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broodings from the burrow

March 24, 2020


top ten tuesday: cookbooks
posted by soe 1:13 am

So, here’s the thing: I don’t actually do a lot of cooking. And even my baking is way less than I think it should be. But … I love buying cookbooks. I am a sucker for them! It’s gotten bad enough that I now force myself to take them out of the library and won’t let myself buy a copy unless we’ve made a recipe out of them.

But, at the moment, no one’s libraries are still open. (That’s true, right? Chicago finally closed theirs, right?) And we’re all stress baking. So, if you need a new cookbook, let me give you some recommendations (and a link to one of my local bookstores, which will ship them to you for free through the end of the month).

So, here are ten of my favorite cookbooks, with thanks to That Artsy Reader Girl’s Top Ten Tuesdays:

  1. Marion Cunningham’s The Breakfast Book — Hands down, my absolutely most-used baking book.
  2. Six Seasons by Joshua McFadden & Martha Holmberg — A great option if you eat seasonally and lots of veg.
  3. Teeny’s Tour of Pies by Teeny Lamothe — Teeny is a local baker who wrote a cookbook where you can make mini pies in cupcake tins
  4. The Language of Baklava by Diana Abu Jaber — Actually more of a foodie memoir, but with Middle Eastern-American recipes at the end of each chapter, including my favorite hummus recipe.
  5. Electric Bread by Suzan Nightingale — My favorite cookbook for my breadmaker.
  6. Any Moosewood cookbook — Honestly, I buy these any time I see them at a used bookstore, which isn’t as often as you’d think, in part because their recipes are straightforward, vegetarian, and well loved and, therefore, home cooks don’t often part with their copies.
  7. Laura Werlin’s Great Grilled Cheese — Okay, so this is less great cookbook and more just inspiration in a book when I’m wanting melty cheese in a different way (brie with apricot jam, for instance).
  8. Perfect Pops by Charity Ferreira — Popsicles are very comforting and can be made while you sleep.
  9. The Joy of Cooking — Because sometimes you just need an all-purpose, no nonsense cookbook to give you the bare basics.
  10. My grandmother’s collection of recipes — Sorry. You won’t find this in the bookshop, but it is one of my most treasured possessions.

I have not cooked from either of these cookbooks, but they would be next on my list to buy: José Andres’ and Matt Gouldings’ Vegetables Unleashed (it’s only a matter of time before he adds Nobel Peace Prize winner to his resume) and The Hot Bread Kitchen by Jessamyn Waldman Rodriguez (all bread products originated by the women who have trained/work at this NYC immigrant-friendly bakery). I have read all the recipes in the latter and would absolutely bake my way front to back.

How about you? What are your favorite cookbooks/baking books?

Category: books. There is/are 8 Comments.

March 19, 2020


mid-march unraveling
posted by soe 1:00 am

Unraveled

I haven’t knit on my sock in a couple of days, but I take it up to the park with me each evening, along with my book, which I have been working on. I’d thought I’d leave A Murderous Relation until later, because it looks distinctly possible that what was once a two-week slog could go on for months. But this week has been more painful than I expected, and time with Veronica and Stoker is comforting, which seems like an odd things to say about a book set in London with main characters pursuing Jack the Ripper.

I should resume listening to The Bride Test by Helen Hoang, but it hasn’t quite captured my interest the way I’d hoped it would. I have downloaded Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman for Rudi and me to listen to together. And I also just added the next Inspector Gamache novel, Cruelest Month, to aptly take me into April.

Unraveling along with As Kat Knits.

Category: books,knitting. There is/are 3 Comments.

March 17, 2020


top ten books on my spring tbr list
posted by soe 2:04 am

(No, my computer isn’t fixed yet, but washing the dishes gave my old tablet enough time to charge.)

My top ten titles on my spring tbr list:

  1. Recipe for Persuasion by Sonali Dev
  2. Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo
  3. Shuri: A Black Panther Novel by Nic Stone
  4. Aurora Burning by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
  5. Check, Please!, Book 2: Sticks and Scones by Ngozi Ukazu
  6. The List of Things That Will Not Change by Rebecca Stead
  7. The Happy Ever After Playlist by Abby Jimenez
  8. Mulan by Grace Lin
  9. Orphan Eleven by Gennifer Choldenko
  10. By the Book by Amanda Sellet

How about you? What books are you looking forward to this spring?

Category: books. There is/are 5 Comments.

March 15, 2020


my library checkout list
posted by soe 11:52 pm

D.C.’s public library gave us the advantage of a couple days’ notice that they were going to close for the rest of the month, which meant that I had the opportunity to add a few things — mostly cookbooks and dvds — to the burgeoning collection of materials I already had checked out.

DVDs:

  • The Big Year (I’m not a huge fan of Steve Martin, Jack Black, or the Wilson brothers singly, let alone in combination, but I’m hopeful.)
  • Rush Hour (I never saw the original movie, but I enjoyed the tv remake that came out a couple years back, which friends assure me was sometimes based line for line on its source material.)
  • Spy (I like Melissa McCarthy and am hopeful this will fall on the silly side of funny, rather than stupid.)
  • Spider-Man, into the Spider-Verse (I have seen it. And loved it. And wanted to see it again.)
  • Charlie’s Angels (We missed it when it was in the theaters last fall, probably due to my volleyball schedule. I know it got terrible reviews. Probably I would have watched it anyway.)
  • Veronica Mars: Season 1 (This is the new tv show. No, we didn’t watch the original tv show and the series is old enough that our library system has all the seasons broken up into multiple dvds, so you can’t really request them and instead have to wander around the various branches searching out the discs you need. We understand the overall concept, if not all the nuance.)
  • Frankie Drake Mysteries. The complete second season
  • The Goldfinch (Honestly, even the preview for this movie made me anxious, but I still wanted to watch it. I just might not have picked it up right now if it hadn’t already been on hold for me.)
  • Brooklyn Nine-Nine: Season 5

Nonfiction

  • Sheet Pan Suppers Meatless by Raquel Pelzel
  • Great British Bake Off — Bake It Better. No. 8: Pastry & Patisserie by Joanna Farrow
  • Red Truck Bakery Cookbook by Brian Noyes (All three of these were picked up yesterday, when the urge to start stress baking on a daily basis started rearing its head.)
  • The Library Book by Susan Orlean (Yes, I’ve had this out for like six months. Apparently it’ll be mine for at least one more.)
  • Dreyer’s English by Benjamin Dreyer (This has also been checked out to me for a while, but I haven’t started it. Guess I have time now…)
  • The First Dinosaur: How Science Solved the Greatest Mystery on Earth by Ian Lendler (Ian was my childhood neighbor and is the first person who introduced me to Tolkein.)

Adult Fiction

  • A Murderous Relation by Deanna Raybourn
  • The Travelers by Regina Porter
  • The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abbi Waxman
  • Red Letter Days by Sarah Jane Stratford

YA Fiction

  • Wayward Son by Rainbow Rowell (I need to find and reread Carry On, and now, apparently, I have time to figure out where my copy is.)
  • I’m Not Dying with You Tonight by Kimberly Jones (Seems about right for our current situation, although it’s actually about race relations.)
  • Don’t Date Rosa Santos by Nina Moreno
  • Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson
  • The Downstairs Girl by Stacey Lee
  • The Beast Player by Nahoko Uehashi

Middle-Grade Fiction

  • Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky by Kwame Mbalia
  • The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise by Dan Gemeinhart
  • Song for a Whale by Lynne Kelly
  • Homerooms & Hall Passes by Tom O’Donnell
  • Crush by Svetlana Chmakova
  • Roll with It by Jamie Sumner
  • Stargazing by Jen Wang
  • Each Tiny Spark by Pablo Cartaya
  • Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga

Do you have materials out from the library to help you through your hours at home?

Category: books. There is/are 1 Comment.

March 12, 2020


unraveled sock madness
posted by soe 1:28 am

Unraveled Sock Madness

That right there is not a nearly completed pair of Sock Madness socks, close to being finished by Saturday’s noon deadline so I can advance to the next round.

Nor is it a nearly finished single Sock Madness sock that will allow me to keep receiving patterns.

But what it is is a start to a sock I’m enjoying making. And that will just have to be enough this year.

I’m several chapters into The Bookish Life of Nina Hill, which I’d like to be enjoying more than I am. I am hopeful that now that we’ve introduced everyone and set up the plot the story will pick up a little more, but so far it’s a bit thin and thinks itself a bit more clever than it actually is. If it doesn’t improve, I may just let it go back to the library.

I finished Louise Penny’s Fatal Grace on audio and now have Tara Westover’s Educated to start and Helen Hoang’s The Bride Test to finish.

Head to As Kat Knits for a roundup of what others are reading and crafting.

Category: books,knitting. There is/are 3 Comments.

March 10, 2020


ten authors i follow on twitter
posted by soe 1:40 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl asks us to share authors we have fun following on social media. I don’t know that I have particular fun following these folks on Twitter, but I do follow them:

  1. Rainbow Rowell
  2. Jason Reynolds
  3. Angie Thomas
  4. Laura Lippman
  5. Tim Federle
  6. Becky Albertalli
  7. Adam Silvera
  8. Eliot Schrefer
  9. Stephanie Pearl-McPhee
  10. Jasper Fforde

Do you follow any authors on social media?

Category: books. There is/are 4 Comments.