Volume 7 Issue 7
*** Random Thoughts
How I love back to school time! New notebooks and pencils, knowing fall is on its way. Most importantly: routine.
Routine – so mundane and rigid. I used to think of routines as strict guidelines that kill creativity and try to make everyone conform.
Now I know that for me, routine sets creativity free. Steps and lists and guidelines – that’s what I need to be productive and engaged. Without a routine, all the little things that add to big things don’t get done. Time and days slip away, leaving me frustrated and disappointment with myself, which doesn’t do a thing to help my productivity and creativity.
School starting means cooler temperatures can’t be too far behind (here’s hoping). Back to school is like the beginning of the new year for me, too. I love it!
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
"I think we need to be put back in touch with our childhood...to be reminded of what's important, like memories about people we loved, or things that happened to us that affected our lives, things we can laugh about and shed a few tears about... I think storytelling is a way of saying 'I love you. I love you enough to tell you something that means a great deal to me.' " -- Kathryn Tucker Windham
*** Fun Food Ideas
Treats for teachers. To get the year off to a “sweet” start, send the teacher a treat: Caramel Cashew Bars! These are heavenly – buttery and rich. Make them with pecans or walnuts, if you’d rather. They are simple to make and as an added bonus, they can be made ahead of time and frozen.
Cut the bars into squares and fill a cellophane bag with them. Tie the bag in school colors and attach a few No. 2 pencils to the bow.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Saving the world – first, let’s start with manners.
Epiphany through Billy Ray Cyrus. No, really.
Lucky
Back home
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
The Secret History by Donna Tartt is one incredible novel. I’m already looking forward to re-reading it.
13 Reasons Why by Jay Asher will break your heart. It’s an important book to read.
All the books I read in July.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
Monday, August 1st – My sister in law’s birthday
Friday, August 5th – First day of school
Sunday, August 21st – My other sister in law’s birthday
Thursday, September 1st – Miss. State’s season opener at University of Memphis at 7:00.
Wednesday, September 7th – Jeffrey’s birthday
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
July Delta Dish
Volume 7 Issue 6
*** Random Thoughts
I don’t know of any day camp for grownups where we get to make things, like in Vacation Bible School and summer camp. That was always my favorite part. (Least favorite: dodge ball and softball.)
There’s nothing like making something. It’s why I wander around in Michael’s, browsing the paper products alone for an hour: rubber stamps and inks and so many different kinds of paper.
When I saw an article that told how to make marbleized paper (never mind that it was an easy activity for kids – *I* wanted to do it) I pounced.
The Child got home from summer camp this morning. We spent an afternoon in the kitchen swirling colors and dipping paint in them. We tried umpteen combination, every one of them gorgeous. Near the end of the afternoon he said, “I’m so glad you’re my mom and not some other mom.”
Me, too.
I’m thankful for summer afternoons playing. Making something. Maybe a memory, too.
Step by step instructions – it’s so easy and fun – along with pictures here.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” – Thomas Jefferson
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”- Gouverneur Morris
“You have to love a nation that celebrates its independence every July 4, not with a parade of guns, tanks, and soldiers who file by the White House in a show of strength and muscle, but with family picnics where kids throw Frisbees, the potato salad gets iffy, and the flies die from happiness. You may think you have overeaten, but it is patriotism.”- Erma Bombeck
*** Fun Food Ideas
Planning a cookout or get together to celebrate the Fourth? These cookies are the perfect addition! Soft sugar cookies coated with a sweet, colorful glaze in red, white, and blue are so festive.
It’s tomato time! This tart made with fresh sliced tomatoes, basil, and roasted garlic is one of my favorites.
Another summer favorite: blueberries. We’re lucky enough to fresh, Mississippi-grown blueberries. I’ve frozen them in popsicles
put them in baked French toast for a Father’s Day breakfast
and baked them into muffins.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Delta flooding
Dreamy getaway
Genteel
I had on sloppy gym shorts and a green Piggy Wiggly t-shirt. It was seven a.m. and a man in a pressed white shirt and tie in a Land Rover passed by. He looked surprised and puzzled but he smiled and waved.
History history everywhere
We all but tripped over history the entire afternoon.
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I’ve just now gotten around to reading the Pulitzer-Prize winning A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan.
It was wonderful. "Readers will be pleased to discover that the star-crossed marriage of lucid prose and expertly deployed postmodern switcheroos that helped shoot Egan to the top of the genre-bending new school is alive in well in this graceful yet wild novel." - Publishers Weekly
I read some great books in May, too.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
This year's conference is August 5th and 6th in Jackson, Mississippi.
*** Calendar
Book Club - Wednesday, July 27. We're reading Child of God by Cormac McCarthy. Y'all wish me luck with that!
*** Random Thoughts
I don’t know of any day camp for grownups where we get to make things, like in Vacation Bible School and summer camp. That was always my favorite part. (Least favorite: dodge ball and softball.)
There’s nothing like making something. It’s why I wander around in Michael’s, browsing the paper products alone for an hour: rubber stamps and inks and so many different kinds of paper.
When I saw an article that told how to make marbleized paper (never mind that it was an easy activity for kids – *I* wanted to do it) I pounced.
The Child got home from summer camp this morning. We spent an afternoon in the kitchen swirling colors and dipping paint in them. We tried umpteen combination, every one of them gorgeous. Near the end of the afternoon he said, “I’m so glad you’re my mom and not some other mom.”
Me, too.
I’m thankful for summer afternoons playing. Making something. Maybe a memory, too.
Step by step instructions – it’s so easy and fun – along with pictures here.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” – Thomas Jefferson
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”- Gouverneur Morris
“You have to love a nation that celebrates its independence every July 4, not with a parade of guns, tanks, and soldiers who file by the White House in a show of strength and muscle, but with family picnics where kids throw Frisbees, the potato salad gets iffy, and the flies die from happiness. You may think you have overeaten, but it is patriotism.”- Erma Bombeck
*** Fun Food Ideas
Planning a cookout or get together to celebrate the Fourth? These cookies are the perfect addition! Soft sugar cookies coated with a sweet, colorful glaze in red, white, and blue are so festive.
It’s tomato time! This tart made with fresh sliced tomatoes, basil, and roasted garlic is one of my favorites.
Another summer favorite: blueberries. We’re lucky enough to fresh, Mississippi-grown blueberries. I’ve frozen them in popsicles
put them in baked French toast for a Father’s Day breakfast
and baked them into muffins.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Delta flooding
Dreamy getaway
Genteel
I had on sloppy gym shorts and a green Piggy Wiggly t-shirt. It was seven a.m. and a man in a pressed white shirt and tie in a Land Rover passed by. He looked surprised and puzzled but he smiled and waved.
History history everywhere
We all but tripped over history the entire afternoon.
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I’ve just now gotten around to reading the Pulitzer-Prize winning A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan.
It was wonderful. "Readers will be pleased to discover that the star-crossed marriage of lucid prose and expertly deployed postmodern switcheroos that helped shoot Egan to the top of the genre-bending new school is alive in well in this graceful yet wild novel." - Publishers Weekly
I read some great books in May, too.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
This year's conference is August 5th and 6th in Jackson, Mississippi.
*** Calendar
Book Club - Wednesday, July 27. We're reading Child of God by Cormac McCarthy. Y'all wish me luck with that!
Thursday, June 2, 2011
May-June Delta Dish
Volume 7 Issue 5
*** Random Thoughts
My calendar works just fine. I have no excuse, then, for skipping the May issue of Delta Dish.
I felt like something was missing. I looked around, patted my pockets. I had my keys, my cell phone. I realized it was the entire month; it had gone in a flash.
Summer brain encourages dawdling, gazing at nothing, and daydreaming about fresh peaches and ripe tomatoes.
It’s not an entirely lazy state of mind; summer brain also involves tending a growing vegetable garden, end of school year activities, diving into the new novel I'm working on, and getting time in to think about what all we’ll eat while visiting South Carolina.
For years, I was not a summer person. I still don’t get crazy excited about the extreme heat we’ll suffer for two or three straight months.
But.
I wish I’d realized years ago that summer requires slowing down. Piddling. Spending time in an inefficient manner. Sipping mint iced tea. It’s the only time of year, really, when one can say, “I’m going to the pool for the day! I’ve got lots of lying around, lounging, and lolling about to do. Back later!”
That should be celebrated. That and the fresh squash, the homemade ice cream, the sound of an air conditioner clicking on.
Go summer.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass on a summer day listening to the murmur of water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is hardly a waste of time.” - John Lubbock
*** Fun Food Ideas
During the first week of May, I made the cutest cookies for the 3rd grade teachers at my son’s school. They were in the shape of apples, frosted with the amazing wonderful cookie glaze I’ve just discovered.
The cookies were big and went in a cellophane bag. My son signed the tags that hung from the ribbon.
Wouldn’t you think I would have taken a picture? At least one?
Yet I didn’t. The cookies were big hits. The teachers were not expecting it. I may do the same thing when the next school year starts.
Another good one: Watermelon and Sweet Tea Granita.
Talk about refreshing! I made it for my book club last week and it was delicious.
1/4 vanilla bean
1 Tbs. good-quality loose black tea, such as English Breakfast (I used a Lipton tea bag)
2/3 cup boiling water
2 Tbs. granulated sugar
3 cups puréed watermelon (from about 4 cups diced, seeded watermelon)
1 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
Kosher salt
Sweetened whipped cream (optional)
Note:
I didn't detect much tea flavor in the finished product. I bet you could use lemonade or other fruit juice in place of the tea, if you don't happen to have any tea on hand.
Split the vanilla bean and scrape out the seeds. Put the vanilla seeds and tea in a small bowl (save the pod for another use). Add the boiling water and steep for 10 minutes. Add the sugar and stir gently to dissolve.
Or just add a bit of vanilla extract to 2/3 cup strong sweet tea.
In a large bowl, combine the watermelon purée, lemon juice, and 1/4 tsp. salt. Strain the tea mixture into the watermelon mixture and stir to combine. Pour into a 9x9-inch metal baking pan, cover with plastic wrap, and freeze. After 1 hour, stir and scrape the mixture with a fork, repeating every 30 to 40 minutes, until the mixture has an icy shard-like consistency, about 3-1/2 hours total.
To serve, scrape the granita into chilled bowls, and top with a dollop of sweetened whipped cream (if using).
*** More from the Kudzu Kitchen:
Incredibly delicious and easy homemade bread with roasted red peppers, sprinkled with thyme and sea salt.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
We got the garden in.
Love the Peabody Hotel.
You’ll never guess who got a bike!
Our two-year wedding anniversary
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I had the great fortune to read several good books here lately.
Another was A Homemade Life by Orangette blogger Molly Wizenberg.
From an Amazon.com review: In A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table, Molly Wizenberg recounts a life with the kitchen at its center. From her mother's pound cake, a staple of summer picnics during her childhood in Oklahoma, to the eggs she cooked for her father during the weeks before his death, food and memories are intimately entwined.
I got an advanced reader’s copy of South of Superior, which I really enjoyed.
From the jacket flap: When Madeline Stone walks away from Chicago and moves five hundred miles north to the coast of Lake Superior, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, she isn't prepared for how much her life will change.
April Books here.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
June 14 – Flag Day
June 21 – Summer Solstice
June 29 – Book Club. This month's read is Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt.
*** Random Thoughts
My calendar works just fine. I have no excuse, then, for skipping the May issue of Delta Dish.
I felt like something was missing. I looked around, patted my pockets. I had my keys, my cell phone. I realized it was the entire month; it had gone in a flash.
Summer brain encourages dawdling, gazing at nothing, and daydreaming about fresh peaches and ripe tomatoes.
It’s not an entirely lazy state of mind; summer brain also involves tending a growing vegetable garden, end of school year activities, diving into the new novel I'm working on, and getting time in to think about what all we’ll eat while visiting South Carolina.
For years, I was not a summer person. I still don’t get crazy excited about the extreme heat we’ll suffer for two or three straight months.
But.
I wish I’d realized years ago that summer requires slowing down. Piddling. Spending time in an inefficient manner. Sipping mint iced tea. It’s the only time of year, really, when one can say, “I’m going to the pool for the day! I’ve got lots of lying around, lounging, and lolling about to do. Back later!”
That should be celebrated. That and the fresh squash, the homemade ice cream, the sound of an air conditioner clicking on.
Go summer.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass on a summer day listening to the murmur of water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is hardly a waste of time.” - John Lubbock
*** Fun Food Ideas
During the first week of May, I made the cutest cookies for the 3rd grade teachers at my son’s school. They were in the shape of apples, frosted with the amazing wonderful cookie glaze I’ve just discovered.
The cookies were big and went in a cellophane bag. My son signed the tags that hung from the ribbon.
Wouldn’t you think I would have taken a picture? At least one?
Yet I didn’t. The cookies were big hits. The teachers were not expecting it. I may do the same thing when the next school year starts.
Another good one: Watermelon and Sweet Tea Granita.
Talk about refreshing! I made it for my book club last week and it was delicious.
1/4 vanilla bean
1 Tbs. good-quality loose black tea, such as English Breakfast (I used a Lipton tea bag)
2/3 cup boiling water
2 Tbs. granulated sugar
3 cups puréed watermelon (from about 4 cups diced, seeded watermelon)
1 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
Kosher salt
Sweetened whipped cream (optional)
Note:
I didn't detect much tea flavor in the finished product. I bet you could use lemonade or other fruit juice in place of the tea, if you don't happen to have any tea on hand.
Split the vanilla bean and scrape out the seeds. Put the vanilla seeds and tea in a small bowl (save the pod for another use). Add the boiling water and steep for 10 minutes. Add the sugar and stir gently to dissolve.
Or just add a bit of vanilla extract to 2/3 cup strong sweet tea.
In a large bowl, combine the watermelon purée, lemon juice, and 1/4 tsp. salt. Strain the tea mixture into the watermelon mixture and stir to combine. Pour into a 9x9-inch metal baking pan, cover with plastic wrap, and freeze. After 1 hour, stir and scrape the mixture with a fork, repeating every 30 to 40 minutes, until the mixture has an icy shard-like consistency, about 3-1/2 hours total.
To serve, scrape the granita into chilled bowls, and top with a dollop of sweetened whipped cream (if using).
*** More from the Kudzu Kitchen:
Incredibly delicious and easy homemade bread with roasted red peppers, sprinkled with thyme and sea salt.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
We got the garden in.
Love the Peabody Hotel.
You’ll never guess who got a bike!
Our two-year wedding anniversary
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I had the great fortune to read several good books here lately.
Another was A Homemade Life by Orangette blogger Molly Wizenberg.
From an Amazon.com review: In A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table, Molly Wizenberg recounts a life with the kitchen at its center. From her mother's pound cake, a staple of summer picnics during her childhood in Oklahoma, to the eggs she cooked for her father during the weeks before his death, food and memories are intimately entwined.
I got an advanced reader’s copy of South of Superior, which I really enjoyed.
From the jacket flap: When Madeline Stone walks away from Chicago and moves five hundred miles north to the coast of Lake Superior, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, she isn't prepared for how much her life will change.
April Books here.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
June 14 – Flag Day
June 21 – Summer Solstice
June 29 – Book Club. This month's read is Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
April Delta Dish
Volume 7 Issue 4
*** Random Thoughts
My son told me once that he couldn’t wait until he grew taller than me because then he’d be older than me and he could tell me what to do. He was incredulous when I explained that he may well be taller than me someday but he’d never be older than me.
I added I wouldn’t count on his telling me what to do, either.
When you’re a kid you can’t wait to be a grownup. Candy bars for breakfast, ice cream for dinner, and cartoons nonstop in between!
Wouldn’t it be nice if that’s what being a grownup was about, at least part of the time? The other day I was trying to decide what to have for dinner, running through what was in the freezer and what was in the pantry and I thought, “Didn’t I just do this yesterday?”
There it was: being a grownup in a nutshell. Didn’t I just do this – folding a load of towels, returning books to the library, figuring out what to have for dinner – yesterday and the day before that and the day before that?
Thankfully, most of the time I find contentment in the happy repetition of daily life (although not in unloading the dishwasher). Still, on Fridays when he asks if we can get a snow cone after school, I don’t hesitate. Enjoy being a kid.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Easter spells out beauty, the rare beauty of new life.” - S.D. Gordon
*** Fun Food Ideas
Goodies for Easter:
Easter egg sugar cookies!
Bake cupcakes that have a fun swirled cake batter topped with spring-colored cream cheese icing.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Getting ready for the garden
P90X Update
You can go home again
Multi-tasking is sorely overrated
My grandfather's garden
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I must be living right: I have read so many great books lately.
West of Here is one of the best novels I’ve read in a while.
Our book club’s pick for April is Crooked Letter Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin. I finished it in one day; it was so compelling that I couldn’t put it down.
Last month I got to hear author Andre DuBus do a reading at Turnrow Books. I bought a copy of his memoir, Townie, which is excellent. "Searing" is the word many reviewers use to describe it.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year.
*** Calendar
April 10th – 16th – National Library Week
Sunday, April 17 – Palm Sunday
Sunday, April 24 – Easter Sunday
*** Random Thoughts
My son told me once that he couldn’t wait until he grew taller than me because then he’d be older than me and he could tell me what to do. He was incredulous when I explained that he may well be taller than me someday but he’d never be older than me.
I added I wouldn’t count on his telling me what to do, either.
When you’re a kid you can’t wait to be a grownup. Candy bars for breakfast, ice cream for dinner, and cartoons nonstop in between!
Wouldn’t it be nice if that’s what being a grownup was about, at least part of the time? The other day I was trying to decide what to have for dinner, running through what was in the freezer and what was in the pantry and I thought, “Didn’t I just do this yesterday?”
There it was: being a grownup in a nutshell. Didn’t I just do this – folding a load of towels, returning books to the library, figuring out what to have for dinner – yesterday and the day before that and the day before that?
Thankfully, most of the time I find contentment in the happy repetition of daily life (although not in unloading the dishwasher). Still, on Fridays when he asks if we can get a snow cone after school, I don’t hesitate. Enjoy being a kid.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Easter spells out beauty, the rare beauty of new life.” - S.D. Gordon
*** Fun Food Ideas
Goodies for Easter:
Easter egg sugar cookies!
Bake cupcakes that have a fun swirled cake batter topped with spring-colored cream cheese icing.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Getting ready for the garden
P90X Update
You can go home again
Multi-tasking is sorely overrated
My grandfather's garden
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
I must be living right: I have read so many great books lately.
West of Here is one of the best novels I’ve read in a while.
Our book club’s pick for April is Crooked Letter Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin. I finished it in one day; it was so compelling that I couldn’t put it down.
Last month I got to hear author Andre DuBus do a reading at Turnrow Books. I bought a copy of his memoir, Townie, which is excellent. "Searing" is the word many reviewers use to describe it.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year.
*** Calendar
April 10th – 16th – National Library Week
Sunday, April 17 – Palm Sunday
Sunday, April 24 – Easter Sunday
Labels:
Andre Dubus,
cakes,
cookies,
holidays,
Jonathan Evison,
Tom Franklin
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
March 2011
Volume 7 Issue 3
*** Random Thoughts
Earlier this year when I bought my new calendar and notebooks, I decided that at the beginning of each month, I could try to recapture that feeling that comes at the beginning of the year. The optimism, the sense that anything can happen, this could be your year! And lots of other phrases from self-help books.
That worked remarkably well for January. Come February, I forgot about it until well into the first week of the month.
Ditto for March. But since I love lists and planning, I’m trying to capitalize on that nerdy quirk. Make it work for me. I used to think that if I could focus, I’d be dangerous I’d get so much done. So I’m trying to put my money where my mouth is.
Anyone have any tips to share that help keep you on task?
Also, welcome to the new subscribers! I hope you enjoy.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“When I bought my farm, I did not know what a bargain I had in the bluebirds, daffodils and thrushes; as little did I know what sublime mornings and sunsets I was buying.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
***Now for something completely different.
I put together a PDF with a few Mardi-Gras-inspired recipes. I will figure out how to post it online so you can download it. In the meantime, if you’d like a copy, just email me at kudzuuu at gmail dot com and I’ll send it to you!
*** Fun Food Ideas
Garden, garden, garden is on the brain. Our zucchini seeds aren’t even in the ground yet and I’m already excited about grilling slices of zucchini. So much so that I’m going out and buying some zucchini so I can make this hors d’oeuvres for a wedding shower we’re hosting later this month.
Grilled Zucchini Rolls with Herbs and Cheese
From The Food You Crave: Luscious Recipes for a Healthy Life by Ellie Krieger
3 zucchini (about 1/2 pound each), sliced lengthwise into 1/4-inch slices
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/8 teaspoon salt
Pinch freshly ground black pepper
1 1/2 ounces reduced-fat soft goat's cheese
1 tablespoon freshly minced parsley leaves
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
2 cups baby spinach leaves
1/3 cup basil leaves
Discard the outermost slices of zucchini and brush the rest of the slices with the oil on both sides. Season with salt and pepper. Place on a preheated grill or grill pan for about 4 minutes on each side, or until tender.
In a small bowl combine the goat cheese, parsley leaves and lemon juice, mashing with a fork.
Put 1/2 teaspoon of the cheese mixture about 1/2-inch from the end of a zucchini slice. Top with a few spinach leaves and 1 small, or half of a large basil leaf. Roll up and place seam side down on a platter. Repeat with the rest of the zucchini slices.
Homemade salad dressings sound so fancy but they are a snap to make.
I happened upon this recipe for a tangy Ginger Sesame Dressing that I love. It makes a great sauce for grilled chicken or shrimp or tossed with vegetables and pasta. And, of course, SALAD.
Ginger Sesame Dressing
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
2 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons honey or brown sugar
2 tablespoons peeled and minced ginger
1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
Combine all the ingredients in a blender. Add 2 tablespoons of water. Process until smooth.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
I want some hushpuppies RIGHT NOW.
That time we got stuck on an elevator in Memphis and the fire department showed up to pry the doors open so we could escape
Looking around Memphis.
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman is great!
It’s about an English-language newspaper in Rome, with each chapter telling a story from a different person’s view.
The books I read last month.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
Wednesday, March 9th – Book club.
This month’s pick is The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown.
Sunday, March 13th – Spring forward. Grrrrrrr.
Tuesday, March 15th - The Ides of March. Beware.
Thursday, March 17th – St Patrick’s Day
*** Random Thoughts
Earlier this year when I bought my new calendar and notebooks, I decided that at the beginning of each month, I could try to recapture that feeling that comes at the beginning of the year. The optimism, the sense that anything can happen, this could be your year! And lots of other phrases from self-help books.
That worked remarkably well for January. Come February, I forgot about it until well into the first week of the month.
Ditto for March. But since I love lists and planning, I’m trying to capitalize on that nerdy quirk. Make it work for me. I used to think that if I could focus, I’d be dangerous I’d get so much done. So I’m trying to put my money where my mouth is.
Anyone have any tips to share that help keep you on task?
Also, welcome to the new subscribers! I hope you enjoy.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“When I bought my farm, I did not know what a bargain I had in the bluebirds, daffodils and thrushes; as little did I know what sublime mornings and sunsets I was buying.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
***Now for something completely different.
I put together a PDF with a few Mardi-Gras-inspired recipes. I will figure out how to post it online so you can download it. In the meantime, if you’d like a copy, just email me at kudzuuu at gmail dot com and I’ll send it to you!
*** Fun Food Ideas
Garden, garden, garden is on the brain. Our zucchini seeds aren’t even in the ground yet and I’m already excited about grilling slices of zucchini. So much so that I’m going out and buying some zucchini so I can make this hors d’oeuvres for a wedding shower we’re hosting later this month.
Grilled Zucchini Rolls with Herbs and Cheese
From The Food You Crave: Luscious Recipes for a Healthy Life by Ellie Krieger
3 zucchini (about 1/2 pound each), sliced lengthwise into 1/4-inch slices
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/8 teaspoon salt
Pinch freshly ground black pepper
1 1/2 ounces reduced-fat soft goat's cheese
1 tablespoon freshly minced parsley leaves
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
2 cups baby spinach leaves
1/3 cup basil leaves
Discard the outermost slices of zucchini and brush the rest of the slices with the oil on both sides. Season with salt and pepper. Place on a preheated grill or grill pan for about 4 minutes on each side, or until tender.
In a small bowl combine the goat cheese, parsley leaves and lemon juice, mashing with a fork.
Put 1/2 teaspoon of the cheese mixture about 1/2-inch from the end of a zucchini slice. Top with a few spinach leaves and 1 small, or half of a large basil leaf. Roll up and place seam side down on a platter. Repeat with the rest of the zucchini slices.
Homemade salad dressings sound so fancy but they are a snap to make.
I happened upon this recipe for a tangy Ginger Sesame Dressing that I love. It makes a great sauce for grilled chicken or shrimp or tossed with vegetables and pasta. And, of course, SALAD.
Ginger Sesame Dressing
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
2 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons honey or brown sugar
2 tablespoons peeled and minced ginger
1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
Combine all the ingredients in a blender. Add 2 tablespoons of water. Process until smooth.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
I want some hushpuppies RIGHT NOW.
That time we got stuck on an elevator in Memphis and the fire department showed up to pry the doors open so we could escape
Looking around Memphis.
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Click on “Follow This Blog” to the right. You’ll be alerted when new content is posted.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman is great!
It’s about an English-language newspaper in Rome, with each chapter telling a story from a different person’s view.
The books I read last month.
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
Wednesday, March 9th – Book club.
This month’s pick is The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown.
Sunday, March 13th – Spring forward. Grrrrrrr.
Tuesday, March 15th - The Ides of March. Beware.
Thursday, March 17th – St Patrick’s Day
Friday, February 11, 2011
February 2011
Volume 7 Issue 2
*** Random Thoughts
I am a goober for Valentine’s Day. As a teenager, I flipped through issues of Victoria magazine (no, really)
and swoon over the romantic images: petit fours and iced sugar cookies, doilies, ice skating. Even now, I try to pick up the February issue of Mary Engelbreit’s Home Companion for its bright, cheery heart montages. It’s happy stuff.
February also means Mardi Gras to me (even if it happens to fall in March this year). We hosted supper club this month with a Mardi-Gras themed dinner and had a big ole time. There’s nothing like the Crescent City for good food and good times.
I hope you’re staying warm and snug.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quote
“Love many things, for therein lies the true strength, and whosoever loves much performs much, and can accomplish much, and what is done in love is done well.” – Vincent Van Gogh
*** Fun Food Ideas
Chocolate Cherry Brownies
Espresso Chocolate Shortbread
The Farm Chicks had a cute and easy idea for a Valentine’s gift.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Getting in Mardi Gras early
Celebrating
Why I like looking around
Better late to the high-tech party than never
Me and P90X
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
Books I read last month.
*** Adorable Thing My Child Said
He asked me what I used to want to be when I grew up. I told him a Broadway dancer.
“Whoa. REALLY? Like after you had me?”
“No, this was like when I was about your age.”
A couple of minutes later, said half to himself:
“That is so cool that you wanted to do that.”
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
Wednesday, February 16th – Book club. Selection: Blood for Molasses
Monday, February 14th – St. Valentine’s Day
Monday, February 21st – President’s Day
Also this month – time to start thinking about the garden!
2011 © Pecan Street Press. All rights reserved.
*** Random Thoughts
I am a goober for Valentine’s Day. As a teenager, I flipped through issues of Victoria magazine (no, really)
and swoon over the romantic images: petit fours and iced sugar cookies, doilies, ice skating. Even now, I try to pick up the February issue of Mary Engelbreit’s Home Companion for its bright, cheery heart montages. It’s happy stuff.
February also means Mardi Gras to me (even if it happens to fall in March this year). We hosted supper club this month with a Mardi-Gras themed dinner and had a big ole time. There’s nothing like the Crescent City for good food and good times.
I hope you’re staying warm and snug.
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quote
“Love many things, for therein lies the true strength, and whosoever loves much performs much, and can accomplish much, and what is done in love is done well.” – Vincent Van Gogh
*** Fun Food Ideas
Chocolate Cherry Brownies
Espresso Chocolate Shortbread
The Farm Chicks had a cute and easy idea for a Valentine’s gift.
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
Getting in Mardi Gras early
Celebrating
Why I like looking around
Better late to the high-tech party than never
Me and P90X
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
Books I read last month.
*** Adorable Thing My Child Said
He asked me what I used to want to be when I grew up. I told him a Broadway dancer.
“Whoa. REALLY? Like after you had me?”
“No, this was like when I was about your age.”
A couple of minutes later, said half to himself:
“That is so cool that you wanted to do that.”
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year. To learn more, visit www.mississippiwritersguild.com
*** Calendar
Wednesday, February 16th – Book club. Selection: Blood for Molasses
Monday, February 14th – St. Valentine’s Day
Monday, February 21st – President’s Day
Also this month – time to start thinking about the garden!
2011 © Pecan Street Press. All rights reserved.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
January 2011
Volume 7 Issue 1
*** Random Thoughts
I hope the new is still on your year. I love January, when anything seems possible. On any given day, of course, anything IS possible, but this month we tend to talk about goals and what we hope for and we’re looking for, more than at any other time of year.
That optimism is good, don’t you think?
Irony and cynicism and disdain are so fashionable these days that high hopes and good thoughts are a welcome change. So yay for the new year.
I have high hopes and good thoughts for *you* for the new year. I hope for the best for you in 2011. Dream big!
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Be intent upon the perfection of the present day.” -- William Law
"If you dream of something worth doing and then simply go to work on it and don’t think anything of personalities, or emotional conflicts, or of money, or of family distractions; if you just think of, detail by detail, what you have to do next, it is a wonderful dream even if the end is a long way off, for there are about five thousand steps to be taken before we realize it; and start making the first ten, and stay making twenty after, it is amazing how quickly you get through those five thousand steps.” – As said by inventor Edwin Land, taken from the book about him, “Insisting on the Impossible.”
*** Fun Food Ideas
Thank goodness for Southern Living magazine. That’s where I got this recipe (I tore it from the magazine ages ago and just got around to trying it). It’s a winner: homemade macaroni and cheese with pimentos that has two big things going for it: 1) Easy and 2) Delicious.
Skillet Macaroni and Cheese
This is a marvel - a rich, creamy cheese sauce that is made from low-fat milk. No butter, no cream, and it is so very good.
1/2 (16-oz.) package penne pasta*
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups 1% low-fat milk
1 cup (4 oz.) shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
1 (4-oz.) jar diced pimiento, drained
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
Pinch of paprika
*(Can substitute ½ of a 13/5-oz package of whole grain penne pasta.)
1. Prepare pasta according to package directions.
2. Whisk together flour and 1/4 cup milk. Add flour mixture to remaining milk, whisking until smooth.
3. Bring milk mixture to a boil in a large skillet over medium heat; reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer, whisking constantly, 3 to 5 minutes or until smooth. Stir in cheese and next 4 ingredients until smooth. Stir in pasta, and cook 1 minute or until thoroughly heated. Serve immediately.
Easy Skillet Green Chile Mac 'n' Cheese: Substitute 1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Monterey Jack cheese for Cheddar cheese and 1 (4-oz.) can chopped green chiles, undrained, for diced pimiento. Proceed with recipe as directed.
Per serving: Calories 251; Fat 7.3g (sat 4.6g, mono 0.2g, poly 0.1g); Protein 11.6g; Carb 34.1g; Fiber 1.5g; Chol 22mg; Iron 1.7mg; Sodium 491mg; Calc 229mg
Hearty, warm, and easy:
Sausage, Beans, & Greens Stew
The original recipe called for kale, which our local store didn’t have so we used spinach. Spinach tastes nothing like kale, of course, but that’s what we did, and it was good!
1-1/2 Tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped (1-1/2 cups)
1 medium carrot, peeled and finely chopped (3/4 cup)
1 medium celery stalk, finely chopped (3/4 cup)
1-1/2 tsp. minced fresh rosemary
2 Tbs. tomato paste
2 large cloves garlic, minced (1 Tbs.)
1 quart homemade or lower-salt chicken or vegetable broth
Two 15-oz. cans cannellini beans, rinsed and drained
6 oz. Lacinato kale, center ribs removed, leaves chopped (about 4 firmly packed cups) OR 4 cups of fresh spinach
1 Parmigiano-Reggiano rind (1x3 inches; optional – we did not use because we did not happen to have a 1x3-inch rind of Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese lying around)
1-1/2 tsp. cider vinegar
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2/3 lb. sweet or hot bulk Italian sausage, rolled into bite-size meatballs
Heat 1 Tbs. of the oil in a 4- to 5-quart pot over medium heat. Add the onion, carrot, celery, and rosemary and cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables begin to soften, about 6 minutes. Add the tomato paste and garlic and cook until fragrant, 45 seconds. Add the broth, beans, greens, and Parmigiano rind (if using). Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to medium low, and simmer gently until the vegetables are tender, about 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, heat the remaining 1/2 Tbs. oil in a 10-inch nonstick skillet over medium-low heat. Add the sausage meatballs, sprinkle with a pinch of salt, and cook, stirring occasionally, until browned and cooked through, about 10 minutes.
Add the sausage to the soup and bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Cook 5 minutes more to meld the flavors. Stir the cider vinegar into the soup and season to taste with salt and pepper.
The broth was so good. We used homemade chicken stock, and that may have been why. This soup was easy, inexpensive, and really tasty.
The next time we make we're going to make a few changes:
- andouille sausage. We used mild Italian and the soup could have used a little more flavor. Plus I don't like fennel at all, which the Italian sausage had in it.
- um, kale, as the recipe calls for, if we can find it anywhere.
- possibly dried beans instead of canned.
Calories: 430; Fat (g): 18; Fat Calories (kcal): 160; Saturated Fat (g): 5; Protein (g): 20; Monounsaturated Fat (g): 9; Carbohydrates (g): 48; Polyunsaturated Fat (g): 3; Sodium (mg): 1160; Cholesterol (mg): 25; Fiber (g): 12;
If you like food blogs, and WHO DOESN’T, visit SimpliFried for recipes and tips, all of which are very doable and easy. None of the guilt-inducing things you may find other places (cough MarthaStewart cough). Erin, the site author, seems to thrive on simplicity and being organized. Just going to her web sites make me feel good.
Also in the Kudzu Kitchen:
Italian Braised Chicken with Green Beans and Olives (although we left out the olives and it was still delicious)
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
New calendar, new notebooks...love it!
My word for this year.
Auld Lang Syne
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Visit http://writekudzu.blogspot.com and click on “Follow This Blog” to the right, about midway down the page. You’ll be alerted when a new content is posted. It’s fast and no cost, of course.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
After getting the book last year for Christmas, I vowed to read The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin each January. It’s the perfect book for starting out the new year.
Yester day I finished The Likeness by Tana French and it was incredible. I’m going to the library today to check out her books. From The Booklist review: “The Likeness has everything: memorable characters, crisp dialogue, shrewd psychological insight, mounting tension, a palpable sense of place, and wonderfully evocative, painterly prose.”
The books I read last month.
*** Adorable Thing My Child Said
He asked me what I thought I might become when I grow up. I was thinking that I feel pretty well grown up as it is.
I said I’d like to be novelist. He nodded.
Then his face brightened. “Or! You could work at McDonald’s!”
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year.
The Mississippi Writers Guild is a non-profit association of writers from all over the state and is a growing part of Mississippi’s literary art landscape.
*** Calendar
Friday, January 21st – my birthday. But you already had it marked on your calendar, right?
2011 © Pecan Street Press. All rights reserved.
*** Random Thoughts
I hope the new is still on your year. I love January, when anything seems possible. On any given day, of course, anything IS possible, but this month we tend to talk about goals and what we hope for and we’re looking for, more than at any other time of year.
That optimism is good, don’t you think?
Irony and cynicism and disdain are so fashionable these days that high hopes and good thoughts are a welcome change. So yay for the new year.
I have high hopes and good thoughts for *you* for the new year. I hope for the best for you in 2011. Dream big!
Best,
Keetha
You can follow my blogs! Just click “Follow This Blog” to sign up and you’ll receive alerts when new posts are up.
*** Great Quotes
“Be intent upon the perfection of the present day.” -- William Law
"If you dream of something worth doing and then simply go to work on it and don’t think anything of personalities, or emotional conflicts, or of money, or of family distractions; if you just think of, detail by detail, what you have to do next, it is a wonderful dream even if the end is a long way off, for there are about five thousand steps to be taken before we realize it; and start making the first ten, and stay making twenty after, it is amazing how quickly you get through those five thousand steps.” – As said by inventor Edwin Land, taken from the book about him, “Insisting on the Impossible.”
*** Fun Food Ideas
Thank goodness for Southern Living magazine. That’s where I got this recipe (I tore it from the magazine ages ago and just got around to trying it). It’s a winner: homemade macaroni and cheese with pimentos that has two big things going for it: 1) Easy and 2) Delicious.
Skillet Macaroni and Cheese
This is a marvel - a rich, creamy cheese sauce that is made from low-fat milk. No butter, no cream, and it is so very good.
1/2 (16-oz.) package penne pasta*
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups 1% low-fat milk
1 cup (4 oz.) shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
1 (4-oz.) jar diced pimiento, drained
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
Pinch of paprika
*(Can substitute ½ of a 13/5-oz package of whole grain penne pasta.)
1. Prepare pasta according to package directions.
2. Whisk together flour and 1/4 cup milk. Add flour mixture to remaining milk, whisking until smooth.
3. Bring milk mixture to a boil in a large skillet over medium heat; reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer, whisking constantly, 3 to 5 minutes or until smooth. Stir in cheese and next 4 ingredients until smooth. Stir in pasta, and cook 1 minute or until thoroughly heated. Serve immediately.
Easy Skillet Green Chile Mac 'n' Cheese: Substitute 1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Monterey Jack cheese for Cheddar cheese and 1 (4-oz.) can chopped green chiles, undrained, for diced pimiento. Proceed with recipe as directed.
Per serving: Calories 251; Fat 7.3g (sat 4.6g, mono 0.2g, poly 0.1g); Protein 11.6g; Carb 34.1g; Fiber 1.5g; Chol 22mg; Iron 1.7mg; Sodium 491mg; Calc 229mg
Hearty, warm, and easy:
Sausage, Beans, & Greens Stew
The original recipe called for kale, which our local store didn’t have so we used spinach. Spinach tastes nothing like kale, of course, but that’s what we did, and it was good!
1-1/2 Tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped (1-1/2 cups)
1 medium carrot, peeled and finely chopped (3/4 cup)
1 medium celery stalk, finely chopped (3/4 cup)
1-1/2 tsp. minced fresh rosemary
2 Tbs. tomato paste
2 large cloves garlic, minced (1 Tbs.)
1 quart homemade or lower-salt chicken or vegetable broth
Two 15-oz. cans cannellini beans, rinsed and drained
6 oz. Lacinato kale, center ribs removed, leaves chopped (about 4 firmly packed cups) OR 4 cups of fresh spinach
1 Parmigiano-Reggiano rind (1x3 inches; optional – we did not use because we did not happen to have a 1x3-inch rind of Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese lying around)
1-1/2 tsp. cider vinegar
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2/3 lb. sweet or hot bulk Italian sausage, rolled into bite-size meatballs
Heat 1 Tbs. of the oil in a 4- to 5-quart pot over medium heat. Add the onion, carrot, celery, and rosemary and cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables begin to soften, about 6 minutes. Add the tomato paste and garlic and cook until fragrant, 45 seconds. Add the broth, beans, greens, and Parmigiano rind (if using). Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to medium low, and simmer gently until the vegetables are tender, about 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, heat the remaining 1/2 Tbs. oil in a 10-inch nonstick skillet over medium-low heat. Add the sausage meatballs, sprinkle with a pinch of salt, and cook, stirring occasionally, until browned and cooked through, about 10 minutes.
Add the sausage to the soup and bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Cook 5 minutes more to meld the flavors. Stir the cider vinegar into the soup and season to taste with salt and pepper.
The broth was so good. We used homemade chicken stock, and that may have been why. This soup was easy, inexpensive, and really tasty.
The next time we make we're going to make a few changes:
- andouille sausage. We used mild Italian and the soup could have used a little more flavor. Plus I don't like fennel at all, which the Italian sausage had in it.
- um, kale, as the recipe calls for, if we can find it anywhere.
- possibly dried beans instead of canned.
Calories: 430; Fat (g): 18; Fat Calories (kcal): 160; Saturated Fat (g): 5; Protein (g): 20; Monounsaturated Fat (g): 9; Carbohydrates (g): 48; Polyunsaturated Fat (g): 3; Sodium (mg): 1160; Cholesterol (mg): 25; Fiber (g): 12;
If you like food blogs, and WHO DOESN’T, visit SimpliFried for recipes and tips, all of which are very doable and easy. None of the guilt-inducing things you may find other places (cough MarthaStewart cough). Erin, the site author, seems to thrive on simplicity and being organized. Just going to her web sites make me feel good.
Also in the Kudzu Kitchen:
Italian Braised Chicken with Green Beans and Olives (although we left out the olives and it was still delicious)
*** Hit the Highlights – a few choice posts from this month’s blog
New calendar, new notebooks...love it!
My word for this year.
Auld Lang Syne
Be the first in your neighborhood to know when fresh blog posts are up! Visit http://writekudzu.blogspot.com and click on “Follow This Blog” to the right, about midway down the page. You’ll be alerted when a new content is posted. It’s fast and no cost, of course.
*** Shameless Bid for Commerce
“Keetha DePriest Reed's "More Culinary Kudzu: Recollections and Recipes from Growing Up Southern" is part cookbook, part collection of wonderful essays on food, family and growing up Southern and altogether great fun...
I would very highly recommend "More Culinary Kudzu" to anybody who enjoys good food and good writing as well as to anybody who wants to find out more about the South. As for me, I only have one question left - how do I get invited to one of their family reunions?” – review by ReaderViews.com
*** Recommended Reading
After getting the book last year for Christmas, I vowed to read The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin each January. It’s the perfect book for starting out the new year.
Yester day I finished The Likeness by Tana French and it was incredible. I’m going to the library today to check out her books. From The Booklist review: “The Likeness has everything: memorable characters, crisp dialogue, shrewd psychological insight, mounting tension, a palpable sense of place, and wonderfully evocative, painterly prose.”
The books I read last month.
*** Adorable Thing My Child Said
He asked me what I thought I might become when I grow up. I was thinking that I feel pretty well grown up as it is.
I said I’d like to be novelist. He nodded.
Then his face brightened. “Or! You could work at McDonald’s!”
*** Mississippi Writers Guild
The Mississippi Writers Guild sponsors writer workshops, conferences, writer retreats and reputable writing contests. Membership dues are only $40.00 per year.
The Mississippi Writers Guild is a non-profit association of writers from all over the state and is a growing part of Mississippi’s literary art landscape.
*** Calendar
Friday, January 21st – my birthday. But you already had it marked on your calendar, right?
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