Celebrating ....

CELEBRATING The PJ's 50th YEAR! * www.junto.blogspot.com * Dr Franklin's Diary * Contact @ WritersClearinghouse@yahoo.com * Join WritersClearinghouse at Facebook, Instagram, etc. *Meeting @ Philadelphia * Empowered by WritersClearinghouse.
Showing posts with label Carreño Ralph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carreño Ralph. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 November 2023

BAHAMIAN GALLERY: A SONG OF NASSAU 1.

Dedicated to Marion B. Carreño, Ralph J. Carreño, Roberta E. Carreño Bernard, and Stafford Morrison 2

Limbo, Limbo Like Me

You Can't Go Home Again 

The way they were. (Top and below)

Functioning?
The way they are.

The "old" John Bull, Ltd., then across from Rawson Square.

Friday, 13 March 2020

DON MERLOT UNCORKED

By Don Merlot 


Id-so-facto: Thoughts on food and wine

March 10, 2020

Don Merlot
Ralph Carreño
This last Christmas 2019 my Daughter Micaela gave me the new edition of Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine Book 2020. Johnson has been one my favorite wine guides since the 1980’s, albeit,  not my only wine mentor;  but when as I traveled I could stick his pocket sized edition in my attaché case and when I was alone I pulled it out and I could read it as a novel of untold adventures of places I have visited, wines I had drunk, repasts I had consumed and/or places I had visited or was about to visit. I learned to understand the definition of varietals, flavors, smells, colors, cultures, and vocabulary. I now understood why every wine growing country believes that they grow and produce the best wine on earth, and probably rightly so, including states within the United States of America, & wine producing countries:  Canada, Mexico, Brazil and Peru. Why not?, I have been to all of them and they produce quality wines and in a blind tasting it is hard to taste the regional differences sometimes of the vin ordinaire as the  heart and soul of the vintner that is in the nectar of their wine. In looking over my Library I found my first book the vintage Wine Book by William S. Leedom 1963 (Vintage Books Random House) and back in 1970 it cost me $1.95.  My first career boss and bosses had lived in France or Europe and had the savoir faire of wine and food and the culture and as a neophyte it was passed on to me as I joined the company and started my career. 

As I started my journey, I really had to differentiate between what the learned wine experts – connoisseurs said were the best and what wines I tasted and liked, and I preferred. I had to learn not to like something because it was recognized as the best but because it pleased my senses, as I was lucky enough at that stage to be able to afford it and taste it. I kept logs and noted my comments and saved the labels and kept several books by country and regions. Prior to starting a career, I had encountered several occasions of having wine, as a participant. When I grew up at home, we had Wine with Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner. In College my roommate Bob Lightfoot introduced me to MATEAUS – a sparkling rose from Portugal. And post college on social occasions we had Gallo wine - Hearty Burgundy. 

I recently recollected how I started going down my wine path and who my mentor at my first job was, and there is no question it was Ralph [Carreño],* my first boss who piqued my curiosity in wine, and let me decide for myself what was my taste and not focus on what was famous etc.; written up so I should like it but make my own mind up. We lived in St. Joseph, Michigan, and had a wine purveyor who was lucky to have the whole corporate group to supply their daily needs if they did not run into South Bend or go to Chicago to buy wines, which was technically against the law, but I never knew anyone that was caught.

Friday, 8 November 2019

JFK




The PJ depends on reader support. Please help us by contributing directly via PayPal, or by contributing editorial content via PhiladelphiaJunto@ymail.com. Empowered by WritersClearinghouse | S.P.Q.R. 1976 Richard Carreño, Editor Copyright MMIXX. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, 12 June 2017

EATING IN SPANISH. DRINKING IN FRENCH.

 
DUALITY OF CULTURES
By Don Merlot
[WCNews Service]
My first trip to the outside world started in New York in 1968 when working with our international advertising agency and the account people. I met them face to face and  worked with them to carry out my responsibilities. 

I had grown up in Mexico City. My parents were American; and we spoke English at home.
I attended the American School which was a primary school and junior and senior high.  Classes would be half day in English and half day in Spanish. Most students had similar backgrounds; mostly Americans; or European or Mexican parents who wanted to have the children have a bilingual education.

Many fathers worked for American companies or the U.S. Government. There were also Canadians, and Europeans. We were part of the Anglo-American community of Mexico City. When we visited friends, we would walk or ride our bikes to see each other. As we matured we could take busses if we went beyond our neighborhood.
 
One day I was with a friend on city bus and we were talking in English when an older woman asked us,  Por que no hablan en Cristiano? ( “Why are you not speaking in Christian?”  She meant Spanish, of course.) I remember being startled by that. We knew other passengers we interested in our answer. I was instantly aware that we were in an awkward situation. We apologized and talked in Spanish. Mexico’s language is Spanish and “in Rome do what the Romans do.”

Friday, 14 April 2017

Fly on the Wall, A Memoir

THE BEGINNING OF MY CAREER 
Notes & thoughts on food and wine
 
“Life is a heavy burden; take it one step at a time." – Eiyasu Tokugawa, founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate in Japan. (17the century). 
 
By Don Merlot
[WC News Service]
Our daily office coffee break ritual started at 9 am. The department heads had two groups: sales and engineering. The directors would walk out of their offices into the office bays to collect us, and we would be joined by the rest of the departments and go to the company cafeteria where several dining tables would be full of office staff. We would take our morning coffee together. Our group consisted of the international division. Our directors would be in the center of the table and the staff would surround them. 
 
On my first day I was thinking as I walked through my first business rite of passage to my first job that here I am with my new family. I recently graduated from Thunderbird (American Institute for Foreign Trade). I was newly married, and had just relocated to southwestern Michigan and my new job was in international advertising and sales promotion at Whirlpool Corporation. 

This day was also the first day for a fellow graduate from Thunderbird, who was recruited at the same time as I. Not, that I was overwhelmed, but there were so many people coming over from other tables to meet us too. I knew I would never remember all the names and the roles they had, but I felt welcome to my new life. 

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

In Training

 
MAD MAN
By Don Merlot
[WC News Service]
The flight from Michigan to New York City was on a clear night. I could look out the plane windows and see the towns and villages. We were traveling from Chicago to New York City.  As we came into New York’s air space, we cruised over the metro area and saw the Statue of Liberty and the buildings on Manhattan: The Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building were front and forward. The ribbon of street lights looked like gold necklaces. After landing we took a taxi to the hotel in Manhattan. It was late so we settled in for the day to prepare for the next day.
 
The excitement was high for me. This was my first business trip with my first job. This was not my first time to New York. My earlier visits were when I went military prep school in Virginia in 1958 to 1959. One trip was to visit my school roommate’s home in Short Hills, New Jersey, and the other was to catch up with a childhood friend that I had known from the American School in Mexico City, whose father had moved and worked in the city. He commuted from Roslyn, on Long Island. The other two trips were interviews for jobs when I was at Thunderbird (1967).These experiences prepared me for the massive size of the greater metropolitan area; the cosmopolitan culture; the skyscrapers, and the blaring noise of the traffic that was constant from day break to nightfall. These visits were a test to see the big picture for business, and the global world as well: The preparation to see the world: the big picture. It reminded me of the movie Auntie Mame, and I was the bronco being busted to become a worldly executive.
 
This trip was tremendous boost for my persona and very emotional. I was in the throes of the beginning of my international career and on the road to become a world savant and traveler.
  

Thursday, 21 April 2016

Maria Elena Carreño de Granados

Nana and Papa: Circa 1950 Brooklyn, New York


Joaquin A. Perez 18
A FAMILY VISIT
By Richard Carreño
[WC News Service]
MEXICO CITY.
Emerson 243
My paternal grandmother, Maria Elena Carreño de Granados, was born in Bogota, Colombia, in 1895, and from there, started a life journey that weaved a path to the United States, The Bahamas, France, and finally to Mexico, where she died, in 1984, at eighty-nine years. For a large part of that journey, for almost forty years, she was a nurturing presence in my life.
 The trajectory of her travels was linked to the fortunes -- and a worldwide deployment -- of my family. With the notable exception, that is, of how Maria Elena Granados wound up as a twenty-year-old in New York City, in 1915.That involved work. Employment, she explained to me, as a nanny for the wealthy Colombian family whom she had accompanied to New York while the family was on a temporary assignment there.

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Carreño de Miranda


 
COURTING CONTROVERSY
By Richard Carreño
[WC News Service]
MADRID -- I have two great painters in the family.

One was my grandfather, Toribio Carreño, an early 20th-century immigrant from Cuba, who was house painter in New York.
 
The other is Juan Carreño de Miranda, a 17th-century Spanish court painter.
 
They both worked in oils.
 
That's pretty much where their artistic similarities begin and end. Toribio went on to have his ephemeral masterpieces take pride of place on several residential blocks in Brooklyn. Juan's works have proven to be more timeless, taking pride of place in the Museo Nacional del Prado here. 
 
Family legends are often dodgy, more fun to playfully indulge in than rigorously inspect, and thus it's often best not to scratch too deeply into genealogical details.
 
Still, it's more than just amusing to associate one's own DNA with a historical figure, especially a personage who can link a family's roots to a glamorous, regal past. True, Carreño de Miranda (1614-1685) wasn't as skilled, prominent, nor as well-connected as his contemporary Diego Valázquez (1599-1660). Valázquez painted kings. Carreño, for the most part, painted dukes and lesser royalty. (Though, as a royal painter, he still did get a few cracks at depicting Mad King Charles II in a few unflattering portraits). 
 
 

Monday, 18 August 2014

Letter from Switzerland

The author and her grandfather (1964)
Yodeling and Kvetching in the Alps
By Harriet Eser Phillips
[WritersClearinghouse News Service] Posted 19 August 2014
South Bend, Indiana
That damn it to hell Linkedin.... I was trying to look somebody up and of course without "joining" you can't do that.... and even then the info was sketchy so I am triple aggravated.  Chances of deleting myself are very good indeed.
 
I truly hate gadgets. Mme Ludite for sure.  21st Century version of Mme Lafarge, I think.  Watching the death of civilization while I dust.
 
Oh Lausanne!  Ponce de Leon threw up the pizza he swiped.  Yes, I could have told him that was a foolish heist.... I remember it well....
 
Barbara was a drunk as a witch on Halloween and descended into the potted palm.... It was Fourth of July time, 1964, we flew to Europe from Venezuela, and there was a massive patriotic themed dinner at a swanky restaurant complete with a gigantic ice carving of a goose (well swan, maybe), featuring caviar or some such between his fridgedly  frozen wings. Must be the company picked up the tab.
 
I sat next to the Swiss office comptroller, if I say Fogelsanger I'm close, could have been Feuchtwanger. Anyway, he was pointing out the wonders of the Swiss navy, and I asked him if he thought maneuvers in Lake Constanz would serve them well when there is a major invasion?  Am I wrong, or is Switzerland landlocked?

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Long-legged Blonds



What no snails? Gary Lee Kraut filtring absinthe during a recent lunch
Photo: WritersClearinghouse News Service/Richard Carreño
In Praise of Tour Guides
By Richard Carreño
[WritersClearinghouse News Service]
Paris
On my first trip to Europe, to London as a teen-ager in the early-60s, my father had arranged for our family to be guided about the city, my first experience with a touring service. We settled comfortably in a big car, shepherded by stoic 'right-you-are,-guv'ner' type driver in the buttoned-up standard uniform of that period and our guide, long-legged blond in a micro-mini. (Also standard issue. Remember Swingin' London?)
Sitting in the back seat, trying to ignore my younger sister, Roberta, I had the best view of London possible. Her legs.
In the fifty-odd years since, I haven't had much use for guided tours (long-legged blonds are another story); rather, navigating my way around the world under my own steam. Strictly do it yourself, you see. Some notable exceptions have involved visits to Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, and Israel.
Recently, I've changed my mind. About guided tours, that is.

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

A Flâneur at Large: An Introduction

Urban Walkers
 
The following is from an Introduction to A Flâneur at Large by Richard Carreño, to be published by WritersClearinghousePress next month.
Like most in our fraternity of perambulation, I was a flâneur before I knew the meaning of the word. In fact, before I encountered it. Nipping into byways. Poking about allies. Darting into swiggly-designed little streets. Even looking up, sweeping the the view of the upper reaches of a building facade.These have been my proclivities for as long as I can remember. Curiosity didn't kill this cat. It gave me a tenth life, as flâneur.
 
I came by the term courtesy of my father, who introduced me to the urban intrigues of the 'city,' as Manhattan was known when I was growing up scores of years ago in Brooklyn. Those urban delights were, by today's standards, the simple pleasures of museums (mummies at the Met and dinosaurs at Museum of Natural History), toys at F.A.O. Schwartz, and shopping along Madison Avenue. All this, and much more, constituted my World of Seven Wonders.


Monday, 26 March 2012

Reprinted from The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Personal Reminiscence:
Reclaiming My Inner Brooklyn
Richard Carreño stands in front of his former residence at 583 E. 22nd St., Flatbush.Richard Carreño stands in front of his former residence at 583 E. 22nd St., Flatbush.
By Richard Carreño
Special to Brooklyn Daily Eagle
PHILADELPHIA — Every city kid who has moved away has an “old neighborhood.”

Mine is Flatbush, a vibrant ribbon of racial and ethnic diversity that cuts through the heartland of Brooklyn. Until recently, it was also a place and a bit of personal history that I long ignored, or, maybe, even longed to forget.

Increasingly, over the past few years, all that turned around, and in one of those marvelous contradictions that accompany age, reconnecting with Brooklyn now became a kind of longing. And that recently resulted — after 55 years! — in my first return to the old ’hood, East 22nd Street between Newkirk and Foster avenues. A change of heart? Certainly. An old man’s sentimentality, surely.

More important, after years of living elsewhere — the Bahamas, France, England, and, now, Philadelphia — I was finally ready to join the ranks of countless others who realized that the roots of their identity (however shaped, massaged and contrived in subsequent years) were born in the hardscrabble of their past. My denial, while lodged in the more polished social and educational perches of my later years, where the fast-talking, wise-guy personae of a Jackie Gleason or a William Bendix character were hardly ideal — slipped away as I grappled with my newfound identity as a Brooklynite.

Thanks to Bob Oppedisano behind the wheel, my old Brooklyn almost immediately came into focus. We circled the imposing victory arch in Grand Army Plaza, which had been my first taste of martial triumphalism. Nearby was the Brooklyn Museum, the place of my first up-close-and -personal arts exposure, and where I also heard full-orchestrated concert music for the first time. (My, my, to be able to play the kettle drum, I mused then.).

Bob was in his element. He, too, was a Brooklynite, having grown up in Carroll Gardens, and he tooled the streets with savvy aplomb. As we approached magnificent Ocean Parkway, the years were flipping back like one of those flashback calendar scenes in a 1940s movie. The gritty, cinder bridle path that once spoke of the elegance of the parkway was now paved. “Long gone,” said Bob.

When Bob and I first met in the 60s as journalism undergraduates at New York University, I was fashioning myself as a sort of ex-Parisian from Michigan. (This odd contortion of identity reflected the fact that I had been living with my parents in France before a job transfer required my father to move to the Midwest). At that point, Brooklyn still had no attraction. Given my journalism proclivity, why I had never thought to align myself with the legendary historic spirit of Brooklyn Eagle reporter Walt Whitman or then-raging histrionic spirit of Norman Mailer mystifies me.

Flatbush was in sight as he turned onto Foster Avenue, heading east to Ocean Avenue and East 22nd Street. I was struck that everything was “smaller.” The distances, not as great. The buildings, not as towering.

Otherwise, the infrastructure was frozen in time.

My time was an almost 11-year span from my birth in 1946 to 1957. During that period, we Carreños lived in a rambling three-story, barn-like structure (3,110 square feet) at 593 East 22nd St. It was one of five single-family houses on the east side of the street built just after the turn of the 20th century. Low-lying apartment houses lined the rest of the street.

Our family was overseen by the family patriarch, my paternal grandfather, Toribio, a tyrannical overlord of Spanish extraction who had immigrated from Cuba to New York in the 1920s. In sharp contrast to the taciturn Toribio, a tobacco-chewing ex-house painter and building super, was his younger wife, my grandmother, Maria Elena, who remains among the kindest, most forgiving and compassionate individuals I have ever met.

Then there was the rest of us, and what a mixture! My father, Ralph (born Rafael), the youngest of three brothers. My mother Marion; my sister Roberta, born in 1956; and our dog Zippy, a black-and-white mutt. We inhabited No. 593’s first floor. On the second floor, and later in a renovated attic, lived my Uncle Andy (the middle brother), his wife Eda and my cousin James, known as J.J. I think my cousin Anita was born about then as well. In the attic’s rear were my grandparents. Toribio and Elena’s eldest son, Charles, or Charlie, was next door in another single-family house with his wife Thelma and my cousins Bernie and Mark. It would not be an over-statement to note that we were a tight family.

In many ways, we also mirrored the ethnic mix of Flatbush, then a largely working-class neighborhood that harbored, harmoniously, a ethnic diversity that ranged from Irish and Italian Catholics to Eastern European Jews. (Flatbush Avenue at the time was a corridor of kosher delis, where my fondness for knish and pastrami was born). My mother was Jewish, and so was my aunt Thelma. My aunt Eda was of Italian heritage, from upstate New York. My grandmother was a devout Catholic, and it was thanks to her that I received my religious training at Our Lady of Refuge, a stone, neo-Norman-like structure at the corner of Ocean and Foster avenues. (Elena converted her bedroom into a kind of chapel. I seem to remember that a dressing table doubled as an altar. In other words, it was scary).

Our Lady of Refuge was where I was baptized, confirmed, celebrated my First Communion, and also developed my first anti-clerical animus. The church basement, where the nuns would berate us if we did not leave room when seated for our guardian angels, doubled as my Boy Scout meeting place. Upstairs, in the “telephone” booths of the sanctuary, the priests would berate us for any hiatus in their system. (Woe to he who professed, “Oh my father, my last confession was three weeks ago....” “What!” ... After the requisite tongue-lashing, being assigned to recite about five Hail Marys was getting off light.)

My father, on the other hand, was an atheist. So were Toribio and his other sons, as far as I could tell.
Parking nearby, Bob and I found our way to the church’s office. “Sorry, the sanctuary is closed,” we were politely, but firmly, told by the sexton, a middle-aged woman who spoke with a Caribbean lilt.
Like the church congregation, the neighborhood itself now seemed mainly made up of folk of Jamaican descent. In other nearby parts of Ocean Avenue were Indian and Pakistani immigrants. As Bob and I later descended onto Flatbush Avenue, we discovered the vibrancy of island culture, with its open-air markets, spotless streets and jostling crowds.

Some old shops still soldiered on with white owners. Others were converted to new uses. The old A&P, which Elena persisted in calling the “Altantico y Pacifico,” is now the Homeplace Furniture store. An ice cream parlor at the corner of Newkirk and Flatbush was just a memory.
The neighborhood seemed stable, approaching a middle-class status. Single-family houses go for almost $500,000.

East 22nd Street was how I remembered it. How could this be? Yet, there was the same alley (albeit narrower) where we used to play stickball. (I was always “called” last, unless my cousin Bernie had a say.) There was the corner where I scarred my right knee when I tripped on glass in a small dirt patch. (The scar is still there, and so, I noticed, are some new shards of glass in the same dirt patch.) The driveway, where my dad’s DeSoto was parked. I looked up to the window of the apartment where a friend’s mother offered me a cream cheese sandwich with olive bits. How exotic, I thought. Not far away were the bushes where I was thrown when I was thrashed by some boys after school. My first schoolboy fight. I lost.

There was, of course, the street itself, which we would commandeer for ball games, and its inner sinews where, behind garbage cans and such, we’d duck out of sight for hide-and-seek. I could still hear Mrs. Kroberger calling from her apartment house window for our friend (her son) Buster to return home.

And, finally, there was the Ostrow house, next door to ours.

Mr. Ostrow was an officer in the Fire Department, and, to me, a kind of vague figure, because he spent so many nights away. He also seemed menacing — this despite our family being friendly with his, and his son, Jacky, being my best friend. When I broke a window in Mr. Ostrow’s garage door with an arrow, flung innocently from my bow, I trembled in fear for what would happen when our neighbor returned. Nothing did.

The Ostrow house also housed our family GP, Dr. Landesberg. He also scared the bejesus out of me.
Still, for the most part, this was a place of joy. On summer nights we’d assemble on the front porch, the men drinking beer and we, way past our bedtimes, listening to the youthful happiness of our elders. The bounty of Christmas, again surrounded by family and extended family. Huge feasts prepared by Toribio, who fancied himself a chef extraordinaire. And Lionel trains — the big ones. In the winter, laughter emanated from a sitting room, where adults by night would surround a newfangled black-and-white television to tune in to I Love Lucy. In the front parlor were my dad’s books, a hi-fi and a party-line telephone (GE-8-6524), where we’d receive the rare call when Ralph was travelling in South America on business.

My old elementary school, P.S. 152, housed in a French chateau-like structure on Glenwood Road, had been converted into P.S. 315, the School of the Performing Arts. It was there, when as P.S. 152, that my fourth-grade teacher, Mrs. Eleanor Gochman, arranged that I’d be appointed a AAA monitor when I had been originally passed over. That was important. Very important. My cousin Bernie was AAA, you see. P.S. 152 itself, I discovered, has been relocated nearby to a spiffy new, purpose-built building and dubbed as the School of Science and Technology.

In addition, I detected an eerie silence. I remember constant shouting on our street, the rah-rah of ball playing, open fire hydrants, the roar of traffic, all interspersed with cars honking as we hogged and clogged the street with bikes and scooters. There was none of that now, even though it was well into the afternoon and well after school being let out. I saw no one playing stoop ball or punch ball. No one “digging to China,” an engineering feat Bernie, Jacky and I once undertook in our backyard behind the neighboring Flatbush Church of Redeemer.

No one was trading baseball cards. No one was snapping Pez containers. Off Flatbush Avenue, the streets were nearly deserted.

What had happened to the cacophony of Hit Parade music that used to waft from windows and car radios, or the orphan sound of classical orchestral music that would drift down the street from time to time?

Of course, I knew my family was unlike others. I had been to the city many times. I had visited the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History. My clothes were purchased at Brooks Brothers. My toys came from F.A.O. Schwarz. But I really didn’t know how different until one afternoon when I heard the classical music and I walked by two men who were shaking their heads in disbelief. “Who’s that jerk playing that longhair music?” one man said to the other. Yes, in those days they actually said “longhair.” And, yes, the man they were talking about was my father.

Soon after, we moved. That was more than five decades ago. I now returned to reclaim my inner Brooklyn. Funny, I realized, I had never really lost it.
___________________________________
Carreño is a partner in the Philadelphia-based online bookshop @philabooks|booksellers (www.philabooks.webs.com), a former lecturer at the American University in London, and the author of Lord of Hosts: The Life of Sir Henry ‘Chips’ Channon.

 

Thursday, 8 March 2012

You Have a Problem With That?




Reclaiming My Inner Brooklyn
By Richard Carreño
[Writers Clearinghouse News Service]
New York
Every city kid, who has moved away, has an 'the old neighbourhood.'

Mine is Flatbush, a now vibrant ribbon of racial and ethnic diversity that cuts through the heartland of New York's most populous borough, Brooklyn. Until recently, it was also place and a bit of personal history that I long ignored, or, maybe, even longed to forget.

Increasingly, over the past few years, all that turned around, and in one of those marvellous contradictions that accompany age, reconnecting with Brooklyn now became a kind of longing. And that recently resulted -- after fifty-five years! -- in my first return to the old hood, centred around a patch just off Flatbush Avenue, East 22nd Street between Newkirk and Foster avenues. A change of heart? Certainly. An old man's sentimentality? Surely.

More important, after years of living elsewhere -- from the Bahamas, France, England, and, now, Philadelphia -- I was finally ready to join the ranks of countless others (many I had come to know in those other countries, as well) who realised that the roots of their identity (however shaped, massaged, and contrived in subsequent years) were born in the hardscrabble of their past. My denial, lodged on the more polished social and educational perches of my later years, where the fast-talking, wise-guy personae of a Jackie Gleason or a William Bendix character was hardly a beau ideal, slipped away as I grappled with my new-found identity as a Brooklynite.

Thanks to Bob Oppedisano, behind the wheel, my old Brooklyn almost immediately came into focus. We circled the imposing victory arch in Grand Army Plaza, which had been my first taste of martial triumphalism. (And, maybe, just maybe, apart from the the Paris version -- and, certainly, those others from Marseille to Philly -- still my favourite). Nearby was the Brooklyn Museum, the place of my first up-close and personal arts exposure, and where, as well, I heard full-orchestrated concert music for the first time. (My, my, to be able the play the kettle drum, I mused then. Never, ever in later years forgetting that lingering, fond notion).

Bob was in his element. He, too, was a Brooklynite, growing up in Carroll Gardens, and he tooled the streets with savvy aplomb. As we approached magnificent Ocean Parkway, the years were flipping back like one of those flash-back calendar scenes in a 40s movie. The gritty, cinder bridle path that once spoke of the elegance of the Parkway, a promenade that extended in its grandeur to Coney Island, was now paved. 'Long gone,' said Bob.

When Bob and I first met in in the 60s (both journalism undergraduates at New York University's Washington Square campus), I was then fashioning myself as a sort of ex-Parisian from Michigan. (This odd contortion of identity was dissembled from the tenuous trope that I had been living with my parents in France before a job transfer required my father to move to the Mid-West). At that point, Brooklyn still had no attraction. (Given my journalism proclivity, why I had never thought to align myself with the legendary historic spirit of Brooklyn Eagle reporter Walt Whitman or then-raging histrionic spirit of Norman Mailer mystifies me).

Flatbush was in sight as he turned onto Foster Avenue, heading east to Ocean Avenue and East 22nd Street.

I was struck that everything was 'smaller.' The distances, not as great. The buildings, not as towering.

Otherwise, the infrastructure was frozen in time.



My time was an almost eleven-year span from my birth in 1946 (at New York Hospital in the 'city,' as Manhattan was known then as well as now) to 1957. During that period, we Carreños lived en famille, in a rambling three-story, barn-like structure (3,110 square feet) at 593 East 22nd Street. It was one of five single-family houses on the east side of the street built just after the turn of the 20th century. Low-lying apartment houses lined the rest of the street.

One man's 'famille' is another man's 'clan.' Ours, by whatever rubric, was overseen by the family patriarch, my paternal grandfather Toribio, a tyrannical overlord of Spanish extraction who had immigrated from Cuba to New York in the 1920s. In sharp contrast to the taciturn Toribio, a tobacco-chewing ex-house painter and building super, was his younger wife, my grandmother, Maria Elena, who remains among the kindest, most forgiving, and compassionate individuals I have ever met.

Then there was the rest of us, and what an admixture! My father, Ralph (born Rafael), the youngest of three brothers. My mother Marion; my sister Roberta, born in 1956; and our dog Zippy, a black-and-white mutt. We inhabited No. 593's first floor. On the second floor, and later in a renovated attic, lived by my Uncle Andy (the middle brother), his wife Eda and my cousin James, known as J.J. I think my cousin Anita was born about then as well. In the attic's rear were my grandparents. Toribio and Elena's eldest son, Charles, or Charlie, was next door in another single-family house with his wife Thelma and my cousins Bernie and Mark. It would not be an over-statement to note that we were a tight family.


 In many ways, we also mirrored the ethnic mix of then-Flatbush, a largely working-class neighbourhood that harboured, harmoniously, a ethnic diversity that ranged from Roman Catholic Italians and Irish, to European Jews. (Flatbush Avenue at the time was a corridor of kosher delis, where my fondness for knish and pastrami was born). My mother was Jewish on her father's side. My Aunt Thelma, born in South Africa, was née Feinstein. My Aunt Eda was of Italian heritage, from upstate New York. My grandmother was a devout -- nay, slavish -- Catholic, and it was thanks to her that I received my religious training at Our Lady of Refuge, a stone, neo-Norman-like structure at the corner of Ocean and Foster avenues. (My grandmother converted her bedroom into a kind of chapel/shrine. I seem to remember that a dressing table also doubled as an alter. In other words, it was kind of scary).

Our Lady of Refuge was where I was also baptised, confirmed, celebrated my First Communion, and also where I developed my first anti-clerical animus. The church basement doubled as my Boy Scout meeting place and the venue where resident nuns would berate us if we did not leave room when seated for our guardian angels. Upstairs, in the 'telephone' booths of the sanctuary, the priests would berate us for any hiatus in their official mind-control system. (Woe to he who professed, 'Oh my father, my last confession was three weeks ago....' 'What!.... After the requisite tongue-lashing, being assigned to recite about five Hail Marys was getting off light).

My father was an atheist. So was Toribio and his other sons, as far as I could tell.

Parking nearby, Bob and I found our way to the church's office. 'Sorry, the sanctuary is closed,' we were politely, but firmly, told by the sexton, a middle-aged woman who spoke with a Caribbean lilt.

Like the church congregation, the neighbourhood itself now seemed mainly made up of coloured folk, of Jamaican descent. In other nearby parts of Ocean Avenue were Indian and Pakistani immigrants. As Bob and I later descended onto Flatbush Avenue, we discovered, here in the heart of the neighbourhood, the vibrancy of island culture. This, amid the hub-bub open-air markets, spotless streets, and jostling crowds. Some shops soldiered on with white owners. Others were converted to new uses. The old A&P, which Elena persisted in calling the 'Altantico y Pacifico,' is now the Homeplace Furniture store. (My friends and I used to, in the old A&P, return bottles we collected in alleys and byways in exchange for deposits). An ice-cream parlour at the corner of Newkirk and Flatbush was just a memory.

If anything, and to my astonishment, the neighbourhood seemed stable and approaching a middle-class status. Single-family houses go for almost $500,000.




East 22nd Street was how I remembered it. How could this be? Yet, there was the same alley (albeit narrower) where we used to play stickball. (I was always 'called' last, unless my cousin Bernie had a say). There was the corner where I scarred my right knee when I tripped on glass in a small dirt patch. (The scar is still there, and so, as I noticed, are some new shards of glass in the same dirt patch). The driveway, where my dad's DeSoto (boy, I loved that exterior spotlight) was parked. I looked up to the window of the apartment where a friend's mother offered me a cream cheese sandwich -- with olive bits. How exotic, I thought. Not far away were the bushes where I was thrown when I was thrashed by some boys after school. My first schoolboy fight. I lost.

Wearing short pants. Lending libraries. The BMT over the Brooklyn Bridge.

There was, of course, the street itself, which we would commandeer for ball games, and its inner sinews where, behind garbage cans and such, we'd duck out of sight for hide-and-seek. I could still hear Mrs. Kroberger calling -- more cackling -- from her apartment house window for our friend (her son) Buster to return home.

And, finally, the Ostrow house, next door to ours.

Mr. Ostrow was an officer in the Fire Department, and, to me, apparently because he served many nights away, a kind of vague figure. And menacing. This, despite our family being friendly with his, and his son, Jacky, being my best friend. When I broke a window in Mr.Ostrow's garage door with a arrow, flung innocently from my bow, I trembled in fear for what would happen when our neighbour returned. Nothing did.


The Ostrow house also housed our family GP, Dr. Landesberg. He also scared the bejesus out of me.

Still, for the most part, this was a place of joy. On summer nights we'd assemble on the front porch, the men, drinking beer and we, way past our bed-times, listening to the youthful happiness of our elders. The bounty of Christmas, again surrounded by family and extended family like the Salleses. Huge feasts, prepared by Toribio who fancied himself a chef extraordinaire. And Lionel trains. The big ones. In the winter, laughter emanated from a sitting room, where adults by night would weekly surround a new-fangled black-and-white television to tune to I Love Lucy. In front parlour was my dad's library, a hi-fi, and a party-line telephone (GE8-6524), where we'd receive the rare call when Ralph was travelling in South America on business.

Still, change was equally palpable.

My old elementary school, P.S. 152, housed in a French château-like structure on Glenwood Road, then, as now, akin to a suburban oasis, had been converted into P.S. 315, the School of the Performing Arts. It was there, when as P.S. 152, that my 4th grade teacher, Mrs. Eleanor Gochman, arranged that I'd be appointed a AAA monitor when I had been originally passed over. (That was important. Very important. My cousin Bernie was AAA, you see). P.S. 152 itself, I discovered, has been relocated nearby to a spiffy new, purpose-built building and dubbed as the 'School of Science & Technology.')

In addition, I detected an eerie silence. I remember constant shouting on our street, the rah-rah of ball-playing, opened fire hydrants, the roar of traffic, interspersed with cars honking as we hogged and clogged the street with bikes and scooters. There was none of that now, even though it was well into the afternoon and well after schools being let out. I saw no one playing stoop ball, as I had once long ago. There was no one playing punch ball. No one 'digging to China,' an engineering feat Bernie, Jacky, and and I once undertook in our backyard behind the neighbouring the Flatbush Church of Redeemer. (In the Lutheran church's basement I saw my first magic show).

No one was trading baseball cards. No one was snapping Pez containers. Off Flatbush Avenue, the streets were nearly deserted.

What had happened to the cacophony of Hit Parade music that used to waft from windows and car radios? Even, the orphan sound of classical orchestral music that would drift down the street from time to time?

Of course, I knew my family was unlike others. How exactly, I wasn't sure. Other than I had been to the the city many times. I had visited Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History. My clothes were purchased at Brooks Brothers, where the salesmen in the Madison Avenue shop knew my father by name. My toys came from F.A.O. Schwarz, the old one across from the Plaza. Small things. But I really didn't know how different until an afternoon when I heard the classical music and as I walked by two men who were shaking their heads in disbelief. 'Who's that jerk playing that long-hair music?' one man said to other. Yes, in those days they actually said 'long hair.' And, yes, the 'jerk' they were talking about my father.

Soon after, we moved. That was more than five decades years ago. I now returned to reclaim my inner-Brooklyn. Funny, I realised, I had never really lost it.

Post-Script
Not long after my family, including Zippy, moved to Nassau, the brothers sold No. 593, and Uncle Andy, Aunt Eda, J.J., and Anita moved to New Jersey. Toribio and Maria Elena moved with them. Uncle Charlie, Aunt Thelma, Bernie, and Mark moved, first, to an apartment on Ocean Parkway (with the slowest two-person elevator in the history of mankind, I remember) and later to an apartment on 15th Street, near Fifth Avenue, in the city; then to Long Island; and, finally, to Mexico City. After Toribio died in New Jersey, Maria Elena moved to Mexico, though she undertook extended trips to Europe to visit my parents from time to time. She died in Mexico City.

Charlie, Thelma, Ralph, and Marion have since died.


Andy and Eda now live near Atlanta, with their youngest, Andrea. Anita lives in New Jersey. J.J., in Washington state.

Bernie lives in Austin, Texas. Mark, in Los Angeles.

The Ostrow family moved to Florida, where Jacky still lives. (He's a Facebook friend).

I have no idea where Buster might be.

Zippy died in Nassau.

Thursday, 22 July 2010

Fly on the Wall

First wine at 10, En Route to Vin
Don Merlot's French Summer House
By Don Merlot
Junto Senior Staff Writer Bio
Early in my wine journey I found that enjoying wine is something very personal. Certain lessons from my parents and early mentors have a way of shaping and defining. My father said, “Tell me where you come from and I will tell you where you are going,” or “Tell me who your friends are and I will tell you who you are.”

I recall that my first taste of wine was during Thanksgiving and Christmas as I grew up in Mexico City, when I was 10. My father always received Christmas gifts from his customers that included bottles of wine that were saved for festive events.

We have all heard the story that the Turkey bird was Native American and almost became our national bird, but the bald eagle won out.

Growing up in Mexico City, the turkey was a special regional dish from Puebla when it was served as turkey and Molé Poblano (Molé from Puebla recipe – which is made with bitter chocolate, ground dried chillis and roasted ground peanuts – these ingredients that came from the Aztecs and are pre-Colombian).

The modern recipe was changed and made in its current style since 1860s when the French supported Maximilian II, Emperor of Mexico (he was from the house of Hapsburg) and came to Mexico to replace Benito Juarez.

I doubt if the royal court would have had wine, back then, but today one might try a Cream Sherry, or fine port with mole. My Mom was an Anglo Saxon and served it the American way: all the trimmings of a beautiful baked turkey, with Kansas bread stuffing, cranberry sauce, corn bread, mashed potatoes, calabacitas (small Mexican native zucchini’s that are fried in butter in a pan.)

A white wine was selected from the gift stash, and we all had a stem crystal glass of wine. As I look back and recall the tastes, there were three types we had:

The first one I identified was a fino sherry from Spain.

The second one I identified a sparkling white wine from Italy.

The last was a sparkling apple hard cider from Mexico (Puebla).

It was not until college that I experienced a wine on special nights. I attended Tulane in New Orleans, and the drinking age then was 18. Usually Bob Lightfoot, my roommate, found a favourite of his. He was Italian-American and knew much more than any of us. His special wine of choice was Mateus, a sparkling wine from Portugal.

This carried me to graduate school -– Thunderbird (or, known then as the American Institute for Foreign Trade) in Phoenix (Glendale now), Arizona, my wine knowledge was still in the novice category.

By the time I arrived at my first job at Whirlpool Corp., my first career mentors could begin to polish me. The view of red wine was Ralph Carreño (Bordeaux), John Steeb (Burgundy, Cote d’Or), Jerry Southland (Rhone), and Curt Klus (Bordeaux and Rioja). They all had a taste and a favourite that they wanted to bend me in their direction.

Martin Mak broke me in on white Sancerre (Sauvignon Blanc) in a Paris bistro, and my love for Chardonnay started with a trip to London and a visit to a fish restaurant to have grilled Dover sole off the bone swimming in English butter with a Mearsault.

John Husband was our English distributor for our refrigeration products. He was a military school-trained armoured cavalry officer who had been the wine steward at his school. He also shared his passion for Pommard with me. That day though I have never forgotten the taste of Chardonnay and Dover sole. There is a definite 'Je ne sais quoi' there!

So here I was learning about Old World wines by my New World mentors. When I got to do France in depth, I developed three French mentors who really set me straight on French wine. French wines from Bordeaux and Burgundy, because they are very best (and most expensive were shipped out of France to other European locations or to the USA).

In Paris, I was trained to go to bistros and order pichets of wine. (1/2 liter or 1 liter pichets). The French restaurateur was the expert of what wine went with his food. We are not talking of chefs with one, two or three stars, but we are talking of bistros with chefs who went to the vineyards and brought to their work the best matches to their menus. Back then that was the best formula.

My customers were a European group called Pernod S.A., who sold our ice makers to European restaurants that bought their liqueurs: Pastis, 51, Suze. My Paris contacts were Mon. Pierre Emié, the managing director of Pernod Equipement, Michel Julien, and Jean Tremellat.

Emié was, to me, was the ultimate European executive. He was a great leader and loved by his subordinates. During WW II, he was a French paratrooper –- equal to our airborne. There was no nonsense to him. He is memorable in my life of great men. He was from Charente, south of the Bordeaux area known as the Cognac region and was knowledgeable about Médoc in Bordeaux (famous for its Cabernet Sauvignon) which can age beyond 30 years because it has more tannin than most varietals.

He knew Bordeaux, Cognacs, and Armagnacs. His advice to me was to go to the French wine books that show the vineyards and identify the vineyards next to that premiere Crus and check them out. He proved to me that I could spend one tenth of the price buying next door to Pomerols such as Vieux Chateaux Certain. In the US, I could buy, back then, a bottle of Pomerol at $5.50 Compared to $100.00 today. He knew his Pomerols and Cabernet Sauvignons.

My friend Michel Julien was the Director of Sales for Pernod Equipmement, and he liked to be called Michael because Michel as Americans pronounced it sounded too feminine. He's today one of my best friends. He is without equal. He took me on my first trip to Burgundy in France.

My favourite story of our tour of the Cote d’Or was how one day at dusk we found ourselves, driving in his Deux Cheveux, in Gevrey-Chambertin. He told his wife that he was lost. I said we should go up to the next chateau (Chambertin) and take a left. He slammed on the breaks and stopped the car, and got out and yelled, “An American telling a Frenchman where to go in France. Impossible!” We all laughed. The wife, the dog, named Tupelo, and me. It sealed our friendship. Years later Michel enabled me to become a member of the Confrérie de Chevalier des Tastevin –- the world's premiere wine society.

Jean Tremellat was the Technical Director for Pernod Equipement, and he kept the Whirlpool ice makers running in Europe. He was the “noble sauvage” of my French connections. He could correct me without insulting me. He introduced me into the 'tu' form and made me a friend in France with the 'vous' form. He became my bon ami. He and Michael corrected my language and faux pas, and got me to the point where the French could not tell I was an American. He taught me how French think and how they see Americans.

My honour was that I became a Frenchman, one of them. Merci, mes amis, 'Jamais en vain, toujours en vin.'

Thursday, 17 June 2010

Fly on the Wall

Running with Wine:
'C'est la Vie'
By Don Merlot
Junto Staff Writer Bio
Learning about wine has always been exciting. It's an art form and process. You’re influenced by your own tastes, as well as those who teach you and relate their experiences. So in the late 1960s when I said I 'wanna' be an oenophile, give up beer and cocktails, and focus on vino and the wine culture, In Vino Veritas became my credo.

The little city of St. Joseph, in western Michigan, housed the executives of Whirlpool and Clark Equipment, many of whom knew something about wine, and the only shop we frequented was a little store called Lambrecht’s in St. Joseph. We learned quickly that every state controls its liquor, wine, and beer retail sales and wine wholesalers do not necessarily have the same selection in Michigan, Indiana, or in Illinois. This, no matter what the customer’s expectations are.

Lambrecht’s wine purveyors gave him good selection of French wines, and California was making a strong effort, but he could not carry wines that could not sell. In Michigan, I am sure the Eastern part of the state (Detroit) dictated what wines were to be carried. The wines we bought for entertaining would be a Bordeaux house called Prosper Vignal. I paid $1.79 for Médoc -– 14-ounce bottle.

My business contacts in France told tell me they could go to the vineyard and buy that type of Médoc for four francs. (Which in that era was about 75 cents). One of my French mentors, Pierre Emié, gave me a bottle from his cousin’s vineyard. Marcel Petit, and it would rival the better known known Bordeaux.

But my real lesson on buying wine started when my boss Ralph Carreño and I would visit New York to work with a company advertising agency. Before leaving for La Guardia, Ralph would take me to Sherry-Lehman’s, a true wine merchant and purveyor par excellence. Of course on my first visit I was dumbfounded. Luckily I met my next mentor, a Sherry-Lehman dealer, a Mr. Gelfand, who befriended me. Every time I visited he would walk me through the aisles, and asked me what I liked or what he thought I should try to learn more about wine.

Mr. Gelfand knew I liked red Burgundies, and he knew that I had fallen in love with Les Grands Echezeaux’s. But he was kind and took me through all of Burgundy Cote d’Or. From Fixin to Nuits St. Georges. St. Denis, the French Patron Saint of Wine, would have been proud. Each trip to visit with Gelfand led to buying a half a case of wine that was well packed and fit under the seat in front of me on the airplane.

I saved my Les Grands Echezeaux for very special personal occasions, and I opened up my mind to other Pinot Noir glories. Gelfand steered me to Clos de La Commaraine, Pommard: silky and velvety, the good Lord’s velvet trousers finding their way my gullet once again. He introduced me to a Burgundian orphan, Morey St. Denis. The king of red Burgundy was Chambertin, but this magnificent wine neighbor was relatively unknown outside of the Cote d’Or. Of course this became my Burgundy of choice if I could find it on a menu.

After I was corrupted on “the grape,” I had many colleagues in St. Joe join me in my quest for wine. They could not go to New York, nor could I carry back wines for them. My friend Tom Michel who has said I corrupted him on Burgundy agreed that we had to increase our wine purchase points to Chicago.

I found my next mentor there. We went to the House of Glunz on North Wells. In that period, in the late 60s, this area was in transition. This wine house had survived prohibition, and at that time it was a decaying neighborhood. It was like seeing a war zone from World War II.

Tom and I would make a wine run to Chicago. We would leave St. Joe by 9 am. Michigan is on Eastern Standard Time; Chicago, on Central time. The 90-mile journey took us about an hour. Speed limits were 70 miles per hour, and most cars could go 78 without being stopped. The only fear of being stopped was on the way back because the state patrol would confiscate the wine because we were taking the booty over state lines with paying state taxes. C’est la vie, if caught.

We would get to Glunz by 9:30 am and ring the door bell so that Old Man Glunz would let us in. We had to step over the drunks and derelicts wanting to get in to buy liquor, but had no money. There was a lot history here that went back before Prohibition. They imported under their own label wines form all over Europe. Glunz introduced us to Spanish Rioja, Manzanilla, Fino sherries, Italian Tuscan wines. He had a little tasting room within the store with old crystal, and we would sampled the special reserves that he had cellared. We did this wine run bimonthly and bought a case each time.

Glunz brought in my favorite Morey -- St.-Denis from Negociats a Beaune -– Caron Pere & Fils. We bought cases of that, and that became our entertainment wine for our French classic gourmet club. A case of 12 bottles would cost about $50. We eventually ran into the Grand Cru Classé, Clos des Lambrays. To connoisseurs, these are top red Burgundies, and I was able to find them before the prices skyrocketed.

We'd wrap up our tasting and purchasing about 11:30 and drive near Rush Street area and go to a Mexican restaurant called La Margarita. Mexican food was relatively unknown then, and this was pre-Chi Chi’s. I knew Mexican food, but my friends did not and I had to introduces them to picante food. Spicy food is picante, Hot food (stove hot) is caliente. We ordered Carne Asada (skirt steak) with poblano rajas, refried beans and an enchilada. This is Tampico style, not Tex Mex. Wed find ourselves back in St. Joe at by 5 pm. That is, if we idn't get nabbed by the state cops.

(Ron Alonzo writes under the name Don Merlot. His business beat is in South America and Canada, a reason he's hardly ever at his Florida home).