Lovely Listeners,
We're at the time of year when spring festivals of Passover, Easter, Nowruz, and Ramadan ask us to look deeper at ordinary things. Rebirth is everywhere in stories of survival, redemption, kindness and faith. All you have to do in Southern California right now is walk outside your door, smell the jasmine and look up at the sky to know that each day is an opportunity.
Eggs are the ultimate symbol. We have heaped layers of meaning on them for millennia. Author Lizzie Stark uses her personal story to explore the cultural history and uses of eggs. Egg: A Dozen Ovatures is "an unconventional history of the world’s largest cellular workhorse, from chickens to penguins, from art to crime, and more."
I can't seem to stop baking, most recently from Irina Georgescu's Tava: Eastern European Baking and desserts from Romania & Beyond. It's a fascinating exploration of baking traditions in the overlapping cultures of Romania. Cheesecake lovers will prize her Easter recipes which are filled with sweetened "curd" or fresh cheese tucked into many doughs and shapes.
Chickens are once again "a thing" as more urbanites decide to build coops and populate them with the charming but problematic feathered creatures. Tove Danovich loves raising backyard chickens, a tradition that dates back to her great-grandmother. Under the Henfluence: Inside the World of Backyard Chickens and the People Who Love Them, is "an immersive blend of chicken-keeping memoir and culture reporting by a journalist who accidentally became obsessed with her flock."
Perhaps you know someone who ran from the city to an "intentional farming community." The impulse to go "back to the land" waxes and wanes over generations. Most recently the pandemic saw record numbers of people reassessing their lives. Margot Anne Kelley says millennials are the latest generation to embrace this attempt at utopian living. She revisits utopian back-to-the-land movements throughout American history in her book Foodtopia: Communities in Pursuit of Peace, Love and Homegrown Food.
Craig McNamara was one such youth. He dropped out of Stanford, began to travel and found a measure of peace and intention in restorative farming as he grappled with the legacy of his father, Robert McNamara's involvement in the Vietnam War. His book Because Our Fathers Lied: A Memoir of Truth and Family from Vietnam to Today is an urgent read.
Enjoy your holiday meals with family and friends.
Evan