SOCIAL MEDIA

Book Review: The Vibrant Table

Why I picked it: In the last two years, I have become obsessed with cookbooks.  I enjoy reading personal stories, and find it amazing to discover how a list of ingredients transforms into an experience for one, or many.

Synopsis: Walk with Anya Kassoff through farmers' markets, local food shops, and her garden and you too will start to see fresh fruit and vegetables as the raw materials for artistic expression. Rose petal and honey sundaes, lemongrass and raspberry tiramisu with cardamom cream, amaranth pumpkin porridge: with these recipes in hand, you will never run out of ways to enjoy fresh, whole foods at home.

Anya's family-focused food blog, Golubka (Russian for "dove"), has a well-earned reputation for unique recipes that please the palate and senses. Her recipes are healthy by most standards--always vegetarian, mostly vegan, gluten-free, and often raw--and every dessert can serve as an energizing breakfast. Her food is fresh, seasonal, homemade, handcrafted, and 100% delightful.

Over 100 recipes include lighter interpretations of familiar classics and embody a fresh, bright sensibility that will inspire you well beyond the table. From breakfasts through sweet indulgences, every recipe tells a story of a balanced and nourished lifestyle, centered around the family table and a bustling kitchen.

Anya's kitchen is part workshop and part art classroom, so many recipes double as food projects that can be done for or with kids. Anya's love for fresh and seasonal ingredients prepared with love is clear.

Quick Take: Have you taken the time to flip the pages of a cookbook recently?  If you read the introduction and the pages between each recipe, you can really get to know the author.  Cookbooks today are part memoir. The author of The Vibrant Table shares a glimpse into her life growing up in Russia, during the 'iron curtain' days. She mentioned her mother spent half her life waiting in lines and learned to use every last bit of food to feed their family.

Food blogger, turned author, this book is extremely useful.  The author explains how to use the book, teaching the reader/user about ingredients and everyday items to keep in the kitchen. She explains oils, nuts, flours, sweet options, etc...

The photography is stunning, the page layout is lovely, and the recipes are creative.

Ingredients for each recipe are listed in a column to the side, making it easy to glance at and confirm you have everything need before getting started. I have made several recipes from the book and can't wait to buy a copy to add to my cookbook collection.

note: I read this book in January (pub date Jun 10), on a cold, snowy weekend. Looking at the photography and reading each recipe warmed me as I sat on the sofa, with a fire roaring, and the football playoffs being consumed by my family. Sharing recipes and ideas with them, we all enjoyed it!


Rating: 5 stars
Source: Netgalley (review copy)
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Book Review: Cold Antler Farm

Why I picked it: If I'm completely honest, the cover grabbed my attention, then my eye dropped to the bottom of the cover where I read... memoir (which I love to read).

Synopsis:  Author Jenna Woginrich is mistress of her one-woman farm and is well known for her essays on the mud and mess, the beautiful and tragic, the grime and passion that accompany homesteading. In Cold Antler Farm, her fifth book, she draws our attention to the flow and cycle not of the calendar year, but of the ancient agricultural year: holidays,  celebrations, seasonal touchstones, and astronomical events that mark sacred turning points in the seasons.

Amidst the "lost" holidays of the equinoxes, May Day, Hallowmas, and Yule, we learn the life stories of her beloved animals and crops--chicken, pig, lamb, apples, basil, tomatoes. May apple blossoms are sweet fruit for rambunctious sheep in June. And come September, the harvest draws together neighbors for cider making under the waning summer sun. The living beings she is tending fuel one another--and the community--day to day, season by season. 

Quick Take: I read this book in two days, during a snowstorm, snuggled on the sofa with a fire roaring. 

Jenna Woginrich is a talented writer, reading her craft challenges me to become a better writer, and I'm forever grateful to her. In addition to the amazing writing, the author shares the struggles and triumphs of owning a homestead.  The daily/seasonal tasks that MUST happen can be overwhelming at times, but equally satisfying. 

"I weed my garden bursting with life, I see weeding as a metaphor for the lifelong process of winnowing out that which does not serve me, giving space for all that feeds me and lets me flourish."

"People are drawn to the lives they want to live, at least the stubborn ones are." 

Her story is anchored by an ancient calendar, a year of holiday's and celebration that I found fascinating. I'm a city gal who longs for a simple life, day dreams bring chicken coops, sheep, and the joy of growing my own vegetables. Ah... daydreams.  You can see why I loved this book.

I have also decided I need a handmade broom, clearly every home needs one. 

Rating: 5 stars
Source: Review Copy (Roost Books)
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