Thursday, January 28, 2010

Books in Waiting

As I sit here at my desk, there are several temptations a few feet to my left. Books. They stare at me from their multi-colored spines, urging me to pause each time I pass, wooing me with the knowledge and stories held within their covers. However, my GANC book this month has taken up most of my reading space, and I have endeavored to read two other books on the side for personal and professional gain. So, no room on the night stand for these books, these books in waiting. Below, a selected few of these 14 books (and counting)...

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, by Seth Grahame-Smith - I got this book from Aaron's mom for Christmas, and then Aaron got a copy from me for Christmas. Clearly this is an unread but well-loved book. My devotion for Pride and Prejudice (P&P) is deep and true. One of the best books I have ever read and will continue reading until I am too blind to read, in which case I will get it on CD or MP3, or whatever listening medium we have 50 years from now. I am saving P&P&Z for when I need a good pick-me-up and a laugh, but I fear temptation may win out over my pragmatic goal.

Guns, Germs and Steel, by Jared Diamond - I have looked at this book and begun reading it almost every time I have gone into a bookstore for the past 6 or so years. And finally, this Christmas, I got it (thanks to mom and dad - thanks!). The main thrust of the book is exploring how and why one civilization thrived while another died out. It mixes my love of history with science, which is less known to me but I am eager to learn about.

King Leopold's Ghost, by Adam Hochschild - This was a book I was supposed to read in my African History 2 class but did not finish. Looks like I got, oh, about 48 pages in of about 300. The class was hard for me because I had not taken African History 1 and the flow of African history is dissimilar from European history. It was not countries at war, but tribes with ever changing boundaries, and then Europe came in and started creating their own boundaries. Very confusing. However, I do want to read this book and give it the opportunity I could not my junior year of college.

The Terror, by David Andress - For about a year now, I have wanted to read more about the French Revolution. It is a time in history I am woefully not knowledgeable of. In my high school world history class, we ended right around the French Revolution and, in college, all of my history classes were either American or British (save my African class). I loved A Tale of Two Cities so I thought it high time I read the history of it all. I had a couple books on my list that looked decent, but over Christmas in Texas, I found myself at a Half Price and could not say no to this book. I have no idea how good or bad it is and hope that if it is not great, it is not so bad that it deters me from further reading.

To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee - No, I am not spoiling a GANC novel here; I have already read this book. However, that was in junior high, so it is about time to revisit Scout and friends. And, I just happened to have a gift card to Barnes & Noble, which just happened to carry the 40th anniversary edition. So, I bought and now it sits on my "classic literature" shelf waiting to be as well-loved and well-read as its companions.

There you are, a few of the books waiting to be read on my shelf currently. All the rest are histories or non-fiction, including two I have already "read" but loved enough to purchase. What books-in-waiting are on your shelf?

Monday, January 25, 2010

Christmas Birthday Dinner

Timing is everything, or so the saying goes. In the case of this particular dinner, I would say a double oven is everything. Aaron and I would have eaten much earlier had I two ovens instead of one. And if I had shopped for all the dinner food before the evening of - that would have helped too. However, let it be known this is the best dinner I have ever made and eaten after 10 pm.

On a previous grocery trip, Aaron and I were buying some chicken breasts. From a few chicken rows down, Aaron spied them. Two little Cornish hens waiting to be cooked. Aaron, having never had Cornish hen and hot off our Thanksgiving chicken victory, asked if we could buy them for a future meal. That future meal turned out to be our Christmas/Aaron's birthday gift exchange. One of us found this recipe for Roasted Cornish Game Hen with Panzanaella Dressing and Sauteed Broccolini and thought that was a decent celebratory meal. After a lot of bread cutting, herb chopping, single oven ballet and recooked chicken due to medium rareness (good in steak, not in chicken), here is what we ended up with some time after 10 pm...


It was just as good as it looks in the picture, maybe even better. The dressing was my least favorite, in part because I do not own a bowl large enough to toss the bread, tomatoes and herbs without flinging them across the kitchen. So, some bread had no seasoning, other pieces where heavy laden with rosemary. It was a powerful taste that I feel could have been dialed back a few notches, but something I would be willing to try again in a smaller batch.

The chicken, after being cooked through, was quite tasty and succulent. My garlic paste did not pan out as intended due to some tough cloves that refused to be transformed into paste form, so that could use some tweaking next go round. There was just enough rosemary in the chickens' cavities to lend a nice aromatic note to the meat without overpowering it. Definitely something to revisit and play with in the future.

And the broccolini. I had forgotten how tasty sauteed broccoli was and now I think I may have to make a batch a week for munching. The finely sliced garlic sends the broccolini over the edge into "eat me daily" deliciousness.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Eat Your Veggies!


One of the presents I received for Christmas was Rachael Ray's Book of 10 cookbook (thanks, Aaron's mom!). Aaron had taken the liberty of flagging a few of the recipes he thought he would like to have me make for him before his mom wrapped it for me. After I opened it and he explained why there were hot pink post-it flags throughout the book, I gave my obligatory sigh and looked to see what recipes he chose. And some of them actually looked pretty good. So, we made one of them after returning to NC. (I almost said Texas. Aw.... miss you, Texas!)

Creamy Polenta with Veggie Ragu is the flagged dish that caught my eye first. And, after having eaten it, my stomach agrees with my eyes. Good stuff. The veggie ragu was hearty and filling, and easy to substitute veggies at will. But the polenta, oh my goodness. Best polenta I have ever made or eaten. And while credit is due to the recipe, kudos to de la Estancia organic polenta for making creamy, just enough grit polenta. Yum!! The whole recipe makes a lot of food, enough for at least 6 big (big!) servings, and 8-10 reasonable portions. It satisfied my winter need for hot food without it being soup, meat, or something overtly creamy, cheesy and fattening.

Creamy Polenta with Veggie Ragu
from Rachael Ray's Book of 10, page 128-129

1 large head of cauliflower, about 2 lbs, cut into bite-sized florets
3 Tbsp EVOO, plus some for drizzling
Salt and black pepper
6 cups vegetable stock
2 cups milk
1 large fennel bulb, cored and thinly sliced
1 large onion, thinly sliced
4 large garlic cloves, chopped
2 red bell peppers, seeded and sliced
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1/2 cup golden raisins, 1 overflowing handful
2 cups quick-cooking polenta
1 head escarole, washed and coarsely chopped (I used spinach)
2 Tbsp butter
1/2 cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
1/2 cup fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves, 2 generous handfuls, chopped

Preheat oven to 450F.

Arrange the cauliflower on a rimmed baking sheet, drizzle it generously with EVOO, then season it with salt and pepper, tossing it around to make sure all of it is coated. Roast the cauliflower for 15 minutes, or until it's lightly browned and tender but still has a bit of a bite.

While the cauliflower is roasting combine 4 cups of the vegetable stock and the milk in a sauce pot. Add salt and pepper and bring it up to a simmer, then turn the heat down until you are ready to add the polenta.

Place a large skillet over medium-high head with 3 Tbsp of EVOO. Add the fennel, onions, garlic, bell pepper, and red pepper flakes and season them with a little salt and black pepper. Cook, stirring frequently, for about 5 minutes, or until the veggies are approaching being tender. Add the remaining 2 cups of vegetable stock and bring it up to a simmer, then continue to cook for 4 or 5 minutes.

Add the roasted cauliflower and the raisins to veggie mix, toss them to combine and continue to cook them for 3 to 4 minutes, or until the liquids have reduced by half.

Once you have added the cauliflower to the skillet, finish the polenta. Using a whisk, add the polenta to the simmering stock and milk mixture; cook, stirring constantly, for about 5 minutes. Be careful; the closest you'll probably come to having hot lava in your kitchen is a pot of bubbling polenta (she is not kidding). Once the polenta is cooked, add the chopped escarole to the skillet with the cauliflower and cook it until the escarole wilts, a couple of minutes.

Add the butter and cheese to the polenta, and stir them to melt in. If the polenta thickens too much, add a little more stock or milk to loosen it up.

Add the parsley to the skillet with the cauliflower and combine. To serve, place a helping of the polenta in the bottom of 6 shallow serving dishes and top it with some of the veggie ragu. Serve it along with a little more cheese to pass at the table.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Confessions of a Dessert Lover

Hi, my name is Allison, and I love desserts. Brownies, cookies, pies, cakes, candy, cobblers, crisps, even ice cream that gives me stomach aches - all are welcomed at my dessert table. I can generally keep my longing under control, but there are those evenings when the day has been long and I need some sweet, sweet comfort. The internet comes to my rescue with coffee mug cake or brownies, no bake cookies and Wendy's 99 cent Frosties. Something had to be done to satisfy my longing and yet not eat what feels like a cup of pure sugar at night.

Enter my salvation -Stonyfield Farms' organic Chocolate Underground fat free yogurt. Yes, you are reading that all correctly - organic...chocolate...fat free. You are probably now thinking that it must contain wheat chaff and taste like carob or something. Wrong! It is smooth, rich, creamy and tastes like melted frozen yogurt. The tang of the yogurt cuts through the rich chocolate marvelously. My ghetto Walmart does not sell this particular yogurt, so I have begun making treks to Harris Teeter to keep myself supplied. I even dared to let Aaron have a whirl with it and it has won him over handily. It is all the indulgent benefits of a dessert without being 1000 calories. A guiltless decadence, if you will.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

GANC: Rabbit, Run

I am one day late on posting my GANC book, but that is because yesterday I was spending 10+ hours in a car with Aaron driving through Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina in our attempt to arrive in Raleigh after visiting him and his mom in Indiana. West Virginia is very curvy, or the roads are at least. On to the book...

This month I read Rabbit, Run by John Updike. The book follows Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom as he struggles with his desire to escape the routine monotony of his life as a salesman with a wife and a son and his felt responsibility to said wife and son. The writing style and flow of the story were simple enough to follow; it was the wanderings of Rabbit that were the difficult part for me. Not giving too much away, after another day selling kitchen gadgets, Rabbit returns home to find his very pregnant wife watching a kid's show and well on her way to being drunk. After realizing how all the minutiae of home life are not paying off as he thought, he decides to leave his town and drive to the Gulf of Mexico. In a roundabout fashion, he lands on the doorstep of his high school basketball coach, who takes him in and introduces him to Ruth, who is a prostitute. Rabbit begins to live with Ruth in somewhat tenuous circumstances, all the while wondering if he made the right decision to leave his wife and child. After all, nothing seems to have changed.

The story weaves in and out of Rabbit almost going home, going home but not seeing any family, and going to his house and staying there, only to leave again. The book is best described as tragic. At times, I wanted to say out loud, "Rabbit, what are you doing?!" Here is a man who found adulthood not as the still-famous basketball star of the town, but as another face in a crowd, nothing special. He believes that if he could start over it would all be different. He would be something better, greater, though he knows not what nor where to begin. So, instead Rabbit circles the same issues again and again - leave the familiar, wallow in the not quite familiar, return to the familiar and run away again. Even at the end, after true and painful tragedy has struck, Rabbit runs.

I am unsure the impact this book has had on American culture, but it clearly speaks to many young professionals who find middle class life to be a shadow of the dream they had for it in high school or college. A person who may not be able to see all the good about his life and instead focuses on how the closet door cannot open all the way because it will hit the television. In other words, the small little annoyances get the attention and are the call to action instead of the people around you who care and are calling you to action.

Rabbit's escape is a sentiment most people, I imagine, have felt at one time or another. And, in some ways, the reader can live out that escape through him and see just how far or near it can take a person. I do not think desiring an escape is a bad thing, it is why vacation time exists in jobs, but it must be done responsibly, unlike how Rabbit went about it. He wished to escape from his whole existence, his day to day everything, or at least so he thought.

I believe this is a great American novel. Certainly not of the type I thought I would be saying. It is not grand or redemptive, there is no hero, no person to cheer for. But it is honest and true to more of America than we may want to suppose.

Great American Novel Challenge Booklist:
July 2009: Absalom, Absalom! - William Faulkner, publ. 1936
August 2009: Lonesome Dove - Larry McMurtry, publ. 1985
September 2009: Moby Dick - Herman Melville, publ. 1851
October 2009: For Whom the Bell Tolls - Ernest Hemingway, publ. 1940
November 2009: Their Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale Hurston, publ. 1937
December 2009: The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath, publ. 1963