Monthly Archives

October 2012

Books

Brooklyn Bugle Book Club: “Culinary Intelligence” by Peter Kaminsky

October 5, 2012

Image via Amazon.com

“Culinary Intelligence: The Art of Eating Healthy (and Really Well),” by the food writer Peter Kaminsky, provides a lively and light hearted tour through a serious subject. We live in a society of plenty, where processed foods filled with fat, sugar, and salt are readily available. But they make us fat. According to the New York Times, two-thirds of American adults, and one-third of American children are overweight or obese. In his late 50s, Kaminsky came to a medical crossroads: his weight was high enough to put him at risk of diabetes. As he puts it: “How does a guy who loves food and wine–in fact, makes his living writing about them–gain control of what he puts in his body?”

In this book, Kaminsky provides the answer, along with recipes, and a memoir of some good meals. The key is what he calls Culinary Intelligence, or CI. The principle is simple: “Buy the best ingredients you can afford. Cook them well.” How do you do this? Kaminsky devotes the rest of the book to recommendations for ways to keep eating pleasurable, joyful, and healthy.

The first corollary is something Kaminsky calls Flavor per Calorie. Taste is extremely important to the enjoyment of food, of course, not to mention safety – bad taste can be a warning that a food is spoiled or dangerous. Kaminsky reports that taste does not end in the mouth. Recent research has shown that we also have taste receptors in our stomachs. And if those taste receptors are satisfied, because what you have eaten tastes good, then you will quickly feel full. Or, as Kaminsky puts it:

It stand to reason, then, that if you get more taste bang for the bite, then you won’t need so many bites. If your food is indifferently prepared from ingredients that lack flavor, the only alternative is to pile on the high-calorie combo of sugar, salt, and fat.

Corollary two: Avoid processed food. Think about what is in the food you’re buying. Check out the labels, and avoid anything with too many multi-syllabic ingredients. Corollary three: Buy local if possible, because food that has traveled may have been grown to withstand the rigors of travel, rather than for taste (think of the supermarket strawberries you get in March, for example). And, corollary four: Cook your food in a way that adds flavor – there’s a small section on spices, and a much longer one on caramelization.

There’s not too much science in this book. (If you want to know the difference between caramel and caramelization you’ll have to go elsewhere.) Kaminsky refers, several times, to Michael Pollan’s “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” which everyone interested in food and food production should read. Brownstone Brooklyn readers will enjoy Kaminsky’s mentions of local shops. Because Kaminsky also focuses on what to do day to day, when to bend the general rules, and how to cope with restaurants, this spritely book outlines a philosophy that anyone can follow. Do you agree? Let us know in the comments.

I also blog about metrics here. Have a book you want me to know about? Email me at asbowie@gmail.com

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Events, Food

Carroll Gardens Greenmarket Hosts Apple Pie Bake Off On Sunday, October 21

October 4, 2012

Fall is in the air at Carroll Gardens Greenmarket. It’s time for the annual Apple Pie Bake Off, on Sunday October 21 at 11 a.m. at the corner of Carroll and Smith Streets. The winning pie-maker will receive a bag of Greenmarket groceries.

Greenmarket Manager Kelly Faust tells Cobble Heights Blog: “If anyone would like to either be on the panel of judges or participate by bringing a pie, please let me know. I would like to invite any and all of you to do so. I’m hoping to have a full table of pies to taste. Please let me know soon if you’d like to judge or bake!” Email Faust here.

For more than 30 years, GrowNYC’s Greenmarket staff, volunteers and farmers have worked to promote regional agriculture, preserve farmland, and to ensure a continuing supply of fresh, local produce for all New Yorkers. More info here.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7871

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Brooklyn Heights

BBP’s Pier 5 Showcased in October 6 ‘open-housenewyork Weekend’

October 4, 2012

To celebrate New York’s architecture & design, the 10th-annual “openhousenewyork Weekend” will allow access to hundreds of sites talks, tours, performances and family activities in neighborhoods throughout the five boroughs. Included in the event is a tour of Brooklyn Bridge Park’s Pier 5, on Saturday October 6, from 2-3 p.m.

Slated for (alleged) completion this fall, Pier 5 comprises three outdoor multi-purpose fields for soccer and other team sports. A “Picnic Peninsula” accessible from the main park promenade on the Pier 5 landslide will include banquet-length picnic tables for barbecues, a concession and children’s play equipment; while Pier 5′s perimeter will provide a waterfront esplanade for strollers, river viewers, sports spectators and fishing(!) Reservations for “openhousenewyork Weekend” are required. More info is here.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48863

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Celebrity Residents

Lena Dunham Could Probably Soon Buy Mansion House, As Book Deal Reaps $3.6M

October 4, 2012

Poor, poor misguided Uley… On the “Entertainment Weekly” website, he comments, “Is Lena Dunham honestly that big of a draw? To the general public, she’s a no name. I know of her, but I’m not interested in reading a book by her. Seems like publishers might be jumping the gun on this one.” Those literary types, however, obviously recognize the Brooklyn Heights’ resident as “an influential creative voice for young women.”

And so… the heat is on. BHB reported Wednesday that our neighbor was peddling a book deal for a collection of essays titled “Not That Kind of Girl: Advice by Lena Dunham,” with an auction for publishers starting at a robust $1 million. A day later, you can strike that figure, as the Emmy-nominated actor, director, executive producer, writer and creator of HBO’s “Girls” has already fostered bids as high as $3.6 million.

According to Deadline New York, Dunham’s lit agent Kim Witherspoon from InkWell Management is working the deal, which will soon be finalized. The numbers for the book of advice & anecdotes from the 26-year-old entrepreneur will likely head even higher as

Perhaps she was playing it a little safe when she purchased a one-bedroom, 800-square-foot apartment at Mansion House back in June. (Photo: Curbed)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48837

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Events, Kids

BBP’s Harvest Festival: Saturday, October 20

October 3, 2012

Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy in partnership with Brooklyn Bridge Park, celebrates autumn with the Harvest Festival on Pier 6, Saturday, October 20 beginning at 10:30 a.m. Join the festivities, including a free pumpkin patch, face painting, storytelling and arts & crafts for the family. Birdie from GreeNYC will also make a special appearance. Musical performances include Bilingual Birdies at 10:30 and The Pop Ups at noon.

Inventgenuity Workshops brings its Mobile Studio to Harvest Festival for kids to meet some of the “masters of invention” as they present their latest projects. Private Picassos will lead leaf rubbings and watercolor resists for budding artists of all ages. In addition, co-sponsor SUNY Downstate at LICH will offer health screenings and pediatric info, with the opportunity to meet UHB-LICH physicians. Event co-sponsor Brownstone Pediatric Dentistry will host an activity table. Other Harvest Festival partners include The Transit Museum, Half Pint Citizens, The Moxie Spot and Sweet’N Low.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48809

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Brooklyn Heights, Music

Dutch & New York Artists Collaborate For NYFA Int’l Composers Exchange

October 3, 2012

The New York Foundation for the Arts’ (NYFA) International Composers Exchange is offering composers from different nations artist-in-residency opportunities in New York to advance their careers through seminars, creative exchanges and performances. On Saturday, October 13 at 8 p.m., five Dutch and New York acts will collaborate in concert at Our Lady of Lebanon Cathedral, 113 Remsen Street in Brooklyn Heights. Tickets are $15, or $12 for members and students.

The performance concludes the first International Composers Exchange, in which the five Netherlands artists worked in residence with some of NYC’s “most dynamic young ensembles and artistic institutions. The concert presents the result of this international collaborative work, with a great variety of styles and media, ranging from jazz to chamber music to video installation,” according to the organization.

The October 13 ensemble will showcase the world premiere of a new work by Michael Edward Edgerton, a leading specialist of extended vocal techniques, as well as a piece by composer and NYFA scholar Eve Beglarian, who will soon be heading to the Netherlands as part of the second round of the International Composers Exchange.

Featured artists include: Sander Breure, Witte van Hulzen, Mise-En Ensemble (dir. Moon-Young Ha), Jeremiah Runnels, Ekmeles Ensemble (dir. Jeffrey Gavett), Thanasis Deligiannis, Eve Beglarian, Michael Edward Edgerton and Yedo Gibson. See their bios here.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48804

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Sports

Open Thread Wednesday, October 3, 2012

October 3, 2012

It was on this day in 1951 that the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World” occurred, when the New York Giants’ Bobby Thomson hit a game-winning home run in the bottom of the ninth off Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca, to win the National League pennant after being down 14 games. Mind you, four years later, the Dodgers would win the World Series against the Yankees, gathering afterward to celebrate in the lobby of Brooklyn Heights’ Hotel Bossert.

So on this BHB Open Thread Wednesday for October 4, 2012, what’s happening in your world? Comment away! (Photo: Chuck Taylor)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48601

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Brooklyn Heights, Events

It is a Truth Universally Acknowledged that Jane Austen is the Toast of Brooklyn this Week

October 3, 2012

We have previously noted Theater 2020′s partially staged reading, followed by a reception with the cast, of Lynn Marie Macy’s work in progress, Lady Susan or the Captive Heart, a Jane Austen Bodice Ripper, to be presented this Thursday evening, October 4 at St.Charles Borromeo Church, 21 Sidney Place, starting at 7:00 p.m. (suggested donation $25; reservations here or call 718-624-3614). As it turns out, this fits neatly into a program of Austen related events that are free and open to the public in connection with the annual meeting of The Jane Austen Society of North America, being held at the Marriott Brooklyn Bridge, 333 Adams Street.

On Thursday afternoon from 1:00 to 2:00 at the Marriott there will be a lecture, “In Search of the Real Jane Austen,” by Austen expert Annette LeClair. Admission is free, but please e-mail jasna2012A@gmail.com with your name and the number in your party, so they can know how many to expect.

This coming Sunday, October 7, from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m., also at the Marriott,

[d]ozens of authors will be present to sign a variety of books (available for purchase); the roster includes cocktail historian David Wondrich, and Austen-inspired novelists Syrie James and Linda Berdoll.

Free admission, and no rsvp necessary.

Image: Jane Austen Literary Festival.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48786

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Music

Middlebury College Bobolinks Perform At Our Lady of Lebanon Monday, October 15

October 2, 2012

Middlebury College’s oldest coed a cappella group Bobolinks will perform Monday October 15 at 7 p.m. at Our Lady of Lebanon Cathedral, 113 Remsen Street (Henry Street entrance). The concert is free, with donations appreciated. Bobolinks’ repertoire ranges “from rock to hip-hop to bizarre British neo-pop & everything in between.” The group was selected to appear on the “Voices Only” CD compilation featuring the best college a cappella music of 2011. The group is now touring to raise money to produce its own all-Bobolinks CD.

Student music director Catherine Charnov, a 2013 Middlebury graduate, is a Brooklyn Heights resident who graduated from St. Ann’s School in 2009. She also performed in the Brooklyn Youth Chorus Academy, where she trained for 11 years.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48755

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Celebrity Residents

Heights Resident & HBO’s ‘Girls’ Guru Lena Dunham Shops Million-Bucks Book Deal

October 2, 2012

Now you can add “author” to the lofty list of accomplishments from Brooklyn Heights resident and Emmy-nominated actor, director, executive producer, writer and creator of HBO’s “Girls” Lena Dunham. The critic’s darling is shopping a book proposal, according to Slate. “Not That Kind of Girl: Advice by Lena Dunham” is currently in proposal form, with a $1 million price tag attached to the publishing auction.

Dunham has previously published “First Love” in The New Yorker and a short essay in “Rookie,” which Slate calls a candid look at love, sex and youth. She also has more than 354,000 followers on her Twitter feed, posting commentary about her life and loves. “Advice,” according to the proposal, offers a collection of essays about Dunham losing her virginity, trying to eat well (detailed diet journal included), obsessing about death, along with tips about staying focused on work, how not to ruin a potential relationship, and so on. More at Slate here.

“Girls” launches its second season on HBO in January 2013.

This afternoon Dunham Tweeted this photo:


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/48742

From the Web