Monthly Archives

October 2016

damn delicious, recipes I've tried and liked

Recipes I’ve tried and really liked: Joy the Baker One-pot French Onion Pasta

October 3, 2016

french-onion-pasta

Can I just be honest for a second? I need a second-opinion when it comes to food blogger recipes. I want someone I know and trust to say, ‘I made this recipe a bunch of times and, believe me, it’s totally worth the effort.’

It’s so disappointing when you make a recipe and it’s just not as delicious as you’d hoped. It happened to me just last week with a Thai Red Curry recipe. It wasn’t really edible even though the pictures of the recipe online looked like a million bucks.

So, this series is a compilation of the recipes I’ve tried and liked online. They’re worthy of the weekly rotation because they combine deliciousness with ease of operation. First up we have Joy the Baker’s One-pot French Onion Pasta. I mean, is there anything more delicious than caramelized onions mixed with spaghetti noodles and topped with freshly grated Parmesan cheese? I don’t think so! I skip the argula, though. I just don’t like the spicy green, but I’m sure it’s delicious if you’re into that sort of thing.

Let me know if you try it!

editor letter

Editor’s Letter, #2

October 2, 2016

sleepy-eyes

These days, I’m thinking a lot about vegetarianism. I’ve flirted with it in the past. For me, it’s all about the animals. I can’t help but thinking that it’s not necessary for them to die just so I can eat. Added to that, the popular instagram page has introduced me to the horrors of factory farming. Don’t google it if you don’t want to see it. You just can’t unsee it. It’s truly horrific, at least for me.

On the other hand, I believe in intuitive eating. Through therapy, I’m working hard every day to strip away my rules with eating and just listen to my body and give it what it craves without shame. Sometimes my body craves meat.

It’s a bit of a rock and a hard place, really. Ethically, I believe in vegetarianism. Personally, I don’t want to establish another set of food laws when I’m working so hard to undo years and years of shame around my food choices. The path forward for me, at least right now, is to tell myself and others that I’m exploring vegetarianism. It’s all exploration. It’s not based on rules and regulations. Every time I get hungry, I try to check in with myself. I ask myself what my body is craving. I wonder if meat is on the agenda. Sometimes it is. Yesterday, for example, I had a chicken wing and some bacon in a wedge salad. Today, meat hasn’t been on the agenda yet. It’s all an ebb and flow.

It’s so easy to get caught up, thinking that life is so black and white. The reality is that most of life exists in the grey areas, a delicate balance between competing ideals. For me right now, the personal choice of vegetarianism has a lot of shades of gray. I’m trying to be comfortable with that, knowing that I probably eat with my vegetarian ethics about 75-80% of the time and it feels completely intuitive. I love food so much that it’s not hard for me to find satisfaction without meat, especially if I’m the one cooking. For the other 25% of the time, I trust myself to eat what my body is currently craving, even if that involves meat.

I’m finding that things don’t need to be as fraught as we make them out to be most of the time. We just need to do the best we can with what we have.

-Meeshy D

I took a lot of inspiration from this post on intuitive eating + vegetarianism. It’s well worth the read.

Image via designlovefest

books

The art of possibility

October 1, 2016

benjamin-zander

I am in a phase of my life where all I want to read is self-improvement books. I devour them these days. It’s gotten so bad that I noticed a self-improvement book on the desk of a work colleague who was on vacation last week and I nabbed it to read, very carefully, while he was away. I thought I could blitz through it and replace it on his desk with him being none-the-wiser when he returned from his trip.

Of course, I didn’t know I was going to read one of the books that will likely inform the direction of the rest of my life. I was immediately entranced with The Art of Possibility by Rosamund Stone Zander and Benjamin Zander. I snuck the first few pages from my desk that morning. Then, I couldn’t help myself from closing my office door and reading a few more. Next, I took myself to lunch and found myself accidentally splattering the pages with salsa because I just had to keep reading while I ate. I’d finished it by the next evening and I had to order a new copy of the book for my colleague because there was no way I was going to return the one I’d ruined.

I can’t begin to describe how good it is. You MUST read it for yourself. Please do and let me know what you think.

Photo via here