The rather common plug has a face-lift

We live in an age where mobile phones, lap tops and tablets are now slimmer and sleeker than ever.  And this makes transporting them from A to B simply joyous.  Except that, more often than not, they need charging as you go.  Enter the heavy, antiquated, chunky power plug.  Remaining unchanged since the Second World War, it scratches everything else in your handbag or bulks out any laptop bag.  In short, we are screaming out for an updated, slicker version of the common plug.

the Mu plug

So… imagine how much I squealed with delight as the Mu folding plug, designed by South Korean born Min-Kyu Choi, landed on my desk.  A graduate of London’s Royal College of Art, this genius has shrunk the regular 4.5cm plug to a 1cm flat-pack contraption.  To clarify, his Mu plug features a patented swivel mechanism allowing the three pins of the plug to fold away.

But I am, of course, not the first to praise Choi’s innovation.  The Mu Folding Plug has won numerous design awards including the Design Museum, James Dyson and Wallpaper, when the iconic magazine immediately rejoiced in the new world of non-scratching, cumbersome plugs.

Now, who said a plug couldn’t be sexy?

COMPETITION:  Retailing at £25 from www.themu.co.uk, I have managed to get hold of 5 Mu folding plugs* for LifeOfYablon readers.  All you need to do is email emmaparlons@googlemail.com stating which country Min-Kyo Choi was born.  Competition ends Tuesday 17th July 2012.

 

*USB adapters for universal smartphones

 follow @yablon to find out the winners of this competition…

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under fabulous finds, prizes, shopping

from rags to Glyndebourne

the grounds of Glyndebourne

I reckon that there is a little bit of Cinderella in every one of us girls.  If it isn’t the rags to couture dream transformation, it might be the handsome prince, the true love or maybe even the feeling of revenge.  It’s the fairytale which goes on and on pleasing.  And that just about sums up our afternoon and evening at Glyndebourne last Friday; it was utterly pleasing.

Glyndebourne was founded by John Christie and his opera singer wife, Audrey Mildmay, in 1934.  With a mission to make opera more popular in the UK, they decided to build, in the grounds of their home, a 300-seat theatre fully fitted with an orchestra pit and stage as well as proper technical and lighting equipment.

And so the Glyndebourne Opera Festival was born.  Now, more than 150,000 music lovers enjoy the 120 live performances between May and August each year – and many more watch the operas at their local cinema via the recently launched Glyndebourne on Screen programme.

Cinders in Suzannah

The opera He had chosen for us and our accompanying Canadian London-living opera-obsessed friends:  La Cenerentola (Cinderalla) by Rossini.  It has been said, slightly insultingly by those more knowledgeable about opera than me, that Rossini’s La Cenerentola is for half wits.  The composer has taken the simple tale and has over-exaggerated the cliff hangers and good-reigning-over-evil moments.  Yet, I must admit, as an opera-ignorant, this Peter Hall revival (last seen in 2005) certainly entertained me in its suitably light-hearted fashion. Although I must admit that Elizabeth DeShong’s characterisation of Cinders did need a little imagination at times.  But overall, I felt that Rossini’s take on the fairytale mixes the right amount of slapstick comedy with magical enchantment.

I have fond memories, as a child, of my parents dressing in black tie at midday and swanning off with their opera-loving friends.  And then, when Little Bro and I were considered culturally worthy (the tickets are not cheap), we were bundled into the car, dressed in our Sunday Best, to make the long journey to Lewes in East Sussex.

In keeping with the Cinderella theme, I needed a dress.  And who better to be my fairy godmother than the very talented British dress designer and stylist, Suzannah.  Knowing that we would be not only training to Lewes but also picnicking on the lawn, I was keen to wear something really comfortable yet suitably elegant.  Her 30s Vintage Racing Heart Print Silk Tea Dress fitted the bill perfectly.  And I left her boutique on Bristol Gardens, Maida Vale, fully inspired by the 1930s design (and also thrilled as this would echo the era Glyndebourne first opened its curtains), and skipped off to have my hair ‘fixed’ appropriately.

As is customary, the 90-minute interval at 7pm (the performance begins at 530pm) allows the finest picnics to commence in the breath-taking grounds of Glyndebourne.  Many set up tables and chairs on the lawn – and some even bring butlers so that the occasion is as perfect as a fairytale.

Although I didn’t need a coach nor six white horses, we were still lacking our dinner.  As if by magic, in stepped the grocery shop and kitchen, Melrose and Morganwith two cool bags, masquerading as hampers.  They were packed full of pies, cheese, fresh bread, hummus and crudités, homemade pear piccalilli and summer Pimms jelly with strawberries.  The food was unbelievably fresh, superbly packed and very tasty.  Fit for a prince and his merry picnickers, there was no stomach rumbling during the remaining opera.

Needless to say, we were home before the clock struck twelve.

I saw La Cenerentola at www.glyndebourne.com 01273 813813 tickets start from £75.  Only until 10th July. 

I wore www.suzannah.com ‘s 30s Vintage Racing Heart Print Silk Tea Dress 020 72868280 £395

I ate www.melroseandmorgan.com ‘s picnic for two 020 7722 0011 £44.95

 

 

This article also appears on Culture Compass.

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under fabulous finds, friends, him, music

Friends with Kids – selfish? us?

I should be straight with you; my motivation for seeing Friends with Kids last night was Jon Hamm.  I have a very weird relationship with him, where he is not Jon Hamm at all.  He is Don Draper from Mad Men; the man I could never marry.  He’s my ‘one person’ (if you ever play that game?  His is Cat Deeley).

So, accompanied by My Blonde, we headed for the plush seats (and honeycomb bites) at the Everyman Belsize Park for an evening of smokin’ Don.  Incase you have missed the hype, actress Jennifer Westfeldt (Jon Hamm’s long term girlfriend) makes her debut as writer and director of this relationship comedy.  In short, two best friends observe their closest friends have babies and how this affects their relationship.  Conscious of ticking body clocks, they agree to have a baby together, before dating others and finding their ‘one person’.

Of course it ends in tears, and not just the baby’s.  But I have to admit the strained relationships, the selfish parent reactions and the change of family dynamic made me properly laugh out loud.  It made me wonder: why is it so funny to see a mirror image of your domestic situation played out on the big screen?  Tragic as we feel sometimes, I suppose it’s good to know that we’re not alone in dealing with our ‘new lives’.

But I’m afraid I didn’t laugh all the way through the film.  I cringed and checked my Blackberry a little while I waited for the Happy Ever After moment.

Friends With Kids (15) is out now.

 

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under film

sharing nicely at Kopapa

I am trying to remember if there was a time when restaurants didn’t offer a menu of sharing plates?   If so, I honestly can’t remember it.  In particular, sharing plates of ‘fusion cuisine’ – which seem to have become a culinary fashion staple.  Perhaps it’s the little black dress equivalent for foodies….

arriving on tuk tuk

With guests of honour in town from Iowa City (Little Bro and his equivalent-professor wife), I was under pressure to find somewhere alternative, quirky and, of course, delicious for them to review with Him and me.  Their dining schedule for the week already resembled a Time Out guide as they caught up with old friends and extended family.  The pressure was on.

Having recently spotted the Kiwi maestro, Peter Gordon (spatula in hand) at the Marylebone Summer Fayre, I was reminded that the very popular Providores is not his only outlet.  60-seater restaurant café, Kopapa opened its doors at Covent Garden’s Seven Dials at the end of 2010 and was still very much on my hit list.

As pseudo tourists, we arrived by hilarious tuk-tuk and, taking our seats by the window, immediately perused the drinks menu.  Always one for a cocktail, I opted for a curiously-sounding wasabitini (£9.50), while the others, gasping for a perfect white, choose the Pegasus Bay (£37.50).  Neither disappointed and both made ordering even easier.  The menu at Kopapa is precisely detailed.  It needs to be as the food is a gastronomic explosion.  If I write that our taste buds were stimulated, you will all laugh.  But, in truth, they were.  To list the ingredients of everything we tried would leave me with a review looking more like a pretentious shopping list.

duck spring rolls

Among our sharing plate favourites were salt cod fritters (£5.50), miso asparagus with fennel salad (£8.20), spring rolls of duck, feta and guindilla chillies with tamarind aioli (£8.10) and buffalo mozzarella with tomato salad, mint and black vinegar Medjool dates (£7.20).  We also consumed a fabulous sharing platter of grilled chorizo, pickled cucumber, hummus, olive, Manchego cheese, babaganoush (£10.50)… need I go on?

If you pushed me to find a negative, the slightly soft pickled cucumber would have got it in the neck.  Others might have added that Kopapa’s casual café interior doesn’t do the gastronomic experience any favours.  Personally, I loved the low key feel and would describe it as edgy and cool while also slightly eccentric.

homemade biscuits and chocolates

I had been tipped off by a fellow food lover to save room for the plate of homemade biscuits and chocolates (£6.50) and, although I hadn’t, I managed admirably.  The transatlantic catch-up had been fueled by an onslaught of small sharing plates of utterly mind-blowing food.

 

The only issue has been that we had had to share them.

Kopapa, 32-34 Monmouth Street, Seven Dials, Covent Garden, London WC2

 

This article appeared on Culture Compass where I love to review food….

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under fabulous finds, food