Saturday, December 10, 2011

Opening Sentence of the Day: Delights and Prejudices

 
When Proust recollected the precise taste sensation of the little scalloped madeleine cakes served at tea by his aunt, it led him into his monumental remembrance of things past.
-- Delights and Prejudices by James Beard.

Proust's madeleine is such a cliche now that I was a little disappointed with this opening sentence.  But maybe back in 1964 when Beard wrote this memoir, the Proust reference was fresher.

My disappointment disappeared in an instant because by the second sentence, Beard is deep into his own food history and the book is a real delight from then on.  He bounces around from his childhood in Portland to Les Halles in Paris and beyond.

I love it! Particularly the parts about Portland's rich culinary history.

His chapter on his family's holiday traditions, which I just read this morning, is wonderful.  He describes many delights, including his mother making fruitcakes a year in advance and a ginger shortbread recipe (see below) that sounds amazing, but he also had a lot of holiday prejudices, like thinking cranberries were an "abomination," homemade candy "really unsavory," and Christmas cookies only good if you make them yourself and eat them right away, exhorting well-wishers:
But have pity on us, all you bakers -- the spirit of Christmas notwithstanding -- and deliver us from cookies that have crumbled or gone stale.
Amen!

Ginger Cakes

Mix 2 cups sifted flour, 1 firmly packed cup brown sugar, 1 tablespoon ginger and 1 teaspoon soda thoroughly, and then combine them with 1 cup butter until the ingredients are well blended and crumbly.  In 6- to 8- inch layer cake pans, put 1/2-inch thickness of the mixture and bake in a 325[degree] oven for 45 minutes to 1 hour.  Cut the ginger cake into finger-shaped pieces while it is still warm.  Remove the pieces carefully with a spatula and store them in covered tins. 

This is my sixth and final book for the 2011 Foodie's Reading Challenge.  I can't wait to sign up again for the 2012 version.



WEEKEND COOKING

2 comments:

  1. Congrats on finishing the challenge...sounds like a great book to end it on.

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  2. I want to sign up for the American Battle of the Prizes Challenge, but the comments section isn't working. I decided to find another post to let you know about that. How nice to find a Weekend Cooking post plus your final book in the foodies challenge.

    A nice bonus is finding this great James Beard book. I didn't know he came from Portland. Now I really want to read it to learn more. I've admired his work but don't really know anything about him.

    P.S. I will check back in a few days to see if the comments or links are working for the American Battle. You are quite the challenge headquarters for me this next year.

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