Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Book Review: One Thousand Gifts

In the hectic life of raising two boys I have set myself the goal of reading 13 books in 2013 that push my horizons a little beyond my standard fare of crime novels and recipe books.  This is my response to #7 on my list: One Thousand Gifts by Ann Voskamp.
Source: amazon.com
I had read the first chapter of One Thousand Gifts online and was keen to read more.  Voskamp's faith journey, as she undertakes a dare to list one thousand gifts or blessings in her day to day life, is told in a humble and gentle way.  Her mantra - "eucharisteo" - is a Greek verb meaning "to give thanks."  Each chapter unfolds a new layer of understanding she finds while she keeps her list of one thousand gifts and beyond.  She quotes many notable Christians (throughout history) as she discovers the blessings of giving thanks, changes her perspective of her difficult life experiences, and grows closer to God.  And she as a busy, homeschooling mother of six, I could identify with some of her daily challenges quite easily.

I struggled a bit though, with her writing style.  Don't get me wrong! It is beautiful, poetic, and draws the reader in, layer by layer, through her journey of deepening her relationship with God.  The problem is more that the way I read at the moment is in snatches - five minutes here, ten minutes before nap time ends, at the tail end of the day when my brain is fuzzy...  This method does not lend itself to poetic appreciation on my part.  I just wished she'd get to the point more directly!  

Having said that, I believe this was a timely read for me.  As a pragmatist, I often am quick to critique situations, and find a more charitable, optimistic perspective hard to maintain.  Voskamp has caught my attention enough to prompt me to exercise more thanksgiving in my life, so since the season of Lent begins today, one of my Lenten disciplines this year will be to start my own list.  Maybe I'll keep it going after Easter; maybe not.  But I'm hoping the posture of gratitude will be more firmly established in my attitude come March 31st.  And I'll be back to read it again sometime, when I can more deeply savour the style along with the message.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Mr Castle would be proud

For Christmas J was sent a book (complete with CD) of Margaret Mahy stories which included one of my favourites, Jam.
Source: amazon.com
It tells of Mr Castle, an extremely competent house-husband, who decides to make jam from the plums falling from their backyard tree.  The problem is that he refuses to waste a single plum and,consequently, every receptacle in the house is used to hold the jam.  They cheer when they can reclaim the teapot for tea, to go with their "scones, pancakes, roly polies and sponge cakes." And so they go on eating the jam.  I won't spoil the ending for you.

I have been enjoying reading and listening to the stories over the past month, especially Mahy's Kiwi accent! The excesses of Mr Castle's jam-making always seem to come to mind when I am midway through preserving a big batch of produce.  I'm sure the fruit multiplies when I am cleaning, trimming and chopping it; so it is gratifying to finally have it in jars, sitting in my pantry at the end (when it has usually returned to its former proportions)  Nevertheless, it is satisfying on many levels to consume.

My most recent session was making jam from nine pounds of strawberries (closer to 8.5 after we snacked on some.)  I ordered the fruit from our produce co-op and invited a friend to come over and help the next day.  We prepped 5 lbs of strawberries that afternoon, made 2 batches of jam, and I mixed up some to macerate in the fridge overnight.  Over the past week I made that lot up, and made two more batches with the remaining strawberries.  Phew!

I used the following recipes, with varying degrees of success, but they all taste great. I didn't buy new jars, just reused ones with rubber seals in the lids.  On the whole, my attempt to reuse baby food jars was NOT successful. So much for saving so many.  I'll be hunting on Pinterest for some other projects I think.
Plain Ol' Strawberry Jam: I did a half batch and then a whole batch.  I didn't bother processing the jam (Shock, horror! Call the food police!) but just cooked it until it was a soft setting consistency.  The total yield was 4 large [18oz?] jars.  Even the large jar that was still 2 inches below full had enough residual heat to create a vacuum and seal. Yay!
Strawberry and Ginger Jam:  A search for a recipe was prompted by a friend mentioning her German mother-in-law's amazing jam.  This yielded 1 large jar and 1 baby food jar.  The latter refused to seal so we have been sampling it.  I'll make it again.
The entire yield from 8.5lbs, minus 3 baby food jars consumed already.
Strawberry Basil Jam: I had bought some basil for another recipe and decided to use it up when I saw this mentioned.  As an experiment in water-bath canning I tried processing baby food jars in my largest pot, and this was my big fat failure!  Two jars came open while they were in the water bath, two made that satisfying 'pop' sound as the seals depressed but sadly they weren't sealed when I checked them the next morning.  Because they were being processed I didn't cook the fruit as long so the jam is more syrup than spreading consistency.  All 7 little Xs below are this yield and are now in our fridge.  The downside: I didn't have a deep enough pot to process a large jar so I only used the baby food jars.  The upside: strawberry basil syrup tastes great on pancakes!  I'll try this one again but cook until setting point is reached.
Strawberry, Ginger, Bay, Black Pepper and Lemon Jam: I made a half recipe with the last 2 lbs of strawberries. I didn't have quite enough black pepper (despite raiding our collection of little sachets that come with plastic cutlery on airplanes and the like) and I doubled the lemon zest.  This yielded 1 large jar and 1.5 baby food jars. Again the baby food jars didn't seal.  I think I'd like to make this again with more pepper.
 
All in all, a mountain of strawberries now in jars of deliciousness.  Mr Castle would be proud!

Monday, January 28, 2013

13 Books for 2013

I've noticed a lot of bloggers posting their goals for 2013.  I'm not that brave!  I do, however, want to broaden my reading selection to something more than the crime novels and recipe books that inevitably catch my eye at the library.

So here I am, proposing to read 13 books this year that I have not read before.  Some have been on my list for a while.  Some are recommended by others.  Some caught my eye in the 'newly published books' magazine that the library promotes.  Some I have read other books by the author.  Some will hopefully get my Regent juices going again.  Some might help me understand more of N's papers when I proofread.

In no particular order:

1. Life Together - Dietrich Bonhoeffer This was one of the texts my housemates read for their internship when we lived in community in Vancouver.
Source: amazon.com
2. Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy  I figure I should read it before I see the movie - even though N has shared most of the plot with me before. ;o)
Source: amazon.com
3. Jesus and the Eyewitnesses - Richard Bauckham  On my list of 'things to read' since it was mentioned at Regent a lot - and we have it on our bookshelf!
Source: amazon.com
4. Ratlines - Stuart Neville OR Watching the Dark - Peter Robinson  It's hard to resist the crime novels, and these caught my eye in a review magazine that I picked up at the library - BookPage.


Source (both): amazon.com
5. Guns, Germs and Steel - Jared Diamond  This has been on my 'to read' list since N recommended it at least 7 years ago!  Diamond's other books, Collapse and The World Until Yesterday, also look good.
Source: amazon.com
6. Me Before You - Jojo Moyes  Another recommendation I noticed in BookPage.  The blurb reminds me of 'The Intouchables'.
Source: bookpage.com
7. One Thousand Gifts - Ann Voskamp  Somewhat of a blog-world sensation, I've read some of this online and want to see if the rest is as good.  I've seen and heard mixed reviews.
Source: amazon.com
8. Habits of the House - Fay Weldon  Touted as a book for fans of Downton Abbey - I fit the bill - this looked interesting.
Source: amazon.com
9. Listening Prayer - Leanne Payne  Meg recommended this at Moms Talk.
Source: amazon.com
10. Hokey Pokey - Jerry Spinelli  I had to have a kids' book somewhere!  I've led a novel study on another of Spinelli's books, and I like the title of this coming-of-age novel (though I think he's referencing the song and not the icecream flavour).
Source: bookpage.com
11. Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light - Mother Teresa and Brian Kolodiejchuk  Another recommendation I picked up at Regent, which explores the 'dark night of the soul'.
Source: amazon.com
12. Fall of Giants - Ken Follett  Having read two of Follett's other epic novels, Pillars of the Earth and World Without End, I'm keen to see how he traverses the 20th century.  This is the first of his new Century Trilogy.
Source: amazon.com
13. Being Consumed: Economics and Christian Desire - William T. Cavanaugh  One of the books N seems to refer to frequently in papers and one that likely will be part of his dissertation.  It looks pretty approachable, and it's already on the shelf too.
Source: amazon.com

So there you go.  Thirteen books for 2013.  The first request (#7) is waiting at the library already.  Wish me luck!

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Advent 2012: Week 3

Well, Christmas has arrived, but here's our update on Advent activities.  They have helped me focus more on the season of preparation this year.  I felt surprisingly calm and organised - I hope it lasts!  Here's what we got up to in Week 3...

December 15: Due to a short ban on DVDs for a young man, we postponed watching a Christmas movie until a few days later!  Instead we opened our piggy banks and helped him divvy up some money to give to the Salvation Army bell-ringer at Walmart.  He has been fascinated with the bell each time we shop there, so he was keen to give - even if it was more for the bell than the need we explained to him simply.  Near disaster - the bell-ringer wasn't in place as we entered the shop but (phew!) was cheerily ringing as we exited.

December 16: We lit the third candle on our Advent wreath.  J can now tell me as I light each candle during breakfast, "That's the hope candle. That's peace. That's joy!"  He likes trying to blow them out too.
December 17: This morning we hosted our playgroup friends.  Only a couple of families were able to make it but we still expended some energy!  We watched "Jacob's Gift" as our Christmas movie and some relaxation in the afternoon.  It is based on a book by Max Lucado of the same name, telling the Christmas story from the perspective of a carpenter's apprentice whose family runs the inn by the infamous stable.  It has a wonderful message about gift giving.  We have watched and read the book MULTIPLE times during the week since.
Source: Amazon.com
December 18: We bundled the boys up in pyjamas and drove over to Highland Park (a swanky Dallas suburb) to see the Christmas light displays.  Many have been installed by professionals and they can be spectacular. (Not that you can tell from my evidence!  The blurry photos don't do the displays justice.  Props to anyone who can identify what is shown in the third photo.)  J could identify snowmen, Santa Claus, trees and houses that looked like "gingerbread house[s]".  I was disappointed that (here in the Bible Belt) there were hardly any nativity scenes.  I think I only saw one in half an hour's driving!


December 19: We made an early start and made Peanut Butter Squares before we went to the local library's story time and shared Christmas stories and cookies.  This is one of the recipes my mum makes around Christmas time, and is the reason I love Reese's Peanut Butter Cups so much!  Apart from the essence, they are pretty alike.  The boys helped crush the graham crackers to smithereens (since wine biscuits are hard to come by here) and I was amazed they didn't even attempt to hit each other. :o)  I think the recipe was originally from an Alison Holst cookbook but I can't be sure.

December 20: Today we made gift tags for presents.  I traced some shapes onto paper (stars for J and circles for C) and wrote in the to/from details.  The boys went crazy with the crayons and I doctored them up afterward and cut them out.

December 21: The boys helped me wrap the presents they are giving to each other and Dad.  We made sure to stick on the gift tags. At the moment the presents are stashed away because little prying fingers have no mercy and I don't have shares in wrapping paper companies.  They'll come out under the tree closer to Christmas Day.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Oooh La La!

Ever since I saw Julie and Julia I have been wanting to read more about Julia Child's life.  I happened across her autobiography, My Life in France, at the library last week and devoured it in three days.  (It would have been a one sitting, all day affair, but then one might have been accused of child neglect!)  The prose was so readable, and Child's exuberant voice just bounced off the page.  I enjoyed it immensely.
Source: www.alexprudhomme.com

(Meryl Streep made a fabulous Julia Child, by the way, but after seeing the movie, I didn't really have a hankering to read the book it is based on.)

My favourite quote from Child's book is:
     I don't believe in twisting yourself into knots of excuses and explanations over the food you make. When one's hostess starts in with self-deprecations such as "Oh, I don't know how to cook...," or "Poor little me...," or "This may taste awful...," it is so dreadful to have to reassure her that everything is delicious and fine, whether it is or not. Besides, such admissions only draw attention to one's shortcomings (or self-perceived shortcomings), and make the other person think, "Yes, you're right, this really is an awful meal!" Maybe the cat has fallen into the stew, or the lettuce has frozen, or the cake has collapsed -- eh bien, tant pis! Usually one's cooking is better than one thinks it is. And if the food is truly vile, as my ersatz eggs Florentine surely were, then the cook must simply grit her teeth and bear it with a smile -- and learn from her mistakes.
Some would say there's more than a little self-admonishment in my choice!

It was fascinating to read of Child's scientific approach to recipe testing.  I appreciate the work that went into that - particularly when ingredients (flour, butter,...) on different continents have slightly different properties, and therefore modified proportions and substitutes are necessary.  (Man, I miss NZ dairy products!)  Her exhaustive efforts to replicate French bread in the American home kitchen have borne fruit!

Although I have been using a different recipe, not specifically French, and certainly not authentic in technique, I have been making some artisanal bread lately.  The basic recipe comes from Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day.  It is basically a flour, water, yeast and salt mixture.  Rather than kneading and rising, the bulk ingredients are simply mixed until uniformly damp, then left to rise for 2 hours, and refrigerated until needed.  Then the required portion of dough is scooped out, shaped, allowed to return to room temperature and baked (with a pan of water to produce steam and the resultant crisp crust).  It requires minimal hands-on effort for a chewy, tasty loaf or rolls.  (I find the dough takes on a sourdough taste after refrigeration, but the saltiness also increases, so I tend to use less salt than the recipe calls for.)  Here's a link to the illustrated version.

Bon appetit!

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Overheard

Two funny incidents I need to share...

The first happened a few months ago.  At the time, J's favourite CD was a lullaby one of original songs promoting breastfeeding (a free gift from WIC, you can download it here).  It featured one song that goes, "It's alright, it's okay" multiple times, in multiple verses.
Source: breastmilkcounts.com
So when I overheard him singing "It's alright, it's alright, it's alright" in a somewhat tuneless way, I was about to correct him to include "it's okay".  Then I heard the next line: "She moves in mysterious ways."  It seems that the dozen times he has heard Mysterious Ways by U2 in his life has had an impact - even if it was out of tune!  (I don't get to play 'my' music much any more.  Possibly the first time he heard this song was in utero when we went to see U2 in concert in Vancouver.  His hearing was supposedly developing that week and he sure kicked along with the vibrations.)

The second incident was this week.  A wee while ago I was throwing our recycling in the community bin at a local school when I noticed the library had been culling their big books collection.  Being an educational magpie, I swooped up anything that looked like emergent reader stuff before the rain started and brought it home.  J had a blast (and still is enjoying) turning the giant pages and having me read to him.  He even can 'read' along with me for some bits.


One of his favourites is a book called It Came To Tea by Hope Hucklesby (not to be confused with Judith Kerr's The Tiger Who Came To Tea).  It is about an intimidating stranger coming to door, shyly requesting help with a puncture, and eventually he is invited in for tea, where he turns out to be quite sweet.  The illustrations feature a very shaggy, muppet-ish monster with knobbly knees.

Anyway, I am doing something else when I notice J playing with his motorcycle and toy lion (shaggy mane!), saying something in a deep voice over and over again.
That's when I realise he is quoting the book, using his lion as 'It' and his motorcycle as a prop: "Bike's got a puncture.  Could use a patch or two.  I'm not sure how to fix it -- do you know what to do?"

A good reminder that he soaks up everything he is exposed to, and then it comes back in some form!

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

What I've Been Reading

I've had a few books on the go lately and thought I should share.
(All images from www.amazon.com)

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

This was a compelling read.  I've heard great reviews of the movie but wanted to read it first.  It may have been because we are here in the southwest, but I could 'hear' the voices of all the characters so clearly.  I'm glad we live in more enlightened times (comparatively), but I fear there are still echoes of these relationships still sounding.

Canning for a New Generation by Liana Krissoff


A girl after my own heart.  As I've been looking for canning / preserving recipes over the summer I have been restricted by the lack of variety in recipes, and that many of them call for way more produce than I can deal with (i.e. start with 100 lbs tomatoes).  This beautiful book has adventurous recipes (cardamom plum jam, cumin and paprika pickled turnips, etc.) alongside more traditional ones (strawberry preserves, grape jelly, all-purpose tomato sauce, etc.), and uses a variety of preserving methods (fermentation, freezing, water-bath, freeze-drying, overflow).  It also deals with smaller batches, which is ideal for me.  I hope this copy is available in the library next time I find I have a glut of something from our food co-op.  The tomato sauce is really good, by the way!

Agatha Christie and the Eleven Missing Days by Jared Cade


I love reading Agatha Christie mysteries and thrillers.  She is definitely the 'Queen of Crime' for me, so this biography was interesting to read.  I had completely missed the fact she was a 'missing person' for 11 days in 1926.  The book is an account of her life and draws deeply from family sources and Christie's books.  It was a bit sad in places, and given her dislike of any reference to her disappearance, I felt a little guilty to be reading about it in such detail!  It has made me want to go back and re-read some of her mysteries and find some more of her pseudonymous works (under the name Mary Westmacott).

Extra Yarn by Mac Barnett


And something lighthearted to finish with.  Extra Yarn is a picture book with delightful illustrations by the conceptual artist for Coraline, Jon Klassen.  It follows the knitting of Annabelle, whose box of yarn always has some extra.  And it has a little moral for the greedy too. ;o)

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Bakery

Ever since the food course, we have been much more conscious of what we are putting in our mouths, and what food we are buying. More about that in another post - suffice to say that we are now using organic flour whenever possible.
The flour is important because it is the most basic ingredient in bread-making. Our place has begun to resemble a bakery over the last few months as we've hardly bought bread from the supermarket since July.
It started when we returned to Canada in July, and I was home while Nathan did Hebrew at summer school and I got ready for teaching school. Long periods in an empty basement suite were filled with yeasting, waiting, mixing, kneading, waiting, rising, waiting, baking, and waiting while cooling. I tried my hand at a sourdough starter with rye flour and water. It was a bit of a hit and miss affair. I made a VERY dense loaf at one stage (pictured below) and threw a large amount of starter into the compost! The last lot migrated to the compost when I cleaned the fridge earlier this month. It was 'well fermented', shall we say? No recipe for you, as it was probably one of my least successful baking endeavours ever.
I reverted to my trusty basic bread recipe from our awesome Aussie friend, Susannah. Once you've made the plain white loaf a few times you can easily judge if the dough needs more flour or water by touch. If you double the recipe, it makes one large loaf, or two smallish ones.
Susannah's Basic Bread
2 cups of flour
1 cup warm water
1 teaspoon of dried yeast
1 teaspoon (or less) of salt [sometimes I put in vegemite/marmite instead of salt]
1 teaspoon of sugar/honey etc
1 tablespoon of oil.

Activate yeast by putting it in warm water with the sugar. When it is frothy, mix it with the dry ingredients and oil. Knead. Allow to sit in warm place, covered with loose cling film. After about and hour, knead again then form into desired shape. Place in cooking pan and allow to rise in a warm place for about 30 mins. Bake in a moderate oven for 20-40 minutes.
I also found success making cinnamon rolls - the Vancouver specialty. Here they are before... and after baking, but without their crown of cream cheese frosting.
Nathan tried his hand at making bread over the recent reading week, and has been bitten by a yeasty bug too... making bread every 4 or 5 days ever since. He experimented with whole wheat flour and decided that a mix of white and whole wheat was more pleasant than the dense rolls he first started with. Next he's going to try using spelt flour.
So, now that we've perfected this recipe, Nath suggested we try making bagels (one of the few bread products we have bought recently). A visit to the library was duly made, and we spent a fun Saturday morning making a dozen bagels to a recipe in "Bread: from sourdough to rye" by Linda Collister (adapted to include more marmite, of course!) My next post will be a photo-journal of our fun.

Monday, August 11, 2008

P.S. Food Course: Other Resources

Films

Children's Books

  • Jam: A True Story - Margaret Mahy
  • Whose Garden Is It? - Mary Ann Hoberman
  • Mrs. Moskowitz and the Sabbath Candlesticks - Amy Schwartz
  • Goops and How to Be Them - Gelett Burgess
  • Mice Squeak, We Speak - Arnold Shapiro
  • Stone Soup - various versions of this traditional tale
  • An Angel For Solomon Singer - Cynthia Rylant and Peter Catalanotto
  • A Bad Case of Stripes - David Shannon
  • Blueberries For Sal - Robert McCloskey
  • Little House in the Big Woods - Laura Ingalls Wilder (and other books in the series, especially Farmer Boy)
  • Green Eggs and Ham - Dr. Seuss
  • The High Rise Glorious Skittle Skat Roarious Sky Pie Angel Food Cake - Nancy Willard
  • The Pipi Swing - Sarona Aiono-Iosefa
  • Bread and Jam for Frances - Russell Hoban

Websites


P.S. Food Course: Reading List

Here are some of the most interesting and helpful books that were in our reading list.


Reading List
  • Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: A Year of Food Life - Barbara Kingsolver, Steven L. Hopp, and Camille Kingsolver
  • Food and Faith: Justice, Joy, and Daily Bread - ed. by Michael Schut
  • For the Life of the World - Alexander Schmemann
  • Hungry Planet: What the World Eats - Peter Menzel and Faith D'Aluisio
  • In Defense of Food - Michael Pollan
  • Much Depends on Dinner: The Extraordinary History and Mythology, Allure and Obsessions, Perils and Taboos, of an Ordinary Meal - Margaret Visser
  • Mudhouse Sabbath - Lauren F. Winner
  • The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating (also published as Plenty) - Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon
  • The Botany of Desire - Michael Pollan
  • The Hungry Soul - Leon Kass
  • The Omnivore's Dilemma - Michael PollanThe Paradox of Plenty: A Social History of Eating in Modern America - Harvey Levenstein
  • The Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution, Eccentricities, and Meaning of Table Manners - Margaret Visser
  • The Supper of the Lamb - Robert Farrar Capon
  • The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture (3rd ed.) - Wendell Berry

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Food Course: Taste and See

Our class was really a book discussion on May 15. Our reading assignment was "the WHOLE book if possible"... that is, "The Supper of the Lamb" by Robert Farrar Capon. I had read this book for the Christian Thought & Culture class last year, so this was a pleasant refresher for me.

Capon focusses on the need to be mindful of the world we live in, in order to appreciate God's goodness more fully. He sees our role in the world as priests; making meaning in our actions, living in a posture of thanksgiving to God, paying attention to things for their own sake and appreciating and using them at their best. Our discussion ranged far and wide, bringing together many strands of our previous classes.

The whole book is quotable, so here are some of my favourites that the class picked:
“… let us eat. Festally, first of all, for life without occasions is not worth living. But ferially, too, for life is so much more than occasions, and its grand ordinariness must never go unsavored” (p.18).
“Against all that propaganda for fancy eating and plain cooking, I hope to persuade you to cook fancy and just plain eat" (p.144).
"Man's real work is to look at the things of the world and to love them for what they are. That is, after all, what God does, and man was not made in God's image for nothing" (p.18).

In the afternoon, we had a visit from a friend and farm meighbour of the Wilkinsons, Sherri Koster. Sherri is a clinical counsellor, and we had a helpful Q&A time with her about food disorders from a medical (and Christian) point of view.

Our final mindful meal was centred on a Turkish theme:

We ate appetizers with headscarves on, before Debbie read a New Testament passage about our freedom in Christ. We were then invited to either remove our headscarves, or to eat with them on, in solidarity with persecuted Christians around the world.
Olives, Hummus, and Pita Bread

Roast Lamb, Kabouli Palau, Eggplant Bake, Greek Salad (accompanied by raki/ouzo... much better with water!)

Halva, and Turkish Apricots Afterwards, Ben set up a houka for some to smoke...

and some of us just enjoyed the turkish coffee...or giggled our way through some belly dancing!

The night ended with a little talent sharing... poetry, banjo, piano, story reading... and an impromptu campfire on the beach.