2022年8月10日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

A hot dog candle, a Cotswolds retreat — and more.

Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we share things we're eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday. And you can always reach us at tlist@nytimes.com.

VISIT THIS

A Sustainable Getaway in the Cotswolds

The high ceilings of a suite at the Fox in the English Cotswolds display its original 19th-century beams. The handmade wooden four-poster bed was specially commissioned by artisans in Gloucestershire.Martin Morrell

By Tilly Macalister-Smith

T Contributor

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Last month, the English Cotswolds welcomed another pub hotel, the Fox, which, fittingly, is the sister property of the Wild Rabbit, a traditional country inn in Kingham. Both are owned by the Bamford family, which also operates nearby Daylesford Organic Farm and the accompanying groceries and cafe outposts across London. The new six-room spot is set in a 19th-century building nestled on the bend of the high street in Lower Oddington, a postcard-pretty parish three miles northwest of Kingham and a mile west of the farm. For its renovation, Carole Bamford adopted a "zero to landfill" policy, meaning she partnered with suppliers that recycle any waste produced by their work, and the hotel itself will run entirely on renewable energy. Local sheep, including her own Lleyn flock, provided wool used for insulation, and for the mattresses. She enlisted local craftspeople from Gloucestershire to create the four-poster beds and comfy armchairs, and rounded things out with antiques sourced from across England and Wales. Finally, there is a rooftop garden that's been planted with British wildflowers and annuals to create an abundant paradise for bees and butterflies — and with herbs for the chef Alan Gleeson's pub menu, which includes wood-roasted violet artichokes with salsa verde and Aperol spritz jelly with raspberries. Guests at the Fox, like those at the Wild Rabbit, can book appointments at the famed Bamford Wellness Spa, which is housed in a white barn at Daylesford and offers treatments and wellness classes. And who wouldn't want to finish a day spent ambling around the countryside with a massage? Rooms from around $275 (breakfast included), thefoxatoddington.com.

BUY THIS

Laundry Detergent That's Easy on the Skin

Left: Dirty Labs detergent in Free & Clear, $14, dirtylabs.com. Right: Laverée detergent in Wind, $45, and stain remover, $36, laveree.com.Courtesy of the brands

After the Seoul-based entrepreneur and fashion designer Jong Min Baek had her first child in 2019, she searched extensively for a detergent gentle enough for newborns. Whatever she found, however, left her doing separate loads, as there wasn't anything that was mild enough for her daughter yet effective enough for her own clothes. So she started developing her own detergent, Laverée ($9-$45), which she launched this spring after over a year of research. It's free of toxic dyes, endocrine disrupters and skin-irritating enzymes, and is packaged in recycled-plastic bottles. There's an unscented version for those also looking to avoid fragrance. Otherwise, try the Forest formula, which was inspired by Seattle, where Laverée is made, and has notes of cypress. For another gentle but capable option, try the Laundress's new Summer Fridays offering ($25), which is dermatologist tested and free of petroleum, phthalates and parabens — and smells of oak moss, sweet water, jasmine and warm ambergris. Finally, Dirty Labs, an E.W.G.-certified clean brand founded by the chemist Dr. Pete He and the entrepreneur David Watkins, produces an eco-friendly detergent ($14-$22) that uses Phytolase, the brand's proprietary 5-in-1 enzyme-driven cleaning technology, and not toxic petroleum-based surfactants. Starting this month, it will be available at Whole Foods.

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EAT THIS

A Popular Paris Restaurant Comes to Hollywood

Left: seating at the new Mr. T in Los Angeles. Right: Chip and Dip with crème fraîche, herbs, pickle daikon and trout roe.Innis Casey

Next week, the popular Paris restaurant Mr. T, which is named after its head chef, Tsuyoshi Miyazaki, who applies classic French techniques to dishes inspired by street food found in cities all over the world, will open a second location on Sycamore Avenue in Hollywood. To design the new space, which is larger than the original but retains the intimate feel of a bistro, the restaurateur and owner Guillaume Guedj worked alongside the architect Richard Altuna, who died last year before the project was complete. "We wanted to utilize as many natural materials as possible," Guedj says. Hence the raw stones like white quartz used on the bar and counters, and the furnishings, sourced from artisans outside Mexico City, made largely of tzalam wood. As in Paris, music — and more specifically a soundtrack consisting of '90s hip-hop and R&B — will help set the tone. Cocktails include the Can't Knock the Hustle (Japanese whiskey and amaro flecked with smoked cinnamon) and the Mr. T (vodka, blackberry and mint with St.-Germain foam), while the food menu features roast lamb kebab; Comté mac and cheese with mimolette flambé; and koshihikari rice and confit egg yolk with sea urchin crème. Go soon to enjoy summery specials, such as a Caprese salad incorporating heirloom tomatoes and fresh peaches, made with produce sourced from a combination of local purveyors and the on-site herb garden. instagram.com/mrtlarestaurant.

TRY THIS

Classic Liquors With Unexpected Ingredients

Voatka, a spirit made from organic oats (left), and Matchbook Distilling's agave alternative made from sunchokes (right).Left: Courtesy of Voatka. Right: David Benthal

By Aliza Abarbanel

T Contributor

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Across the country, speed rails and home bar carts are filling up with bottles from brands using unexpected ingredients to make classic spirits new again. For a sustainable alternative to mezcal, which relies on slow-growing agave plants in high demand, the Greenport, N. Y.-based Matchbook Distilling offers Late Embers Sunchoke + Honey, a smoky spirit derived from locally grown and then fermented roasted sunchokes, which are so hearty they're borderline invasive. Good Vodka was launched in 2015 by Tristan Willey and Mark Byrne, who met at Brooklyn's Kings County Distillery. It's made not from the sugar from potatoes or grapes, as is often typical, but from that of coffee cherry pulp, 15 million tons of which are discarded during the roasting process each year worldwide. Using would-be discarded fruit reduces water waste and carbon emissions, while providing another revenue stream for Colombian coffee farmers. "There's a bit of a peppery note that comes through on the back of the profile, which is reminiscent of the flavor of ripe coffee fruit, if you were to bite into it," says Byrne. Another new vodka is on the horizon thanks to Voatka, a soon-to-launch brand and spirit from the founder Rebecca Robertson that's made from organic oats. "Vodka is so clean, and using oats gives it a layer of warmth with a deeper base of creamy flavor," says Robertson, who's partnered with Matchbook Distilling for production. Consider it a kind of alt-alt-milk.

LIGHT THIS

Summer Essentials in Candle Form

Candles from the artist Janie Korn's fourth collection with Fort Makers.Alistair Matthews

By Arden Fanning Andrews

T Contributor

Janie Korn started out as a ceramist but traded clay for wax a half-decade ago in hopes of prompting more interaction between her work and the viewer. Now, she makes sculptural candles that often reference pop culture and, because of the very nature of candles, are a way to mark the passing of time. That's especially true of her latest collection, "Have a Nice Summer," which launches today. It was commissioned by the New York-based, artist-led design studio Fort Makers and perfectly captures the carefree, languid spirit of August, along with the accompanying blues brought on by the knowledge that the season will soon come to a close. "You can feel it's a temporal experience — we have X amount of summer left," says Korn, who modeled the offering's 10 pieces after a bottle of Water Babies sunscreen, a hot dog squiggled with mustard, a cassette-ready boom box, a "Jaws" (1975) movie poster and other nostalgic staples. A neon tennis ball balances on a racket, and a family of Bic lighters in various colors and sizes promise to burn as if by flames of their own making. For her part, Korn, who lives in Manhattan, will spend the next few weeks not at the beach, but upstate in Hudson, N.Y., where she's renting a place and plans on rereading fairy tales, which are the focus of a forthcoming collection. Perhaps, though, come nightfall, she'll work by candlelight. From $125, fortmakers.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

A Painter's Home That Celebrates Hawaii

At Jean Charlot's home in Honolulu, a view from the primary bedroom into the living room with his "Tropical Foliage" (1957) fresco.Mariko Reed

More than four decades after his death in 1979, the French American artist Jean Charlot is still regarded as both a generational talent and an outsider turned exemplary steward of the deep Hawaiian ideology that connects land, people and spirituality in contemporary art. His two-story, 2,856-square-foot home, built on a 10,310-square-foot lot near Kahala Beach, is reflective of both his artistic sensibilities and his appreciation for the islands. Charlot House is constructed primarily from redwood and concrete bricks, with two walls covered in dried hāpu'u, an endemic fern said to soothe muscles in Hawaiian plant-based medicine. A cantilevered wood table extends from the dining room through a wall of sliding glass windows onto one of three lanais, creating 558 square feet of patio space that brings the outdoors inside. So, too, does the 12-foot-square fresco of heavy, yawning leaves of banana, papaya, bird of paradise and red and green ti that Charlot painted with his friend the Oahu-born muralist Juliette May Fraser on one of the living room's double-height walls while the house was still under construction. Read the full story at tmagazine.com, along with more stories from our fall Women's Fashion issue, and follow us on Instagram.

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2022年8月5日 星期五

The Daily: Stopping Monkeypox

Answering your questions.

Welcome to the weekend, and happy August. We hope wherever you are, you're enjoying some sun.

This week on The Daily, we covered the spread of monkeypox — the latest public health crisis. Below, our health and wellness reporters answer some of the questions you submitted about how to stop its spread.

Also, we have some news: Next week will be the last week you receive The Daily newsletter in your inbox. Don't worry — The Daily podcast isn't going anywhere, and New York Times Audio will continue to develop robust and wide-ranging audio programming that helps listeners understand the world. Thank you for all the time you've spent with us over the years — responding to our questions, following our recommendations and engaging with our ideas. Stay tuned for updates and new projects from us in the future. — Team Daily

Answering your questions about monkeypox

Monkeypox vaccines being prepared at a nonprofit clinic in Chicago last month.Eric Cox/Reuters

Monkeypox, once a relatively obscure virus endemic to parts of Africa, has bloomed into a global threat, infecting more than 20,000 people in 75 countries and forcing the W.H.O. to declare a worldwide health emergency.

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After more than two years of the Covid-19 pandemic, it's understandable that news of a another virus spreading around the world may cause alarm. While health experts say that monkeypox is unlikely to create a scenario similar to that of the coronavirus, many of you still have questions about vaccination efforts and the ways in which monkeypox is spread. Here are some answers.

Who can get it?

Anyone can potentially catch and transmit monkeypox, but the number of cases in women and children has remained relatively small, even as testing has expanded across the globe.

Currently, the risk to the general population is pretty low. People are unlikely to get monkeypox from being in shared spaces like schools and offices, or by trying on clothes in stores, as some social media posts have suggested, said Dr. Seth Blumberg, an expert in infectious diseases at the University of California, San Francisco.

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In a study of more than 500 cases that were reported in 16 countries between April and June, researchers found that 98 percent of monkeypox cases were among men who have sex with men. Researchers in another study found evidence of monkeypox virus DNA in saliva, urine, feces and semen, but they do not yet know if the virus found there can replicate and infect another individual.

Some experts and academics are concerned about the stigma that comes with labeling monkeypox a sexually transmitted infection. Others argue that it is important to acknowledge sex as a possible risk factor in order to help those who are most vulnerable right now — men who have sex with men.

How does it spread

Studies of previous outbreaks suggest that the monkeypox virus is transmitted in three main ways: through direct contact with an infected person's rash, by touching contaminated objects and fabrics, or by respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. There is also evidence that a pregnant woman can spread the virus to her fetus through the placenta.

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Scientists are still trying to understand if the virus can spread through semen, vaginal fluids, urine or feces, and if people can be contagious before they develop noticeable symptoms.

Several factors can determine your risk of getting monkeypox, including whether you have cared for someone who is ill, attended packed parties or simply had sex. How close you are to people who are sick, how infectious they are, how much time you spend in their vicinity and how healthy you are may affect your susceptibility, said Dr. Jay Varma, a physician and epidemiologist who specializes in infectious diseases at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City.

As a precaution, some public health experts have suggested that those at risk of monkeypox temporarily reduce their number of sexual partners to lower their risk and avoid sex if they do get sick. The W.H.O. has also updated its guidance to recommend that those who have a confirmed or suspected monkeypox infection use condoms during sex for 12 weeks after they have completely recovered to reduce the chances of spreading monkeypox to partners.

What is the treatment?

Prevention is crucial. Two vaccines originally developed for smallpox and kept in the U.S. stockpile can help prevent monkeypox infections. The one that is most commonly used for monkeypox is called Jynneos. It consists of two doses given four weeks apart. But because its supply is limited and is controlled by the federal government, it is not widely available to the public. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people who are eligible for vaccination include:

People who have been identified by public health officials as a contact of someone with monkeypox

People who may have been exposed to monkeypox, such as:

  • People who are aware that one of their sexual partners in the past two weeks has been diagnosed with monkeypox
  • People who had multiple sexual partners in the past two weeks in an area with known monkeypox cases

If you do experience a fever, a headache, back and muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes and exhaustion, followed by a rash, click the first link below for more information about how to get treated.

Listen to First Person

Charles Falls Jr. has gone on 55 cruises and counting.Mary Beth Koeth for The New York Times

New York Times Opinion's newest show, "First Person," features intimate conversations about the experiences that shape our views. Today's Daily episode is about what it means to live — versus just exist — in our pandemic reality.

Since the Covid pandemic started, we've all had to make endless decisions about what is worth the risk — eat out or stay home, attend a best friend's wedding or watch the livestream, go on vacation or cancel it (again). But going into Year 3, that calculus has lost its urgency for many people. This summer's chaotic travel season is evidence enough.

For Charles Falls Jr., or Chillie, the biggest decision of the past two years has been whether, and when, to start going on cruises again. Before the pandemic, he spent much of his time at sea on cruise ships. With their buffet lines and cramped quarters, cruise ships are many people's idea of a pandemic nightmare — and for Chillie, who has pulmonary disease, they pose a particular risk. But after he'd spent almost two years marooned on land, the real nightmare for Chillie was staying home.

On The Daily this week

Wednesday: Why are Democrats bankrolling far-right candidates?

Thursday: What happened when Kansas put the issue of abortion to the people.

Friday: He loves cruises. But he's at higher risk for Covid.

That's it for the Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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