Archive for July, 2008

Denali: Part 1

July 25, 2008

“The Big One”, Denali was impressive throughout.  A quick rundown:

Pre:  Camping is complicated, at least the first time.  Scrambling for sleeping bags, tents, food, shoes(I think we know why these were important), and so on.  Some items we could borrow and some had to be bought.  Then there was the reservation process itself, which was relatively complicated.  When to leave, when to head back, what to do when we got there; Planning was required every step of the way.  It should get easier the next time, especially when you buy permanent gear, but for our initial foray…  Worse, Denali’s distance from civilization doesn’t allow much modification once you’re on the road.  But we worked at it and got things mostly on target.  We hoped.

Day 1:

We left at an ungodly 6 AM away from Anchorage.  The drive itself took ~5 hours, which went by pretty quickly.  We all took turns playing DJ with Ipods, talking about gender, family, sex, money, and the like.  Good stuff.

We passed through powerful scenery and inclement weather to arrive at the main entrance.  While the opening gate was welcoming, barriers awaited.  Unlike many parks, Denali will let you drive your car in, but they won’t let you take it through the entire grounds, which of course required more prep.  Our first order of business was to register our campsite and eat.  We go to the tourist building and I have a hideously bland burger.  The rest of the group get similarly weak sauce, and our adventure becomes badly in need of upgrading.  We decide to take the public road to its limit and hike the only trail in Denali, Savage River.  Here’s an aerial view of how the main road looks at the guard house protecting the rest of the park:

Pretty place, no?

Speaking of aerial view, Savage River was a pleasant trial, but a trifle soft.   So Nick and I went off-trail a quarter of the way through, climbing hills and outcroppings and getting fun views like the above.  And this:

This was fun for a while, but trouble was apaw.  Nick and I lingered on a hill, so that the rest of the group continued along.  After coming down and getting back on the path, we passed a ranger walking towards the trail head.  We exchanged our hellos and continued on, when a second later she yelled “Bear!  Bear on the trail!”.  Nick and I turned, and sure enough we saw a bear on the trail, not ninety seconds where we were climbing before.

Let’s back up a second.  Bears were a prominent part of my Denali research.  I, to my knowledge, have no bear phobias.  Yet one has to respect in Denali that bears are prevalent.  And, theoretically at least, bears are a genuine threat to life.  More than something like exposure or, I dunno, syphilis. Now the fact that you can be killed doing something should not bar you from the activity.  I regularly get into airplanes and drive cars.  I’ve bungee jumped, and while I had a primal fear jumping off the crane, I would argue a little threat to life and limb once in a while makes life colorful.  In fact, it was the expense of the Denali trip that turned me off somewhat, rather than the copious bears running around the park, which upon typing it I realize is some weird value system.

But for all that “makes life worth living” talk, I have a healthy respect for lethal activities.  I might appreciate the rush of adrenaline, or getting from A to B, but that hardly crosses into suicidal.  As such, we did plenty of bear research before coming to Denali.  Bears, we learned, have powerful noses, and are in general leery of humans.  They’re indirectly dangerous if they smell food, and they’re directly dangerous if you get in the way of their cubs or if you startle them.  Don’t trap them in a corner either, but that seemed unlikely in 9,400 square miles of preserve.  The direct dangers were easy (make lots of noise, don’t pet the adorable cubs!!!), but the food bit required preparation.  Mainly it meant storing all food and wrappers inside bear canisters, and keeping nothing on you when you’re wandering around the woods.  Easy enough, although we relaxed these standards somewhat near the end of the trip.

So back to this bear.  This bear became two as its companion came lumbering down to join it.  Nick swore they followed me down the mountain, but it’s hard to say.  Being a good Denali guest I didn’t have food on me, but maybe I was rank enough to summon bears.  I hope not, that would wreak havoc on my game.  Regardless, we were confronted by two bears on the trail, yay fifty yards away from us.  The park service recommends 250 yards, for what it’s worth.

The ranger was waving her arms and yelling like mad, to get their attention and drive them off.  She suggested we do the same.  We did so.  Nick, bless his heart, was uncomfortable with the pair o’bear, and turned around and got ready to run off.  The ranger turned and screamed “DO NOT RUN”.  She was right of course, bears are attracted to running people.  We went back to yelling and arm waving, trying to sound tough and look large.  I took a quick break to snap a few photos.

Was I scared?  I don’t think I was was scared per se.  The best way to describe how I felt was “high alert”.  My senses were trained on those grizzly bastards; I was focused.  Fear wasn’t part of things, just being in the moment.  There was a trill in my tummy, but if I didn’t feel safe exactly, I didn’t feel in mortal danger.  It’s hard to describe.

The shouting/arm waving thing was going fine.  The bears had sniffed around, but decided to about face and head back towards the trail head.  I was sure a bus load of tourists was about to get a good show.  Things were going along swimingly until another group of hikers came around the bend.

This was a situation.  The bears noticed the other people, and the other people, those bastards, began to walk towards the bears.  The ranger screamed “DO NOT WALK TOWARDS THE BEARS” and they listened.  Mostly.  But still, the bears were not happy to be confined so.  They turned back towards us and took a few steps closer, their first.  At each step that “high alert” feeling turned into “higher alert”.  Running was a terrible idea.  Right?

Well we kept waving and shouting and eventually the bears decided they had had enough.  Jumping into the cold Savage River they went to the other side and climed a big hill yonder.  Here’s a shot of them deciding to take a plunge:

You can just make out the other group in the background.

The rest of the walk was uneventful (but to be fair, where else is there to go after that?).

Which is not to say the day was over, but that will have to wait until later.  I have a final I need to study for.

:(

The final stretch

July 18, 2008

And the second to last week comes to a close. Remaining:

*Two days of class
*Three days of work
*A final exam
*An end-of-term dinner, sponsored by SeattleU
*Packing(frown)
*And last but certainly not least, this weekend’s trip to Denali National Park.

According to the Denali National Park Visitor’s Board, Denali National Park is the best thing ever. Six hours away from Anchorage in pristine wilderness, a weekend trip is almost criminally short. But what can you do? We bought lots of freeze-dried food today to stick into bear canisters. I have packing(frown) to do tonight. And tomorrow at 6AM, we head out! Pictures forthcoming.

-Noah

P.S. On advice of counsel, I will not be hiking in the backcountry with my trademark “Bacon-and-Honey Delight” sandwiches.

The morning ritual

July 13, 2008

There are people out there, most likely some type of automaton, who are colloquially referred to as “morning people”.  These genteel souls go to sleep early, wake up early (no doubt having spent slumber dreaming of all the exciting things that will be accomplished the next day!!!) and in general harnessing life to the fullest.  These good people are not just active in the morning, they penetrate the morning, forcing the AM to do their noble bidding.

I am not a morning person.  I wake up slooooooow.  This is well documented.  My most likely move when I wake up is to fall back asleep, followed very closely by a trip to the bathroom, then back to sleep.  If I do manage to get up and stay up, most likely due to a feminine influence, I’m still effectively comatose.  I shuffle around, mumble; all those clever quips that pepper the afternoon and evening are buoyed by the extraordinary dullery of first part of the day.  Mentally I’m way below what any medical person would call “conscious”.   Physically there’s something similar.  I am, among other things, not in the least bit hungry out of bed.  My body is still in hibernation mode, for good or ill.  I may be thirsty, but put a piece of toast in front of me and I’d have a lot of trouble choking it down.  When my brain has woken up my body follows, although it might be the other way around.  The tricky part is getting that process started.

I generally do the bathroom/drink of water bit, and if I remember to, splash some water on my face and/or stretch.  This is a good eye opener if i remember to do it, but memory is a mental process, and again not my specialty straight out of bed.  It’s kind of a Catch-22, which is a concept I can utilize correctly because I’m writing this post at 11:30 at night.

Anyway, we’ve got this issue where morning is slow time, and I need to get started on the day, but we need a spark.  After said ignition, you gotta fuel up.  Luckily, oh so luckily, there’s cooking to the rescue.  A meal, a specific breakfast that takes the right time to make, so that by cooking it you’re mentally awake, and by the time it’s finished you’re hungry to eat.  The magic meal is that old chestnut oatmeal.  And if you’re curious how to put together this delightful morning ensemble, look no further my friend.  Full details ahead.

Now there are a lot of kinds of oatmeal out there.  Instant and rolled are the two most common to Americans, and they’re not bad in a pinch.  Instant is a little sugary and a little expensive for what you get, but in a pinch…Rolled oats are great to have around for desserts or the occasional granola bar.  But for breakfast, head and shoulders above the best version of oats are Steel-Cut.  So named by the process used to separate the grain from the oat kernel, these oats are the least processed of oat varieties, and consequently the healthiest.  In my opinion they’re also the tastiest, but the trade-off is that they require the most effort.  I believe it is time well spent.

The golden ratio of steel-cut oats is a simple one cup of oats to four cups of liquid.  This is the ratio for the oats to absorb the right amount of liquid, so that they create yummy, gummy texture, as opposed to being a mass or disintegrating.  Less than that amount of liquid goes from uncomfortably chewy to painfully crunchy.  This ratio is a good standby, but keep in mind that each portion of steel-cut is slightly different.  The toasting process(below) can be different, the amount of time absorbing liquid, and the amount of liquid needed for optimal consistency are all variable.  There’s nothing you can really do about the last one except, if needed, add more liquid (sticking to the ratio, it’s not really possible to put in too much right off the bat).  Some may find the lack of consistency a problem for their morning ritual.  I find it endearing.

With the ratio in mind, we first examine how much oatmeal we’ll be making.  That full cup of oats makes way more oatmeal than I can eat.  I generally go with 1/3 cup of oats, with a healthy amount of additions later on.  Sometimes if I’m sensing real hunger in the morning, I’ll go with a half cup, although this is definitely the upper limit of eating for one.  A last point before we get cooking proper: Not all steel-cut oats are precisely the same.  Besides the individual variations in batches mentioned above, brands are subtly different.  The only version I’ve truly disliked is Bob’s Red Mill Steel-Cut Oats.  Bob’s is generally good stuff, but their oats always come out grades below.  Bulk-section steel-cut generally work out well, but my absolute favorite brand is Country Choice Irish Style(Steel-Cut) Oats.  A canister looks like this:

And 1/3 cup of the raw oats looks like this:

You can work with the oats in this state, but I like adding some flavor at this point and toasting them.  It’s a cooking maxim that everything tastes better toasted, and oats are certainly no exception.  To toast the oats, you’re going to need a little butter melted in the bottom of your cooking vessel.  It detracts from the some of the health benefits of this breakfast, but you really don’t need much here.  Your goal is to get the butter liquidus so that you can mix it into the oats to get a more efficient toast going.  Your melted butter will look something like this:

You’ll dump your cup o’ oats into the butter and stir it around, getting as much immersion as possible.  The butter smells alright, but the smell of oats toasting in the morning is both comforting and delicious.  My heat will be at medium-high here.  This portion is the trickiest part of the breakfast, and mistakes do happen.  The overarching goal is for the oats to be browned but not burnt.  Since toasting is optional, you’d be correct to think that under-toasting is superior to over-toasting.  Note however that the flavor spike is pronounced.  The best way to know your toasting is going well is by sight and smell.  Obviously a burned odor is bad news, but it’s not fatal.  A little burn won’t kill you; it most likely means that you haven’t been shuffling the oats enough.  Moving them around in the pan goes a long way towards even toasting.  The smell, sadly, doesn’t transmit.  Hopefully this pic will give you a good approximation of the color you’re looking for:

The next step to the [1/3] cup of oats is [one cup] of boiling water.  When you’re ready for this step, turn the burner down to simmer; ideally the water will be boiling at this point.  Again, the line between toasty and burny is very fine.  There’s nothing wrong with removing the pot of oats entirely from the stove while the water finalizes its boilage.  Water looks like this:

A cup of water looks like this:

Well, approximately.  Boil it in another pot or electric kettle and toss it right on top of the oats.  It will look unappetizing:

Now just cover it with a lid and don’t think about it again for 25 minutes.  During that time the oats will absorb the water and become eatable, and you can spend the time getting further ready for your day.  Perhaps picking out your clothing, or jumping in the shower, or reading from a magazine, or checking your email…whatever’s your fancy.  It’s a great part of the morning.

Once those 25 minutes are up(give or take a few, depending on the batch), your oats will have absorbed the water you’ve given them, taking on the appearance of very moist brown rice:

Astute mathematicians, aka my single reader, will note that we’re still missing 1/3 cup of liquid.  You can use more water, but that’s missing opportunities for flavor.  Of the dairy variety.  With that remaining 1/3, your options are quite varied.  I tried buttermilk for a while, and got a good tang going, but it would always curdle when it hit the hot oats.  Whole milk and half&half are both legitimate options, depending on whoever is winning your flavor v. health battle that day.  I generally use skim milk or 1%, but I’ll put in a touch more than 1/3 of a cup.  This amount varies somewhat, although it’s never more than one half.  I figure too much milk is better than too little, although it does soften the texture of the whole deal.  Depends how gummy you like yours I suppose.

The key before pouring milk is to stir up the oats.  Those little buggers have adhered to the pot at this point; directly adding milk is not going to get the right saturation.  Gently stir the oats before adding the mild and after, to get maximum absorption potential.  Remember, the goal is each oat filled with liquid, but little to none in the bowl itself.  Here’s what stirred-and-immersed oats look like:

And just let it simmer and absorb.  Check on it, and give it a stir if it looks like the milk is pooling up top.  In about 10 minutes, the oatmeal will be fully cooked and ready.  Are you hungry yet?

Those 10 minutes gives us time to get the fixings ready.  Steel-cut oatmeal is perfectly consumable in this form, if a little bland.  But with just a few additions, the oatmeal transforms into something truly special.  To wit:

Scientific fact: everything is better with peanut butter, including peanut butter.  A little cinnamon, maybe some splenda or salt also plays well here.  But this particular morning I’m in a saucy mood, so our PB gets combined with:

Strawberries!  Sweet!

And there you go.  A breakfast to let you start the day off with someting tasty, healthy, and warm in your tummy.  I don’t do it every day, but the ones that begin like this usually go well.  Good morning!

Books Review

July 9, 2008

When I’m not working, studying, fending off amorous moose or playing emulated NES/SNES games, I read for pleasure to while away the time in sunny Alaska.  Here’s my take on the last three I’ve since finished.

Julie and Julia, by Julie Powell

A food-centric memoir, recommended by Brie.  We both thought I would enjoy this one.  I did derive some satisfaction out of reading it but, unusual for me, I found myself liking it less and less when all was said and done.  The reasoning below.

Julie and Julia is about a woman who decides to cook every recipe from Julia Child’s famous Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. 1 within a single year.  The premise was unusual and intriguing.  What would the reader learn about french cooking from this book?  Which recipes would taste great, and which would fall flat?  Are the recipes as butter-and-cream laden as the rumors say?  Why would Ms. Powell attempt such a feat?

That last question is a good one, and having read the entire story, I still don’t know precisely why Julie wanted to tackle Julia, especially under her self-imposed clock.  Maybe we can figure it out.  Julie Powell begins the book as a secretary in a government office.  Having little drive, she finds herself withering on the vine.  In a similar vein, as the book opens Julie finds herself beget(ha!) with fertility issues.  Her marriage is going well enough, but like career and reproduction capabilities, stuck in stasis.  Theoretically, this limbo is a good incentive to kickstart a grand project like Mastering, but on closer inspection the reasoning starts to fall apart.  Although Julie explains why this particular cookbook(nostalgia), the book fails to go into why cooking as a whole is the solution to her woe.  Going back to school, marriage counseling, looking into adoption; these may be effective routes to beating back ennui.  Cooking is fun, but Julie never even implies it as a vehicle to a better life after her year(why why why that deadline?!) is up.  She runs it out as an experiment, a diversion.

But while the foundation is at best arbitrary, the premise does have merit.  It would be stronger still if, for example, the author was soon to attend Le Cordon Bleu, where Ms. Child matriculated, but no matter.  Cooking eminently french recipes, serving them to friends and family…entertaining and educational?  The potential was there.

Sadly the execution is really where the book falls short.  There’s a few reasons for this, but one of the bigbest is simple: You do not care about Julie Powell.  Her “quest”, her domestic issues?  A big fat “whatever” from the reader.  In our defense, these feelings were not self-generation.  Rather, these thoughts were merely a reflection of the author’s own voice.  In the beginning Julie discussed the difficulty of conceiving with her husband. This is not a bad beginning to getting a reader invested. However, any good will generated with the first few chapters are blown away with incessant drinking and swearing and complaining. And complaining, and complaining.  There’s nothing wrong with those things per se, but for engendering sympathy, they are the wrong tack. Who roots for the woman who bitches all day and drinks all night? Clearly she doesn’t root for herself. Why should we get involved?

The second big problem with the premise is that it’s window dressing.  The real story is simply a recounting of Julie’s life that year.  Certainly the cooking project is prominent, but so are the stories about her family and her remarkably insipid friends.  Like attracts like as they say, so there’s no surprise here.  But considering how precariously we care about Julie, Pseudonym X and Y’s plight is strictly wasted ink.  “Oh no, random chica is having trouble finding romance.  Yay, she found romance!  Boo, she’s throwing it away for a new romance.” You can blame the author, my gender, or my soul if you want but I have no interest in shallow people making shallow decisions.

We read about the food, but we’re never drawn into the food.  Julie whines, throws stuff at her husband, cries, starts a blog, continues to work her job, reports she’s remarkably unsympathetic to 9/11, attracts maggots, dishes, and generally behaves like someone you have little interest in knowing.  Well except for her desserts, apparently she’s a champ at pastry making.  Actually the food portions are enjoyable.  Her journey for bones(to extract marrow) or offal or any number of odd recipes and the ingredients they call for are precisely the scenes I wanted to see in the book.  They’re jewels, and like most precious things, far too rare.

One of the oddest passages was the epilogue, where Julie hears that Julia Child has died. Her loyal blog readers clue her in and to their “face” she plays it cool. But moments later, to us, she breaks down and sobs long and hard for the death of Mrs. Child. Although by the finale no one knows what it was, Julia Child was simply a means to an end for Julie. Analogously, it would be like crying when your favorite hammer breaks, or maybe your favorite hammer manufacturer going out of business. No question it’s unfortunate, but great gasping sobs?

There are probably some people out there, not many but some, who read the bible and cry when Jesus goes up on the cross. It would seem to me that such a person would be remarkably sensitive, and their reaction would not seem out of place. A rarity perhaps, but not an oddity. But the issue here is that Julie is not a sensitive person. She doesn’t give a fuck, as she tells her readers many times over. Perhaps it’s a mask, but if so it runs very deep. Certainly deeper than her fledgling authorship skills are able to penetrate. I don’t really care if she’s lying about the death of Julia affecting her, or there are gaps in the story, or her psyche; these are things we are not meant to know. The passage is incongruous, but oddly appropriate to the disconnect of her not caring, yet thinking we will.

Who is the protagonist in Julie and Julia? Who is the villain? Considering it’s an auto-biographical piece, Julie plays all roles. But unlike most autobiographies, where you are simply observing events that have come before, Julie is trying to play on your emotions. She wants the reader to cheer her on. She wants the reader, like her ubiquitous blog readers she quotes so regularly, to be there for her when she stumbles in her pursuits. The primary question all readers will be asking themselves is: Why? Why should we root for this woman? Because she’s trying to cook meals? Because she lives in New York? Because she’s an un-confessed alcoholic? Certainly bad things happen to Julie, but it would be an awfully dull(well, duller) story if nothing bad ever happened to the author. But instead of drama or tension or exaltation when things do go her way, we’re left with blasé. “Problems, yawn.  Solutions, yawn.”  There’s simply no investment. Every time we get close, she actively tries to push the reader back.  Julie reports herself as flighty, and we are helpless not to act the same.

I don’t remember if Julie finished her project on time, nor do I particularly care.  Based on the book I am more interested in looking at Mastering the Art of, and simultaneously less interested in anything further by Ms. Powell.  Her book was a lark, fluff.  That’s fine if it’s what you’re looking for.  I just wish someone had told Ms. Powell.

Predictably Irrational, by Daniel Ariely

MIT Professor Dan Ariely spends 304 pages explaining why are humans are, in his words “whack”.  Each chapter used evidentiary support to back up a particular foible(Irrational) the human race exhibits and falls victim to on a daily basis(Predictable).

The book is, for the most part, brilliant.  Offensively, each chapter explains the oh-so common ways humans are ripe to do things not in their own best interest, and how you can use that information for your own gain.  The book begins abruptly with a comparison to the field of economics, and how the paradigm of people always acting in their own best interest is fundamentally flawed.  While the author does not suggest the reader go out and be more effective at manipulation per se, he dips his toe into using his data to the betterment of all.  More on that in a bit.  Whether you use the information presented for good or evil, it’s a great arrow in your quiver.

Defensively, the information is a mighty shield to the forces of persuasion and vice present in the world.  Knowing how advertisers try to trick you, or how low cognition drops in the throes of desires(gambling, lust, avarice, the other four, etc.)  is incredibly beneficial to your own wallet, maybe your own sanity.  Certainly there are great lessons in the book on how to help raise children in this materialistic society.  The passage on “anchor pricing” alone was worth the price of admission.  The Economist Magazine’s trick to get people to buy online and print subscriptions?  Utterly brilliant.

It’s a good book, but not perfect.  Dan can’t quite maintain the full book’s length, which leads to the later chapters feeling tacked on, pedantic, or whimsical.  He’s clearly at his best on any subject involving money, which luckily is a major percentage of the book.  Dan spends some ink about his quest to use his data to change the policies of a large credit card company.  Dan tells the board that his data will allow them to make (almost) comparable sums of money, but heavily reduce the amount of consumer debt in the country.  A laudable goal, but the board (for some odd reason) does not take him up on his offer.  Ironically, Dan’s optimism seemed irrational, the result predictable.  I can’t say he was wrong to make the attempt, but it seemed more like a foot note than worth the time Dan spent sharing the story with the reader.

Aside from a few middling sections, the book hums along at a brisk pace.  Dan has an easygoing style, and explains the tedious experimentation procedures well.  He’s clearly a teacher, although whether that’s a plus or minus is the call of the reader.  Regardless, for the information he presents on humanity and daily life in America, I would suggest this as required reading.  It’s not 100% gold, but how much do you need before your awareness has been improved dramatically?  You can skip the last few chapters with no great loss, but reading the first 7-10 should be anyone’s top priority.

The United States of Arugula, by David Kamp

Another food book, this one promised gravitas to back up its subject matter.  A very complete tome, at least for the subjects that earned chapters, yet the breezy, optimistic tones of the book kept the reader from feeling overwhelmed.  The reader was overwhelmed, but credit to the author in preventing the reader from feeling that way.

First, I confess I am probably not the target audience.  The book throws around French like it was the underpinnings of all American culinary traditions, or somesuch.  True as that may be, the assumption that the reader knows enough French, or at least French dishes, to not Wiki every other italicized entree was certainly a failure on my end.  I’ve also never read Mastering the Art of, which I’m sure puts me in a minority of the readership.  Names and dates were thrown out like parade candy, and it’s up to the reader to determine how much, or how little, they want to exert themselves during the show.  I chose little.

My take with these kinds of historical works is that they’re written for two reasons.  One is looking back farther than anyone there being alive today.  What were things like during the Revolutionary War?  I have no idea, but luckily you don’t either.  We can both read 1776 and start on equal footing.  The other perspective is the nostaligic one, where the author presumes the reader was around for a good percentage of the book’s subject matter.  Here, the author would revist scenes of childhood memory, ideally with a different, inside perspective than any one person’s experiences from back then.  While of course I know of Emeril Lagasse and Mario Batali, these characters are introduced in chapter 11(of 12).  My guess, although no back cover would dare restrict its buyers in such a way, was that that this book was written for my parents’ generation, i.e. Baby Boomers.  Too much ink was spent on protests and Julia Child to think differently.  Chapters ~1-3 get the 1950-born reader up to speed, and the rest goes to how the key players were acting while you(but not me) were watching, decades ago.  It is interesting, but in my case, in the same interesting way scenery looks when travelling by train.  Good stuff, but far too much goes by too quickly to retain.

Kamp progresses in a steady if languid way.  The egg of locale meets the sperm of a key player, and a new food epoch is born across the country.  It comes off as slightly surreal.  There’s no question that the right person in the right place can alter the course of gastro-history.  But Kamp takes it further, and anecdotally shares with the reader how everyone who was at the epicenter of the new fad went on to gigantic deeds.  “Alice Waters founded Chez Panisse and is now the champion of growing local.  Jeremiah Tower cooked at Chez Panisse for many years and is one of the most famous chefs in America.  Albert Smithson bussed dishes for six months on work-release, and went on to invent China.” And so forth.  One realizes that not everyone involved in a project went on to glory, but odds are if Kamp named you in the book, you were a prominant figure somewhere.  And Kamp throws out a lot of names.  The feeling of being overwhelmed again.

Locations and names and France started running together pretty quickly, but one concept latched onto and threaded throughout the book was the war of convenience.  America had quite the internal struggle going with the convenience’s value: a question of whether ease and bargain beat (eventual) taste and (sometimes) expense.  There were lots of pockets of our history where cooking wives were encouraged, socially, into TV dinners and microwaves, where only a few years before, the stereotype of four simmering pots was the house-wivean ideal.  Although I realize years passed in the turn of a page, it seemed incredibly abrupt, the appeal then stigma of using prepared meals.  The battle may not be over.

There were a few misfires along the way.  Kamp’s style loves to throw around inside cultural references and portmanteau.  He clearly loves being the stylish one, making you work a little harder to get each and every reference dropped.  I don’t hold it against him; I think he laid it on strong, but I appreciate something similar.  Unfortunately in my case, since I was already giving up all those 60s and 70s references anyway, the tonal crests and valleys breezed past too.  Maybe 10% of the book gets lost this way, but since Kamp had the good sense to surround that 10% with very obvious words(in English!), not much content was lost.  It depends on the reader I suppose; I’m sure there are many out there who would find it maddening.  Let’s put it like this: I was not at all surprised to learn David Kamp writes for Rolling Stone.  YMMV.

All in all, I would recommend this book to anyone with food interests.  The history is interesting and instructive, and there is certainly plenty of real human drama present in the stories.  Kamp is clearly passionate about the subject matter, and the fact that that’s clear is a big plus in the column.  As far as my knowledge of the history of food culture in the U.S. is concerned, I feel pretty satisfied.

Moments of zen

July 7, 2008

I probably need new hiking shoes

July 1, 2008