Tag Archives: molly yeh

Baking Fun: Sweet Farm! and Baking Yesteryear

19 Feb

Sweet Farm!
by Molly Yeh

I’ve been following Molly Yeh since back in her blogger days when she published her memoir Molly on the Range about her move from NYC to her husband’s family beet farm so I jumped at a chance when I could get a copy of her latest cookbook from Netgalley and the publisher. Yeh has become a star on Food Network with her show Girl Meets Farm and judging appearances on a variety of competitions and now owns her own restaurant. I loved the marzipan chocolate chip cookies from her second book Home is Where the Eggs Are so I looked forward to her latest cookbook Sweet Farm! Her recipes often feel both homey and exotic with their mix of cultures from her Jewish and Chinese heritage as well as time living in the Chicago area, NYC, and her in-laws Scandinavian/Midwestern roots. We tried baking up the raspberry coconut cinnamon version of her jam bars which were very tasty. There are also two other versions one with plum hazelnut five-spice, and another with apple cardamom marzipan that also sound delicious. I appreciate the fact that Yeh isn’t afraid to use floral fragrances in some of her bakes like rose essence and lavender. My Parisian grandmother always used to make financiers for Christmas; I’m looking forward to Yeh’s version which adds rainbow chocolate chips for a kid friendly spin and I’m also plan trying the Nutella version of her nutbar recipe. If you are looking for fun twists on some classics sweets than this cookbook should delight. Yeh fans will also enjoy some insights into life on the farm including what it is like farming sugar beets and what sugar beet farmers do during the winter months. Checkout Sweet Farm! when it comes out on March 4!

Baking Yesteryear
by B Dylan Hollis

Baking Yesteryear features recipes from B Dylan Hollis whose Youtube/Tiktok shorts are always a fun mix of goofy humor and retro baking. Hollis was born in Bermuda before coming to the United States for school. Viewers are never sure whether a quirky old timey recipe will turn out yummy or yucky. Most of the recipes in the cookbook are from the yummy category, although there are a few worst of recipes for those wanting to try something truly awful like a Jell-O molded spaghetti-Os salad. The recipes are primarily broken up by decade and span from the 1900’s to the 1980’s. There is also a specific chapter though for dates (the fruit). A brief background of the origin of the recipe and historic context is given. My family tried baking five of the cookie recipes in the book for Christmas this year including Peanut Butter Styrofoams (my son’s favorites), ANZAC Biscuits (my favorites), Potato Chip Cookies (my husband’s favorites), Starchies, and Sour Cream Cookies. The first three we would definitely bake again. The Starchies were a little on the dry side though there may have been a slight baking error in that the recipe states they should not brown and ours definitely had a brownish color on the edges. Another recipe I look forward to trying is the Kiskadee Fantasy which comes from Hollis’s Bermudian father and is named after a common bird on the island. I also can’t wait for May when his next cookbook Baking Across America: A Vintage Recipe Road Trip will be published.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

Visiting With Some Old Foodie Friends: Brooklyn in Love, Picnic in Provence, Home is Where the Eggs Are, and This Might Be Too Personal

27 Dec

This year marked my 20th year here at the library, which of course got me feeling nostalgic about back when I first started working here in 2003, a newly graduated MLIS student, single and excited about living just across the river from that legendary city, NYC, though Hoboken is not shabby on its own legends either. Although the blog hasn’t been around quite that long it got me to thinking about some of the memoirs, I had reviewed early on and what their authors might have been up to now. Here are a few. Like me they found love and started families, but of course their adventures in their delicious “next chapter,” as Amy Thomas describes her own part two, only continued.

Brooklyn in Love: A Delicious Memoir of Food, Family and Finding Yourself
by Amy Thomas

In 2012, Amy Thomas published Paris My Sweet, a memoir about the years she spent in her dream job getting to write ad copy for Louis Vuitton in the city of lights. When I blogged about it back then, it was clear that as much as Thomas enjoyed and celebrated Paris, it wasn’t where she was going to put down roots. In 2018’s Brooklyn in Love, on the other hand, it definitely has more a feeling of figuring out where her long term home is. As with Paris My Sweet where she includes recommendations for bakeries and Cafes in Paris, In Brooklyn in Love she focuses on the unique and delicious places she encounters in Brooklyn. I think it is notable that I felt of the previous work that, “wonderful descriptions of the sweets is what truly caries this work,” but in this memoir I was more interested in what she had to say about her life, her relationship, and her first experiences of motherhood.

Picnic in Provence: A Memoir with Recipes
by Elizabeth Bard

I had also blogged back in 2012 about another French Memoir along with Thomas’s, Elizabeth Bard’s Lunch in Paris. Unlike Thomas, Bard married a Parisian and became of French citizen. That book as does her more recent memoir (2015) Picnic in Provence include recipes at the ends of chapters. This memoir follows her pregnancy and adventures in motherhood. At first Bard is a bit disconnected from motherhood and feels like she hasn’t fully bonded with her son, but then she uses a shared love of cooking to form a stronger connection with him. The later half of the memoir also focuses on her and her husband starting an artisanal ice cream shop that serves scoops inspired by the local Provencal flavors that they have fallen in love with and her efforts to become officially a French citizen. Francophiles, foodies, and other moms and entrepreneurs will find this book a treat! Bard followed up Picnic in Provence in 2017 with Dinner Chez Moi: 50 French Secrets to Joyful Eating and Entertaining, a book of advice and easy to follow recipes.

Home is Where the Eggs Are: Farmhouse Food for the People You Love
by Molly Yeh

Molly Yeh rose to culinary fame with her award winning food blog, My Name is Yeh. Her memoir Molly on the Range published in 2016, follows her time studying classical music at Julliard and her childhood in a Chicago suburb in addition to her moving to sugar beet farm that her in-laws had been running for generations. Since her first book came out Molly has gone on to being a host of the Food Network show Girl Meets Farm as well as hosting some of their food competition shows. Her cookbook Home is Where the Eggs Are: Farmhouse Food for the People You Love published in 2022, is in a way a reverse of Picnic in Provence which is a memoir with some recipes, in that it is a cookbook with bits of memoir included in each section and recipes including pictures of Molly, her husband, and oldest daughter throughout. Her recipes take inspiration from her own Jewish and Chinese heritage as well as her husband’s family Scandinavian/Midwest background, but I find there is also sort of playfulness often that is uniquely her own. Several recipes in the book caught my eye including goat cheese and dill baked eggs, cheesy kimchi fried rice, and watermelon basil bug juice. We made her marzipan chocolate chunk cookie recipe this year as one of our Christmas bakes and they were DELICIOUS!

This Might Be Too Personal
by Alyssa Shelasky

Alyssa Shelasky chronicled her nervousness about cooking while dating a celebrity chef (Spike Mendelhsohn) in Apron Anxiety which I had found to be a fun read. It was interesting to hear about Shelasky overcoming her cooking fear even if her relationship with “chef” doesn’t last. This Might Be Too Personal contains essays, mainly about Shelasky’s life chronicling her time working for New York Magazine’s Sex Diaries and eventually adapting them to a TV series as well as her choice to become a single mom before finding the love of her life. There is a brief mention of catching up with “chef” who is now happily married. Those looking for a foodie memoir will enjoy her previous work, but for fans of gossipy party girl fun similar to Candace Bushnell’s Sex and the City memoirs balanced with sweet mom moments with Shelasky’s daughter Hazel, this will be an enjoyable read. The audiobook made me feel like I was hearing about the adventures from one of my bffs.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager