San Francisco

There are a few things you can learn from going to BFD, Live 105′s annual concert at Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View. Among these are that people will wait in huge lines to spin any prize wheel, it can take over an hour to ...
There are a few things you can learn from going to BFD, Live 105′s annual concert at Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View. Among these are that people will wait in huge lines to spin any prize wheel, it can take over an hour to go from the highway exit to a parking space, and there’s [...]The post Show Review: Live 105′s BFD at Shoreline Amphitheater, 5/19/2013 appeared first on Spinning Platters.
19 minutes ago
In a dangerous escalation of the global latte art movement, Osaka-based barista Kazuki Yamamoto has been perfecting a technique for making 3D latte art. The foamy milk sculptures take the form of animals and pop culture characters. For m...
In a dangerous escalation of the global latte art movement, Osaka-based barista Kazuki Yamamoto has been perfecting a technique for making 3D latte art. The foamy milk sculptures take the form of animals and pop culture characters. For more of his latte art, check out his Twitter media gallery. Baristas of America: this is not a drill. via Kotaku
35 minutes ago
In the interactive installation “Welcome Into The Future,” spectators use cube-shaped devices to control projections that are mapped on to two animal sculptures. A collaboration by Dutch design studios Sober Industries and St...
In the interactive installation “Welcome Into The Future,” spectators use cube-shaped devices to control projections that are mapped on to two animal sculptures. A collaboration by Dutch design studios Sober Industries and Studio Rewind, the installation was displayed at Rotterdamse Museumnacht in Rotterdam back in 2011. photo via Studio Rewind photo via Sober Industries photo via Sober Industries via Lustik
about 1 hour ago
In anticipation of the Webby Awards, comedian Patton Oswalt worked with Funny or Die to make “They Surf,” a parody of the sci-fi classic They Live where he “learns that the Internet is taking over the world” after...
In anticipation of the Webby Awards, comedian Patton Oswalt worked with Funny or Die to make “They Surf,” a parody of the sci-fi classic They Live where he “learns that the Internet is taking over the world” after “donning a pair of special sunglasses.” Oswalt is set to host the Webbys for the second consecutive year on May 21, 2013.
about 1 hour ago
Waller Street, 1927 / UC Berkeley, Bancroft Library This afternoon, the Board of Supervisors will begin considering whether the Duboce Park area should be declared the city’s 12th historic district. It’s the end of a proces...
Waller Street, 1927 / UC Berkeley, Bancroft Library This afternoon, the Board of Supervisors will begin considering whether the Duboce Park area should be declared the city’s 12th historic district. It’s the end of a process that began a couple of years ago and has seen a series of hearings, community meetings, and votes by various city departments. The proposed historic district would stretch from the northern boundary of Duboce Park to Waller Street, from Scott to Steiner. Properties in historic districts are subject to strict rules about changes which can be made to their exteriors, though they are also eligible for certain tax savings for such improvements. Last week, the Board’s Land Use Committee, which is comprised of Supervisors Scott Wiener, Jane Kim, and David Chiu, met to consider recommending the designation to the full Board. According to the official minutes, the Committee made a couple of minor amendments to the proposed ordinance, and then endorsed it unanimously. So now it’s up to the full Board. Supervisor Wiener tells us the legislation will have two votes before the Board — one today, and one in two weeks, on June 4th. Today’s meeting is at 2pm at City Hall, room 250. If the legislation passes, it will then go to the Mayor for the final sign-off. We’ll keep an eye on it, and will update accordingly.
about 1 hour ago
Illustrations by Lila Volkas (click on any image to view larger versions and activate slideshow) Last summer, as my daughter Lila unpacked on her return from another year of college in Canada and a stint WWOOFING on an organic farm, she ...
Illustrations by Lila Volkas (click on any image to view larger versions and activate slideshow) Last summer, as my daughter Lila unpacked on her return from another year of college in Canada and a stint WWOOFING on an organic farm, she plucked from her backpack a large Ziplock bag encasing a strange, slimy, dripping pancake and held it up to my face, declaring proudly, “Look at my baby!” I admit I recoiled with a gasp, as I managed, “What is that thing?” “Oh, Mom, “ sighed Lila, like it was so obvious, “That’s my Kombucha SCOBY!” Since I was uninitiated to the delights of the fermented, fizzy drink with a long history and the recent surge in popularity, Lila was eager to share her discovery from the organic farm of how easy (and cheap) it is to make your own kombucha with only water, tea and sugar. As we searched our shelves for a suitable jar and a cotton cloth, she raved about the health benefits (still in dispute) and how drinking some kombucha every day made her feel so good. After brewing a gallon of tea, adding a cup of sugar and letting it cool completely, I watched Lila pour the sweetened tea into our largest mason jar and gently place the slippery SCOBY (Symbiotic Colony Of Bacteria and Yeast) to float on top of the liquid. She covered the mouth of the jar with a cotton dishcloth and secured with a rubber band. “Now we just have to wait for seven days.” Decanting the bubbling golden brew a week later, I sipped the earthy tang of a zingy, apple cider. Maybe I’m suggestible, but after a small glass, I felt re-energized. A few weeks later, as Lila was packing for her job as an art instructor at a summer camp in Yosemite, she broke the news, “You’re going to have to take care of my SCOBYs while I’m gone for two months and whatever you do, don’t let them die!” As I surveyed the brood of SCOBYs (which, like rabbits, had multiplied and now occupied all of our glass pitchers) I was suddenly flooded with memories of the traumatic summer when I was nine and volunteered to feed my neighbor’s fish, while they were on vacation. One morning, to my horror, I discovered dead fishies floating atop a tank of black water. I don’t think my neighbors spoke to me again. Luckily, Lila left me with detailed drawings and instructions and all went well during her absence. Seems my maternal instincts are still intact. When she returned home, however, I pointed out a few worrisome threads hanging off the bottom of a SCOBY, but Lila reassured me they were a normal part of the yeast and not mold. Last September, as Lila packed to go back to school, she offered me my own SCOBY, but I declined, because of impending trips away from home. (I know now could have set up a SCOBY hotel) Meanwhile back at UBC in Vancouver, Lila became active in Sprouts, their volunteer-run, organic café and gave kombucha making workshops to curious Canadians, including lists of do’s and don’ts (e.g., only clean your bottles with hot water, never use soap). She had intentionally expanded her SCOBY family in the intervening months so she could give each of the 30 attendees their own baby SCOBY to take home. While she was away at school, I missed the bubbly, revitalizing beverage and tried store-bought kombucha but nothing hit the spot like Lila’s brew. Lila is back for the summer now and our fridge is once more full of her concoctions, this time, flavored with ginger and lemon or blueberries and chia seeds. Soon she’ll be leaving for her summer camp job and I’ll be in charge of the little rascals again. This time, I’m ready. Instead of regarding the jellyfish-like blobs with distaste, I now welcome them as a part of the family who inhabits half our pantry. And I thank my daughter for her willingness to let me mother her “kids.”
about 1 hour ago
San Francisco needs more rooftop bars. Medjool, the central Mission hotspot that closed last year, wasn't always the best ambassador, however. The very idea seemed to have gone before the NIMBY...
San Francisco needs more rooftop bars. Medjool, the central Mission hotspot that closed last year, wasn't always the best ambassador, however. The very idea seemed to have gone before the NIMBY...
about 2 hours ago
The wake of Monday's two-mile-wide tornado in Moore, Oklahoma -- a natural disaster that killed dozens and has been billed by some as "the worst tornado in the history of the world" -- caused harrowing destruction. Children have died, n...
The wake of Monday's two-mile-wide tornado in Moore, Oklahoma -- a natural disaster that killed dozens and has been billed by some as "the worst tornado in the history of the world" -- caused harrowing destruction. Children have died, neighborhoods razed, and lives all but ruined. You should really donate if you can. [ more › ]
about 2 hours ago
(By E. Chang) The Giants trip to Colorado and Toronto was as harrowing as a night out at Infusion Lounge. But this week, at home, promises to be better. Fingers crossed. [ more › ]
(By E. Chang) The Giants trip to Colorado and Toronto was as harrowing as a night out at Infusion Lounge. But this week, at home, promises to be better. Fingers crossed. [ more › ]
about 2 hours ago
[Photo via Curbed Flickr Pool/Justd0it] · Get to know a Mission Creek houseboat [NY Times] · Transit agency board to vote on Central Subway contract [SF Examiner] · Target opens a tech center in San Francisco [Racked SF] ...
[Photo via Curbed Flickr Pool/Justd0it] · Get to know a Mission Creek houseboat [NY Times] · Transit agency board to vote on Central Subway contract [SF Examiner] · Target opens a tech center in San Francisco [Racked SF] · New mural in the Upper Haight [uppercasing] · Revealed! What's happening to the former Bernal Heights Produce store on Cortland [Bernalwood]
about 2 hours ago