Monday, June 15, 2015

It's Monday, What Are You Reading? 6/15/15


It's Monday and I'm in New York City! We're heading home in a few minutes, so this will be a quick update. It's been a whirlwind weekend of good food, great art, and beautiful outdoor spaces. We'll make one more stop at The Cloisters on our way north..


Current Reading//


The Story of a New Name by Elena Ferrante is even better than My Brilliant Friend. I haven't been able to read very much this week, but always look forward to that hour in the evening.


On the blog//

Tuesday Intro: The Folded Clock
Book Review: Enchanted August by Brenda Bowen
Weekend Cooking: Flounder Milanese with Arugula and Tomato


On the homefront//
Angus, our visiting greyhound, left Wednesday night after a ten-day stay. The house seems very quiet now... and I think Zelda is lonely.

We picked up an early Father's Day present for my husband - a tandem kayak!

An impromptu trip to Manhattan seemed like a good idea. We decided to drive down Friday evening, but both girls were out of town until Sunday. We had a good time anyway, and enjoyed a family evening on Sunday.

My brother, the greyhound whisperer


The week ahead//

Will be a short one... A couple of doctor's appointments for Twin B and lots of book sorting in preparation for our annual Friends of the Library book sale coming up in July. And of course we'll be using that kayak!

How was your week? What are you reading today?

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Weekend Cooking: Flounder Milanese with Arugula and Tomato


I love to cook and frequently experiment with new recipes. It was impossible when the girls were younger (and pickier) but as they got closer to middle school/junior high, I began introducing new recipes with mostly familiar ingredients. By high school, all three were adventurous enough for new foods, spices, and cooking techniques. My husband, who will try anything once, has been an enthusiastic supporter all along. We've had our fair share of successes, but also accept the fact that an occasional flop is inevitable.

However, there are still nights (and sometimes entire weeks) where only quick and easy will do. For those times, I have a handful of dishes I consider to be my "go to" recipes. This week, I turned to  Skinnytaste (a favorite blog and cookbook) and her Flounder Milanese with Arugula and Tomato. Not only is it low in calories and delicious, I can also have it on the table in less than 20 minutes!


Flounder Milanese with Arugula and Tomatoes

Ingredients:

4 (4 oz each) skinless flounder filets
pinch kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper
4 cups arugula
1 medium vine ripe tomato, diced small
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 lemon, halved
2 large egg whites
2/3 cup seasoned bread crumbs
olive oil spray (about 1 tbsp worth)

Directions:

Season fish lightly with salt and pepper.  In a medium bowl, combine the arugula, tomato, olive oil and the juice from half of of the lemon. Season with salt and pepper, toss and set aside. Slice the other half of the lemon into 4 slices or wedges to serve with the fish.

In a shallow bowl, beat the egg whites. Place the bread crumbs in another dish. Dip each fish filet in the egg whites, then bread crumbs.

Heat a large saute pan over medium heat. Spray a generous amount of olive oil spray on one side of the fish, and lay it in the pan, oil side down. Spray the other side of the fish generously to coat and cook for 4 to 5 minutes on each side, until the crumbs are golden and the fish is opaque and cooked through.  

To serve, place a fillet on each dish and top with arugula salad and lemon.

Servings: 4 • Size: 1 filet • Old Points: 4 • Weight Watcher Points+: 5 pt 
Calories: 220 • Fat: 4 g • Carb: 13 g • Fiber: 2 g • Protein: 33 g • Sugar: 2  g
Sodium: 476 mg (without salt)  • Cholest: 77 mg
--The above recipe is from Skinnytaste.com--

My notes:
This recipe would work well with several different kinds of white fish. I'll try sole or tilapia next. Also, I cheated a little on the fat and used a very small amount of olive oil and butter instead.

My photo is not as pretty as Skinnytaste's, but it sure was delicious!


What is your favorite quick and easy "go to" dish?


Weekend Cooking, hosted at Beth Fish Reads, is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Enchanted August: A Novel by Brenda Bowen


Enchanted August: A Novel
by Brenda Bowen
Pamela Dorman Books, 2015
320 pages
source: publisher via Netgalley

Summary (from goodreads):

On a dreary spring day in Brooklyn, Lottie Wilkinson and Rose Arbuthnot spot an ad on their children’s preschool bulletin board:

Hopewell Cottage
Little Lost Island, Maine.
Old, pretty cottage to rent on a small island.
Springwater, blueberries, sea glass.
August.

Neither can afford it, but they are smitten—Lottie could use a break from her overbearing husband and Rose from her relentless twins. On impulse, they decide to take the place and attract two others to share the steep rent: Caroline Dester, an indie movie star who’s getting over a very public humiliation, and elderly Beverly Fisher, who’s recovering from heartbreaking loss. If it’s not a perfect quartet, surely it will be fine for a month in the country.

When they arrive on the island, they are transformed by the salt air; the breathtaking views; the long, lazy days; and the happy routine of lobster, corn, and cocktails on the wraparound porch. By the time of the late-August blue moon, real life and its complications have finally fallen far, far away. For on this idyllic island they gradually begin to open up: to one another and to the possibilities of lives quite different from the ones they’ve been leading. Change can’t be that hard, can it?

With a cast of endearingly imperfect characters and set against the beauty of a gorgeous New England summer, Enchanted August brilliantly updates the beloved classic The Enchanted April in a novel of love and reawakening that is simply irresistible.

My thoughts:

Whether you've read Elizabeth von Arnim's The Enchanted April  or not, Enchanted August  by Brenda Bowen is a near-perfect summer novel. So clear your calendar, pull up a beach chair, pour a cold drink, and prepare to be transported.

Just like The Enchanted April's  castle in Italy, I inhabited Hopewell Cottage on Little Lost Island, Maine... and regular readers of this blog know how much I love Maine! I gazed at the ocean, gathered sea glass, smelled the flowers, listened to birdsong, and feasted on lobster. Pure bliss.

Bowen's characters - a pair of harried New York City moms, a publicly humiliated movie star, and the elderly, grieving Beverly Fisher - offer an entertaining twist on Von Arnim's Londoners... especially Beverly Fisher. I delighted in my time with this group.

As a rule, I am not a fan of 'modern retellings'. In fact, I can only think of one I truly enjoyed. Now that number has doubled. And by the way, If you haven't read The Enchanted April, now is the perfect time. Why not read the two books back to back?

Bottom line: 
Relax and enjoy some summer fun. Escapist reading doesn't get much better.

My rating:


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Tuesday Intro: The Folded Clock

                                                                                                              June 21 
Today I wondered What is the worth of a day?  Once, a day was long. It was bright and then it wasn't, meals happened, and school happened, and sports practice, maybe, happened, and two days from this day there would be a test, or an English paper would be due, or there would be a party for which I'd been waiting, it would seem, for years. Days were ages. Love bloomed and died in a day. Rages flared and were forgotten and were replaced by new rages, also forgotten. Within a day there were discernible hours, and clocks with hands that ticked out each new minute. I would think, Will this day never end?  By nightfall, I'd feel like a war had been fought. I was wounded; sleep was not enough to heal me. Days would linger in my nerves, aftershocks registered on the electrical plain. Days made a physical impact. Days could hurt.
The Folded Clock: A Diary
by Heidi Julavits

A few of my library holds came in last week, including this book, which has surprised me... first the physical beauty of the hardcover edition (I may want one of my own) and then the beauty of the opening entry. I haven't seen many reviews yet, but I really like writing style and am hopeful it will continue like this. It seems like a book to read slowly, maybe a few entires per day.

Here is the goodreads summary:
Like many young people, Heidi Julavits kept a diary. Decades later she found her old diaries in a storage bin, and hoped to discover the early evidence of the person (and writer) she’d since become. Instead, "The actual diaries revealed me to possess the mind of a paranoid tax auditor." The entries are daily chronicles of anxieties about grades, looks, boys, and popularity. After reading the confessions of her past self, writes Julavits, "I want to good-naturedly laugh at this person. I want to but I can't. What she wanted then is scarcely different from what I want today." 
 Thus was born a desire to try again, to chronicle her daily life as a forty-something woman, wife, mother, and writer. The dazzling result is The Folded Clock, in which the diary form becomes a meditation on time and self, youth and aging, betrayal and loyalty, friendship and romance, faith and fate, marriage and family, desire and death, gossip and secrets, art and ambition. Concealed beneath the minute obsession with “dailiness” are sharply observed moments of cultural criticism and emotionally driven philosophical queries.  In keeping with the spirit of a diary, the tone is confessional, sometimes shockingly so, as the focus shifts from the woman she wants to be to the woman she may have become.  
 Julavits's spirited sense of humor about her foibles and misadventures, combined with her ceaseless intelligence and curiosity, explode the typically confessional diary form.  The Folded Clock  is as playful as it is brilliant, a tour de force by one of the most gifted prose stylists in American letters.
What do you think? Would you keep reading?


Every Tuesday, Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea posts the opening paragraph (sometime two) of a book she decided to read based on the opening. Feel free to grab the banner and play along.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

The Sunday Salon 6/7/15: A Week with the Greyhounds


Anther week has passed, and this one has literally gone to the dogs. Angus, the recently retired greyhound we are grey-b-sitting for friends, arrived on Monday and has captured our hearts. He is such an affectionate, well-mannered big boy - unusual for one so fresh off the racetrack. He even kept me company on a few morning walks. Angus will be with us until Wednesday... we'll all hate to see him leave.

His behavior and attitude have me even more convinced that Zelda was abused and traumatized during her racing career. She was a cowering, skittish mess when we got her, and it was months before she would even hold eye contact. I suppose I'm better off not knowing exactly what her life was like before she came to us five years ago. Greyhound racing is a terrible thing.

Anyway, being home with the dogs allowed for some extra reading time. My original reading plans were derailed by a netgalley approval and the arrival of a couple library holds.

Finished last week//


Enchanted August: A Novel by Brenda Bowen (via Netgalley)
This modern retelling of Elizabeth von Arnim's 1922 novel, The Enchanted Aprilis pure fun! Review coming soon.



Aquarium by David Vann 
An unusual coming-of-age in a dysfunctional family story. Well-written and creative, but I can't say I liked it much. I'll sort out my thoughts and write a review.


Current reading//


The Story of A New Name (Neopolitan novels #2) by Elena Ferrante
A read/listen combination. Very good so far. Put on the back-burner for the two books above, but now it's my top priority.


Other new Books:


The Folded Clock by Heidi Julavits 
Another library hold, this beautiful hardcover edition will probably be up next. 



Baltimore Blues (Tess Monaghan Novel Book 1) by Laura Lippman 
A $1.99 kindle daily deal... I think I need an intervention.

On the blog//

Tuesday Intro: The Story of a New Name  by Elena Ferrante
Everything Old is New Again: The Poldark Saga
Weekend Cooking: Chowderland  by Brooke Dojny


Around the blogosphere//

Shannon's (River City Reading) thoughtful post, Do Book Bloggers Know Their Worth?, is well-worth a read if you haven't seen it yet.

Have you ever thought about writing tweet-length reviews? Check out Fourth Street Review's post, Mini-Reviews (in 140 Characters or Less) and be inspired.


In the kitchen//

It was unseasonably cool last week and I made soup, twice. First a clam chowder from the Chowderland cookbook (recipe and review here) and then a very simple Slow Cooker Chicken Enchilada Soup from Gimme Some Oven.

We also had one of my "go to" quick and easy favorites, Honey Beer Chicken from Betsylife. I've made this countless times and it's always delicious, but Thursday I used a very hoppy beer and didn't care for the taste quite as much.

Later today//

My parents and siblings are coming over this afternoon for the first boat ride of the season. Later we'll cook hamburgers and hot dogs on the grill. Summer is here!

How was your week? What are you reading?

Zelda and Angus 

Friday, June 5, 2015

Chowderland by Brooke Dojny


Chowderland: 
Hearty Soups & Stews with Sides & Salads to Match
by Brooke Dojny
Storey Publishing, 2015
144 pages
source: from publisher via Netgalley

CHOWDER (noun)  :  a soup or stew of seafood (as clams or fish) usually made with milk or tomatoes, salt pork, onions, and other vegetables (as potatoes); also :  a soup resembling chowder <corn chowder> 
That's the definition of chowder according to  Merriam-Webster, but to me it means much more. Chowder conjures up images of the New England coastline. It makes me think of weather-beaten waterside restaurants serving up comfort-in-a-bowl on outdoor decks, oversized oyster crackers, and family vacations in Maine. I love Maine.

3 reasons I requested Chowderland:
  • The cover. It makes me want to pull up a spoon.
  • I only have one good seafood soup recipe in my repertoire.
  • My FIL orders New England Clam Chowder every time we go out to dinner. Every time.
3 things I loved about the cookbook:

  • Gorgeous photography
  • Visually appealing graphics
  • Informative ingredient discussion - which variety of potato, whether to use salt pork or bacon...


3 things about the Boston-Style Creamy Clam Chowder I made:

  • It takes some effort. I mean, no throwing ingredients into a crockpot and having soup appear six hours later.
  • It tasted even better the second day.
  • Heavy cream and bacon grease are scary, but that's probably why it tasted so good.

3 reasons I recommend Chowderland

  • Clear, concise instructions
  • Non-seafood chowders, accompaniments, and dessert recipes are also included
  • All the chowders!

3 more recipes I want to try (make that 4):

  • Lobster and Sweet Corn Chowder
  • Mussel Chowder with light curry and colorful vegetables
  • Penobscot Bay Scallop Stew
  • The Real Deal Lobster Bisque




The recipe:

4 ounces salt pork or bacon, cut into 1/2 inch dice or ground in the food processor, (about 1 cup)
6 tablespoons melted butter, more if needed
1 large onion, chopped
1 large celery stalk, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
3 cups bottled clam juice
2 cups water, plus more if needed
1 pound all-purpose potatoes, peeled and diced (about 3 cups)
2 teaspoons dried thyme or 2 tablespoons chopped fresh thyme
1 bay leaf, broken in half
3 cups chopped hard-shell clams with their liquor
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley

1. Cook the salt pork with the butter in a large heavy soup pot or Dutch oven over medium-low heat until crisp and the fat is rendered, 10 to 15 minutes. Remove the cooked bits with a slotted spoon, drain on paper towels, and reserve. If you don't have 8 tablespoons of fat in the pot, make up the difference with additional butter.

2. Add the onion and celery and cook over medium heat until they begin to soften, about 5 minutes. Sprinkle on the flour and cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Add the clam juice and water and bring to a boil over high heat, whisking until smooth.

3. Add the potatoes, thyme, and bay leaf, and cook, covered, over medium-low heat until the potatoes are tender, about15 minutes. Add the clams and cream, cook for 5 minutes, and remove from the heat. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Let the chowder sit at cool room temperature for at least an hour or, better yet, refrigerate for up to 2 days.

4. Reheat over low heat, adding more broth, cream, or water if the chowder is too thick. Ladle into bowls, sprinkle with parsley, and pass the reserved pork bits (reheated in the microwave) for sprinkling on the chowder if desired.

Bottom line: If you love chowder, this cookbook belongs in your collection!


Weekend Cooking, hosted at Beth Fish Reads, is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Every Old is New Again: The Poldark Saga


I feel a little silly admitting this, but I've just made a connection. Poldark  has been mentioned a lot lately, and I know it's an upcoming PBS series. But I just figured out that it's not about vampires or supernatural phenomena. And it's not post-apocalyptic or dystopian. {But you understand why I might draw that conclusion from the name, right? }

But here's the strange thing. It's based on a book... a series of books, actually. And almost everyone seems to know about them. Except me. Several of my goodreads friends have even read some (or all) of them. Even more surprising, Poldark has already been made into a miniseries. Twice. In the seventies... when I was paying attention to that kind of thing. {Remember Roots?} How did I miss it?

The twelve historical novels of The Poldark Saga  were written by Winston Graham, the first four in the 1940s and 1950s. After a long pause, the series resumed in 1973 and book 12 was published in 2002.

Set in the 1780's, the main character, Ross Poldark, is a British Army officer. He returns to his home in Cornwall after the American Revolutionary War only to find that his fiancée Elizabeth Chynoweth, having believed him dead, is about to marry his cousin Francis Poldark... And it continues from there.

There's more information on the PBS website. The series begins June 21.

Have you read the books or watched the miniseries? Will you watch this new version? Should I?





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