*I was invited to the media preview for purposes of this post. All thoughts and opinions remain my own*
It’s that berry time of year again! It’s time for the Knott’s Boysenberry Festival! Today through April 28th you can enjoy all things boysenberry at Knott’s Berry Farm!
The Knott’s Boysenberry Festival is an annual food-inspired event that celebrates the park’s historic roots by highlighting the little berry that started it all, the boysenberry.
This year’s festival will feature over 75 new and returning boysenberry-inspired creations crafted by the Knott’s culinary team. Guests will have the opportunity to indulge in a tantalizing lineup of dishes ranging from savory foods with a boysenberry twist to one-of-a-kind specialty desserts and drinks that can only be found at Knott’s Berry Farm during this time of year. In addition to the unique food and drink offerings, the Knott’s Boysenberry Festival offers a wide selection of daily entertainment, live music and fun activities for guests of all ages to enjoy.
Now here’s a look at all the foodie delights you have to look forward to at this years festival!
Knott’s Boysenberry Festival 2019 Food Items
$35 – Tasting Card (8 choices of the 14 options) $30- Wine/ Craft Brew Card
Tasting Card Items
1) Boysenberry Chili in a Boysenberry Sourdough Bread Bowl (NEW!) a. Sutter’s Stand
2) Boysenberry and Lemon Hummus with Pita Bread (NEW!) a. Sutter’s Stand
3) Boysenberry Dry Rubbed Flank Steak with a Boysenberry Cream Cheese Topping (NEW!) a. Sutter’s Stand
4) Boysenberry Elote a. Ghost Town Bank Stand
5) Boysenberry Jerk Chicken Wings (NEW!) a. Spur’s Chophouse Outdoor Stand
6) Boysenberry Sausage in a Bun a. Wilderness Dance Hall
7) Boysenberry BBQ Chicken Skewers with a Boysenberry Aioli (NEW!) a. Wilderness Dance Hall
8) Boysenberry Pot Roast over Boysenberry Mashed Potatoes (NEW!) a. Inside Spurs Chophouse
9) Boysenberry Glazed Salmon over mixed Greens and topped with a Boysenberry Vinaigrette (NEW!) a. Inside Spurs Chophouse
10) Boysenberry Habanero Baked Mac and Cheese (NEW!) a. Wagon Wheel Pizza
11) Boysenberry Jambalaya with Chicken and Sausage (NEW!) a. Wagon Wheel Pizza
12) Boysenberry Pulled Pork Tostada (NEW!) a. Wagon Wheel Pizza
13) Boysenberry Waffle with Maple Boysenberry Cream Cheese Syrup (NEW!) a. Ghost Town Bakery
14) Boysenberry Cinnamon Sugar Flour Tortilla Chips with Boysenberry Ice Cream (NEW!) a. Ghost Town Bakery
Other Boysenberry Food Items
Spurs Chophouse:
Boysenberry Shawarma (NEW!)
Boysenberry Cheesecake on a Stick
Boysenberry Glazed Salmon over mixed Greens and topped with a Boysenberry Vinaigrette (NEW!)
Boysenberry Pot Roast over Boysenberry Mashed Potatoes (NEW!)
Growing up I loved Disney. As an adult, I love Disney. Driving into the Disney Studios in Burbank, never gets boring. This was a placed I dreamed of working. As I walk to the theater where the special preview of Dumbo is screening, I wonder if Mr. Disney walked the same streets or turned the same corners.
I was asked to screen the upcoming Disney release Dumbo and here’s the thing, I never saw the original in its entirety, which I just found out is only about 60 minutes or so. Is this a good thing or a bad thing? Dumbo was originally slated as a 30-minute short film. It ultimately expanded to just under 64 minutes (Dumbo is Disney’s second shortest animated feature film behind 1942’s “Saludos Amigos,” which was just 42 minutes).
I’ve seen the trailer for the live action version many times, and each time I had tears and chills. I kept thinking 1. Wow, Colin Farrell gets better looking with age and 2. That is the cutest elephant I’ve ever seen, where can I get one. Yes, that is how real the CGI looks.
Let’s be honest, I know a little bit about the original. It’s about a baby elephant who is taken away from its mother, has ginormous ears and is forced to fly in a circus. Beyond that, I had nothing. We all know about the famous music that came out of the original. Danny Elfman keeps those same elements in his reimagined score. You’ll find a few other elements from the original, like the pink elephants, a reimagined Timothy Mouse and of course the famous Casey Jr. Circus Train.
The film centers around a traveling circus in the height of the traveling circus craze. Colin Farrell’s, Holt Farrier, has just come back from WWI having sustained an injury that left him with one arm. His wife has died and his and his children were left, being raised by the “Circus Freaks” they’ve come to know as family. Holt and his wife were the main attraction of the Medici Family Circus, and once that duo ceased to exist, so did the attraction of this traveling band of misfits. With times hard continuing in the foreseeable future, Max Medici, sells Holt’s prized horses to purchase a pregnant African Elephant, call it a two-for-the-price-of-one deal. However, once baby Jumbo, Dumbo’s original name, is born, Max sees him as just another freak, saying, “a face only a mother could love.”
With his Jumbo ears, Dumbo, is made to dress up like a clown, perform horrific stunts and is teased mercilessly by the circus crowd. Mama Jumbo gets very angry at the people laughing at her baby and take matters into her own hooves. Because of her actions, one of the roadies get killed and many spectators get injured. This is going to wreck the Medici Family Circus, so he gets rid of Mama Jumbo and keeps his new attraction: Dumbo the Flying Elephant.
Dumbo, even with the love of Holt’s children Milly and Joe, is depressed because he misses his mother, something Milly and Joe can relate to. There are so many parallels between Milly, Joe and Dumbo. They’re not taken seriously, they have lost their mother, they’re trying to just find their place in the world.
Once the circus begins to thrive again with Dumbo’s help –he’s forced to fly–, villain V.A. Vandevere, played by Michael Keaton, makes Max Medici an offer he cannot refuse, he becomes the Vice President (in name only) of Vandevere’s state of the art amusement park, Dreamland. Not everyone in Dreamland agrees with Vandevere’s treatment of his animals, especially his most prized item, Dumbo. This leads to the climax of the story. Dumbo is anxious to be with his mama once more.
FLYING HIGH
The movie itself is absolutely visually stunning. We are taken back to 1920’s America and then taken to a “Fantasyland” of entrainment called Dreamland.You forget you’re looking at CGI elephants. They look so real and Dumbo’s eyes are the most endearing eyes, you can’t help but want to save all the elephants.The costumes in Dreamland are brightly colored and magical, especially the costumes worn by Eva Green’s, Colette Merchant, the famous trapeze artist who is tasked to soar with Dumbo.She wears this this beautiful feathered outfit that truly makes her look like a soaring bird.
One thing that Max Medici says towards the end of the film is that animals “don’t belong in cages”. The messages in this film speak volumes. At its heart, this simple story is one of family and acceptance, acceptance of what makes us all different. We could learn a lot from Dumbo. And yes, animals don’t belong in cages.
Dumbo is directed by Tim Burton and stars Colin Farrell as Holt Farrier, Michael Keaton as V.A. Vandevere, Danny DeVito as Max Medici, Eva Green as Colette Marchant, Nico Parker as Milly Farrier, Finley Hobbins as Joe Farrier, Alan Arkin as J. Griffin Remington, Roshan Seth as Pramesh Singh, DeObia Oparei as Rongo the Strongo, Joseph Gatt as Neils Skellig, and Sharon Rooney as Miss Atlantis.
*We were invited as media to cover the press conference. All thoughts & opinions remain our own.*
On March 10th I drove out to the Beverly Hills Hilton to sit in a Disney magical ballroom with Tim Burton, one of my favorite directors of all time, to listen to him talk about his latest project, Dumbo. Believe it or not, I’ve never seen the entire 1941 original, which comes in at only 64 minutes. My thought going in to this film was, how are they going to make a full-length movie about an elephant?
Journalist Grae Drake, our moderator for the day, dressed as a ringmaster, introducing her “circus”, and what a circus it was. First up we heard from Screenwriter Ehren Kruge, Producers Justin Springer, Derek Frey, Katterli Frauenfelde, Production Designer Rick Heinrichs, Costume Designer Colleen Atwood and Composer/Oingo Boingo founder Danny Elfman.
I remember taking a film music class in college where we analyzed the music of various film composers. Danny Elfman was one of the composers we studied, a composer that I greatly admire, and he’s worked with Tim Burton on 17 films. Come on, it wouldn’t be a Tim Burton film without an Elfman score. For Elfman, working with Burton, isn’t as simple as working with other directors. Burton’s mind is both strange and interesting. Just like the way audiences see the amazing characters that Burton creates.
Burton making a movie about a traveling circus is very fitting. Producer Derek Frey said that, Tim Burton’s films “are populated with outsider characters” and that “Dumbo was the original Disney outsider” in a world full of beautiful Disney Princesses.Burton took on this very simple, sweet story. You have a band of outsiders who make their own sweet, simple family. Burton himself, never liked the circus, but liked the idea of running away with the circus.
The Costumes created by designer Colleen Atwood were beautiful and magnificent. They had to represent both hardship and extravagance. She made the 1920’s heyday of the traveling circus come to life. Samples of these gorgeous costumes were on hand to admire. The red feather dress worn by Eva Green in the film was just breathtaking. All of her costumes were beautiful. As the trapeze artist, her costumes were delicate and flowy, similar to that of an elegant bird soaring through the sky.
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