Wednesday, November 05, 2025
A Song for Our Time (Again?)
Monday, November 03, 2025
What is Pumpkin?
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| Canned pumpkin or pie filling can legally be either actual pumpkin or one of a few kinds of orange squash. |
Pumpkin Decorations
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| The pumpkin wall on Halloween night. It goes on much longer than this. (Alice’s photo) |
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| The pumpkin wall on Sunday. Some pumpkins remain, others are gone. |
Cooking pumpkin and squash
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| A pumpkin pie web image search. |
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| Stereotyped Thanksgiving image with pumpkins. |
Our Leaders Enjoy A Meal?
| Presidential banquet, starving masses. (Image from the Guardian) Thinking about Thanksgiving forces me to consider how some Americans are being abused, deprived of ways to buy food, and kicked around by our leaders. |
Sunday, November 02, 2025
Books old and new
Looking Forward to a New Book
| To be published later this week: Margaret Atwood’s memoir. I have been reading her novels since the very first one, The Edible Woman. |
“How does one of the greatest storytellers of our time write her own life? The long-awaited memoir from the author of The Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments, one of our most lauded and influential cultural figures.
“‘Every writer is at least two beings: the one who lives, and the one who writes. Though everything written must have passed through their minds, or mind, they are not the same.’”
Looking at Our History
Looking at a Hobbit — Again
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| This is the cover of the book I just reread. I enjoyed it as much as ever. It was published in 1937. |
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| This is the cover of the edition that I read decades ago. We wore it out by reading it often. In good condition, it’s worth quite a bit. |
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| This is the cover I like the best (but I’ve never seen one). |
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| There are dozens of editions of The Hobbit! It’s an inspiring and influential book. |
Friday, October 31, 2025
October Wrap-up
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| In my kitchen in October I have two new refrigerator magnets among all my bird magnets. |
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| New: flamingos and an eagle. |
Len’s Latest Bread
Good Dinners from My Kitchen
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| Cabbage salad, stuffed mushrooms, and pork tenderloin. |
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| Savory corn pancakes with lettuce and cottage cheese. |
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| Pastrami with tomatoes and lemons, garlic bread, spaghetti, and chocolate pudding with biscotti. |
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| Lamb chops and salads. |
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| Salad — note the purple carrots! |
Outside the Kitchen Door
| Beyond the kitchen door: the last of the potted herbs. The first frost this year is very late. |
Happy Halloween
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| New York Times Headline about decreasing chocolate quality due to very high prices. |
”Experts say high cocoa prices have triggered a wave of ‘reformulations,’ the industry term for recipe changes. As the Halloween season boosts demand, some candy companies are replacing expensive cocoa butter with other fats, a swap that means their products no longer meet the U.S. regulatory definition of milk chocolate and can no longer be called that on packaging.” (source)
What’s Missing From Our Nation?
As I survey my own food for this month and next month, I realize how lucky I am. Heartless actions by the government and our leaders threaten large numbers of citizens with hunger and desperation. SNAP, the federal food assistance program, is critical in the lives of many Americans. This headline is local, but the disaster is national. What’s missing from our nation is compassion and generosity,
“The threat of food assistance disappearing for 42 million Americans, even for a month, has exposed how threadbare the nation’s social safety net has become at a time of persistent inflation and deep federal funding cuts. Filling the void in the coming weeks will strain many food banks and other organizations that were already stretched thin.” (source)
Friday Afternoon Update:
Crisis may be over
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
More Books and More Walks
Neighborhood News:
The Great Pumpkins Have Arrived!
| When I drove past this morning, this year’s giant pumpkins were being carved. Now we are ready for Halloween! |
Reading
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| Practical Magic: a real Halloween book about witches! |
“Sally was the one who cooked healthy dinners of meat loaf and fresh green beans and barley soup, using recipes from a copy of Joy of Cooking she’d managed to smuggle into the house. She fixed their lunchboxes each morning, packing up turkey-and-tomato sandwiches on whole-wheat bread, adding carrot sticks and iced oatmeal cookies…” (p. 6)
“They’ll fix a picnic lunch of cream cheese and olive sandwiches, pita pockets stuffed with salad, Thermoses filled with lemonade and iced tea. They’ll pack up the car the way they do every August, and get on the highway before seven, to avoid traffic.“ (p. 195)
“Vegetarian lasagna and green bean salad with almonds, and cherry cheesecake for dessert, all homemade.” (p. 198)
The two sisters escape the real witch house of their aunts, who actively practice witchcraft and do spells for women in distress (especially distressed love) — but their powers follow the sisters when they try to escape, and in the end, witching is the big thing. Meanwhile, they have insights about life and all its complexities, but can’t always solve their own problems. They are also cursed: the men they love are doomed to die. As one sister observes: “Money, love, or fury—those are the causes for most everything.” (p. 202)
Note: I haven’t seen the movie of this book, and I just read about a coming sequel to that movie. The review was lukewarm, so I probably won’t bother to see either of them.
| Mary Burton: What She Saw |
Halloween Again: Walking in my Neighborhood
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| This “dog” barks and jumps out of his house when you walk by on the sidewalk. It’s very scary! |
| Most of the blow-up decorations are boring, but this one is kind of neat. |
| At the local produce store: pumpkins everywhere. |
The Botanical Garden in Autumn
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| A beaver lives here. |


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