Author Archives: pk

Following Up

Things seem back to normal now that the traveling has ceased.

Photos from San Diego and Spain are available for consumption on pk photo albums.

San Diego was very relaxing and incredibly beautiful. Wook and I drove up to Los Angeles to meet up with Mung. We later met up with John Jung on his turf in West Hollywood. “GAMeboy” – could you figure out what it means? KASCON21 workshop at UCSD went well, although we liked the Princeton audience and setup better.

Spain with Melanie was very pleasant, although Madrid could have been warmer. The city was a pretty and interesting place to walk around. I took the “company” Canon EOS 10D SLR camera and snapped away 800 shots, only to come up with a few dozen decent, non-blurry ones. Wook says he should’ve taught me to use F-stop. The food in Madrid wasn’t that great – not sure if my expectations were too high or we just didn’t know the best spots. Walking through the Prado Musuem with Mel was great. We saw El Greco, Velasquez, Reubens, and Goya among others, and I actually remembered studying a few of them during my few alert moments in Art Hum in college. The touristy highlight of the trip was our visit to Segovia, about 2 hours by Renfe train from Madrid. Segovia is a very old town situated high up in a mountainous region. It is know for the majestic Cathedral of Segovia, the castle Alcazar that inspired the Sleeping Beauty castle in Disneyland, and the Roman acqueducts that frame the entrance of the town. I must have mistakenly called Alcazar “Alcatraz” – how stupid.

I was very pleased to finish David Mamet’s On Directing Film and Ian McEwan’s Enduring Love on the plane ride back from Madrid. I highly recommend both – the first for its clarity and no-nonsense advice about storytelling through films and the latter for its high-intensity drama from start to finish – even more so than Atonement, I thought. Enduring Love was adapted into a movie that starred Daniel Craig (the new James Bond) as Joe, the science journalist who is the object of another man’s obsession. I am guessing that the movie didn’t stay completely loyal to the novel since Joe is described as very big, clumsy, and seriously balding.

And this past weekend was the return of Entourage on HBO. Brandon, Andy, Mel, and I celebrated with sam gyup ssal, beer, and lots of kimchi as we watched a brand new Sopranos and then the premiere of Entourage Season Three. Didn’t realize that its creator Doug Ellin was a Brit. The next several Sunday nights are booked – will keep travel limited for at least the next few months.

A List So I Can Remember How Time Flew By Recently

Hillman Curtis on Creating Short Films for the Web by Hillman Curtis (see his stuff here)
Puppies (cleaning poop and pee for five days)
Island Cafe & Lounge (two blocks from my apt.)
Peasant
Securing the blind emboss on biz cards
Meetings with clients in small diners/coffeeshops/Thai joints
Rats by Robert Sullivan
Kilian’s Irish Red
Trying to claim SkyMiles from Delta
Feeling special about a discount subscription rate from The New Yorker
Entering contacts into Highrise
This American Life, First Episode on Showtime
McSweeney’s No. 22 (magentic binding – cool)
The Believer 42nd Issue
Wondering when I’ll ever watch Flags of Our Fathers from Netflix, which has gathered dust for the past month.

Bonus – upcoming things that make me seem cosmopolitan:
San Diego for three nights to give a workshop at a conference
Madrid, Spain with a teacher on break for four nights
Taking days off to attend Tribeca Film Festival

Seventh Floor Exchange

Note: A juicy short story – sort of.

I think it first started the day she baked a cake and didn’t want it to go to waste. We lived across the hall from each other on the seventh floor of our apartment building.

She rang my doorbell and stood there holding a plate with a very large wedge of cake.

“Howdy neighbor, I made way too much and thought you’d like some,” she said. “It’s just butter pound cake with some nuts.”

I gratefully took the cake from her and said I’d return the plate promptly. The cake was moist and the nuts added extra flavor.

About a week later, I made too much shrimp fried rice, so I thought I’d ask if she had had dinner yet. I prepared a big bowl and garnished it with a lemon wedge and some cilantro and left it on my kitchen counter. I walked across the hall and rang her doorbell, empty-handed.

“Nope, haven’t eaten yet – I’d love to have some,” she said when I asked. I told her I’d be right back with her bowl. I returned and she received it with a big smile. “I’ll bring the bowl back when I’m done,” she said.

And without any deliberate attempt – at least for the first few weeks – we alternated cooking for each other. She made meatloaf. I made her penne a la vodka. She prepared teriyaki short ribs (very tender). I roasted chicken with garlic and herbs. She made me mac’n’cheese from scratch, using six different cheeses and small cubes of pancetta. The more times we went back and forth, the more elaborate the dishes became. I baked thin slices of salmon and wrapped them around grilled artichokes topped off with a lemon cream. She bought over a small bucket (no idea why she kept one) of steamed mussels in garlic and white wine sauce. I made pizza with fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, basil, and prosciutto, nicely spread over my thin handmade crust. She brought over a mini Peking duck kit with juicy boneless pieces, fresh flour wraps, and plenty of green onions and cucumbers. She admitted that the sauce was store-bought. The serving size could not have been more perfect – I finished every morsel without feeling too full.

Then one day, I decided to try one of my grandmother’s classic dishes – the sam-gye tang: steamed chicken stuffed with sticky rice, dates, chestnuts, garlic, and ginseng in a clear broth. I had to call my grandmother – still ripe and constantly cooking at 82 years old – for her exact recipe and ingredient amounts. I was a bit frustrated when she instructed me to “use my best judgement” for some of the seasoning, so I had to call my mom for more precise measurements. I found the all the ingredients in Koreatown and even stopped by Whole Foods to pick up an expensive, free-range chicken. I spent about a total of four hours making the dish, paying extremely close attention to the chicken, which I prayed wouldn’t overcook and become too tough. When I finally finished, I dumped the chicken and broth into a smaller, cuter pot and heated it a few minutes longer before taking it across the hallway. I also had with me a small Tupperware container of pickled daikon since I was unsure if she tolerated kimchi.

“Here you go – it’s a Korean classic. Hope you like it!” I said, handing the pot and Tupperware over to her.

“Wow this is a lot of food,” she said. “I might have to call Steve over to help me.”

“Yeah, it should be good for two servings – or dinner tonight and tomorrow,” I said. “Who’s Steve?”

“Oh, it’s my boyfriend,” she said. I thought I noticed a slight hint of regret in her eyes, as if she felt she had said too much. “That’s right, you guys haven’t met yet. I’ve been telling him so much about you and all your amazing dishes. I’ll be sure to introduce you two to each other the next time.”

“Great,” I said, forcing a girn. “Well, hope you guys enjoy!” I turned around and walked across back to my apartment, my appetite for my own serving of sam-gye tang completely obliterated. I stored it in the fridge for later and reached for the Heineken.

She returned the pot a few days later along with the Tupperware container. She told me she really liked the dish and asked if I could write down the recipe for her sometime. I told her I would. She said thanks and left.

The next week, she didn’t come. I made myself some Shin ramen with large chunks of Spam. I dropped two eggs into the pot after turning off the stove, letting them poach in the high-sodium soup. The next week, I switched to Neoguri ramen and decided not to use any Spam.

***

A month or so later, I ran to the elevator door as it was closing on the first floor. I got my hand in just in time, forcing the door to re-open. As I entered, I noticed her standing there with a tall guy. He seemed athletic and had a strong jaw and curly brown hair. His green eyes briefly met my eyes as I awkwardly stared at him for a moment. I heard her speak.

“Hey, haven’t seen you in a while,” she said good-naturedly, breaking the silence.

“How have you been?” I asked.

“Good,” she said. “Oh, this is my boyfriend Steve. Steve, this is Ryan, my neighbor across the hall.”

“Nice to meet you,” he said as we shook hands. “You’re quite a cook, aren’t you.” His palms were large and his grip was tight.

Before anything else could be said, we reached our floor. I let them out first and watched their backs, their hands linked together.

“Oh yeah,” I said loudly. She turned around sharply. “You guys should come over for dinner sometime. I’ve been itching to cook something fancy.”

She glanced over at Steve as if to communicate something by eye contact and then looked back at me. “Sure, we’ll definitely do that,” she said. We said bye, and I watched them go inside.

Back inside my place, I took out Spam and a big jar of kimchi. I didn’t feel like having ramen again. I washed some rice, turned on the rice-cooker, and waited patiently for the rice to finish cooking.