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Teen Tales: A Door Closes

12.03.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

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When The Dog was still living, The Child’s bedroom door was never closed. It wasn’t that she didn’t close it, or try to – she did – but rather that he always kept an eye on us. If he walked by her bedroom and found the door shut, he’d push it open with his nose, just slightly, just enough to be sure of where she was.

The Red Dog hasn’t learned this trick, nor is he likely to, any time soon. His primary concern is not Us but Me, specifically, not losing sight of me, even for a moment, even if it means walking away from his just-filled food bowl because I left the kitchen.

I miss peeking into The Child’s room – sometimes terrifically messy, other times obsessively neat. I miss the pause at the top of the stairs, where her door is, and peering in to make sure she was safe and sleeping, listening to her breathe, and then closing her door as quietly as possible. Sometimes, she would hear me and call out, Mommy, and I’d go in to give and receive a hug, and tell her she needed to either go to sleep or get up.

The door is shut now, and to open it, there needs to be a reason for the intrusion. She’s always there, behind the door, busy in a world I’m not connected to: Her TV shows are Youtube channels, watched on her computer in her room, and the long hours she spends talking to friends aren’t on a kitchen phone with a long cord, but also in her room, using a Skype ID I don’t know.

Sometimes I hear her giggling, and later ask who she was talking to that was so funny, but often I don’t get an answer, or if she does answer, it’s with a story that can only be followed by those on the inside, which I’m not.

Sometimes, she ventures out, needing me. One day last fall the group of girls who accepted her invitations, but never invited her in return, had a sleepover, and were sure to post pictures of it on Instagram so that those who were not invited would know for sure where they stood: Outside, not in. That evening and all through the weekend, The Child and I talk a lot, about who those girls are and how they made her feel.  I point out that although I don’t really know who she’s spending all those long hours skyping with, I do know it isn’t those girls; their names were never mentioned in the half-answers I received to my inquiries.

It’s just enough to be helpful, and though the girl drama continues, The Child changes her lunch table and starts to look less like a girl she thought those girls would approve of, and more like the girl I know.

She recedes again from my world, and our car ride conversations become long silences that she proclaims Awkward and fills with music I don’t know. Still, I prefer it to the eyerolls and You Don’t Get Its that I receive in return for my occasional inquiries.

I even stop asking about schoolwork, so it comes as a rude shock to discover that after a strong start, The Child stopped turning work in, failed her math midterm. I talk with her, and go to work late so that I can meet with her advisor, and help her come up with a plan for getting on track, and though she seems to be working hard to catch up, each time I check, more assignments are missing.

I have a reason now to stick my head into her room, and each time I stop at the top of the stairs, I open the door and tell her to turn off Youtube, and make sure I can see work on her laptop screen before I will leave. My visits are a blast of winter air into her warm house, and she learns to shorten them by simply turning the laptop screen in my direction as I enter: See? Schoolwork.

One evening, I find her nestled in pillows, buried under blankets, but working, and I gently help her move to another room before she falls asleep; the next day, she thanks me for helping her be productive. Another evening, I take her with me so that while I attend a lecture, she is in an empty room next door, studying, and at the end she shows me the project she’s outlined on the blackboard as she captures the work with her camera phone.  I got a lot done, she tells me, it’s nice to work with no distractions.

She dresses beautifully the day she has to give her final presentation for one class, but she’s in her jeans when I pick her up. I ask how it went, and she says great, and tells me all the little reasons she thinks so.  I ask about other classes, and suddenly she’s angry: tests have been failed, assignments are still missing.

It’s too late to do anything, she says, I’m past the deadline for late work.

I ask what went wrong, why she stopped turning her work in, what on earth she was doing all those hours she seemed to be working.

I don’t really know. Do we need to dwell on this?

I rage out loud, then silently, for the rest of the drive.

When we get home, she disappears behind her door, slamming it shut and wedging her collection of Keds underneath it, to be sure it stays that way.

 

Categories // All By Myself, Teen Tales

Pioneer Woman’s Lemon Rolls

11.29.2014 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

A few days before Thanksgiving, I did get a call from the friend I had hosted for many years, inquiring if perhaps we could get together for Thanksgiving at a restaurant … and by the way, would The Child and I like to come over for Christmas like we used to? It was nice to be remembered, and invited, and made the day seem more holiday-ish, but in the end, though we thought we might join her for Christmas, The Child and I decided to stick with our original Thanksgiving plan: Watch bad movies all day, listen to Christmas music, and decorate for Christmas.

We started on Wednesday night, and it turned out there wasn’t much for me to do, except let her know where things might be stashed. The Christmas Village? Check the laundry room.

The most helpful thing I could do was offer dinner, and though I fearfully expected this would lead to a dark, rainy drive to her favorite burrito place, she had holidays on her mind, and wanted latkes. Never mind that when I made latkes for Hanukah last year, she didn’t like them. This year, they are all she wants.

It seems like I should have an old family recipe for latkes handed down from my Jewish grandmother, but I don’t, and in fact if my Jewish grandmother ever cooked latkes for me, I have no recollection of it. So I google, and quickly discover there are far too many latke recipes on the internet to sort through (about a zillion, give or take). I restrict my search to the Fine Cooking website, which also has an abundant number of recipes, but at least the numbers are reduced enough that there’s a chance I can evaluate them all and choose the best one. Then I made the second recipe that came up on the search results, because I made the first recipe on the list last year.

The Child pronounced them delicious and proceeded to devour them while sitting at the table and researching which of her favorite stores would have the best Black Friday deals. Last year you put in too much onion, she said. These are perfect.

It’s always a good day when you’ve managed to fix something even though you had no idea what was wrong with it in the first place. But since the ratio of onion to potato is the same in both recipes, I decide to simply accept the compliment.

With dinner done, The Child resumed her decorating, and I thought that it would be nice to make some breakfast treats for Thanksgiving morning. I used to get frozen cinnamon rolls at Costco for Christmas, but this time, I would do better: I would make my own. I didn’t want cinnamon, though; instead, I wanted lemon, partly because lemon rolls sound lovely and partly because I have a bag of lemons in the fridge that are right on the edge, that I want to use up. A bit of searching yielded some recipes, including this one by the Pioneer Woman. I made the dough on Wednesday evening, and finished the recipe Thursday morning.

This is probably a good time to mention that until I attempted this recipe, the only thing I knew about the Pioneer Woman is this: Every so often someone I know posts something from PW’s website on Facebook, which is typically followed by a bunch of comments about how awesome she is.

Lemon rolls from a popular food blogger: Seems safe.

My first clue that something was amiss was this: the instructions for the dough make enough for two batches of rolls, but only one is used. This would be fine, but no explanation is given for why we’re making all the extra, or what to do it.  Does it freeze? Do I need to make more rolls ASAP? I decided to avoid answering these questions and simply divide the recipe by two, and this is where I found myself questioning the Pioneer Woman’s recipe testing. Why didn’t she just divide it to begin with? There was nothing difficult about dividing the ingredients in two, no pesky “three eggs” to throw things off. Every quantity listed was easily divisible by two.

Try it. It’s simple math.

Math doesn’t seem to be PW’s strong suit, though, because after following the directions for the dough, I rolled it out as instructed into a 30×10 inch rectangle. After liberally swabbing the dough with butter and lemon sugar, I found myself facing another conundrum: Do I roll it along the long side? Or the short side? The recipe actually does say which side to use, and I quote, “the side furthest from you.”

If there’s a rule about whether you should end up with the long or short side nearest you after rolling out dough, I don’t know it, so I look for clues elsewhere in the recipe. This involves more math, and I’m sorry about that. Here you thought you were getting a lemon roll recipe, and instead you’re getting a math test.

Here’s the problem: The recipe says it makes 24 rolls. The recipe also instructs the cook to cut the rolled-up dough into half-inch slices. How do you roll a piece of 30×10 inch dough to achieve a log that can be cut into 24 half-inch slices?

In case you’re not good at math, there are two possible outcomes for people who follow the directions as written: they will have 60 rolls, or they will have 20 rolls. I guess in theory you could roll it on an angle, but the recipe doesn’t say to do that, or mention starting with a pointy corner, and my geometry skills are too rusty to figure this one out.

I decide to go with rolling the dough into a 30-inch log, which may be why I also needed three pie pans to bake my rolls in – though I’m hard pressed to see how you could slice the same amount of dough in any other direction and still get them into the two pans the recipe claims you’ll need. We’ll chalk that up to my rusty geometry skills, too, and also ignore the fact that the dough at this stage tasted like used gum. Surely, a little oven time and some lemon glaze, and all will be well.

I pop the three pie plates into the oven, and set about making lemon glaze: Lemon zest, lemon juice. Three cups of powdered sugar.

Two cups of milk.

I foolishly poured in one cup of milk and suddenly understood why it was being called “glaze” rather than “icing.” I hadn’t even used half the milk called for and found myself with a bowl full of sweetened lemony milk. Since the Pioneer Woman helpfully instructs the cook to “taste it and add a bit more of whatever it needs,” I added another two cups of powdered sugar, but still found myself staring at a bowl of opaque, lemon … well, let’s call it glaze. Perhaps if I’d followed PW’s instructions to the letter and added the melted butter to the glaze, it would have magically solved everything, but I was beyond humoring her at this point.

When the rolls were nicely browned, I poured some of this stuff all over them, bit in, and noticed two things: First, they still tasted vaguely doughy, and second, the little glaze dribbles that had been sitting on the counter for 20 minutes had still not hardened even slightly.

I hesitantly offered a roll to The Child.

She spit it out and poured herself a bowl of cereal with no hesitation whatsoever.

I’m not even going to try to be polite, she said, because you already know they’re awful.

I resentfully ate a couple of rolls, and a few hours later had developed one of those headaches you get when your blood sugar crashes after having been too high. Lying down, waiting for it to pass, it dawned on me that it was a bit like the sleepy feeling you get after eating turkey, except that it hurt and the only thing I wanted to do with the leftovers was what I did. I threw them out.

IMG_3826

Pretty, right?

 

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // kitchen disasters

Ottolenghi’s Slow-Cooked Chickpeas on Toast

11.26.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Last year, we spent Thanksgiving with Mr Faraway’s family, but though he and I have chatted from time to time, there is no such invitation this year. I’ve also not heard from the friend I hosted every Thanksgiving for ten years, but since she made other plans last year, I assume we’ve both moved on, too.

In fact, I’ve heard from no one.

There are probably options, but after The Child and I discuss the matter, the only thing that either of us can come up with that will be missed about Thanksgiving is this: my stuffing. I’ll miss it, but the idea of not only not hosting Thanksgiving, but skipping it entirely, is strangely liberating. This year, there will be no leftovers that linger for too long; this year, we will not suffer through the miserable sameness of the menu.

No matter what new side dish or pie you make each year, no matter where you eat or with whom, Thanksgiving is always the same.

Except this year. I make reservations at a local seafood restaurant, and though I feel slightly guilty that someone will work that day so that I don’t have to, I remind myself that many college students are waiters and appreciate the extra income that guilty, generous people like myself leave on such a day. I resolve to leave a big tip, and with that, am relieved of both my guilt and my obligation to eat turkey.

Not having to make room in my fridge for a turkey has some huge pluses, but mostly this one: I can keep cooking food from all the fun, new cookbooks that the library let me borrow, even though I’ve developed an unfortunate habit of keeping their cookbooks far too long.

The most recent book is Yotam Ottolenghi’s Plenty More. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to bother with a book about nothing more than vegetables, since I attempted Ottolenghi’s last cookbook when The Child was still a vegetarian, and without much success. It wasn’t a bad book, but I didn’t get excited about it, probably because I was tired of hunting out and cooking things that she could eat, but wouldn’t.

I was much more excited with the recipes in Plenty More, especially this recipe for slow-cooked chickpeas – partly for the chickpeas, but mostly because I’ve lately become obsessed with anything served open-faced on toast, preferably with a soft-boiled egg on top. I ate Smitten Kitchen’s Spinach and Smashed Egg Toast every night for a week, and only stopped making it because I ran out of fresh spinach and didn’t have time to go to the store. The supermarket lines are long and slow this week – what with all those people buying turkeys – so a recipe that can be cooked from the pantry is ideal.

This recipe requires a bit of planning ahead, since you need to soak the chickpeas overnight. Don’t try to substitute canned, because you need dried chickpeas to withstand the long, slow simmer that infuses them with flavor. I did substitute canned tomatoes for the fresh tomato Ottolenghi calls for; use fresh if you like, but canned will save you a trip to the store and after five hours of cooking, you’re not likely to notice any difference.

The long, slow simmer is perfect for a winter weekend, and rewards you at the end with a nicely spicy, savory bean stew that is thick enough to sit politely on a piece of toast while being held and eaten. I was so enthralled with the spicy-bean-on-toast combo that I forgot all about the poached egg that Ottolenghi suggests and the soft-boiled egg I was planning (follow the Smitten Kitchen directions in the link above). The beans don’t need anything else, and they rewarm perfectly for a nice lunch the next day.

And the next.

Unlike turkey, they probably won’t last much longer than that in your fridge, and also unlike turkey, there’s no stuffed feeling, even if you have a second helping.

 

Slow-Cooked Chickpeas on Toast

 

Ottolenghi's Slow-Cooked Chickpeas on Toast
 
Print
Author: Yotam Ottolenghi, Plenty More
Ingredients
  • 1 cup dried chickpeas, soaked overnight in water and 2 tsp of baking soda
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 1½ tsp tomato paste
  • ¼ tsp cayenne pepper
  • ¼ tsp smoked paprika
  • 2 medium red peppers, diced (about 1¼ cups)
  • 1 can (15 oz) diced tomatoes
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • 4 slices of sourdough or rustic bread, sliced thick, brushed with olive oil, and grilled on both sides
Instructions
  1. Drain and rinse the chickpeas and place them in a large saucepan with plenty of water. Place over high heat, bring to a boil, skim the surface, and boil five minutes. Drain and set aside.
  2. Place the oil, onion, garlic, tomato paste, cayenne, paprika, red peppers, 1 tsp salt, and some black pepper into a food processor and blitz until a paste forms.
  3. Place the paste into a large saucepan and fry for five minutes, stirring occasionally, then add the tomatoes, sugar, chickpeas, and 1 cup water. Bring to a low simmer, cover the pan, and cook over very low heat for four hours. Stir every so often and add water if needed to maintain a sauce-like consistency.
  4. Remove the lid and cook for a final hour, allowing the sauce to thicken without the chickpeas becoming dry.
  5. Place a piece of grilled toast on a plate and top with the chickpeas. If you like, you can top this with a poached egg drizzled with a bit of olive oil and za'atar.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // beans, vegetarian

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