I must have a holiday/food/cooking
hangover. Made chocolate cookies this week, dipped in powdered sugar and covered
with a frosting of chocolate fudge. Also drank my last bottle of Goose Island
Bourbon County Stout, all by myself. 13.8%, thick as light syrup and hearty as
a buffalo burger.
Which reminds me, hipster
redevelopment is ruining even our white restaurant-bars. My favorite place for
ribs, buffalo burger and a Southwick's Ale, Big Hoss, was sold and now there's
only one kind of buffalo burger, the ale is gone and the décor went minimalist.
Luckily, my daughter sent us to the Roo Bar that's got a great burger, lots of
micros, is cheaper and close to Denver's Northside. Yeah, it's preppy, but that's
the way the barrio goes.
Yesterday, I made frijoles with
ham hocks, and pork green chile--delicioso, dicen. Then there was a buffalo
roast last week that was to die for. Chingaus, I'm hungry. Anyway, here some
Latino-book-food news:
Last week at Denver's
Tattered Cover Bookstore, La Bloga's Lydia Gil read from her new bilingual
children's book, Letters from Heaven / Cartas del Cielo.
About Letters, from Arte
Público Press:
“The protagonist, Celeste, moves through a grieving
process following the death of her beloved grandmother…Healing begins when the
girl receives posthumous letters from Grandma filled with love, advice, and
special memories. In spite of quarrels with school friends and a bully who
makes her life difficult, Celeste finds solace with the family’s network of
adult female friends who help her with recipes.”—School Library Journal
Lydis was also recently interviewed in a Denver Post article, "Endangered Cuban cuisine preserved by cooks in America." She talks about Cuban food and traditional recipes
that are in the article and her book. It's a "flip" book, meaning you
can read the English version straight through, or flip it over to read the
story Spanish. It's a sweet onee, somewhat magical in its realism. If you get a
chance, go hear one of her readings.
March 5-6,
2015, Reading Rock Stars, Rio Grande Valley, Tex.
March 19, 2015,
Thursday, time TBA. Presentation & Discussion at Palm
Beach State College, Boca Raton, Florida.
April 15, 2015,
Wednesday, 2pm. Panel on “Help Children Cope” at the Texas Library Association
Annual Conference, Austin Convention Center, Austin, Tex.
April 18, 2015, Saturday,
1-4pm. Día de los niños, día de los libros celebration, Houston Public Library,
Julia Ideson Buildilng, 500 McKinney, Houston, Tex.
April 27, 2015, Monday,
Las Comadres & Friends National Latino Book Club, April 2015 Selection,
Teleconference
In his latest video, Ask a Mexican
Gustavo Arellano takes his tongue out of his cheek, just a little, to slap at the
biggest pest plaguing our Latino communities--hipster redevelopment.
As Gustavo
says, "Though the issue of gentrification rears its happy head in various
manifestations, the most obvious front is food, battlefield for $17 burritos,
"street" tacos and the ever-popular mezcal. I mention most of this in
my latest ¡Ask a Mexican! video, which ridicules hipsters but nevertheless
urges tolerance for their columbusing ways…. HA!"
I've been
doing what I can to reeducate young Anglos moving in around me, but you can check
out Gustavo's whole video for his game plan. And he'll be running around Aztlán
(the Southwest, hipsters) plugging his Taco USA – How Mexican Food Conquered America book that I just love.
Es todo, hoy, 'cause I gotta go eat something,
RudyG, a.k.a. Chicano spec author Rudy Ch. Garcia, who just finished a time-travel story with a theme of--surprise!--hunger.
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