my cart my cart |

Penguin.com (usa)


(To view entire post, click on the "Read more" link under each post)

Eat Your Feelings, Heather Whaley

Thu, 09/24/2009

Some Thoughts on Hamburger Casserole, by Heather Whaley:

(View entire post here)

Next week in Brooklyn at the powerHouse Arena there will be a cook off featuring three recipes from my book!  One of these is Hamburger Casserole For When Nobody Loves You And Never Will, so I thought I would share with you the origins of this delicious food.

There are a only few family recipes passed on to me by my grandmother Mary Bucha.  She was a prolific cook, but a gourmand she was not.  Most of her recipes begin with the instruction "open a can of soup." Her cole slaw, in particular, is legendary. As a child I was terribly jealous of my older brother Jason for many reasons, but chief among them was that my grandma called it "Jason's Cole Slaw."  It wasn't his cole slaw.  It was everybody's cole slaw.  I loved it, too.

Recently my brother had Thanksgiving at our cousin Lisa's house, and when he promised to bring the cole slaw, Lisa reacted as though he were bringing a tin of caviar directly from the Caspian Sea. You would have thought it was a secret family recipe that had gone to the grave with Grandma, and that only Jason had had the foresight to write it down. Well, I'm here to spill the beans.  I had to give Jason the recipe for the precious cole slaw because he never bothered to ask Grandma for it.  It goes like this:

"Chop up a cabbage.  Either the big kind, or a Napa cabbage or Bok Choy. Any kind of cabbage.  Chop the whole thing.  Put it in a bowl and pour a bottle of Wishbone Italian Salad Dressing over it.  The whole bottle.  If you have some of that stuff they call ‘Salad Seasoning' you can sprinkle it on top."


in
Tue, 09/22/2009

Coming To Eat Your Feelings, by Heather Whaley:

(View entire post here)

I have a therapist. I have weekly meetings with this therapist and am fortunate that they are covered by my insurance. However, I don't generally have anything to talk about or that I need to talk about for 45 minutes every week. So my therapist and I talk about television - he watches True Blood, Mad Men  and Rachel Maddow, and, if I know you, we probably talk about you and your problems. There was one day, though, that I was actually talking to him about something that bothered me. Really bothered me. It was a betrayal that had to do with my family and the television show The View, and one that I am not likely to forget. I left his office that Wednesday at 1:00 in both a huff and in a serious depression.

His office is on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and I started walking down Central Park West, not sure where I was going, but I had two hours before I had to pick up my kids from school. I mark the buildings on CPW by the celebrities that live there. I walked past Jerry Seinfeld's place, past Marvin Hamlisch's building, past where Madonna used to live, and past where Sting lives now. Before I knew it, before I was even aware where I was going, I had entered the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle, gone down the escalator to Whole Foods and was standing in front of what they call the "Comfort Foods Bar."


in
Tue, 09/22/2009

Heather Whaley, author of Eat Your Feelings, our guest blogger for the week of 9/21:

(View entire post here)

Heather Whaley is our guest blogger during the week of September 21. If you have any questions for Heather Whaley, add a comment to any of her posts. Here is some more information about Eat Your Feelings: Recipes for Self-Loathing:

A riotous and all-wrong collection of real recipes from Heather Whaley- think Amy Sedaris meets a warped Martha Stewart

In this hilarious tongue-in-cheek collection, actress and playwright Heather Whaley reminds us that unlike fair weather friends and reliable sources of income, food will always be there for you- and for each of life's pitfalls she has provided the perfect recipe to cheer you up. Whether you've just been dumped, fired, found naked pictures of yourself online, or are forty-five and living with your parents, Eat Your Feelings will help fill any void.

With a dark comedic edge, this book collects the comfort foods necessary for any emotional rollercoaster: Sky-High Banana Cream Pie Because You're Dating a Married Guy, Lonely Christmas Pudding, Little Sister Earns More Than You Ham-and- Cheese Toastie, and many more. Illustrated with photos that add the perfect punch, this collection confounds life's little dramas with wit and brevity.

About Heather Whaley:


in

Syndicate content