Happy New Year, my darlings. I hope you have had a lovely holiday season, and are feeling happy and rested. We are going to have our work cut out for us in 2017--or, more likely, we will be cutting it out as we go. I am so proud to share information here about the money we raised and donated to the Environmental Defense Fund, the ACLU, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Planned Parenthood, and Partners in Health. Thank you for being so game and generous and wonderful. I love you. xo
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Saturday, December 31, 2016
Monday, December 19, 2016
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Gift Guide Earnings Update
As of today, the gift guide has earned
Can you see that? My lame screenshot? $3851.34
You ROCK! Please stay tuned as we figure out where to donate it.
Yours, in love and solidarity, always. xo
Friday, December 09, 2016
Eggnog Cheesecake Squares
If you're here for the gift guide, it's just below, over here. (And we have made over $2000 to donate so far, WHAT? Seriously. Let's try to make it $5000! I am ambitious and charitably greedy.) But I'm posting this recipe by special request, since it turns out never to have migrated over from the old columns! Please stay tuned, because I'm also going to be posting an eggnog bundt cake recipe. #likeagoodjew
Eggnog Cheesecake Squares
Makes 16
Active time: 20 minutes; total time: 1 hour
This is an adaptation of a recipe that was in Martha Stewart
Living. I stole the ginger-snap crust from another old recipe of
mine because ginger snaps are so much, well, snappier than graham crackers, if
you ask me. Also, we substituted Jack Daniels for brandy because it's what we
had.
1 1/2 cups finely smashed ginger snaps (this is a 10-ounce
bag minus ten cookies)
3/4 cup plus 3 tablespoons sugar
1/2 a stick of butter, melted
1 pound cream cheese at room temperature
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk
3/4 cup eggnog
1 heaping tablespoon flour
1 tablespoon brandy (or Jack Daniels)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
Heat the oven to 350. Coat a 9-inch square baking pan with
cooking spray (or butter it). Stir together the ginger snap crumbs, 3
tablespoons of the sugar, and the melted butter. Press this mixture into the
bottom of the pan. Bake 12 minutes and let it cool while you finish with the
rest of the filling.
Meanwhile, beat the cream cheese with the remaining sugar in
a mixer on medium speed until fluffy about 2 minutes. Add beat in the eggs one
at a time, then the yolk, eggnog, flour, liquor, vanilla, nutmeg, and salt;
beat until smooth, scraping the bottom of the bowl with a rubber spatula to
make sure there's no lurking cream cheese. Pour the filling over the crust,
then set the pan in a roasting pan, and add enough boiling water to come
halfway up sides of baking pan.
Bake until just set, about 45 minutes. Remove the baking pan
from water bath and transfer it to a wire rack. Let cool to room temperature,
about 30 minutes, then refrigerate for at least 4 hours or overnight. Use a
very sharp knife to cut it into 16 squares, then dust with more nutmeg before
serving.
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Gift Guide 2016 (Now with bonus charitable fundraising!)
Charitable, in the post title, autocorrected to irritable, which made me laugh. |
The charitable piece: If you click over to Amazon from any of
the links in this blog, then I make a significant commission on everything you
buy from that round of shopping, whether or not you buy something I actually recommended.
We will be donating all that commission money at the end of the month. (I
promise it will be way more than the Amazon Smile program would make for your
organization—so don’t click over to that, even if Amazon tries to tempt you.) I’ll
take a screen shot of the total on December 31st, and you can stay
tuned and weigh in on where to give it. (I’ll take a screen shot of the
donation too, so you don’t picture me secretly luxuriating in the Bahamas
because you bought a jigsaw puzzle.) In fact, if you wanted to leave a comment
about that now—where to give the money—I’d be grateful. Planned Parenthood and
the ACLU and the Southern Poverty Law Center leap to mind, but there's also Partners in Health and other international organizations that might be suffering, donation-wise, because of our troubles at home. Please share your thoughts. (And for
your own giving, this is a great post-election guide.)
Last year's gift ideas are here.
The year before, here.
The year before that, here.
And the year before that, here.
As always, the master list of games is here.
The year before that, here.
And the year before that, here.
As always, the master list of games is here.
Gifts for Kids,
Artists, and Gamers
Cathedral makes a great gift because it’s wooden and lovely
and seems kind of heirloomy in that nice holiday way. It's in the game family of Quoridor and Quarto
and Gobblet—the games we refer to as "the
wood games," as in, "I don't know. Maybe one of the wood games?"
when someone asks you what you want to play, and there are only two of you
playing. Logic + spatial relations = I rarely win. But I like playing.
photo from the League of Nonsensical Gamers website |
Patchwork is another two-person game, which someone
recommended here last year, and even though there’s a ton of strategy in it,
it’s fairly quick and straightforward, with a fun Blokus-type quilt-themed
puzzle element to it. Please note: the game box is depressingly ugly, like a
quilt made by somebody’s misanthropic and colorblind great aunt, but the pieces
inside are totally different and very attractive. (I am kind of a game
aesthetics snob.)
Lanterns is a gorgeous tile-laying game also recommended
here last year, by a reader named Amanda. I gave it to the kids last Christmas,
and then we went away for two days and played nonstop for two days in our motel
room. We’ve played a lot since, too. It’s a matching game crossed with a set-collecting
game and, like all good games, every time you play it you feel like you're
finally hitting upon the one true strategy—only to find, the next time you play
it, that you weren't. It's super-pretty too, and not that hard to
learn—certainly not nearly as hard as some board games (Agricola, I’m looking
at you.)
My friend Asha’s husband invented the game Tiffin, and it’s
a really good game. It’s a total gamer’s game, 2-4 players, fairly complex but
not super-long. The (awesome) concept is that each player is delivering hot
lunches by bicycle in Mumbai, and you need to make as many deliveries as you
can to score points—but, that said, it’s pretty abstract while you’re playing,
and it’s more about collecting and timing. It reminds us a little of the
also-fabulous Ticket to Ride, if that’s a game you know.
Okay, shhhh, I’m giving Sushi Go Party to Birdy this year.
We play a lot of the basic version of Sushi Go when we don’t have a ton of time
and can’t think of what else we’d want to play, and that’s partly because it’s
a clever, satisfying game, and partly because the cards are so cute with their sushi little cutie
faces. This expanded version has more cute cards. I think that’s kind of it!
But I feel like we need that in our lives, more cute cards.
Asmodee Timeline: Inventions. The way this game works is
that everyone has a hand of cards, and you take turns laying them in order,
trying to get the chronology of different inventions right—once you play your
card, you get to look at the date on the back. So you might lay “light bulb”
between “mammoth-bone weapon” and “ipod nano,” and you’d be right! It’s
actually subtler than that—it’s kind of a cross between trivia and deductive
reasoning—and I like the inventions version (there are lots of games in the
Timeline series) because if I don’t feel as stupid not knowing whether “hair
dryer” comes before or after “electric toaster” as I would not knowing whether
“Cuban Missile Crisis” comes before or after “The French Revolution.” Also,
it’s a very tiny and portable game, and fun to keep in your bag for any waiting
you might have to do.
I read about these Paper Games in some fancy gift guide, and
got a set for the kids this year: five 150-page pads of tear-off two-person
pen-and-paper games, including three-dimensional Tic-Tac-Toe, Dots and Boxes, Hedron, Nim,
and Hex. (I think I only know Dots and Boxes!) The presentation is deeply
attractive, and I love the idea of keeping a pad or two in the car and in my
bag, since you can always draw or write on the backs of the pages.
This is a pad of “artist’s tiles,” which basically means perfect
six-inch squares of high-quality paper that tear off perforatedly. They are so
nice, and the pad is so chunky, and all in all it seems reasonably priced for
such good paper that you can sketch on or fold up into cards or use for writing
your elected officials.
And while you’re at it, this is an excellent set of black
pens for the artists or writers in your life—a perennial favorite gift of ours.
As far as colored pens go, we’ve given many sets of these in the past couple of
years, and they are wonderful.
Forgive me if this is too particular/peculiar to be helpful,
but Birdy has been wanting and wanting a long-throated stapler, so I am finally
giving her one. If you’ve got a person in your family who is forever folding up
paper into zines and books and pamphlets, but then they can’t figure out how to
get a stapler to reach all the way in to the fold, then this is a gift you
might consider.
I am beautiful on the inside! |
I’m recommending my friend Kate’s book again here, because
the world needs more of Kate’s books, and because it is a profoundly excellent
book for anyone of any age: Rad WomenWorldwide. It’s a collection of mini biographies of extraordinary women
doing extraordinary, bad-ass things—even more extraordinary than the ordinary
things that all of us everyday women are doing so extraordinarily bad-assedly,
if you know what I mean. Forty profiles—from the better-known 20th
century Mexican painter Frida
Kahlo to the lesser-known Grace "Granuaile" O'Malley, a 16th-century
Irish sea captain—all illustrated with Miriam Stahl’s incredible
paper-cut art. This is the team that brought you Rad American Women A to Z, so you know it’s good.
I also got The Gutsy Girl for Birdy, because even though it looks a lot like a tough-girl version of our belovedly ungendered Unbored, I can’t resist feeding that girl’s love of adventure and courage and independence.
Are you are giving gifts to very small people this year? I’m
realizing that I’ve have never had occasion to recommend my three all-time
favorite little-kid pretend-play presents, two of which are extremely
inexpensive:
Guest check pads (10 for $8). Ben got a pad of guest checks as a party
favor when he was a preschooler, and it added a great deal of pizzazz to years
and years of the children’s pretend restaurants. This is either a good thing or
a bad thing, depending on your tolerance for sitting on a tiny chair while
somebody painfully writes the words “eg sallid sambwidge” on a pad, tears off
your copy, and then brings you a plastic crab inside a tiny enamel pot, but
still. A set of pretend money is a great accompaniment to this gift.
A roll of generic tickets (these come in lots of colors).
Same as above, only for performances: concerts, circuses, magic shows, dance
recitals, poetry readings, surrealist plays about LEGO and farm animals. The
tickets always lent just the exact right detail of realism that the kids were
craving. Again, use your discretion, since maybe you’re not looking to
encourage your children to put on even more soul-crushingly meandering and
infinite performances than you’re already enduring.
Play silks. Over many, many years of dressing up and making
believe, this rainbow assortment of silky fabric squares has been everything to
my kids: capes and skirts; rivers and forests in theatrical sets; doll slings
and hammocks and curtains; tea-party table cloths and fluttering flags. If I
were to calculate cost per use, it would be something like one gazillionth of a
cent. And Ben and Birdy still use them.
Hamilton: TheRevolution. What can I say? We got the bug. We listen to the soundtrack day
and night, the way normal people did a year ago. And even though this is an
expensive book, it’s cheaper than trying to actually go to the show. Total savings: $3775.
These parachute-nylon hammocks are all the rage in our particular
outdoor-themed world, and for good reason: they’re light, strong, pretty, comfortable,
and super-easy to hang up. We love ours. It would make a great gift for campers
or more domestic backyard types.
We are puzzlers of all kinds around here—crossword, logic,
and, yes, jigsaw. I know I mentioned this puzzle briefly last December, but
this year I’m putting it officially in the gift guide because it’s a perfect
puzzle (and because its designer is a reader here). And lest I recommend some crazy puzzle with no cookie theme, this is another great puzzle that we did earlier
this year during a multi-family weekend trip. Perfection.
Gifts for Grown-ups:
Two Novels, Socks, and Cooking Stuff
Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad. If, like me, you’re
having a hard time right now with reading matter that falls at all short of
life-and-death importance, but you still like a good novel, then this is the
book for you. I couldn’t put it down. Get it for yourself, but give it as a
wrapped gift and ask to borrow it as soon as the person unwraps it.
After one of my most trusted reading friends recommended it
to me, I got the new Zadie Smith book for my dad, in the hopes that I might
borrow it more or less asap, as above. I’m sure it will be excellent.
I’ve been giving a pair of these socks to my mother every
year because they are wool and they are gorgeous and they come with an unconditional lifetime guarantee. (Um, yeah, hi, I doused my socks in gasoline? And lit a match? And they burned up! So, like, can I get my money back?) I also
like that this style is called “witch crew,” since they really do look like the legs
sticking out after Dorothy’s house falls onto that wicked somebody.
Yes, this Whiskware Dressing Shaker is a total one-trick
pony of a gadget, but I confess to loving it. For the past twenty years, our
salad dressing has left leaves oily mason-jar rings on the counter every night. No more! This is a
leak-proof glass shaker bottle that has a dripless spout and a weird metal ball
in it that looks like a cat toy but pretty well emulsifies your vinaigrette. I
know, I know. You’ve already got a free mayonnaise jar, and so do all your
friends and relations. But trust me on this.
Abeego Beeswax Wrappers. The big ones. My friend Nicole gave these to me
for Christmas, either last year or the year before, and I use them every day.
They’re great non-plastic bowl covers, yes, and you can wrap cheese in them or
anything else, but what I mostly use them for is packing Birdy’s school-lunch
sandwiches: they’re easy, reusable, and nontoxic, and they smell pleasantly of
beeswax. If you have the kind of friend who would love a great solution to an
everyday problem, this is the gift for him or her. Don’t give it to your
dad, though, unless he’s, like, Sting.
This is a huge splurge, but I bought it earlier
in the year because Michael was still cooking eggs in a horrible old nonstick
pan, and I swore that I would replace it with something that would neither
poison us all continually nor be as needy and high-maintenance as our cast-iron
pans. Voila. This is my go-to pan for everything. You have to follow the
directions lovingly when you first get it—heating it gently with oil or butter,
never dry—and then it will love you back, so that even eggs and tofu slide
right out. Plus, it’s gorgeous: heavy and lovely, but not fussy. It comes in
many colors (and sizes too, though 10 1/4 is what I have and love for a pair of fried eggs or a couple of chops) and is crazy expensive because Le Creuset.
This is the first year in a while that I didn't recommend you buy your *kids* some or other crazy knife! |
Years ago, I recommended a little Kyocera ceramic paring knife—which I stand by; it is a wonderful knife—and now I’m recommending the 5½ inch knife in the same series. I basically never use my metal knives any more
because this knife is always sharp and great and exactly what I want to use. I
love it, love it, love it, and recommend it as a gift for your cooking friends
and family. Plus, it comes in lots of pretty colors!
Okay. I'm excited. I hope you end up with some awesome gifts and that we end up with a lot of money to give too! To that end, please share this guide as widely as possible! <3 p="">3>
One last thing: this calendar. I bought it for myself at Paper Source (my favorite store of things) and it was a huge splurge because for the past twelve years we've been using the free Norman Rockwell calendar from the bank, so every day when I go to write "root canal" or "set self on fire because of the election" I am stuck looking at a basket of puppies or a rosy-cheeked boy bent over so that the teacher who's scolding him can also be whapping his behind with a paddle. Suffice it to say: I am IN LOVE with this calendar. Every page is some perfectly gorgeous arrangement of paint chips, and it's huge, and it's very matte and lovely to write on. I bought one as a present too.
Okay. I'm excited. I hope you end up with some awesome gifts and that we end up with a lot of money to give too! To that end, please share this guide as widely as possible! <3 p="">3>
Monday, November 21, 2016
Three Kings. No, no. Gravies. Three Gravies. (Including a killer vegetarian one.)
This is still the recipe I use, that my mom dictated to me over the phone in 1993, when we were living in California. |
So, yes, I make three kinds of gravy every year. That’s
because 1) Gravy. 2) Having enough gravy. And 3) Gravy-making-wise, three
different opportunities present themselves: the (ew) neck and giblets that come
with (i.e. inside) the bird (ew); the
scrumptious pan drippings left after the birdy is cooked; the fact that there
are vegetarian mashed-potato eaters at our holiday table.
Birdy at the non-gravy-themed protest wall of the Union Square subway station. I love New York. I really do. |
Also, you probably know this story already, but one year we
ran out of gravy. Yes, it turned out that Michael’s brother Keith had simply
hidden the gravy mid-meal so there would be plenty for leftovers the next day,
but still—it scarred me, the running out.
One photo for 3 gravies, and it's not even a good photo. I assure you: they all look more or less like this. |
Good Vegetarian Gravy
Let’s do vegetarian first, so the vegetarians can stop
reading before anyone is sticking anyone’s hand inside anything dead, shall we?
This gravy is all about salt and what I think of as the flavor brown. Nutritional yeast, miso, and soy
sauce are my vegetarian umami trifecta, but if you were to use, say, only two
out of three, I’m sure the gravy would still be plenty umami and good. Also, a
spoonful of almond butter stirred in adds a certain richness, but it’s
optional; sometimes it feels like one thing too much. (Also, I am returning to add: if Birdy didn't hate them, I would use mushrooms as the base of this gravy like a normal person.)
3 tablespoons butter (you can use Earth Balance)
1 shallot, minced
3 tablespoons flour (you can use gluten-free flour)
3-4 cups low-salt vegetarian broth or stock (or, what I use,
which is 1 vegetarian bouillon cube dissolved in 3 cups water)
¼ cup each mild white miso, nutritional yeast, and un-oaky
red wine (or apple cider)
1 tablespoon each soy sauce and maple syrup
1 tablespoon almond butter (optional)
1 tablespoon tomato paste (optional)
1 tablespoon tomato paste (optional)
A shake of garlic powder
A small sprig of fresh thyme or a pinch of dried
In a medium-sized pot, melt the butter and sauté the shallot
over medium-low heat until it is translucent and on the verge of browning.
Whisk in the flour, and cook as long as you can stand to—from a minute to ten
minutes, depending on how committed you are to giving the flour a little color
and flavor. (I am usually in a rush, and cook it for just a minute.)
Whisk in 3 cups of the broth or stock or bouillon, and cook
over low medium-heat, whisking, until the gravy is lump-free(ish). If it gets
crazily thick right away, then add that extra cup of broth or stock or water.
Whisk in all the other ingredients and cook the gravy,
whisking somewhere between frequently and constantly until the gravy is thick
and the harshness of the wine flavor has mellowed. If at any point it gets too
thick, thin it a little with stock or water. Taste it and decide if it needs
anything else. You could add more salty something, need be, but more likely is
that it might need a tiny bit of something acidic. A splash more of wine or
apple cider, say, or a thimble-full of balsamic vinegar. Be very judicious—it
may be perfect already!
Serve right away or chill and reheat at a later time.
Neck Gravy
Okay, this is more traditionally called giblet gravy, but for me and my dad, it’s all about that neck, and
sharing the neck for our Thanksgiving-day lunch. I usually make this gravy the
night before, when I am unwrapping the bird anyway to brine it. It is one less
thing to do on the day of. (Get as much laughter as you can out of the Mr. Bean
up-to-your-elbow-in-the-bird’s-bum moment.) It’s wine-ier and herbier than the classic
pan-drippings gravy, and is some people’s favorite and other people’s second
favorite.
The neck and giblet packet from your turkey
1 tablespoon each butter and vegetable oil
4 more tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons flour
½ cup each diced onions, carrots, and celery (I probably use
a little more than this: 1 large carrot, 2 celery sticks, 1 small onion)
6 cups chicken stock or broth
1 cup red or white wine (something dry and not oaky)
1 tablespoon tomato paste
3 parsley sprigs; 1 bay leaf; a sprig of fresh thyme or a
pinch of dried
Evaluate what you’ve got from inside the inside-the-bird
“packet”: ideally, a neck (feel around for this—it won’t be in that weird paper
bag), and some assorted organs. You want the smallish thumb-shaped heart and
the globular kidneys, but don’t use the larger thing, which is the liver,
because it makes the gravy taste livery. (I cook it and feed a little bit to
the cat.) Dry everything off with paper towels, and make a big fuss about how
completely gross it is, so that everyone feels sorry for you.
Heat the 1 tablespoon each butter and oil over medium heat in
the pot you have that will be least inclined to allow the gravy to stick and
burn. Sauté the neck and giblets, turning frequently until they are deeply
browned. Remove them to a plate as they’re done; the neck will take the
longest. (If anything has burned, stop at this point and scrub out the pot;
otherwise, proceed as below.)
Now add the 4 tablespoons of
butter and the vegetables to the (dirty) pot and sauté until the onions
are translucent and everything is going a nice, rich brown. Add the flour and
stir, then whisk in the broth and add everything else, including the browned
“meat” and bring to a boil, whisking rigorously. Or stirring with a wooden
spoon, if you can’t whisk around the veggies et al.
Cook the gravy, covered, over very low heat, stirring
regularly, for 2-4, until the neck is falling apart and you feel like the gravy is going to be all evaporated if you keep cooking it. (I feel like this would more sensibly done in a
crockpot, but I’ve never tried.) Make sure the gravy is not secretly sticking
to the bottom of the pot and burning. If you have more stock, you'll probably want to add some every now and then; as it is, this does not make a ton of gravy. After two hours, taste it. Does it need
a splash of wine? A little more salt? More cooking? You want it to be really, really
good-tasting.
Strain out the giblets, vegetables, and herbs and, if you
like, put the veggies through a food mill back into the gravy pot—or add them
back in and blend it all up with a stick blender. This will make the gravy
thicker and sweeter and less refined, so you will have to guess if that’s going
to be your cuppa or not. Serve right away or chill and reheat at a later time.
Eat the neck. Yummmm.
Pan-Drippings
Gravy
This is more of a formula than a recipe. It is delicious.
The only thing that’s a pain is the fact that you have to make it after the
bird comes out of the oven, which means that you likely already have a houseful
of people. No worries! I like to whisk the gravy with a glass of wine in my
non-whisking hand, while various guests come and talk to me. It’s not as
anti-social as you might think. Make sure you have a 1-quart box of stock handy
before you start. (I use all the fat, always, to make as much gravy as I can.)
Once the bird is removed to the carving board, measure your
pan drippings, ideally in the kind of measuring cup that will also separate the
fat from the juice. (Or use a ladle to separate them as best as you’re able.) Put
all the fat in a medium-sized pot over medium-low heat and whisk in an equal
amount of flour: ¼ cup, say, for ¼ cup of fat. Whisk until the flour-fat
mixture bubbles, then whisk in all of the reserved drippings plus enough
purchased (or homemade) chicken or turkey stock to equal around 2 cups of
liquid per every ¼ cup of fat. Cook, whisking more or less constantly, while
still agreeably putting people’s side dishes into the oven to warm, until the
gravy is as thick as you like. Taste the gravy for salt (its saltiness will
depend on whether or not you brined your bird), and add a splash of (un-oaky) wine
or apple cider if it needs oomph.
Note: if there is a lot of good stuff in the pan that
doesn’t simple pour out—nice browned bits and the like—then you can deglaze the
pan with a little stock, cooking it gently and loosening the browned bits, and
then use this stock in the gravy. Strain it first or not, depending on whether
you do or don’t want the bits.