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Updated: Jun 22, 2020



When I left work back in January, right before my foot surgery, I only checked out two books from the library. At that time, I thought I wouldn’t be back for about eight weeks, and I didn’t want to have a lot of overdue books on my account. With two automatic book renewals, I knew I was good for about nine weeks as long as I didn’t check out a bestseller on which folks would be placing holds.



I chose my books carefully. The first was a novel called The Recipe Box by Viola Shipman. I was drawn to it because it’s set in Traverse City. It’s the story of a young woman who quits her fancy job in New York City, working for a famous chef who treats his employees badly, and returns home to her family’s orchard in TC. As the book description reads, “she spends a summer working on her family’s orchard cooking and baking alongside the women in her life—including her mother, Deana, and grandmother, Willo. One beloved, flour-flecked, ink-smeared recipe at a time, Sam begins to learn about and understand the women in her life, her family’s history, and her passion for food through their treasured recipe box.”


I am a librarian who does not know how to write a decent book review, so let me just say I enjoyed The Recipe Box. I loved that it is set in Northern Michigan and loved reading the backstories of all the strong women characters in the book. And it is a love story to boot. I wanted something light-hearted and easy to read while recovering, and it fit the bill nicely.


The other book I checked out was one I had the pleasure to order for my library, and had wanted to read for a while, but never took the time to do so. It turns out I had plenty of time to read Europe’s Top 100 Masterpieces: Art for the Traveler by Rick Steves & Gene Openshaw while rehabbing following surgery. Who knew eight weeks would turn into five months staying home?


Are you familiar with author Rick Steves? For over thirty years, Steves has run a travel company that takes thousands of folks on tours in Europe each year, as well as publishing great guide books for European travelers. Oh yes, and he has a travel show on PBS. He’s a very busy man who loves to share his love of Europe with others.


His travel books offer practical advice for traveling on your own or as supplemental information if you are traveling on one of his tours. Or, as they put it on their website, their travel guides “inspire, inform, and equip Americans to have European trips that are fun, affordable, and culturally broadening.” Our library has carried his books in our travel section for years and update with the new releases each year. We also have many of his PBS show videos in our non-fiction DVD collection.



I love to travel as well and have been very lucky to have taken several Rick Steves tours over the past twelve years. I have seen a lot of art on these tours. I always travel with one of my daughters, and we love to walk around museums, guide book in hand, and read what Rick has to say about the art. He makes some pretty funny comments about notable and or infamous pieces. His books also tell you the best times to hit a museum to avoid crowds, how to move around a museum in an efficient manner to make sure you see all the important pieces, and which ones not to bother with if your time is limited.


Which brings me back to Rick’s book about the top 100 masterpieces of Europe. I thought it would be fun to dig back through my pictures from trips past and see how many I’ve visited, sharing with you the ones I have seen. Of course, you aren’t always allowed to photograph the art in some museums, but let’s see which ones I do have. Here we go!


>Chapter One: Prehistory. Europe’s first artists were already hard at work 30,000 years ago carving tiny statues and painting on the walls of caves. The primeval art produced so many years ago has lived on and continues to influence art to this day.


Venuses Through History. I’ve seen four of the seven Venuses mentioned and have pictures of three of them.

At the Louvre Museum, in Paris: Venus de Milo, Mona Lisa. Do I really have to tell you who these two are? Well, maybe I should. Venus de Milo, the goddess of love, from the Greek island of Milos, was sculpted in 100 B.C. She was discovered in 1820 by a Greek farmer, but her arms have never been located.


Mona Lisa is, according to Rick Steves, our world's most famous painting. She sits alone behind bullet-proof glass, mobbed by six million tourists each year. Pictured above are but a few of them. Leonardo da Vinci started painting Mona in 1506. He tweaked the painting for years, and it was really only "finished" with da Vinci's death.


At the Uffizi Gallery, in Florence: The Birth of Venus. The goddess of love and beauty, she was painted by Sandro Botticelli in 1485. Pictured with my own personal Venus, daughter Janelle. 😊




>Chapter Two: Ancient Greece. Although these masterpieces were created in Athens thousands of years ago, today, some of them can now be found in other countries around the world. My first Rick Steves tour was to Greece in 2008. This was the trip that got me hooked on travel. My travel companion for this trip was daughter Laura.



This isn’t the best picture, but at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens I saw Artemision Bronze. It could be either Zeus or Poseidon. Experts cannot agree on which Greek god it is. Circa 460 BC.


The Parthenon, perched on top of the Acropolis in Athens. With my own lovely Greek goddess, Laura. 😊 Built in the fifth century BC using 100,000 tons of the finest white marble, it is dedicated to the goddess Athena, the patron of Athens.


Apollo Belvedere, now found in the Vatican Museums in Rome. He is the Greek god of the sun and of music and is considered by some the most perfect work of art in the world. Circa AD 130.


Winged Victory of Samothrace. This armless and headless statue of Nike now is found at the Louvre Museum, Paris. Circa 190 BC.


Laocoon. A man and his two sons wrestle with snakes. This statue was lost for a thousand years until it was unearthed in Rome in 1506. Now found in the Vatican Museums, Rome. Circa first century BC.


>Chapter Three: Ancient Rome. In a nutshell, classical Rome lasted for a thousand years, from 500 BC to AD 500.


Roman Colosseum. For nearly 2000 years, the Colosseum has been the enduring symbol of Rome—the Eternal City. Circa AD 80.


Roman Pantheon. The soaring roof of the Pantheon might be the most influential dome in art history. The sunroof in the top of the dome is the building’s only light source. Circa AD 120.


>Chapter Three: Medieval Era. These “Middle Ages” lasted from about 500 to 1500. The first half is often called the Dark Ages.


Book of Kells—Christ Enthroned. This picture of Christ is just one page of the 1,200-year-old gospels known as the Book of Kells. This is a photo I got from the internet as the rare artifact, created by scholarly Irish monks, cannot be photographed. Not to mention I couldn't hardly get near it due to all the tourists! Visited at the Trinity Old Library, Dublin.


I was able to take plenty of photos of the Long Room in Trinity Old Library. This room resembles the library used in the filming of the Harry Potter movies.


Florence Baptistry’s Hell. The Last Judgement mosaic dominates the walls of the Baptistry in Florence, Italy. Its octagonal dome is covered with golden mosaics of angels and Bible scenes. Circa 13th century.

I did not photograph the actual mosaic of Hell. Not something I cared to revisit later.


Bayeux Tapestry. This skinny, 70-yard-long strip of cloth is like a graphic novel in tapestry. Located at its own museum in Bayeux, France, this city is just a short drive from Normandy and the beaches of D-Day. Circa 1070.


Paris’ Notre-Dame Cathedral. I am very glad I was able to see this grand cathedral before the fire last spring that damaged a great deal of it. It was built between the years 1163 to 1345.



Sainte-Chapelle. There are more than 1,000 different scenes of Christianity depicted on the amazing stained-glass windows in this cathedral of glass in Paris. It was built in only six years, (1242-1248) while Notre-Dame, just a few steps away, took 200 years.


>Chapter Four: Renaissance. Renaissance means rebirth. It began in Italy with the likes of Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, but it spread across Europe for over a century.


Ghiberti’s Bronze Doors. Many believe that the contest to design bronze doors for the Florence Baptistry kicked off the Renaissance. The winner was Lorenzo Ghiberti. The mini-head on the left, popping out in the middle strip, is a self-portrait of Ghiberti. Circa 1425-1452.


The actual competition panels of the two finalists, Filippo Brunelleschi (on the left) and Ghiberti, are on display at the Bargello Museum in Florence. The year was 1401.


Brunelleschi’s Dome. Brunelleschi, the loser of the Baptistry door contest, went on to build the dome for the Florence Cathedral or duomo. Started in medieval times, the cathedral remained unfinished until the dome was added. It was based on the Pantheon’s dome and was the largest dome built in a thousand years. Circa 1420-1436.

My daughter, Janelle, took the picture of the dome from the top of the cathedral after climbing up 463 steps. I remained firmly on the ground. Here she is waiting in line to make the climb up.


Donatello’s David. Sculpted by Donatello in around 1440, this was the first freestanding male nude Europe had seen in a thousand years. On display in the Bargello Museum in Florence today, for years it stood in the courtyard of the Medici Palace. A young Michelangelo grew up admiring it…


Michelangelo’s David. And then Michelangelo created his own David. This one though is pure Renaissance: massive, heroic in size, and superhuman in strength and power. There’s Janelle, just hanging with David, at the Accademia Gallery in Florence. Circa 1504.


Leonardo’s Last Supper. This masterpiece decorates one entire end of a former monastery dining hall in the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, in Milan, Italy. Because of the painting technique Leonardo da Vinci used in 1498, the Last Supper is not in good condition. To protect it from humidity, only 30 visitors are allowed in every 15 minutes for exactly 15 minutes.


Funny story, I was so excited to see The Last Supper I forgot to take my sunglasses off before entering the room. So, I viewed one of the most famous, important paintings in the world in a diminished capacity. I kept thinking, wow, they really keep the room dark to protect the painting. I was very disheartened when I realized my mistake. Not one of my brightest moments.


No picture taking allowed, so the pictures I’m presenting are from signage for the exhibit.


Michelangelo’s Pieta. This is the statue that made Michelangelo famous at the young age of 24! It was delicately carved from Carrara marble, one of the hardest of stones. Sadly, it was damaged in 1972 by a madman with a hammer. Meant to be viewed close up to appreciate it’s beauty, it now sits behind bullet proof glass and is viewed from a distance, inside St. Peter's Basilica, Rome. Circa 1499.


Raphael’s School of Athens. Raphael was just 25-years-old when he began painting this fresco in the Papal apartments in the Vatican. With Plato and Aristotle in the center, Raphael imagines all the great scientists and philosophers from the ancient world gathered together in kind of a rock and roll heaven. Circa 1511.


Titian’s Venus of Urbino. Another Venus, this one by Titian of Venice who was possibly more famous than Michelangelo back in the day. When this painting was first displayed in 1736 at the Uffizi in Florence, it had to be secretly kept behind a more modest painting. Circa 1534.


>Chapter Five: Baroque Era. The Baroque style mean drama, bright colors, large canvases, lots of flesh, and pudgy winged babies; 17th and 18th century. I have not seen a lot of Baroque art. But I have visited it’s two greatest sights…



St. Peter’s Basilica. Located within Vatican City, Rome, this church was built on the site of St. Peter’s grave, starting in 1506. Believed to be the largest church in the world, it’s considered the epitome of Baroque. It’s a riot of marble, gold, stucco, mosaics, columns of stone, and pillars of light. Soaring above it all is Michelangelo’s 430-foot-tall dome.



Palace of Versailles. The palace was the official residence of French kings from 1682-1789. Located on the outskirts of Paris, Versailles is everything I always thought it would be and more! Covering over 2,000 acres, Versailles is made up of the main palace and magnificent gardens, several smaller palaces, a theater and the Queen’s hamlet. This private retreat is where Marie Antoinette would go to play “peasant” and relax with her friends. One could spend days and days exploring Versailles; you and the thousands of other tourists who swarm the palace.


>Chapter Six: 19th Century. There were several distinct art styles going on this century: Neoclassical, Romanticism and Impressionism. In addition, the Industrial Revolution and the invention of the camera strongly influenced art during this time. This chapter includes two magnificent landmarks in Paris.


Arc de Triomphe. Napoleon Bonaparte commissioned the Arc to commemorate his 1805 victory at the Battle of Austerlitz. It is the geographical center of Paris’s 12 grand boulevards that radiate out from here in the shape of a star.

While this isn’t a great photo, this was one of my favorite moments of my 2016 visit to Paris. It was the last night of our tour, we had just shared our final group meal together, and our tour guide, Virginie, took us for a short walk into a nearby park. When we had all gathered together, she asked us to turn around, and there was the Arc de Triomphe, all lit up and in its glory. It’s moments like this that make Rick Steves’ tours special: his talented guides making magic moments happen.


David’s Coronation of Napoleon. This is a huge piece of art for a small man. It measures 32 feet long and 20 feet high. The coronation took place at Notre-Dame Cathedral; the art hangs in the Louvre Museum in Paris. Circa 1807.


The Eiffel Tower. The Eiffel Tower was created for the Paris World’s Fair in 1889. It was so popular it just never came down. And today it’s the most visited monument in the world!


The day we were there in late April was very cold and windy; there were even snow flurries. We waited a long time to finally be able to ride the elevator to the top. By the time we got up there we were miserable. We just took our photos and headed back down. Sadly, we were too cold to linger and enjoy the view from the top for very long.


Going up!


And everywhere you go in the city, there it is. 😊




Monet’s Water Lilies. In his seventies, Monet began his water lily project; it would take him 12 years to finish, and he was slowly going blind as he finished. Painted on eight huge curved panels, the water lilies float in two pond-shaped rooms in the Orangerie Museum in Paris.

I have an admission to make: I did not fully appreciate Monet’s water lilies. I walked past these gigantic canvases much too fast to be honest. I didn’t see the beauty in them most others do. C'est dommage. Circa 1914-1926.



We were also lucky enough to travel to Giverny and see the home where Monet lived and painted for years. Here he created his own pond, stocked it with water lilies, built a Japanese bridge over it and surrounded it all with beautiful gardens. This place was gorgeous, and I love visiting it and seeing what inspired his famous water lilies.



Rodin’s Thinker. This larger-than-life statue is bronze and sits in the gardens of the Rodin Museum in Paris. Because Rodin created The Thinker using a mold, he was able to make others; there are 28 other authorized versions around the world. There's the Eiffel Tower again, peeking over the shoulder of the Thinker. Circa 1904.



Van Gogh’s Life in Paintings. I have seen several Van Gogh paintings including this self-portrait at the Orsay Museum in Paris. (Circa 1889.) I have also been to the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam, which is home to world's largest collection of his works. You are not allowed to take photos at his Amsterdam museum, so all I have to show you from there is this selfie of my daughter Laura and I in front of a copy of one of his sunflower paintings.



>Chapter Seven: 20th Century. Ah, modern art. Expressionism, Abstract, Cubism, Surrealism. I have seen a Picasso or two; I visited the Picasso Museum in Paris. But I have no pictures from that museum that are in the final chapter of this book. In fact, I have not seen any of the other works mentioned in the chapter either. I think it's probably time for me to up my modern art game.

And with that, we have come to the conclusion of my pictures of art masterpieces of Europe. I've been blessed to have been able to travel far and wide and to see all the wonderful art that I have seen. I’ve enjoyed sharing them with you and hope you enjoyed them as well. It’s always fun to relive a vacation and go on a trip down memory lane. I hope to get back to Europe one day, but for now, trips down memory lane will have to do.


Thank you to my daughters, Laura and Janelle, for being wonderful travel buddies. Additionally, I must also thank them for allowing me to use several of their photos for this post. They take great pictures, as well as get a kick out of watching me try to take a selfie.


Stay safe. Be well. Enjoy the hot weather. I’ll be enjoying my AC. 😊


P.S. One quick question. When Janelle and I were in Milan in 2015, we saw a man that I’m pretty sure is the former Tiger baseball player, Magglio Ordonez, having dinner with his family. Anyway, I nonchalantly took a picture of him while I was pretending to take a picture of Janelle. What do you think? Agree or disagree it’s Magglio?





  • Writer: Beth
    Beth
  • Jun 6, 2020
  • 6 min read

Updated: Sep 21, 2020


I’m hoping by now you’ve had a chance to check out our new database, Creativebug. As a reminder, Creativebug is a collection of thousands of online art and craft classes. These videos can teach you a new skill or help you to polish up old ones.


It’s all free, courtesy of the Clarkston Independence District Library for you, our patrons. To find Creativebug, go to the homepage of our website: cidlibrary.org. Click on the link to research, then on A-Z databases, and look for Creativebug in the C’s. Have your library card handy to sign in.


I’d like to share with you one of the videos and crafts I’ve been having fun with. It’s called Creative Doodling: Get Your Doodle on! (After logging in, go to Classes, click on Art+Design, then click on Lettering.) I have long been a doodler. I’ve doodled in the margins of college notebooks; I’ve doodled on handouts of meetings I’ve attended. Give me a sheet of paper, a pen or pencil, and a minute or two to spare, and I’ll start doodling.


For that reason, when I saw the Creative Doodling class, I knew it was going to be one of the first I would try. There are actually four parts to Creative Doodling, and I started with the first: Get Your Doodle On! There are three videos to this session, a total of about 25 minutes. It’s a quick introduction to something we probably all do, but can now take to the next level.


If you’d like to learn how to doodle creatively, I suggest you start by watching the video. “Get Your Doodle On” is taught by doodle expert, Pam Garrison. She does a great job explaining how to take your doodles, elevate them, and create your own pieces of art. Or, just doodle. No big deal.


According to Pam, doodling is slow and meditative, and that it moves on its own. It should be fun, as there are really no rules. You do want to get closed segments or lines though, so that you’ll have areas that can be colored in later. So, I guess that’s kind of a mini-rule? 😉

Experiment to figure out what tools you like best. Do you prefer to doodle on one sheet of paper or in a notebook? Pam prefers ball point pens, but do you? Maybe not. So many choices and options for coloring with. You’ll decide your favorite. Or use them all, changing from one doodle to the next.


I’m going to try and give you the basics of what I learned from Pam and her video class. The best part about doodling is you can do it with whatever materials you have around the house: paper, pens, and whatever you want to color with.


Here is Pam’s material list from her class:

· Ball point pens

· Micron pens

· Gel pens (her favorites: Sakura Gelly Roll)

· Scratch paper

· Sketch book (She uses a Strathmore mixed media)

· Markers (her favorites: Koi Brush Pens)


That said, all you really need to get started is a piece of blank white paper, a pen and something to color with such as crayons, markers or colored pencils. I found art paper in an old art pad, probably leftover from when my daughters were kids, and used that. I grabbed three different ball point pens and one gel pen to doodle with. Rummaging through my cabinets, I found crayons, colored pencils and some markers. I was now all set to begin creative doodling.


I decided to start by figuring out if I preferred one pen type over another of the four I chose to work with. I doodled one of my go-to circular doodles, making a few with each of my pens. In the test run picture below, #2 is the gel pen, the others all ball point pens with a variety of tip sizes. Turns out I liked #4 ball point best because of the thickness of the strokes. I liked the looks of the gel pen, but the #4 ball point just moved much smoother. (It was a Bic bold point pen, 1.6 mm size.) Personal preference; you’ll use whatever works for you, for whatever reason.






Pam mentioned sometimes she doodles using single lines, and sometimes she likes to retrace her lines and get a double line effect. I played around with that at the bottom of my sample sheet and liked the looks of a double doodle a lot, and went with it for my doodle art.


Do you have a go-to doodle? If so, that's a great doodle with which to start. In Pam’s demonstration, she made leaves. Make some big, make some small. Place them close together, spread them out. Some go straight up, some lean left or right. Make some with single lines, and then do double. Try different pens and papers if you have them.



When I was ready to move on, I decided to experiment with flower doodling. I have long doodled flowers such as these, and I always add the roots. Back to that garden theme of which I’m very fond.


When Pam was doodling butterflies in her class, she talked about “doodle freedom.” She says you don’t really have to emulate nature. As she put it, “these are my butterflies!” I tried to practice that principle with my flowers, but I’ll admit, I was kind of in a rut. I need to doodle more out of the box next time. Nonetheless, I tried not to stress as I doodled and did vary them a bit so they wouldn’t all look alike.


Another tip Pam offers is that if you don’t like your doodle, just keep doodling and turn it into something you do like. You can’t make a mistake, it’s experimental. But, if in the end, you still think it doesn’t work, then you simply don’t have to use that doodle again.


When I finished my page of flower doodles, I allowed them to sit for a short while before coloring. I don’t remember Pam saying to do that, but I know ink sometimes smears, and I didn’t want that to happen with my doodles.


I actually took a break to eat dinner, and then went back to color them in, which gave them plenty of time to set. I had been tempted to order a set of the Koi Brush Pens by Sakura that Pam likes from Amazon, but I resisted. (Sooooo hard for me to do! 😊) As I previously mentioned though, I found crayons, colored pencils and markers at my house, and so, I used them.

In the picture of my flower doodles, the three at the top were my experiments using the three different mediums. From left to right, I used colored pencils, markers, and crayons. It did not take me long to figure out my clear favorite: markers! They provided a brighter, more intense color. They also colored quicker, and I liked the control the sharp point gave me to get in corners and small spots. FYI, the markers I used were Crayola Take Note! They are fine tip, permanent markers.


After I finished my color experiment, I colored in all remaining flowers using the markers. I have to say I really enjoyed coloring them in and seeing them come alive. I didn’t get into the adult coloring phase of a few years past, so I wasn’t sure I was going to enjoy this step in the process. But I did! And, I believe, coloring with markers was the reason why.


After I colored them in, I took Pam’s suggestion and went back with the ball point pen and added a bit more detail to my flowers. I think that was a cool idea, giving the flowers extra dimension. I’m not one to toot my own horn, but I like how the flowers turned out. Quite frankly, I think doodling can make anyone look and feel like an artist!



Are you asking yourself, why should I waste my time doodling? I’m here to tell you I don’t think it’s a waste of time. First of all, I believe it can be a great stress reliever. It’s fun, you can do it with a minimum of readily available supplies, and it doesn’t have to take up a lot of your time. I think you could take a fifteen-minute doodle break and come away feeling relaxed and rejuvenated.


And then I started thinking of ways that doodling could be a very productive hobby. You could use your doodling skills to make bookmarks, for yourself or to give as gifts. You could make gift cards or invitations with doodles on them. Do you keep a journal? Jazz it up with doodling. And, I think this could be a great team craft to do with kids. You could doodle and they color. Or, visa versa. You could keep a notebook of doodle art or create some individual pieces you might actually want to frame and hang or just set casually about your house for a pop of color.


I’m sure you can come up with even more ways to use your new doodling talents. And if you do decide to give doodling a try, send me a picture of your art, and I’d be happy to share it with my readers in a future blog. Send to graib@cidlibrary.org.


I know we are no longer under orders to stay home and are able to venture out into the world again. I, personally, will be taking baby-steps when it comes to leaving my home for a while. And you will do what’s right for you. So, for a change, I won’t remind you to stay home, but I do want you to stay safe! 😊


(Will you continue to hunker down like the spotted turtle or wander like a sandhill crane? Both seen recently in my yard.)

Updated: May 31, 2020


I’m not going to lie, I dislike using a recipe that doesn’t include a picture of the dish. That’s just a pet peeve of mine. If I’m perusing a cookbook for a new recipe to try, if there is not picture to show me what the finished dish will look like, I usually skip it. I like to see what I’m going to make. That said, do as I say, not as I do. 😉


Because I have a great recipe for you to make, and I don’t have a picture to share along with it. Oh, no! It’s very good though, another family favorite, and I hope you’ll give it a try. I have baked this bread a lot over time, just not recently, which is why I have no picture to post.


Baking bread has become quite a thing as we’ve stayed at home these past few months. Toilet paper has not been the only item to disappear from our grocery store shelves recently, flour and yeast have as well. We have become a nation that bakes bread from scratch again. Hey, we’ve had a little extra time on our hands, so why not? Plus, it smells and tastes so good.


The recipe we have today is called Parmesan bread. I got this recipe off the back of a can of Pet Evaporated Milk many years ago. It makes two delicious loaves of bread; you can certainly freeze one after it’s baked to enjoy later. At our house, we usually serve Parmesan bread with an Italian meal such as spaghetti or lasagna. But it would work well with any meal actually, or even as a side with a nice, green salad.


Parmesan Bread

Ingredients

2 envelopes active dry yeast

½ cup lukewarm water

1 cup evaporated milk

¼ cup melted butter

¼ cup sugar

1 t. salt

1 T. Italian seasoning

1 egg, slightly beaten

½ cup Parmesan cheese

3 ¾ - 4 cups flour

2 T. melted butter

2 T. Parmesan Cheese


Instructions

Dissolve yeast in warm water in large bowl. Stir in evaporated milk, ¼ cup melted butter, sugar, salt, Italian seasoning, egg, ½ cup Parmesan cheese, and 2 cups flour. Stir in additional flour until dough leaves edges of bowl.


Turn onto floured surface. Knead 5 minutes, adding additional flour as necessary.

Place dough in large, buttered bowl. Cover and let rise in warm place 1 ½ hours or until doubled in size.


Divide in half and turn into 2 buttered 1 – quart casserole dishes. (They can be square or round in shape.) Cover and let rise ½ hour or until doubled in size again.


Brush tops with 2 T. melted butter; sprinkle with 2 T. Parmesan cheese. Bake at 350° for 25 – 30 minutes or until loaves sound hollow when tapped. Remove from dishes at once. Cool on wire racks.


I think you’ll find the recipe very easy to execute and, hopefully, one you’ll want to make time and again.


I’d like to share with you some pictures my daughter, Laura, has sent me over the past few months. She has definitely been bitten by the baking bread bug while quarantining in New York City. I think she also may be single-handedly responsible for any shortage of flour and yeast NYC might be experiencing. Just kidding! 😊


The above picture is of chocolate babka. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen two loaves of bread before that looked this pretty. And, Laura said it tasted delicious! She got it from a website called The Smitten Kitchen, who acknowledge that they borrowed the recipe from a cookbook called Jerusalem: a Cookbook by Yotam Ottolenghi. Good news, the Ottolenghi cookbook is available to read as an eBook via Overdrive. As always, it's free to read with your CIDL library card.


Also, I’ve included the link to The Smitten Kitchen if you’d like to give the babka a try:


Laura really likes to mix it up as you can see from the next group of pictures. From left to right: Naan, a traditional flat bread from India; an everything bagel; and sweet rolls, another old family favorite.




My daughter out on the west coast, Janelle, has also done some baking during the pandemic. She has issues with gluten though, and is learning to bake in a new way. How does chocolate chip banana bread sound? It sounds great to me. She told me that she uses half almond flour and half Bob’s Red Mill Gluten Free Baking Flour in her recipe.


Good luck with your bread baking. Do you know what is another good thing about baking bread? Kneading dough is a great stress reliever. Better get busy.





Updates on Previous Blog Posts

In my last post, I talked about the puzzle shortage and how my daughters and I are sharing our puzzles with each other when we’re done with them. One of my loyal blog readers, who also happens to be a retired library co-worker, kindly offered to give us one of her previously used puzzles to pass around. I took her up on her offer, and we met at our library for a properly social-distanced puzzle exchange. 😊 It was very good to see her! And, I’m grateful for her generous offer to share her puzzle with us.


That was also the first time I’ve been back to the library since just before my foot surgery back in January. It was kind of hard to wrap my brain around that; it was winter when I left, and now, after rehabbing my foot and one pandemic later, it’s May and springtime. Look at those beautiful white blossoms on the trees bordering the steps to the library! Oh, I know they smell wonderful, and I’m sad that we are missing them this spring. Just one of the things I miss about our library.


Do you remember the recycled tin can flower pots I blogged about at the beginning of May? I recently changed them out. They originally were planted with some cuttings I had rooting in water. My intention all along had been to plant the cuttings this summer into my own, normal flower pots that I always have on our back deck. That’s what I did this week: planted ten pots with lovely summer annuals, adding in the cuttings. And, in their place, I brought in my favorite marigolds to plant in my patriotic pots. Marigolds have always been among my favorite flowers, and I plant them every summer somewhere in my yard. I’m sure they’ll do well in my homemade pots.




As always, stay home and stay safe.


Bake some bread, do a puzzle, plant some flowers, enjoy the day.


Take time to smell the lilacs.





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