Shoulders, Knees, and Toes

Knits, Jeans, Shoes 2

Let’s pretend, for imagination’s sake, that I have an inspiration board at home. I don’t. But I love seeing others’ inspiration boards. Plus, isn’t that the general idea of Pinterest. I’ve gathered some knits, jeans, and footwear I’ve been eyeing these week here on my internet mood board.

Speaking of Pinterest, I have also added all of these lovely pieces to my Transitions– Winter to Spring 2016 board! I’ve linked it here on the page, and you can click the widget on my sidebar to be directed to my Pinterest page as well. So if you find it easier to look through your style inspiration there, right on!

I’m feeling all things knitted these days. Yes, it’s the cold temps. Yes, it’s my obsession with wool. (Pure cotton is wonderful, too.) Yes, it’s the way they lie against your skin and against a great pair of jeans.

The reality of these looks is that I’d love to take them all out for a spin!!! Happy Friday!

XX, Megan

Links Left to Right, Top to Bottom

1. Cashmere Turtleneck Sweater

2. Emma Legging Jeans in Black

3. Sway II Pointy Toe Pump

4. Handknit Cozy Turtleneck Sweater

5. Flea Market Flares

6. Jaeger Booties

7. Back-zip Sweater in Cable Stripe

8. Demi Boot Jeans in Essex Wash

9.  The Modern Point Loafer

10. Chunky Wool Wide Crew Neck

11. Slim Boy Jeans

12. Italian Ankle Wrap Sandal 

A Little Bit Audrey

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Here is a prime example of how style can make you feel… happy. I pulled this look together for an afternoon lunch date, and ended up calling my husband to see if we could photograph the evidence, I liked it that much.

It reminded me so much of Ms. Hepburn– Audrey. With her cigarette pants, simple tops, and a classic pair of flats. All classics. All staples. All perfect.

Yes, I liked it so much I had to do a couple spins just for the fun of it. Here’s to a wonderful day, and a wonderful end to your week!

XX, Megan

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Trench Coat: Banana Republic (past season, current seasonsimilar, similar, love this short version), Sweater: J.Crew, Pants: J.Crew, Flats: Cole Haan, Scarf: Vintage, Clutch: Old Navy, Sunglasses: Karen Walker Super Duper, Earrings: Vintage, Watch: Invicta, Bracelet: J.Crew (similar), Lips: MAC Pure Zen

 

Herbed Pork Loin Roll-ups

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My husband requested that I inform all of you, my faithful readership that “THIS is the BEST meal” we have ever eaten. I have to say, I agree!

Thank you The Scramble, thank you Aviva Goldfarb, and thank you to my sister and brother-in-law who introduced us to this indispensable meal planning service!!!

I’ve mentioned it before, and want to say again here that you can tweak this meal to YOUR OWN healthiness level as you prep. For example, the next time I make this recipe I am going to use half of the breading, and simple add more herbs to the tops of my roll-ups.

Maybe you need to go gluten free and choose brown rice or quinoa. Maybe you dislike dijon mustard or mustard in general. You could easily sub another dressing or flavor. Maybe you don’t eat pork and opt for chicken.

The Scramble helps you to honor all of these personal mealtime mantras, commitments, and needs. Plus, no matter what you do, if you follow the grocery list, and get your buns in gear you will come out the other side with a delicious home-cooked dinner for  your family.

Hooray!!

So here you have, THE BEST MEAL my husband has ever eaten. I’d love to hear how you like it!

XX, Megan

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Ingredients

1 Tbsp. butter or margarine
1 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup seasoned bread crumbs (use wheat/gluten-free if needed), or mix plain bread crumbs with 1/2 tsp. Italian seasoning and a little salt and pepper
1 – 1 1/2 lb. pork, turkey or chicken cutlets (thinly sliced meat)
2 Tbsp. Dijon mustard (use wheat/gluten-free if needed)
1 tsp. Italian seasoning blend, or use a mixture of oregano, thyme, dried basil and dried parsley
1/4 tsp. salt, or to taste
1/8 tsp. black pepper, or to taste
1/2 cup shredded mozzarella cheese, or use Swiss, Jarlsburg, or your favorite cheese
4 – 8 toothpicks

Directions

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a wide microwave-safe bowl, combine the butter and the oil and heat it in the microwave until the butter is melted. Put the bread crumbs on a small shallow plate.

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Lay the cutlets on a cutting board. Put the mustard in a small bowl, and using a pastry brush or the back of a spoon, spread the mustard evenly on the top side of each piece of meat. Sprinkle the herbs, salt and pepper evenly over the mustard, and sprinkle about 1 Tbsp. cheese on top of each cutlet. Roll up each cutlet and secure it with 1 or 2 toothpicks.

Dip each roll into the butter-oil mixture, then into the bread crumbs to coat it. Set the rolls on a baking sheet or dish, drizzle them with any remaining butter and oil, and spray the tops with nonstick cooking spray (use butter flavor, if you have it). Bake them for about 30 minutes until they are cooked through and lightly browned on the outsides. (Meanwhile, prepare the buckwheat and the kale, if you are serving them.) Serve it immediately.

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*The Scramble is a meal planning service to which you can subscribe here. For a fantastic price you will receive 8 weekly meals which means 8 recipes (main course plus a side dish), complete grocery list, the ability to tweak the number of people you are making for, and full nutrition facts.

PLUS tips as to how best to PREP your meal beforehand, add a punch of FLAVOR, and how to SLOW COOK almost every recipe if you’re especially slammed that night. This wonderful service really does live up to it’s name. You can come home at 6 p.m. and be sitting down to a DELICIOUS, HEALTHY, HOME COOKED meal by 6:30-7:00 p.m. most nights.

Monochrome

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The key to dressing like you live in L.A. while actually living in the mountains in the dead of winter is this– jump into your car to go snap a photo, jump out of your car and snap the photo, jump back into your car.

There. Now you know my dirty little secret. The reality is that every outfit can be made climate appropriate. If I were really going to wear this in my day-to-day I’d add a black fur snood, some low black ankle booties, or ever some sleek leather driving gloves. Wha-la! Cold weather approved!

Black and white are coming back strong for Resort 2016 (as if they every left a carefully curated wardrobe, ha!), so get ready to pull out your monochromatic separates and make them into fantastic blanc on black outfit options!

XX, Megan

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Jacket: Zara (old, similar, save, splurge, fun), Shirt: J.Crew, Pants: J.Crew, Shoes: J.Crew (similar, similar, save, splurge), Sunglasses: Ray-ban, Bag: Old Navy, Necklace: Aldo, Earrings: Aldo, Watch: Belle & Ross, Lips: Nars Lip Gloss Orgasm

Letters: To Marilyn Sandpearl

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Dear Mrs. Sandpearl, (to my fifth grade self Ms. Finder),

You are the Miss Honey to my Matilda, the Annie Sullivan to my Hellen Keller, the Caroline Duggan to my Keltic Dreams Bronx-school-kid dancing fifth grade self. I don’t pretend to be the exceptional powerhouses some of these students were, but I was a little girl growing up in a small town with big hopes and dreams.

That self, that ten-year-old girl, that geeky stretch pant wearing, terrible perm-frizzed hair and buck teeth sporting girl still exists. She is me. I am her. We are all our small selves. Grown and learning– we hope– but somehow still the same. Your impact is carried in me, with me to this very day.

I am not alone in this, Mrs. Sandpearl. You have touched hundreds, probably THOUSANDS of kids with your love of learning, your vigor and lust for life, with your energy and care for your students. With your commitment to perfect cursive handwriting, and mad tap-dance skills atop desks from West to East, you awakened an entire generation to the joy of learning.

You taught us to thirst after knowledge and to look for learning opportunities in every aspect of our lives–inside and outside the classroom. You read to us from wonderful books and required us to apply our learning through projects and papers that cemented this link between learning and living for all of our lives.

Your attitude toward mastery, education, and learning was and is contagious. I would guess that your positive teaching mantras not only uplift and enlighten your students, but your fellow faculty members and the other staff at the schools you’ve worked with, as well.

I have come to believe that I, WE, you– the whole world really– ARE ONLY AS GOOD AS OUR TEACHERS. We are only as STRONG, INTELLIGENT, ENLIGHTENED, and INSPIRED as the ones whose job it is to pass that torch on every day in classrooms around the world.

I had an interesting exchange with a nurse-friend of mine, recently. This friend is STRONG, she is TOUGH. She is a marathoner, a kidney cancer survivor, a mom of three boys (like you), a compassionate and caring caregiver to those who she has ministered to in her chosen career of nursing.

I’ve always known that I didn’t have the STONES for the medical profession. I didn’t have it for the blood, the other bodily fluids, the stress of caring for someone’s needs in the most critical times of their life, the LONG hours and the low(er) pay (at least for many nurses I find this to be the case).

I was telling my friend how much I admired the work that she did, day in and day out. Taking the utmost care of the human race must be hard. I told her that I could never be a nurse. I didn’t have the courage, or the presence of mind, or the physical will.

I told her that someday, if life allowed, I wanted to be a teacher. She said to me, “I could never be a teacher. That is the hardest, most important job that anyone can have.” I was shocked. To put it lightly.

I was surprised because this woman in a profession that I know I could never sustain, never succeed in, a profession I admire and respect very much, was telling me that TEACHERS had all of her admiration and respect. TEACHING was a job she knew that she didn’t have the moxie for, and she honored everyone who chose that career.

I’m not a teacher, yet. So I can’t speak to the long hours, low pay, and skewed curriculum that teachers face day in and day out. But I can speak to YOU, Mrs. Sandpearl. I can say that I’ve watched you– up close as your student, and from far away as you’ve continued in teaching– and I know that YOU MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE.

You don’t simply have the opportunity to change and shape lives every day as every teacher does who steps into a classroom five or six days a week. YOU DO change and shape lives every day (let alone the lives of your incredible sons). You shaped those lives in a rural cow town in the middle-of-nowhere Utah then, and you shape those lives in a metropolitan contiguity of Boston now.

I honor you. I honor what you do. I pray that you won’t ever stop doing it. I pray that others will follow after you. I hope that Teachers will continue to recognize and embrace the power and opportunity they are given every. single. day.

Thank you.

Love, Megan