by David Cohen
The Passionate Vegetable By Suzanne Landry • Health Inspired Publishing • $29.95
Vegetables are often relegated to the side of meat, fish or poultry, but chef and educator, Suzanne Landry, takes these garden gems and turns them into delicious and flavorable entrees unto themselves. The Passionate Vegetable is full of recipes that fit any type of lifestyle diet, from vegan and vegetarian, to meat-eaters.
For over 30 years Suzanne has educated people on how eating a variety of vegetables is the best path to optimal health. Focusing on the connection between food and healing, Suzanne has created a trove of fresh enticing dishes, which not only make the most of seasonal produce from your local farmers markets or community garden, but enables even the unskilled home cook to create tasty, healthy, and well-balanced meals. Always a crowd pleased, Suzanne is happy to shares her favorite recipe with PINK!
| | California Fiesta Quinoa Salad (Serves 6) 1 cup quinoa, uncooked 2 cups water ¼ tsp sea salt ¾ cup chopped medium tomato ¼ cup chopped celery ½ cup seeded and chopped cucumber ½ cup chopped scallions ½ cup of cleaned and chopped fresh cilantro ½ cup fresh or frozen blanched corn ½ cup of rinsed and drained cooked black beans ¼ cup of pitted and diced black olives. Kalamata olives are the best!
| Dressing:1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil •1 tsp of hot red pepper flakes or more to taste) 2 Tbs red wine vinegar or ¼ cup lemon juice • ½ tsp sea salt - Boil 2 cups water and add salt. Thoroughly rinse quinoa in strainer. Place in boiling water, cover, and reduce heat to medium-low. Cook for 20 minutes or until grain is fluffed and water is absorbed. Remove from pot into a large bowl and allow to cool before adding vegetables.
- Slice tomatoes into ½-inch slabs and remove most of the seeds. Then cut tomatoes into sticks and crosswise into ½-inch cubes. This will give you evenly sized tomato pieces that won’t get mushy if the salad isn’t eaten right away.
- Cut celery by slicing down the rib in the center of the stalk. If the stalk is large you might want to cut it in thirds. Then cut crosswise into ½-inch pieces.
- Slice cucumber lengthwise into 4 strips and then remove center seeds. Chop these strips into ½-inch pieces. Remove root ends of scallions and cross chop into ¼-inch pieces. Toss cooled quinoa with all remaining vegetables, beans, and olives.
- Mix vinegar, oil, hot pepper flakes, and salt together. Toss lightly with salad. Refrigerate for an hour before serving. This will last 5 days in the refrigerator.
Serving Suggestions: My favorite way of enjoying this as a leftover is in scrambled eggs! Just before the eggs set hard, I add ¼ cup or so of this salad and give it a stir. Very yummy breakfast!
Elvis in concert in Memphis, July 1956. A flashbulb went off in the audience just as Wertheimer took the photo. Photos: 2013 Alfred Wertheimer. Courtesy TASCHEN
The King of Rock'n'Roll is born The making of Elvis, behind the scenes By Alfred Wertheimer • TASCHEN• Spring 2013
“Elvis who?” was photographer Alfred Wertheimer’s response when, in early 1956, an RCA Victor publicist asked him to shoot an up-and-coming crooner from Memphis. Little did Wertheimer know that this would be the job of a lifetime. At just 21 years old, Elvis Presley was about to become an international legend, and trailing him like a shadow, Wertheimer was given unlimited access to get up close and personal. From the gyrating on stage to seducing young women in dark hallways, Elvis allowed the photographer to record his every move. Wertheimer took nearly 3,000 extraordinary photographs of intimacy and unparalleled in its scope, Wertheimer’s Elvis project immortalized a young man in the very process of making history. (Just a month after he shot Elvis recording the “Don’t Be Cruel”/“Hound Dog” record, it became the first ever song to top all three Billboard charts.) This collector’s edition of 1,706 numbered and signed copies by Wertheimer, highlight his most remarkable shots from 1956, as well as a selection of his 1958 pictures of the star being shipped off to an Army base in Germany. Nearly half of the photographs in this book have never been published before. Each chapter is illustrated with an original poster created especially for this book by Hatch Show Print, one of the oldest letterpress print shops in America which helped define the imagery of country music in the 1940’s and Rock and Roll (including many early Elvis posters) in the ’50’s. Fans of photojournalism, portraiture, and, of course, the King himself will covet this collector’s volume.
The Killer Wore Leather By Laura Antoniou • Cleis Press & Viva Editions • March 2013 Cormac “Mack” Steel, the Global Mr. Leather and Fetish, has been murdered in Manhattan’s Grand Sterling Hotel during the huge annual BDSM/fetish weekend ball. He was found on the floor of his suite wearing only a pair of frilly, yellow panties. Detective Rebecca Feldblum, a murder specialist who worked on number of high-profile cases, had never seen a case like this one. She must track down the murderer who could be any one of the thousands in attendance. In the world of leather and latex, masters and slaves, pups and trainers, Detective Feldblum has only until the end of the weekend to find out who killed Mack Steel. Before she knows it, she gets herself tied and bound up in the kinky underworld, a world she never explored. With wit and insight Antoniou leads you into a deliciously tongue-in-cheek murder mystery overflowing with the intriguing, and often hilarious personalities of BDSM and kink. Readers will only become more engrossed in this world of roleplay as their eagerness to find out who killed Mr. Leather grows. $16.95, trade paperback original • 416 pages • ISBN: 978-1-57344-930-4
Q&A with AARON HARTZLER, author of Rapture Practice
by Lisa Moraleda, Associate Director of Publicity at Little Brown Books for Young Readers
Growing up gay in a fundamentalist evangelical family, Aaron Hartzler was taught from an early age that at any moment the Rapture could happen...that Jesus might come down and scoop him and his family up to heaven. As a kid, Aaron was thrilled by this idea. But at fifteen, the Rapture becomes a race against the clock, as Aaron fights to experience a life that is strictly forbidden by his parents. Deciding to break their biggest rule, Aaron purchases a movie ticket, which eventually leads him down a path of rebellion. From watching television to listening to rock music, making out and drinking alcohol, Aaron’s thoughts and actions carry him further and further away from fundamentalist Christian teachings and from his own family. In RAPTURE PRACTICE Aaron Hartzler recalls his teenage journey to find the person he is without losing the family that loves him. Ultimately this story is about finding your own truth while accepting your family for who they are, RAPTURE PRACTICE will speak to anyone who has ever questioned religion, sexuality, or one’s path in life.
PINK: What is your message for this book? Aaron Hartzler: I think that growing up means learning to really like who you are—not try to be something somebody else wants you to be. If you’re a teenager who feels like your decisions are being made for you, or in spite of you: hang on. You do have a voice, and what you have to say matters. PINK: Who is this book is intended for? A: This book is first and foremost for teenagers in religious schools—especially those who might be questioning their faith, or their sexuality, or both. It’s also for teenagers who feel that their decisions are being made for them. Beyond that, I think the book will appeal to anyone who has ever had questions about religion, sexuality, or felt a conflict between the path they feel called to in life, versus the path someone else wants them to follow. PINK: When did you start writing this book? A: After grad school I move to L.A. to be an actor. This book grew out of my one-man shows and standup. Some of the writing I did for the stage wound up in this book, so I guess you could say I’ve been writing this off and on for thirteen years, though I didn’t start trying to write it as a book until about seven years ago. PINK: What do your parents think about the book? A: I don’t know. I’ve told them about it, but they haven’t asked to read it as of yet, and we haven’t discussed it. I really wanted this book to be a love note to my childhood. I am unflinchingly honest in the writing, but I love them very much. I’ve said since the day I started writing it that I want this book to be a parade, not a baseball bat. PINK: What are you doing with your life today? A: My boyfriend and I live in Palm Springs, about an hour and a half away from Los Angeles, and we own two rescue dogs. I mainly write books and screenplays—but I still act from time to time. I’m up for a part in a movie this summer. I have so many creative opportunities now, and all of them are a direct result of telling my story as authentic and honest as I did. I have discovered that if I don’t like something about my life, I have the power to change it, and when I remember to do that, things get better and better. PINK: Do you ever go back home to Kansas City? A: I have a tight-knit group of friends from high school that I still see every year or two in Kansas City. It’s always fun to be back and reminisce. Kansas City was a great place to grow up. It’s a beautiful city full of tree-lined boulevards and beautiful neighborhoods with fountains and plazas developed by a man named J.C. Nichols. He also helped develop Beverly Hills. There’s an excellent Equity theatre (Kansas City Rep), and lots of great support for the arts. PINK: Do you affiliate yourself with any religion? A: I don’t affiliate myself with any religious group. I grew up with all of the pat answers to the world’s unanswerable questions: Why are we here? Is there a God? What happens when we die? The older I’ve gotten, the less I know for sure, and the happier I’ve become. I’m just one of those people who is okay with not knowing. There are so many beautiful colors on the spectrum between black and white, and for me, the “mysteries” that organized religion claim to represent—virgin birth, atonement, resurrection—seem to pale in comparison to the true mystery of our natural universe. I love the idea of God. There’s just unfortunately a lot of baggage that comes with believing in God in the Christian fundamentalist sense. PINK: If you could give your 15-year-old self one piece of advice, what would it be? A: Be easy on yourself. You have all of the answers inside you. It’s okay to follow your inner GPS. It will be hard, but you are stronger than you know. By finding your voice and telling your story, you’ll be able to help other people, which will make you feel better than anything else ever will.
Aaron Hartzler • Rapture Practic • To be Released April, 2013 • www.aaronhartzler.com
Gaga Feminism: Sex, Gender, and the End of Normal by J. Jack Halberstam. At a time when the world is changing rapidly, from economic downturns to technological advances, is it also time change our views on sex and gender? Jack Halberstam thinks so, and in Gaga Feminism he argues that that a little creative mayhem could be a very good thing for society. Using Lady Gaga the jumping off point for a new kind of feminism that rejects the old models of gender and sexuality and replaces them with something wild, visionary, and fluid; this bookcalls for feminism with fewer constraints and more spectacle. Exploring new ways of defining gender, creating families, straying from the beaten path, Halberstam provides a new roadmap to sex and gender in the twenty-first century. Gaga feminism does not offer hard and fast rules to live by. It is not a call to put women in positions of power, nor does it does not favor women over men. Instead it aims to recalibrate the way gender is understood. Positioning Lady Gaga as the symbol for this new way seeing the world, Halberstam discusses what the pop star signifies for those who do not wish to conform to the norms and traditions set out for men and women through politics, society, and pop culture. Judith "Jack" Halberstam is the author of four books including, Female Masculinity (Duke Up, 1998) and The Queer Art of Failure, (Duke Up, 2011). Currently a professor of English and Gender Studies at USC, Halberstam teaches classes in queer theory, cultural studies, film, and the arts. Halberstam also writes a blog at bullybloggers.com and has been published in outlets including The Nation and Bitch. When not writing and reading, Halberstam can be found in LA, complaining about the endless sunshine.
The World According to Wonder is the first publication from the Hollywood-based production company World of Wonder, Some of the work produced and directed by the company include fine documentaries and wired original programs, such as Monica in Black and White, a feature documentary about Monica Lewinsky, Heidi Fleiss: Madam of Crystal and Carrie Fisher’s Wishful Drinking, and The Eyes of Tammy Faye. In September 2011, The Strange History of Don't Ask, Don't Tell premiered on HBO on the very day that the controversial military policy was repealed, and last the HBO documentary In Vogue: The Editor’s Eye, celebrating 120 years of Vogue, To top it all Million Dollar Listing and RuPaul's Drag Race became World of Wonder's biggest TV hit shows, and house hold favorites. The World According to Wonder is a book jam-packed with hundreds of photos and hilarious stories telling the history of the company and its wired productions. The eleven chapters spread out over nearly 400 pages are filled with original shots taken by photographers Idris Rheubottom and Tony Craig of many pop culture personalities, and of many celebrity portraits that never seen before. Written by co-founders and award-winning filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, the book is not only a celebration of twenty one years of production and the people they met. It is also their life story from the time when it was the dawn of reality TV, and they track the rise of this revolutionary genre through their modest triumphs and abysmal failures, sharing their passion for telling drama stories of those on the edge of our society. Some of those features include Pamela Anderson, Chaz Bono, Andy Cohen, Macaulay Culkin, the Duchess of York, Elvira, Linda Evangelista, Carrie Fisher, Heidi Fleiss, Larry Flynt, Perez Hilton, La Toya Jackson, Kato Kaelin, Lady Bunny, Marilyn Manson, Imelda Marcos, Kelly Osbourne, Camille Paglia, Joey Ramone, RuPaul, Chloe Sevigny, Ultra Naté, Dita von Teese, John Waters, Carnie Wilson, Holly Woodlawn, and many, other celebrities. The World According to Wonder is the work and cutting edge product of a twisted duo, once lovers, now old men trying to hold on to a world that has long gone called youth. This celebration of hollywood red carpet, TV personalities, Los Angeles "Want-A-Bees," and "glorious odd moments" is the ultimate in inferior psychotic creativity, dedicated to the celebration of twenty one years of their life. This remarkable hard cover book is available for purchase on www.Amazon.com for only $110.00.
The Raw Truth: Raw Food For Dummies® Shares Ten Reasons to Quit Cooking Your MealsMost people don’t think of cooking their food as a bad thing. Chances are, you love baked potatoes, green bean casserole, glazed cooked carrots, and much more. Sure, you’re game for the occasional salad and veggie tray with dip, but the thought of switching to a raw foods-only diet sounds pretty radical. What would you eat, exactly? Would your diet be balanced? Would you be getting proper nutrition? According to Cherie Soria and Dan Ladermann, authors of Raw Food For Dummies®, it might be worth your while to think outside the box (or the skillet). There are a lot more compelling reasons to go raw than you might think! “All raw foodists have personal stories about how raw foods helped them lose weight, heal, gain more energy or mental clarity, look better, feel better, or achieve some other benefit or goal,” says Soria, co-author along with Ladermann of Raw Food For Dummies® .“This diet has even attracted celebrities including Demi Moore, Sting, Madonna, and Woody Harrelson.” If you’re totally unfamiliar with the raw food lifestyle, it essentially means that you eat fresh, nutrient-rich plant foods that have not been heat processed. When foods are cooked, many of their nutrients are lost. “You can go totally raw if you’d like, or you can simply incorporate more raw foods into your existing meal plan to experience the benefits,” explains Ladermann. Ten reasons why raw might be the way to go:Looking and feeling better. Most people report improved health and general well-being within weeks of switching to a raw food lifestyle. The nutrient-rich raw diet is high in antioxidants, phytochemicals, vitamins, minerals, fiber, and healthy fats (such as omega-3 fatty acids), so it maximizes health and vitality. Reducing health risks and healing from disease. The facts are indisputable: A raw plant-based diet leads to lower risk of heart disease, cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, rheumatoid arthritis, and obesity. Avoiding premature aging and promoting longevity. Many raw foodists look twenty years younger than people of the same age who eat cooked foods. This youthfulness is due in part to the nutrient density of raw foods, which are rich in antioxidants, phytonutrients, and vitamins that protect the body from free radicals, which attack healthy cells. Achieving an ideal body weight. Many people believe that the body continues to feel hungry until nutrient needs are satisfied. Therefore, even if you eat enough calories to fuel your body, you’re still hungry—for nutrients! In this situation, your metabolism slows down, you stop burning fat, and you crave more food. Increasing energy, vitality, and stamina. When the human body is well nourished, it’s healthy and active, and has an abundance of vitality. Fats, especially heat-processed oils, slow you down because they require long periods of digestion, which steals energy from your body. Light foods, such as fruits and vegetables, digest easily and leave you with energy for activity. Enhancing memory and mental clarity. Your brain needs nourishment, and whole, ripe, raw organic plant foods provide the power you need for strong mental acuity. The essential fats that the brain needs, such as omega-3 fatty acids, are in leafy greens, flaxseed, chia, hemp, and walnuts as well as many other raw plant foods. The human brain also needs plenty of water, magnesium, and organic sodium; whole raw foods offer an abundance of these nutrients. Reducing colds, flus, and allergies. Most raw foodists find that their diet reduces or even eliminates their respiratory problems, colds, flus, and allergies. A raw diet is especially great for people who are intolerant of dairy, wheat, and soy because raw foods have virtually no hidden ingredients. Forgetting about cleaning dirty pots and pans. Hallelujah! A raw diet frees you from cooking! And raw food preparation is (for the most part) quick and easy with meals that are a breeze to clean up. No greasy stoves, hot ovens, or fryers. Demonstrating kindness to animals. Although some raw foodists do consume small amounts of meat and fish, Soria and Ladermann recommend following a raw vegan diet, which includes only plant foods. When all of your recipes are vegan, no animal suffering is involved. Protecting the environment. A raw lifestyle supports sustainable farming, creation of healthy topsoil, protection of watersheds, and reduction of your carbon footprint. A vegan diet also protects natural resources by not contributing to the deforestation that’s inherent in the meat industry. Published Wiley in December 2012, Raw Food For Dummies® is available at bookstores nationwide, major online booksellers, or directly from the publisher by calling (877) 762-2974. Retail $19.99
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Pastry chef, cookbook author and teacher, Paula Shoyer, creates delectable kosher Passover desserts that everyone will love.Passover is one of the most important holidays of the Jewish calendar and is when families get together for the Seder meal. Passover baking is the greatest annual challenge in the Jewish kitchen because Passover dessert recipes cannot use flour, yeast, soy milk, or even pure vanilla, and shifting from flour to matzoh cake meal and potato starch is not intuitive, even for experienced bakers. As dessert plays an important part of the Seder meal, you need fabulous desserts to end your evening. This Passover, pastry chef and teacher, Paula Shoyer, shares delicious and easy desserts for Passover from her best-selling cookbook, The Kosher Baker. | Producing flavorful and appealing desserts that are kosher has been a challenge for Jewish cooks. Without access to butter, cream, milk, cheese, yogurt, or other dairy products, creating a delicious and memorable dessert for holiday meals requires more than simple substitutions and compromises. Paris-trained pastry chef, Paula Shoyer decided to change that. Using all her creativity and love of dessert, she developed The Kosher Baker, the indispensable kitchen companion providing a wide range of dairy-free desserts, from family favorites and time-honored holiday classics to stylish and delicious surprises of Paula's own creation.
| Marble Chocolate Matzoh • Serves 12
1/3 cup slivered almonds 10 ounces parve dark bittersweet chocolate, chopped or broken into 1-inch pieces 1/3 cup parve white chocolate chips 3 large or 4 small pieces of matzoh
Preheat the oven to 325°F. Line a jelly roll pan with parchment. Spread the almonds on the pan and toast for 15 minutes, stirring the nuts after 10 minutes. When the almonds are toasted, remove the pan from the oven and slide the parchment off the cookie sheet.
While the nuts are toasting, melt the dark chocolate in one heatproof bowl and the white chocolate in another. You can do this either on the stovetop in a double boiler or in the microwave. If you use the microwave method, be especially careful with the white chocolate chips so they do not burn.
When the almonds are toasted, use a large knife to roughly chop them into pieces about 1/3 of their original size. Mix the nuts into the melted dark chocolate.
| | Line 1 large or 2 smaller cookie sheets with waxed paper and place the matzohs on top of the waxed paper. Spread the dark chocolate and nut mixture all over the matzoh slices to cover them entirely on one side with the chocolate.
Drop clumps of the melted white chocolate randomly on top of the dark chocolate. Use a toothpick to swirl the chocolates to create a marble effect. Place in the refrigerator to set for 1 hour and then break into pieces to serve. Store in the refrigerator for six days or freeze for up to three months.
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Strawberry Mousse • Serves 8
16 ounces fresh strawberries 1 teaspoon imitation rum extract, optional 2 teaspoons confectioners’ sugar Juice of 1 lemon 6 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons unflavored kosher gelatin powder 1 cup parve whipping cream
Remove the stems from the strawberries and set 6 of the strawberries aside. Take the 6 strawberries, slice thinly, and place in a small bowl with the rum and confectioners’ sugar. Mix to combine and then place in the refrigerator.
| Cut the remaining strawberries in half and place in a blender or food processor fitted with a metal blade. Purée the strawberries completely, scraping down the sides of the processor bowl or blender so that all the strawberries pieces are puréed.
Place the strawberry purée in a small saucepan. Add the lemon juice and sugar and stir. Cook on medium low heat for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the sugar melts. Add the gelatin, whisk, and then remove from the heat. Strain into a medium bowl, pressing hard to get as much strawberry purée through as possible, and place in the refrigerator for 20 minutes, stirring twice during that time.
In bowl with an electric mixer on high speed, whip the whipping cream until stiff. Remove the strawberry purée from the refrigerator and fold in the whipped cream in four parts. Scoop the mousse evenly into the ramekins and smooth the tops with the back of a spoon. Cover with plastic and place in the refrigerator for 3 hours or overnight.
To serve, remove from the refrigerator and place a few of the rum-soaked strawberry slices on the top. Store covered in the refrigerator for up to three days
Recipes are From The Kosher Baker: Over 160 Dairy-Free Recipes from Tradition to Trendy by Paula Shoyer, Brandeis University Press. Paula guides home cooks through more than 160 mouth-watering recipes and expands every non-dairy baker's repertoire with simple, clear instructions and a friendly yet authoritative voice. You don’t have to be Jewish, or even keep kosher, to love Paula’s recipes.
If you are planning to visit Los Angeles, then Naughty Girl’s Guide to Los Angeles is the book for you. The naughty lifestyle expert Sienna Sinclaire covers everything saucy in her recent travel book which offers the places you should go to, see, and do as a single naughty girl. Sinclaire stands behind all of her naughty suggestions in her book, Naughty Girl’s Guide to Los Angeles. With her in depth research of visiting each and every spot, Sinclaire teaches people how to live a naughty lifestyle, which just so happens to include extensive traveling. “My passion has always been traveling and I’ve always wanted to have a job in travel, but I didn’t know exactly what,” says Sinclaire. “So I started a travel blog where I would post all of my naughty travels around the world and people started to respond and offer suggestions. It became so popular that I decided to write a book on Los Angeles, since this is where I live.” In the book Sinclaire serves as a personal tour guide, leading the reader through the perfect getaway for singles, couples or just the girls. This book is intriguing and if you planning to visit Los Angeles especially if you want to discover the untypical naughty sights of the Adult capital of the world. The highlights: - Female friendly places to visit where one can feel safe and tap into your inner naughty side
- The naughty history of Hollywood and the entertainment industry
- Los Angeles – the adult capital of the world
- Where to find that motel with mirrors on the ceiling; Sexy Date spots; Best Lifestyle clubs; Best fetish spots
- New tricks to spice up your relationship
- Tour guide reference for everyone in Los Angeles, not just visitors
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