Category Archives: Staycations At Home

Ideas for things to do in and around the house to enjoy with your family and friends, with money-saving tips. The best staycations are at your doorstep.

“The Over The Hill Band” Playing This Week

The Over The Hill Band
The Sisters of Love

The Oscars are a great way for casual films buffs like me to hear about small indie and foreign films that don’t get a lot of publicity.  This week, one such film is playing at the Edina Theater.  It’s a film from Belgium called “The Over The Hill Band”.  It’s the story of a recently-widowed woman named Claire, aged 70, who has two sons.  The elder son, Miche, is the down-to-earth stalwart with a good job and a family.  The younger son, 40 year-old Sid, is the dreamer who has never held a steady job and aspires to be a pop musician.  He’s been living far away from home, but returns for their father’s funeral.  The family arguments return and the three part ways with all of their old wounds suitably renewed.

Sid from The Over The Hill Band
Sid

However, left to face her new life alone, Claire reaches out to her younger son.  She visits him for the first time, and asks to hear some of his music.  As you’d expect, Sid’s hard-core blend of rap and R&B isn’t really Claire’s cup of tea.  She and two friends used to have a girl group back in the day called “The Sisters of Love”.  But Claire’s affection for Sid and her desire to help him find his way through life inspires her to suggest that she get the girls back together and merge with Sid’s small band.  And so they create “The Over The Hill Band”.

 

The Over The Hill Band
The Over The Hill Band

Hearing these spry ladies speaking in Flemish, but singing in English certainly evokes the spirit of ABBA, and the story had me thinking of “Mama Mia” with Meryl Streep, Christine Baranski, Pierce Brosnan, and this year’s Best Actor winner Colin Firth.  The film has some good notices, including being an Official Selection into the Palm Springs Film Festival.  It’s struck me more than once how the teens of today share more musical roots with their parents than any time in the past 150 years, and this film brings that fact home.  Claire’s declaration that inside she still feels 17 years old struck a very familiar chord with me.  “The Over The Hill Band” is a touching story of how the Rock and Roll generation deals with aging in the modern world.   The film runs March 4th through the 9th at the Edina Theater near 50th and France in Edina.  There’s plenty of free parking in the area, and great restaurants close by, so it’s a great Twin Cities Staycation.  See the Edina Theater Website for tickets and showtimes.

Rediscovering An Old Treat – Popcorn!

The Minneapolis Tribune had a fun article in the Taste section this morning on popcorn.  Lee Svitak Dean told a story of how his mom used to pop popcorn on the stove and how sometimes his mom and dad would treat themselves to a bowl after the kids had gone to bed.  I’m sure I wasn’t alone in thinking that I could have written the same story.  About the only difference is that my mom used to pop popcorn in a covered Revere Ware frying pan instead of a Revere Ware pot that Lee’s mom used.  That Revere Ware was the cornerstone of my mom’s kitchen, and she took such good care of it that I inherited it along with the house more than 50 years since.  The copper bottoms are tarnished now because I rarely polish them, but I’ve taken a scouring pad to them occasionally just to see that copper glow.   Children being easily amused, I considered it a special treat to be allowed to shake the pan as the corn was popping.  I bet your kids would love it, too.

But Lee had a great point when he mentions how much better fresh popcorn is than the microwave packaged product.  Cheapskate that I am, I mostly prefer it because it’s cheaper, but I don’t think the cost makes a difference for most people – it’s the perceived convenience.  Oh, to be sure, microwave popcorn is easier to make and there’s no clean-up with it, but it’s so easy to make the fresh stuff that the usual time benefit of microwave cooking isn’t a factor.  Before the microwave version became such an American staple, there was a brief spate of popularity in hot air popcorn poppers in the 1970’s, as I recall.  They were table-top electric appliances that made popcorn, as the name implies, with hot air and so no oil was required, which appealed to those on a diet.  The downside was that the popcorn they made tasted like cardboard.  Of course, the manufacturer’s soon added a small reservoir for butter which would slowly melt over the popcorn – totally obliterating the caloric advantage.

My point here, and I do have one (as Ellen DeGeneres used to say), is to pass on a suggestion that Lee overlooked.  I was feeling adventurous a couple of years ago and decided to try to make my own kettle corn.  First, some background: I’ve always loved caramel corn since my first box of Cracker Jack.   And when I was still in grade school, my sister and I would sometimes go downtown to see a movie at the old State Theater on Hennepin Avenue or just to go shopping.  Yes, I’m that old. And around the corner on 7th Street there was a place called Karmel Korn where they made some wonderful stuff.  The obvious, of course, along with other flavored popcorn and bars of pure caramel wrapped in wax paper.  It was a toss-up for me whether their caramel bars or the bars of taffy at the concession stand at Lake Harriet were a better treat.  Also during my wayward youth, I worked at the Montgomery Ward’s store at Southtown in the Camera Department, which was located right next to the Candy Department where they made fresh caramel corn every night.  It was torture having the fragrance of fresh caramel corn waft over me every evening, and I would occasionally succumb to temptation and buy a bag only to be severely disappointed.  The reality of the wicked stuff they concocted never lived up to the promise of the perfume.  Anyway, always in need of a good treat, and having failed a few times in making my own caramel, I was inspired to give kettle corn a whirl.

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