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Friday Round-Up

By March 15, 2013October 2nd, 2013219 Comments

Whatโ€™s 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. Patrickโ€™s Day and how her kids came down with lice while flying on the private jet of eBayโ€™s CEO. Also: I donโ€™t 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 โ€”ย Deconstructed Dinnerย on DALS now has itโ€™s own category. If you click on it (right over there in the right margin under โ€œCategoriesโ€) 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 Iโ€™m talking about โ€” the mix of cookware, cookbooks (youโ€™ll 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 โ€œworking glasses,โ€ aย classic market tote, and a table runnerย thatย I bought for my momโ€™s 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 Iโ€™m a publicist for โ€œHereโ€™s the Thing,โ€ but Alec Baldwinโ€™s 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, โ€œYou 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 โ€œspecialโ€ birthdays coming up this year, hereโ€™s my new favorite gift. (I love my childrensโ€™ friends, but I ainโ€™t spending $40 on them.)

*Iโ€™ve loved every essay Iโ€™ve 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, Iโ€™m guessing this will continue. The last paragraph ofย Catherine Newmanโ€˜s essay โ€œTalk With Your Mouth Full,โ€ about the evolution of her familyโ€™s 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. Itโ€™s a natural check on overeating, for example. Even if youโ€™re talking and eating at the same time, you simply canโ€™t generate the same food-shoveling velocity that you could if you were eating silently. Plus, Iโ€™m sure itโ€™s good for mental health, for social health, for learning how to become a good date โ€” although, my god, Iโ€™ll miss them when thereโ€™s someone theyโ€™re 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 bookโ€™s publication generally, Iโ€™m 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: Pixarโ€™s hand-drawn storyboard illo from the family dinner scene inย The Incredibles. (Is there a better movie in the world?)

219 Comments

  • Avatar Frances says:

    Would love the book! Cookbooks are a total luxury in my budget!

  • Jesabes says:

    The book looks great!

  • Avatar jehanara h says:

    Hi
    I recently came across your blog and really love your simple yet ingenious dinner deconstruction ideas.

  • jandi says:

    Sounds so interesting!

  • jandi says:

    Love that plant btw

  • Avatar Molly says:

    Still contemplating reading โ€œLean In.โ€ You may have inspired me.
    This week we have made your turkey meat loaf, chicken and leeks, and Bourbon pork tenderloin (which I have made about 6 times this year). We just moved, and DALS is the only cookbook I have taken out of the box.
    Trying your Fried Rice shrimp from Bon Appetite next week!

  • Avatar nina says:

    the book looks great! I so appreciate your website

  • Avatar Anna D. says:

    Iโ€™ve been looking forward to reading this book! Would love to win. Thanks for the giveaway!

  • Avatar Nolo says:

    Sounds like a fun book! Enjoy the day!

  • Avatar Andrea says:

    I love your site, love that quote! Thanks for a chance to win that book.

  • Anna says:

    What an amazing quote! Thank you for the opportunity!!

  • Avatar Anna says:

    I havenโ€™t read โ€œLean Inโ€ yetโ€“I suppose I should enter the fray. I have read, on the other hand, โ€œDinner, A Love Story,โ€ and it is fantastic!

  • Avatar Julie M says:

    Help, my family dinner was sabotaged last nite. After picking up my son from school and rewarding him w/ice cream for his โ€˜good jobโ€™ level on the classroom behavior chart, I bought yummy fresh ingredients for fish tacos. Literally 3 minutes before I was to serve this meal, 2 neighbor kids (my sonโ€™s absolute idol) showed up at the door to play. My choices: say no, come sit and eat, and my son is miserable at the missed opportunity to play, rendering family dinner miserable for all. Or choice two, push dinner back, the food wanes and loses that just made quality, and I feel miserable because everyone eats at diff. times. I took the fall and made choice 2 to not be the bad guy. Does this ever happen to others? I need to read that book!
    Jenny, your posts are always so funny and engaging, thank you for that!

  • Avatar Mandy M. says:

    Thanks for the opportunity! Looks like a wonderful book!

  • Avatar Stacy says:

    It sounds like an inspiring book. Thanks!

  • Avatar Sara says:

    Would love the book! Thanks also for the deconstructed dinner section. My 5 year old thanks you as well ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Beth says:

    Thank you for the chance to win! Your site has changed our dinner table. Iโ€™m a working mom to a 2 year old and every meal we ate this week came from your site. Thank you!

  • Avatar Jennifer says:

    Loved this post โ€“ wanting to read โ€œLean Inโ€ with a group of working friends, dying to go to Stone Barns, always stashing potential bday presents, and trying to love family dinner even when the six year old is (not) eating her curated plate while we try to use up leftovers! Book sounds great too!

  • Avatar Pam says:

    Thank you for the mix of food and book ideas. I love your site and want to read the book even if I donโ€™t win it. Cheers.

  • Avatar Sara says:

    The book looks very interesting!

  • Avatar Louisa S. says:

    Thanks for sharing the gift ideas, and Iโ€™d love to read the book!

  • Avatar catie says:

    count me in, please.
    weโ€™ve been in a deconstructed dinner phase lately โ€“ bookmarking that page, thank you : )

  • Avatar Carol says:

    I would love to have this book! thank you for the chance.

  • Avatar Randi says:

    Catherine Newman is my favorite and I would absolutely LOVE to win the book!

  • Avatar Jessie says:

    Just discovered your blog recently and am loving it! The book looks great!

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