Time, Crime & Tomatoes: Screen & Kitchen

ON SCREEN

Time and Mortality

On Golden Pond  (Amazon Prime $)

Jennifer Finney Boylan is an occasional opinion writer for the New York Times and an English professor at Bard.  Years ago, I read her groundbreaking memoir, She’s Not There:  A Life in Two Genders, about her transition from male to female.  I find her columns thoughtful and insightful.  

In her most recent piece, she reflected on age and time.  Boylan is now 63 and not as physically flexible as she would like.  Watching the film, On Golden Pond, with Fonda and Hepburn as Norman and Ethel, a retired couple of 80 and almost 70, prompted thoughts on life and what comes after.  Here’s a quote from this July 9 column, Katherine Hepburn, Henry Fonda, and Me.

It is not just the thought of my now-grown children that causes me to come unstuck in time. My wife and I first came to Maine in our 20s; now, as Ethel says in the film, we are a couple of old poops.

We have changed so much and have been blessed — and battered — by time. But we are still in love. I am not ready to leave this pond or Maine or her. Still, I know that, in time, all of us leave the things that we have known and turn our eyes toward whatever it is that comes next.

At the end of “On Golden Pond,” Norman asks Ethel if she wants to say farewell to the pond. This time, as they stand by the water, he hears the sound that eluded him before. “Ethel, listen,” he says. “The loons. They’ve come around to say goodbye.”

Hepburn & Fonda (mubi.com)

Like Boylan, the Chief Penguin and I first saw On Golden Pond in 1981, the year it was released.  Then it was an engaging film about an older couple enjoying their cottage on the lake while working hard to entertain a 13-year-old soon to become their daughter’s stepson.  In 2021, it’s a poignant film that hits hard at the challenges and cruelties of getting old while simultaneously demonstrating the strength of a long marriage. 

 I have to say that these characters, Norman and Ethel, act older than many 70- and 80-year-olds do today.  Many of us are more active and in better health than folks were then. It’s noteworthy that this was Henry Fonda’s last film and Jane Fonda played his daughter Chelsea.  Their father-daughter relationship was better after the film. Although a bit dated, I still recommend On Golden Pond.

Complex Lives

Mare of Easttown (HBO via Apple TV $)

Winslet as Mare (tvline.com)

This seven-part crime series stars Kate Winslet as a small-town detective on hard times.  It’s set in a fictitious working-class town near Philadelphia.  Anyone who knows that area will recognize place names (Darby, Bryn Mawr) and a certain gritty quality in the streets of houses set cheek by jowl.  Detective Mare has a difficult home life.  Her aggrieved mother and her high school daughter live with her along with her young grandson Drew.  Drew’s father was Mare’s son Kevin, who committed suicide several years ago.  Several young women have gone missing or disappeared and another’s body is found in the woods.  Mare knows everyone in town and is alternately compassionate, brusque, and her own worst enemy.  

Initially, I was put off by the depressing quality of these townspeople’s lives.   I kept on and began to appreciate the depth and complexity of Mare, superbly played by Winslet.  In some ways, more than a crime series, this is a study of a community relationships and travails.  Recommended!

CULINARY CORNER

In the Bowl—Summer Soup

As part of reviewing our cookbook collection for recipes to scan, I came across a recipe for a tomato and berry gazpacho in Dorie Greenspan’s book, Everyday Dorie:  The Way I Cook.  I marked the page for scanning and then decided to serve it to friends.  I went online the next day to print out the recipe and it was not there!  Seems the Chief Penguin either missed it or made an executive decision.  In any case, I went ahead and made it and served it in small cups as a teaser with pre-dinner drinks.  I loved it, the guests liked it, and even the skeptic enjoyed it!

Greenspan uses cherry tomatoes and fresh strawberries and includes scallions, mint and basil leaves, chopped fresh ginger, lime juice, sherry vinegar, some olive oil, and either harissa powder or hot sauce to your taste.  I used some Tabasco in it and had it available for anyone who wanted more heat.  It was a luscious variation on traditional gazpacho with a hint of sweetness.

Dorie Greenspan’s recipe is not available online, but here’s a link to another strawberry-tomato version which has cucumber, jalapenos and honey.  Happy summertime!

Note: Header photo from On Golden Pond is from top100project.com

Tidy Tidbits: Of Roosevelts & Cookbooks

HAPPY 4TH OF JULY!

(aarp.org)

On this year’s Independence Day, there is much to celebrate. With the waning of the pandemic, we can be out and about and gather safely with friends and family.  Particularly if we are fully vaccinated.  We have been through a bruising few years.  It is heartening to now have a president who is compassionate, committed, and balanced, qualities sadly lacking before.  

Yet, we are a deeply polarized nation—witness the thousands of people who showed up at a Trump rally last night here in the neighboring town of Sarasota.  I would like to be optimistic that the ideals on which the United States is based, freedom and equal opportunity, will prevail, but fear that we will live through more contentious times until civility returns.  Nonetheless, I remain hopeful for the future.  Let’s celebrate today and cherish what is good in our society!

ER–COMPLEX AND COURAGEOUS WOMAN

Young Eleanor (nps.gov)

I am currently immersed in David Michaelis’s new biography of Eleanor Roosevelt entitled simply, Eleanor.  I am old enough to recall some of the news coverage when Eleanor Roosevelt died in 1962.  Over the years, I’ve read a number of books about Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt, including one by Joseph Lash, as well as Blanche Wiesen Cook’s massive three volume biography of Eleanor.  I read good reviews of the Michaelis biography but did wonder how much new information it might contain.  A lot.  

With a decade’s research and access to new source materials, Michaelis presents an even fuller picture of Eleanor than Cook did.  Eleanor’s mother died when she was eight. Two years later her father, whom she idolized, also died.  Orphaned, she was raised by her grandmother, but always felt like an unwanted outsider and lacked self-esteem.  Belittled and berated by relatives for her height, her lack of beauty, and her stilted adult demeanor, it was several decades before Eleanor came into her own as a person of worth.  Early on she learned not to show any emotion, and this hindered how she dealt with Franklin and their five children.

Franklin and Eleanor were distant cousins, but a mismatched pair as husband and wife.  Both were needy in their own way; he always desirous of being the center of attention and more aligned with his mother Sara than his spouse.  Eleanor wanted to do something worthwhile and was frustrated by the strictures put upon her actions by her social class and the place of women in society overall.  She felt unacknowledged and unappreciated by Franklin and was devastated by the discovery of his affair with Lucy Mercer during WWI.

It is fascinating to learn how Eleanor came out of her shell, engaged with the wider world, found love, and ignored public opinion on the proper role of a First Lady. She jaunted around the country giving speeches and wrote a daily newspaper column.  She became an activist force and an ally to FDR when polio limited his mobility.

David Michaelis met Eleanor Roosevelt briefly when he was four years old, a meeting that made an indelible impression on him.  His book is engaging, candid about both ER’s and FDR’s flaws, and written in a lively, almost sprightly style.  Highly recommended!

COOKBOOK CULLING

An unexpected treasure!

The Chief Penguin and I own more than a hundred cookbooks.  They are titles we bought or gifts with the oldest ones from the early 1970’s (think Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking) through the 1980’s (Silver Palate) and 90’s to more recent publications.  We have several compendiums including multiple editions of Rombauer’s The Joy of Cooking; Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything; The Gourmet Cookbook and Gourmet Today; the French Bible of home cooking, I Know How to Cook; the Italian equivalent, The Silver Spoon; and one of my all-time favorites, Essentials of Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan.  Plus, there are celebrity cookbooks by Daniel Boulud, Jacques Pepin, Nigella Lawson, Gordon Hamersley, Thomas Keller of French Laundry fame, Patricia Wells, Georges Perrier of Philadelphia’s Le Bec Fin, and Ottolenghi.  

Also, books dedicated to a particular cuisine such as Vietnamese or Chinese or a particular region of a country. We have a bunch of regional Italian cookbooks and several that focus on recipes from Paris bistros and cafes.  And last, but not least, a trove of baking books—breads, pastries, and cookies, the province of C.P.  A wealth of recipes.  What’s fun about this review is discovering notes on dishes I’ve made in the past, a trip down culinary lane.

Some years ago, Philadelphia hosted an annual Book and the Cook festival.  Chefs from restaurants around the U.S. were invited to the city and paired with a local chef.  Meals were jointly prepared by the two chefs.  It was a chance for elegant dining or casual fare with always a meet and greet with the guest chef.  You could bring or buy the featured cookbook and have it autographed.  We usually signed up for 2 or 3 events each year and often with our good friends Ellen and Bob.  

Two occasions stand out.  We four have fond memories of being warmly greeted at the dining room entrance by the statuesque Julia Child.  She later made the rounds of all the guests and inscribed her book for anyone who asked.  Although I like and make many of her recipes, Marcella Hazan was not a gracious guest chef.  She was brusque and did little in the way of schmoozing with the diners.  But these events were both notable for the food!

So, what has prompted this review of our cookbooks?  We have too many to be able to keep all of them when we ultimately move to a smaller place.  Consequently, starting with the older less used books, we are reviewing each one, marking recipes we’ve made or ones we like, and then scanning them.  

The Chief Penguin is the architect and executor of this project.  We both review the recipes, then he takes a photo on his iPhone via Scannable, and it gets sent to Evernote.  On Evernote, he’s created a folder for each cookbook with the cover image and then the recipes get filed with the book.  The beauty of this is that they are all searchable by ingredient, author/chef, and so forth.  This makes them available anywhere we have access to Evernote and will enable us to give away some of the cookbooks.  I’d love to find a local college or public library that would like them; failing that they may end up at Goodwill, my last resort.  

Tidy Tidbits: Potpourri of Viewing Options

DOCUMENTARIES—HEROES & SCIENTIFIC DETECTIVES

Defying the Nazis:  The Sharps’ War  (PBS)

Martha & Waitstill Sharp (uusc.org)

This film by Ken Burns is a moving portrait of the sacrifices made by American minister Waitstill Sharp and his wife Martha during the Second World War.  In 1939, they left their children behind in Massachusetts and went on a secret mission to Berlin to help refugees in Europe escape the Nazis.  It was a dangerous undertaking and a noble one, but one that splintered their marriage.  They were an amazing couple and one that more people should know about.  This film is a testament to their courage and their beliefs.  

The Gene: An Intimate History  (PBS Passport)

Mukherjee & Burns (news.columbia.edu)

Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee is the author of a comprehensive account of the human gene, how it governs life and its role in hereditary diseases.  This series by Ken Burns brings the book to the screen featuring commentary by Mukherjee and others interwoven with real patient case histories.  It’s a densely packed series and a good way to update one’s understanding of human biology.    

ESCAPISM—VILLAGE CRIME & INTERNATIONAL SPYCRAFT

Whitstable Pearl  (Acorn via Amazon Prime)

Pearl & Mike (environmental.co.uk)

Based on a book series by Julie Wassmer, these are cozy mysteries.  Not much violence and little blood and gore.  Pearl Nolan owns a restaurant and bar in small town Whitstable, England. She’s also a former police officer turned private detective.  Known to almost everyone, she hunts for missing people and lost items.  When detective Mike McGuire an urbanite from London, is assigned to a suspected murder case, Pearl offers assistance.  Their unlikely alliance slowly morphs into a fragile friendship.  

There are six episodes in Season 1.  Many viewers like me are hoping for a second!

Alias  (Amazon Prime)

Agent Bristow with cast (cinema blend.com)

Alias is pretty much the extreme opposite of gentle Whitstable Pearl.  Sydney Bristow is a double agent working for both SD-6 and the CIA.  She was recruited as a spy during college, but when she discovered that SD-6 were the bad guys she thought she was working against, she went to the CIA.  Sydney and her partner Dixson get sent on challenging and dangerous assignments around the world, everywhere from a mountain slope in Chile to Barcelona, Rome, and Cairo.  They have nifty technical devices to jam signals, encrypt files, and the like.  Despite innumerable physical fights, torture, and nasty encounters with the enemy, Sydney always manages to return home safely to Los Angeles.  

Preposterous and fast-paced, with lots of action, this series is unbelievable, but good entertainment.  There are five seasons and I’m about midway through Season 1.

FAMILY DYNAMICS

Us  (PBS Masterpiece)

Douglas, Albie & Connie (pbs.org)

Are you yearning to travel abroad?  This 2-part series shot in some great European cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Madrid, and Rome, is a visual feast.  It’s also a study of a marriage on its last legs and a coming-of-age story.  Connie tells Douglas she wants out of their marriage, but reluctantly agrees to carry on with their planned family trip abroad.  Albie at 17 is disgruntled, rattled by the tension between his parents, and eager to be on his own.  Add in that relations between Albie and Douglas are tense and awkward at best. 

 I liked this series more the farther into I got.  Initially, I found Douglas annoying and my sympathies lay with Connie.  But each of them has faults and how they struggle to get along and be supportive of their son is very believable.  As one summary put it, there’s humor and heartbreak here.

Note: Header image is waterfront in Whitstable, Kent, England (planetware.com)

Tidy Tidbits: Historical Figures in Fiction

NEW NATIONAL HOLIDAY

Today, June 19, is Juneteenth.  It is now a federal holiday and yesterday, government workers had the day off.  It commemorates the date in 1865 when Texas got the word that American slaves were emancipated.  Many states already have Juneteenth celebrations, but this bill, passed by both houses of Congress and signed into law on Thursday by President Biden, reinforces this date as one to celebrate both freedom and African American culture.  Thus far, nine states have also made it an official state holiday.  Sadly, legislation to enact this in my state of Florida died. 

HISTORICAL NOVELS

A successful historical novel engages the reader in a good story.  Simultaneously, it provides a context for events of a time and place distant or just different from our own.  The focus can be on notable events depicted through fiction or the creation of a three-dimensional real individual about whom we know not much.  And because it’s fiction, timelines can be altered and love interests, probable or simply imagined, added.  A good author makes history come alive through her novels.  Here are two that I recently enjoyed, one that’s particularly fitting for this holiday.

BLACK LIFE IN RICHMOND & PHILADELPHIA

The Secrets of Mary Bowser by Lois Leveen

Most of the novels about slavery that I’ve read have been set on a plantation, detailing the hard lives of house slaves and the brutality and mistreatment of those who worked in the fields. Mary Bowser was a real individual, born into slavery in Richmond who, at about age 12, was bought by Bet Van Lew, the daughter of her owner.  Bet freed Mary and sent her to Philadelphia to live free and be educated.  Mary’s mother had also been freed, but her father was still enslaved and working as a blacksmith, so they stayed in Richmond.

The first half of this absorbing novel depicts the differences in urban life in Richmond, where most Blacks were slaves, and in Philadelphia with a population of free Blacks.  The rules for living in Richmond were very clear and strict; in Philadelphia, freedom came with its own nuanced restrictions.   

Bet Van Lew (smithsonianmag.com)

With Civil War looming, Mary made the amazing and courageous decision to leave Philadelphia and return to Richmond.  Once there, she collaborated with her benefactor, Bet Van Lew.  Pretending to be a slave, she got taken on as a maid in Jefferson Davis’ home.  During the war years, she collected and passed on information on the Confederate plans to the Union side.   

Much about Mary Bowser is not known, and there are no known photos of her. But Mary, Elizabeth Van Lew, and Thomas McNiven, another character, were all real people who spied on the Confederacy for the Union.  Leveen’s novel creates the environment in which Bowser lived and worked and gives us a fictional, yet wonderfully rich, portrait of Mary’s thoughts and actions.  Highly recommended!

For a differing perspective on this Mary, this article questions some of the claims made about her. 

BRIDGE BUILDING

The Engineer’s Wife by Tracey Enerson Wood

This novel is about Emily Warren Roebling’s role in the building of the Brooklyn Bridge.  I found it fascinating and compelling.  So much so, that I raced to finish it.  There is a lot of description of the various steps and processes involved in the bridge construction which might put off a few readers.   I gained a greater appreciation for what went into the beauty of this monumental structure.  Like many folks, I have walked across it! 

Walking the Brooklyn Bridge (JWF)
Emily Roebling (asce.org)

Emily was married to Washington Roebling, whose father John was a successful bridge builder and the one who drew up the original plans for Brooklyn.  Washington was a former military man who took over the chief engineer role after his father’s death.  Unfortunately, he suffered severe illness from working in the caissons (underwater tubes) and was an invalid for much of the construction work.  Over the next eleven years, It fell to Emily to be the messenger transmitting plans, ideas, and decisions between Wash and the working team at the bridge site. Later she took over supervising, calculating, and deciding on materials. 

Emily Roebling pushed the boundaries of what was acceptable for women in the late 19th century.  She was limited in her participation in the women’s suffrage effort by the all-consuming bridge project.  Wash’s illness had a negative impact on their life together, although they remained married. Appropriately, Emily was one of the first individuals to cross the completed bridge in 1883!

My mother was always interested in architecture.   She was especially fascinated by bridges.  In my teens, we made a family trip to see and drive across the famed Mackinac Bridge linking Michigan’s Lower and Upper Peninsulas.  The Big Mac, as it was called, is one of the longest suspension bridges in the Western Hemisphere.  It opened in 1957.  

(mightmac.org)

Another reason for my interest in this novel is the hint of a family connection to the Roeblings: if not a relative working on the Brooklyn Bridge, then on one of Roebling’s other structures.  My mother had two teeny tiny saws, the size of a bracelet charm, which belonged to a family member.  I don’t know that she ever figured out to whom they belonged, so the saws remain a puzzle.

LOCAL CUISINE

You know that life is nearly back to normal and the direst days of the pandemic behind us when the Chief Penguin and I return to Cortez Kitchen.  Before we moved here, it was our go-to place on our twice-yearly visits to Florida.  Once established here, we ate there once a week on average.  The other night we decided it was safe to return after an absence of more than a year. 

Located in the historic fishing village of Cortez, the restaurant is a semi-covered outdoor space on the water.  The menu includes local fish (mainly grouper), shrimp, seared tuna, steamed clams, and a burger for those who prefer meat.  It’s a funky kind of place whose clientele includes faithful regulars, the biker crowd, snowbirds, and folks like us.  We go not for the food, but for the vibe, the live music that’s occasionally very good, and the slightly rustic, relaxed ambience.  We went early this night, ordered our usual fare, and even connected with our favorite longtime waitress!