Saturday, July 6, 2019

Favorite Wisconsin Cheese Recipes

Known as "America's Dairyland" of its abundant dairy production, Wisconsin is famous for its cheese, especially cheddar. Locals have been cooking with cheese for almost two centuries now and have perfected these recipes included in Wisconsin Cheese: A Cookbook and Guide to the Cheeses of Wisconsin by Martin Hintz and Pam Percy

  • Blueberry Ricotta Coffee Cake
  • Wisconsin Three-Cheese Soup with Parmesan Croutons
  • Wisconsin Buttermilk Blue and Asian Pear Salad
  • Santa’s Wisconsin Cheese Delight
  • Asiago Cheese Puffs
  • Wisconsin Cheddar Scones with Smoked Turkey
  • Hook’s Blue Cheese Cake
  • Cherry Cheddar Crusted Pork Tenderloin
  • Wisconsin Gruyère Fondue
  • Fontiago Polenta with Tomato Basil Concassée
  • Goat Cheese Fudge
  • Milk Chocolate Cheesecake

A Cookbook and Guide to the Cheeses of Wisconsin 
by Martin Hintz and Pam Percy
The Globe Pequot Press, 2008

Reviews Archive
Cheese
Outrider Reading Group

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Now cooking with... Super Roots

Remedial food. It's a thing.
Got a tummy ache? There's chicken broth.
Feeling toxic? Try some Ginger Mapo Tofu.
Tired? Gado Gado.
Bloated? Bibimap Wraps.
This cookbook offers 60 health-enhancing recipes based on therapeutic dishes from the Far East cultures of Thailand, Malaysia, Korea, Indonesia and more.

Cooking with Healing Spices to Boost Your Mood by Tanita de Ruijt.
Hardie Grant, 2019.

The Book Stall
Cookbooks
Medicinal Plants and Seeds


Sunday, April 28, 2019

testing Beehive Alchemy

This book is a continuation of Petra Ahnert's popular Beeswax Alchemy.

With this new book, readers learn about the benefits and attributes of beeswax, honey, propolis, and more alongside a full range of projects and techniques to process and harness the amazing gifts of bees. Inside, there are instructions to make hand dipped birthday candles, lip balm, the classic French dessert canele bordelais, Lithuanian honey spirits, honey butter, honey mustard, propolis salve, hair pomade and more.

Beehive Alchemy: Beehive Alchemy Projects and recipes using honey, beeswax, propolis, and pollen to make soap, candles, creams, salves, and more.
by Petra Ahnert
Quarry Books, 2018.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Travels with Foxfire

The Foxfire oral history project delivers another compendium of the collected wisdom of artists, craftsmen, musicians, and moonshiners in Southern Appalachia. In this volume we learn the secret origins of stock car racing, the story behind the formation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and how to gather wild ginseng.

More than thirty essays include the recipes of an award-winning cookbook writer along with profiles of bootleggers and bear hunters, game wardens and medicine women, water dowsers, sculptors, folk singers, novelists, record collectors, and even the world’s foremost “priviologist.”

Stories of People, Passions, and Practices from Southern Appalachia
by Phil Hudgins and Jessica Phillips
University Press of Kentucky, 2018


Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Review: Bake Like a French Pastry Chef


Michel et Augustin is the pastry version of Ben & Jerry's in France, creating cookies and other desserts with a team of 100 employees in Paris, Lyon, and New York.

With the ambition of becoming "the first company on planet Earth to be 100% pastry-certified," this book compiles five years of employee training sessions to prepare for Certificat d'Aptitude Professionnelle exams that certify the ability to make good French pastries.

The lessons and recipes are divided into five pastry families (tarts, entremets, choux pastry, puff pastry and viennoiseries) with instructions on making doughs, creating fillings and exploring variations. There's a glossary of pastry terms from bain-marie and frangipane to pecher mignon and T45, an encyclopedia of essential ingredients, and a collection of templates for shaping Paris-Brest, Religieuse, Salambo pastries and more.

Delectable Cakes, Perfect Tarts, Flaky Croissants, and More
by Michel de Rovira and Augustin Paluel-Marmont
Countryman Press, 2018

continued in The Book Stall

Reviews Archive
Pastry
The Book Stall

Sunday, December 30, 2018

Reading the History of California Wine


This book tells the 200-year story of the heady dream that wines as good as the greatest of France could be made in California. A dream dashed four times in merciless succession until it was ultimately realized in a stunning blind tasting in Paris. In that tasting, in the year of America's bicentennial, California wines took their place as the leading wines of the world.

Here is the complete and dramatic story of the ascendancy of California wine in vivid detail. It also looks at the larger story of California itself through its singular wine history.

The Triumph of California Wine
by John Briscoe
University of Nevada Press, 2018

Out of the Past
Book List
History and American West Titles


Thursday, December 20, 2018

Review: The Science of Enlightenment


This book is by American meditation instructor Shinzen Young, ordained in Japan as a monk in the Shingon tradition of Buddhism which attempts to reach eternal wisdom through symbolic gestures, mystical syllables, and mental concentration.

The title suggests a scientific study of meditation that reveals its inner workings and proves its benefits, but that's not what this volume is about. Young has collaborated with scientists looking at the effects of contemplative practice on brain waves and physiology, and makes mention of those studies when he describes his approach to teaching meditation as "informed by the spirit of science." But don't expect to find summaries of that research or references to peer-reviewed publications.

Instead, the author teaches the basics of meditation, explains various meditation practices, tells the history of Buddhism, relates inspirational tales, and uses scientific language to make meditative concepts more understandable and less mystical.

How Meditation Works
by Shinzen Young
Sounds True, 2018

continued in The Book Stall
Prisoners of Our Thoughts
Reviews Archive

Monday, December 17, 2018

A Guide To... Jewish Travel.


This concise, easy-to-use handbook is for the Jewish traveler, or anyone interested in Jewish history and culture. Jewish sites and resources in major metropolitan areas as well as small communities throughout the United States and Canada are featured. It includes a directory of synagogues, community centers, kosher restaurants, Judaica shops, lodgings, and Jewish establishments.

The Jewish Travel Guide: Museums, Shops, Restaurants, Landmarks, Hotels and Other Sites
by Betsy Sheldon.
Hunter Publishing, 2001

The Book Stall
Guidebooks and How-to Titles
Book List

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Review: North Wild Kitchen


"My understanding of Norwegian cuisine went from an unfortunate stereotype (meat and boiled potatoes) to a world filled with berry-infused moose sausage, fermented trout, wild nettle soup, rhubarb juice made from birch sap, home-brewed beer, and traditional cheeses and porridges made on the farm," writes food blogger Nevada Berg in the introduction to this exploration of her adopted land's culinary traditions.

Norwegian cuisine has been shaped by centuries of trade and migration and has much in common with the palates of its Nordic neighbors and northern Europe, but what makes it authentic is its use of locally sourced foodstuffs and traditional methods of smoking, curing, and preserving foods in a challenging climate.

Eight chapters explore separate parts of Norway's culinary culture - foraging (Sankingen), fishing (Vann), farming (Seteren), harvesting (Innhostingen), hunting (Katen), preserving (Stabburet), outdoor cooking (Balet), and baking (Jernet, Takken, og Ovnen). Each chapter includes correspondingly traditional recipes along with newer dishes well embedded in the culture. Notes on ingredients and equipment are included along with thoughtful essays and descriptions of each dish.

Home Cooking from the Heart of Norway
by Nevada Berg
Prestel, 2018

continued in The Book Stall
Reviews Archive

Saturday, November 10, 2018

Now Exploring "Out of the Woods"

In this introspective collection of essays, Julia Corbett examines nature in our lives with all of its ironies and contradictions by integrating personal narratives with science and research.  Each essay delves into an overlooked aspect of our relationship with nature — insects, garbage, backyards, noise, open doors, animals, and language — and how we cover our tracks.

Out of the Woods leads to insights into the products, practices, and phrases we take for granted in our everyday encounters with nature and encourages us all to consider how we might re-value or re-imagine our relationships with nature in our everyday lives.

Seeing Nature in the Everyday
by Julia Corbett
University of Nevada Press, 2018



Book Notes Wild
Nature Writing and Natural Histories
The Nature Pages

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Reading the History: Battle of the Bulge.

In the winter of 1944–1945 , Hitler sought to divide Allied forces in the heavily forested Ardennes region of Luxembourg and Belgium. He deployed more than 400,000 troops in one of the last major German offensives of the war, which became known as the Battle of the Bulge, in a desperate attempt to regain the strategic initiative in the West.

Hitler's effort failed for a variety of reasons, but many historians assert that Lieutenant General George S. Patton Jr.'s Third Army was ultimately responsible for securing Allied victory. Although Patton has assumed a larger-than-life reputation for his leadership in the years since World War II, scholars have paid little attention to his generalship in the Ardennes following the relief of Bastogne.

In this book, Captain John Nelson Rickard explores the commander's operational performance during the entire Ardennes campaign, through his "estimate of the situation," the U.S. Army's doctrinal approach to problem-solving. 

Patton as Commander in the Bulge
by John Nelson Rickard Ph.D.
University Press of Kentucky, 2018

Out of the Past
Book List
Artwork: General George S. Patton


Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Now Exploring "Elkhorn"

Driven by topophilia (love of place), former Kentucky Poet Laureate Richard Taylor focuses on the eight-mile stretch of the creek from the Forks of the Elkhorn to Knight's Bridge a few miles outside of Frankfort to provide a glimpse into the economic, social, and cultural transformation of Kentucky from wilderness to its current landscape. 

Taylor explores both the natural history of the region and the formation of the Forks community. He recounts the Elkhorn Valley's inhabitants from the earliest surveyors and settlers to artist Paul Sawyier, who memorably documented the creek in watercolors, oils, and pastels. Interspersed with photographs and illustrations ― contemporary and historic ― and intermixed with short vignettes about historical figures of the region, this book delivers a history that is by turns a vibrant and meditative personal response to the creek and its many wonders.
Evolution of a Kentucky Landscape
by Richard Taylor
University Press of Kentucky, 2018

Book Notes Wild
Nature Writing and Natural Histories
The Nature Pages

Sunday, November 4, 2018

Reading the History: Victorian Radicals

Starting with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and lasting through the dawn of the 20th century, the Victorian era's painters, writers, and designers challenged every prevailing belief about art and its purpose.

The full spectrum of the Victorian avant-garde is displayed in this book, accompanied by essays that illuminate issues the artists contended with, including the relationship to art and nature, questions of class and gender identity, the value of handmade versus machine production, and the search for beauty in an age of industry.

Characterized by attention to detail, vibrant colors, and engagement with literary themes and daily life, the paintings, works on paper, and decorative objects featured reveal the myriad ways Victorian artists and artisans made sense of a rapidly changing world.

Victorian Radicals
From the Pre-Raphaelites to the Arts & Crafts Movement
by Martin Ellis, Timothy Barringer and Victoria Osborne
Prestel, 2018

Out of the Past
Book List
History and American West Titles


Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Review: The Healing Code of Nature

The author of this book, Clemens G. Arvay, is the Austrian biologist who penned The Biophilia Effect examining the healing properties of nature, and forests in particular. This work is a sequel, reporting on the positive effects of plants and animals on the human immune system.

Arvay argues convincingly for the importance of trees in human nature. We evolved from forest-dwelling mammals, after all, and a verdant canopy of leaves is sown deeply into our genetic memory. He cites several clinical studies suggesting strong links between the presence of trees and human health.

"Our immune system is not strengthened by substances from trees," he asserts, "but it is rather weakened by the separation from these substances in modern life. Spending time in nature therefore does not lead to more defense cells; rather it brings their number and activity back to a natural level."

Separation from nature is as much a destroyer as any environmental toxin.

The Healing Code of Nature
Discovering the New Science of Eco-Psychosomatics
by Clemens G. Arvay
Sounds True, 2018

continued in The Book Stall
Health & Beauty