Mom’s Cannoli Yield: 24 Servings Shells: 3 Cups Flour 1/4 Teaspoon Cinnamon 3/4 Cup Dry Red Wine 2 Tablespoons Sugar 2 Tablespoons Shortening 2 Quarts Light Oil Mix flour, cinnamon, and sugar. Mix in shortening as you would mix for pie, making a crumbly mixture, then add wine slowly until a ball is formed. Knead […]
Meet Carmela, my Mom
Finally, I’ve posted some recipes from her cookbook—which is hot off the press ready to be distributed to her kinfolk and close friends. This is at her table in Annapolis, MD. One Saturday, four of us kids (Jim, Terry, Grace, moi) dropped in and as we sat on her patio she cooked up lunch, below, […]
Viva zapatos!
Just fooling around–this is not the whole collection. Tango shoe fetish -click here for a video
Alaska’s Chilkoot Trail
Gold! Gold! Gold! the headline goaded. A listless nation heeded, trading its financial doldrums for its well-worn frontier spirit. From all corners of North America, ordinary people turned toward the cold, dark, remote land that held the stuff of their dreams. Flatlanders mostly, they were in for a surprise when they reached the snowy granitic […]
Alaska in winter
Los Angeles Times – Alaska in winter Winter fun warms up visitors A spirited bachelor auction — combined with sublime scenery — helps December travelers chill out during a sojourn to the 49th state. By Camille Cusumano, Special to The Times Anchorage – Last December I stood on the deck of a lodge in Talkeetna, […]
Tango is Yoga
Appeared in the December 2006 issue of dancenotes Yoga’s secret ingredient for partner dancers By Camille Cusumano If you’ve ever felt that dancing tango requires the stamina of a martial artist, then you’re ready for Carmen Iglesias. A yoga teacher and tango dancer, Carmen has developed a program that supports the special demands of Argentine […]
Ruby Mountains
He told me his name was Johnny and he’d lived his whole life here, except for “the two years I gave to Uncle Sam.” I didn’t ask which two years. It was the lifetime in a place like Lamoille that brought my imagination to the brink.
Tango Under the Stars
Buenos Aires’s first annual tango in the streets took place Saturday, December 8, 2007, on Avenida de Mayo. Live orchestras played and live people danced. The event was a success. Two days later on the same street, Argentina’s first elected “Presidenta,” Christina Ferdinand Kirschner, took office from her husband, Nestor Kirschner. Some of these photos […]
Protected: A Family Reunion in Sicily
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
Savoring Patagonia
Dark peaks, many still cloaked in snow, rag the horizon. Besides the druid-like towers, a formation called the Cuernos del Paine rises above Lago Pehoé, one of many lakes we passed, whose waters seem to come in three shades—emerald, aquamarine, and sapphire. When the relentless wind blows, it’s a sight to see hundreds of frothy white caps stand up and dance on their rippling waters. wild hares browsing, and horses running loose from a nearby estancia. Milky Way achingly close. The sky is so dense with stars,
Heirloom Tomatoes in California
A love apple a day keeps the doctor away One tomato supplies 35 calories and almost half of your daily vitamin C requirement. Tomatoes are a source of vitamin A and the minerals iron and potassium. In 1995, Harvard researchers found a tomato-rich diet to be associated with decreased risk of prostate cancer-due, they believe, […]
In the Jungle, the Mayan Jungle
Belize’s unspoiled Caribbean shores teem with brilliant sea life. With its 180-mile-long barrier reef and 200-isle archipelago, the Central American country was bound to be a haven for pleasure-seekers.
Snorkeling in warm waters and baking on white-sand beaches sounds wonderful for two days. It wouldn’t raise my pulse for eight. Beyond its seacoast, lagoons, and mangrove swamp lies Belize’s broadleaf rainforest. Twisting paths are overgrown with vines, lianas, and strangler figs. Black orchids and bromeliads proliferate amid mahogany trees and cohune palms. Thousand-foot falls and smoky rivers score the jungled face of mountains. The air waxes with the primordial calls of birds, insects, and howler monkeys, and throughout the forest, dark caves and Mayan ruins wait to be explored.
Chile Chile Bang Bang
Southwestern staples include beans, corn, and . . . .chiles. By Camille Cusumano Originally published in Via Magazine. It struck me as fitting that New Mexico’s pueblo architecture would look hand-molded from a pile of refried frijoles. I was, after all, standing on the historic proving ground for Southwestern cooking, one of the country’s most […]
Protected: Las Garzas de San Blas
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
Yoga’s secret ingredient for tango and other partner dancers
If you’ve ever felt that dancing with a partner requires the stamina of a martial artist, then you’re ready for Carmen Iglesias. A yoga teacher and tango dancer, Carmen has developed a program that supports the special demands of Argentine tango-and, in essence, of all partner dancing. All ballroom dances require that the leader and […]
Sister Act
Sister Act appeared in Islands Magazine, 2001. I have connected deeply with my Sicilian roots through many visits to the old country over the past 24 years and it remains one of my abiding spiritual quests. For one trip to the island, I considered the novelty of sleeping in monasteries and convents—Italy’s monastic bed-and-board tradition […]
Gold Award, Pacific Asia Travel Association
1993 Gold Award, Pacific Asia Travel Association, Getting Hold of Big Sur (travel story in VIA)
Society of American Travel Writers Western Chapter
1999 Second place, Society of American Travel Writers Western Chapter, Hiking the Chilkoot (travel story in VIA)
James Jones First Novel Fellowship finalist
2000 James Jones First Novel Fellowship finalist for novel, The Last Cannoli, Legas, New York, 2000