
I am feelin’ this mocha biscuit cake, y’all. And I gotta tell ya: I have a soft spot for desserts that come together easily…and this dessert falls into that category.
As I’ve mentioned before, I live in the traffic-choked city of L.A. It’s a cool place, but it’s not perfect. For example, I don’t love trying to get on the 405, taking 45 minutes to get anywhere or screaming at idiots who think they own the road. Well, maybe I enjoy that last bit.
On occasion, I take the bus. How does that go? Well, we have a love-hate relationship, the bus and I.
I love that it’s cheap. I love that I can sit, relax and catch up on the latest from Karen at The Art of Doing Stuff. I love that I don’t have to pay for a wtf? $65 school parking permit. All I have to do is come up with a buck-fifty and enjoy the ride.
Newsflash!
Cheap-ass ride = colorful cast of characters. Here are a few of my favorites/not-so-favorites:
The Smoker: This gent pulled a bunch of papers from his pocket. I figured he was just getting rid of junk; but then he took a bank receipt and used it to create a makeshift holder for the tiniest spliff I’ve ever seen. Waste not, want not…I guess. It was all I could do to suppress my laughter and was nothing but smiles for the rest of the ride.
The Pet Lover: This chatty-Cathy sat next to me and asked her mom to put her puppy on the phone. She then proceeded to speak baby-talk to it for about 10 minutes. Hey man, I get it. Everyone loves their pets, but what’s with the baby-talk? On the phone? On the bus? Have you no shame? Apparently, not.
The Rastafarian: This guy sat down right next to me which was fine, until his stank wafted over. It was an incredibly offensive mix of chronic and ass. This one was partly my fault because if I know one thing it’s this, “Never sit at the back of the bus”. Sitting there is like asking for trouble….the extremely funky kind.
I could go on, but I won’t. You’re busy and so am I. So let’s take a break and make a baked potato for lunch. Strike that. Let’s make the perfect baked potato.
It used to be when I wanted to make a “baked” potato, I would stab it with a fork a bunch of times, put it in a plastic bag, and throw it in the microwave. The result would be mediocre at best. The ends would be hard and overcooked, the skin would be soggy, and the inside would have that undercooked crunch which no one desires.
Enter Alton Brown, who puts the potato directly on the rack and then walks away for an hour. No foil, no mess and definitely no microwave. The outside is salted and crispy. The inside is light and fluffy. It’s fantastic!
Now, then…are you ready for a perfect baked potato? Excellent. Let’s go buy a 5 lb bag along with all the fixins. I’m gonna take the bus. Does anyone care to join me?
Perfect Baked Potato recipe from Food Network
Check out Dave’s photography technique at Perfect Baked Potato Photo Shoot: Behind the Scenes.
If you’re tired of the same old impersonal snacks, then Boomf is the service for you. For the low price of $20, Boomf will print 9 of your favorite Instagram photos on Marshmallows. That’s right …. Marshmallows. The next time you want to relive great family memories, don’t reach for the photo albums, pull out the Marshmallows!
Photography isn’t as permanent as it used to be with services like Snapchat, but this takes things to a whole ‘nutha level. Forget about deleting photos, now you can eat photos.
Considering these are printed on food, I gotta say the demo’s look pretty good. But who cares, it’s a photo printed on a Marshmallow. Nobody is going to call Boomf and complain about their blacks dropping out.
Boomf is located in the UK, but they do ship worldwide. With Christmas around the corner, this could make the perfect gift for your favorite photographer.
I don’t know about you, but after checking out these photos, I never want to eat boring old Marshmallows again.
Happy All Things Thursday but it’s really Wednesday, Everybody!
Are you ready for I’m-About-To-Stuff-Myself-Into-A-Coma Thanksgiving Day? Well, if you’re not then put on those pants with the elastic waistband and you’re half-way there.
Alright then.
Just a quick note to let you know that we, here at I bake he shoots, will be on vacay for a minute; but we will still be busy. First, we will stuff our faces. Then, we will drink, drink, drink. Next, we will nap like there’s no tomorrow. And of course…repeat, repeat, repeat.
Please know that through it all, we will miss you and promise to return.
Peace and Blessings,
Mondo & David
P.S. This Thanksgiving we are thankful for your visits, comments and general hanging-around. And of course, cornbread.
One cannot think well, love well, sleep well if one has not dined well.
Virginia Woolf
I don’t think about death.
I mean…yes, I know we are all going to leave this earth at some point, but I don’t dwell on the subject. Rather than considering the afterlife, heaven or never-ending abyss, I ponder the meal which comes beforehand. My last indulgence which satisfies me wholly, as if to say:
My palate is at peace. I am sated and ready for my next adventure.
Let’s see. Now…I’m not sure what will be piled on my plate. Perhaps, a big bowl of Killer Cajun Shrimp or maybe a huge piece of Beatty’s Chocolate Cake. But if I know one thing, it’s this:
There. Will. Be. Cornbread. There will most definitely be classic cornbread.
When I write ‘classic cornbread’ I mean nothing super-fancy. For me there’s no need to throw fire-roasted corn kernels or Gruyere with minced shallots into the batter. It doesn’t need the aide of honey maple butter or cranberry pepper jelly. Ok…maybe the honey maple butter, but you get my point, right?
Honestly, I’d be delighted with just a chunk of cornbread, sweet butter and some strawberry preserves. After that, I’d be ready to walk into the light.
How about you? What will you have at your Last Supper?
Classic Cornbread recipe slightly adapted from food.com
by David
This was a busy day. It started with a family photo session and ended with insanely delicious cornbread. Mondo may be known as the “cookie lady,” but when I hear the cast iron skillet hit the stove, Mondo’s true talents come to light. This girl knows how to make classic cornbread.
Setting up the Shot
Most of the photography videos I watch online skip the metering and chimp their way to a good shot, but light meters are an essential tool in a commercial environment. The thing most people don’t understand is that meters aren’t about setting the shooting exposure, but instead, establishing ratios on the set.
When I shoot a model on a white background, I use an incident meter to set the background at two-thirds of a stop over the shooting exposure. This gives me a pure white background without blowing out the hair. This level of accuracy is mandatory for catalog work and impossible without a meter.
For the classic cornbread shoot, I wanted something dramatic with deep shadows so I went with a 1:4 lighting ratio. In other words, I setup the main light at f16 and the fill light at f8. I ended up setting the shooting exposure at f11, but it could have been a little more or less depending on how I wanted to render the highlights and shadows.
Of course, all of this is made possible by metering. Over the years, I’ve played around with various lighting ratios and typically know what I want before I shoot it.
The lighting
For the main light, I used a light panel placed 45 degrees and approximately 5 feet behind the shooting table. For fill, I decided to use a 60″ Softlighter directly behind the camera. This was used to lower contrast and provided a very even on-axis fill.
I typically place the light panel closer to the food, but I wanted the light to have a little “snap.” A lot of beginners assume that a light gets rougher when moved closer, but the opposite is true.
The character of light is determined by the size of the light relative to the subject. If the light is moved closer, it gets bigger and softly wraps around the subject. If it’s moved back, it gets smaller and creates hard crisp shadows.
Odds and Ends
Mirrors and fill cards are a big deal for food photographers. On the shot below, I wanted to have light scrape across the top of the food, but it was creating a very harsh shadow on the edge of the pan. I couldn’t add another light without killing the texture, so I bounced a little light into the shadow with a silver fill card. It was a perfect solution provided by a piece of scrap I found around the studio.
On this shot, everything looked great at first, but the surface of the knife and jam were lifeless. Unlike the cornbread, these were reflective objects, not textural objects. Reflective objects show dimension by mirroring the items around them. Instead of scraping light across the surface, I created reflective specularity on the top of the jam with a 10 degree gridspot. I then placed a white card over the knife so it would reflect the card of the black surface of the studio.
Wrap-up
By metering the set and understanding the nature of objects, I was able to do everything in-camera. Instead of chimping away and hoping for the best with the lighting, I did the work during the shoot and left with very little to do later. When I got home, I turned on the TV and watched Homeland instead of spending half my life in Photoshop.
All in all, a great shoot with a delicious meal at the end.
Technical
Camera: Nikon D90
Lens: Tamron 17-50mm 2.8
Strobes: White Lightning x1600
Tripod: Manfrotto
ISO: 200
Focal Length: 50mm
Shutter: 125
Aperture: f/11
Guess what I’m getting for Christmas? That’s right, a brand spankin’ new version of Photoshop CC bundled with Lightroom 5. Christmas came early this year when Adobe opened up the Photoshop Photography Program to everyone regardless of their previous purchasing history with Photoshop. (I was ineligible due to my older student and teacher edition) In simple terms, if you have a credit card and a connection to the internet, you can get Photoshop CC, Lightroom 5, Bridge, 20GB of cloud storage, and a Behance Prosite for $10 a month. Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy.
The catch is that it’s a one year subscription with an automatic renewal. Of course, a large swath of the Photoshop user community broke out the old Cry Face when Adobe switched over to a subscription based model, but this is actually an amazing deal. When I first heard about the switch, I was mad too, but then I remembered I’ve been getting ripped off by large corporations my whole life. Compared to the cable company and my cell phone provider, a $10 a month subscription is like getting wrapped in a warm blanket fresh out of the dryer.
A lot of sites have broken down the numbers, so I’ll skip the math lesson, but this is a reasonable price for a great product. Unlike Microsoft Word which is used at Gitmo to break terrorists when water-boarding is ineffective, Photoshop is an enormously capable program worth every penny. For the price of a medium pizza, you get a superior photo imaging bundle plus an online portfolio site combined with 20GB of storage.
I’m not a Pollyanna. I realize Adobe is a big ol’ monopoly stretching its muscles. Once you take the red pill, you’re in the Adobe subscription Matrix forever. If so inclined, they can arbitrarily raise the price and if you stop paying, you’re up the creek. Without a connection to big brother, your Photoshop files will be useless.
That being said, I’m ready to submit to my corporate Overlord. For 10 bucks a month, I get immediate access to all the latest features of programs I use every single day. Adobe isn’t reversing course and the price is never going to get better than this, so I’m all in …… and you should be too.