The Michigan Daily - michignalco Thursday, December 9, 2010 - 3B - The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, December 9, 2010 - 3B aw AllIwant for Xmas is a book ofpoems ot that you need more reading seeming trendy. "Not what you see, but right now, but let's suppose what you perceive: / that's poetry," he you've got a favorite poetry col- writes. "I'll eat you to live: that's poetry." umnist, and that you have no clue what In Hayes's poems, poetry is the one, the to get him (or her) for the upcoming other and more. holidays. You can't rely on The New York Seamus Heaney, "Human Times Notable Books Chain: Poems" (Farrar, of 2010 list because, Straus and Giroux, $24) even though one of its categories is alleg- A fountain pen takes up a "snorkel" edly "Fiction and of ink and becomes "guttery, snottery." Poetry," you'll find The "clunk" of a mechanical baler is only three poetry "cardiac-dull." There's a reason Sea- listings among the DAVID mus Heaney's poems are as popular as 48 books included LUCAS they are admired. He reminds us that there. Fortunately, the English language is spoken just as you have a somewhat zealously in the peat fields of County more respectable newspaper available to Derry as in the lecture halls of Oxford. you in Ann Arbor, and it has seen fit to Heaney's English has drunk deeply of allow me to suggest some of the notable both and still speaks with clarity, sym- poetry books of 2010: pathy and wisdom. Sarah Barber, "The Kissing Party" Kay Ryan, "The Best of It: New and (National Poetry Review Press, $17.95) Selected Poems" (Grove, $24) SAL AM RIDA/Daily Baristas demonstrate their creativity through "latte art" and other self-expressive brews. A caffeinated craft Local baristas get creative in fueling campus through finals ByANKUR SOHONI DailyArts Writer In this December exam season, stu- dents inevitably make a habit of bundling up and studying late into the night. And as a comprehensive solution to the stress of the month, there's nothing better than coffee. Ann Arbor and the University campus area offer a variety of options for coffee lovers looking for a fix or students look- ing for a study pick-me-up. There are the chains - Starbucks, Biggby, Espresso Royale. And then there are the locally owned Ann Arbor coffee shops that stu- dents, professors and city natives fre- quent. The baristas in each shop are vital in creating shop loyalty and establishing a warm environment. They stand between customers and their coffee and represent, for many, a valuable part of any coffee shop experience. "Barista" is Italian for bartender, and in a similar vein to their pub counterparts, baristas often invest significant energy in perfecting their skills to be ready for whatever the customer may order. While the idea of the barista may conjure images of a blank-faced, rote assembly-line job, a look around Ann Arbor coffee shops - where students are often the faces behind the counter - reveals a different picture. "Being a barista definitely has a lot of personality, because there's such an inter- action with the customer," said LSA junior and Espresso Royale barista Kristopher Gutowski. "It's a very high-energy job." Gutowski used to work in The Coffee House, a small shop in his hometown of Muskegon, Mich. While the job proper remains the same, Gutowski said the extraneous elements of working in each shop are very different. "(The Coffee House) was a lot less busy, because it wasn't right on the corner of a college campus," he said. "But there are also a lot of different business practices. At home ... I worked directly with the owner, I talked to him, I knew him really well. Now, there's sort of a distance." Baristas at smaller coffee shops here on campus echo Gutowski's feelings con- cerning the difference between working with the owner of a local shop or as part of a chain. "I haven't worked in any shops that weren't specialty shops," said Ben Sagi- naw, a barista at Comet Coffee in Nick- els Arcade. "This is by far my favorite, because ... the owner of this shop has a set of values I can stand behind, and that's a rarity in business. It is a requirement for (the employees) to appreciate everything that goes from the farm to the grocer to the cup, which I don't think is apparent in all coffee shops." A concern for many baristas as they look to advance their skills is the opportu- nity to be creative in their jobs and infuse their own styles into the different drinks they make. While in larger coffee shop chains, consistency is paramount, baris- tas in smaller shops try to do things their way. "Starbucks is all about making every- thing the same," said Jason Bies, an LSA senior and barista at Caf6 Ambrosia on Maynard Street. "If you get a French Vanilla cappuccino at that Starbucks and you go get a French Vanilla cappuccino at another Starbucks, they're all supposed to be the same, and that's just not what (cof- fee is) about. It's about going places and having your own individual thing." Matt Roney, a 2009 graduate and for- mer Michigan Daily staffer, is a barista at Lab Cafi on East Liberty Street and was the lead barista upon the shop's open- ing in January. Having worked in coffee shops since he was 17, Roney had the basic barista skills. But in order to gain experi- ence with the advanced equipment he was going to employ at Lab, he traveled to Chi- cago to train for the job. Roney highlighted the specific technol- ogy as a unique characteristic of smaller, more personally involved coffee shops. While using Lab's espresso machine, he talked about the "superautomatic" machinery that a shop like Starbucks uses. "I'm not deriding them," he said, "but they can push a button and out comes the espresso shot. There are a lot more steps that go on with a semi-automatic or a manual espresso machine." The more complicated techniques associated with coffee-making in those smaller shops, as Roney explained, allow for more personal creativity in the final product. "We get to experiment a little bit with the methods that we use, because the owners are entrepreneurs and not baris- tas," he said. "Those of us who have a lot of experience and a lot of training and have been doing this for a long time, we're allowed to try things and work on keeping our coffee as high quality as we can." But even in a shop as large as Espresso Royale, Gutowski finds the opportunity to express himself through his work. "It can be a creative job," he said. "There are definitely instances where, when it's really busy, it just seems like the rough-and-tumble of getting custom- ers their drink as quickly as possible. But when there's room for creativity, you can get creative." One way baristas choose to be origi- nal is through latte art, which allows the coffee-maker to "draw" a pattern into the layer of foam atop a shot of espresso by pouring in steamed milk. One of these shapes is a heart, which many baristas strive to perfect. At Cafd Ambrosia, Bies and other baris- tas often experiment with new ingre- dients and drinks, even beyond coffee. Among these is "Purple Drink" - what Bies described as a blueberry, raspberry and white chocolate steamer. Another is "Quicksand," which involves putting cherry flavor in a bottle of Coca-Cola and then adding cinnamon on top. "When you're in a place like (Ambrosia), it's not like, 'You have to make it this way,' " Bies said. "I know what a bad cappuccino is, and I know what a really good cappuc- cino is, and I'm always trying to strive to make my cappuccino really good." No matter which shop they work in, each barista values the same parts of his or her job. Each shop appears to have its See COFFEE, Page 4B Full disclosure: Barber was a classmate of mine some years ago. Fuller disclosure: I'm still jealous of her. She makes the lan- guage I thought I spoke seem unfamiliar, disconcerting and miraculous. So that in one poem, "the women's college girls pass / pert and jodhpured by;" in another, the "parks of our childhood" are "endless afternoon" where the "sun (is) as hot asa mouth." Like those childhood kissing par- ties, these poems are mysterious, sexy and memorable. Anne Carson, "Nox" (New Directions, $35) I don't always understand Anne Car- son, but I don't always understand Ein- stein either. "Nox" is poetry, but it's also translation, collage, photography, a time capsule and - most important- an elegy to a dead brother. I often don't know what to make of it, butI am thankful it has been made. As we enter an age when readers read readers instead of books, "Nox" demonstrates that the book itself can still be a poetic text, an art object, an offering, a shrine. Deborah Digges, "The Wind Blows Openthe Doors ofMyHeart: Poems" (Knopf, $25) Much poetry of our age is about as self-consciously cool and unaffected as a vodka martini. What a thrill it is, then, to read poems so linguistically and emotionally risky. When you read a poet willing to say "Call out the names in the procession of the loved," you know you are in the presence of one who cares deeply about sound and not at all about sounding cool. Digges's poems remind us that poetry fulfills a need; these are poems we need now. Terrance Hayes, "Lighthead" (Penguin, $18) OK, OK, I haven't actually read this yet. But poets and readers everywhere celebrated last week when Hayes won the National Book Award, because he's been writing so daringly and so freshly for so long. Hayes is playful without ever sounding precious, current without ever I'm astonished, first, when I read Kay Ryan's poems - then I'm envious. Her rhymes are so subtle and inventive, her patterns of thought so surprising, that I wish I had written them myself. "Insult is injury/ taken personally," she writes. Donate to the Make A Poet Happy fund. I think, "of course it is," then realize it's her thought, her lines, not mine. Her poems outsmart me, line by line and thought by thought, and all Ican be, finally, is grateful. Richard Wilbur, "Anterooms: New Poems and Translations" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $20) Poetry is supposed to be a young per- son's game, and Wilbur will turn 90 years old on March 1. I'm not goingto suggest that he's sold his soul for poetic youth, but here is Wilbur's description of dreams: "a cobwebbed pane. Where, before our eyes, All the living and the dead Meet without surprise." Too often overlooked because he failed to be one of the dramatic early deaths of his generation, Wilbur deserves the sort of attention he has so long given the world. Of course, I've overlooked a shameful number ofgood books and poets in order to focus on those I've mentioned here. I hope, though, that any one of these books will lead you to those books, and those to others still. The volume of what's good should compensate for my own biases. And if you find the good or the great, I would accept that as an adequate end-of- semester gift. I would also accept cash. Lucas wants you to stuff his stocking ... with poems. To do so, e-mail him at dwlucas@umich.edu. Pudi gets animated about 'Community' By PROMA KHOSLA DailyArts Writer 'Twas two weeks before Christmas, and "Community" was new; but everyone was animated, and Abed confused. Tonight's "Com- munity" will join the ~ , tried-and-true holi- day tradition of stop- "Abed's motion claymation in Uncontrollable "Abed's Uncontrol- Christmas" lable Christmas." NBC The episode, writ- ten by series creator Dan Harmon and Dino Stamatopoulos (who plays "Star-Burns"), follows Abed Nadir (Danny Pudi) as he searches for the meaning of this special, claymated Christmas. "Every day is so different and unique, and once they presented this script to us about this episode and said that we were going to be in stop motion, I was - I mean, we were all so excited," Pudi said in a con- ference call last week. S It's a claymated Christmas, and as expected, only Abed knows it. The episode begins like a normal "Community" episode, with the only dif- ference being the stop-motion style. As fans would expect, Abed is the first and only character to notice and decide the new medium is what makes this Christ- mas special. "And then we go on this magical jour- ney through a winter wonderland," Pudi explained, "including a trip down Gum- drop Road - which I have always wanted to go down - and a number of other plac- es, and I think we all learned a little bit about the meaning of Christmas to us as a study group." Since the beginning of NBC's under- stated comedy about Greendale Com- munity College, Abed has been a clear scene-stealer with his deadpan dialogue and slick pop culture references. And it's no secret that the other characters - and most of the audience - find him a bit eccentric. Pudi said that before his character was cast, Abed was supposed to be Palestin- ian. When Pudi, who is half-Indian and half-Polish, got the part, Abed became half-Polish as well. Pudi grew up with traditional Polish Catholic Christmas celebrations, while his fictional alter-ego grew up Muslim with Catholic and Chris- tian influences. "(Abed) is probably a big fan of Chevy Chase's 'National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation,' " Pudi said. Ironically, Chase plays Pierce Hawthorne, the elderly Greendale student who makes Creed from "The Office" seem normal. For Pudi, being an animated character in tonight's episode is just one of many dreams that "Community" is helping him realize. "You know, it's very bizarre," Pudi explained. "One day, you're working with Pudi hopes that tonight's episode wil be the "'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' for our generation." Chevy Chase and the next day you're going to visit a claymation studio where they have a doll of you. "I met one of the ladies who was mak- ing the doll. Actually, I saw her away from set ... someplace in Los Angeles. She's like, 'I recognize you because I've been work- ing on your doll.' I was like, 'That's defi- nitely another first.'" Stop-motion interests Pudi, who has a dual degree in communications and theatre from Marquette University and previously worked in improvisational comedy. But, he had never done voiceover work before and found it to be a challeng- ing way to convey emotions. "We're all sort of kids in a sandbox in preschool - except that we're all adults at Greendale," he said of the new medium. "But we're essentially doing the same thing. We're all learning from each other and being like, 'Well, this is how I've done it. How do you guys do it?' And I think that's largely the reason why we like to celebrate holidays. Plus, they're just fun - and there's a dance. "And the script is really, really funny and really sharp, but also kind of goes to these places where, I think, with the stop- motion, we're able to go a little bit further in terms of, you know, even more emo- tional depth and some of the sadness of the characters, too," he added. Pudi hopes that the Christmas episode will help bring characters together in a way that traditional episodes cannot. "Yes, I think it's going to rival 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' for our genera- tion," he said. "At least that's our hope."