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Downtown Public Art Photo Hunt

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Some days, I find myself with a few extra minutes between meetings, or just end up taking the long way on my walk home from work. When I’m wandering (especially when I’ve nowhere else to be right afterward) I often come across something I’ve never noticed before. The last time I was out, I snapped a few photos, all downtown, of some great public art - can you guess where they were taken? Leave your guesses as a comment below.

Photo Essay: A Walk Through Victorian Village

Friday, February 17th, 2012

It’s amazing what you notice when you’re not in a hurry. I took a stroll during a foggy afternoon last week around Victorian Village, just north of Goodale Park. This neighborhood is full of beautiful homes, in a stunning variety of architectural styles, but as the neighborhood’s name suggests, Victorian homes abound. Where’s your favorite place for an aimless stroll in Columbus?

Victorian Village

Victorian Village

Victorian Village

Victorian Village

Why Breakfast in Columbus is Worthy of Celebration

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

This post is written by Nick Dekker, author of Breakfast With Nick and blogger at BreakfastWithNick.com . You can follow Nick on Twitter @BreakfastWNick .

This week Columbus is celebrating 200 years of, well, being Columbus. The festivities are taking on many forms – parties, conferences, speeches, sales – and they’re focused on every aspect of life in central Ohio, from the arts and sports to education, city design, and yes, food. These are going to be busy days ahead. Make sure you start by celebrating with a breakfast that represents Columbus. What have we got? Well…

1. We’ve got traditions.
Every corner of Columbus, every neighborhood, every suburb, and every district has at least one old diner tucked away behind an unassuming storefront. These little treasures are a true measure of community: regulars gather day after day and year after year to eat the same dishes and meet the same people. Sitting at the counter in many of these establishments, you’ll see décor that hasn’t changed over the decades.

Daybreak Diner

Diners can serve you classic plates like scrambled eggs, bacon, and pancakes, but they can surprise you with creative signature dishes. Fitzy’s Old Fashioned Diner in Worthington, for instance, mounds plates of bologna and eggs. Bill at Daybreak Diner in Linden whips up breakfast bowls with fried rice, cheddar, and sausage gravy. DK Diner does biscuits and gravy and breakfast sandwiches while serving up some of the city’s best donuts. If you want to mix a little Ohio State in your traditions, order up buttery, chocolaty Buckeye pancakes at Jack and Benny’s near campus.

2. We’ve got innovation.
Columbus’ dining scene has garnered increasing national attention over recent years, as food and travel writers from around the country discover everything from our markets to our cafes to our ice cream. Time and again we see these writers delightfully surprised by what they find. Once thinking of Columbus as a cowtown, they’ve uncovered a vibrant and creative restaurant culture in which chefs innovate with seasonal ingredients and international cuisines.

Skillet

The one-room Skillet in German Village changes their weekend brunch menu based on what’s available from local farms and producers. In the fall, when the apples are ripe, Kevin and Patrick serve a warm breakfast risotto topped with seared honeycrisp apples. In Harrison West, the kitchen at Katalina’s Café Corner adds a Latin flair to popular breakfast items, allowing diners to munch on pancake balls filled with Nutella, breakfast tacos, or spicy Mexican French toast. Downtown, the brightly colored Market 65 serves breakfast wraps filled with cheese and vegetables all sourced within Ohio. They pair well with locally roasted coffee and pastries made by Columbus bakeries.

3. We’ve got variety.
Columbus is an expert at the American breakfast, to be sure, but our morning scene showcases our diverse population, too. You could spend weeks making a breakfast trip around the world just by charting out the four corners of our city. Cuco’s Taqueria in Upper Arlington starts the day early with moyetes, grilled French bread with chorizo, cheese, and beans, or the nuevo amaneser, with fried eggs and salsa on tostadas. Just a little further north on Bethel Road, Thang Nguyen welcomes customers to Lac Viet with steaming bowls of phò, porridge with rice and coconut milk, and sweet potatoes laced with cumin.

African Paradise

Along Morse Road, quickly becoming a destination for ethnic eats, African Paradise represents Columbus’ large Somali population with dishes like foul, a mix of fava beans and vegetables, and chicken suqaar. The suqaar, which means grilled, combines chicken with peppers, onions, and tomatoes in a flavorful sauce. The meal is traditionally eaten by taking pieces of jibati or anjero bread and scooping up bites. On weekends, you can sample Chinese brunch – dim sum – at Sunflower Chinese Restaurant & Lounge in Dublin. Go with a group and try a variety of small plates, all served tableside on carts, from steamed dumplings to rice noodles and even fried chicken feet. Even a somewhat traditional diner like Starliner Diner in Hilliard spices up their menu with Mexican and Cuban favorites like chilaquiles, huevos rancheros, and Cuban French toast.

As we celebrate Columbus’ past and its future, take a morning or two to share a meal with friends and family at any of these Columbus eateries.

Shadowbox Live: America’s Largest Resident Theater Company

Monday, February 13th, 2012

It’s been a great year for Shadowbox Live ! They opened their new digs in the Brewery District, put on some truly remarkable performances, and gave the neighborhood a new spot for some lively refreshments with the Backstage Bistro.

Shadowbox Live

If you haven’t been to a performance (shame!) or to one in their new digs, you’ve got a lot of choices in front of you. If you have limited time, Shadowbox’s Lunchbox performances on Thursdays and Fridays are a great introduction into their repertoire - 45 minutes of energetic live music and some "best hits" sketch comedy - all while you eat lunch.

Shadowbox Live

This month, Rent is a featured production, and Wednesdays are Blues Nights. Their original sketch comedy and rock and roll performance, Body Language is a critical delight that can be caught Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays this month.

Shadowbox Live

The Backstage Bistro is a great new addition to the Brewery District dining scene, offering coffee and pastries along with stiffer drinks later in the day.

What’s the best performance you’ve seen at Shadowbox?

Click NOW for your Valentine!

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

This post is written by Tim Simeone, Visitor Services Specialist for Experience Columbus. You can follow Tim on Twitter @TimSimeone .

It’s coming! This post is not early, it’s right on time. The last thing you want to do when making your significant other feel special is run out the day before and grab something from CVS on the way home from work. Those types of Valentines are not very special and lack the personal touch your loved one deserves. Here are some ideas and links so you can take care of this now, and not be rushed.

If your lady or gentleman enjoys decadent pastries, Sugardaddy’s is the way to go. This Valentine’s Day they are offering their brownie bark, which is a layer of brownie and then a layer of chocolate over top with a candied heart garnish. They are also offering a cute sock monkey in their wrapping. This choice turns out to be cute and delicious.

Sugardaddy's

If your Valentine has gluten allergy, Cherbourg Bakery in Bexley, will be offering gluten-free Valentine’s day cookies and cakes and they will deliver them downtown. The surprise at the office is the way to go. Make your Valentine blush and make others wish you were there’s.

If you are looking for the one two punch of baked goods and flowers call up, Columbus florist, Desantis . They have a number of beautiful Valentine’s Day arrangements and they deliver as well. These flowers would pair nicely with the above pastries. Pick arrangements online as well.

Looking for a one of a kind Valentine? Make one over at Igloo Letterpress ! They have several creative designs and ones that you won’t find at your local drug store.

Sugardaddy's

These are great options for the day of but if you really want to wow your valentine, book a Columbus Food Adventures tour. The gift of quality time over food is romantic, delicious, and thanks to Bethia’s wealth of knowledge, informative. If your sweetheart loves sweets, CFA offers a dessert tour. Plan a dinner and then taste your way through Columbus’ desserts.

After you do all this, go to CVS and watch the panic of others while you remain rest assured that you made your Valentine feel special.

Last Chance - Caravaggio at the Columbus Museum of Art Closes Feb. 12

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

This post is written by Jennifer Poleon, Digital Communications Manager for the Columbus Museum of Art. You can follow the Museum on Twitter @ColumbusMuseum .

In honor of the Columbus Bicentennial and our relationship with our sister city Genoa, Italy, our exclusive Caravaggio: Behold the Man exhibition featuring the Ecce Homo painting remains on view through February 12, 2012 . This is your last week to take advantage of this rare opportunity to see the Italian master’s work up close. Caravaggio’s works are quite rare, as in his short life the Italian master only painted about 80 known works. Our Curator of European Art Dominique Vasseur reflects back on what it’s been like to host such an important exhibition.

Caravaggio: Behold the Man

As Curator of European Art, what are two of the most exciting things about having the Ecce Homo in Columbus?
The opportunity to host an internationally-known painting by Caravaggio from Genoa, our sister city, and the ability to share with our visitors this artist’s amazing impact upon European painting in the early 17th century.

The exhibition has attracted everyone from young art students to clergy members. What is it about Caravaggio that appeals to such a wide audience?
Caravaggio’s realism and ability to address the human condition are as true today as during his lifetime. Students may be drawn to the immediacy of his painting technique, as well as, the stories of his turbulent life. Members of the clergy—both Catholic and Protestant—are likely moved by the poignancy of this important moment in Christ’s passion and the sensitive manner in which Caravaggio depicts it.

What is the most memorable moment of the exhibition for you?
There are many actually, but I have to share my top four: my November 2010 meeting in Genoa with the director of the Musei di Strada Nuova to see and discuss the Caravaggio; the morning of Sunday, October 16, 2011, when we un-crated and installed the Ecce Homo here; our Media/VIP preview the evening of October 19, which was a great success; and finally the lecture presented here on November 12 by Italian scholar Lorenzo Pericolo, who had just published an important and scholarly book on Caravaggio. In it he thoroughly discusses the Ecce Homo and presents several fascinating new theories about the unusual figure of Pontius Pilate.

What about the exhibition were you most proud of?
I am very proud that Columbus was able to organize this special, focus exhibition as a way to begin our 2012 Columbus bicentennial celebrations, as well as the fact that all the major art museums in Ohio (Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton, Oberlin, and Toledo) so generously lent Caravaggesque works to support the thesis of the exhibition: “the impact of a revolutionary realist.” It was immensely gratifying.

Columbus’ 200th Birthday is Feb. 14!

Tuesday, February 7th, 2012

It’s been called the must-attend party of the year, and there are a lot of reasons to join in the fun!  Presented by Grange Insurance , 200Columbus, The Bicentennial Birthday will be a night full of the people, places, tastes and sounds that have made Columbus the unique gem of a city it is.

The Bicentennial Band (click here for a quick video of a recent practice session) led by MoJoFlo and Conspiracy, and including more than 200 members will provide renditions of great original music. Specially crafted Bicentennial cocktails, made with locally produced Watershed Distillery vodka and gin, will be served alongside five-star food.

An amazing 225 feet of 200Columbus cake will be served in style only fit for Columbus, created by Columbus State Community College Major Baking and Pastry Arts Program. This is definitely something not to miss! Bobby Floyd and Shadowbox Cabaret will offer performances, and there will be plenty of special surprises along the way. For more information and to buy tickets, click here .

If this party doesn’t sound like your cup of tea, don’t worry! There are a lot of other ways to celebrate Columbus’ birthday, both this weekend and throughout the year. Visit 200Columbus.com to find the full list of events, projects and celebrations that are starting Columbus off on it’s next 200 years of success!

Starting Feb. 11 and running through Feb. 15, attractions, entertainment, shops and restaurants around the city are offering deals and discounts to anyone who wants to explore the city (just bring a flier with you.) Visit 200ColumbusDays.com for more information and to print your flier or save it to your mobile device.

Columbus Rocks…Creatively

Monday, February 6th, 2012

This post is written by Tim Simeone, Visitor Services Specialist for Experience Columbus. You can follow Tim on Twitter @TimSimeone .

My wife and I stumbled upon Elijah Aaron, local musician, at one of the Short North Gallery Hops . He performs in front of his father’s cartoon shop, Palnik Studios at 14 E. Lincoln. His most recent song called “The Buckeye City,” commemorates the city’s bicentennial. You can listen to it here .

Elijah Aaron

When asked about the process of writing his latest song, The Buckeye City, he said “Every songwriter would agree that occasionally there is a song that just flows out without any effort. The Buckeye City was one of those songs.”

The song plays like a tour of Columbus mentioning some great attractions and several neighborhoods. Though it is Elijah’s personal experience of Columbus, it is still one that locals could relate to and visitors could appreciate. Aaron recruited his whole family towards the end of the song, “The singing of O-H-I-O at the end was sung by my brother, sister, girlfriend, and father.” The creativity runs in the family.

Aaron grew up in Bexley, went to school in Boston, and performed his music in St. Louis and throughout the Midwest. He has most recently moved back to Columbus. On why he returned to his home town he said, “Columbus has a lively arts community and I am discovering its vitality daily. Columbus rocks creatively…that is why I came back.”

Elijah didn’t start out playing the guitar. He studied world percussion while in Boston and trained with Jamey Haddad, Paul Simon’s lead percussionist. He is currently playing percussion for Columbus’ BalletMet and OSU Dance Department, “I love the energy of dance and really get into accompanying modern dance.” Aaron’s talent with his guitar and percussion are what make his music so unique and masterful.

When he’s not playing music all around town he likes to visit German Village . “It’s a fascinating place to wander around in,” he says. He also enjoys the Columbus Museum of Art , the Zoo , and he will “never turn down a trip to the North Market .”

We play his music and other local Columbus musicians in our Visitor Center downtown. If you want to see Elijah perform check out his website at www.elijahaaron.com .

Celebrate at Camelot Cellars!

Friday, February 3rd, 2012
Camelot Cellars

Columbus is known far and wide for our local brews and spirits - but did you know there are also lots of great wineries around the city? One fun choice for a night out, right in the heart of the Short North Arts District, is Camelot Cellars . Camelot is celebrating it’s one-year anniversary of being back under local management. In the past year, the whole storefront has been transformed into a casual yet sophisticated space to enjoy the award-winning wine, conversation, and maybe do some people watching along High Street. Camelot also give guest the chance to make their own wine!

Camelot Cellars

Camelot is celebrating its anniversary 7-10 p.m., Feb. 8 , with complimentary appetizers, $2 off all glasses of wine, gift bags from local Short North businesses, and chance to win a $200 gift certificate towards crafting your very own wine at Camelot Cellars. So stop in, have a glass of wine, enjoy some great company and toast to the success of this great local business!

For more inspiration on the local drinks scene, check out our Pinterest Board: Columbus Drinks .

Camelot Cellars

Win Tickets to Thurber House’s Evenings with Authors, Featuring Tim Dorsey

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

This post is written by Megumi Robinson of Geben Communication.

It’s no secret that Central Ohio isn’t the warmest place to be in February, so Thurber House , a nonprofit literary museum and center located in the former home of writer and cartoonist James Thurber, is bringing warmth and sunshine to Columbus through New York Times bestselling author Tim Dorsey .

Tom Dorsey, credit: Jannie Dorsey

On Feb. 22, Thurber House’s Evenings with Authors series welcomes Dorsey as he shares from his newest book, Pineapple Grenade, set in sunny Miami, Fla. His fifteenth novel features Serge Storms, the hero of Dorsey’s stories, and the series of events he finds himself in including getting involved with Homeland Security, umbrella drinks, a dictator, murder and madcap adventure. The reading begins at 7:30 p.m. and is at the Columbus Museum of Art . (Click here for more details.)

We’re giving you the chance win a pair of tickets to hear Tim share from his hilarious new novel, ask questions and meet and greet with him after the event during a book signing.

Here’s how to win: Leave a comment below, or tweet at us (@ExpCols ) with the best book you’ve read this winter to be entered to win a pair of tickets to Evenings with Authors featuring Tim Dorsey. All entries must be posted by Thursday, Feb. 9 . One entry per person, please. We’ll randomly select the winners and notify you if you’ve won by Feb. 10.

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