Thank you to everyone who noticed that Dinner: A Love Story was down all day Friday. It was frustrating, but the sheer number of โI canโt log on!โ messages I received through social media channels warmed my heart. (They read me! They really do!) In addition to the nightmarishly long phone conversations I had to have with my web host, I was forced to scrap my weekly round-up (โthe reading & eatingโ series) even though it was all ready to go. I would just run that round-up today, but given the events of the weekend, I think you probably know that I canโt bring myself to head straight into cheese graters and Super Bowl menus. Like many of you, Iโm disgusted by the Muslim Ban, an executive order that has diminished this country and all we stand for with the stroke of a pen. The outpouring of action โ spontaneous rallies, heroicย judgesย and volunteer lawyers,ย boycotts, marches, postcard-writing mania โ has been inspiring, but I fear we have a long road ahead of us. So before I get back to regularly scheduled programming, Iโd like to follow the lead of two of my favorite food writers,ย Luisa Weissย and Julia Turshenย byย giving away free books*ย to the first ten people who donateย $100 or more to the ACLU. (Forward your receipt to jenny AT dinneralovestory DOT com and tell me which book youโd like. *You can choose not justย mine, butย Luisaโs,ย Juliaโsย or the book ofย any other author or bloggerย who would like to join forces with us.)
Iโll post the weekly round-up in the next few days, but please take a minute to read this storyย โA Clarifying Moment in American History,โย written by a prominent conservative, paying careful attention to the line about educating our children.
UPDATE: You guys are amazing. The ten books (fourteen actually, it was too close to call) are spoken for. But please continue to donate and forward me your ACLU receipts, if only so my faith in the goodness of this country stays strong. Thank you Katharine, Rachael, Rebecca O, Jay, Victoria, Margaret, Suzette, Jennifer, Rebecca C., Erica, Marian, Elise, Kim, and Tiffany.
NOTE
I want to acknowledge the readers who have told me in no uncertain terms that they come to this blog for recipes and dinner strategies and resent the fact that from time to time I use Dinner: A Love Story as a political platform. I hear you on that, and I understand the frustration. But Iโd like to point out that if you click on the โAboutโ section on the top of my home page, itโs been clear from the beginning that I envisioned this space as not only a forum to discuss whatโs for dinner, but also as a place to discuss whatโs happening around the dinner table. In the past seven years, Iโve posted too many chicken recipes to count, but Iโve also written about how to have meaningful conversations over a shared meal; how to raise compassionate kids; how to raise girls with healthy body images; how technology affects our childrensโ development; how to teach them about empathy and gratitude; where we are traveling; what music we are listening to; and close to a hundred posts about what books we are loving โ fiction, nonfiction, kids, YA, adult โ which, you might be surprised to hear, are perennially the most popular/most shared/most visited posts on DALS. (More popular than even Pork Ragu!) Do politics fit in with this list? You might not think so. A year ago, I wouldnโt have thought so. But I hope you understand, given the extraordinary circumstances of this administration, that it has started to feel disingenuous, almost irresponsibleย to write only about pork chops and apple pies without acknowledging a conversation that started 18 months ago at our dinner table (overlapping with many of the topics I hit on above) and shows no sign of stopping.
Lastly, I hope Iโm not naive in believing that we are in a unique position on this blog. I think itโs fair to assume every person reading Dinner: A Love Story wants what is best for their families and their childrensโ futures. Letโs remember that we have more in common than we donโt, and try to prove my tagline correct as we head into the next few tumultuous years: It all begins at the family table.
Reminder: I welcome reactions from every side here, but the same rule applies as always: If you strongly disagree with me, know that I strongly respect your right to disagree, but you must pretend you are at my dinner table sitting across from me when you post your comment. This corner of the Internet is not the Wild West. I will not approve comments that are flagrantly mean-spirited or that do not advance the conversation in a constructive way.
Nothing to say beyond, โThank you.โ
And yes, we read you. We may not comment all the time or get to the posts day-of, but indeedโฆwe read you.
I love the mix of things you write about and I really like to hear what you are thinking and some of your views. I have this great thing I do when a blogger I read starts to not be what I am looking for anymore-I stop reading them! I canโt imagine telling a blogger what to write about and if you came to my job and tried to tell me what to do, I would have suggestions for you! Keep going, write what you want to write about, that is my only expectation.
Thank you, Jenny. I come here for the recipes, yes, but also for the thoughtful conversation on so many topics, and I also increasingly believe politics is a part of that. I appreciate your brave, compassionate voice.
Always grateful for your recipes, filled with enormous gratitude for this post. Thank you.
Thank you for this civilized contribution to the national conversation. I love that this space is not just recipes. Food is interwoven with culture at every level. Thanks for acknowledging that.
Yes, I came for the recipes, but I stay because your content shows a slice of who you are! Everyone has the right to an opinion and if people donโt agree with yours then thatโs their right too, but if they are angered by your opinion or even by the simple act of expressing an opinion then they know how to close the browser tab and move on. In the UK a couple of years back there was a TV ad in which a character said โNo, I donโt DO politics.โ and the ad pointed out that politics has a part in everything in the world around us from immigration of people to import of the ingredients you use and write about on this site.
Very well said and thank you for taking the time to post this.
I love this! Keep it up. ๐
Thank you so much.
YES! Good vibes and blessings to you and your family. Youโve long been an inspiration to my husband and I (who do not have kids yet but still cook every night) and this further solidifies my love for you and Andy. Thank goodness for people willing to speak up in these trying times. I set up my recurring donation to the ACLU and PP this morning. Cheers!!
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this. I will certainly be coming back for both recipes and dinner time discussion. I appreciate all that you do in this space.
You are a queen Jenny!! I have loved your site for YEARS, and use it and all of your books for dinner references regularly. I just am compelled to comment for the first time with a hell yes! These are incredibly tumultuous times, and I applaud you for speaking your truth! And PS, you are such a great writer, I truly adore your blog and this post gave me chills.
Good for you Jenny. Iโm sure youโll get lots of messsages of support for this post but I wanted to add my thanks too. I read you religiously when you were getting started and now pop by occasionally forideas. You have a powerful platform and Iโm glad to see youโre using it. Oh, and thanks for the reminder of that pork Ragu. I havenโt made that one for awhile!
I like you even more for this! FYI: my friend and I are always talking about โJenny and Andyโ recipes, tips, etc. having both followed your blog/books for years now. And guess whatโฆwe donโt even have kids!
Iโm a long-time reader, never commenter, but just wanted to say thank you for talking about whatโs happening in our country. We are certainly going to need to talk about the things that feed and nourish us โ body & spirit โ in the next four years, but we cannot stop talking about the difficult and dangerous and unacceptable things happening. All of those โhappening around the dinner tableโ things you mentioned are deeply impacted by what is being done by our administration at the moment, and it is truly disingenuous to pretend like one thing is not affected by the other. Iโve had a hard time continuing to read those of my favorite not-explicitly political blogs that havenโt mentioned current events in recent days and weeks because to not mention the total upheaval feels like denying such an enormous part of what is central in my mind and heart at the moment. Thank you for not shying away from this.
Youโre wonderful. Iโm with you 100% and so appreciate your candor.
You are wonderful. Big hugs and solidarity from Canada to all of you.
Thank you for your post Jenny! Completely appreciate your voice, bravery, authenticity, & the tie to your dinner table. Iโm having a hard time reading my normal blogs when they do not address the political environment in some way. It just makes me like yours more.
Donation made.
you are an inspiration in whatever you chose to write about!!!
As a long-time reader, happy that you use your platform to express your views. More importantly, agree about the power of the dinner table as a place to hash out different views. Thank you!
Thank you for everything. The comments, the recipes, the books, the conversations and the sharing of your personal life. I always enjoy reading.
I appreciate your using your blog to communicate important issues that all of us should monitor. Please continue and know you are supported in making a connection between morality and the way we lead our lives everyone around the dinner table.
Just a reminder for people who are donating. Many employers have a matching program for charitable donations, check to see if yours does.
Thank you for sharing.
Thank you.
Thank you, Jenny, for encouraging others to take action! I donated $100 to the ACLU yesterday morning after seeing the impacts of the Executive Order and the ACLUโs work to challenge it, and hope that others will do the same. Talking about things that matter is so importantโaround the dinner table, as well as (respectfully) in corners of the internet. This is only the beginningโฆ