Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Let's Eat

 We adore Gyo Fujikawa!  Her books always bring back nice memories of my childhood (I must have had one or two of her books as a little girl) and of my own children when they were toddlers.  The illustrations of children and animals are always so sweet and especially sweet is the diversity of children  that she drew.  

This article from the New Yorker is wonderful and makes me love her artwork even more!

(Also here's a tip, thrift stores always have her books!)

Let's Eat
Gyo Fujikawa

This is a nice sized board book, just right for toddler hands, all about what we eat. 













Monday, November 24, 2014

Slumps, Grunts, and Snickerdoodles

Lila Perl 1975
drawings by Richard Cuffari

The history of food can be so interesting.  In this book What Colonial America Ate and Why, you can imagine the English Pilgrim families trying to eke out a new way of sustenance.  There were vegetables and grains they were completely unfamiliar with and I'm sure many were homesick for the regular food they were used to.  You can see how they adapted their cooking to use these new American ingredients for their traditional English dishes.

Of course, the Pilgrims intended at the time to plant their own seeds of wheat, oats, rye, barley, and peas in the empty Indian cornfields.  They did not know that much of their seed had rotted on the long, damp journey from England.  Nor did they realize that they had come to the land of Indian corn, to an entire continent in fact where no European grains- no wheat or oats, no rye or barley- had ever been heard of before the first visits of European ships and sailors.

We learned that sukquttahash (succotashwas an Indian dish of corn and beans.  It was one of the first, the simplest, and the most directly adopted recipes taken from the Indians by the colonists.


The poor colonists also had to go without bread- there was no wheat or rye flour.  So they tried experimenting with cornmeal, baking Indian pone- improving the flavor somewhat by adding salt and sugar, milk and butter, and baking their bread on a greased fireplace griddle, pancake fashion.

I like the story of Anadama bread:  A cornmeal and wheat bread that actually had enough wheat flour in it to be raised by yeast.  The story behind anadama bread is that there was once a New England fisherman who grew exceedingly tired of the cornmeal mush served up for dinner day after day by his unimaginative wife, Anna.  Adding several fistfuls of wheat flour, some yeast, and some molasses to Anna's mush, he set the entire mess to rise, baked it, and ate the hot delicious loaf, while muttering angrily to himself between satisfying mouthfuls, "Anna, damn her!" 

Though this new world had plenty of wild fruits and berries, they were all sour and tart.  So the colonists concocted "slumps" and "grunts"- a way to steam the fruit with a cakelike dumpling dough on top.  Or even better, a "flummery", which was fruit stewed and sweetened and served thick with a bit of cream.  



This Thanksgiving holiday I think I'll be thankful for green bean casserole, the sweet light white bread I'll be baking, fat non-gamey turkey and pumpkin pie!  




Friday, November 16, 2012

Timelines Food Feasts, Cooks and Kitchens

Since next week we'll all be preoccupied with food, here's a great book all about it!

Richard Tames
designed by David Salariya 1994

It starts at the beginning and follows various ancient cultures around the world up to the present day. You'll learn about the methods of growing crops, the types of food ingredients available in different regions, cooking styles, and how spices and sugar shaped politics and nations.  Filled with information, we never get tired of looking at books like this.


(Madeleine said they learned about Roman fish sauce in her Latin class- it doesn't look that appetizing to me!)











Thursday, September 20, 2012

Little Pea

I'm so happy my two big kids still like to jump in bed and listen to me read picture books.  The other night both Madeleine and Henry grabbed their favorites and then squabbled over who got to be next to mom (though it does make me feel very loved, you wouldn't believe the wrestling fights three kids can have over snuggle positions!)

Since Henry's birthday is on the horizon, we read his book first.  This book cracks us up because Henry is our picky eater and getting vegetables in him is like a military mission.  Also, Little Pea is just so darn cute!

Amy Krouse Rosenthal
illustrated by Jen Corace 2005


The drawings are adorable and the story is funny. To grow big and strong, peas have to eat candy but Little Pea hates candy. His parents tell him that if he wants to have his yummy desert he has to eat 5 pieces of candy (which he does, though not happily). Can you guess what his dessert is?






Monday, December 12, 2011

A Child's Christmas Cookbook

Betty Chancellor 1964

My friend Lauren gave me this wonderful book for Christmas a couple years ago.  It's filled with Victorian illustrations and all sorts of fun recipes and ideas.  The recipes are fairly easy- we've made cinnamon toast and the egg on bread.  I especially loved the pages about Afternoon Tea or the Party in the Playroom with Tin Soldier Tarts.  And my favorite- Breakfast for a Tired Mother.




Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Pancakes for Breakfast

Tomie dePaola 1978

The other morning Charlotte picked this book out. So of course we then had to make pancakes for breakfast!  We didn't gather the eggs from the hen house, or churn our own butter but they still came out yummy.






There's no words to read, just nice Tomie dePaola pictures showing the story.  We watch the woman gather all her ingredients only to be disappointed by her dog and cat and she has to eat breakfast with her neighbors in the end.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Many Hands Cooking

It's rainy and damp- just the perfect day to make some Irish soda bread.  I like to have my kids helping me in the kitchen.  Sometimes that works out and sometimes there's a lot of arguing!  Madeleine's specialty is "No Bake Cookies".  Henry's good at making molasses cookies and tortillas, and Charlotte likes to help make everything!

Terry Touff Cooper and Marilyn Ratner 1974
illustrated by Tony Chen 

I originally checked this book out of the library years ago and loved it.  Then it was just my luck to find it at a thrift store.   It has great illustrations and a page of cooking term definitions, a map, and information about each country highlighted.  There are plenty of children's cookbooks out there, but I think I like this one best.  The recipes are simple and use easy to find ingredients.




We've tried most of the dishes.  Some were a bigger hit than others- the Irish Broonie is really good, but no one liked the Fufu from Ghana.  Even if not used as a cookbook, the text about the country and its food still makes for good reading and learning. 

Monday, November 15, 2010

The Book of Trades and To the King's Taste

These two books are not necessarily children's books, but they're still fun and compliment the medieval themes of the latest books I've been listing.


Jost Amman 1973

I love this book- originally published in 1568 it lists all the trades and crafts of 16th century Germany. Written in German (with accompanying woodcuts) it has English translations at the bottom of the pages and also has an interesting introduction that would make for a good history lesson.






Lorna J. Sass 1975

This is a great idea in theory- a cookbook of dishes from the reign of Richard II. Unfortunately not many of them sounded appetizing to me. The design of the book has great period illustrations and is a fascinating look at the cookery of that time.