Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Armchair Travelers’ Category

This week we’d like to give thanks not only for family and friends, feasting and forks but also for the spate of wonderful cookbooks that were published by talented chefs in 2012.

The inspired collections reviewed below, informed by cuisines from around the world, will both guide you towards making a delectable Roast Turkey in Andean Pepper and Pisco Sauce with Roast Plantains and Sweet Potatoes on Thanksgiving day (“Gran Cocina Latina”) and help you afterwards in your use of leftovers with a recipe for Turkey and Zuchinni Burgers with Green Onions and Cumin (“Jerusalem”).

But these books also go oh so much further than turkey. There is an infinite list of creative vegetable and grain options in each title we selected, a criteria for making it onto this list. All of these authors cook modern, they cook fresh and they cook healthy. They are accessible to the beginner as well as to the experienced chef; it is their unique flavor combinations and not level of difficulty that set them all apart.

We encourage you to let Thanksgiving and the days following be a time of feasting and possibility, an opportunity for new food traditions to make their way onto your tables. These books will set – or should we say “saute – you on your way.

Oh, and if our husbands happen to be reading along, please consider these titles as topping our holiday wish lists!

Roots: The Definitive Compendium with More than 225 Recipes by Diane Morgan (2012). If you, like me, have been questing for a more vegetable-based Spaghetti Carbonara recipe, then look no further, this book has it: Spaghetti Carbonara with Parsnips, Pancetta, and Pears. This is just one of the many, modern, fresh and healthy takes on root vegetables in Morgan’s lovely book. Simply put,  Roots is one of THE cookbooks of the year, boasting gorgeous photographs of these underground veggies in all their splendor with creative takes on how to coax out their full flavor. Celery Root Gratin, Carrot Ribbons with Sorrel Pesto and Crumbled Goat Cheese (wow – this recipe makes you wonder why you never thought of this before), Raw Beet Slaw with Fennel, Tart Apple and Parsley, Roasted Turnip Ghanoush (a twist on eggplant based Baba Ghanoush, who knew!). Thoughts on availability, storage, history and lore are included but most of all it’s the RECIPES that mesmerize. Perfect for the long, root-cellared winter ahead. ~Lisa Cadow

Gran Cocina Latina by Marciel E. Presilla (2012). O-freaking-le! This is part textbook, part tome, part history lesson, part treatise. Before she was a chef and restaurant owner, author Presilla was a historian and her scholarly talents show through. Her new book, which is more traditional in its flavors than the others on this list, contains over 500 recipes from Latin America’s Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries including beloved tamales, sofritos, adobos. It is evident that this comprehensive undertaking will stand the test of time and not gather dust on your shelf – even though it would take you a culinary lifetime to work through it. So, if you have a hankering to make authentic Paraguayan Cornbread or Central American Sweet-and-Sour Chicken Stew, Puerto Rican Rice and Green Pigeon Peas or a Simple Venezuelan Chunky Avocado Sauce, then this libro de cucina is for you. ~Lisa Cadow

Super Natural Every Day: Well-loved Recipes from My Natural Foods Kitchen by Heidi Swanson (2012). Lisa Cadow has been a fan of Heidi Swanson’s blog “101 Cookbooks” for years, so it is nice to see another one of her quietly brilliant cookbooks spring to life from the web.  Wild Rice Casserole makes you want to walk into your kitchen, take down the ball jar of rice and set it bubbling on the stove, grate some gruyere  and start chopping the tarragon. Swanson is a designer and her photographs, composition and layout are almost as delicious as her healthy, “super natural” ingredients. Green Lentil Soup with Coconut Milk and Chives, Little Quinoa Patties with Parmesan and Herbs, White Bean Spread with Rosemary and Toasted Almonds will set you on your way to a flavorful and healthful new year. ~Lisa Cadow

The Sprouted Kitchen: A Tastier Take on Whole Foods by Sara and Hugh Forte (2012). This husband and wife blogging team are relatively new to the food  scene but they have a lot of talent and fresh flavors to offer home cooks. Their site was such a success that a book deal came relatively quickly. Coconut Loaf, Buckwheat Harvest Tart, Roasted Cauliflower Cappelini, and Grape Salsas - among other innovations – fill the pages of this whole foods oriented cookbook. They offer another fresh and creative take on how it can be easy to use the seasonal vegetables all around us at farmers markets and yet somehow fancy enough for company  - like Roasted Acorn Squash with Hazelnuts and Balsamic Reduction. You’ll have to excuse me now, for some reason I’m feeling the need to get myself into the kitchen! ~Lisa Cadow

 Jerusalem: A cookbook by Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi (2012) – Yes, I know the other Lisa normally reviews all the cookbooks for this blog, but this book has a travel log aspect to it and hits my sweet spot.  So, I decided to chime in with a cookbook review for this post.  I don’t feel too badly about butting in; it is because of the other Lisa I feel secure adding this book to our recommendations – Yotam Ottolenghi is a favorite of hers.  And, since I so absolutely trust her cooking instincts, I trust this book.  And now, the review — The introduction and periodic pages throughout provide insight into Jerusalem and its history of both people and food.  Since I have yet to make it to Israel, this only serves to reinforce my desire to travel there.  The pictures of the recipes and the people and places in Jerusalem are gorgeous and lush. The recipes make your mouth water just reading them, and to be honest the squishy cover is so fun to hold that you just have to pick it up.  Buy this, and then cook from it, use it as a travel guide, or merely display it for friends and family to see.   ~ Lisa Christie

Read Full Post »

Don’t worry, there still remains time to put those now waning but still (!) extra daylight hours to good use with Part Two of our Summer 2012 Picks.  As in the last Book Jam post, our criteria remain that summertime reads should optimally:

1) Not require too much work from the reader (hence our title – “Summertime and the Reading is Easy”);

2) Be placed in an “estival” – just a fancy word for having to do with summer – setting;

3) Elicit a chuckle or two.

So with these in mind, some further suggestions from us to inspire your summer reading. Have fun riding the waves, hiking those mountains, swinging in hammocks and turning those pages.

For a Summer Setting:

 The Big House: A Century in the Life of an American Summer Home by George Howe Colt (2003). This is an “oldie-but- goodie” as it was published in 2003 but it’s lost none of its ability over the past decade to deliver a dose of summer nostalgia and insight into the meaning of vacation, memory, and family dynamics. The reader can practically feel the breezes from Buzzard’s Bay fluttering across the pages of this memoir of a family and it’s beloved beach house. Author Colt masterfully tells not only the story of a multi-generational experience in this eleven bedroom shingled behemoth on the shores of Wings Neck, Cape Cod but also of the history and psychology of summer pilgrimages since the time of Thoreau. Sadly, the time has come for the Colts to sell this treasure as the upkeep and maintenance has become too much of an expense and complications for the fourth generation to bear. A true classic to keep  on the bookshelf next to the bowls of sea glass and piles of shells. ~Lisa Cadow

Maine by J. Courtney Sullivan (2011). You can’t get any closer to the beach than with this novel that illustrates how a summer home can fill the hearts and minds of the family that inhabits is pine walls for half a century. Sullivan does an excellent job creating three generations of female characters whose hopes, dreams, and fears collide on the coast of Maine one year in late June. Young Maggie is pregnant, Ann Marie seemingly has it all but feels lonely and aimless in her empty nest, and matriarch Alice is still haunted by a night that changed the course of her life over sixty years ago. Need I say it? Maine is a great beach read. ~Lisa Cadow

For a Chuckle:

The Pigeon Pie Mystery by Julia Stuart (04 August 2012) – As with Ms. Stuart’s previous book – The Tower, the Zoo and the Tortoise – quirky and oh-so British characters drive the plot of this novel. In Pigeon Pie, Princess Alexandrina is left homeless and penniless by the sudden death of her father, the Maharaja of Brindor. Luckily, there are “grace-and-favor homes” in Hampton Court Palace for downtrodden royalty and Queen Victoria offers one to the Princess. Though the Palace is rumored to be haunted, initially all is well, the princess is befriended by three eccentric widows, the dampness of the quarters can be withstood with a stiff upper lip, her favorite servant – Pooki - comes along, and, well, they have a roof overhead. However, all gets complicated when Pooki bakes a pigeon pie for a picnic and the truly, truly insufferable General-Major Bagshot dies after eating a piece or two or three. When the coroner finds traces of arsenic in his body, Pooki becomes the #1 suspect. However, the Princess is not going to lose her dearest friend and unique discoveries and encounters abound. Bonus for reading it this summer?  The London setting will enhance any Olympic watching. ~ Lisa Christie

For when you need to escape your family vacation with a great book about one as dysfunctional as your own”

Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown (May 2011) – I know the other Lisa reviewed this for our previous Shakespeare inspired post, but this may have been my favorite read this summer, so I am putting it in here as well. What caught my attention in a way that differed from the other Lisa’s?  As someone who has always been slightly fascinated by the influence of birth order on personality development, I loved that aspect of this fun, well-written book. It’s plot? Three diverse and interesting twenty-something sisters and their lives when they each return (for their own unique reasons) to their hometown to live for awhile with their parents. Why are they back home? Due to various failures of their post-collegiate lives to meet their desires, and a need to deal with their Mom’s cancer. Bonus? The Shakespeare references. ~ Lisa Christie

****************************************************************************************************************************

And with this list, we sign off for the entire month of August to read more books ourselves and to find some superb new selections for you.

May you all have great, just can’t put this book down moments during your end-of-summer reading. See you after Labor Day with some great new selections.

~Lisa and Lisa

Read Full Post »

On April 30th, we held our first “Pages in the Pub,”  an event designed to bring together independent booksellers, literary bloggers, public librarians, and book lovers for an evening of talking about great titles. We gathered at a local inn, sipped wine, and turned pages all with the goal of raising money for our public library.

We are pleased to inform you that we oversold and packed guests into The Norwich Inn that evening. More than 60 people attended (even though we had limited it to 50)  and we raised over $500 for the Norwich Pubic Library.

Presenters for our first “Pages in the Pub” included: Superb Norwich Bookstore Booksellers, Carin Pratt and Penny McConnel, Lucinda Walker – the amazing director of the Norwich Public Library - and our own Lisa Cadow of The Book Jam, with bonus books presented by Lisa Christie, also of The Book Jam, whose official role during the evening was to act as moderator.

For those of you unable to join us, a recap of the selections from each presenter is included below – along with a their own six word review. Why six words? Because we wanted to just whet your appetites and then have you research and read more for yourselves. Plus if we went any longer, we’d run out of space!

And don’t worry, if you must have more information right away, each title is linked to an independent bookstore’s review.

Carin Pratt

Carin, a new Vermont resident, sells books at the Norwich Bookstore after serving for twenty years as Executive Producer of CBS’s Face the Nation - yes, THAT Face the Nation.  We think that’s mighty impressive – but more importantly,  she’s a lovely person who we are privledged to know.  And, we really enjoyed her picks for Pages in the Pub.:

Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life death and hope in a Mumbai Undercity by Katherine Boo – nonfiction (2012) – Mumbai slums tragedy. Not beautiful. Great.

Carry the One by Carol Anshaw – fiction (2012) – Girl dies. How do survivors deal?

The Obriens by Peter Behrens – fiction (2012) – Man, marriage, family. Compelling, tragic saga.

Lisa Cadow

Lisa is one of the Lisas behind the Book Jam blog. She is also the founder and Chief Crepe officer of Vermont Crepe and Waffle, which is now moving into its busy fifth season with the opening of our local farmers markets.  Her crepes are fantastic and her book picks are superb and diverse – enjoy!

Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka fiction (2012)- Wartime Japanese Brides. New Lives. Poetic.

Tiny Sunbirds Far Away by Christie Watson –fiction (2011) - Despite turmoil, Nigerian girl learns midwifery.

Blood, Bones and Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef by Gabrielle Hamilton (2012) – Female Restaurateur with MFA writes spicy memoir.

Lucinda Walker

Lucinda is the talented  librarian for our town of Norwich.  She is truly a treasure and we are so glad she offered her gifts to our town.   Her picks are fun and thoughtful. Have a great time reading them.

Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechtel – nonfiction (2006) – What makes our parents tick? Graphic.

The Tower, the Zoo & the Tortoise by Julia Stuart – fiction (2010) – Quirky and sweet. A love story.

Razor’s Edge by Somerset Maugham- fiction (1944) – Bohemian, Post WWI, Paris, Soul-Searching & Snobs.

Penny McConnel

Penny is the co-founder and co-owner of the Norwich Bookstore.  When the Lisas of the Book Jam grow up, we want to be her.  She chose “oldie but goodies” to discuss. So pick up her selections and enjoy some contemporary classics.

Disturbances in the Field by Lynn Sharon Schwartz – fiction (1983) – Philosophy, friends, music, marriage, NYC.

Stoner by John Williams – fiction (1965) – Beautifully written life of sensitive professor.

Any Human Heart by William Boyd –fiction (2003) – Fictionalized biography of interesting worldly man.

BONUS PICKS – because you can never have too many good books

Lisa Cadow’s bonus round

Stones in the River by Ursula Hegi – fiction (1996) – Nazis. Outsider heroine. German village. Astounding.

Lisa Christie

Lisa is the other Lisa of the Book Jam. She was the founding Executive Director of Everybody Wins! Vermont and subsequently served as Executive Director of Everybody Wins! USA, placing children’s literacy dear to her heart.  Her picks are eclectic and involve places far away.  Happy travels.

In One Person by John Irving – fiction (2012) – Bisexual boy. Colorful family. Life unfolds.

The Terror by  Dan Simmonsmystery (2007)- Real Arctic Shipwreck. Everyone Dies. Why?

Vida by Patricia Engel – connected short stories (2010) – Colombian immigrants in Jersey. Teen matures.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 274 other followers