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Food Is Stories

October 18, 2009 By caroline in Uncategorized

by Caroline

It has been, by most objective measures, a lousy week. It announced itself with a dog bite on my Monday morning run, developed with Eli’s fever, peaked the night Tony and I spent at Eli’s bedside, putting cold washcloths on his head and wondering whether to take him into Urgent Care, and has now moved into the quiet dull rhythm of boredom and cabin fever that settles on a house when a family member has been sick a while. I did finally make the ultimately ill-advised decision to leave the house, only to back our garage-parked car into our driveway-parked car (another reason I want to sell one of our cars; it might be a bit harder now, though). But I have to say that if my child was going to choose any week to be sick and keep me anchored on the couch, stroking his head while he watched endless episodes of Oswald and Peep in the Big World, at least he chose the week that the New York Times Magazine published the food issue.

There is so much to like here. There’s the fascinating article about the calorie-restriction diet, and whether it leads to longer life (for the record, there is no way I could undertake such a diet). There’s the piece about Jamie Oliver’s drive to remake the eating habits of “one of the unhealthiest towns in America” (though for an opposing view, directly from Huntington, WV, check out Literary Mama editorial assistant Jenny Hobson’s blog).

The piece about Cress Spring Bakery makes me want to get on a plane to Madison, now, to taste some of that bread, though maybe instead I’ll stay put and learn how to gather my own wild yeast to bake bread. I loved reading about California food pantries and the folks working to make sure that they are well-stocked with fresh fruits and vegetables (Learning to Eat has been promised an essay from Sara Miles, who founded the incredibly successful food pantry at St. Gregory’s church in San Francisco). And Michael Pollan’s Rules to Eat By are going to make an interesting book, indeed. I have used “If you are not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you are not hungry” with my kids, and my husband certainly lives by “Don’t eat anything you aren’t willing to kill yourself.” The political animal in me likes “Eat foods in inverse proportion to how much its lobby spends to push it,” but my favorite is probably the simplest: “When drinking tea, just drink tea” (though I tend more toward its corollary, “When you are drinking tea and reading the newspaper, just drink tea and read the newspaper.”)

But my favorite piece in the issue is Jonathan Safran Foer’s essay, Against Meat, which starts with this wonderful anecdote:

“When I was young, I would often spend the weekend at my grandmother’s house. On my way in, Friday night, she would lift me from the ground in one of her fire-smothering hugs. And on the way out, Sunday afternoon, I was again taken into the air. It wasn’t until years later that I realized she was weighing me.”

The piece goes on to talk about his grandmother, who survived World War ll by scavenging whatever she could and whom he and his siblings grew up thinking of as “the greatest chef who ever lived,” even though she only cooked one dish (which had just two ingredients).

Don’t let the title put you off; it doesn’t matter if you eat a vegetarian diet or not. I happen to; Foer does now, too, although as he describes his first foray into rejecting meat: “My vegetarianism, so bombastic and unyielding in the beginning, lasted a few years, sputtered and quietly died.” It gains purchase when he marries, and finally sticks when he and his wife start a family: “My children not only inspired me to reconsider what kind of eating animal I would be, but also shamed me into reconsideration.” But he knows, as I know, that food choices are less about what we put in our mouths than about becoming aware of all the choices open to us, and the history (family, religious, cultural) behind those choices as well as the contemporary issues (political, social, and economic) affecting those choices. Foer puts it, “I’m not as worried about what [my children] will choose as much as my ability to make them conscious of the choices before them. I won’t measure my success as a parent by whether my children share my values, but by whether they act according to their own.”

That might start to feel complicated, but in fact it is quite simple. As Foer writes of his son, as Lisa and I have been writing all year in various ways, food is stories. “Increasingly the food [my son] eats is digested together with stories we tell. Feeding my children is not like feeding myself: it matters more. It matters because food matters (their physical health matters, the pleasure they take in eating matters), and because the stories that are served with food matter.”

And so back to his grandmother, whose simple chicken and carrots “was delicious,” he realizes, “because we believed it was delicious. The story of her relationship to food holds all of the other stories that could be told about her. Food, for her, is not food. It is terror, dignity, gratitude, vengeance, joy, humiliation, religion, history and, of course, love. It was as if the fruits she always offered us were picked from the destroyed branches of our family tree.”

” It wasn’t until I became a parent that I understood my grandmother’s cooking. The greatest chef who ever lived wasn’t preparing food, but humans.”

Food is stories. It is stories about past and present; it is stories about family. Keep visiting here, and we’ll keep sharing ours.

MadKids

October 16, 2009 By lisa in Uncategorized Tags: Drinks

By Lisa

It’s no secret that my husband and I are shameless fans of MadMen, and I’ve written about the cocktails we enjoy on our own and and with our kids. For that matter,  Caroline and her kids are also fans of a little mixology in the home.

But over the last weeks, the Kidtini has become something of a weekend ritual for our kids, and when I tasked Kory with creating one for dinner last weekend, he went straight to Google for a new recipe and guess what he found…? Learning to Eat.   As Finley put it, “You know Dad is kind of famous. Because he was the first one to invent the Kidtini.  It’s on the computer.”

Now, this is probably not true, but we are building a stash of recipes for fun, aesthetically pleasing kid drinks.  Right now, they’re largely variations on bubbly water + syrups + fresh fruit, like the recent hit:  Pomegranate Kidtinis.  And garnish, because garnish is important for kids:

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When I point out that some people think Kidtinis might encourage kids to favor alcohol too young, Kory scoffed and said, “I think it’s great that we’re encouraging the kids to eat/drink something that isn’t junk.”

To which  I replied, “Um, Kidtinis are basically soda.”

To which he replied, “I mean they’re not a can of cook or a bag of cheetos. They sit down with us and really appreciate what they’re getting.”

To which I had to concede. The point of making a Kidtinis is social.  The point is getting your kids to sit down with you and chat about their day over something really pretty and delicious. The point is getting your kids to appreciate what is made for them, and how its made. It’s also creative, and they can get involved, too.

We don’t think we’re one step away from keeping the bottle of scotch in the cabinet by the door for Don, er Kory, to grab on his way home from the office, but we do like to bring some of the aesthetic pleasure of the show to our own home in a fun way.

And in that spirit, here are two more for you and your own MadKids.

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Kidtini #2: Homemade 7up

This is basically homemade 7 up, but tastier.

  • Torani Lime syrup
  • Torani Lemon syrup
  • Bubbly water
  • Lemon and lime triangles to garnish

Mix equal parts of the lemon and lime syrup, or balance the flavors to your taste.  Fill a glass with ice, then bubbly water, then as much syrup as you want your kids to have.  Spear one lemon and one lime triangle on a party-colored toothpick and balance on the rim of the glass.

Kidtini #3: Ghastly Shirley Temple

  • P1120180Bubbly water
  • Torani Cherry syrup or Grenadine
  • Crushed ice
  • Frozen Blueberries
  • Lime triangles and circles for garnish

Special equipment: Ice cream scoop

This was a Halloween inspired drink that Kory whipped up last weekend.  He simply made a Shirley Temple with  bubbly water and the syrup/grenadine, garnished with lime, and made the “eyeball” by crushing ice in the blender, molding it with an ice cream scoop and sticking a blueberry in it.

And yes: I know it looks like a boob.  It didn’t so much in real life.  The kids thought it was creepy in the good, ghoulish way, not the OMG-there’s-a-naked-boob-in-my-drink way.  They also call our cat by its diminutive name in the most innocent way possible.  Their minds are still pure.


Morale-Boosting Banana Coconut Muffins

October 16, 2009 By caroline in Uncategorized Tags: baking, breakfast, cooking with kids, fruit, recipes, sickness, snacks, sweets, vegetarian

by Caroline

resultThere comes a time in every child’s illness when the child is still too sick to attend school (he’s got to be fever-free for 24 hours) but is too well to lie docilely on the couch watching videos while his mother catches up on her New Yorkers. And that is the time, in this house, when we make muffins. I know this might appall some of the more germ-conscious of you, but I am just not really an art project kind of mom. Plus, we are not making muffins to distribute to our friends; these muffins stay home, in the family, where we’ve all been exposed to the same germs already for quite some time. And of course we wash our hands before we start to cook, which we do whether we’re sick or not.

So here we were, after another feverish night but with the Tylenol finally taking effect. Eli was hungry for a snack, tired of his usual dry crunchy things, but not yet up for a real meal. He noticed some browning bananas in the fruit bowl. For the most part, I try to stick to local fruits, but in the winter, when I do even more baking than usual and the variety of fruits available is slightly more limited, I make an exception for bananas. And of all the various banana breads and banana muffins that I make, this might just be the simplest. I’m linking to the original version on Epicurious (pause here a moment to mourn Gourmet, but to be grateful that Conde Nast is keeping the website alive), but of course I always tinker a little bit, so here’s how Eli and I made the muffins today.

a potato masher makes quick work of soft bananas
a potato masher makes quick work of soft bananas

slicing the butter for melting is a good time to practice knife skills
slicing the butter for melting is a good time to practice knife skills

1 1/4 c all-purpose flour
½ c ground flaxseed meal
1 teaspoon baking powder
pinch of salt
2 very ripe bananas, mashed (3/4 cup)
5 T unsalted butter, melted
½ cup brown sugar
1 large egg
a splash of vanilla
3/4 cup sweetened flaked coconut

Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 375°F. Line muffin cups with liners.

Whisk together flour, baking powder, salt and flax in a bowl. Whisk together bananas, butter, sugar, egg, vanilla, and 1/2 cup coconut in a large bowl until combined well, then fold in flour mixture until flour is just moistened.

Divide batter among lined muffin cups and sprinkle with remaining 1/4 cup coconut. Bake until muffins are puffed and golden, and a tester comes out clean, about 20-25 minutes; keep an eye on them toward the end, as the flax makes them brown more quickly than usual, and you don’t want the flaked coconut to burn. Transfer muffins to a rack and cool slightly.

Peel Me a Pomegranate

October 15, 2009 By lisa in Uncategorized Tags: Drinks, fruit, pomegranate, pomegranate kidtini, pomegranate saketini

By Lisa

The title of this post is a blatant homage to Nina Finci’s,  as yet unpublished memoir Peel Me a Pomegranate about emigrating from Croatia to America age 15, shortly before the Yugoslav war changed her family life forever.  Check out her blog(s).   As for the pomegranate, in one section of her memoir, she writes a lovely story about how her mother peeled her and her brother pomegranates and sprinkled them with sugar for an afterschool snack.   It’s true that we’d been eating pomegranates in my house long before I read Nina’s story, but there was something about the description of her mother, steadfastly peeling the tough fruit, her hands stained red, and setting out the bowls of ruby seeds for them that was utterly moving, and made me think I had never really had a pomegranate–not like she had.  Nina’s story is about eating something delicious and rare and beautiful and oddly satisfying, of course, but it’s also about bringing the family together, and a home she lost, and a mother who nurtured her children in many ways. The pomegranate is a prism into the rich, complicated family life, what is lost and gained over a lifetime.

So now, everytime we eat pomegranates, I think of Nina & her story and how she is probably peeling pomegranates now for her own daughter, and it makes me feel connected to the world.

Finn, on the other hand, just thinks they’re fun and addictive to eat.   And since I’m not above playing with your food as a morning activity, occasionally, we like to peel a whole bunch of pomegranates all at once and keep a jar of the seeds in the refrigerator for a quick snack or garnish for salads, kidtinis, or cocktails.  On the one hand, it’s not a bad small motor skill activity.  But he’s also helping in the kitchen, learning where the fruit comes from and how it’s eaten, and he gets to see different colors and sample the different flavors of the different varieties.

We peel the fruit in a bowl of water. The edible seeds sink and the membrane and rind float, so you can just scoop them off and discard or compost.

P1120137

Finn peeling

P1120141

Sifting pomegranate seeds. Just because.

P1120144

The activity degenerates as Finn tries to figure out how many seeds he can fit in his mouth.

P1120147

The seeds make it to the bowl…

P1120145

Finn eats a pomegranate like a human being.

P1120070

Pomegranate Kidtini

P1120071_1

Pomegranate Saketini

Pomegranate Kidtini

  • Pomegranate seeds
  • Roses lime juice
  • Bubbly water
  • Ice

Fill a goblet or similar glass with ice and a tablespoon of pomegranate seeds. Top with bubbly water and a splash of Roses Lime Juice, to taste. The bubbly makes the seeds float, and the kids can carefully scoop them out with a spoon.

Pomegranate Saketini

  • Pomegranate seeds
  • 2.5 ounces dry sake
  • 1-ounce vodka
  • Chipped ice
  • 1 Japanese cucumber, cut into 1/4-inch rounds, for garnish

Muddle the pomegranate seeds, then combine with sake and vodka in a cocktail shaker with the chipped ice and shake well. Strain into a martini glass and garnish with more pomegrante seeds.   **In the picture above, we just added the seeds as a garnish to the regular saketine, but they sank. (No bubbly water….)  Later on, I crushed the seeds in my glass to release the juice, which was delicious, thus the suggestion to muddle the seeds first.

Feeding the sick

October 14, 2009 By caroline in Uncategorized Tags: comfort food, family dinner, fruit, picky eaters, produce, sickness, vegetarian

by Caroline

Despite timely flu shots, good eating habits, and frankly pretty impressive personal hygiene in kids this age, my sons have been passing a cold back and forth for over two weeks now. I can hardly remember what it feels like to send two children to school. And although I’ve managed to stay healthy (knock wood), the broken nights and the days spent tending to one or the other languishing child has worn me down.

While I know that this is not the time to slack off on the meals, know that they need a varied diet of fresh fruits and vegetables all the more now to get them healthy, I’m honestly relieved that when my kids are sick, probably like most kids, they shut down and eat like birds. This worried me somewhat when my first was a toddler, but now I recognize this as an inheritance from their father. I am the only one in the house who feeds a cold (or fever, or strep throat, or whatever other illness has hit me). The boys in my family subsist, as near as I can tell, on water and something crunchy until they’re back to themselves. They eat dry cereal, pretzels, rice crackers, and plain toast. Again, as someone who rarely misses a meal, who generally starts thinking about lunch even as I’m taking bites of breakfast, this continually surprises me. I might not want enchiladas or mushroom stroganoff when I’m sick, but as I’ve written before, I still usually want a couple flavors on the plate.

I’m lucky, I know, that I’m not talking about serious illness here. A friend’s son is recuperating from brain surgery and, while he’s recovering, has been vomiting daily for weeks. One of Ben’s classmates was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes a couple years ago, and continues to have a caregiver attend school with him daily to monitor his blood sugar and his meals. My kids don’t have allergies or any chronic illness that we have to factor into their diets. They’re picky eaters to start, and now with stuffy noses and taste buds dulled by fever, there’s not much they are interested in eating. For days, their meals have looked like this:

bunny plate with rice & edamame
bunny plate with rice & edamame

(note the attempt to add appeal by serving the food in a cute plate, one that belonged to Tony when he was a boy.)

Today was the first day in a while that Eli could hold his head up long enough to come to the table, but I was feeling pretty droopy myself so was grateful to discover that our favorite local bakery, Arizmendi, was making a family-favorite pizza: pesto and roasted potato. Arizmendi makes a different pizza every day, and while we all love to make pizza from scratch, this was not the day for that. Instead, we let our bakery friends do the cooking, and saved our energy to make a nice salad and slice some crudites:
pizza

Everyone ate a great dinner, and when there was interest in fresh Bolinas apples for dessert, I went to some trouble for my congested children and served them up in slices with sugar and cinnamon for dipping:

apples

Dessert was followed, of course, by their nightly doses of sudafed, tylenol, and a fervent wish for a good night’s sleep.

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