Thursday, May 5, 2016

What We've Been Watching: Baking, Driving, Immigrating, and Building

THE GREAT BRITISH BAKING SHOW

Each week, amateur bakers tackle a different specialty (bread, cookies, etc.), the difficulty of which increases as the competition unfolds. Mary Berry, a leading cookbook writer, and Paul Hollywood, a top artisan baker, search for the country’s best amateur baker by testing the competitors’ skills on cakes, breads, pastries and desserts, crowning a winner after 10 weeks of competition.
I'd been told by four separate people how great this show is, including our daughter Rose who is absorbing all their baking wisdom. She is now making her own croissants since getting interested in puff pastry after one episode.

All it took was one episode and I was hooked, watching at least one every evening.

I like that the bakers are all amateurs. In fact, we get to see shots of them in real life with their families, on the job, and baking in their own kitchens. Because each episode is filmed on the weekend and they get to practice the week before at home.

I like that everyone is so nice (that's why the only American cooking competition I watch is MasterChef Junior — even Gordon Ramsay won't be mean to kids). I like that it is, as one newspaper article said, so "aggressively quaint." In fact, I hear that at the end the winner gets ... flowers. Isn't that nice?

I like how there are still national differences between the British and Americans, even in something so small as a cookie. If this show is any guide, British cookies are never to be less than gingersnap crisp while Americans have a wider range of tolerance, depending on the cookie. (Want to start a fight? Ask in a crowded room which is the best chocolate chip cookie, soft or crisp.)

Most of all, I have realized just how much I know about baking. I can tell when the doughs are too wet or dry or not rolled properly, when something is going to rise too much or little, when a glaze is too thick or thin, and so forth. I try not to comment too much and Tom, the most patient of men, has been watching them all with me.

One season is on Netflix and you can also watch it at PBS online. I also hear that you can find it on YouTube. If this raving isn't enough, here's an article that says all I didn't take the time to articulate.


LEARNING TO DRIVE (2014)

As her marriage dissolves, a Manhattan writer takes driving lessons from a Sikh instructor with marriage troubles of his own. In each other's company they find the courage to get back on the road and the strength to take the wheel.
This film is a small gem of quiet "indie-ness" with just enough quietness and just enough content and ... most importantly ... just enough contrast between the two main characters to give us context.

Is it about living in the moment, as Patricia Clarkson said in an interview?

Is it about the woman being sent an unknown but definitely male teacher just when she has sworn "I loathe all men,", as Ben Kingsley said in an interview?

The answer is both and much more as we found when talking it over afterward. You have to be patient and let the story unwind, but it is worth it.


BROOKLYN (2015)

An Irish immigrant lands in 1950s Brooklyn, where she quickly falls into a romance with a local. When her past catches up with her, however, she must choose between two countries and the lives that exist within.
This was a wonderful film, evoking what it must really feel like to be an immigrant to America. One of my daughter's roommates has an aunt from the Ukraine who saw this and told her that this was exactly what it felt like to immigrate. Coupled with that theme is Eilis's personal growth to maturity, which also captures the idea that often one has arrived (at being an American, at being grown) before one recognizes it.

Overall this is a lovely, quiet story where the people act like real people without having to face manufactured crises to reveal the truths beneath. It was refreshing and we loved it.

LILIES OF THE FIELD (1963)

An unemployed construction worker (Homer Smith) heading out west stops at a remote farm in the desert to get water when his car overheats. The farm is being worked by a group of East European Catholic nuns, headed by the strict mother superior (Mother Maria), who believes that Homer has been sent by God to build a much needed church in the desert...
I'd never seen this classic and thoroughly enjoyed it.

The story behind the movie is as much of a miracle as that the movie depicts. The film was made with the passion and shoestring budget which Mother Superior had for her chapel. Ralph Nelson put up his house to provide half the budget, Sidney Poitier took a small salary with the promise of a percentage of earnings (for which he earned his Academy Award), and the production designer did yeoman work in begging and borrowing props, building the chapel, and organizing the schedule so they could shoot it in 12 days.

The result was a classic which still speaks to us today over 50 years later.

Worth a Thousand Words: Bust of Aristotle

Bust of Aristotle. Marble, Roman copy after a Greek bronze original by Lysippos from 330 BC; the alabaster mantle is a modern addition.

Lagniappe: Where Cinnamon Sticks Come From

No one knows where cinnamon sticks come from. There is a bird called the cinnamon bird that gathers the fragrant twigs from some unknown location and builds its nest from them. To harvest the cinnamon, people attach weights to the tips of arrows and shoot the nests down.

That's not actually true, but it was Aristotle's best guess when he described cinnamon in his Historta Animalium in 350 BC. We have since located the source of cinnamon, relieving us of the necessity of shooting down the nests of mythical birds.
Amy Stewart, The Drunken Botanist
I love educated guesses. This makes me remember that some of our best guesses today, often made by historians and scientists, are going to look laughable in the far future. (Sometimes in the near future.) I wonder which ones?

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Worth a Thousand Words: Maple Sugaring

Maple Sugaring, Currier and Ives
Today's quote about Thomas Jefferson's reasons for switching to maple sugar brought to mind my one of my favorite bits of Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder. That sent me looking for "sugaring off" images. Just think how long ago it was that making maple sugar was a regular household activity. And in what a small part of the country. Yet "sugaring off" remains part of the American vocabulary. Or of my vocabulary at least.

Lagniappe: Thomas Jefferson and Maple Sugar

In 1790, Thomas Jefferson bought fifty pounds of maple sugar to sweeten his coffee. This was less a culinary decision than a political one: he'd been pressured by his friend and fellow signer of the Declaration of Independence, Dr. Benjamin Rush, to advocate for the use of home-grown maple sugar instead of cane sugar, which was dependent upon slave labor.
Amy Stewart, The Drunken Botanist
Lest people think that modern times are the only ones in which food boycotts were used to protest politics.

John Cleese: Political Correctness Can Lead to an Orwellian Nightmare

This is only a couple of minutes long but Cleese nails it. 

It's showing up everywhere but just in case you haven't seen it, here you go!



"If people can't control their own emotions then they have to start trying to control other people's behavior." ~ Robert Skinner, psychiatrist

"So the idea that you have to be protected from any kind of uncomfortable emotion is what I absolutely do not subscribe to." ~ John Cleese
Via Scott Danielson.

In which wealthy spinster Cornelia Van Gorder discovers a mystery ...

... at her rented summer home. Is it that dreaded criminal The Bat? We're beginning a new book at Forgotten Classics: The Bat by Mary Roberts Rinehart.

We also try to live up to noble standards already set for this book, which was released in 1933 as one of the earliest talking book recordings. The Bat was also one of Bob Kane's inspirations for Batman. Find out for yourself why this mystery was so popular.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Amazon's Pop-ups Finally Got My Attention: The Vatican Cookbook


Presented by the Pontifical Swiss Guard, y'all. THE SWISS GUARD!

All those wonderful guard photos are on the inside but even without them this looks like a fun cookbook with lots of extra Vatican photography. And some pretty classy sounding papal favorite recipes too, of course.

I'm either gonna get a copy of this from everyone I know for my birthday ... or none. Because that's how these things work.

But I couldn't resist showing you the cover!

Worth a Thousand Words: Le Domino Rose

John Humphreys Johnston (18577-1941), Le Domino Rose, c. 1895
Via Arts Everyday Living

Well Said: Work and Play

I wish to see our people hardy, vigorous, strong, able to hold their own in whatever test may arise. I wish to seem them able to work and able to play hard. I believe in play, and I like to see people play hard while they play, and when they work I do not want to see them play at all.
Theodore Roosevelt
We seem to have lost that idea but I'm trying to regain it for myself.

Genesis Notes: God Revealed Through Creation

Russian icon of the Trinity by Andrey Rublev, between 1408 and 1425
GENESIS 1:1-31
I like the fact that even though the Trinity is not formally mentioned anywhere in the Bible, we start hearing about it from very beginning of the Bible. Until I read this study I frankly never noticed that God said, "Let us make man in our image." Its amazing what paying attention to the details of the familiar story can teach you.
The use of the plural "us" and "our" in Genesis 1:26 suggests two things about God. First, like the "royal we" it reflects His greatness, His power and majesty. The plural noun Elohiim suggests this as well: there it is a plural of emphasis, not of number. But there is also a longstanding Christian tradition of seeing "us" and "our" as reflecting the Trinity: God the Creator is NOT alone. It gives us an intimation of communion, or community within the godhead, that will be developed further in the New Testament.

The New Testament reveals that Jesus was the "word" that God spoke "in the beginning." He was present as the Creative Word of God. In other words, His role was to create and to sustain the universe and life. "Through him all things were made" (John 1:3); "by him all things were created ... all things were created by him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together." (Col 1:16-17) From the very first words of Scripture, we are introduced to the Word of god Who will, throughout all the rest of its pages, slowly but magnificently be revealed. He will be fully manifested when He takes on human flesh in the womb of Mary, becoming the Incarnate Son of God.

Genesis 1:2 tells us that "the Spirit (lit. ruah, or "breath") of God was moving over the face of the waters." God's loving power, symbolized by his breath, was hovering expectantly over the unformed chaos of creation. This completes the description of creation of the natural order as an act of the Blessed Trinity.
Note on the icon above:
I love this art so much, specifically because it is explained so well in Raniero Cantalamessa's book Contemplating the Trinity, which is where I first encountered the icon.

You may read some of his observations here:

This series first ran in 2004 and 2005. I'm refreshing it as I go. For links to the whole study, go to the Genesis Index. For more about the resources used, go here.

Monday, May 2, 2016

8 Minutes of Thunder - The Ballad of Tommy Bobby



I gave Tom 8 minutes on a NASCAR track for Christmas and the timing worked out so that he drove on his birthday. He had a blast and hit a high of 149 mph.

This turned into a NASCAR theme birthday for Tom. Afterward we watched Talladega Nights (thank you Hannah for that idea!). Pretty good for a family that never watches NASCAR.

Worth a Thousand Words: Pippins and Braeburns

Pippins and Braeburns
by the talented Belinda DelPesco

Well Said: Be not like a horse or mule

I will instruct you and teach you
the way you should go;
I will counsel you with my eye upon you.

Be not like a horse or mule, without understanding,
which must be curbed with bit and bridle,
else it will not keep with you.

Psalm 32: 8-9
I suppose it must be sadly apparent to those who know me well why I suddenly noticed the "horse or mule" section. You can lead a horse to water, as the old saying goes, but you can't make it drink.

How many times have I had to be curbed with bit and bridle only to finally get the point and realize that God's counsel was what I needed all along? How much easier I could have made my life by listening and considering.

Jesse, Julie, and Maissa wish they looked alike ...

Mark Twain and Dorothy Quick
Who was she and why this photo? Listen to the SFFaudio episode.

... so they could trade lives. Wait. Digging into The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain at SFFaudio might have changed their minds.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Reality Check: Teddy Roosevelt and Current Political Candidates

I didn't plan it this way but I've been listening to the 10-part series on Theodore Roosevelt at Giants of History podcast. He wasn't a perfect man by any means, but there possibly couldn't be a better time to learn about Teddy Roosevelt. He is certainly a great contrast to the current political candidates. And they don't come off well by comparison.

J.T. Fusco does a bang-up job of making historical figures come alive, by the way. He's also got a series about Leonardo Da Vinci and a fair number of stand-alone episodes.

Here at Giants of History, we produce a weekly biographical podcast that explores history’s most fascinating figures from cradle to grave. In each series, we strive to highlight the best stories and most monumental moments in each subject’s respective life. Our goals are to entertain our listeners, as well as provide inspiration through education.
Giants of History: website, iTunes

Genesis Notes: The God Who Creates Out of Nothing

The Creation of the World, Antonio Canova, 1821-22
Photo Gipsoteca, Possagno via WSJ

GENESIS 1:1-31
We just considered the fact that the writers of Genesis retold the creation stories of other nations, correcting them to present the right view of God. So let's look at the biggest way they did this, by pointing out that God, uniquely among other creation stories, creates out of nothing.

This really opened my eyes, from the very beginning of Genesis. For one thing, I don't think we moderns give God enough credit. We just take it for granted because "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" is so familiar. But really stop and think about it. Heavens to Betsy! All this around us, created out of nothing!
Genesis begins not just with the beginning of something, but with the beginning of everything. Its first verse uses a word for which there is no equivalent in any other ancient language. The word is bara'. It means not just to make but to create, not just to re-form something new out of something old, but to create something wholly new that was simply not there before. Only God can create, for creation in the literal sense (out of nothing) requires infinite power, since there is an infinite gap between nothing and something. Startling as it may seem, no other people ever had creation stories in the true sense of the word, only formation stories. The Jewish notion of creation is a radically distinctive notion in the history of human thought. When Jewish theologians like Philo and later Christian theologians (who learned it from the Jews) told the Greeks about it, they were often ridiculed.
This series first ran in 2004 and 2005. I'm refreshing it as I go. For links to the whole study, go to the Genesis Index. For more about the resources used, go here.

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Sweet, Sweet Doubletake — Forgotten Classics is "What's Hot" in iTunes

I was looking through What's Hot in Literature podcasts when I did a doubletake. Nice! I guess when you get past 300 episodes you get a nod sometimes.

I'm going to begin The Bat by Mary Roberts Rinehart this weekend. Swing by and let me read you one of my favorite Forgotten Classics.

Worth a Thousand Words: Portrait of Mary Sartoris

Frederic Leighton, Portrait of Mary Sartoris, c. 1860
via Arts Everyday Living

Well Said: Jesus' healings

Jesus' healings are not supernatural miracles in a natura world. They are the only truly "natural" things in a world that is unnatural, demonized, and wounded.
Jürgen Moltmann