Posts Tagged ‘books’

h1

What am I reading, er, eating on tattoo Tuesday?

April 8, 2014

Watermelon Seed Prize2

Our lovely, local, independent bookstore sponsors an Edible Book Fair every April.  Everyone is invited to submit a totally edible interpretation of a book.  The entries are displayed, judged, and eaten.  The set up and the voting takes a couple of hours.  You can’t imagine how quickly the displays are devoured!

The book I chose was The Watermelon Seed by Greg Pizzoli which is the Recipient of the 2014 Theodor Seuss Geisel Award for the most distinguished beginning reader book.

I humbly announce that our entry (above) consisting of a fondant-covered red velvet cake watermelon with watermelon slice-shaped sugar cookies won the award for Most Appetizing.  The prizes in the contest are, not a surprise, books! It is a lot of fun to see what people – kids and adults – come up with.

Edible Book Festivals have become a global event, read more here.

Tuesday would not be complete without tattoos:

watermelon2

watermelon3

watermelon4

 

 

h1

What is tattoo Tuesday about?

September 17, 2013

PLUMS and Plum Blossom Tattoos

A few years ago, my friend, Betty, invited Roz and me over for dinner and made a Plum Galette for dessert.  After dinner, Roz and I politely ate a slice of the galette, and then another, and then abandoned our forks and finished off the galette so that only crumbs were left.

I bought some lovely purple plums in Whole Foods the other day and made this tart.  While it was not devoured all in one sitting, it was pretty good.

pie book cover

The recipe is an adaptation of Rose Levy Beranbaum’s Plum Flame Tart in The Pie and Pastry Bible

1 recipe sweet cookie tart crust

3-4 large purple plums sliced into 1/8 sections

1/3 – ½ cup sugar – depending on the tartness of the plums

½ t cinnamon

1/8 t nutmeg

1/3 cup Apricot or other preserves for glazing

Heat oven to 350 degrees

Place a cookie sheet on a rack in the lowest position in the oven

Crust

One stick of cold, unsalted butter cut into pieces

¼ cup sugar

1 ½ scant cups of all-purpose flour

1/8 t salt

1 large egg yolk

2 T cream

Combine the egg yolk and cream and set aside

Using a pastry blender combine the sugar, flour, butter and salt until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs. You can also use a food processor for this part.  Add the egg and cream mixture and blend with a fork.  I needed a little more cream to make it come together.  If the dough is too soft, refrigerate it for a few hours or freeze for about 10 minutes.  Mine was perfect as is to press into the pan. Press the mixture evenly over the pan bottom and about ½ inch up the sides. Use a tart pan with a removable bottom or a similar spring form pan.  No need to treat the pan because there is plenty of butter in the dough and it will release easily. I used a 10” spring-form pan because that is what I have.

Bake the tart shell for 8-10 minutes.  Remove from the oven and cool.

Place the plum slices on the tart shell in concentric rows beginning with the outer edge of the crust, working toward the center.  Mix the sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg together and sprinkle over the tart.

Bake the tart for about 45 minutes, or until the plum slices are soft.  Remove from the oven and cool.

Glaze the tart by warming and straining apricot preserves and brushing over the tart.  I had an extra plum or two, so I just made some plum preserves, strained them and used that as the glaze.

plum tartWhy did I photograph the plate upside down?

And the tattoos?

plum blossom

plum bird

plum6

h1

What do I think is a good idea?

August 1, 2013

30libraries-span-articleLarge

This article from the New York Times about hotels who are adding book lounges in public areas in order to  take advantage of the book reading, coffee (or whatever) drinking population.

I saw the reference at Bookshelf.

h1

What am I nattering on about?

July 17, 2013

We are having a heat wave – in the 90s.  And our old house does not have air conditioning.  Most days the fans keep things comfortable, but last night the heat and humidity built up to a level that makes me cranky.

So we fled in the air conditioned car to the air conditioned mall with the air conditioned book store and this is how I spent the time . . .

I caught up on a bunch of interesting magazines:

photo(14)

Saw some rather surreal 90 foot orchids – okay, maybe they were 20 foot tall orchids . . .

photo(13)

Saw a fellow studiously photographing a shop window – and then I saw what he was looking at . . .

photo(11)

And walked out of the mall into a beautiful sunset . . .

photo(9)

We now have a window unit in the bedroom – did I mention it was going to be in the 90s all week?

h1

What is Tattoo Tuesday about?

March 5, 2013

This week, it is all about books. I like the variety – especially the bookworm tattoo at the bottom. It is a great positive take on finger tattoos. They don’t usually have such a positive message – but that is what Tattoo Tuesday is all about.

ankletattoo

ben_reigle_orange_book_tattoo1

book back

book on foot

books

book-worm-tattoo-on-fingers

h1

What am I reading?

January 16, 2013

book-face

Paper sculpture found at Hovercraft Doggy.

Also related – paper sculpture by Joel Cooper.  Fascinating.

dryad-a

h1

What am I reading?

November 15, 2012

During a wander on the web I came across these terrific tattoos, and the book in which they are described, and the author.  The book is Science Ink and the author is Carl Zimmer.  Zimmer is a renowned and prolific author of books, articles and The Loom, a blog hosted by Discover Magazine.

Tattoos are fascinating to me – running the gamut from “why would anyone do that?” to “oh, look, that is really cool.”   As a science geek, I find the tattoos in the book to be wonderful expressions of creativity by their “science obsessed” owners.  I liked the story about the woman who works with squids and, ostensibly to help her remember squid anatomy, had one tattooed on her foot and ankle.  I am not sure about using it as an aide-memoire, but it is a very cool tattoo of a squid on her foot and ankle.

It also makes me wonder what kinds of tattoos other occupations would inspire.  What would an accountant’s tattoo look like?

To see more, go buy the book.  I did.

h1

What am I noting today?

October 12, 2012

Douglas Adams’s Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy was published today in 1979.  The Guide is the first book of five in this science fiction trilogy.

h1

What am I sappy cat blogging?

September 21, 2012

New kitty book by Lewis Blackwell coming out October 1.

“As good as Blackwell’s text is (and it’s quite good—an approachable, informative, and appreciative study of cats of all breeds), the true appeal of the book is the stunning images.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

h1

Whose birthday am I celebrating today?

July 7, 2012

Robert Anson Henlein – born July 7, 1907.

A highly quotable and prolific author.   This is one of my favorite Heinlein quotes:

A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.

Read his biography here.

Bibliography here.

My favorite book- The cat who walks through walls

Happy Birthday to Sarah, too!