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Oyceter ([personal profile] oyceter) wrote2007-12-15 08:30 pm

Colwin, Laurie - More Home Cooking: A Writer Returns to the Kitchen

I haven't read Laurie Colwin's first book about home cooking, but I don't think I needed to. This is a wonderfully homey, comforting, happy-making book; it cheered me up immensely. A lot of it is because of Colwin's attitude toward cooking. She likes good ingredients and fresh food, but she's also a fan of things that taste awesome with minimum preparation (the elegant slob, she calls herself).

I was a little wary when the introduction was on the importance of the family dinner and having families eat together. While I usually do like dinners together, I find that people propounding this also tend to advocate "all-American" family values, most of which just don't work with me. But Colwin goes on to talk about how the meaning of family changes and how the giant Norman Rockwell dinners meant slaving at the stove and doing the dishes afterward; she writes of how families are friends or single-parent or gay or lesbian or multiracial.

I particularly like that she includes non-American food in the book; she's equally fond of chutney and fermented black beans as she is of turkey. That said, most of the recipes are American.

And well, she's just funny!

I come from a coffee-loving family, and you can always tell if my sister and I have been around, because both of us collect all the dead coffee from everyone's morning cup, pour it over ice, and drink it. This is a disgusting habit, and only a coffee addict would indulge in it.


It is gross! But it also sums up coffee addiction! (Not caffeine, mind you -- I do like caffeinated things, but I loooove coffee above and beyond that.)

Really fun, and incredibly cheering to read on cold, rainy winter nights.
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[identity profile] oursin.livejournal.com 2007-12-16 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Those books are lovely. I can't remember whether it is in that one or the first one that she writes about cooking at a shelter for homeless women. Her recipes are also very usable (at least, the ones I've tried are).

Her novels are about white people of a certain class and geographical location, but they do (I think) convey a sense that this is a group with its own idiosyncratic ways and quirks, rather than representing The Universal. (Does that make sense?)
ext_6283: Brush the wandering hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[identity profile] oursin.livejournal.com 2007-12-18 07:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I remembered just after posting that Goodbye without Leaving is about a white middle-class young woman who becomes the single non-black singer in an Ikettes-like backing group, and afterwards works for a non-profit organisation that protects the rights of black musicians (e.g. when their work gets ripped off and turned into pop music it goes after the corporation for recompense).