Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Eggplant Bacon Lasagna

I usually use recipes already created by someone else but I made this one up and it turned out well

Ingredients:
2 medium to large eggplant
(slice into about 1/2 to 1" thick slices, brush with olive oil and roast in the oven at 400 for 15 to 20 minutes on each side)

16 oz ricotta cheese
1/2 cup grated parmesan
1 clove garlic minced
3 chives
1 egg
(mix these ingredients together)

large jar vodka sauce
6 slices of bacon cooked until crispy
no bake lasagna noodles
mozarella chesse for topping

Layer ingredients:
vodka sauce
noodles
cheese mixture
eggplant
bacon broken into small pieces
sauce
noodles
repeat (I had a lot of noodles so I mixed up the layering adding more noodles between different layers)
end with sauce on top

Bake at 350 covered for about 1 hour or a little more
In the last 10 min of baking add the mozarella topping and uncover


This is a picture before cooking

Brooklyn Bridge



Carrot Beet Salad

This is another winter salad inspired from the CSA. It is refreshing and has a nice tangy sweet taste

Ingredients:
Raw beets peeled and grated (I used the food processor)
Raw carrots peeled and grated
Lemon juice and olive oil in generous amounts
salt and and pepper

Mix and adjust seasonings

I added a picture of the beets because they are so pretty!

Perspective






Saturday, November 13, 2010

Reflective Summary of "Let the great world spin" by Colum McCann


The book is a compilation of fictional short stories all which are set in New York City. They are all connected in some way to the true story of Philippe Petit a french man who walked a tightrope wire between the World Trade Center twin towers on August 7, 1974. They also connect to each other to give a picture of the people that make up the city during that time period. 

I am fascinated by the structure of the book and am sure that it is meaningful but have not been able to put the pieces together quite yet. I am also intrigued by the chapter titles but am still deciphering these as well. 
  
THOSE WHO SAW HIM HUSHED
Philippe
5 pages

The city gathers. Hold your breath.

Book one

ALL RESPECTS TO HEAVEN, I LIKE IT HERE.
Corrigan
60 pages

 He is the one I remember most. The kingdom of Heaven here on earth. He holds on in faith long after belief is gone. Human connection.    “Corrigan liked those places where the light was drained… Corrigan told me once that Christ was quite easy to understand. He went where he was supposed to go. He stayed where he was needed. He took little or nothing along, a pair of sandals, a bit of shirt, a few odds and ends to stave off the loneliness.  He never rejected the world. If He had rejected it, He would have been rejecting mystery.  And if He rejected mystery, He would have been rejecting faith. What Corrigan wanted was a fully believable God, one could find in the grime of the everyday. He wanted quite simply for the world to be a better place and was in the habit of hoping for it. “Someday the meek might actually want it,” he said.  Yet he needed space for his doubt. He said he’d rather die with his heart on his sleeve than end up another cynic. PEACE and JUSTICE on the doorbell.


MIRO MIRO ON THE WALL
Claire
41 pages

She lives bound to the past, forever returning to her son lost at war. Plagued by superficial, petty, real fears. Money is not enough, it cannot buy friends, cannot bring back the dead. Second guessing. Where is her place? What has she done with her life? Coping. She holds eternal heaviness. It seems easier when shared. Who cares about the guy walking in the sky.

A FEAR OF LOVE
Lara.
41 pages

When you build on drugs, sex and “art” what is left when the mirage melts. Skipping from one party to another. No plan, no reserve. Start over. The past is still there and still empty. Turning point. Car accident. It wasn’t out fault they died, was it? Can’t go on, can’t pretend anymore. Guilt. Need to make things right.  Ciaran Corrigan. Connection in grief. New start.

LET THE GREAT WORLD SPIN FOREVER DOWN
Philipppe
7 pgs

The walk. “The whole August morning was blown right open.”

Book two

TAG
Jose
17 pages
Purpose. To capture the obscure tag. “The thing that oils the hinges of his day.” The art of the ghetto. 

ETHERWEST
Samuel
22 pages

Young alone. The beginning of the cyber world. Thin connectedness over telephone wires.

THIS IS THE HOUSE THAT HOURSE BUILT
Tillie
38 pages

You see how it happens. It is not the plan, the stroll. Not me, not my baby. Then it is there and there is no way out. Pride, dignity and survival.

THE RINGING GROOVES OF CHANGE
Philippe
6 pages

What came before. Planning, preparation and practice.


Book Three

PART OF THE PARTS
Solomon
27 pages

The judge. Claire’s husband. Ideals vs reality. Glamour removed. Justice, a broken system. The slide that makes the world go round. The common and the grandiose collide. Tillie, Jazzlyn, Corrigan and Philip.

CENTAVOS
Adelita
11 pages

The doctor that would have been. Here she is just an aid for the elderly. Mother, lover. Magical moments, the ones we come back to to make it through. Presence and loss. Burried in the masses. Butterfly tatoo just to remember that there is life outside of the concrete jungle. She made him come alive. She was loved, treasured.

ALL HAIL AND HALLELUJAH
Gloria
39 pages

All things are not equal for blacks and whites, not now, not yet, not for a while to come.  Loving up bringing, she could have been great. Bad choices, too late, one thing leads to another. Alone, three sons to raise. Public housing. Listen to opera to forget. Religion is gone. Can’t go home. Boys stolen by war. Grief bridges the racial gap, it is enough. Claire.  Picking up the pieces for others. Rescue the orphan babies born in a brothel.  There is still meaning and purpose. Time to go home.

Book four

ROARING SEAWARD AND I GO
Jaslyn
24 pages

The baby grown up. Present day. So many stories come together. Born to Jazzlyn. Raise by Gloria. “Niece” of Claire. Visits Ciaran, brother to Corrigan who is married to Lara. Redemption, complication, struggle. Rescued from the cycle of the poverty, from the “stroll.”  Searching, for meaning, identity, understanding of the past. She is the future. The thread of connection is pulled tight.


Finally what is their connection to the “Man on wire.”  Corrigan is distracted by him at the time of this death. Claire is annoyed and hurt that he steals the attention of her friends and husband. For Lara he is but a detail in the day that changed her life, the accident, the point of grief and no return. For Jose and Samuel he is just a guy, impressive but soon to be forgotten in their adolescent minds. Tillie shares his courtroom unaware of his glamour as she heads out to pay time for a lifetime of bad decisions, caught in the vortex of sex trade that can only rarely be escaped. For Solomon he was a sparkle in an otherwise mundane existence.  For Adelita he was the distraction her lover’s mind as he passed, some puzzle to be deciphered from a dying man’s lips. For Gloria a story told by friends. And for Jaslyn he was a connection to her mother.

And so it is for us. We share the world. We witness the same events and they affect us very differently. Brushing encounters with people in our every day lives don't allow us to understand the depth or their stories. We cannot see how they are connected to our own. Yet the connections are there and they are not incidental. There is a plan.  




Friday, November 12, 2010

Reflection on the novel "Let the Great World Spin" by Colum McCann



“All the lives we could live, all the people we will never know, never will be, they are everywhere. That is what the world is.”

This is a book about people and their Individual stories. Who are we? What are our fears and dreams? How are we connected? It is about how we need the connectedness especially in a city when no one ever looks up.

Newly arrived to the city as I turn the pages I am introduced to New York and I understand. I drink in the translation. The blur and business are dissected. Keep your head down, there is no time for humanity, not enough energy to engage. There are too many people, most of them alone. The book provides a window into the broken people in the city most of whom remain silent and forgotten in every day life. 

Living in the city the roar of every day life becomes a hum that is soon ignored.  The book takes a step back and pick the noises out again. It calls me to my senses.

Let the great world spin. Circling back through the pages I appreciate the stories, their connect and disconnect. There are lasting impressions and the forget-able. Jazzlyn, Corrie, Tillie, Gloria, I remember. Then there are the others, the girl broken by drugs and party life, the boy finding hope in the creativity of graffiti, the kids hacking computers, Claire, Solomon... there but not so alive. Perhaps the most forgettable of all for me is Philip, the tightrope walker.

I appreciate the timeline of the book. It seems to following the pattern of the tightrope walker and his journey between the two towers. Starting in the past and ending in the present the stories weave many passes back and forth across the middle of time.  The flow of stories makes me think of how God views the world a mixture of stories all woven together somehow making sense.

Living in the city the roar of every day life becomes a hum that is soon ignored. The book takes a step back and has helped me pick the noises out again. It has called me to my senses.
Beauty in the details of life. To see the ordinary new and captivating.  Poetry. The connectedness of life. Hope in broken humanity

Celery and Fennel Bulb Winter Salad


Ingredients: 
Celery
Fennel bulb
fresh lemon juice
olive oil
Parmesan or Pecorino Romano Cheese
salt and pepper

Assembly:
1. Very thinly slice the celery and fennel bulb (the recipe said to use a mandolin cutting device but I did not have one so I did mine manually)
2. Add lemon juice and olive oil, salt  and pepper to taste
3. Use vegetable peeler to grate large pieces of parmesan cheese and add these
(This picture is from the second time I made the salad. I added fresh corn and radishes because I had those on hand. I am sure other added ingredients would be good as well.)

** I found this recipe on the internet after getting fennel bulb and celery in our CSA. We do not really like celery very much but enjoyed this salad, (enough to make it twice in fact). It is very refreshing especially in the fall and winter when there are not a lot of salad options.



Favorite Photo


                                             Many thanks to my friend Jessica Moody who came
                                             in town with her son this past weekend. She is a
                                             gifted photographer and took this photo of me
                                             holding the baby. I enjoyed learning some framing
                                             tricks from her.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

First Vietnamese Cuisine "Bao Bao Noodles" Midtown East NYC

Overall experience rating:
Food A-
Ambiance B+ (cozy but loud)


Pork and Shrimp (eat with rice)

Noodle soup with beef and ox tail broth
add lime, red hot sauce and black sweet and sour sauce with fresh basil leaves

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Fall Food from CSA



Carrot Celery Soup
                                      


Winter Squash and Greens Pie with Gruyere and Thyme


Raw Brussel Sprout and Parmesan Salad