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an everyday life

Category Archives: Mesta Park

Saturday in the Park

26 Saturday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, Mesta Park

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Tags

Everyday Life, Mesta Festa, Mesta Park, Oklahoma Gardening

Mesta Park is all ready for guests to descend for a Saturday in the park, even if my Mesta Festa Chili never made it off the page onto the stove.  

It was just too lovely yesterday to spend the day cooking in front of a stove.  There’ll be many other cold and wet days ahead for that.  And what gardener can resist being outside on such a perfect gardening day as yesterday?   Instead of cooking, I opted to play in the dirt and the new garden beds next door are beginning to take shape.  And then I went to Lowes for the umpteenth time this week — a girl and her neighbors can never had too many perennials at half-price — and then I enjoyed a nice visit with the neighbors.  And after all of these pleasures, I went to bed.  And I went to sleep  as soon as my head hit pillow, full of that good tired soreness.  

My neighbor who lives right next door to Cinderella —  the one who invited me to come up with a list of garden plants for his new front garden landscape —  came over while I was working.  He was checking in for plant recommendations; and with only a small amount of embarassament, I showed him my choices with actual plant specimens.  Yep.  I confess that I bought plants for this nice man too without even being commissioned to do so.  Balloon flowers and Homestead Verbena and Black Blue Salvia and Russian Sage — all blues and purples and it’s going to be lovely in front of his orange shaded brick home.  And thankfully, my neighbor was as pleased as punch with my plant selections.  And had he not been, I would have planted these purplish blue flowers either at Cinderella or given them to Sis.  I can always count on Christi  — who I’ve baptised St. Francis of Rock Creek — to adopt any stray, whether it be plant or animal. 

Today promises to be just as lovely as yesterday.  And again, I’m taking a day off from the kitchen stove.  Lunch will be at Mesta Festa where I’m hoping to grab one or two Big Truck Tacos.  And then tonight we’ll head to Norman for this month’s installment of our family’s moveable feast.  It’s Amy’s turn to host and she is sacrificing her Saturday to the kitchen stove out of love for Bryan’s family — and my husband and I, as I suspect all the rest of our tribe (as all have sent in their positive RSVPs), are looking forward to tonight’s feast and games.   It’s the best of both worlds — home cooking in someone else’s home  — with a slice of Amy’s home-made carrot cake to tip the scales in Amy’s favor.    

From Festa to feast, and all the errands in between, today is shaping up to be full of good things.  Let us rejoice and be glad in it.

Mesta Festa Chili

25 Friday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home, Mesta Park

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Chili, Mesta Festa, Mesta Park, Perle Mesta

Tomorrow is Mesta Festa.  And everyone near and far is invited to come to the neighborhood’s biggest party of the year, held each September in Mesta Park.

My husband and I have lived in this old neighborhood for three years now.  And not only is this the first time I’m planning to attend, I’m even thinking about entering the chili contest, using a modified version of my friend Cindi’s recipe.  And though I may not have a prayer of winning, it will be fun to play.

Appropriately, our lucky winner will receive a $100 dinner for two at Skirvin Hotel’s Park Avenue Grill; I write appropriately, because Bill Skirvin was Perle Mesta’s father and Perle is the namesake of our lovely old neighborhood.  The Skirvins onced lived in a stately mansion over on 16th Street and Lee.  And if you happen to come tomorrow or otherwise drop by the neighborhood, the mansion is definitely worth seeing; but since it’s a private residence, you’ll be limited to the outside view.

Mesta Festa features live music and delicious foods served by local neighborhood restaurants — Big Truck Tacos, The Prohbition Restaurant and McNellies.  And for $12, one can purchase a refillable cup to use for all the beer and wine tastings.  The weather promises to be gorgeous, and the front yards of  neighborhood homes are getting in the spirit of fall, as a few are already dressed for the annual Halloween Contest.

Meet me in Mesta Park —  located off Shartel Avenue between 18th and 19th streets —  between Noon and 5 pm tomorrow.

And if you’re unable to make the party, here’s the chili recipe for your own private festa.  From my life to yours.

Chili

2 lbs extra-lean ground beef
3 garlic cloves minced
1 large onion chopped
2 Tbsp olive oil
 
In a large skillet, sauté onion in olive oil over medium-low heat until softened, about 5 mins.  Add minced garlic and ground beef.  Cook until brown.  Drain off any excess fat.
 
In a large soup pot, combine:
 
Cooked meat mixture
1 can of favorite beans (pinto, ranch, kidney undrained, with or without jalapeno)
2 cups water
3 cans tomato sauce (24 oz. total)
2 Tbsp chili powder
2 tsp garlic salt
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp black pepper
2 tsp cumin
Pinch of Allspice
1/2 tsp red pepper (reduce or eliminate for less spicy chili )
 
Simmer over low heat uncovered for one hour, stirring occasionally.  Adjust salt seasoning to taste prior to serving.  The chili can be eaten straight-up or over corn chips and topped with chopped green onions and grated cheddar cheese.
 
 
 
 

Chasing Fireflies

13 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Mesta Park, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Everyday Life, Fireflies, Heritage Hills, Mesta Park, Oklahoma City, Overholser Mansion

Once upon a time, attending a local firefly dance was as easy as taking a few steps into a warm summer’s evening.   fireflyjarAnd in this old neighborhood where I am grateful to live, the grandest dance of all  took place on the grounds of the Overholser Mansion.

The many keepers of Oklahoma City history record that the Overholser’s were known for their grand and gracious entertaining.  Going even further, some say that Henry and the lovely young Anna were the hub of early Oklahoma City’s high society.

Henry was one of the first to purchase property  in the subdivision north of downtown, that is now the heart of the historic preservation district of Heritage Hills.  The story is fondly told of how Henry purchased three residential lots, which bordered Hudson Avenue and Northwest Fifteenth Street, when the land was nothing more than a cornfield.

Henry’s cornfield cum mansion grounds reminds me of another cornfield cum baseball diamond and that mysterious whisper that repeatedly urged…

…”If you build it, he will come.”

As the story was told on the silver screen, the cornfield cut diamond went on to host the ghosts of some famous boys of summers past, most notably “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and his teammates who were caught up in 1919 World Series “Black Sox Scandal.”

overholserThe Overholser Mansion is not host to any scandals of note, though apparently the Mansion is  no stranger to ghosts.  With more than a few reports of paranormal activity floating on the Internet these days, who knows but that maybe Henry heard his own mysterious voice while looking across his own field of dreams; for sooner rather than later, this “Father of Oklahoma City” built his dream mansion…and the invited citizens of Oklahoma City came.

In the book, Oklahoma City, Land Run to Statehood, one local historian notes that,

“Mrs. Overholser gave her first party in 1904 to 400 lucky guests. The Times-Journal society column reported that as guests entered the home, they were greeted by a string quartet playing on the second floor turret landing, hidden by a blanket of palm and fern.”

firefly

It’s been two dry summers since I last attended a firefly dance at the Overholsers, though not for wont of trying.  Many evenings I have put on tennis shoes for a short walk down Hudson Avenue, hopeful of crashing headlong into a firefly ball.

Previous rendezvous have taught me that these shy little social-lights never gathered on the front lawn proper.  Rather the fireflies gravitate to the east side-yard,blog_DSC01705a where they danced above dusk-tinted lawn between an old Model “T” clothes line and the tree-lined sidewalk.

Like a curious child chasing fireflies, I used the net to discover where the fireflies have flown.   The answers I caught at firefly.org knocked me for a loop though;  unless something changes their fate, these charming bugs of summer will soon be ghosts; or in the words of the website, “glowing, glowing, gone.”  Just as sad for this drylocked Oklahoma gal is to know that fireflies prefer life in the warm humid wetlands, the sort of place where tall grass hits water.

Our typical carefully groomed neighborhood lawns, along with other regions of Oklahoma, must have resembled a wetland two years ago, as our rainy month of June left us with non-mowable yards wallowing in standing water.  But it’s interesting that with so many neighborhood wetland yards to choose from, the Overholser place still held a monopoly on firefly dances.

Blog_DSC01713aAnd why not?  There’s simply no better place in the neighborhood to gather than this place that has long been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  And just as fireflies are anything but a typical guest of an Oklahoma summer, the Overholser place is anything but a typical house museum.  As noted by the Heritage Hills website,

“The Overholser Mansion still contains all of the original furnishings and belongings of the Overholser family, making it one of the rarest house museums in the world. The silverware, dishes, drapes, carpets, furniture – even little Henry Ione Overholser’s doll collection and other toys remain with the home providing a rare snapshot of life at the turn of the 20th Century.

Though I didn’t know it at the time, the Overhoser’s firefly dances of 2007 provided me with “a rare snapshot” of summertime life in Oklahoma.  That little bit of white magic on a former Oklahoma cornfield was something infinitely precious, and though blind, I now see it was a bit of amazing grace served up by a rare summer monsoon followed by a little firefly chaser.

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