Recipes

“For any recipe writer, the mark of success isn’t teaching people how to cook well, it’s showing them how to think well about food, of which 90 per cent is just about having the confidence to disagree. Margaret got into the history of things, explaining that flummery– a jellied fruit cream– used to be set with the shavings of the horn of a young deer, and then was made using the gelatinous powers of simmered calves’ foot, and then with isinglass– a collagen derived from the swim bladder of a fish. In the end, she gave you a more down-to-earth raspberry syllabub recipe with Sauternes, rosewater and cream. Margaret could give a detailed appraisal of tinned foods or she could convince you– like she convinced me– that a cheese soufflé isn’t just a reasonable proposition but in fact an easy midweek lunch. ‘Why should people enjoy cooking?’ Margaret would say, because she knew it was her job to put forward a case.”


― Ruby Tandoh, All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now

babies

I feel the baby kick, like someone playing the other side of a drum. The movements are sharp and sure of themselves. The baby is reminding us that her life is not just some story we’re telling each other. She’s in there, curled in the darkness that is not yet darkness, because how can there be darkness before there is light? She tumbles against the edges of her world, rubbing against my wife’s ribs, her bladder. Do you know it’s a body that contains you? I think as I press my palms against the globe of my wife’s stomach. For weeks I am fixated on what the baby knows. Then we see her finding her own feet on an ultrasound, and I think that maybe the unknowing is what keeps her reaching out into the warm murk again and again, only to discover, every time, parts of herself.

Excerpt from the essay, The Unknowing by Laura Price Steele
July 2021

https://www.thesunmagazine.org/articles/21901-the-unknowing

The wanting………

“I want you to take me the way the night takes the day—slowly, inevitably, until nothing remains. The way the tide aches for the shore—pulling, reaching, desperate to belong. I want you. Everywhere. You, beneath me, above me, around me, within me. I want to lose myself in you, to forget where I end and you begin. I want you to unmake me, to strip me down to nothing but love, nothing but you. I want your love to know no other home but mine.
—I won’t be convinced by anything but your presence.”


― Zaishah, Heart Beating Among The Thorns: Courage To Begin Again

Recipes and Daydreams


“Jane Grigson joined the Observer magazine in the summer of 1968. Her first column was about strawberries. She wrote a recipe for strawberry barquettes– small pastry boats filled with fruit and lacquered with redcurrant jam so that they looked like jewels. There was another for strawberry brulée in a sweet sablé shell, and coeur à la crème– a cream pudding set in a heart-shaped mould and encircled with fruit. ‘In Venice, in the season of Alpine strawberries…’ she wrote, and it didn’t really matter what she said next, because you were already in.


In most recipes, the introduction serves the recipes. Jane’s was the other way around. She wrote about the hybridized origins of modern strawberries in French market gardens, and how they feature in the mythology of the fertility goddess Frigg. After a few lines on the demanding anatomy of strawberry plants, she devoured into Jane Austen, talking about the agro-cosplay fruit-picking of the Regency ball-gown set. She refused to be complacent, especially about the things her readers already thought they knew. ‘Strawberries, sugar and cream. The combination allows no improvement, you think?’ Well, you’re wrong.


None of this would’ve counted for much if the recipes weren’t great, but they really were. One week she’d give you smart alternatives to traditional Christmas cake– rounds of meringue stacked with coffee cream, or Grasmere shortcake with preserved ginger. Another week it’d be the unimpeachable precision of carrot salad, celery soup or a recipe for ice cream flavored with cooked, puréed apples. The cooking was pantheistic and it dealt with everything from kippers to apples, parsley, prunes and fennel with the same care, even love. We get smug these days about how broad our tastes are, and to an extent we’re right. But a newspaper now would never run a double-page spread of recipes for tripe.


The magic of Jane Grigson is that though she was a smart cook, she was really a skilled purveyor of daydreams– even if those daydreams were granular and exactingly researched. ‘I sometimes think that the charm of a country’s cookery lies not so much in its classic dishes as in its quirks and fancies,’ she wrote. This included the esoterica of regional pies and rare apple cultivars. Something could be worthwhile without being useful. ‘Walk into the yard of Château Mouton Rothschild,’ began Jane’s recipe for jellied rabbit, ‘and you see a scatter of small fires. Some flare into the sky, others smoke as they are fed faggots of vine prunings.’ Noisettes de porc aux pruneaux de Tours, crépinettes with chestnuts, carottes à la Vichy, angel’s hair charlotte. She drew from the culinary canon as far back as Gervase Markham’s seventeenth-century The English Huswife.


― Ruby Tandoh, All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now

List of what you cannot bring to the Kentucky Derby

Prohibited Items List Effective Derby Week (Opening Day-Derby Day)

  • Alcoholic beverages
  • Bags larger than 12″ x 6″ x 12″
  • Balloons and inflatables
  • Banners and/or signs, unless pre-approved
  • Cameras with detachable lenses, or equipped with a lens that is 6” or larger
  • Cans (any size or type)
  • Collapsible chairs (Please see below exceptions for Infield Gate Only)
  • Collapsible chairs with canopies
  • Confetti
  • Coolers
  • Drones and remote-controlled aircraft
  • Firearms
  • Food (Opening Day-Thurby)
  • Glass Bottles or containers
  • Grills
  • Hoverboards, skateboards and scooters
  • Illegal Substances
  • Laser lights/pointers
  • Luggage and duffle bags
  • Noise makers, air horns and fireworks
  • Personal music players without headphones
  • Pets, except for trained service animals
  • Poles or sticks of any size, including selfie sticks
  • Portable speakers/sound systems
  • Projectile items (i.e. Frisbees, balls)
  • Seat cushions that are larger than 15″ X 15″ that contain metal arms and/or backs, zippers, pockets or flaps
  • Tents and canopies
  • Thermoses
  • Tripods
  • Umbrellas of any size
  • Wagons (unless designed by manufacturer as a stroller – must be accompanied by a child)
  • Weapons of any kind (i.e. chains, knives, pepper spray, etc.)
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“I wonder if there’s a single place in the whole world that’s never had a story. I bet not. I just about guarantee you there’s no places like that in America. Every little square of it, every place you stomp your foot, that’s where something happened. Something wild, maybe something nobody knows about, but something. You can fall out of the sky and right into some forgotten storybook. You run and run and run and you keep turning pages and none of them are empty. They’re all full of stories. There’s nowhere left to write.


― Jon Bois, 17776: What football will look like in the future

“Simplicity is the final achievement. After one has played a vast quantity of notes and more notes, it is simplicity that emerges as the crowning reward of art. When one does a thing, it appears good, otherwise one would not write it. Only later comes reflection, and one discards or accepts the thing.”


― Frédéric Chopin

Deep

We rarely find a depth by looking inside of ourselves for it. Depth is found in what we can learn from the people and things around us. Everyone, everything, has a story, Gia. When you learn those stories, you learn experiences that fill you up, that expand your understanding. You add layers to your soul.

Kaise West