So I saw this idea on Pinterest about how you can hard boil eggs in the oven at 325 for 25-30 minutes. Not that it's all that difficult to boil them in a pot of water...but I needed to take a shower, so this was more convenient.
It worked. But the shells turned spotty!
You'd think the spots would indicate little burned marks, but there was only one burned place on this whole egg (and none on the one I ate this morning). So...I don't know why they're spotty. Chemists? Any ideas? Oh, and the burned spot would probably indicate that 27 minutes was too long in my oven.
The yolks turned out nice though. And they're spotless.
I also made squash casserole for the first time ever yesterday. I know, I know. How can I have grown up in eastern NC without ever making that? Well, kiss my grits, folks, I usually just saute squash. I used the recipe found here as a starter, but then changed things as I saw fit.
I used the following ingredients:
3 squash
2 zucchini
2 eggs
2 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp vegetable oil
dash of rosemary
8 oz feta (I bought a block and crumbled it myself because it's cheaper that way)
5 oz sour cream
1/2 cup shredded parmesan
2 tbsp garlic powder
1 tsp black pepper
Layer half of your squash on the bottom of the pan.
Beat your eggs.
Mix in all other ingredients.
Spread half of your mixture on top of the squash. Then layer the remaining squash and mixture.
I sprinkled more parmesan and pepper on top. Bake at 375f for 40-45 minutes.
I did a spanking good job on this. Tobias got seconds on vegetables, so you know it was at least a step above edible.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
Between the Lines
Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult and Samantha Van Leer
I read this book a few weeks ago, but am just getting around to writing about it (or maybe just putting forth the energy to write about it). Like I've said before, I'm a big Picoult fan. However...this one wasn't anything like her adult books, and I daresay YA isn't her forte. It'd be unfair of me to say it was a read that tweens and teens wouldn't enjoy, but as an adult, I thought it kind of dragged in some areas, and I wasn't really grabbed by the action in the plot.
Delilah is a teen girl who doesn't particularly care for school, even though she loves to read. The book she's currently infatuated with, Between the Lines, is a fairy tale about a prince on a quest to rescue a princess. It's when the prince begins speaking to Delilah that the story introduces its conflict--how can Delilah rescue a prince from living a repetitive life within the pages of a book?
The number of times Delilah unsuccessfully tries to help the prince escape is what makes this book seem to drag. I thought she could have left out a time or two for the story's sake. It was becoming blatantly obvious that the task was hard. As in most modern fairy tales, there's a happy ending, and readers pretty much know what that ending will be.
Okay, so even though I didn't thoroughly enjoy this book, I can give kudos to the authors for writing a YA novel that is clean. There's no sex, no vulgar language, no inappropriate themes. Despite lacking the topics and language that run amok in today's YA lit, I can say that young girls will enjoy reading this book. It has a happy ending. It has the girl-meets-boy story that infatuates them. It even has color illustrations, which don't come around often in a novel of its length.
So even though I wouldn't recommend it for older readers, if you have a classroom, a library, or a teenage daughter of your own, I'd say it'd be worth it for them to read.
Target age range: 11-15 years
I read this book a few weeks ago, but am just getting around to writing about it (or maybe just putting forth the energy to write about it). Like I've said before, I'm a big Picoult fan. However...this one wasn't anything like her adult books, and I daresay YA isn't her forte. It'd be unfair of me to say it was a read that tweens and teens wouldn't enjoy, but as an adult, I thought it kind of dragged in some areas, and I wasn't really grabbed by the action in the plot.
Delilah is a teen girl who doesn't particularly care for school, even though she loves to read. The book she's currently infatuated with, Between the Lines, is a fairy tale about a prince on a quest to rescue a princess. It's when the prince begins speaking to Delilah that the story introduces its conflict--how can Delilah rescue a prince from living a repetitive life within the pages of a book?
The number of times Delilah unsuccessfully tries to help the prince escape is what makes this book seem to drag. I thought she could have left out a time or two for the story's sake. It was becoming blatantly obvious that the task was hard. As in most modern fairy tales, there's a happy ending, and readers pretty much know what that ending will be.
Okay, so even though I didn't thoroughly enjoy this book, I can give kudos to the authors for writing a YA novel that is clean. There's no sex, no vulgar language, no inappropriate themes. Despite lacking the topics and language that run amok in today's YA lit, I can say that young girls will enjoy reading this book. It has a happy ending. It has the girl-meets-boy story that infatuates them. It even has color illustrations, which don't come around often in a novel of its length.
So even though I wouldn't recommend it for older readers, if you have a classroom, a library, or a teenage daughter of your own, I'd say it'd be worth it for them to read.
Target age range: 11-15 years
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Beef Tips and Mushrooms
I love my new Crock Pot. It's been better than any other appliance in my kitchen these past few weeks. It's not that I've never owned one; this is just the first time I've used one for anything other than Velveeta cheese dip.
The other day I took a recipe I found online that crammed cube steak, cream of mushroom soup, and Lipton onion soup mix into the slow cooker. Okay, I admitted earlier that cooking is pretty new to me (my dad used to say I could burn salad), so please excuse mystupidity ignorance when I wouldn't buy cube steak because I didn't know if it was steak or hamburger (for reasons I won't now get into, I'll eat the former, but not the latter). So I bought the beef tips. Then I forgot to buy the onion soup. So I had to work with what I had at the house.
I did add the curry powder that's in the picture; I mainly did it for color. Otherwise, it would have been...gray... and I don't think my husband would have found it too appetizing (although as my aunt says, you can roll anything in sugar, and he'd eat it). But considering this is what it looked like when I threw it in the pot, I felt doctoring was in order
About halfway through cooking, I did a taste test, and the sauce needed some spice. So I added some chili powder and black pepper to give it a little bite. After 5 hours in the pot (original recipe called for 4-6 hours), dinner was ready.
I served it with green beans, black eyed peas, and quinoa. This was the first time I'd ever had quinoa, and the gravy was a nice touch. It tasted a lot like brown rice, so it needed something on top. The mister said he would prefer rice next time, and he did pick a lot of the mushrooms out (I thought maybe I could slide those by him), but otherwise, he did like it.
Tonight I'm cooking Hawaiian BBQ chicken, so we'll see how that one goes.
The other day I took a recipe I found online that crammed cube steak, cream of mushroom soup, and Lipton onion soup mix into the slow cooker. Okay, I admitted earlier that cooking is pretty new to me (my dad used to say I could burn salad), so please excuse my
I did add the curry powder that's in the picture; I mainly did it for color. Otherwise, it would have been...gray... and I don't think my husband would have found it too appetizing (although as my aunt says, you can roll anything in sugar, and he'd eat it). But considering this is what it looked like when I threw it in the pot, I felt doctoring was in order
About halfway through cooking, I did a taste test, and the sauce needed some spice. So I added some chili powder and black pepper to give it a little bite. After 5 hours in the pot (original recipe called for 4-6 hours), dinner was ready.
I served it with green beans, black eyed peas, and quinoa. This was the first time I'd ever had quinoa, and the gravy was a nice touch. It tasted a lot like brown rice, so it needed something on top. The mister said he would prefer rice next time, and he did pick a lot of the mushrooms out (I thought maybe I could slide those by him), but otherwise, he did like it.
Tonight I'm cooking Hawaiian BBQ chicken, so we'll see how that one goes.
Gorge Yourself
(Picture from nytimes.com, 2007)
After much consideration, I've decided to merge my reading blog with some cooking adventures. It's a newly discovered interest of mine (as in, I used to think anything more difficult than tearing cellophane off a box of food from the freezer wasn't worth any consideration), and I like sharing. I have a photo album on Facebook, but the caption boxes don't let you go into much detail. So even though I will still use this blog to review good (or not so good) books, I'll also use it as a path to culinary enlightenment.
Hot dogs will not be involved in the making of this blog.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Edgar Sawtelle
This is a must read for dog lovers. Before you fret and think this is reminiscent of Old Yeller and will make you cry, the animals are okay!
The Sawtelles raise their own breed of dogs on their farm in Wisconsin. Gar and Trudy love the dogs, but eventually want to have children of their own. After struggling with pregnancies, little Edgar Sawtelle is born mute. [Let me stop here a minute. Because up until now I was kind of floating along in the book trying to decide if it was going to be worth 560 pages of my time. I've got a stack of books waiting for me, I need to use my time wisely here. Thank goodness little Almondine takes the lead at this point.] Almondine is one of Trudy and Gar's dogs who actually lives in the house instead of the barn. She has been trying to find her place in the world, and when she notices baby Edgar vying for his parents' attention, she knows exactly what she must do. She becomes his voice. Almondine is as much a part of Edgar as she is herself.
Skip a few years to an adolescent Edgar. He has learned to sign; his signs are part ASL, part Edgar's version. Not only does he sign with his parents, he communicates with the dogs in this manner. Edgar is excited to learn that he is going to raise his own litter of pups. While training one day, his father suffers an attack, and a voiceless Edgar is unable to help him.
Edgar and Trudy wallow through their days, and Uncle Claude comes back into the picture (much to Edgar's dismay). After an unthinkable turn of events, Edgar flees into the woods with three of his young dogs. They must survive in the wilderness while trying to make their way to Canada. Edgar eventually needs to decide if he will return to Almondine, his mother, and unknown truths at home, or if he will stay away for good.
I do wish, however, that I could see a picture of the fictional Sawtelle dog. At first, I imagined Almondine to be something along the lines of a greyhound. But then as the book went on, I thought the Sawtelle dogs were supposed to be similar to German Shepherds. Does anyone have an opinion on this?
Overall, a good story. If I could go back and do it over again, I would focus my attention on this one, and not be reading three others at the same time. So take that into consideration before you pick it up.
Target Age Range: Older Teens - Adults
50 Shades of --- Does your mother know you're reading this?
It's summer, so I'm back in my usual routine of reading three or four books at a time. You know--one for the gym, one for the pool, one for Battle of the Books, one for bed... I suppose it might actually be easier to just read one at a time, but where's the fun in that? Anyway, it takes longer to finish a book when you do this, so I've been ignoring my posts. Additionally, I've been learning how to cook. Really cook. As in, no microwaves or frozen packaging involved. Now I'm stuck having to write a bunch of reviews at once, which means I'm picking and choosing what titles to discuss.
I wasn't going to write about the 50 Shades Trilogy because of its content, but after reading all three books, I figured I should at least mention it. As you've heard, it's basically erotica. Don't expect anything more in the first book. If you can get past the first one, the second and third have actual plots. They're predictable and definitely not the next great American novel, but "summer beach reads" that are entertaining. They've remained on the NYT Bestsellers list because they create a fantasy world where adults can lose themselves.
I thought they were okay. I'm not going to say they were great because I didn't think so. I don't care how much money EL James has made, there are thousands of books that are better. The characters were pretty flat (as in ALL of the characters, save Ana and Christian, the main characters. But to say they were round and went through leaps and bounds in character development is a leap in itself) and the dialogue was repetitive. How many times can you read the same jealous conversation, even if the words have changed slightly? I also have a hard time giving credit to the author when the books were originally written online as Twilight fanfiction. Ana and Christian are obviously replicas of Edward and Bella. As I told someone else when discussing the book, I kept waiting for Christian to look up from his somber midnight piano playing and provocatively reveal to Ana that he's a creature of the night.
However, I have never been one to completely neglect a book's entertainment value. Obviously, many people have been sucked into the story. In addition to the Christian/Ana escapades, there are car chases, tours of the world, parties, weddings, and attempted murders. If you're looking for a daring read, then this one might to pique your interest.
Haha, on a related note, I saw this picture on Pinterest the other day:
I agree 100% with the quote, but...you might want to read 50 Shades via Kindle. Save yourself from public scrutiny. I know I did.
Target Age Range: Adult
I wasn't going to write about the 50 Shades Trilogy because of its content, but after reading all three books, I figured I should at least mention it. As you've heard, it's basically erotica. Don't expect anything more in the first book. If you can get past the first one, the second and third have actual plots. They're predictable and definitely not the next great American novel, but "summer beach reads" that are entertaining. They've remained on the NYT Bestsellers list because they create a fantasy world where adults can lose themselves.
I thought they were okay. I'm not going to say they were great because I didn't think so. I don't care how much money EL James has made, there are thousands of books that are better. The characters were pretty flat (as in ALL of the characters, save Ana and Christian, the main characters. But to say they were round and went through leaps and bounds in character development is a leap in itself) and the dialogue was repetitive. How many times can you read the same jealous conversation, even if the words have changed slightly? I also have a hard time giving credit to the author when the books were originally written online as Twilight fanfiction. Ana and Christian are obviously replicas of Edward and Bella. As I told someone else when discussing the book, I kept waiting for Christian to look up from his somber midnight piano playing and provocatively reveal to Ana that he's a creature of the night.
However, I have never been one to completely neglect a book's entertainment value. Obviously, many people have been sucked into the story. In addition to the Christian/Ana escapades, there are car chases, tours of the world, parties, weddings, and attempted murders. If you're looking for a daring read, then this one might to pique your interest.
Haha, on a related note, I saw this picture on Pinterest the other day:
I agree 100% with the quote, but...you might want to read 50 Shades via Kindle. Save yourself from public scrutiny. I know I did.
Target Age Range: Adult
Friday, June 1, 2012
Tamar
Tamar: A Novel of Espionage, Passion, and Betrayal by Mal Peet
I loved this book. I don't often start by saying that, but I loved this book. I'm not sure why I pulled it off the shelf at the library initially; a single word title that didn't mean anything to me wasn't exactly captivating. However, the cover revealed the rest of the title, and espionage, passion, and betrayal sound more than interesting. Receiving a Carnegie Medal is nothing to scoff at either, so what the hey, right? I'm so glad I randomly pulled this one because, especially as it was written in 2005, it's set in a time that's near and dear to my historical side---The Netherlands in 1945 during the Hunger Winter.
As an undergrad, the research for my senior history thesis focused on the Dutch underground resistance movement and the Hunger Winter during the latter part of the war. Tamar studies the same, except more is mentioned of the British/SOE's involvement with said resistance. Tamar and Dart are Dutch spies working to help unify the different underground groups. Not much is said about Tamar and Dart's personal lives; it almost seems they have no pasts of which to speak--perhaps this is due to their spy personae. Readers do know that Tamar has been to the area before, and is in love with Marijke, a young lady living with her grandmother on her farm. However, though readers may know about Marijke and Tamar's affair, other characters in the story do not.
Skip to 1995 (as the story jumps between '45 and '95). Here is another Tamar; a granddaughter growing up with her mother, grandmother, and grandfather after her father's disappearance. Not long after her grandmother, Marijke, is sent to live in a nursing home, her grandfather kills himself. He has left Tamar a box of clues--old money, a crossword puzzle, and a map dotted with Xs along the Tamar River--prior to his passing. Tamar and her cousin, Yoyo, travel the British countryside to unravel the mystery her grandfather has left behind.
Back in the '40s, and the war rages on, much to the Allies' efforts. Resisters are edgy, and some go to terrible lengths, resulting in deaths of many innocent men. Dart is counting down how many days he has left as a WO--they don't have a long shelf life. He finds himself visiting the farm more often to see Marijke, and he grows infatuated with her. This may or may not have been aided by the number of pills he has been taking in order to stay awake awaiting codes. Dart, impersonating a doctor, has a number of close encounters with the Nazis, and sleep has been evading him.
It is not until the end of the book, when in 1995 Tamar has reached the end of her journey, and in 1945, Tamar has reached his, that the stories fit together. Peet has created a novel that bases its entire plot on the readers' making an assumption (one I made, honestly), and then revealing the truth at the end. It's not often that I'm taken by surprise like I was during this book, but I'm definitely not complaining. I love it when a YA book is written so well.
I'm not 100% sure it's accurately targeted as a YA novel (though I get it--one of the characters is 15 years old), but if teens are going to read it, I'd encourage them to be older. Some of the deaths in the book are graphic, not in a William Wallace, "FREEDOM!!" kind of way, but in a sad-so-many-innocent-lives-were-lost kind of way. I don't think that younger teens can fully appreciate/understand the mentality of those who had to contemplate everything to survive. I will readily admit that I did not do this book justice in this post, but I didn't want to give anything away! If you like war stories, and you want something with a twist, this is a top recommendation from me.
Target Age Range: older teens - adults
I loved this book. I don't often start by saying that, but I loved this book. I'm not sure why I pulled it off the shelf at the library initially; a single word title that didn't mean anything to me wasn't exactly captivating. However, the cover revealed the rest of the title, and espionage, passion, and betrayal sound more than interesting. Receiving a Carnegie Medal is nothing to scoff at either, so what the hey, right? I'm so glad I randomly pulled this one because, especially as it was written in 2005, it's set in a time that's near and dear to my historical side---The Netherlands in 1945 during the Hunger Winter.
As an undergrad, the research for my senior history thesis focused on the Dutch underground resistance movement and the Hunger Winter during the latter part of the war. Tamar studies the same, except more is mentioned of the British/SOE's involvement with said resistance. Tamar and Dart are Dutch spies working to help unify the different underground groups. Not much is said about Tamar and Dart's personal lives; it almost seems they have no pasts of which to speak--perhaps this is due to their spy personae. Readers do know that Tamar has been to the area before, and is in love with Marijke, a young lady living with her grandmother on her farm. However, though readers may know about Marijke and Tamar's affair, other characters in the story do not.
Skip to 1995 (as the story jumps between '45 and '95). Here is another Tamar; a granddaughter growing up with her mother, grandmother, and grandfather after her father's disappearance. Not long after her grandmother, Marijke, is sent to live in a nursing home, her grandfather kills himself. He has left Tamar a box of clues--old money, a crossword puzzle, and a map dotted with Xs along the Tamar River--prior to his passing. Tamar and her cousin, Yoyo, travel the British countryside to unravel the mystery her grandfather has left behind.
Back in the '40s, and the war rages on, much to the Allies' efforts. Resisters are edgy, and some go to terrible lengths, resulting in deaths of many innocent men. Dart is counting down how many days he has left as a WO--they don't have a long shelf life. He finds himself visiting the farm more often to see Marijke, and he grows infatuated with her. This may or may not have been aided by the number of pills he has been taking in order to stay awake awaiting codes. Dart, impersonating a doctor, has a number of close encounters with the Nazis, and sleep has been evading him.
It is not until the end of the book, when in 1995 Tamar has reached the end of her journey, and in 1945, Tamar has reached his, that the stories fit together. Peet has created a novel that bases its entire plot on the readers' making an assumption (one I made, honestly), and then revealing the truth at the end. It's not often that I'm taken by surprise like I was during this book, but I'm definitely not complaining. I love it when a YA book is written so well.
I'm not 100% sure it's accurately targeted as a YA novel (though I get it--one of the characters is 15 years old), but if teens are going to read it, I'd encourage them to be older. Some of the deaths in the book are graphic, not in a William Wallace, "FREEDOM!!" kind of way, but in a sad-so-many-innocent-lives-were-lost kind of way. I don't think that younger teens can fully appreciate/understand the mentality of those who had to contemplate everything to survive. I will readily admit that I did not do this book justice in this post, but I didn't want to give anything away! If you like war stories, and you want something with a twist, this is a top recommendation from me.
Target Age Range: older teens - adults
Labels:
British,
Carnegie Medal,
Dutch,
historical fiction,
Hunger Winter,
Mal Peet,
Tamar,
WWII,
YA
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