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Here are the tastingspoons players. I’m in the middle (Carolyn). Daughter Sara on the right, and daughter-in-law Karen on the left. I started the blog in 2007, as a way to share recipes with my family. I’m still doing 99% of the blogging and holding out hope that these two lovely and excellent cooks will participate. They both lead very busy lives, so we’ll see.

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BOOK READING (from Carolyn):

Music of Bees, Eileen Garvin. Absolutely charming book about a woman in midlife, lonely, who raises bees, also makes unlikely friends. Heart-warming and very interesting about beekeeping.

A Postcard from Paris, Alex Brown. Really cute story. Dual time line, 1940s and present day about renovating an old apartment in Paris, things discovered.

Time of the Child, Niall Williams. Oh such a good book. Very small village in Ireland, 1960s. A baby is left on the doorstep. The town all whispers and helps. I listened to an interview of the author, which made me like him and his books even more.

Sipsworth, Simon Van Booy. If you like animals you’ll swoon. An old woman who really wants to die finds a tiny mouse in her house and befriends it and finds a reason to live. Utterly charming book.

The Forger’s Spell, Edward Dolnick. True story. For seven years a no-account painter named Han van Meegeren managed to pass off his paintings as those of Johannes Vermeer.

If You Lived Here, You’d be Home by Now, Christopher Ingraham. Could hardly put it down – about a journalist who takes on a challenge to move to small town in Minnesota and write about it. He expects to hate it and the people and place, but he doesn’t. Absolutely wonderful true story.

The River We Remember, William Kent Kreuger. 1950s, Minnesota. A murder and the aftermath. Could hardly put it down. Kreuger has such a vivid imagination and writing style.

How the Lights Gets In, Joyce Maynard. An older woman returns to New Hampshire to help care for her brain-injured son. Siblings and family, lots of angst and resentments.

The Filling Station, Vanessa Miller. Every American should read this book. A novelized retelling of the Tulsa massacre in 1921. Absolutely riveting.

The Story She Left Behind, Patti Callahan Henry. Love this author. Based on a true story. A famous author simply vanishes, leaving her husband and daughter behind. She had invented a mystical language no one could translate. Present day, someone thinks he’s solved the riddle, contacts the family. Really interesting read.

The Girl from Berlin, Ronald Balson. Love anything about Tuscany. An elderly woman is being evicted from a villa there, with odd deed provenance. Two young folks go there to help unravel the mystery. Loved it.

The Island of the Colorblind, Oliver Sacks, M.D. Nonfiction. The dr is intrigued by a remote Pacific island where most of the inhabitants are colorblind. He also unravels a mystery on Guam of people born with a strange neurological problem. Medical mysteries unveiled. Very interesting.

The Bookbinder, Pip Williams. Post 1914 London. Two sisters work at a bookbindery. They’re told to not read the books. One does and one doesn’t. One has visions beyond her narrow world; the other does not. Eventually the one gets into Oxford. Lovely story.

The Paris Express, Emma Donoghue. 1895 on a train to Paris, a disaster happens. You’ll delve into the lives of many people who survived and died in the crash.

A Race to the Bottom of Crazy, Richard Grant. This is about Arizona. Author, wife and child move back to Arizona where they once lived. Part memoir, research, and reporting in a quest to understand what makes Arizona such a confounding and irresistible place.

The Scarlet Thread, Francine Rivers. A woman’s life turned upside down when she discovers the handcrafted quilt and journal of her ancestor Mary Kathryn McMurray, a young woman who was uprooted from her home only to endure harsh frontier conditions on the Oregon Trail.

A Place to Hide, Ronald Balson. 1939 Amsterdam, an ambassador has the ability to save the lives of many Jewish children. Heartwarming.

Homeseeking, Karissa Chen. Two young Chinese teens are deeply in love, but in China. Then their families are separated. Jump to current day and the two meet again in Los Angeles.

North River, Pete Hammill. He always writes such a good story. A doctor works diligently healing people from all walks of life. His wife and daughter left him years before. One day his 3-yr old grandson arrives on his doorstep.

A Very Typical Family, Sierra Godfrey. A very messed-up family. Three adult children are given a home in Santa Cruz, Calif, but only if the siblings meet up and live in the house together. A very untypical scenario but makes for lots of messes.

Three Days in June, Anne Tyler. The usual Anne Tyler grit. Family angst. This wasn’t one of my favorites, but it was entertaining and very short.

Saved, Benjamin Hall. Author is a veteran war reporter. Ukraine, 2022, he nearly loses his life to a Russian strike. Riveting story – he survives, barely.

Grey Wolf, Louise Penny. Another Inspector Gamache mystery in Quebec. She is such an incredible mystery writer.

All the Colors of the Dark, Chris Whitaker. A missing person mystery, a serial killer thriller, a love story, a unique twist on each. Could hardly put it down.

Orbital, Samantha Harvey. Winner of 2024 Booker Prize. I don’t usually like those, but I heard the author interviewed and she hooked me. This is not a normal book with a beginning, a story and an end. It’s several chapters of the day in the life of various astronauts at the ISS (Int’l Space Station). All fictional. She’s been praised by several real astronauts for “getting it” about space station everyday life.

The Blue Hour, Paula Hawkins. An island off Scotland. Inaccessible except when the tide is out. Weird goings on. An artist. A present day mystery too.

Iron Lake, William Kent Krueger. A judge is murdered and a boy is missing. Riveting mystery.

Tell the Wolves I’m Home, Carol Ricks Brunt. 1980s. A 14-yr old girl loses her beloved uncle. Yet a new friendship arises, someone she never knew about.

Four Treasures of the Sky, Jenny Zhang. 1880s, a young girl is kidnapped in China and brought to the United States. She survives with many hurdles in the path.

The Boy Who Fell out of the Sky, Ken Dornstein. Memoir, 1988. The author’s brother died in the PanAm flight that went down in Lockerbie, Scotland. A decade later he tries to solve “the riddle of his older brother’s life.”

Worse Care Scenario, T.J. Newman. Oh my. Interesting analysis of what could/might happen if a jet crashed into a nuclear plant. Un-put-downable.

Song of the Lark, Willa Cather. Complicated weave of a story about a young woman in about 1900, who has a gifted voice (singing) and about her journey to success, not without its ups and downs.

Crow Talk, Eileen Garvin. Charming story which takes place at a remote lake in Washington State, about a few people who inhabit it, the friendships made, but also revolving around the rescue of a baby crow.

The Story Collector, Evie Woods. Sweet story about some dark secrets from an area in Ireland, a bit magical, faerie life, but solving a mystery too.

A Sea of Unspoken Things, Adrienne Young. A woman investigates her twin brother’s mysterious death. She goes to a small town in California to figure it out, to figure HIM out.

The King’s Messenger, Susanna Kearsley. 1600s England, King James. About one of his trusted “messengers,” and his relationship with a young woman also of “the court.” Lots of intrigue.

In the Shadow of the Greenbrier, Emily Matchar. Interesting mystery in/around the area of the famous resort in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia.

Isola, Allegra Goodman. Hard to describe, survival story on an island in the 1600s.

Save the Date, Allison Raskin. Rom-com, witty, LOL funny. Clever.

The Sirens, Emilia Hart. Numerous time-lines, Australia. Mysteries abound, nightmares, abandoned baby, weird allergies.

Red Clay, Charles Fancher. LOVED this book. Mostly post-Civil War story about the lives of slaves in Alabama during Reconstruction.

Stars in an Italian Sky, Jill Santopolo. Dual time line, 1946 and recent time. Love stories and a mystery.

Battle Mountain, C.J. Box. Another one of Box’s riveting mysteries. Love his descriptions of the land.

Something Beautiful Happened, Yvette Corporon. A memoir of sorts in Greece, tiny island of Erikousa, where the locals hid Jews during WWII. All elusive stories told by the author’s grandmother.

The Jackal’s Mistress, Chris Bohjalian. 1860s Virginia, about a woman who saves the life of a Union soldier. Really good story.

Song of the Magpie, Louise Mayberry. Really interesting story about Australia back in the days when it was mostly a penal colony. Gritty strength of a woman trying to thrive with her farm.

The Boomerang, Robert Bailey. A thriller that will have you gripping the book. About a lot of secrets surrounding the president (fictional novel, remember) and his chief of staff and about cancer. A cure. Such a good story.

Care and Feeding, Laurie Woolever. Really interesting memoir of a woman driven to succeed in the restaurant business. She worked for Mario Batali and then Anthony Bourdain. Gritty stories.

Everything is Tuberculosis, John Green. Maybe not a book for everyone. A real deep dive into the deadly tuberculosis infection, its history. I heard the author interviewed and found the book very interesting.

The Book Lovers Library, Madeline Martin. Fascinating read about Boots’ drug stores’ lending library. And the people who worked in them.

The Arrivals, Meg Mitchell Moore. LOL funny, about a middle-aged couple whose children (and their various family members) return to the family home and the chaos that ensues.

My Life as a Silent Movie, Jesse Lee Kercheval. About grief. A big move to Paris, finding herself a new life with a new set of real blood family.

Escape, Carolyn Jessop. Another memoir about a woman really in bondage in Utah, Mormon plural marriage.

 

Tasting Spoons

My blog's namesake - small, old and some very dented engraved silver plated tea spoons that belonged to my mother-in-law, and I use them to taste my food as I'm cooking.

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Posted in Essays, on February 9th, 2009.

There are these things that go around the blog world now and then – called a meme. A blogger starts one and tags it to others. Usually it’s a list of questions and the person is supposed to answer them, then pass the torch on to other bloggers. Nobody’s ever sent me a meme, thank goodness, as I don’t know that I’m all that good at it, or that I even want to do them. But I was reading David Liebovitz’s list of 25+ random things. He didn’t stop at 25, but at 89. Whew. I’ll be lucky to get close to 25, I think. He talked about lots of different subjects, most of them NOT about food, but about him, the person, his character, his politics, his likes and dislikes. If you aren’t a follower of David Liebovitz, the list might not be as interesting as it was to me, having read his blog for a couple of years. He actually thinks he’s not a very interesting person, and wonders why people contact him, want to meet him, etc.

But, composing a list of random things? Well, maybe I can do this one. Here goes:

1. I don’t actually like to cook every meal, every day, day in and day out. My hubby fixes breakfast, although at the moment we’re on a new breakfast menu, so I really do all the work at other times of the week, he just kind of puts it on plates and does a minor amount of cooking to get it there. And we go out to eat about 1-2 times a week for lunch, and at least once a week for dinner.

2. I miss having a dog. But we’re not sure we want the commitment of having one again.

3. I don’t like organ meat. Except pâté.

4. I’m actually quite good with computers. But then I get confounded with some simple problem now and then. I have to sit quietly and think it through – using logical reasoning – to figure it out. Sometimes I’m not successful. I’ve never had any real computer training . . . just picked it up by doing and reading. I did all the computer training for the staff at the ad agency I co-owned, and did all the network administration.

5. I am an only child.

6. Basically I’m a very shy person. Walking into a room full of strangers, where I’m supposed to interact with them, is very intimidating. Unless I’ve been asked to speak to the group about something that I know or understand well. Isn’t that funny? I can do public speaking, no problem.

7. I detest filing, and my home office shows it. That’s why you’ve never seen a picture of it!

8. I’m really, really lucky – my husband enjoys grocery shopping and doing dishes!

9. I don’t really enjoy working out (I do it, but I’m saying it’s not fun), which is why I’m always battling calories in versus calories out. And losing the battle.

10. Once upon a time I lived in Washington D.C. and worked as a clerk/secretary at the Department of Agriculture. Very boring. I had the choice of two jobs – that one, or another that made more money, but the requirement was that I would have to cut the heads off of a whole lot of lab mice (with special mice-decapitating scissors) every day, pouring the blood into a vial, in prep for the mouse and its blood to be tested for various things. No way could I do that. Fortunately I moved about 8 months later.

11. I’m fed up with politicians. Period. I really don’t care which party they belong to, I think most of them are corrupt. Their definitions of honesty, morality and ethics differ from mine.

12. I rarely read the newspaper anymore. Too depressing, period. Nobody writes any good news anymore. Besides, I don’t really trust that the news is accurate, anyway. We get a newspaper every day (my husband reads it, and I do occasionally). On Sundays I read the travel section and Parade. Sometimes the arts and entertainment section. That’s it. I do, however, listen to the radio (news and news/talk) when I’m out driving, so I do get news and commentary that way.

13. I don’t eat much fish anymore unless it’s wild caught. I’m very concerned about what we, as consumers, are doing to the natural order of things because we crave and clamor for all kinds of fish, all year around, everywhere. Therefore, fish producers scramble to raise more and more, using questionable feeding practices and confined pens (here I’m talking about salmon and shellfish mostly). Same thing goes for beef, pork and chicken. I’m buying more and more organically grown meat, too.

14. I never have enough hours in the day to do the things I want to do.

15. I have a luv-affair with my Tivo. I record (not in any particular order) The Closer, Dog Whisperer, Little People, Big World, Barefoot Contessa, CBS’s Sunday Morning (a basic “good news” program), Oprah, Nova, Masterpiece Theater Classics, Steven Raichlen’s Primal Grill, among other things. Also Meerkat Manor, but it’s not “on” at the moment.

16. When I go to sleep at night I plug into my ipod, which has a bunch of (radio) podcasts on it, everything from book reviews, high tech talk shows, to a few food programs too. I usually fall asleep within 10-15 minutes and the ipod shuts off by itself when the program is finished. This morning at the gym I listened to a speech about Andrew Jackson (from a new book about him).

17. I don’t text message. But I do have a cell phone which gets used mostly when I’m away from home. We have a multi-level home, and we have 6 cordless phones in different places in the house. And we have 3 televisions (actually 4, but we never watch the one in the bedroom). I have two computers and my husband has one which he rarely uses.

18. I wish I could write a novel. But my mind just can’t wrap itself around creating a fictitious story.

19. Some years ago I started an investment club, and have learned a whole LOT of stuff as a result of that, but I’m very disenchanted with what’s going on in corporate American business these days (those companies that are public ones) and the things they hide. Makes me wonder whether there are any companies out there running ethical businesses. Business ethics seem to be a thing of the past. Makes me question whether we as individual investors should really entrust companies with our money. Their track records of late haven’t been very good.

20. Celebrities should never be revered as knowing more than any other average joe. Why do celebrities think they know more about politics or politicians than I do? And why do so many of us ordinary people give them credence – mostly we’re far too gullible or star-struck.

21. I have zero credit card debt. (I have credit cards -two of them – but they get paid off each month in full.) And I think what the credit card companies out there have done to encourage people, young and old, with good credit and bad, from all walks of life, to spend up to unrealistic credit limits, is just criminal. Equally criminal are the individuals who have run up the bills and now think they shouldn’t have to pay it back. We, the steady payers, end up paying for those lenders’ bad judgment and the individual greed. Same thing goes for shoplifters – it angers me so much that we, as shoppers, end up paying more for products because stores don’t catch or don’t prosecute shoplifters.

22. I don’t believe in global warming. I came to that conclusion after reading Michael Crichton’s book State of Fear. Although it’s a fictional story, the subject has to do with global warming and the statistics and tables in the book are convincing, and factual.

23. I don’t believe I have ever re-read a book. Except the Bible. And I own hundreds of books (that I’ve read) that collect dust, but I like to look at them. I now own a Kindle (an electronic book reader device) and am trying to buy all works of fiction on it. Cookbooks? Nope. I want to see them in an actual book.

24. When I went to college, I decided to get a degree in Business (a B.B.A – Bachelor’s in Business Administration)). It was mostly a male-dominated arena then, but I was honored to receive an award as Student of the Year in my graduating year from the School of Business. I still have the plaque for it. I went to a small college, California Western University (no longer in existence), in San Diego. Oh, and I graduated from college in 3 years. Most semesters I took 21 units. And I worked part time too.

25. My very first job out of college was in a Personnel Dept. (now they’re called Human Resources Depts.) of a San Diego department store chain, as a trainer. Mostly I gave 2-day seminars on how to be a salesperson, and how to use the (now) antiquated cash register.

26. I really enjoy classical music. I took piano lessons from age 7-14. Then from 14-16 I took lessons on a huge church pipe organ, taught by a very aesthetic music professor at a private boy’s school in Newport, Rhode Island, where my parents and I lived for that 2-year period. My favorite composers? Bach, Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Mahler. And for about 10 years my DH, Dave, and I sang in our 100+ voice church choir. He sings tenor and I sing 2nd alto. We are not singing in the choir at the moment, but want to return to it at some point.

27. I’m a practicing, believing Christian. And in case you didn’t know, prayer absolutely WORKS.

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  1. Sugar Duchess

    said on February 9th, 2009:

    I just stumbled onto your blog, and I’m so glad! I found myself nodding in agreement with just about everything you wrote here. It’s so fun to find another Christian and musician in the food blogosphere. (And your upside down cake looks delicious! I’ll have to give it a try.)

    Hi Sugar – am so glad you found my blog too! I don’t talk about my faith – hardly at all – on my blog. It’s a food blog, not a religious blog – but it’s nice to know there are other Christians out there too. Thank you for your kind words . . . I don’t get very many comments, so when I do, I’m doubly appreciative. . . Carolyn T

  2. jancd

    said on February 9th, 2009:

    I so enjoyed reading these 27 things about you, although I have followed your blog daily for a long time. I laughed at the cash register training thing and remembered that I took an office machine course in college and those machines are probably not in existence any longer. It’s fun to be 60 and see how life changes. I played the organ in church when I was in high school and in college and remembered I made $10 a Sunday for an Episcopal church and thought that was just grand. Keep blogging. You are a must read every morning.

    Jan, thank you SO much. Sometimes I wonder whether anybody really cares that I blog. I have so few people who ever leave a comment too. In looking at my “hit” statistics, over 4,000 people looked at my blog in the last month, but that’s really low, actually. Divide that out by 31 days and that’s only about 130 a day. So, thanks for commenting. . . Carolyn T

  3. Melynda

    said on February 11th, 2009:

    You are one of my “regulars”, I visit you almost daily. This was a fun read. It is always interesting to read about others and have an opportunity to get to know them better. Thanks.

    Thanks so much. Appreciate it that you stop by often and enjoyed my 25+ things. . . Carolyn T

  4. Dana

    said on February 11th, 2009:

    Mom- I have known you for 40 years and there were some things on your list I did not know about you. I love learning more about you . I LOVE YOU!!!!

    Wow, isn’t THAT interesting? It took me awhile to compile the list, I will say. Glad you enjoyed reading it! I’ve had several comments and emails from people (some friends) since I posted this. . . . Mom/Carolyn T

  5. Maggie Pohlman

    said on February 11th, 2009:

    Well, I too enjoyed your 25+ things…you KNOW I’m not into cooking but its fun to see how much YOU enjoy it!! I’ll just sign up to be your “sampler” person…
    You have really added alot of nice things to your blog since I was here before..
    don’t worry about your filing….don’t ya know “A cluttered desk is a sign of genius”!

    Sooo – from one genius to another…Love ya….Maggie

    Yes, I’ve heard that saying about the cluttered desk. In fact, I think I actually had a sign that sat on my desk at work. Nobody particularly appreciated it except me. Thanks for reading my list, Maggie. . . .Carolyn T

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