Thursday, 14 November 2013

Cookbook by Sandra Gutierrez

Cookbook of Author Sandra Gutierrez includes spicy Taco Truck Sauce

By Linda Cicero

It’s hard to believe Miami Book Fair International is celebrating its 30th anniversary. Remember when it was simply a street fair? Now there’s a heaping helping of culinary events alone. Besides cookbook presentations by authors there will be a VIP dinner and a roster of cooking demonstrations next week at Miami Dade College’s Miami Culinary Institute (see today’s Nibbles & Bits column for details).

 

The taco truck recipe here is from Latin American Street Food: The Best Flavors of Markets, Beaches and Roadside Stands from Mexico to Argentina by Sandra Gutierrez (University of North Carolina Press, $35). This is a wonderfully different cookbook, with expected recipes like guava and cream cheese pastries and Cuban sandwiches along with street foods that are less familiar to most Americans, such as Brazilian avocado ice cream, Peruvian fried squid ceviche, Salvadoran pupusas and Guatamalan Christmas tamales.

Gutierrez, whose Book Fair presentation will be at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 23, says of the sauce, “This is perhaps the most popular avocado sauce used by taco truck vendors in Mexico. A little sour and very creamy, it’s used to top everything from totopos (fried tortilla chips) to tacos and chilaquiles. The acidity of the tomatillos keeps the avocado fresh and vibrantly green for up to three days, if properly refrigerated. You can put it in a squirt bottle or spoon it directly onto your food. This recipe has a spicy kick, so if you desire a milder flavor, seed and devein the chiles.”

Q. I love the fish dip appetizer at The Federal on Biscayne. Can you find out how to make it?

Thanks to chef Cesar Zapata and Aniece Meinhold, who identifies herself as “Bar Wench, Pot Stirrer and Co-Conspirator,” we now know that the heat comes from sriracha hot sauce and the creaminess from a combination of mayonnaise, sour cream and Greek yogurt. They smoke their own fish at The Federal, over applewood, and marlin is preferred. But I simply relied on my favorite seafood market’s smoked fish and the dip was creamy and delicious with just enough punch. By the way, Food & Wine magazine recently declared The Federal’s Rocky Road Moon Pies with Salted Caramel and Bourbon Pecan Milk one of the best gluten-free desserts in America.

Savory pudding

Rosie, of Hazleton, Pa., asked if anyone knew of a Pennsylvania Dutch recipe for a savory bread pudding, made with vegetables. It was her grandmother’s favorite way to use up leftover vegetables or a too-bountiful harvest.

Betty H. of Hanover, Pa. sent the recipe here, which she said was a favorite of her own grandmother’s. “We come from a long line of thrifty farm people,” she said.

“We would never waste a thing. So this pudding would be made with the stale bread, the too-soft-to-put-up vegetables, or whatever was in the larder. It usually had no meat, but if there was some bits of bacon or ham or pork chop we’d stir it in before baking. My favorite way to make this is with butternut or delicate squash, but I’ve made it with zucchini and tomatoes or with pumpkin or even corn and peppers. This is an old, old recipe.”

I am always charmed by recipes that have a story, and I can imagine this one evolving one day when the bread was stale and the squash was ripening too fast. I think it makes a grand main dish, but if you see it as a side, pair it with something plain to offset its richness.

Source : http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/11/14/3751059/author-sandra-gutierrezs-cookbook.html



Sunday, 26 May 2013

The Other Typist by Suzanne Rindell - NYDailyNews.com

Ever so noir and a touch Gatsbyesque, “The Other Typist” is a twisty tale of a clerical worker at a Manhattan precinct house during Prohibition. Suzanne Rindell has written a novel so cinematic that it reads as if it’s in preproduction.

Rose refers to herself as being in the “police business.” She’s a typist who takes down and transcribes confessions, a graduate of the Astoria Stenographers College for Ladies who works on the lower East Side and lives in a Brooklyn rooming house. The year is 1924.

The delicious first line: “They said the typewriter would unsex us.”

Being desexualized is hardly an issue for Rose. Or rather, it’s already been taken care of. True, there was that “friendship” with another girl that seemed to cross a line at the Queens convent where Rose was raised. But her plain looks, mannish clothes and shrilly correct demeanor accomplish what nature could not, effectively stifling any suggestion of a sexual self.

Rose is repression personified, beating out 150 words per minute on a typewriter, 300 on the stenotype. She’s deadly accurate, too.

Sometimes it seems as if the roguish Lieutenant Detective is flirting with her, but she reserves what smoldering feelings are left unsuppressed for the safely married Sergeant. Until Odalie shows up, that is.

If Odalie were a cocktail, she’d be a blend of self-possession and class poured over allure. Add a dash of mystery and call it Rose’s Ruin.

Odalie strolls into the station house to apply for the job of the other typist. She makes an immediate impression on Rose.

“She was the dark epicenter of something we didn’t quite understand yet,” Rose observes, “the place where hot and cold mixed dangerously, and around her everything would change.”

Rose is almost as astute as she is susceptible. In just a flurry of time, she’s out of dreary Brooklyn and occupying the other bedroom in Odalie’s suite at a swank Manhattan hotel. Rose is also joining Odalie at speakeasies. Since the main job of work at the precinct house is enforcing the Volstead Act, Rose has assumed a compromising position.

Rindell conjures the aura of vulgar decadence that Baz Luhrmann will soon bring to the screen in “The Great Gatsby.” She even throws Odalie and Rose into high society at a house party on Long Island. It’s at the mansion with vast property fronting both the Sound and the sea that the novel turns sinister.

Obviously, Odalie isn’t typing for money. Rose wises up to the real game fast. She’s also given several versions of Odalie’s past, even as Rose becomes complicit in the sordid present. We know all this, because Rose tells us so.


But can she be trusted? Rose, after all, is a worrisome package of obsession and repression. She may be able to record a confession almost faster than it can be spoken, but how good is she with the truth outside of the interrogation room?

“The Other Typist” is seductive, shady fun, an ideal read for the beach on West Egg.


ON OTHERS' WORDS

“The Golem and the Jinni" is a fantastical tale about, well, a golem and a jinni who cross paths in lower Manhattan at the turn of the last century. No one should have trouble picturing a golem on the lower East Side or a jinni in Tribeca, then or now.

Helene Wecker’s story begins in 1899 as a Polish Jew spends his remaining fortune on a golem — fashioned from clay into a human figure, as golems traditionally are. This particular golem is meant to serve as the man’s wife, as he prepares to emigrate to New York. He dies onboard ship, while she lives and ends up working in a Jewish bakery on the lower East Side.

Meanwhile, the jinni travels to Manhattan’s Little Syria in a flask opened by a tinsmith at his shop near Washington St. The golem, Chava, is lost without a master while the jinni, Ahmad, must rid himself of the wizard who first imprisoned this devilish spirit capable of taking human form.

The two inevitably meet and that Jewish-Arab chasm is nothing to these mystical, tormented beings. Each has a particular destiny to defy as they chase through the streets and over the rooftops of the long-ago city. The tale is meant to be magical, and it is, but Wecker’s real sleight of pen is re-creating Manhattan as it was then. She has a historian’s grasp of detail and a novelist’s flair.



Source : http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/typist-golem-jinni-book-reviews-article-1.1332363

Joyland - New Stephen King novel for Hard Case Crime

A new novel by Stephen King, Joyland, is to be published by Titan Books imprint Hard Case Crime in June 2013.

The book will be released as a paperback first, with e-book to follow at a later date. King said: "I loved the paperbacks I grew up with as a kid, and for that reason, we're going to hold off on e-publishing this one for the time being. Joyland will be coming out in paperback, and folks who want to read it will have to buy the actual book."

The title, set in a small-town North Carolina amusement park in 1973, tells the story of the summer in which college student Devin Jones comes to work as a carny and confronts the legacy of a vicious murder, the fate of a dying child, and the ways both will change his life forever.

Hard Case Crime editor Charles Ardai bought world English rights in the title, with King's novel The Colorado Kid previously released under the imprint. The deal does not affect King's relationship with his usual UK publisher, Hodder.

Ardai said: "Joyland is a breathtaking, beautiful, heartbreaking book. It's a whodunit, it's a carny novel, it's a story about growing up and growing old, and about those who don't get to do either because death comes for them before their time.

"Even the most hardboiled readers will find themselves moved. When I finished it, I sent a note saying: 'Goddamn it, Steve, you made me cry.'"

Source : http://www.thebookseller.com/news/new-stephen-king-novel-hard-case-crime.html

New Novel Doctor Sleep by Stephen King - First Look

The cover for Stephen King's new novel Doctor Sleep, which features Danny Torrance from The Shining, has been released.

It shows a picture of a white cat surrounded by smoke and is available online in an interactive animated version. The innovative format allows fans to find out more about the book, watch a video of King reading an extract and share their thoughts through social media.

Doctor Sleep will be released in September. The novel returns to the characters and territory of King's 1977 bestseller, The Shining, about a little boy, Danny Torrance, who is haunted after his family move to a remote hotel.

The cat on the cover references one of King's early influences for the novel – Oscar, a therapy cat who was able to predict the deaths of terminally ill patients in a nursing home in America by sitting on the beds of people who died shortly after.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, King said the cat "was the transmission and Danny was the motor". The now middle-aged Danny, or 'Dan', works with the cat in a nursing home where he provides final comfort to the dying, becoming known as "Doctor Sleep".

King described writing Doctor Sleep as a "real challenge" because of its connection to The Shining, which he wrote before he was 30. Now 65, the author said he wanted to "go back to the real creepy scary stuff" in the new novel.

Doctor Sleep also shows how Dan has grown up after his experiences in the Overlook Hotel and whether he has inherited the alcoholism that haunted his father Jack in The Shining. King has introduced a "surrogate child" character, Abra Stone, to mirror the fatherhood theme which was a cause of such fear in the Seventies bestseller.

Stone also has "the shining", which puts her at risk from a tribe of people who live off the "steam" that those who "shine" produce when they are tortured to death. The novel follows Dan's attempts to save her from this terrible fate.

Source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/booknews/9943326/Stephen-Kings-new-novel-Doctor-Sleep-first-look.html

Monday, 13 May 2013

And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini

And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini

Format : Hardcover
Author : Khaled Hosseini
Release date: May 21, 2013

Book Description

An unforgettable novel about finding a lost piece of yourself in someone else.

Khaled Hosseini, the #1 New York Times–bestselling author of The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns, has written a new novel about how we love, how we take care of one another, and how the choices we make resonate through generations. In this tale revolving around not just parents and children but brothers and sisters, cousins and caretakers, Hosseini explores the many ways in which families nurture, wound, betray, honor, and sacrifice for one another; and how often we are surprised by the actions of those closest to us, at the times that matter most. Following its characters and the ramifications of their lives and choices and loves around the globe—from Kabul to Paris to San Francisco to the Greek island of Tinos—the story expands gradually outward, becoming more emotionally complex and powerful with each turning page.

About the Author : Khaled Hosseini was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, and moved to the United States in 1980. His first novel, The Kite Runner, was an international bestseller, published in thirty-eight countries. In 2006 he was named a goodwill envoy to UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency. He lives in northern California.