All about the Pioneer Woman…

April 1, 2012 by

The first summer I worked at Lemuria, my mother called with a cookbook she thought I should purchase. The year was 2009, the cookbook was The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Recipes From An Accidental Country Girl. My husband is a huge meat eater whereas I am not. My mother thought this cookbook would be perfect for me as I was starting to cook more meat that usual.

My copy has pages stuck together, splotches of various sauces on each page, and each recipe has been tried. I’ve cooked through it several times. It is a staple in my kitchen. An extra perk is that she lays out each recipe step by step. There is a photograph of what you are doing should look like.  This is very helpful when you are unsure exactly what what the recipe is asking you to do.

Some of our favorites are: Katie’s Roasted Corn Salad, Sherried Tomato Soup, Chicken Spaghetti, Penne Alla Betsy (a shrimp dish), and Angel Sugar Cookies.

Since that came out, Ree Drummond, the Pioneer Woman herself, came out with The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels. This is her memoir. It is filled with recipes, the story of her falling in love with Marlboro Man-her nickname for her husband and the story of how she came to be as she is today.

I have to admit; I’ve  jumped on the bandwagon. I’m a fan. I now visit her website often as I make my grocery list. I follow her (along with 294, 659 others) on Twitter. (Should you need a lesson on Twitter, see Mark’s blog here. )

Continuing on to keep my Pioneer Woman collection complete, the newest purchase is The Pioneer Woman Cooks Food From My Frontier. I already have several flagged to make in the coming weeks. Following the layout of her first cookbook, Dee lays out each recipe with photographs.

I’ve got a long list for the grocery for next week. It includes ingredients to make the following: Spicy Grilled Vegetable Panini, Whiskey-Glazed Carrots, Grilled Corn Guacamole, and Spicy Lemon Garlic Shrimp.

This unseasonable warm weather screams for something cool.  I recommend you making the Blackberry Chip Ice Cream. (Note: An ice  cream maker is not required!)  -Quinn


33 1/3 (the record keeps spinning)

March 31, 2012 by

Dear Listener,

I hope you guys aren’t tired of reading about the 33 1/3 series, because I sure ain’t done talking about it.  In a burst of excitement, we have ordered twenty four different 33 1/3 books.  Here is the list.  Get excited.

  • the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds by Jim Fusilli
  • the Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutiqueby Dan Le Roy
  • the Beatles’ Let It Be by Sam Matteo
  • Big Star’s Radio City by Bruce Eaton
  • Jeff Buckley’s Grace by Daphne Brooks
  • Dinosaur Jr.’s You’re Living All Over Me by Nick Attfield
  • Guided by Voices’ Bee Thousand by Marc Woodworth
  • the Magnetic Fields’ 69 Love Songs by LD Beghtol
  • the Minutemen’s Double Nickels on the Dime by Michael T. Fournier
  • Nas’ Illmatic by Matthew Gasteier
  • Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea by Kim Cooper
  • Nirvan’s In Utero by Gillian G. Gaar
  • Pavement’s Wowee Zowee by Bryan Charles
  • Prince’s Sign O the Times by Michaelangelo Matos
  • Public Enemy’s It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back by Christopher R. Weingarten
  • Radiohead’s Kid A by Marvin Lin
  • Radiohead’s OK Computer by Dai Griffiths
  • the Replacements’ Let It Be by Colin Meloy
  • the Rolling Stones’ Some Girls by Cyrus Patell
  • Elliott Smith’s XO by Matthew Lemay
  • Patti Smith’s Horses by Philip Shaw
  • Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation by Matthew Steams
  • Television’s Marquee Moon by Bryan Waterman
  • Neil Young’s Harvest by Sam Inglis

A couple of other blogs on 33 1/3:

Reading 33 1/3

Master of Reality by Black Sabbath

For your enjoyment, below is the song “Friction” from Television’s debut album Marquee Moon (1977)

by Simon

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwrCUEMl76U?rel=0&w=420&h=315]


Rumors of Water by L. L. Barkat

March 30, 2012 by

Having been interested in the craft of writing and the writing life for around five years now, I’ve set out to collect and read as many good books on the topic as I can. Some books are fairly indispensable on the subject, such as John Gardner’s The Art of Fiction, Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life, Robert Boswell’s The Half-Known World, and Dorothea Brande’s Becoming a Writer.

There are other books that are not so good, and plenty that while helpful, tread the same territory as those that have come before them, not adding anything new or memorable to the discussion. Saying anything with originality and genuine beauty is difficult, but creating a work that instructs while also stamping itself onto the reader’s mind like good poetry is something altogether more challenging and uncommon.

L.L. Barkat’s latest book Rumors of Water: Thoughts on Creativity and Writing achieves the latter, and with great reward to the reader. Along with Rumors of Water, Barkat is the author of the spiritual memoirs God in the Yard: Spiritual Practice for the Rest of Us, and Stone Crossings: Finding Grace in Hard and Hidden Places, as well as the book of poetry InsideOut, and she is the Staff Writer for The International Art Movement’s The Curator. As someone who also wants a life dedicated to art and faith, I find Barkat a kindred spirit.

Growing up in church while also attending a private Presbyterian elementary, I became well-acquainted with instruction on faith and life. There were those in the classroom and pulpit who could actually tell a story, and make God and the teachings of Jesus more tangible and applicable to the life, thus capturing my attention and influencing my perspective. And there were others who, sadly, left me bored and more inclined toward rebellion. I draw this parallel to Barkat because the essays in Rumors of Water remind me of sermons in every best sense, making the characteristics of the writing life and the discipline necessary to live one more concrete and lucid, and she does so in such a way that makes the artist want to create.

Barkat’s writing urges the reader to uncover all that is glowing in the given day, to hear “the orchestra of life” as Barry Hannah once put it. Earlier in the year, I read Marilyn Chandler McEntyre’s excellent book Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies, wherein she states that we read literature because literature gives us “equipment for living.” I can think of no better way to describe Rumors of Water than as a book that provides the hopeful creative with equipment for living, and subsequently, material for creating. Barkat underscores an important truth: the way in which the artist lives will most definitely determine the way in which the artist creates.

Like any good sermon or work of art, Rumors of Water is a lesson in paying attention. Each essay is full of sharp images, rendered with a poet’s heart and eye, but the book isn’t reduced only to how an artist’s eyes need to be wide open. Rather, the work also deals with the issues of forming right habits, finding voice, grappling with rejection, networking genuinely with other artists and editors, and even the benefits of taking such publishing routes as Print on Demand–a means that we booksellers know may be finding more traction as the industry continues to change. In each essay Barkat illustrates the many correlations between her own deliberate living and the creative process: correlations available to every artist with the patience, faith, and willpower to create. In probably my favorite piece “Watering the White Moth: Writing Takes Time”, Barkat states:

As I water the garden, I think of my dark-haired girl–Sara, who weeded and planted and worked this ground. I think of the spray from the hose, how it sometimes stirs a white moth from the grass. The moth might rise into the arc of the temporary rainbow made by my watering. But there is no moth today.

…I believe a writer can make writing happen, sit down and stir from grass or leaves or snow. But I also believe it takes time to write. Each book I’ve written, in some sense, could not have been written before its time. The white moths were not ready to rise.

There is no hurry. The things we cannot write about today, we will surely find we can write about tomorrow. We should not worry about the process, but simply trust it and move on. After all, we contain fields upon fields of stories we’ve rehearsed over time. We must recognize that these are the ready ones, the now-stories.

When I stand at the edge of the garden, I water with a certain kind of faith–that the water I am spraying now will make Sara’s basil grow, that this rainbow in my hands is beautiful and is enough for today, that somewhere between clovers and strawberries is a white moth that may yet rise. (151-153)

Passages like these are what make Barkat’s work so much better than the average book on craft. She provides careful insight to unraveling the snags that every writer encounters, providing illustrations from her own life, illustrations that not only are authentic, but genuinely hopeful, finding collation in the life of the reader: again, the stuff of good sermons. We are not only informed about craft; we are invited to find our own rising moths, to, as Frederick Buechner says, “listen to our lives,” and then with faith and determination, go and do the work.

With Rumors of Water I am pleased to discover one more indispensable book on craft. It is indispensable for its wisdom, for its understanding that good stories are crafted from a life well lived. I will return to Barkat’s work often. Even if you have no interest in the writing life or craft, I encourage you to purchase Barkat’s book simply for its ability to rustle things from the heart: awe, vision, and appreciation for creation and existence—characteristics our culture desperately needs to recover. In a world where the authentic well appears to have run dry, Barkat intrudes upon the prophetic: for those who have heard rumors of water, she points us to a river of life.

Visit L.L. Barkat’s blog here.  -Ellis


“The writer’s job is to get naked.” R.I.P Harry Crews 1935-March 28, 2012

March 29, 2012 by


New Delta Rising

by

It is not, despite appearances, the end of nowhere. The empty fields are its destination. The weeds let you know where one crop ends and another begins. While other man-made places were covered in people and concrete, here it was the dirt that mattered, and there was just so much of it, between porch lights, and schools, and hospitals. There still  is. In the open land between the towns and the wide places in the road, dark drops like a lid on a box, and that very isolation has shaped life here, held it, and marked it deeply and sometimes horribly. -Rick Bragg, from the introduction to New Delta Rising.

Welcome to the Delta. A place where the divide between rich and poor, educated and uneducated is so prominent that it draws comparisons to a third world country. A place that has produced countless writers, musicians and artists in spite of this divide, possibly because of it. Welcome to a place that I am fortunate to call home. Having grown up in the quintessential Delta town of Sumner, a community of around five hundred, I consider myself firmly rooted to the “dirt” that Rick Bragg aptly describes in the introduction to New Delta Rising.  Sumner, like much of the Delta, is a small town strongly shaped by its agricultural and historical past (still home to many a farmer and the location of Emmett Till’s murder trial.)

The strong sense of place that was instilled in me as a child by the shapes of the land and the community is exactly the sentiment that beckons numerous visitors to the Delta-visitors such as award-winning photographer Magdalena Sole, whose photographs the University Press of Mississippi has published in a beautiful collection titled New Delta Rising. Sole spent a year photographing and interviewing residents of the Delta, and the connection she established with her subjects is evident in every frame she captured. The testimonials that accompany the photographs, which only deepened my pride for the resilient people of the Delta, also serve as a spirited introduction for those who are not familiar with “the most southern place on earth.”

Magdalena Sole will be at Lemuria for a signing on Thursday, March 29 at 5:00.

Click here for more details about the book.

 

by Anna