One Fine Day

Our epic FirstSaturdayOffSince2011 Day of Merriment and Excellence began as all classic Saturdays should, luxuriously sleeping in until  8 a.m. (my teenage self is gasping in horror right now) and homemade blueberry pancakes.

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Shortly thereafter we eagerly booked it downtown with our required flashlights and sturdy waterproof shoes for a rare and highly sought after Cincinnati Museum Center Heritage Program tour of Cincinnati’s abandoned underground subway and mass transit tunnels that we’ve been anxiously stalking for well over a year and, thanks to a fantastic Christmas present from my parents, we were lucky enough to book back in February, on the very day the tour was released for public ticket sales. The tour runs only one day a year and usually sells out instantly, with a mile long waiting list.

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Long story short the water canal that used to connect Cincinnati to other major Ohio cities like Toledo, Cleveland, and Columbus in the late 1800s was drained, dug out, and turned into an underground subway system in the 1920s. But about halfway through the project, the city ran out of money and the concrete tunnels were never completed. One of the stations, it is rumored, was going to be outfitted with gorgeous tile from Cincinnati’s famous Rookwood Pottery, and the tunnels were very well built. They were built to impress and they were built to last. My blog post from last February gives you a little more detailed info about it, if you’re interested. The above ground stations were torn down during the construction of I-75, but the underground stations still remain intact. In the 1960s the Liberty Street station was installed with electricity, a telephone, flushing toilets, bunk beds, basic kitchens, and a supply of food and water so that it could serve as a nuclear fallout shelter. And in the early 2000s the city spent $6 million (the exact amount it would have taken to finish the subway back in 1928) to structurally restore it and install a 52″ water main in it to supply the west side of Cincinnati with water. And though many proposals have been presented over the years for how to revive the tunnels and make them useful again, none of the options have been viable enough to bring to fruition. So the subway remains abandoned…and totally alluring!

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Unfortunately, cameras were not allowed on the tour, so I don’t have any personal pictures to share, but the experience was just awesome and the memories will last a lifetime! We entered through the boarded up and police guarded Race Street station on the corner of Race St. and Central Parkway downtown. It was pitch black in there save for the beams of our flashlights. But they placed a few candles along the edges of the platforms on either side so nobody would fall off, which gave it a very Phantom of the Opera look, which I greatly appreciated. Our docents were very knowledgeable and shared a lot of great information with us as we walked down the oak planks laid as per-cursors to tracks in the tunnels. We crossed “Lake Cincinnati” because the tunnels are no longer completely waterproof. And at one point we all turned our flashlights off and stood perfectly silent in the blackness for a moment – it was eerie and powerful all at once. How often do you get to experience such deafening silence, in a subway tunnel no less? Such a rich history our city has! If you ever have the opportunity to do the tour, it’s worth it. Sure, it’s just an empty old subway, but experiencing something so integral to the history of such an amazing city and standing where so few other people will ever get stand is really something special.

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After the tour we walked over to Findlay Market, Ohio’s oldest continually operated public market in the depths of the historic Over-the-Rhine neighborhood downtown. This is another Cincinnati landmark I’ve been aching to visit for well over a year. I would liken it to Seattle’s Pike’s Market. We walked around for several hours perusing the spices, fruits, veggies, meats, cheeses, pastries, plants, restaurants and more. It was a perfectly gorgeous day out – sunny and 75° with a light breeze, so it was wonderfully relaxing, enjoyable, and surprisingly not too crowded.

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While at Findlay, I ordered a Banh Mi Thit Nuong Vietnamese sandwich from Pho Lang Thang, which was phenomenally flavorful and well worth the eight months I’ve been waiting to try it, and washed it down with a scoop of creamy sea salt caramel ice cream from Dojo Gelato. Dojo’s thai mango with spicy chili pepper ice cream and lemon rosemary sorbet were also to die for. We walked out of Findlay Market with treasure – 3 lbs. of crunchy green beans from one of the farmer’s tables and a pound of thick ruby red stalks of fresh rhubarb to take home.

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Despite our aching feet from all that walking, we had to spend an hour exploring Eden Park, which surrounds Mt. Adams, because it was just too beautiful outside to pass up the opportunity. Eden Park was named because it was listed as one of the top ten possible locations on Earth, according to Catholic and Protestant clergy of the 1900s, for where the Garden of Eden could have been. We walked around Mirror Lake, strolled the shaded paths, tried to identify flowers and various berries on trees, admired the city from the top of scenic overlooks, dashed across grassy meadows and down hills, and climbed up and down the remains of an old rock wall. In addition to boasting miles and miles of gorgeous, Eden Park is also home to some lovely Mt. Adams homes, the Cincinnati Art Museum, and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. We loved everything we discovered! The pictures don’t even do it justice, and Mirror Lake is simply stunning.

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Every November Eden Park also hosts Balluminaria, where dozens of hot air balloons are glowed up in the night sky for the evening….which I must attend this year!

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After exploring some of the coolest sights in Cincinnati until our feet were throbbing, we thought it best to head home, play a few rounds of our favorite lawn game Washers in the backyard, enjoy a homemade meal of slow cooker chicken veggie Parmesan, and throw in a movie.

It was a deliriously perfect day.

Oh, and if you were wondering what became of that fresh rhubarb from Findlay Market…

A fresh pie might be something along the lines of what happened to it. My insanely delicious top secret recipe fresh strawberry rhubarb pie was ready to make an appearance – welcome back summer!

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Well Suited

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Summer’s fast approaching, and I think one-piece suits are going to be the star of the show this year. I also think I’ve officially reached that age in my life where sassy, stylish one-pieces win over the skin-bearing bikinis of my high school and college years. It also helps that one-pieces have, thankfully, gotten significantly more inspired and significantly less matronly in the past five years. Plus, I kind of just don’t feel comfortable hitting the waters of Blue Lake in a skimpy two-piece whilst surrounded by hordes of 9th graders. Here are my top picks this season. Now, if only they were more affordable because, let’s be real, you must be out of your tree to think $198 for a swatch of spandex is wise.

Trina Turk Fiji Flower {via}

Roberta Roller Rabbit {via}

Marrakech Paisley Bandeau Tank {via}

Lenny Swimwear {via}

ASOS Plunge Backless Suit {via}



Miraclesuit Isabella {via}

Ella Moss Vintage {via}

There’s a million more out there…enjoy the options! Let me know if you find any cute contenders.


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All These Wonders and it’s Only Wednesday

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My computer’s still vacationing at Apple, but I thought I’d steal away on Ted’s computer (which is still limping along, remarkably, at the moment) to take a moment to share some of the things that are making me happiest this week! A little dose of sunshine never does any harm.

1. I’m eagerly anticipating an actual, real, live, WEEKEND OFF. I haven’t had a Saturday off in….months? In fact, I don’t even know when my last free Saturday was. And the last day I had two consecutive days off in a row was….????? And it’s my first day off, where I don’t have to do work of any kind – for any of my jobs, in over three weeks. Ted and I have a magnificent day of awesomeness planned. More on that later!

2. I smoked two auditions this week. As always, live theatre is an unpredictable business, so something may or may not come of it, but regardless of the outcome, it’s nice to be getting myself back out there and to feel good about it!

3. We caught Maverick out of her cave – that sneaky little cray! We were graced with the presence of five whole minutes of Maverick, in the flesh, strolling about her tank this morning! This is big. Girlfriend’s been feeling under the weather lately, first with the tank cycling fiasco and then with the dud craybie eggs and resulting nasty fungal infection, so she’s been camped out under her rock for the past three to five weeks. We know she must come out sometimes, likely at night when we’re asleep, but it was wonderful beyond words to really get to see her, all of her, up and at ’em and clambering laps around her plants again. She’s eating much better too. She’s just so cool!

4. Last night I had a delicious gourmet chocolate chunk cookie and Ted made me mac n’ cheese for dinner so I didn’t have to cook. He makes a mean boxed Kraft mac n’ cheese – magic touch? It was perfection. It’s the little things in life.

5. Lots of great opportunities have presented themselves lately! Doing my darndest to take advantage of them and hoping for some great things and good changes in the future. Fingers crossed.

6. Getting excited for the summer – I think it’s going to be a really fun one, for many reasons – the summer jobs I’m booking, the personal summer fun bucket list I’m compiling, and more. The more research I do and the more things that get scheduled, the more excited I get! Stay tuned for more on that as well.

7. We have a roof over our head, food on our table, jobs to go to, vehicles to get us there, good health, each other, a sweet cray, and great family and friends. Boy, are we ever lucky!

The husband of one of Ted’s work friends had a heart attack last night. While, thankfully, he’s expected to be okay, it really puts life into perspective. It’s been a busy few weeks, with lots of planning, and big decisions and opportunities, and fears and stresses, and that can get overwhelming and consuming. But really, life is pretty great because, as you can see from bullet #7, we’ve got all that we need to be happy in this life.

What are you happy about this week?

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On Color, Bashes, Computers, and Crays

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A few months ago I decided that if I was going to get serious about advancing my career that I needed to make the investment to own a few standout audition and interview dresses. It’s really, very common to see a whole awful lot of black at auditions. Black dresses, black heels, black cardigans, black skirts, black blouses…black black black. I get why everyone does this. You don’t want your outfit to distract from your work. But I don’t think colorful outfits have to always be distracting; I think they can enhance your look in a memorable way by letting your personality shine through. So I spent a few weeks perusing the WWW seeking out several boldly colored, solid, flattering silhouettes. I found a few options that I think are great investment pieces, one of which was a pear/lime frock. It’s a fairly unusual color, I think, as far as dresses are concerned. But it stands out without distracting, is extremely flattering, and works well with my coloring and personality.

I had the opportunity to wear it yesterday morning for the first time at an audition. It definitely suited me well! I walked into the green room to await my audition and the girl ahead of me was also wearing a very lovely dress – in the EXACT same shade of pear/lime as my dress! And we were both wearing brown heels. The dresses were different silhouettes and we looked nothing alike, so it was totally fine (although ironic), but still, what are the odds!? It was great! We complimented each other on our great sense of style and agreed that we both (obviously) favor bold color statements at our auditions. It was funny.

On Sunday night Pones Inc., one of the fantastic arts non-profit companies I work for, turned five years old! To celebrate Kim & Lindsey threw a big old birthday bash at Neon’s Unplugged – this chill outdoor bar that calls itself “the back yard of Over-the-Rhine.”  There were DELICIOUS braised pork and kale tacos with caramelized onions, queso fresco, chipotle salsa and cilantro, cherry lavender margaritas, live music from an instrumental collective, a giant Jenga game, a Bocce court, cafe string lights draping from the trees, a piñata, phenomenally glorious weather, dancing, lots of celebrating a great young dance company and her co-founders, AND a surprise singing telegram (dressed as a chicken) for a special birthday boy, complete with terrible chicken jokes!! I was entirely unaware that Cincinnati actually has a singing telegram company, and this was my first time to enjoy one live. It was amazing…I’m thrilled beyond measure to know that I now have access to an entertaining new way to humiliate my pals on special occasions.  It was a magical evening! I really think I need to hang out at Neon’s more often.

And finally, I was going to post an update, with cute photos, of our sweet Mav – who is doing very well, by the way, despite a fungal infection we’ve been treating with meds (this girl is a real trooper for enduring all that she has had to deal with so far and we love her so!!!) – but apparently my computer, and Ted’s computer had other plans as they BOTH crapped out on us yesterday. Mine is back at Apple for the week being repaired (for real this time) and Ted’s will be making its way there shortly. So my posting and updates may be sporadic this week, but bear with me please. I should be back on track by next week.

How has your week been so far?

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Cedar and Overalls – A Vacation State of Mind

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Two nights ago I used our new cedar planks to make cedar plank salmon with candied pecans. It was delicious but more importantly, as soon as those soaked cedar planks hit that dry oven, it made the whole place smell like cedar, which is the precise smell of steamy, relaxing cruise ship sauna.

Cheapest vacation I’ve ever taken.

In other news, despite this flattering description of overalls,

Unless you are a tyke or a farmer, this is not an attractive look. Try to wear pants that don’t extend over your shoulders and wear clothing in general that doesn’t instantly bring to mind characters from Hee-Haw. 

in one of my most favorite books in the whole entire world,  563 Stupid Things People Do To Mess Up Their Lives by Dr. Larry (highly recommended if you want to laugh so hard that tears are streaming down your face), I really, desperately want a pair of overalls this season! When cuffed at the ankle and paired with the right shoes, tops, accessories, and some braids, they’re not the tacky overalls of the 90s!

I think I could probably find a vintage pair at the thrift store if I put my mind to it. Sure beats the $398 price tag for a new designer pair!

Cedar planks and thrift store overalls, my friends, is today’s lesson in creating a relaxing summer vacay on the cheap.

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A Sweet Lesson in Patience

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I saw this today, and whether it’s a true story or not, it was touching and I was glad to have taken the time to read it. It’s entitled “A Sweet Lesson in Patience.”

A NYC Taxi driver wrote:

“I arrived at the address and honked the horn. After waiting a few minutes I honked again. Since this was going to be my last ride of my shift I thought about just driving away, but instead I put the car in park and walked up to the door and knocked. ‘Just a minute’, answered a frail, elderly voice. I could hear something being dragged across the floor. After a long pause, the door opened. A small woman in her 90’s stood before me. She was wearing a print dress and a pillbox hat with a veil pinned on it, like somebody out of a 1940’s movie. By her side was a small nylon suitcase. The apartment looked as if no one had lived in it for years. All the furniture was covered with sheets. There were no clocks on the walls, no knickknacks or utensils on the counters. On the corner was a cardboard box filled with photos and glassware. ‘Would you carry my bag out to the car?’ she said. I took the suitcase to the cab, then returned to assist the woman. She took my arm and we walked slowly toward the curb. She kept thanking me for my kindness. ‘It’s nothing’, I told her. ‘I just try to treat my passengers the way I would want my mother to be treated.’ ‘Oh, you’re such a good boy,’ she said. When we got in the cab, she gave me an address and then asked, ‘Could you drive through downtown?’ ‘It’s not the shortest way,’ I answered quickly. ‘Oh, I don’t mind,’ she said. ‘I’m in no hurry. I’m on my way to a hospice.’ I looked in the rear-view mirror. Her eyes were glistening. ‘I don’t have any family left,’ she continued in a soft voice.’The doctor says I don’t have very long.’ I quietly reached over and shut off the meter. ‘What route would you like me to take?’ I asked. For the next two hours, we drove through the city. She showed me the building where she had once worked as an elevator operator. We drove through the neighborhood where she and her husband had lived when they were newlyweds She had me pull up in front of a furniture warehouse that had once been a ballroom where she had gone dancing as a girl. Sometimes she’d ask me to slow in front of a particular building or corner and would sit staring into the darkness, saying nothing. As the first hint of sun was creasing the horizon, she suddenly said, ‘I’m tired. Let’s go now’. We drove in silence to the address she had given me. It was a low building, like a small convalescent home, with a driveway that passed under a portico. Two orderlies came out to the cab as soon as we pulled up. They were solicitous and intent, watching her every move. They must have been expecting her. I opened the trunk and took the small suitcase to the door. The woman was already seated in a wheelchair. ‘How much do I owe you?’ She asked, reaching into her purse. ‘Nothing,’ I said. ‘You have to make a living,’ she answered. ‘There are other passengers,’ I responded. Almost without thinking, I bent and gave her a hug. She held onto me tightly. ‘You gave an old woman a little moment of joy,’ she said. ‘Thank you.’ I squeezed her hand, and then walked into the dim morning light. Behind me, a door shut. It was the sound of the closing of a life. I didn’t pick up any more passengers that shift. I drove aimlessly lost in thought. For the rest of that day, I could hardly talk. What if that woman had gotten an angry driver, or one who was impatient to end his shift? What if I had refused to take the run, or had honked once, then driven away? On a quick review, I don’t think that I have done anything more important in my life. We’re conditioned to think that our lives revolve around great moments. But great moments often catch us unaware – beautifully wrapped in what others may consider a small one.”

Sometimes I like to post these things when I come across them, because I think, fact or fable, there’s a lesson in here for all of us. I have a lot crammed into the end of my week this week, and it’s so easy to get wrapped up in the things we need to do. It’s so easy to feel overwhelmed and to focus on the things we think are important, and to let all the little moments, all the little opportunities to appreciate or feel or be helpful or grateful or kind, even in the smallest of ways, pass us by as we hurry to prepare for and accomplish the next thing, and then the next. As I go through the rest of my week, I am trying to keep this story in mind so I can remember to experience ALL the moments, big or small.

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Mondays at Bakersfield and the 1215 Wine Bar

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Bakersfield.

Gourmet Mexican snackitizers, chips & salsa/queso/guacamole, sangria, and margaritas.

Downtown on Vine Street in Over-the-Rhine.

Within a block of Ensemble Theatre (where I work), Taste of Belgium (where two fine lady friends of mine work) and Cincy Haus (where I kind of want to work!).

A perfect, chic, chill after work hot spot. I’ve been dying to try this place for months!

Last night I met Allyson there for dinner, where we were joined by Allyson’s friend, and consequently my new friend, Abigail – who is awesome! Turns out we all have a lot in common.

Allyson & Abigail

I have been looking forward to this girl date since last week! I actually put on a cute gray & yellow outfit (read: not dance pants), painted my nails, and blow dried my hair for the first time since, well November? I know. I didn’t have to teach at all yesterday, or attend a physical job of any kind in fact, so it was kind of worth it. I had the whole day off to get some serious acting and personal work done, and I was READY to have a relaxing evening with some girlfriends.

We chatted about relationships and religion and moral issues and lifestyles and jobs and families and more while we dined on chips and queso and salsa and tacos and sangria and margaritas. It was pretty amazing. And, truth be told, I was kind of thrilled to make a new friend. I love how open these girls are, how easy the conversation is, and how instantly comfortable friendship can be.

The queso was so, so good it was unreal. I’m pretty sure I could make an entire meal out of the chips, queso, salsa and guacamole, wash it down with a margarita and be set for life.

We followed up at 1215 Wine Bar, the wine & espresso bar next door. None of us had been in before, but it looked so relaxing and inviting with the picturesque French doors that opened out onto the balcony enclosed in wrought iron fencing, fresh flowers, candlelight, a bike and a few boutiques parked across the street, lovely weather, and a delicious selection of full-bodied, flavorful wines.

Oh yeah, we’ll be back for more.

It was like Paris in Cincinnati.

Not bad for a Monday night.

As I’ve mentioned before, I’m a pretty big fan of Mondays.

What did you do last night?

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Thunder

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Thursday night I went to see Thunder Knocking on the Door, my first show at the world renown Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.

My dear friend, blogger buddy, and perpetual theatre date Allyson won two free tickets to opening night and was kind enough to invite me along for the adventure (because Lord knows there was no way I could have afforded a $61 ticket plus $10 parking), so we said HECK YES to free theatre and away we went!

Thunder Knocking… = super cool script.

Lately, I’ve been really into unusual and fabulous scripts that have something a little different and unexpected to offer. This isn’t a new show by any means, but it was new to me and a refreshing breath of fresh air from the standard vanilla musical.

Here’s a brief synopsis of the show taken from a TheaterMania review by David Finkle of a 2002 production:

The story, such as it is, presents Gertha Dupree, also known as Good Sister, whose late husband, Jaguar Dupree Senior, once bested a blue-eyed shape-shifter called Marvell Thunder in a guitar-playing contest. Miffed and vengeful, Thunder arrives some years later to insinuate himself into the Dupree household; here Gertha lives with daughter Glory, who is blind as the result of a car accident. A frequent visitor to the humble household is Dregster Dupree, twin brother to Gertha’s ex-husband and now Gertha’s longtime lover. Jaguar Dupree, a prodigal son, has also returned after forfeiting one of two charmed guitars his father left him and his sister. He’d lost it in a guitar contest that Thunder instigated. Now Thunder is knocking on the Dupree door because he wants the second guitar. In order to take possession, he challenges Glory to yet one more face-off–but not before he has returned her sight, and the two have discovered they have eyes for each other.

The questions Thunder Knocking on the Door means to raise are: Will the three Duprees survive Thunder’s threat? Will Glory beat Thunder in the contest and remain able to see? Will Gertha confront whatever it is that keeps her from committing to Dregster? Will Thunder, who is slowly and literally turning to stone, be able to reverse the disastrous metamorphosis? And will Jaguar overcome the unease he apparently feels as a promising rock-and-roller to proselytize for the blues as his dad did? {via}

I loved the bluegrass style music. I loved the humor. I loved the infectious energy. I loved the unusual and captivating storyline that dabbled in the supernatural. I loved that the cast played the story – larger than life characters, supernatural beings, and compelling circumstances – totally seriously instead of turning it into a cheeseball spoof (as it so easily could have become with a show of this nature). I loved the talent. I loved how loud and bright and flashy it was. Yet I loved the humanity of it all. And I loved the magic tricks.

Yeah, those magic tricks get me every darn time.

You should have heard the two of us gasping at Glory floating in mid-freaking-air, the flash of lighting fast complete costume change that took place onstage in full view of the audience in less than 1 second, and the guitar case that magically popped open when pointed to by Thunder. Now, we’ve both been in theatre long enough to know that each of these little gimmicks must have a perfectly logical explanation. But they were well hidden. And therefore perfectly unexpected and delightful!

But most of all, I just loved the story.

So, if you have the chance to see it anywhere, please do. It’s different and it’s fun and it’s sure to keep you on your toes.

{via – Photo: Sandy Underwood}

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Snippets of Daily Life

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{1} Monday night we went to a “Music in the Museum” organ concert in the rotunda of the museum center – a gloriously beautiful backdrop for a phenomenal instrument. Yes, we were the only people under age 75 there. Ted took organ lessons as a child and has always enjoyed organ music, the mechanics of the instrument, and Pipe Dreams – the Sunday morning organ radio hour. The organist, Frederic Champion, was a young guy, but a world renowned organ player living in Switzerland. The choirs of St. Xavier University and Trinity Episcopal church accompanied a few of his songs. The song with the female voices of the St. Xavier choir was just completely exceptional. It was hauntingly gorgeous and the notes just resounded so perfectly in the rotunda. Haunting and memorizing are really the only words for it. And it was a real treat watching someone actually play an organ – talk about a workout!!

{2} I know that he looks like, well, a Grinch, but he has always been fascinated by this beautiful, historic organ (a favorite of organists world wide) and had a really great evening, despite what his favorite shirt (a favorite of strangers world wide) and his face may say.

{3} My plants are flourishing! Well, at least my basil and tomato plant. The green onion stalks are thinking about growing and my cilantro just isn’t having it this year.

{4} A Chinese feast from our favorite little hole-in-the-wall Chinese place. Sometimes, you just need a huge Chinese feast, am I right?

{5} In sharp contrast to the image above, Easting Well is a great magazine – I love it!! Such delicious, healthy recipes and great meal inspiration. My other favorite publication as of late is A-Line, a magazine for the young, classy yet quirky local women of Cincinnati. It’s truly awesome. Someone please get me a subscription to it!

{6} My breakfast….chai vanilla yogurt with granola crunch and fresh berries, tea, and 1/2 a grapefruit. I adore my Monday and Wednesday mornings of (sometimes) peace, solidarity, and productivity (again, sometimes)!

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Queen City Underground Tour: Bosses, Breweries, and Burials

On Sunday we redeemed a half-off Groupon for the Queen City Underground Tour: Bosses, Breweries, and Burials through American Legacy Tours at the Cincy House on Vine Street downtown.

Although the tour actually had nothing to do with burials and we did not venture down into any kind of burial chambers as advertised, at least that I can remember, the tour was still excellent and we had such a fun time! It was definitely more packed than we expected (probably close to 75 people), but the two tour guides were always loud enough to be heard by everyone (which is normally one of my biggest gripes about group tours and tour guides), plus they were funny, knowledgeable, likeable, and clearly enjoy their work, which makes for a pleasant experience for everyone. The walking tour was about 2 hours and covered about a four block radius of Cincinnati’s historic Over-the-Rhine district. It was cool and windy, but being a Sunday morning the streets were quiet and the atmosphere was wonderful. I loved being able to go into (and beneath!) the beautiful old, historic, abandoned, boarded-up buildings from the 1850s-1900s that I pass every day on my way to work.

Cincinnati has such a rich and lively history, so it was great to learn a little more about it!

John and Mitch, our tour guides, informed us that Cincinnati was known as the “Paris of the west” and that Over-the-Rhine is the largest in-tact historical district in the USA, even beating out the New Orleans French Quarter for the title. Back in the late 1800s, the several blocks that encompassed Over-the-Rhine were home to more than 130 theatres, beer gardens, bars and saloons. Germans immigrants, who were exceptionally fond of their beer, inhabited the area in jam-packed tenant buildings and, second only to Milwaukee and St.Louis, Cincinnati was one of the biggest brewing cities in the country. The only difference is that Milwaukee and St.Louis exported their beer to other states, while nearly 99% of the beer brewed in Cincinnati was consumed within 1/2 mile of where it was bottled. There were breweries on every corner. And under all these buildings were lagering tunnels and storage tunnels and tunnels to transfer the barrels of beer to the bottling factories. It is estimated that each person drank over 40 gallons of beer per year. Back then Cincinnati’s water was exceptionally disease-ridden – it is said that you could walk across the Ohio river on the skins of rotting pig carcasses without ever getting your feet wet – and because of the alcohol in beer, it was more sanitary to drink beer than water! In fact, Over-the-Rhine got it’s name from this. If you wanted a good German brew, you had to literally cross “over the rhine” (the Ohio river which they mockingly nicknamed the rhine) to get it. So brewing plays a huge role in Cincinnati’s history.

We learned about the historic People’s Theatre (now Venice on Vine) that hosted hotshot Buffalo Bill, and was also the place where his wife, the famous gun slinging Annie Oakley (who took her stage name from Oakley, a suburb of Cincinnati near where we live) entered a shooting contest and got her start. We learned about all the actors and plays and wild entertainment acts and traveling carnival shows that frequented the streets of Over-the-Rhine. Interesting how all those theatres are now parking lots – a disturbing trend that continues still to this day – a real shame.

We ventured into the worn-out remains of an old original 1870s theatre, beer garden and German newspaper printing building, which found a new life in the late 1990s and early 2000s as a goth fetish club. When the building was still a theatre and beer garden, it often featured “strongest man” competitions.

We walked past one of my favorite little gardens in downtown Cincinnati, which shows off some beautiful flowers, wall murals, and tile work in an urban setting.

We strolled past one of my most favorite historic churches in the area.

And we arrived at a gorgeous building that used to be known as the “Second City Hall.” This building was a really nice beer garden, a beer garden you could take your women and children to, a beer garden where what eventually became the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra would play music on weeknights, a beer garden where one of Cincinnati’s biggest political machine bosses, Boss Cox, conducted his business. If you needed a job, a favor, or anything else – you met Boss Cox for a beer at this beer garden.

Next we hit up the Guildhaus, where a series of underground lagering tunnels were accidentally discovered from old blueprints of the building that somehow survived prohibition. The building used to be a brewery, and the tunnels were used as a cool place to store and ferment the beer before the giant barrels were rolled in carts through the tunnels, under the streets, to the bottling factories. During prohibition the tunnels were filled in with dirt in an effort to discourage any kind of sneakiness. It is estimated that almost every building in Over-the-Rhine has tunnels running under it. We learned about the copper pipes and how ammonia and other fluids were run through them to keep the tunnels cool, and how the holes in the brick and tunnel ceilings were used as a ventilation system to keep the carbon dioxide from filling the tunnels. It was great fun exploring down there! You had to squeeze down a real sketchy little steep staircase from a blown-out hole in the concrete to get down there, but that kind of made it all the more fun.

We traipsed back up to ground-level and made our second to last stop at an old German tenant building that used to house up to 10 people in each of its little two-room apartments. It is now for sale for $1 (but don’t quote me on that!!). The catch is that whoever purchases it must retain its historical integrity. They cannot buy it, tear it down, and rebuild something new in its place. They have to restore it and keep its structural historical significance alive, which is often much more expensive than just tearing it down and starting again from scratch. As part of the renovation and restoration efforts to bring Over-the-Rhine back to its glory (instead of the crime-ridden, violent slum that it became and home of the 2001 race riots), all these beauties are for sale to people who want to fix them up and turn them into lofts, storefronts, boutiques, galleries, and snazzy little restaurants. Up until a few years ago people were still squatting in these unsound buildings and police were hauling out dead bodies from its rooms on a weekly basis. Now the company that owns all these buildings and is selling them for the purpose of revitalizing Over-the-Rhine has them all boarded up, but gave American Legacy Tours the keys to several of them for touring purposes.

Our last stop was at a chic, upscale little furniture and home furnishings boutique on Vine street near Cincy House. This particular store was one of the Over-the-Rhine success stories. An old historic building with a rich history, most likely with underground tunnels running beneath it, that was purchased, remodeled, preserved, and now helps bring beauty and economic vibrancy to Over-the-Rhine once more. Many of the businesses, much like this one, who call Over-the-Rhine home do so because they passionately believe in this area. They want to bring it back to life and restore its former glory while keeping the tales of its rich, varied, and historically significant past in mind. So it was fitting to end the tour at a place where John and Mitch could encourage all the tour-goers to continue to patronize the tours, restaurants, shops, and theatres in Over-the-Rhine. Because with each purchase made to an Over-the-Rhine company, the revitalization effort only grows stronger.

And if we had more money I definitely would have patronized the heck out of that little boutique! I spied a gray, white and yellow patterned arm chair, a few rugs, unique chandeliers, and a wall full of urban canvas wall paintings I would have loved to bring home! One day. Maybe. But probably never. Ha. It’s the thought that counts.

Meanwhile, as part of the tour, advance tickets to their future tours were available for purchase at 50% off (tickets are normally about $20 per person, so $10 per person is a pretty great deal for some entertainment and knowledge, we think!). Since we had such a great time, saw some really cool things, and so enjoyed learning more about our city, we bought a few more sets of tickets to go on their other tours! Even though you read this overview of the Queen City Underground tour, you really should still go on it if you get the chance – I skipped over a lot of great information they shared with us. Plus it’s really a great opportunity to experience it first hand instead of just through pictures.

Sometime this season we’ll be going on their famed Newport Gangster Tour, Civil War Tour, Queen City is Haunted Tour, Barons & Bike Tour, and Rookwood & Wine Tour – I’m ridiculously excited about the last two tours, though they all sound like great fun! You can, and SHOULD read a quick little paragraph about the upcoming tours we’ll be going on here. Then let me know if you want to come on any of them with us!

On May 12 we’ll be going on the Cincinnati Abandoned Subway Tour through the Cincinnati Museum Center’s Heritage Program. We have been waiting to go on this tour for well over a year and we’re SO excited for it!!

P.S. – But why on earth I agreed to do the Queen City is Haunted tour on a Friday night, in the dark, is beyond me. A lot of the places we visited on this Queen City Underground Tour are some of Cincinnati’s most haunted locations. I’m a huge pansy and cannot even fathom how I am going to make it through that tour. I’m sure there’s a ton of great history to be learned, so if you fancy scaring yourself silly and you want to go with Ted, be my guest!!

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