About those holiday letters...
Do you write an annual holiday letter and inflict it
on family and friends? I do, mostly because I love to receive them. So many of
my friends are far away, and reading their holiday letters is a way to keep up
with their lives, with the events we never quite get around to talking about in
our emails, infrequent phone calls, and even more infrequent face-to-face
encounters.
One of my major regrets is that I didn't keep the
letters that came with some of those photos. It never occurred to me until
about ten years ago, the first Christmas after one of the letter writers died.
She didn't write only holiday letters, but long, newsy missives all year long.
Sadly I have only a couple of them, and I wish I'd kept them all. Now I do, even
the electronic ones. But alas, so many of those don't include photographs.
My own holiday letter has been a webpage for several
years now. I stopped sending physical cards (and letters) to nearly everyone on
my Christmas card list when holding a pen became painful, due to arthritis.
That's under control now, but I admit I really like both saving the cost of
postage and not adding to the waste stream (for those of you who aren't aware,
I tend to be a trifle passionate on the topic of reducing waste). Using a
webpage gives everyone the option of ignoring it, although I hope no one will.
It's also easier than sending out a b'zillion emails, which feels way too much
like spamming. I figure if I tell the folks on a couple of lists, post to my
Facebook page, and put it here, most of the people who might be interested in
how I spent my year can go find out.
One thing I've spent quite a bit of time doing this
past year, but isn't in my holiday letter, is trying new recipes. The Web is a
fabulous resource, so much so that I am gradually reducing the size of my
cookbook library. Here is one of the recipes I found, when I decided that all those
kale stems were too tough for salad but too healthful to put into the compost
bin. It takes 10 to 15 minutes to make, depending on whether you've stripped
the stems for something else, or do so just for this recipe.
Sweet and Spicy Sautéed Kale Stems
2
teaspoons olive oil
10-12
kale stems, picked clean of the leaves and chopped into 1 inch pieces
2
tablespoons onion, finely minced
½
teaspoon soy sauce
1
tablespoon honey or maple syrup
½
teaspoon sriracha
⅛
teaspoon chili flakes
Sea
salt, to taste
Heat
the oil in a medium sized frying pan over medium high heat. Add the kale stems
and onion and sauté for 5-7 minutes, or until the kale stems have softened but
still have a little crunch. Remove from the heat and stir through the soy
sauce, honey or maple syrup, sriracha, chili flakes and season to taste with
sea salt. Serve immediately.
I
used maple syrup and the red-stem kale the first time I made this. Pretty!
(from:
TheEndlessMeal.com)