Monday, May 22, 2023

Blueberry Oat Scone

 

Blueberry Oat Scone photo by ET Charles



Rustic Blueberry Oat Scone

1 cup flour

1 cup whole oats

1 Tablespoon baking powder

3 Tablespoons sugar

1/16 teaspoon lavender salt or less

1/4 cup unsalted butter (half a stick)

2 ounces cream cheese

1/3 cup heavy cream

2 eggs

1 cup frozen blueberries

          With a one-to-one-to-one ratio of flour, oats and blueberries this makes a hearty, irregularly shaped scone.

Directions: Combine dry ingredients in a mixing bowl. Stir and mix well. This makes a thick batter that is best mixed by hand. Cut in butter with a fork or pastry mixer. Cut in cream cheese also with a fork. Add the cream and mix well. Wash and dry each egg. Crack each egg separately into a small bowl and examine for flaws. Make a well in the batter; add the eggs. Mix the eggs in the well and then mix the eggs with the rest of the batter with a fork.

          Grease and flour a 10.5-inch pie pan. Place dough in pan. Dough will be thick and lumpy and will not reach all edges of the pie pan. Bake at 375 degrees Fahrenheit for 35 – 40 minutes. Oven temperatures vary so adjust baking time as necessary. A knife inserted into the baked scone should emerge clean. Let scone cool.

Icing

2 Tablespoon unsalted butter

2 - 3 Tablespoons fresh squeezed Meyer lemon juice or whatever you have

1/3 – 1/2 cup sifted powdered sugar

          In a small sauce pan melt butter. Add lemon juice. Stir. Remove from heat and sift in powdered sugar. This will make a translucent glaze. Pour glaze on scone and serve warm but not hot.

Serves 6 people.

Thanks to Wanda Dietz for the first gift of lavender salt.

 

Monday, April 17, 2023

Book Review and Interview: Alone

 

cover illustrated by Pascal Campion

Alone, Megan E. Freeman’s novel in verse, published by Aladdin an imprint of Simon & Schuster, is a suspenseful, harrowing mystery and survival story set in a Colorado town. Maddie, twelve years old, and George a faithful rottweiler, left alone in an abandoned town survive together in this compelling novel. Ms. Freeman has written a multi award winning mystery and survival novel. Alone is recommended for grades five through nine. However, I would suggest fifth grade through 100+ years. Pascal Campion illustrated the cover.

Two Question Interview with Megan E. Freeman

Hello Megan, Welcome.

ETC: What advice would you give those in K-12 school about writing?

MEF: Once you’ve written something that feels good and satisfying, ready for outside eyes, find a Trusted Reader and share it with them. It can’t be just anyone. You may have to secretly audition several people before you discover the one who qualifies for the formal title with the capital letters. Your Trusted Reader will be the person who, when they’ve read and responded to your work, leaves you feeling eager and excited to get back to your desk to write more. That’s it. That’s the only qualification. They may also be someone who can offer actionable feedback, like a critique partner or a fellow creator, or they may simply be someone who reads for pleasure, like your best friend or a family member. It doesn’t matter. The most important thing is how you feel once they’ve read it. And the crazy part is, they probably won’t even realize the gift they’ve given you. Through the mysterious alchemy created between your hard work and their generous heart, your Trusted Reader unknowingly partners with you to form a positive feedback loop that keeps you excited to write and share with them. Your Trusted Reader motivates you to write more, and they do it simply be being who they are.  

ETC: What did you find most helpful to your writing?

MEF: First, joining the Rocky Mountain chapter of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators was a game changer. The combination of craft resources and industry support is invaluable. I am a better writer because of SCBWI and I am a savvier business person. I encourage everyone to join and take advantage of as many of their resources as possible. 

Second, my motto for anyone who wants to be traditionally published is this: Show up. Show up to your desk, show up to conferences, show up to webinars, show up to critique groups, show up to online writing communities. Sign up for workshops that include professional critiques so you’ll have an imposed deadline you’ll have to meet. It doesn’t even matter if the agent or editor or writer likes your work; you will have done the writing, and that’s the most important part. I almost didn’t register for a workshop where I ended up meeting an editor who eventually introduced me to my agent. Imagine if I hadn’t shown up for that!

Here’s another example of what I’m talking about. At the end of 2019, I applied for a place in a juried writing workshop where an author I admired was going to be teaching. I hadn’t completed the required manuscript, but I had the early chapters to submit with my application. Acceptances wouldn’t be announced until a few weeks before the conference, so I had to go ahead and finish the manuscript assuming I would be accepted; there wouldn’t be time to do it later. As it turned out, I wasn’t accepted and the author cancelled the workshop due to COVID, but none of that mattered because I had a completed manuscript that I wouldn’t have written otherwise. It was a win-win, regardless of the outcome of my application.

Every single opportunity that has advanced my writing career or my mastery of craft happened because I showed up. 

ETC: Thank you so much for joining us.

Visit Megan E. Freeman

Visit Pascal Campion

Visit your local book store: The Wandering Jellyfish Bookshop

 

Monday, April 3, 2023

Spring Fling 2023 Petals and Surf

 Petals and Surf

Word Count: 146

by Elizabeth Thoms Charles

             Hamish Gopher pops his head out of the burrow, past winter’s dead leaves. He looks for predators: cats, hawks and foxes.               

            He ducks back in his hole. A bit later Hamish pops out; looks and dashes to the gate and into spring. He picks up his surf board and runs to the street.

            Ding. Ding. Hamish hops on the streetcar.

            The trolley descends past Fourth Street, past Third Street, past Second Street, past First Street and End of the Line at the beach! Hamish hops off.

            Pink petals swirl about as he scurries across the sand to the ocean.

            Paddle out; wait; catch the wave; surf into the beach.

            Repeat.

            Setting sun, time to return home. Catch the trolley.

            Ride past First Street, past Second Street, past Third Street, past Fourth Street and disembark. Scurry back home.

            Petals drift into the burrow. What a wonderful day.

 

 Gopher photo J. Charles. gif created with Canva

Thank you Kaitlyn Leann Sanchez and Ciara O'Neal for Spring Fling 2023.

Saturday, March 4, 2023

Shamrock Collage and Guacamole

 

Shamrock Collage by ET Charles




 

Guacamole with Anaheim and Two Mandarins

1 large avocado

1 Anaheim chile

2 Mandarins

Directions: Wash and dry all produce.

Roast chile on stove top. When skin of chile is blackened, remove chile to a cutting board to cool. Cover chile with a bowl. This helps the skin to loosen.

Meanwhile, peel and dice the two Mandarins, a small, sweet citrus fruit, and place in bowl.

Rinse the chile under cool water and remove the skin. Place on cutting board and remove seeds and veins to taste. Dice and add to Mandarins.

On a cutting board, slice the avocado in half. Wash the knife. Remove the pit. Score the fruit in each half vertically and horizontally. Using a spoon, scoop the fruit out of each half shell and add to the bowl with the tomato and the citrus. Smash avocado with a fork and mix the three ingredients together.

This version of guacamole has a bright citrus taste.

Serves 4 people.

Notes: Guacamole variation 7



Thursday, January 5, 2023

Watercress: Review and Interview with Andrea Wang

 


 

Happy New Year All.

Watercress is a dazzling brilliant combination of writing and illustration which has been awarded the rare combination of a Caldecott Medal and a Newbery Honor in 2022 and additional awards. Andrea Wang writes of her childhood in Ohio and Jason Chin’s watercolors illustrate the boredom and embarrassment of harvesting roadside greens and household furniture. Eventually the characters and readers learn why Ms. Wang’s parents left China. Holiday House published Watercress.

While the story is specific to Ms. Wang’s childhood, it does contain universal themes such as childhood embarrassment because of one’s family. It evokes memories and answers to the childhood admonishments to: eat your vegetables; finish your dinner; there are starving children in China or elsewhere.

Two Question Interview with Andrea Wang

Hello Andrea. Welcome.

ETC: What advice would you give to writers under the age of 12?

AW: Read. Read as many books as you can in the category and genre that you want to write, but try to also read different types of books. Maybe try some poetry, or a picture book (you're never too old for a picture book), or a graphic novel. Reading across categories and genres will help build your vocabulary and show you different ways that stories can be structured. 

 ETC: What was some of the best advice that you received early in your writing career?

 AW: This is a tough question because I took a lot of writing classes and received a lot of great advice. One tip that I've found helpful is to let the story be what it wants to be. That might sound a little wacky, but basically I take it to mean that I shouldn't limit the story to what I think it should be. Maybe I start out with the intention to write a picture book, but I get really intrigued by the theme and end up writing several thousand words. That's okay -- maybe the story is really a chapter book or middle grade novel. Or maybe I think I'm better at writing prose, but what comes out is free verse. That's okay, too. I think the important thing is to let your creative mind explore and have fun. Afterward, you can figure out what works best for the story and reshape it during the revision process.

 Happy New Year! Thanks again for hosting me on your blog. 

 ETC: Thank you so much Andrea. It has been an honor.

 

Visit your local bookshop: The Wandering Jellyfish Bookshop

Visit Andrea Wang

Learn more about Jason Chin

Online Exhibition: Asians Everyday  at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art:

Visit: Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art

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