Whatโs happening in Family Dinner-Ville this week:
*Have you readย Lean Inย yet? What do you think? I found myself skimming over all the studies reminding me of what I already know (women make less money than men; women do more housework even when they work full-time; leaving your kids to go to work is harder for moms than kids, etc.) and absolutely devouring the (somewhat measured) glimpses into her high-power life โ like how she forgets to put her kid in green on St. Patrickโs Day and how her kids came down with lice while flying on the private jet of eBayโs CEO. Also: I donโt know if this is just a case of me wearing my family dinner goggles, but there are countless references to getting home in time to eat with her kids and how good it makes her feel. Howย centered.
*Due to popular demand โย Deconstructed Dinnerย on DALS now has itโs own category. If you click on it (right over there in the right margin under โCategoriesโ) you can get a list of dinners that are more conducive to separating into individual components (for kids) while not messing with the integrity of the whole (for parents).
*Every time I head to Stone Barns I think a) How lucky am I that this farm is right here in my neighborhood? then b) What can I buy at their gift shop? Locals know what Iโm talking about โ the mix of cookware, cookbooks (youโll recognize at least one), tableware, kids toys, canning jars, and way more is one of the most beautifully curated gift collections anywhere. Some good news for non-locals: I had no idea until a few weeks ago that they have an online store as well. Head over there and check out my current obsessions: Lidded โworking glasses,โ aย classic market tote, and a table runnerย thatย I bought for my momโs birthday last year and liked so much I went back to pick one up for myself.
*I know, at this point you probably think that Iโm a publicist for โHereโs the Thing,โ but Alec Baldwinโs interview with NBC Nightly News host Brian Williamsย made me run a mile longer than I wanted to so I could hear the entire thing. (Ask Andy, this was an unprecedented event.) Favorite moment: Williams recallling his mother showing young Brian a photograph of a famous broadcast journalist, then telling Brian, โYou can do better than him.โ)
*Apropos of nothing, I just bought this fabric to cover a bulletin board in my home office.
*Apropos of all niece and nephew and โspecialโ birthdays coming up this year, hereโs my new favorite gift. (I love my childrensโ friends, but I ainโt spending $40 on them.)
*Iโve loved every essay Iโve read so far inย The Cassoulet Saved My Marriage: True Tales of Food, Family, and How We Learn to Eat,ย and based on the luminaries that editors Caroline Grant and Lisa Catherine Harper lined up for the anthology, Iโm guessing this will continue. The last paragraph ofย Catherine Newmanโs essay โTalk With Your Mouth Full,โ about the evolution of her familyโs dinner table conversations, has been haunting me for days โ even if the entire essay leading up to it had me in stitches. Here it is:
There are doubtless measurable benefits to dinner-table conversation. Itโs a natural check on overeating, for example. Even if youโre talking and eating at the same time, you simply canโt generate the same food-shoveling velocity that you could if you were eating silently. Plus, Iโm sure itโs good for mental health, for social health, for learning how to become a good date โ although, my god, Iโll miss them when thereโs someone theyโre dating besides us. Bust mostly the benefits are immeasurable. What dinner table conversation gives us is time to stop and appreciate how much we have, right now, even as we imagine, deliriously, that it could go on forever.
To celebrate this quote specifically and the bookโs publication generally, Iโm giving away one copy of Cassoulet to a random commenter below. Good luck and have a great weekend. Update: Chris (#194) is the winner. Congrats!
PS: Credit for illustration way up top: Pixarโs hand-drawn storyboard illo from the family dinner scene inย The Incredibles. (Is there a better movie in the world?)
Thank you for the chance to win โ I love your site!
Would love this! Thank you
Iโd love that book!
What a tossed salad of a post! Delightful.
And the ideas laced in that haunting quote haunt me every dayโฆ.
I love love love the quote from the book! It is on my must read list!
The book sounds great โ Iโd love to win a copy!
would love this book for myself โ but Iโd probably give it to my mom if I won, whoโd love it even more ๐
This quote is great. Makes me want to read the book!
Would love to read the bookโฆIโm newly married with two teenage stepdaughters and one of my dreams is that my new family could approach dinner the ways yours does! I loved your book.
Ooh, if i win the book, will you wrap it in some of that honeycomb fabric? ๐ Buying the book if I donโt win (and probably buying some of that fabric too. I keep beesโฆ)
I would SO love to win this because Iโve been trying to reserve this book at my local library and itโs nowhere to be found in the entire library system in my county. Thanks for the opportunity!
What a fun list of links and ideas! Thanks!
Havenโt read a book in ages, unfortunately, unless you count cookbooks. ๐ Would love to change that fact with this book!! ๐
I would love to win this because we try to eat together as a family every night of this week. Iโd love to hear these stories as we have our own set of stories!
I looked at this book the other day on Amazon, I would LOVE to win this! Happy Friday!
Love The Incredibles!
Forgot to add; that is a great birthday gift but I wonโt be spending $40 on them either! ๐
The book sounds fantasticโฆI want in.
A Friday round-up is always a special treat! Thanks!
Iโm not a kid, but I would consider that terrarium (or book!) a great gift!
The books looks really fun! Thanks.
ooh, that paragraph alone makes me want to read this book!
Thank you for sharing Alec Baldwinโs podcast! Already added to my Stitcher App for my drive home. Made my Friday!
What a beautiful quote, and youโre right, a haunting quote. Itโs enlightening to think that our dinner table conversations now are shaping the kind of communicators and friends they can be in the future.
This book sounds great!