Category Archives: District News

Open Shopping Day & Tree Giveaway at Greene Hill Food Co-op

Photo Credit: www.nydailynews.com

Photo Credit: www.nydailynews.com

All are welcome, members and non-members alike, to shop at the Greene Hill Food Co-op this Saturday, March 22nd from 10am-4pm. Take this opportunity to check-out the space, meet members and shop! In addition, they will be giving away 100 free trees in partnership with the Million Tree Project from from 10am-12pm and offering a composting workshop. Learn more about the tree giveaway or register for a tree in advance.

Questions? Contact events@greenehillfood.coop. You can also check out their Facebook event and invite your friends.

Greene Hill is a  member owned and operated food co-operative located in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, providing affordable, top-quality food. The store is located at 18 Putnam Avenue and is open three days a week: Monday: 1:30PM – 8PM; Wednesday: 6PM – 10PM; Saturday: 10AM – 4PM. There are many affordable payment plans for all to become members and EBT cards are accepted.

Tree Giveaway at Trilok

Image Credit: MillionTreesNYC

Image Credit: MillionTreesNYC

 

Trilok Fusion Center for Arts and Education is hosting a tree giveaway event on Saturday, March 29th on Myrtle Avenue. This series of tree giveaways is sponsored by the New York Restoration Project (NYRP) and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, via the MillionTreesNYC initiative.

If you want a tree, register here.  If registration is closed, a limited number of trees will be available on a first-come first-served basis.

To pick up your FREE tree, you must agree:

– To plant it in one of the five boroughs.
– To keep trees properly watered and maintained.
– NOT to plant your tree along streets, in city parks, in containers, terraces, balconies or on roofs.  Trees can be planted on private property, school property, church grounds, etc.

What: Tree Giveaway at Trilok Fusion Center for Arts & Education
Where: 143 Waverly Avenue at Myrtle Avenue
When: Saturday, March 29th, 12-2pm
Info: Contact Megan McGibney at megan@trilokfusion.com or call (718) 576-2563

For general information, contact NYRP at info@nyrp.org or call (212) 333-2552.

St. Patrick’s Day Celebrations at Putnam’s Pub & Cooker

Putnam's St Paddys Day-a

It’s a St. Patrick’s Weekend-Long Celebration at Putnam’s Pub & Cooker, including Putnam’s 1st Annual St. Patrick’s Day Guinness & Oyster Festival — $30 gets you FULL and HAPPY.  Check out the weekend-long happenings:

Friday, March 14th
5pm-9pm
1st Annual St. Patrick’s Day Guinness & Oyster Festival — $30

9pm-on
DJ Misbehaviour on the turntables (downstairs) 

Saturday, March 15th
All Day: $4 (16oz) Coors Light Cans
$15 Irish Whisky Flight 

9pm-on
DJ Tim “Soul Finger” Downstairs

Sunday, March 16th
Featuring Sim Ross + The Easy Truth & Hostess, The Jack Hacketts Broken Compass Society
Pre-St. Patrick’s Day Live Music Show, FREE  7pm-on
Putnam’s Unplugged

 plus: $4 (16oz) Coors Light Cans & $15 Irish Whiskey Flight

Monday, March 17th – St. Paddy’s Day!
Enjoy the best Guinness in Brooklyn along with some very special Irish fare all day:
Dublin Cockles & Mussels, Irish Smoked Salmon on Brown Bread, Ballymaloe Irish beef stew, Corn Beef & Cabbage, Colcannon with boiled Irish bacon, Gaelic Steak with Jameson sauce.  And featuring a wide variety of delicious desserts.

Putnam’s Pub & Cooker is located at 419 Myrtle Avenue (corner of Clinton Avenue).  

Putnam's--2014 weekend

Real Time Bus Data Gets You to Myrtle Avenue

Image Credit: MTA

Image Credit: MTA

The MTA recently expanded the availability of real-time bus location information to all bus routes in New York City.  No more wondering when the bus will come.  No more guessing which route to take.  This is big news, especially for areas not near major subway lines, like Wallabout and the northern parts of Fort Greene and Clinton Hill.

Real time data is available on the MTA website, via text message, and via MTA-approved smartphone apps.  To save you time, our staff tested many of the smartphone apps.  We recommend NYC Bus Checker and Roadify.  Both are fast, accurate, have interactive maps, and can save favorite stops for on-the-go use.  And both are FREE.

So what are you waiting for?  Get on the bus!

For more information, check out this  MTA webpage.

 

Five Spot’s Weekly Events Calendar, Purlie Victorious this week

Five Spot on Myrtle Avenue

A veritable who’s who of film and stage stars have performed in the play Purlie Victorious since famed actor Ossie Davis penned it in the 1960s, including Davis himself, his wife, actress, Ruby Dee, Melba Moore, Beah Richards, Cleavon Little, Godfrey Cambridge, Sherman Helmsley, Alan Alda, Denise Nicholas, John O’Neal and Helen Martin.  Set in 1960s rural Georgia, Purlie Victorious reflects powerful themes of the Civil Rights Era.  Davis skillfully wrapped his political messages in raucous comedy.

The Brooklyn Performing Arts Center will perform the award-winning Purlie Victorious for 4 days this month at Five Spot Soul Food:  March 14, 15, 21, and 22.    $40 will get you a 5-course meal plus the performance.  Call (347)433-6518 or email purlievictorious2014@gmail.com for tickets.

Five  Spot Soul Food & Supper Club is located at 459 Myrtle Avenue, at the corner of Washington Avenue.

Check out the website for daily lunch, dinner, happy hour and other specials, including $3 beers, Bud bottles and drafts everyday plus other upcoming events: www.fivespotsoulfood.com.

International Women’s Day Celebration at Corkscrew Brooklyn

corkscrew rosie the riveter-a
Join Corkscrew Brooklyn on Saturday, March 8th beginning at 5pm for an International Women’s Day Celebration which will feature lecture and guided tasting.
5pm sharp –20-minute discussion with Katell Pleven, founder of the Vine Collective (discusses her long-time work as an entrepreneur and wine purveyor)
Q&A and guided tasting of two wines specially selected for the evening by Katell of two female-produced wine she imports:   Brouhaha Pinot Gris, Winemaker: Kim Butler, Pasa Robles, CA and Les Graviers Chinon, Winemaker: Anne Claire Valle-Mercier, Loire Valley, France

Corkscrew Brooklyn
is located at 489 Myrtle Ave, Clinton Hill between Hall & Ryerson.  Please RSVP at imbibe@corkscrewbk.com or call the store at (718) 230-WINE  with questions.

 

Throwback to 1986 on Myrtle Avenue

334 & 336 Myrtle Avenue, between Carlton and Washington Park, as seen in 1986.

334 & 336 Myrtle Avenue, between Carlton and Washington Park, as seen in 1986.

Throwback to 1986 at 336 Myrtle, between Carlton & Washington Park.  The buildings look quite a bit different today than they did 28 years ago.  Today, the fully restored buildings, which have apartments upstairs, is now home to the new Humo Smokehouse at 336 and Dr. Jan’s medical office at 334.  Chung Chun Kitchen, seen in the photo, can still be found on the block.  They’ve moved next door to 338 Myrtle Avenue and have called that block home for more than 30 years.

Both buildings pictured above underwent facade restorations back in 2009.  The restoration project received support from the New York Main Street Grant program.  This program has assisted with the rehabilitation more than 30 historic buildings on Myrtle Avenue in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill.

Interested in more local history?  Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to catch our weekly #ThrowbackThursday posts.

Take Michelle to Work for Women’s History Month

POST PHOTO Black Artstory - Take Michelle to Work D3

The #TakeMichelleToWork project by artist Aisha Cousins continues from Black Artstory Month into Women’s History Month! Join the project and the conversation by picking up a DIY doll kit here at our office from March 10th-14th*.  Here’s how you can participate in just 3 easy steps:

1. Contact us by email or (718) 230-1689 to get your doll (it’s free!).
2. Dress/accessorize your doll and give her a career.
3. Take her to work with you, document her journey, and share it!

 Aisha Cousins-Take Michelle To Work- Polish Abr (1)IMG_4319

By taking your doll to work and posting about it on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram with the #TakeMichelletoWork you can draw attention to the dreams Michelle sacrificed to support her husband and family. You can also remind people of the many other ways black women are asked to choose between what is best for themselves and what is best for the race. Just as importantly, you can encourage your co-workers to imagine a nation where our daughters are no longer asked to choose, because it is understood that helping every woman pursue her dreams is in fact what’s best for all of us.

Inspired by Take Our Daughters to Work, this community performance art project is the latest in series of performance art scores composed by artist Aisha Cousins to document black women’s experiences during the Obama era.

*While supplies last!

Local Heroes by PS 20 at DC Optics

PS 20 artwork -  (14)

 At times, Black History Month seems to be focused on the national heroes: the figures that went down in the history books for shaking up the political or social system, who were considered innovators or groundbreakers. But what about the local figures, the unsung heroes, our own community celebrities? For the Black Artstory Month exhibit title “Local Heroes”, PS 20 art teacher, Magin Schantz, encouraged students to create portraits of someone they consider to be a hero or an inspiration. Here is more about their process, and reflections from the students themselves. The work is on view at DC Optics all month, as part of an avenue-wide Black Artstory Month exhibition that includes 20+ artists at 10 Myrtle locations. Download the Art Walk map here and take a self-guided tour!

Drawing Mr. Parker

Born in Harlem in 1930, Warren Parker has been living and making art on Myrtle Avenue for decades. Mr. Parker visited the students in their classroom, where they turned the tables on the artist, making him the subject of these chalk portraits. Students worked to capture his likeness while also experimenting with different techniques of using chalk pastels. After the drawing session, students were able to view Mr. Parker’s work and engage in a dialogue with him about art. “Last Thursday when we were going to art, Ms. Schantz, our art teacher, surprised us with a very special artist and made us draw him. It was very fun, trying to capture all the features on him and light and dark spots that shone on him. I really liked drawing Mr. Parker and when we saw his drawings they were very creative and inspiring.” – Jordan Scantlebury, 4th Grade

Drawing Mr. Hampton

Lonnie Hampton is PS 20’s beloved music teacher, and also a talented jazz musician outside of the classroom.  He came to visit in order to collaborate on a gesture drawing exercise. Students drew him quickly and energetically while he played saxophone, working to capture a joyful, rhythmic spirit in their work rather than a realistic likeness. His love of music, and their love for him, is captured in these watercolor painting. “What I liked about drawing Mr. Hampton is that I got to learn a lot of new stuff. I liked that he was moving a little so it made it a little harder, I like that he made the class happy.” – Zuffy Cazabon, 4th grade

Role Model Collages

Students were assigned different celebrities who have various ties to Fort Greene and Clinton Hill, and were asked to deconstruct and reconstruct images as a way of relating their own artistic style to that of the role model they were investigating. These mixed media collages re-imagine some of Fort Greene’s living legends, who helped to establish our neighborhood’s reputation as an incubator for important African American artists, and include Erykah Badu, Saul Williams, Yasin Bey (Mos Def), and Spike Lee. “I like Saul Williams because I like acting and I want to act. I also want to do other things. I like art because you get to express your feelings in your drawing.”  –  Jahlil White, 4th grade

DC Optics is located at 390 Myrtle Avenue, between Clermont and Vanderbilt.

Daily Sing-A-Longs at Five Spot on Myrtle Avenue

Five Spot Singalong Artists_Myrtle Avenue

If you’re starting to feel cabin fever with your little ones in the house, perhaps a visit to Five Spot Soul Food on Myrtle Avenue in Clinton Hill can offer a cure.  Every weekday morning, Five Spot hosts a kid sing-a-long at 11:30.  The daily event features a variety of musicians, including Hopalong Andrew, Lloyd H. Miller, and Leslie & the Flying Foxes.  The $10 cover per family will get you some entertainment for the young ones, complimentary light breakfast, and 50% off lunch entrees.

Five Spot Soul Food, 461 Myrtle Avenue between Waverly and Washington Avenue.

The Gefilteria are Picklers-in -Residence on Myrtle Avenue

pickles at peck's on myrtle avenue

The Gefilteria was founded by a trio of New York foodies, one of whom is a Fort Greene resident. The Gefilteria “reimagines Old World Jewish foods, adapting Ashkenazi classics to the values and tastes of a new generation.” They are currently the  in-house picklers at Peck’s, 455A Myrtle Ave.  With pickling barrels in the basement you get the freshest picks each time you purchase their sours and half-sours.  Also, keep a look out for Pickling Workshops led by team member Jeffery where you’ll learn “the value of pickling and fermentation in Ashkenazi food culture, and how to make your own pickles at home.”

Visit The Gefilteria to learn more about their products – gourmet gefilte fish, horseradishes, beet kvass and a new line of pickled products – and purchase on-line or find a store near you.

Peck’s , 455A Myrtle Avenue between Washington & Waverly Avenues

Take Michelle Obama to Work for Black History Month

Aisha Cousins- Michelle Obama at Work I (620)Performance artist Aisha Cousins asks you to ‘Take Michelle Obama to Work’ for Black Herstory Month. By taking your Michelle Obama doll to work, you can help raise this question: Why did electing the USA’s first black president require Michelle Obama to give up her career?

Inspired by Take Our Daughters to Work, this community performance art project asks you to take fabric dolls of a young Michelle Obama to work with you for Black Women’s Herstory Month (February 15 – March 15). This is the latest in series of performance art scores composed by artist Aisha Cousins to document black women’s experiences during the Obama era.

By taking your doll to work and posting about it on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram with hashtag #TakeMichelletoWork, you can draw attention to the dreams Michelle sacrificed. You can also remind people of the many other ways black women are asked to choose between what is best for themselves and what is best for the race. Just as importantly, you can encourage your co-workers to imagine a nation where our daughters are no longer asked to choose, because it is understood that helping every woman pursue her dreams is in fact what’s best for all of us. heather hart build a brother 291

About the faces: The doll faces were carefully designed to reference artist Heather Hart’s Build a Brother Workshop (photo: left) which asked participants to build black male dolls as a methaphor for “building” up and nurturing real black men. Cousins learned about Build a Brother when she saw the dolls in the homes of two black women friends. The Take Michelle to Work dolls were designed with similar faces to spark conversations about how black women’s immense desire to nurture the black men in our lives can, at times, cause us to forget that nurturing our own development is just as important.

Meet the artist & get your free Michelle Obama doll:
Saturday  2/15: 1-4PM @ The Brooklyn Sweet Spot: 366 Myrtle Ave
Sunday 2/23: 1-4PM @ Polish Bar of Brooklyn: 470 Myrtle Ave

Share photos of your Michelle Obama doll’s journey: @MyrtleAveBklyn (Twitter and Instagram) @MyrtleAveBrooklyn (Facebook)
#BlackArtstory #TakeMichelletoWork

This project was commissioned for Black Artstory Month by the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership.

FREE Film Screening: The Wonder Year

On the Black Artstory Month calendar this week: a free screening of The Wonder Year and light refreshments at the Ingersoll Community Center. This event is co-sponsored by the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership and Act Now Foundation. The screening is this Wednesday, February 12, at 7pm.

The Wonder Year – Trailer from LRG Clothing on Vimeo.

About the film: A year in the life of CEO, NAACP ambassador, Duke University professor, husband, father, son and Grammy Award winning producer 9th Wonder. The Wonder Year follows one of soul music’s most dynamic figures from his childhood home to late nights in the studio and everywhere in between.

Visit our calendar for a complete listing of all events, featured artists, programs and venues.

Storytime Art and Free Film Screening

Black Artstory Month is in full swing, with two upcoming events hosted by the Ingersoll Community Center (177 Myrtle Avenue):  Storytime Art and Film Screening of “The Wonder Year”.

Sofie and the City - storytime art SMALLStory Time Art: A Celebration of Home and the Migrant Story
Saturday February 8th at 12:30pm
FREE

Join FOKUS at 12:30pm on Saturday, February 8th, as they take children and their families on an exciting examination of home, both ancestral and current, using the book “Sofie & The City” by Karima Grant. This arts workshop will take place at the Ingersoll Community Center.
FOKUS will have stations that examine various homes from across the world. These stations will be designed to trigger the five senses and prompt the event-goers to draw things that come to mind when they think of home using chalk and a “sidewalk.”

wonderyearFilm Screening: The Wonder Year
Wednesday, February 12 at 7pm
FREE

Join us for a free screening of The Wonder Year and light refreshments! This event is co-sponsored by the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership, Act Now Foundation and the Ingersoll Community Center.

About the film: A year in the life of CEO, NAACP ambassador, Duke University professor, husband, father, son and Grammy Award winning producer 9th Wonder. The Wonder Year follows one of soul music’s most dynamic figures from his childhood home to late nights in the studio and everywhere in between.

Visit our calendar for a complete listing of all events, featured artists, programs and venues.

 

Introducing the New www.myrtleavenue.org

Picture24

Welcome to the new www.myrtleavenue.org, our new website created specifically for our all those interested in Myrtle Avenue, Fort Greene, Clinton Hill and Wallabout, Brooklyn. Our newly designed website holds a slew of new features to help users connect with the assets and resources here. Your experience is important to us. Please let us know if it easy to explore and find what you are looking for at by sending us a message. Below are some tips that we think will be useful.

Are you looking for a restaurant or place to meet up for dinner? Check out our online Dining Directory.

Do you need to find a gift or supplies for your home or workplace? The Shopping Directory will quickly help you find the business that has what you are looking for.

Looking for something to-do over the weekend with friends or family? Visit our easy-to-use Calendar to find local events.

Do you want to learn more about the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership and the work we do? Click around the main menu to find out more about our initiatives with local businesses, historic preservation, food and health, arts and culture, and public space.

Have fun exploring our site and check back often to find the latest neighborhood news and to explore new features.

 

A Historic #TBT at 350 Myrtle Avenue

1940's Tax Photo of 350 Myrtle Avenue.  Photo purchased from the NYC Department of Records.

1940’s Tax Photo of 350 Myrtle Avenue. Photo purchased from the NYC Department of Records.

This photo of 350 Myrtle Avenue, between Carlton and Adelphi, dates from 1940.  The photo captures Tony’s Express Storage and Warehouse, the tenant at the time.  At this point, the handsome Romanesque Revival building had been around for 40 years.

Today, Gnarly Vines wine shop calls the space home.  If you pass the building now, you’ll notice the closed-up storefront and boarded-up upper floor windows have been removed.  Also missing today are the Myrtle Avenue trolley tracks in the street and the Elevated train tracks above.

Interested in more local history?  Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to catch our weekly #ThrowbackThursday posts.

Pick-up Farm Fresh Groceries at Tipsy Wineshop

New Partnership - Tipsy & Good Eggs

New Partnership – Tipsy & Good Eggs

Tipsy is partnering with Good Eggs to help customers buy groceries from local farmers and foodmakers on-line and pick-up at Tipsy wineshop.  Pick up would take place on Tuesdays & Thursdays 4-8PM and will begin the week of January 27th. Tipsy staff will help pair your wines with your groceries, creating wonderful meals to be had at home. Visit Good Eggs to learn more and start shopping today.

Tipsy, 584 Myrtle Avenue between Emerson and Classon.

#TBT at Fort Greene Houses, 1944

Image Credit: LaGuardia-Wagner Archives.

Image Credit: LaGuardia-Wagner Archives.

This photo captures Fort Greene Houses (now known as Whitman and Ingersoll Houses) exactly 70 years ago this week.  On January 19, 1944, the grounds of the recently completed development are filled with military personnel and civilians who were employed at the nearby Brooklyn Navy Yard.  During World War II, the Yard employed more than 70,000 people.  The recently complete public housing provided the much needed housing for this large surge in the neighborhood’s population.  It wasn’t until after the war that the buildings would fulfill their original purpose as affordable housing.

Visit the LaGuardia-Wagner Archies at LaGuardia Community College to learn more.

Interested in more local history?  Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to catch our weekly #ThrowbackThursday posts.

#TBT at Kum Kau Restaurant

Image Credit: Ted Lewin, author and illustrator of Big Jimmy's Kum Kau Chinese Take Out.

Image Credit: Ted Lewin, author and illustrator of Big Jimmy’s Kum Kau Chinese Take Out.

Kum Kau Restaurant has been on Myrtle Avenue in Clinton Hill for more than 38 years.  The restaurant, on the corner of Washington and Myrtle, has been a local institution for years and was even featured in a children’s book.  Big Jimmy’s Kum Kau Chinese Take Out, written and illustrated by neighborhood resident and Pratt Institute alum Ted Lewin, provides today #ThrowbackThursday image.  The watercolor illustration captures Kum Kau in 2001, and it looks like not much has changed in the past 13 years at this local landmark.

Big Jimmu’s Kum Kau Chinese Take Out by Ted Lewin, published by Harper Collins Publishers, 2001.

Interested in more local history?  Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to catch our weekly #ThrowbackThursday posts.

Artworks by Teri Sanders at Pillow Cafe

Image Credit: Teri Sanders

Image Credit: Teri Sanders

A new exhibition by painter Teri Sanders is up at Pillow Cafe-Lounge on Myrtle Avenue! The exhibition, titled “Art at Work”, will be on view until the end of February.

Being a classically trained portrait painter, Teri’s philosophy is that no matter how “processed” the result is in a publication, it all comes back to the brush on canvas. This exhibit gives the viewer a rare insight into those sources: the raw work on canvas. A prolific painter and art director, her work has been published in The New Yorker, The New York Times, New York Magazine and Atlantic Monthly.  She has also shown at the National Portrait Gallery in London, Aberdeen Art Gallery and Royal Albert Memorial Museum.

For more information, contact teriksanders@gmail.com or visit www.directoryofillustration.com/TeriSanders.

Brooklyn Sweet Spot Offers a Double Sweet Deal

Brooklyn Sweet Spot_blood drive2 There is a double-sweet deal planned at Brooklyn Sweet Spot on Friday, January 17th.  Yes, double:  Give blood to help save a life PLUS enjoy Brooklyn Sweet Spot’s delicious confections. This Friday, January 17th, Brooklyn Sweet Spot is joining forces with the New York Blood Center via a bus mobile parked outside of the bakery from 1pm-7pm. Just one pint of blood can save 3 lives so imagine the possibilities.  The blood will be used for adults and children experiencing a wide range of challenges, including surgeries, accident cases, cancer and sickle cell anemia patients. Stop at the busmobile to learn more and to give.  Please call (718) 522-2577 for additional information.  Photo ID with birthdate will be required.  Eat a well balanced meal before giving blood.   Brooklyn Sweet Spot is located at 366 Myrtle Avenue between Clermont and Adelphi.  They can be reached at 718. 624.CAKE (2253)

Tipsy Offers 3 Days of Wine and a Bit of Dine

Tipsy hosts wine tastings every Saturday at the store but this time, it’s three wine tastings plus a $30 weekender special (3 bottles of wine).  So, yes, get ready for Friday (1/10); a Greek wine theme on Saturday (1/11)–Brooklyn Kolache is bringing tasty spinach & feta kolaches to go with Tipsy’s white and red Greek wines; and next Tuesday (1/14) tastings.  Here are the details:

Happy Hour Friday

TGIF! Tipsy’s kicking off the weekend with a sustainable, silky red: Vincola Corellana Zorzal Graciano
($12).
It’s full of soft red cherries and a little kick of pepper; pair it with your hearty January meals, particularly pork or beef dishes. Come 7pm today.

Saturday Sippers & Bites: Going Greek

Greek wine is still a bit of a mystery to many, but Tipsy has two bottles that that “customers are crazy about.” PLUS Brooklyn Kolache Co. is serving up some delicious mini feta & spinach kolaches because everyone deserves hors d’oeurves and wine on a Saturday. Stop by tomorrow, Saturday, from 3–7pm and try them; they’ll remind you that summer does exist (or prompt you to buy a plane ticket to Santorini).

Semeli Mountain Sun White ($14) – This fruity white comes from the Peloponnese region and is ripe with crisp lemon and melon with some stony undertones to mellow it all out.

Moraitis Paros Reserve Red ($16) – From the Greek island of Paros, this fun blend of red and white grapes yields a wine full of cherries and chocolate.

Tuesday Tasting

Tuesday January 14th is all about deep, red fruit so Tipsy is bringing out one of their favorite barberas: Giribaldi Rie Barbera Superior ($18).  Come bask in some cherry and raspberry flavors with Tipsy from 5–8pm.

New Weekender!

Tipsy’s latest combination comprises three bottles that have a combined value of $40, but they will let you have it for $30. Obviously this means that you have no excuse not to try these:

Hugues Beaulieu Picpoul (regularly $11) – Zesty and spicy all at once, with a hint of honey.

Vinicola del Sannio Aglianico (regularly $14) – Tipsy drank this bottle at their tasting last week.

Valle las Acequias Malbec Robles (regularly $15) – Bright notes of plums and raspberries dominate this wine, with the most luscious hint of chocolate – yum!

Get Tips on How to Shop Healthy on a Budget

'Shop Healthy' Tours led by the Fort Greene / Clinton Hill Community Food Council

‘Shop Healthy’ Tours led by the Fort Greene / Clinton Hill Community Food Council

Join the Fort Greene / Clinton Hill Community Food Council this Sunday, 1/12/14 at Red Apple Supermarket (Myrtle/Navy) for a “Shop Healthy” tour and conversation.  In partnership with students and faculty within the Nursing Department at  St. Joseph’s College Council members have been trained to teach shoppers how to read nutrition labels, understand unit pricing and the benefits of buying fresh, whole products verses canned and prepared foods. By sharing personal food stories and discussing ways that shoppers can add more healthy food items to their list (even on tight budgets!) the Council has created a rewarding and educational initiative for all involved.

Watch for the Council at Red Apple every first Sunday starting February 2014! Want a tour at a store closer to your home? Contact us, we’ll work with you to arrange a time a date.

 

‘Hot Chocolate’ Art Exhibition Opens at Pushkin Creperie

Image Credit: Brooklyn Art Review

Image Credit: Brooklyn Art Review

Hot Chocolate features the artwork of 10 local Brooklyn artists at Pushkin Creperie (541 Myrtle Avenue), curated by Joshua H. Stulman. And Hot Chocolate, of course!

Exibition: January 12, 2014 – February 23, 2014
Opening Reception: January 12, 4pm
The exhibition and opening are FREE and open to the public.

In the middle of winter, sometimes all you want is warm cup of Hot Chocolate and a reason to get out of the house. Hot Chocolate is the perfect excuse to brave the cold to find an eclectic collection of amazing artwork being made locally in Brooklyn. Merging realism, abstract, comic book illustration, figurative, and color field paintings, Hot Chocolate mixes up artists from different backgrounds and age groups to offer a brief survey of interests in the fine arts today.

Participating Artists:
Jon Axelrod, Ramona Candy, Jesse Xavier Ruiz, J.F Lynch, Tomo Mori, Doug Newton, Kathleen Migliore-Newton, Juan Sarmiento, Fabrizio Seminario, and Joshua H. Stulman.

Pushkin Creperie is located at 541 Myrtle Avenue near the campus of Pratt Institute (between Steuben and Emerson Sts., across from the Pratt Store).

For more information contact Brooklyn Art Review at info@joshuastulman.com.

A Snowy #TBT on Myrtle Avenue

Gedney_1960s_winter on Myrtle

Image credit: Duke University David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

A #TBT photo that may help to mentally prepare for the coming snow. This shot of Myrtle Avenue was taken by famed photographer William Gedney in 1969 from his apartment above what is now Kum Kau at the corner of Washington & Myrtle.  The winter scene is dominated by the Myrtle Avenue Elevated train, which ran through Fort Greene and Clinton Hill from the 1880’s through the 1960’s, when it was removed.