PREVIEW: 44th Ann Arbor Folk Fest

The Ark is a staple of our community, Ann Arbor’s #1 source for all things acoustic! But it’s been a hard year for live music, to say the least. This year’s annual Ann Arbor Folk Fest will be held online this year, with ticket and merch sales going towards fundraising to keep this beautiful venue kicking for years to come.

The two-day event begins Friday, January 29th at 6pm and continues through the evening, with a second group of artists performing during the same hours on Saturday. I’ll be going Friday, but both nights will undoubtedly be lots of fun! Sets are around 30 minutes and feature artists of recognition and up-and-coming nature. It’s a great night to experience an at-home concert with your roommates; still a wonderful musical event, with the added benefit of being able to show up in your pajamas.

Get your tickets (with package options that include Ark merch from event t-shirts to mugs) here:

44th Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival

REVIEW: Bon Appetit Test Kitchen Variety Show

Many of us are spending quarantine making sourdough starters and baking cinnamon rolls, but the chefs at Bon Appetit have been doing it for ages, and continue to do so despite cooking at home. For those of you unfamiliar with the test kitchen, Bon Appetit is the YouTube channel for a food magazine based in New York. The YouTube Channel currently has 5.85 million subscribers, featuring shows such as Gourmet Makes where pastry chef Claire Saffitz attempts to recreate snack foods in the test kitchen; It’s Alive with Brad Leone, microbial food culture enthusiast; Reverse Engineering with Chris Morocco who attempts to recreate recipes through scent, taste, touch, but no sight; and Back-to-Back Chef with Carla Lalli-Music who guides a celebrity through a recipe – while they stand back-to-back.

 

Since the switch to the various chefs’ home kitchens, the new recipes the chefs have filmed have been incorporating more common ingredients. Some of the recent home kitchen videos have included 13 Kinds of Pantry Pasta, Sour Cream and Onion Biscuits, 3 Kinds of Homemade Pasta, and 9 Kinds of Pantry Sandwiches. The chefs are all very charismatic and personable and have, as a result, built a massive fan base (Saffitz is said to have developed a cult following for Gourmet Makes) on social media. Since cooking from home, there’s been an increase in guest appearances by kids and pets – what more could you want?

 

On May 1, the Test Kitchen staff hosted a live fundraiser on YouTube to raise money for the World Central Kitchen. Over the course of an almost two-and-a-half-hour show, BA raised a total of $185,616. The WCK is currently working to distribute packaged, fresh meals to communities in need due to the coronavirus outbreak. The BA staff hosted a Variety Show on Friday night, featuring segments such as a whipped cream speed challenge, a feature on the staff members’ pets, an interview with Ina Garten, a Q&A, and several pre-prepared montages such as a cursing montage, a cutting onions montage, and a best of Brad Leone montage.

 

I was personally a fan of the whipping cream challenge (Chris Morocco took first place by whipping cream in 30 seconds to the point where he could hold the bowl over his head and nothing fell out), Carla’s son being her arms in Front-to-Back, and the pre-edited montages. There was a little bit of inevitable awkwardness throughout the course of the show with internet delays, but various members of the staff got tipsier and tipsier throughout the show, which really added character to what could’ve been a very bland show. There was a live comments feed from viewers around the world that was so active that the BA tech staff had to comment and ask everyone to slow down as they couldn’t keep up with all of the messages.

 

Overall, the show was very entertaining, although a little long as I ultimately decided to join the Lionsgate La La Land livestream instead of watching the last 45 minutes of the show. However, it was clear the staff and the viewers were all having a good time, and, of course, it was all for a great cause. I highly recommend Bon Appetit – they have an endless supply of videos on their channel, and they continue to post multiple times a week. The videos will no doubt make you very hungry, but they’ll inspire you to head to your kitchen and become a pro chef yourself. And you might as well use this time to get into cooking!

 

The donation link for the World Central Kitchen is still up on the livestream recording, and I’ve included it here.

 

Also, here is a photo of my Bon Appetit cinnamon rolls. I’m quite proud of them. I followed this recipe but didn’t have any dates, so I used the filling from this recipe.

PREVIEW: Spread Your Seeds

SPREAD YOUR SEEDS

Wednesday April 11th, 7-10pm at the Kelsey Museum of Archeology on State Street

A group of graduating seniors is organizing a heartfelt event in honor of an incredibly important cause: Spread Your Seeds The evening launch event will include “food, friends, the opportunity to buy and sponsor necklaces, artistic and creative outlets (painting wall! reflection journals!), planting stations, music, and most importantly–the chance to cultivate community. This will be a space where people can gather, meet new friends, create art, conversation, and community–to become grounded and rooted together.” Bring a dish to pass, instruments, $10 in cash for purchasing necklaces and seeds, and most importantly, yourself.



To get more information, check out the website and the Facebook event


“When we lose our grounding, we lose ourselves. The solution? Find a way to ground yourself wherever you are: through community, art, sharing, and of course, love. In other words: Spread Your Seeds.
Spread Your Seeds is a growing organization devoted to helping root community and prevent isolation. The premise is simple: as a community, we hope to de-stigmatize depression, starting right here on the U of M campus. We raise money by selling handcrafted necklaces, composed of vials filled with local, Michigan seeds. The wearer can scatter the seeds anywhere that makes them feel at home or at peace–to remind them that they are connected to the world. The money we make from selling necklaces will all be directed toward different projects to build a community of understanding about depression.
Our first project is creating a collaborative children’s book about depression–the idea for which came from a community member who suffered deeply from depression. We hope the book can be a positive step toward making depression a more understood and less taboo social topic. We hope it will educate kids at an early age that depression, like other mental illnesses, is not a personality flaw, but a very serious disease that can be overcome when addressed and understood fully.”
Come and root yourself in the wholesome celebration of life and the effort on behalf of this organization to cultivate a sense of compassion and understanding.
(Logo design by Ellen Rutt of The MORE Show)