Children’s Book Week

Celebrate Children’s Book Week

Blue Willow is fortunate to be an official host for Children’s Book Week. We love to work with the Children’s Book Council to highlight this week each year!  All of us know the value and joy that reading can bring to kids and their families and we celebrate that week with special events (Jessica Day George will visit May 8) and the coveted Children’s Book Week posters and tote bags.  This year’s poster was designed by Brian Selznick, of HUGO CABRET fame:

You can celebrate Children’s Book Week too, by voting in the Children’s Choice Book Awards.  Take a look at the ballots below and make your choices by May 9 (winners are announced at an awards gale in New York on May 13).  If you don’t know what book to choose, ask your favorite kid, librarian or bookseller. They’re sure to have an opinion!

-Cathy

What I Did on My Spring Vacation

What I did on my spring vacation

cabin

 

Six days of reading bliss.  My idea of real vacation is planning nothing more than what I’m reading, eating, and drinking for the day.  I just returned from a ski trip to Park City, Utah where my older son Will is wrapping up his second season as a ski instructor at  Deer Valley.

For eating and drinking, I highly recommend The Tin Angel  in Salt Lake City when you arrive at the airport. It’s very convenient, locally supported, and friendly.  They have great sandwiches and pastas.  Also we love the atmosphere and the whiskey flights at High West Distillery.

 

high west

 

We enjoyed the good but we are spoiled with Houston’s fabulous restaurants.  What I don’t have in Houston is the relaxation and reading that comes when forced to leave the shop. I read eight books–some picked up from stacks that have been calling to me and some from ones sent to me the day I left.  It’s always so hard to decide.  Here are just a few reviews:

Mapmaker’s War

by Ronlyn Domingue 
Ronlyn’s coming to visit so I really needed to read this.  Her last book THE MERCY OF THIN AIR was an ethereal ghost story set in New Orleans.  It took me a few pages to realize that she’s written an allegory set in a fantasy.  Personally I’m not a big fantasy fan, partially because I struggle to form the newly formed world in my old brain.  This story enchanted me.  A young girl is singled out for her mapmaking skills which causes her world to become much bigger than ever imagined. As a young woman she is sent on a trip to discover what lies beyond the river.  It’s more than what anyone expected. It’s more than I expected. Highly recommended.

A Constellation Of Vital Phenomena

by Anthony Marra

I picked this up last September at the regional trade show.  Everyone has been raving about it.  Why did I wait so long??  Especially after I found a note from my mother tucked in it that she loved it and was going to recommend it to her book club.  The novel is set during the civil unrest periods (is there any other time?) in Chechnya.  Achmed wakes to see his neighbor being dragged away by the Feds as they torch his home.  Knowing that the young daughter may still be inside, he goes to rescue her.  Achmed takes her to a hospital where he believes she could be safe. There a Russian doctor reluctantly takes on the care of the young girl as well as the mentorship of Achmed.  There are many different strands that you must follow as all the characters are related in some way.  The heartbreak and humanity shine in this debut. You must read it.

The Suitors

by Cecile David-Weill

If my friend Susan Brickell wrote a book set in the south of France, this would be it.  A bitingly funny farce supposedly about two very wealthy French women who are trying to find a spouse in order to preserve the beloved family summer home.  This summer home is a French Downton Abbey set in present day.  Marie narrates the story of the kooky cast of characters who are invited to either lunch (that would include Martha Stewart), a weekend (that would be the wealthy potential suitors-sadly most poorly attired), and the regulars who’ve been coming for years.  Complete with menus, seating arrangements, and laugh out moments, anyone who wants something funny will surely enjoy.

Until the next trip,
-Valerie
And here’s why we went!
Will and Jennifer

Blue Willow Best Books of 2012: Middle Grade Novels

Editor’s Note: Close to the top were JOSHUA DREAD, LIAR & SPY, SAME SUN HERE, and WONDER.

 

Katherine Applegate

by Katherine Applegate (HarperCollins)

Silverback gorilla Ivan lives at the Exit 8 Big Top Mall and Video Arcade with aging elephant Stella and cranky dog Bob.  The owner is always looking for something to draw more people, so he brings in Ruby, a curious baby elephant.  Ivan’s goal is to help Ruby escape to a better life, and as he plots, Applegate shows us courage, loyalty and honor that we hope to recognize in those around us — both human and animal.

Cathy

 Sheila Tunnage

by Sheila Tunnage (Dial Books)

Mo LoBeau lives in Tupelo Landing, NC, full of quirky characters who gossip about everyone in town.  She washed ashore in a hurricane eleven years ago and found a home with the Colonel and Miss Lana.  When a policeman comes to town asking questions about Colonel and a murder, Mo and her best friend Dale Earnhardt Johnson III are determined to get to the bottom of it. This is a story that’s easy to dive right into and is an utter delight. For grades 4 and up.

Cathy

Jennifer Nielsen

by Jennifer Nielsen (Scholastic Books)

From the very first page, I fell in love with author Jennifer Nielsen and her character of Sage. You first meet Sage as he is running from the butcher after stealing a roast. He is then bought by a wealthy man and entered into a very secretive but potentially dangerous competition. Sage’s honest (and often funny) voice kept me hooked throughout the book. I would highly recommend this for anyone looking for an adventure, children (4th grade and older) or adults.

Jordan

Lois Lowry

by Lois Lowry (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Decades ago, Lowry’s Newbery Award winning novel THE GIVER captivated readers with her dystopian tale of Jonah and his struggle with his society.  She’s now completed SON, which finished the four book series and details the story of Gabriel (Jonah’s brother) and Gabriel’s birthmother in a true battle of good and evil.  It is masterful and magnificent and will be enjoyed by those in 5th grade through adulthood.

Cathy

What I’m Grateful For — #1

Editor’s Note: I’ve asked the staff to write about people and events they are grateful for–if you’d like to guest blog, let me know!

Walking Group

My Walking Group

 

How could I not be thankful for the group I walk with in the mornings?  We got started walking at 7:45 a.m. when we sent our kids out to the middle school bus stop and then hit the streets.  There is a convenient one mile loop around the neighborhood, so our fearless leader Debbie starts from her house, where a few of us meet her, and then any late arrivers go the reverse way and pick us up as we go around.  This works out great most of the time, except when the leaders aren’t out and others are circling in the same direction.  We don’t have a monopoly on the path, though, as there are a couple of other groups, including the one with LOTS of dogs.

 

 

With The Dogs

With The Dogs

 

We are quite notorious because there are sometimes as many as ten or twelve, and we take up a lot of the street.  We are busy walking and talking and may not always pay great attention to the unfortunate drivers who are trying to get to work or school.  In the course of our usual four miles we have helped plan weddings and vacations, celebrated births and graduations, mourned deaths, and discussed the activities of our children.  These kids have always been aware that the neighbors are in the know and are watching them.  That is never a bad thing.

 

Watching Over The Neighborhood

 

Every once in a while, we get cleaned up and go out for lunch to celebrate birthdays or other big occasions.  Now if I can just get them to come for book events.

 

Lunch With Friends

Lunch With Friends


Crumbs In Our Pages — The Smitten Kitchen

Smitten Kitchen

The Smitten Tour is stopping here on December 1.

Bonjour, y’all!  I have left Paris and returned to Houston for the summer (I’ll let you ponder that one for a moment), and Valerie reluctantly agreed to let me jump back on the blog for a guest appearance.  Martha and I had a “Crumbs” reunion and spent a wonderful morning   cooking out of a new cookbook we both love, The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook by Deb Perelman.  We were already fans of the wildly successful Smitten Kitchen blog, and had both been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Deb’s first cookbook.  Martha had to wrestle our advance copy  out of the hands of  some other (weaker) BWB employees, and I savored each page of it while our food was in the oven.  It is, as I expected, fabulous.

 

Deb Perelman

Deb Perelman

 

First, lets talk about Deb Perelman, shall we?  She is, like most of us, not a restaurant chef or one who was trained in a culinary institute.  She started a blog because , like most of us, she loves to cook.  I love that.  Deb lives in New York City and creates her incredible dishes in a teeny, tiny kitchen that is probably a fraction of the size of most of ours.  Plus, she is usually kept company in her teeny tiny kitchen by her teeny tiny (and precious) toddler.  All of these contribute to my admiration of this mom who can produce a gorgeous blog, and now an incredible cookbook.  However, what I really love is her casual and funny writing, which makes you feel like you are her best friend and makes you wish desperately you lived next door to her.  Or at least on her floor.  Martha and I suspect that she makes regular deliveries of her kitchen bounties to those lucky enough to actually be her best friends or her neighbors.  The easy, breezy style of her blog is also present in her cookbook, making it fun to read. And did I mention her photographs?  Oh my.  Food porn at its best.
So now that you know why we love Deb and her blog and her new cookbook, I”ll tell you about what we cooked today.
First we made leek fritters with garlic and lemon.  Leeks?  Fritters (=fried)?  Garlic? Lemon?  Really- how could you lose? These came together quickly and were absolutely delicious.  We chopped up three big leeks and cooked them in water.
Leeks

Leeks

 

Leeks Cooking

Cooking Leeks

 

Then we mixed the drained leeks with some dry ingredients and an egg.

 

Mixed with flour

Mixed with flour

 

Then Martha fried them like pancakes in a little olive oil.

 

Martha working hard!

 

As you can see, they get a nice brown crust on the outside.  Aren’t they gorgeous?

 

Finished

 

And Plated

 

Finally, we mixed up a little garlic lemon sour cream sauce to plop on top and it was time to eat!

 

Kate and Martha enjoy their fritters

 

Being the kind of girls we are, we wanted a sweet after our leek fritters, so we whipped up a delectable blueberry cornmeal butter cake.  Oh yes we did!  This cake was a quick but perfect combination of butter, cornmeal, lemon zest, blueberries,plus the other usual suspects.  On top went a streusel topping of sugar, flour, cornmeal, cinnamon, and butter.  Into the oven for long enough to bookmark a dozen other recipes in the cookbook I want to try, and then voila!  A delicious, moist cake with just the right balance of lemon, cinnamon, blueberry and butter.  Oh yeah.

 

Crumble

 

It has been a pleasure reconnecting with my “Crumbs” friends.  Stop by and see what I’m cooking up  at www.maisouiparis.wordpress.com! ~~ Kate

 

 

 

Blue Willow’s Happiness Project (Or How Nancy cleaned out her junk drawer)

 Editor’s Note: Gretchen will be appearing at the Greater Houston Women’s Chamber of Commerce Luncheon featuring her new book HAPPIER AT HOME on Tuesday, Oct 23. Tickets are available. Book sales will be handled by the happiest bookshop in Houston!

In 2009, Gretchen Rubin wrote a book called The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun.  The book chronicles her 12-month adventure in researching theories about happiness and setting personal goals to become happier herself. It is fun to read, as well as inspiring. The world really could and should be a happier place and Rubin believes that goal can be reached one person at a time.

 

The Happiness Project

 

When Rubin came to Blue Willow shortly after the book’s release, we knew we had to have some fun, happy, quirky stuff happening that evening. One of the things that caught my eye while reading the book was a part that mentioned cleaning out your closets and using up all those old special occasion napkins that you’ve got stashed away. Yes, I could relate to that. I contributed several partial packages of napkins to the event, my favorite being the “Congratulations Class of 2006!”

Adding to my happiness of 1) Getting them out of my pantry, and 2) Amusing Ms. Rubin, was the fact that many of our bookstore patrons also thought this was a great idea. We initiated the Blue Willow Happiness Project and put out a call for napkins. We received BAGS of Halloween, birthday, Christmas, etc. napkins, promising that we would not throw them away, but instead put them to good use at our author events.

And guess what? We’ve finally run out. So, in our continuing quest to make West Houston a happier place, we’re once again taking donations of all those napkins that you can’t bear to throw out, but also can’t imagine actually using again. Here’s my contribution:

 

Happiness Project napkins

Happiness Project Napkins

 

And if you’ve got something that tops “Congratulations Class of 2006!” I can’t wait to see it. – Nancy

Crumbs In Our Pages — The Back In The Day Bakery Cookbook

The Back In The Day Bakery Cookbook

 

Just pack me up and move me to Savannah right now!  I want to live in Cheryl and Griffith Day’s Back in the Day Bakery.  This is the perfect cookbook for the true BAKER in you, whether you are a novice or a well seasoned baker!  The Days are passionate about their recipes that they lovingly prepare each morning using quality ingredients. That morning starts very early – 3:30am early to be exact.  Cheryl and Griffith are celebrating the bakery’s 10th anniversary by bringing us this delightful cookbook.  It is packed with all the charm that we would experience if we got the chance to visit their bakery.   Each page shows their true love for each other and their love of baking wonderful treats for their customers.

Ingredients

Pressing The Crust

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

During the week of July 4th, and in keeping with the theme of the week, I selected the Cherry Pie Bars.  The recipe starts with a crust base.  First, you press this into a casserole dish and bake, leaving a bit in reserve.  The next layer is the cherry pie filling.  I used frozen cherries for this step.  Then you add a bit of the leftover unbaked crust sprinkled on top.  Bake and get ready for the deliciousness, because these are super good.  I cut them into small squares – they set up nicely and were pretty to look at too.  Customers and shopkeepers alike snacked on these all afternoon.

 

Whipping Up The Pie

Sprinkling The Last of The Crust

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Again, each page just shines with their love for each other and the love of what they achieve every day.  This book is a lesson to us all to find your life’s true passion and just GO FOR IT!

 

Fresh From The Oven

Ready to serve at Blue Willow

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Enjoy– Julia


E-Banter May 21 edition

Is that summer we see coming very fast in our direction? With prom over and graduation this weekend, we are busy preparing for our summer programs.  Check out Camp Blue Willow and Gamemeisters for the elementary set. We have some wonderful novelists coming to visit in June, capped off by the bestselling Jodi Picoult.

Calling Invisible Women Jeanne Ray

Here are our Banter reviews for this week.
Since I last wrote to you, I’ve spoken with 10 bookclubs, women’s groups, and school faculties about great books for the summer.  There is going to be a lot of fun reading ahead.  If you want me to speak to your group, let me know.

Sean McDermott Annie Rice

Sean and Annie

Congratulations go out to our two graduating seniors: Annie Rice, who is headed to Missouri and Sean McDermott, who is headed to Belmont.  Stratford will miss them and we will too.  I really need to go back into the files and see how many “kids” have spent their high school days working here and see how they are faring.  If you are one of this hardy band, email me and let me know.
Sadly for us, our good neighbor The Pretty Penny gift shop is closing after 39 years of business. We know that Lester will be happy to get a chance to travel, be with her mom, and rest. She earned it!
I re-read Welcome To Utopia and The Art of Hearing Heartbeats this past week and finished Goodbye For Now by Laurie Frankel (coming out in August) and The World Without You by Joshua Henkin (coming out next month).  I’m listening to Unbroken (the wonderful narrator is Edward Herrmann).
What are you reading?

signature

 

Valerie

Crumbs In Our Pages — Ruhlman’s Twenty

Back when I used to sew lots of my own clothes, I decided to sign up for a class that would help me to move from homemade to haute couture.  The instructor graciously suggested that I might want to take Sewing 101 since pretty much everything I knew about sewing had been learned in 7th grade home ec – in other words, it was back to the basics. Sensing that perhaps my cooking might suffer from a similar plight (same home ec class – second semester), I picked up a copy of Ruhlman’s Twenty a few months ago and have been practicing the 20 basic techniques that help us ensure that every creation is a crowd pleaser.

Michael Ruhlman

Michael Ruhlman has a great story that you’ll want to read, but it was his Twenty Essentials that really caught my eye.

 

 

Michael Ruhlman

Michael Ruhlman

 

Some critics quibble that a few of the Techniques are actually Ingredients – but really, folks, life’s a bit too short for those kinds of discussions.  After reading through Chapter 1: Think, I quickly graduated to Chapter 2: Salt and decided to experiment with Sage-Garlic Brined Pork Chops.  Everyone says brining makes all the difference in keeping meat from becoming dried shoe leather after grilling, sautéing, pan frying or roasting. So half of the chops were infused with a lovely kosher salt, shallot, lemon, fresh sage leaves, 2 bay leaves, and black peppercorns brine for about 6-8 hours before being grilled; the others were thrown mercilessly onto the fire.

 

 

Brined Chops

Brined Chops

 

Then I rounded up my favorite guinea pigs and had them try Chop A (for brined) and Chop B (yes, I know brined starts with B, but I didn’t want it to be obvious).

 

A or B

Grilled Pork Chops

Grilled Pork Chops

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You don’t need me to tell you that Chop A won hands down; you already knew that and have moved on to Chapter 3: Water (other chapters include onion, acid, egg, butter, dough, batter, sugar, sauce, vinaigrette, soup, sauté, roast, braise, poach, grill, fry, and chill).

Each chapter begins with a few thoughtfully written instructions about the featured technique and then a few tantalizing recipes follow to give us a chance to put into practice our newly acquired skills.

—-

Kate and I had fun with Chapter 6: Egg when I visited her in Paris in February.

les oeufs

les oeufs

Essentials

essentials

 

 

 


 

 


 

Egg, Arugula & Bacon Pizza

Egg, Arugula & Bacon Pizza

 

Ruhlman’s Twenty is a super idea for all who want to kick their cooking up a notch – part technique, part recipes, as Ruhlman himself says: a Cook’s Manifesto.  What I love about Ruhlman’s book is that he demystifies cooking.  We get so overwhelmed by mandolins, mirepoix, and macerating that we throw in the towel and call for take-out and then are so disappointed with our Styrofoam suppers.  This summer as life slows down a bit (OK, I’ll wait until you stop laughing), let’s get the family back in the kitchen, not just around the table, but in front of the stove as well – and rediscover the joy of cooking and enjoying what’s been created with our own hands. Family all grown up and moved away? Then gather up some friends and start a Friday night supper club – what could be more fun? – Martha

Bloopers – you know how at the end of a movie they sometimes include the parts where the actors messed up? Here’s my brining blooper – burnt to a crisp…

Burnt chops


Crumbs In Our Pages — Under The Tuscan Sun Cookbook

Do you remember where you were and what you were doing on September 1, 1997? That’s when Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes found its way into our hungry little hands.

 

Under The Tuscan Sun

 

I would have had a 6, 5, and 2 years old – we were up to our eyeballs in Barbies, Legos, Thomas the Tank Engine, Beanie Babies, chicken nuggets and Happy meals – I’m sure that I would have been found guilty of throwing in a Barney video or two just so that I could escape to Tuscany with the Mayes – drooling over the market fresh meals that Frances and Edward would drive all over the countryside to gather and laughing until tears rolled down my face at the slapstick antics of the workers they had hired to fix up their Tuscan villa (were you as disappointed in the movie as I was? What a letdown!).  It was such a delicious delight when Under the Tuscan Sun Cookbook arrived at Blue Willow last week-

 

Under The Tuscan Sun Cookbook

 

– page after page of the people, the places, the produce, the pasta that make Tuscany such a slice of heaven on earth – there is eye candy for all – from fetching fennel to luscious landscapes to the mesmerizing smiles and laughing eyes of the Mayes’ friends and family.  Bruschettas, paninis, pestos – it was hard to choose where to start – until the lasagna caught my eye.  A while back I made lasagna from Smitten Kitchen that was like no other I had ever made: a béchamel sauce (or as we say here in Tuscany – a besciamella instead of ricotta. It turns out that this is the more traditional way of making lasagna, and we loved it (so did the neighbors who just had a new baby!).  Now this recipe is not fast food – but oh, it is worth the wait.  If you have the time, it’s best to stretch it out over two days – making the ragù sauce the first day and the besciamella and assembling the lasagna the second.  First you start with a soffritto which is guaranteed to make your kitchen smell fabulous; a gently sautéed onion, carrot, celery and parsley in a dash of olive oil is all you need to get the party started.

 

 

Soffritto

Soffritto

 

Now it’s time for the ragù (am I the only one who thought ragù was a only brand name for super sweet, overly processed American spaghetti sauce? It’s even spelled wrong on the label – Ragú instead of Ragù.  Believe me, that’s the sort of thing that makes a former language teacher cringe!)  Real ragù, my friends, is nectar of the gods – my tongue is still burned to a crisp I tasted it so many times yesterday right from the quietly simmering pot.


Ragù

Ragù

 

And lastly the besciamella – it’s the grating of fresh nutmeg that makes all the difference.

 

Besciamella

Besciamella

 

All of this is assembled in the 9×13, sprinkled ever so lightly with parmigiano-reggiano and baked into layers of lusciousness that I will feast on for a week.

 

Lasagne

Lasagne

 

Under the Tuscan Sun cookbook is a wonderful way to bring a bit of Tuscany home to anyone who has ever had the pleasure of savoring this sun-drenched, produce-rich, intoxicating corner of the culinary world - Buon Appetito!  Martha