Search
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
Close
Menu
Search
Close
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
Menu

LIZ HEATHER

January 1, 2024

December Dalliances 2023

by Liz Heather in Best of NYC, Family, Food, Movies, Personal, Products, Recipes, Television


Grand Central Station, December 2023

Grand Central Station, December 2023

Welcome to the last monthly post of the year! I would say that this felt like a fast year but truthfully it still feels like 2012 to me so my opinions might not be reality-based. Here’s what went down last month!

  • Here are the best tweets of the month.

  • The best Christmas tweets can be found over here.

  • I recapped how I did on my autumn list.

  • I wrote my winter list of things that I want to do.

  • I got drinks at The Peninsula, which was fun and Christmas-y but wildly overpriced.

With Diana at The Peninsula

  • Some of the department store windows in NYC this year were fantastic.

Saks Holiday Display, 2023

Rockefeller Tree, December 2023

The New York Public Library, December 2023

The NYPL Christmas Tree, December 2023

  • I made these espresso martini cookies and they were really good.

  • Nathan’s special was named Best YouTube Special of 2023 by The New York Times (!!!!!!!)

  • Finally got dinner at Mel’s (in the old Del Posto space) and it was good! But I never need to go again.

  • We’ve needed new pots and pans for over a decade, so it was immensely satisfying to buy this set from Wayfair.

  • I made this apple crumb cake over Christmas break and I didn’t try it (!), but it wasn’t a big hit since it was only half eaten by the time I left for New York so I should remember not to make this one again. (Also I never want to become the type of person who doesn’t eat the things she makes for others, it goes against everything I stand for??)

  • Speaking of Christmas food, so much was made!

    • Still obsessed with making homemade pizza with sausage and fennel.

    • Two charcuterie boards: I will forever add candy to these boards going forward. And I finally made the ricotta jam jar and it was a a big hit. Absolutely should be on all charcuterie boards at all times. (The tip I use to make this faster: make the tomato jam yourself, but absolutely buy jarred pesto.)

    • The mushroom loaf (that I learned about from this tweet) that I will absolutely make again, it was so good.

    • The leftover turkey sandwich: always a winner.

    • The Nutella cookies: always my favourite. Next year I won’t be so stingy with the amount of Nutella.

    • Made the spinach & artichoke puff pastry Christmas tree for the second time and I absolutely love this recipe. It’s delicious, beautiful and actually not difficult to make.

    • Not every recipe can be a winner, so the losers this year? The Christmas lunch roast beef sandwiches. The meat was overcooked and tough enough that it made me instantly decide to try a new lunch recipe next year. Also I’ve messed up shortbread on TWO different recipes this month. The Alison Roman ones I always make during the holidays AND a new recipe of chocolate pistachio shortbread cookies. Both doughs were beyond crumbly, and they just didn’t taste right. So I’ll need to take a long shortbread break.

Sausage & fennel pizza

Christmas tree charcuterie board

I’m still learning how to create a good board

Ricotta jam jar

Mushroom loaf

Leftover turkey sandwich

Nutella-stuffed cookies

Spinach & artichoke puff pastry Christmas tree

  • Obsessed with the Mighty Patch nose patches.

  • Some things I watched:

    • I started Office Christmas Party and stopped it after twenty minutes, it was so bad.

    • I finished The Crown. Oof. Other than the fact that this was, by far, the worst season of all - it really made me focus on what a terrible show it truly is and how thankful I am that it has ended. I hate that it was based on all of these real people, but so much of it is fiction. If the writers/creators would have just committed to either being fully truthful or fully fictitious then I wouldn’t be left with this feeling of disgust. There’s so much to complain about, but I’ll let it go because let’s just be glad it’s done. But really… the ghost of Diana? God, this series was sick.

  • The egg nog flavoured Greek yogurt at Trader Joe’s is spectacular.

Officially a nog head

  • We didn’t have the whole family together this Christmas (which never feels right), but we made the most of it.

Christmas kids!

  • Did my annual skating night with some close friends that truly heals us all, haha.

Buying skates at age 38 was the smartest decision I’ve made in my adult life

  • Nathan and I spent the past few days near Baltimore in Maryland and went to The B&O Railroad Museum (yes the B&O Railroad from Monopoly), which is a must-visit attraction if you’re nearby and then I had a great crab cake from Alexander’s Tavern.

Fun clouds make a photo a thousand times cooler

I told Nathan that one of his resolutions will (not “should”) be “take more photos of Liz.”

Fully regret not buying this shirt

Train museums are the best museums, fight me

Maryland crab cake!

Some things that I’m looking forward to this month: looking forward to seeing the Restaurant Week menus (it starts on January 16th), I’m going to start using this first-of-the-month checklist again and I’ll recap my resolutions from last year as well as make new 2024 ones.

If you have any interest in the other monthly roundups of 2023, they can be found here: November, October, September, August, July, June, May, April, March, February and January.

Baby Dog in slumber

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Liz Heather (@lizheather)

TAGS: December, December 2023, best of December 2023, December Dalliances 2023, Liz Heather, Grand Central Station, The Peninsula Hotel, Christmas in NYC, holiday windows NYC, Saks holiday display, Saks holiday display 2023, Rockefeller Christmas Tree, NYPL, New York Public Library, Christmas trees NYC, espresso martini cookies, Nathan Macintosh, New York Times, Mel's, pot set, Wayfair, apple crumb cake, Christmas recipes, mushroom loaf, homemade pizza, ricotta jam jar, leftover turkey sandwich, Nutella stuffed chocolate chip cookies, spinach and artichoke Christmas tree, upstate-style roast beef sandwiches, shortbread, chocolate pistachio shortbread cookies, charcuterie board, Mighty Patch, Office Christmas Party, The Crown, egg nog, egg nog Greek yogurt, skating, The B&O Railroad Museum, Alexander's Tavern, Baltimore, Maryland, crab cake Maryland, Baby Dog


November 22, 2021

Treasures Exhibit at The New York Public Library

by Liz Heather in Best of NYC


The exhibition takes place inside the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

The exhibition takes place inside the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

As far as I know, the NYPL has never had an exhibit like this one before. It showcases literary pieces from their world-renowned research collections - from a draft of the Declaration of Independence to the original Winnie-the-Pooh and Friends and more. Here are the coolest things that I saw.

This is Charles Dickens’s desk, writing slope, lamp, desk calendar, and chair (below). Fun Fact: “In the fall of 1940, the mayor of New York City, Fiorello La Guardia, was invited (or took it upon himself; we don’t know which) to sit in Dickens’s chair and see how it would have felt to have been the great author. Whereupon he broke right through the caning in the seat, and nobody has ever been allowed to sit in Dickens’s chair since that date.”

Charles Dickens’s desk, writing slope, lamp, desk calendar, and chair, Treasures Exhibition, NYPL, 2021

This is the 1623 first folio of William Shakespeare’s works. It’s just insanity to be able to this see this person.

The first folio of William Shakespeare, Treasures Exhibition, NYPL, 2021

This is Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Kanga, and Eeyore. Pooh was purchased at Harrods department store in London and given by A. A. Milne to his son Christopher Robin on his first birthday, August 21, 1921. The rest of the toys were received as gifts by Christopher Robin between 1920 and 1928.

Winnie the Pooh and his friends, Treasures Exhibition, NYPL, 2021

This is Arthur Rackham’s design for the cover of the original Cinderella in pen and ink with watercolor from 1919.

Arthur Rackham’s design for the original cover of Cinderella, Treasures Exhibition, NYPL, 2021

And this is Charles Dickens’s paper knife from 1862. It is made of ivory, a cat’s paw and metal. Evidently he was a dog lover, but his daughter Mamie persuaded him to let her keep a cat, Williamina, who later gave birth to a litter of kittens; all but one - Bob - were given away. Mamie related that “the master’s cat,” so called by the household servants for his devotion to Dickens, would “follow him about the garden like a dog, and sit with him while he wrote,” and even snuff out candles with his paw in a bid for attention. After Bob died, his paw was fashioned into this paper knife. It is likely that the paper knife was not actively used, and that it was regarded as a decorative tribute to a beloved pet.

Charles Dickens’s cat paw paper knife, Treasures Exhibition, NYPL, 2021

You should definitely take some time before or after your visit to walk around the library itself because it’s breathtaking. It’s been around for over a hundred years and it’s a miracle that it’s still so well preserved. It’ll always blow my mind that it’s free to see.

The details, my god

Whatever you do, look up when you’re inside the NYPL

There are other incredible things to be seen (Virginia Woolf’s walking stick - the one that was found near the water where she killed herself, the Bill of Rights, Thomas Jefferson’s handwritten copy of the Declaration of Independence, etc.) so you really should go take a look for yourself.

Tickets are completely free and can be reserved here for a timed entry.

TAGS: NYPL, New York Public Library, Treasures Exhibition, Treasures NYPL, best of NYC, NYC, things to do NYC, Liz Heather, Charles Dickens, New York City, Winnie the Pooh, Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson, Dickens desk, William Shakespeare, A.A. Milne, Christopher Robin, original Cinderella cover, Arthur Rackham, Charles Dickens cat paw paper knife, cat paw