What’s happening in Family Dinner-Ville this week:
*Have you read Lean In yet? What do you think? I found myself skimming over all the studies reminding me of what I already know (women make less money than men; women do more housework even when they work full-time; leaving your kids to go to work is harder for moms than kids, etc.) and absolutely devouring the (somewhat measured) glimpses into her high-power life — like how she forgets to put her kid in green on St. Patrick’s Day and how her kids came down with lice while flying on the private jet of eBay’s CEO. Also: I don’t know if this is just a case of me wearing my family dinner goggles, but there are countless references to getting home in time to eat with her kids and how good it makes her feel. How centered.
*Due to popular demand — Deconstructed Dinner on DALS now has it’s own category. If you click on it (right over there in the right margin under “Categories”) you can get a list of dinners that are more conducive to separating into individual components (for kids) while not messing with the integrity of the whole (for parents).
*Every time I head to Stone Barns I think a) How lucky am I that this farm is right here in my neighborhood? then b) What can I buy at their gift shop? Locals know what I’m talking about — the mix of cookware, cookbooks (you’ll recognize at least one), tableware, kids toys, canning jars, and way more is one of the most beautifully curated gift collections anywhere. Some good news for non-locals: I had no idea until a few weeks ago that they have an online store as well. Head over there and check out my current obsessions: Lidded “working glasses,” a classic market tote, and a table runner that I bought for my mom’s birthday last year and liked so much I went back to pick one up for myself.
*I know, at this point you probably think that I’m a publicist for “Here’s the Thing,” but Alec Baldwin’s interview with NBC Nightly News host Brian Williams made me run a mile longer than I wanted to so I could hear the entire thing. (Ask Andy, this was an unprecedented event.) Favorite moment: Williams recallling his mother showing young Brian a photograph of a famous broadcast journalist, then telling Brian, “You can do better than him.”)
*Apropos of nothing, I just bought this fabric to cover a bulletin board in my home office.
*Apropos of all niece and nephew and “special” birthdays coming up this year, here’s my new favorite gift. (I love my childrens’ friends, but I ain’t spending $40 on them.)
*I’ve loved every essay I’ve read so far in The Cassoulet Saved My Marriage: True Tales of Food, Family, and How We Learn to Eat, and based on the luminaries that editors Caroline Grant and Lisa Catherine Harper lined up for the anthology, I’m guessing this will continue. The last paragraph of Catherine Newman‘s essay “Talk With Your Mouth Full,” about the evolution of her family’s dinner table conversations, has been haunting me for days — even if the entire essay leading up to it had me in stitches. Here it is:
There are doubtless measurable benefits to dinner-table conversation. It’s a natural check on overeating, for example. Even if you’re talking and eating at the same time, you simply can’t generate the same food-shoveling velocity that you could if you were eating silently. Plus, I’m sure it’s good for mental health, for social health, for learning how to become a good date — although, my god, I’ll miss them when there’s someone they’re dating besides us. Bust mostly the benefits are immeasurable. What dinner table conversation gives us is time to stop and appreciate how much we have, right now, even as we imagine, deliriously, that it could go on forever.
To celebrate this quote specifically and the book’s publication generally, I’m giving away one copy of Cassoulet to a random commenter below. Good luck and have a great weekend. Update: Chris (#194) is the winner. Congrats!
PS: Credit for illustration way up top: Pixar’s hand-drawn storyboard illo from the family dinner scene in The Incredibles. (Is there a better movie in the world?)
Looks like a great book! Thanks for the giveaway!
I finally bought your book yesterday and devoured it instead of actually, you know, making dinner. Thank you for your writing.
Looks like an interesting book! I’d like to read it.
Book looks delightful, and now on my ‘must-read’ list.
This looks wonderful…how I love to read about food and meal making!
Thanks for the chance to win this book.
I now know my next borrow from the local library. I got your book from our local library and it has totally changed my life (been doing family dinner since Dec 23 2012 and haven’t looked back!). Thank you so very much for all you share!
No, there is no better movie.
Thank you
What a profound quote…especially with a graduating senior at our table now!
Thanks for sharing the quote, and for your terrific website!
Sounds like a great book!
The book looks and sounds gat. I would love to win and then pass it on to my sister who also loves to read books about cooking and eating!
Instead of doing report cards, I’m checking in on my favorite site and thinking of this week’s meals 🙂
I would love this!!
Great giveaway! I love that fabric, remind me of my favorite fabric at Hable Construction.
Love your posts – hope to win
Love your blog! Would love this book!
Would love to win a copy of this book. Also heard about it on Catherine newmans blog. I love both of you. By the way, I had dinner with a great friend tonight, and she brought your book to dinner. She knew I had read it and wanted to talk about it with me and find out my favorite parts and recipes.
love this book, hope i win!
This book looks great-thanks for the opportunity!
Thanks for the giveaway!
I love Catherine Newman. . . and I’d love a copy of the book!
Wow, I can’t believe I didn’t recognize the artwork from The Incredibles until I read your note at the bottom. Love that scene.
I enjoy your blog along with Catherine Newman’s blog.
Put that book on the wish list!
Ooo – pick me, please! I just finished DALS the book, and I’m dying for something else to gobble.