Friday, May 10, 2013
Julie and Julia
While I typically am a fan of action movies, sports movies, and courtroom dramas, Julia and Julia was surprisingly enjoyable to watch. Watching Julie go 365 days cooking through ALL of Julia Child's cookbook was inspiring. Julie's passion was able to carry her through the frustration of balancing a job and the blog, mental breakdowns, and a big fight with her husband. Apart from Meryl Streep's pretty irritating voice, the movie was good and the way that Julie used food and cooking to escape from her otherwise boring, repetitive life, is what made the movie as fun to watch as it was.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
CAN A CHEF BE AN ARTIST?
There
exists a field called the Culinary Arts for a reason. A chef can most certainly be an artist; not
just visually, but conceptually as well.
Artists make creations that are enjoyed by other people. Paintings are enjoyed by people that view
them, films are enjoyed by people that watch them, music is enjoyed by people that
listen to them, and food is enjoyed by people that eat it. A chef is one of the most important kinds of
artist actually when you think of it like that, at least for me and many other
teenage boys that eat a lot.
When
preparing food, a chef must use creativity, something that is certainly a necessary
characteristic of an artist. They must
be innovative in both the ingredients and the recipe, but also in the presentation
of the food. A good chef definitely
needs to have artistic qualities in order to be successful.
TRANSFORMATION IN "BABETTE'S FEAST"
The theme
of transformation appears increasingly throughout the course of Babette’s Feast. The people of Berlevaag are highly religious and
they reject the concept of pleasure because of their fundamentalist
Puritan-like ways. They shun luxury and
thus, have never really enjoyed the food that they ate, something which Babette
values immensely. Over the course of the
meal that Babette prepares, we see a huge transformation in the way Martine and
Phillipa look at food, and on the broader scale, life. The feast leads to interaction among the
guests and the well-cooked meal is overwhelmingly enjoyable. The narrator of the story explains, "Usually
in Berlevaag people did not speak much while they were eating. But somehow this evening tongues were
loosened” (page 56). The transformation
that Babette’s 10,000 franc feast brings about is that of realization; the
realization that enjoyment is okay and should not be feared/avoided.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Making a Kugel - An Axelbank Family Tradition
For as long
as I can remember, there has been a kugel
present at every one of my family’s holiday gatherings, and it pops up at other
random times throughout the year too (when my mom feels like making one). The kugel’s
place of origin is Eastern Europe but today it is mostly eaten in Israel and
the US. It is certainly a traditional
Jewish dish that many families make (mine just makes it the best). The recipe we use is that of my maternal
grandmother, but we don’t put apples or raisins in it like she did. In my family, my mom cooks it, and we are
usually the ones to bring the kugel
to all our family holiday gatherings. Not
only do I love the taste of kugel but
I also have a strong association between kugel
and my sense of both Judaism and family.
Kugel makes me think of my
extended family and all the awesome times I’ve had with them.
| The recipe |
Thursday, February 14, 2013
The Axelbank Family Dining Habits
As I am not
usually inclined to make my own food, I am fortunate enough to have a mom that
is an EXCELLENT cook. She does most of
the cooking in the Axelbank household but my dad and sister (when she is home)
pitch in as well. Other than breakfast,
and when my dad has to eat an early dinner so he can get off to work, it is not
usual to find somebody eating alone (except the cat). But even recently, we’ve been experimenting
with putting an extra chair at the dinner table and seating Moonshadow, our
cat, up there; he usually stays for at least part of the meal!
When my dad
works evenings (Mondays and Thursdays) my mom and I eat together. These are usually very simple dinners
(omelets, tuna sandwiches, etc.). My mom
works Tuesday evenings, making for a nice father-son dinner, in which we
usually capitalize on the absence of the family vegetarian (my mom) and grill
burgers, or cook chicken, and just generally make as much meat as we can. Every Wednesday we eat as a family and my mom
usually makes something nicer than our average dinner (see below); my mom likes
to make various ethnic foods sometimes for these dinners (for a Jewish mother,
she makes a mean chicken tikka masala).
Friday night is Shabbat for us Jews and when we can, we have Shabbat
dinner with the whole family around.
When we do get to have Shabbat dinner as a family, this is usually the
biggest meal of the week with the most effort put into it. These dinners can vary anywhere from Mexican
lasagna, to homemade soup, home-baked bread, and a big salad bar, to ravioli,
garlic bread and roasted veggies.
My family
has some of our best, most important conversations over dinner. I’d say that 50% of the time, these
conversations are politically oriented, and the other 50% are just typical conversations,
relevant to our lives.
During the
average week, my family eats approximately $150 dollars worth of food
made/prepared in the house and $75-$100 worth of food from take-out/delivery or
eating out. I have broken the total
price of home made/prepared food down into percentage of total price as
follows:
Fruits and Vegetables – 40%
Wheat/Grain – 20%
Dairy – 10%
Meat – 10%
Snacks and Desserts – 10%
Beverages – 5%
Condiments – 5%
As my mom,
the main cook, is a vegetarian, and my dad will eat whatever my mom makes, the
meat consumption is low; the 10% meat comes from times when my mom makes me
chicken (she won’t have red meat in the house so when my dad and I grill
burgers we have to do it outside). All
meat is kosher. At every meal there is
some form (usually forms) of
vegetable, and the most common dessert is fruit. As for wheat/grain, we go through probably a
dozen bagels a week, a ton of cereal, and when my dad eats an early dinner before
working nights, he almost always has pasta.
Our dairy consumption consists mostly of milk, butter, cheese, and
yogurt. On our designated snack shelf,
we have a variety of cookies, chips, and most importantly Pop-Tarts. We drink
predominantly water but my mom often has seltzer. We drink coffee and OJ in the morning and
keep pomegranate and mango juice around too.
Our condiments consist of various sauces and spices that we use to
accompany our meals.
Not just food, but meals themselves play an
important role in my family’s life. We
eat together as often as we can, and we use meals as opportunities to stay
connected as a family. My dad has said
multiple times that he loves nothing more than when the whole family is home
for dinner, especially on Shabbat.
| The Axelbank kitchen |
| Typical dessert of fresh fruit |
| Wednesday night meal of Mexican style fajitas |
Monday, February 11, 2013
The Madsens of Cap Hope, Greenland
The Madsen
Family consists of Emil Madsen, 40, Erika Madsen, 26 (not sure if that’s really
true), Abraham, 12, Martin, 9, and Belissa, 6.
Residing in Cap Hope, Greenland, the family sticks to a traditional
Greenlandic diet consisting of A LOT of meat, breads, pastas, various prepared
foods, fruits and vegetables, and quite a bit of fruit drinks.
Grains and Other Starchy Foods à $34.07
Dairy à
$4.87
Meat, Fish, and Eggs à
$53.97
Fruits, Vegetables, and Nuts à
$8.67
Condiments à
$25.66
Snacks and Desserts à
$54.25
Prepared Food à
$35.66
Beverages à
$36.40
Miscellaneous à
$23.49
Total à $277.04 (1928.80 Danish
Krone)
The Madsen
family consumed 60.8 pounds of meat in the May week in which they recorded
their diet. This would ordinarily be
extremely expensive but because the Madsens hunted 47.4 pounds of that meat
themselves (a $221.26 local value), the weekly meat price is manageable. Their most eaten meats are ox, walrus, geese,
and polar bears, all four of which fall under the hunted-themselves category.
The Madsens
spent the most amount of money per pound of food ($35.66/8.64 lb) on prepared
foods (no surprise). They used chicken
bouillon, Cup o’ Noodles, spring
rolls, sausage, and dried soup bases to supplement their home-cooked/prepared
meals. They had three full loaves of
bread and 12 dinner rolls throughout the week and they all stuffed biscuits
into their pockets for quick snacks throughout the days. The family ate cold cereal in the morning,
and had two types of both pasta and rice.
All this for $34.07
As for
fruits and vegetables, the Madsens didn’t appear to be fans. The extent to which they had fruits and vegetables
were canned oranges and “fruit cocktail,” yellow onions, and preserved
mushrooms. The family spent three times
as much on Condiments as they did on fruits veggies. They had multiple different sauces, both
sweet and not, along with salt, pepper, sugar, and of course, narwhal oil.
The family
had many traditional American snacks such as Pringles, Ritz crackers, and
Milky Way bars. Interestingly, the family spent the most
money out of all the category breakdowns on Snacks and Desserts ($54.25). The Madsens’ only dairy products consisted of
milk and butter. They drank quite a bit
of fruit-based drinks throughout the week (11 qt). They also drank 40 teabags worth of tea and
instant coffee. The family spent some
extra money on Prince cigarettes
(three packs) to “compliment” their diet.
Each family
member has different favorites: Emil’s favorite food is polar bear, Erika’s is
narwhal skin, Abraham and Belissa like traditional Greenlandic food and Martin
loves Danish food.
For a full lineup of the Madsen family’s one-week diet see the pictures
below.
| The Madsen Family (from left to right, Emil, Erika, Martin, Belissa, and Abraham) |
![]() |
| One's week worth of food eaten by the Madsen family |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
