A Master Oboe Technician and a Dim Sum Feast!

Heidi Chisholm in her workshop

I arrive for my appointment with my favorite oboe repair person, Heidi Chisholm. She greets me warmly, we sit down at her cluttered workplace and my oboe is rapidly is disassembled by expert and experienced hands; her intelligent eyes sparkle as she fills me in on the latest news from the oboe world.

As Heidi works on my instrument, I look around her shop crowded with tools, supplies and a music stand with orchestral excerpts.

We chat about politics or our families; on this particular day, Heidi mentioned that she often works on the instruments of talented young oboists that face an extremely uncertain job market and a lack performance opportunities when they finish music school. So here’s the plug: Minnesota State College offers a nine month band instrument repair program with 97% of graduates finding work in their field! She also mentioned that Oberlin Conservatory of Music offers a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Piano Technology; a two-year program of study designed in association with Steinway & Sons. Food for thought; we do currently have a big shortage of skilled technicians.

At this point, my blog entry may become a bit nerdy, unless you are an oboist, but stay with me! I asked Heidi about using swabs to clean out the bore of oboes; knowing that I was baiting her. Her eyes started to flash and she said, ” Never pull a swab through all the way an oboe. ” “Let me show you this!” She pulled out an old oboe that had been cut in half and lined it up with a ruler. “See”, “look how narrow the bore is”! I remember at one point that Heidi displayed ruined instruments with stuck swabs on her wall.

I thoroughly enjoy my visits with Heidi. Not only is my instrument expertly repaired; it often feels like my instrument plays like velvet when I get home. I value our conversations peppered with her sharp wit and observations about all subjects. And then, I confess that I look forward to a culinary treat in nearby White Plains. A few years ago, I discovered an excellent Chinese restaurant, Aberdeen Seafood and Dim Sum, tucked away in the lobby of a Marriott hotel in the middle of downtown White Plains. They serve a wonderful assortment of dim sum, translated as “touch the heart”. This visit I made an order to go that included a delicious combination of shrimp and snow pea dumplings, pan fried chive dumplings and delicate vegetable dumplings covered in a casing of rice dough flavored with spinach.

Shrimp and Snow Pea Dumplings
Pan fried Chive Dumplings
Vegetable Dumplings

Placed on a towel on the seat next to me, I had a wonderful picnic on the ride home! I look forward to my next visit to Heidi’s. I do have to stop by this weekend to pick up an English Horn that she repaired for Hofstra University- with perhaps another side trip to Aberdeen Seafood and Dim Sum!

AND: Here is the “Tree of the Week”

“I am trying out my new pouty look”!”

Blunt-lobed Hepatica: Drury Preserve-Sheffield, MA

HAPPY SPRING!!

A Serendipitous Walk and Hearty Red Lentil Soup!

A few weeks ago, I put the address in the GPS for the Steepletop Preserve in New Marlborough, Massachusetts. I was looking forward to a peaceful contemplative walk on this beautiful set of trails. I drove for a few minutes, not paying close attention, enjoying the scenery around me and slowly realized that the surroundings did not look at all familiar. I had lost internet service a while back and I was basically lost!

I had ended up on a quiet dirt road that followed a small winding stream. I pulled the car over to the side and decided to walk and see where the stream and road led. I would retrace my steps later to return home.

This turned out to be a delightful serendipitous walk and I would love to return to this spot, but I am still not quite sure where I was! I did take a picture at a fork in the road and when I returned home, my husband and I looked up where we thought I was on a map! I believe it may be a small road in Mill River, Massachusetts. Any guesses??

???

Safely home, I decided to make a big pot of hearty Red Lentil Soup, a soup that I have made many times and wrote about in an earlier blog post. I based my current version on the delicious Moroccan Red Lentil soup that we enjoy at the Amanouz Cafe in Northampton, Massachusetts. I sauteed onion and garlic and stirred in tomato paste with cumin, smoked paprika and red pepper flakes and let the mixture lightly brown. I added green beans cut into small pieces, red potato, carrot , celery and plenty of chopped parley. Fragrant with thyme and bay leaf, the soup was thick and filling enough for dinner along with a small green salad and fresh peasant bread.

ENJOY!

Hearty Red Lentil Soup

Ingredients:

4 cups dried red lentils

1 medium onion finely chopped

2 garlic cloves minced

1 medium carrot peeled and cut into small pieces

1 celery stalk with leaves cut into small pieces

handful Italian parsley finely chopped

2 medium red potatoes cut into small chunks (no need to peel them)

handful fresh or frozen green beans cut into small pieces

2 teaspoons ground cumin

pinch of red pepper flakes (or more to taste)

1 teaspoon dried thyme

1 teaspoon smoked paprika

1 bay leaf

1/2 can tomato paste

salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

water to cover

To Make Soup:

In a large soup pot or cast iron pot, heat olive oil

Saute onions until translucent, add garlic and stir. Add other spices and tomato paste. Cook mixture until tomato paste starts to lightly brown.

Add lentils, vegetables and cover with water about 2-3 inches above other ingredients.

Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer until lentils and vegetables are very tender and soup thickens. If soup is too thick, add a bit more water. Adjust seasoning. ENJOY!

AND: Here is the “Tree of the Week”!

“Spring Really is Here”!!

Vernal Pool- Barnum Road Sheffield, MA

HAPPY SPRING!!