Eating Experience

When I was in Germany we went to this crazy extravagant vegetarian place where the meals were similarly priced, but the food was a culinary experience.

The menu only told you what the ingredients were, the actual food you didn’t know until you had it. That was such an interesting idea and it worked out well! We got 2 menus and shared it, and I have to say I was so impressed with the vegan menu. I could really eat anything without fear (since I’m pretty sensitive to lactose), whereas there was a dish in mine that I totally didn’t want to eat (some poached fried egg concoction).

But I was thinking during this meal, that this restaurant celebrates the experience of eating. There is no dropping in for a quick meal and then leaving. Each course is a singular experience to be experienced without being rushed. It is about spending time with others while waiting for your senses to be moved. There is no point looking when the food will be done, because it will just be done when they choose. It isn’t about the food, or the time. You pay for an experience, and a new one at that.

One where the taste combinations are unique and innovative. Where your food palette and likes are challenged, but usually reformed on the other side of that first bite. It’s that first moment of tasting that is worth it all. When you taste something totally foreign and maybe even scary, but that just works. It’s the daring and the challenge.

That’s what you pay for. And in that respect, I loved it. The food really was innovative and delicious. They were so friendly and attentive. Plus the decor inside, everything in the place was about creating that atmosphere and experience. They had little wooden branches with holes where a bowl of salt and a container of oil was. Unbelievably cute and ended with the same branches but filled with chocolate truffles. It was a beautiful evening, which reminded me of the beauty (and possibility) of food.

Book Site Growth

I was thinking the other day what are my goals in terms of my book review site, what type of reviewer do I want to be, and what information do I want to present.

In terms of goal, my current goal is to have 30 people subscribed to my newsletter on that site. I don’t think it’s unattainable. The newsletter for the book blog goes out once a week, Mondays, and that’s it! Less emails than this blog in fact. There are at least two full length book reviews, sometimes some short story reviews as well. I need to build a widget to display how many followers I have and what not.

I want to be an insightful reviewer. I do not give information that can only be made sense of if you read the novel, I hope to provide interesting tid bits and things I found fascinating to encourage you to read them. For those who have read them, I hope they provide my point of view on these issues. I want my writing to be beautiful, I get too caught up in the writing for my school and what not, that I want it to be a playground of beautiful words.

I have been debating about whether I should put a short synopsis. I think I will, but I want to challenge myself to perhaps only write one sentence (ideal scenario since I haven’t written any yet).

I want the site to grow with me. My ideas are baby ideas, still in the mushy unformed state. So are my reviews. They could use expansion, contraction, a whole lot of stuff. They need refinement, polishing, and a certain style. I want to develop this on that platform. To explore the things I can say about books, my passion in life, and all the ways I can make them beautiful. To help people see the love and tenderness I feel, the highs and the lows, to make people fall in love with them just as I have.

What I still need to do: promote my blog through my friends on facebook, connect it to bloglovin (a blog platform), and pick a logo/icon for the facebook page.