I didn’t realize it until just now, but after painting Cinnamon Bun swirls for Day 6, I followed with another spiral dessert in Rugelach.
Clearly my subconscious is working overtime. I couldn’t resist looking up more meanings of spirals going back to Celtic times: balance, progress, centering, expansion, connection, journeying (the path from outer consciousness to the inner soul). Most of this made sense in the context of the Challenge.
Today’s painting is based on a photo I recently took at the Zaro’s Bakery stall in Grand Central Market. The Market in Grand Central Station is one of my favorite places to go and get inspired to paint food, and eat lunch after taking a train into Manhattan.
You should have seen me take this, standing on tiptoes holding my camera lens high above the glass, as the cashier was giving me the evil eye… However, I managed to take photos without hanging over the glass and contaminating the baked goods.
The first order of business was to zoom in on the rugelach and eliminate extraneous clutter in this sketch on wood panel. The primed surface is unforgiving, and doesn’t really allow for rough sketching. I tried to sketch lightly so the pencil lines wouldn’t be obtrusive in the final painting.
I don’t know if you can see it, but the table line on the left and right doesn’t line up in this sketch. Luckily I noticed it after checking the photo, and made the correction early on. Sometimes the camera lets you see details that you miss with the naked eye.
I started with a cool, light blue background to complement the cake stand, which I had been wanting to paint for ages, and to balance the color palette so it wasn’t too warm. Then I moved on to the combination of chocolate and strawberry rugelach.
When I first showed the painting to Bonnie after a few hours work, she said it reminded her of Wayne Thiebaud. That’s not a bad thing so I decided to stop. The next morning, I studied it in the morning daylight, added a bit of detail (the darker strawberries), and called it a day. After all, it is a painting a day.
As I was writing this blog post, I wasn’t quite sure how to spell rugelach. When I looked it up on Wikipedia, I found numerous spellings: rugelakh, rugulach, rugalach, ruggalach, rogelach (all plural), rugalah, rugulah, rugala. Since it’s a traditional Jewish pastry that rolls dough around various fruit fillings, the common spellings are a hodgepodge of English and a phonetic version of Hebrew. My initial spelling, rugelah, wasn’t even on the lis!. Zaros used two “g’s”.
Now what spelling should I use for hashtags?
Tomorrow I need to get up earlier and take advantage of the natural daylight. It’s always better to paint during the day. After the midnight kitchen leak incident, I managed to shift my days and nights again.
With that, off to my easel.