Bread and Wine

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ZONDERVAN

Bread & Wine


Copyright 2013 by Shauna Niequist
This title is also available as a Zondervan ebook. Visit www.zondervan.com/ebooks.
This title is also available in a Zondervan audio edition. Visit www.zondervan.fm.
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530
ISBN978-0-310-32817-9
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from The Holy Bible, New
International Version, NIV. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc. Used by
permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
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Published in association with ChristopherFerebee.com, attorney and literary agent.
Cover design: Michelle Lenger
Cover photograpy: Johner / Glasshouse Images
Cover and interior calligraphy: Lindsay Sherbondy
Interior design: Beth Shagene
Printed in the United States of America
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contents
authors note. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
on bread and wine: an introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

my moms blueberry crisp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21


Blueberry Crisp

what the table is for. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28


Mini Mac & Cheese

hungry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Nigellas Flourless Chocolate Brownies

start where you are. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40


Basic Vinaigrette

go-to risotto. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Basic Risotto

enough. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
the chopping block. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Steak au Poivre with Cognac Pan Sauce

on tea and pajamas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68


Breakfast Quinoa

run. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Green Well Salad

hummingbird. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Goat Cheese Biscuits

delicious everywhere . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
Watermelon Feta Salad

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jazz and curry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100


Mango Chicken Curry

open the door. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105


White Chicken Chili

baking cookies with batman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112


Breakfast Cookies

morning, noon, and night. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118


Sweet Potato Fries with Sriracha Dipping Sauce

what my mother taught me . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123


Real Simple Cassoulet

cupcake in the oven . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128


feasting and fasting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
Robins Super-Healthy Lentil Soup

love and enchiladas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139


Annettes Enchiladas

meeting mac . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

hail mary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153


magical white bean soup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
Magical White Bean Soup

present over perfect. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166


Bacon-Wrapped Dates

the bass players birthday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173


russian dolls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
on scrambled eggs and doing hard things . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
Goat Cheese Scrambled Eggs

happy new year. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190


Dark Chocolate Sea Salted Toffee

swimming in silence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197


Esquites/Mexican Grilled Corn

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what money cant buy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207


Gaia Cookies

last-minute lunch party. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213


Maple Balsamic Pork Tenderloin

city love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218


better late than never. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
Brannons Caesar Salad

swimsuit, ready or not. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229


Farmers Market Potato Salad

the mayor of the river. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234


Mar-a-Lago Turkey Burgers

pont neuf. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241


Simplest Dark Chocolate Mousse

take this bread. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248


Sullivan Street Bread

come to the table. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 256

four-week book club/cooking club discussion guide . . . . . . . . . . . 261


four-week book club/cooking club menus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264
for ma rga ret:

on weeknight cooking, with pantry list. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265


dea r beck y:

my best entertaining tips, with sample menus. . . . . . . . . . . . . 273


recommended reading. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280
recipe index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
recipe index by category. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282
acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283

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an int r o d u cti o n

on bread and wine


Im a bread personcrusty, golden baguette; hearty, grainy,
seeded loaves; thin, crispy pizza crustall of it. Flaky, buttery
croissants; chewy pita; tortillas, warm and fragrant, blistered by
heat. Whenever my jeans are too tight, Im reminded that I know
better than to love bread the way I do, but love is blind, and
certainly beyond reason. And I am a wine personthe blood-red
and liquid gold, the clink and glamour of tall-stemmed glasses,
and the musty, rich, almost mushroom-y smell.
More than that, I am a bread-and-wine person. By that I mean
that Im a Christian, a person of the body and blood, a person of
the bread and wine. Like every Christian, I recognize the two as
food and drink, and also, at the very same time, I recognize them
as something much greatermystery and tradition and symbol.
Bread is bread, and wine is wine, but bread-and-wine is another
thing entirely. The two together are the sacred and the material at
once, the heaven and earth, the divine and the daily.
This is a collection of essays about family, friendships, and the
meals that bring us together. Its about the ways God teaches
and nourishes us as we nourish the people around us, and
about hunger, both physical and otherwise, and the connections
between the two.
Its about food and family and faith. Its also about everything
else, because all of life is a jumble of ideas and experiences and
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b re a d & w i n e

the things we find under the couch cushions. All of life is a whirling
mash-up of the big and little thingsthe things we see and think
and remember and smell and feel, the deep values that guide us
and the dirt under our fingernails, the undercurrents of belief and
doubt and the coolness of cotton sheets right when we slide our
toes down to the bottom of the bed. Its about food, and its not.
Its about life, which is to say its about everything.
A few Christmases ago, my dear friends Steve and Sarah gave
me a book called My Last Supper. Its a gorgeous, oversized
hardcover with a collection of interviews with fifty great chefs
about their last suppers. Apparently thats one of those age-old
kitchen questions chefs and cooks discuss ad infinitum, in lulls
between service, as they close down the kitchen at the end of a
busy nightIf you knew it was your very last meal, what would
you eat? Who would cook it? What would you drink, who would be
around the table with you, if you knew it was your very last meal?
Being married to a musician, Im very familiar with the
musicians equivalent: Out of all recorded music, what song do you
wish you had written? Or If you were putting together your dream
band, who would play each instrument? For an English major like
me, its something like, If you could sit in a caf with one writer,
who would you choose? Or maybe, What line do you wish you
had written? Its one of those questions you can discuss forever,
and change your answer a little bit every time, one that you love
answering, because it permits you to live in that worldthe food
world, the music world, the literary worldfor as long as youre
working out your answer. If youre like me, you keep changing
your answer, because you want to stay in that world for as long as
possible.
For the record, my last-supper meal looks a bit like this: first,
of course, ice-cold champagne, gallons of it, flutes catching the
candlelight and dancing. There would be bacon-wrapped dates
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on bread and wine

oozing with goat cheese, and risotto with thick curls of Parmesan
and flecks of black pepper. There would be paper-thin pizza with
tomatoes and mozzarella and slim ribbons of basil, garlicky pasta
and crusty bread and lots of cheeses, a plummy pinot noir and
maybe a really dirty martini, because you might as well go big on
your last night on earth. There would be dark chocolate sea salted
toffee and a bowl of fat blackberries, and wed stay at the table for
hours and hours, laughing and telling stories and reaching for one
more bite, one more bite, one more bite.
Whats becoming clearer and clearer to me is that the most
sacred moments, the ones in which I feel Gods presence most
profoundly, when I feel the goodness of the world most arrestingly,
take place at the table. The particular alchemy of celebration and
food, of connecting people and serving what Ive made with my
own hands, comes together as more than the sum of their parts. I
love the sounds and smells and textures of life at the table, hands
passing bowls and forks clinking against plates and bread being
torn and the rhythm and energy of feeding and being fed.
I love to talk about food and cooking and entertaining. I want
to hear about how other people do it, and about the surprising
and significant things that happen when people gather around
the table. Many of the books Ive read and loved most dearly have
been about food and gatherings at the table. My best moments
have been spent in the kitchen, and many of the most deeply
spiritual moments of the last year have taken place at the table.
Its not, actually, strictly, about food for me. Its about what
happens when we come together, slow down, open our homes,
look into one anothers faces, listen to one anothers stories.
It happens when we leave the office and get a sitter and skip
our workouts every so often to celebrate a birthday or an
accomplishment or a wedding or a birth, when we break out of
the normal clockwork of daily life and pop the champagne on a
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b re a d & w i n e

cold, gray Wednesday for no other reason than the fact that the
faces we love are gathered around our table. It happens when we
enter the joy and the sorrow of the p
eople we love, and we join
together at the table to feed one another and be fed, and while its
not strictly about food, it doesnt happen without it. Food is the
starting point, the common ground, the thing to hold and handle,
the currency we offer to one another.
Its no accident that when a loved one dies, the family is
deluged with food. The impulse to feed is innate. Food is a
language of care, the thing we do when traditional language fails
us, when we dont know what to say, when there are no words to
say. And food is what we offer in celebrationat weddings, at
anniversaries, at happy events of every kind. Its the thing that
connects us, that bears our traditions, our sense of home and
family, our deepest memories, and, on a practical level, our ability
to live and breathe each day. Food matters.
At the very beginning, and all through the Bible, all through the
stories about God and his people, there are stories about food,
about all of life changing with the bite of an apple, about trading
an inheritance for a bowl of stew, about waking up to find the land
littered with bread, Gods way of caring for his people; about a
wedding where water turned to wine, Jesus first miracle; about
the very first Last Supper, the humble bread and wine becoming,
for all time, indelibly linked to the very body of Christ, the center
point for thousands of years of tradition and belief. It matters.
It mattered then, and it matters now, possibly even more so,
because its a way of reclaiming some of the things we may have
lost along the way.
Both the church and modern life, together and separately,
have wandered away from the table. The church has preferred to
live in the mind and the heart and the soul, and almost not at all
in fingers and mouths and senses. And modern life has pushed us
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on bread and wine

into faux food and fast food and highly engineered food products
cased in sterile packages that we eat in the car or on the subway
as though were astronauts, as though we cant be bothered with a
meal.
What happens around the table doesnt matter to a lot of
people. But it matters more and more to me. Life at the table is life
at its best to me, and the spiritual significance of what and how we
eat, and with whom and where, is new and profound to me every
day. I believe God is here among us, present and working. I believe
all of life is shot through with Gods presence, and that part of
the gift of walking with him is seeing his fingerprints in all sorts of
unexpected ways.
My friend Nancy is a nature person. To know her is to know
that the created worldmountains, wildflowers, sunshineis the
tie that binds her to God, that demonstrates his presence to her
in the deepest ways. For my dad, its the water. The sounds and
smells and rituals of life on the water bind him to God in ways that
nothing else does. For my husband, Aaron, its music. And for me,
its the table.
What makes me feel alive and connected to Gods voice and
spirit in this world is creating opportunities for the people I love to
rest and connect and be fed at my table. I believe its the way I was
made, and I believe it matters. For many years, I didnt let it matter,
for a whole constellation of reasons, but part of becoming yourself,
in a deeply spiritual way, is finding the words to tell the truth about
what it is you really love. In the words of my favorite poet, Mary
Oliver, its about letting the soft animal of your body love what it
loves.
My friends and I didnt learn to cook, necessarily. In an effort
to widen our options, to set us free to be whatever we wanted
to be, many of our mothers shooed us out of the kitchenthat
place of lingering oppression and captivity for many of them.
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b re a d & w i n e

They encouraged us to study and travel and participate in sports


and the arts, the things women didnt get to do when they were
young. They shooed us out as an act of love, regardless of the fact
that some of us really wanted to be there. So then, largely, young
women and men moved out of their parents homes and didnt
know how to cook at all, and both genders felt conflicted about it,
for a host of reasons. So we got takeout and thought about other
things.
But many of us, men and women alike, at a certain point, are
wandering back to the kitchen and fumbling and learning and
trying to feed ourselves and the people we love, because we
sense that its important and that we may have missed something
fundamental along the way. Especially for those of us who make
our livings largely in front of computer screens, theres something
extraordinary about getting up from the keyboard and using our
hands for something besides typingfor chopping and dicing
and coaxing scents and flavors from the raw materials in front of
us. Theres something entirely satisfying in a modern, increasingly
virtual world about something so elementalheat, knife, sizzle.
The cookbooks and food writing I enjoy most are written by
people who love to eat, people who are not above what I would
call regular-people food. Tell me you eat toast. Tell me you love
cheap candy or fake cheese (I, for one, deeply love fake cheese).
Tell me that every so often you find yourself standing over the sink
eating leftovers, and that theyre running down your chin. I know
there are people who see food primarily as calories, nutrients,
complex bundles of energy for the whirring machines of our
bodies. I know them, but theyre not my people. Theyre in the
same general category of people who wear sensible shoes and
read manuals. Good people, but entirely foreign to me.
Im not a cook, and this isnt a cookbook. I have no illusions of
opening a fine-dining fusion restaurant or a charming bed-and16

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on bread and wine

breakfast, wearing an apron and making scones every morning.


My husband will tell you we eat plenty of takeout and that I have a
truly manic commitment to leftovers. Ill eat the same thing eight
meals in a row, just so it doesnt go to waste.
Im not a stickler about nutrition or a purist about organics,
although I care about those things. Im learning about them little
by little, and living them step by step, meal by meal. Im not a
vegan and I dont eat low-carb, and I dont want you to change
the way you eat, necessarily. But I do want you to love what you
eat, and to share food with people you love, and to gather people
together, for frozen pizza or filet mignon, because I think the
gathering is of great significance.
When you eat, I want you to think of God, of the holiness of
hands that feed us, of the provision we are given every time we
eat. When you eat bread and you drink wine, I want you to think
about the body and the blood every time, not just when the bread
and wine show up in church, but when they show up anywhere
on a picnic table or a hardwood floor or a beach.
Some of my most sacred meals have been eaten out of travel
mugs on camping trips or on benches on the street in Europe.
Many of them have been at our own table or around our coffee
table, leaning back against the couch. Theyve been high food and
low food, fresh and frozen, extravagant and right out of the pizza
box. Its about the table, and about all the other places we find
ourselves eating. Its about a spirit or quality of living that rises up
when we offer one another life itself, in the form of dinner or soup
or breakfast, or bread and wine.

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When you wake up in the morning, Pooh, said Piglet at last,


whats the first thing you say to yourself?
Whats for breakfast? said Pooh. What do you say, Piglet?
I say, I wonder whats going to happen exciting today? said
Piglet.
Pooh nodded thoughtfully.
Its the same thing, he said.
A. A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh

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C hapte r 1

my moms blueberry crisp


My moms dad is Irish, a storyteller and twinkling-eyed joker, and
her mom is German, a rose gardener and meticulous baker. They
met in the third grade in Vicksburg, Michigan. My grandpas family
moved away at the end of that school year, but my grandparents
reconnected at the end of high school, and my grandpa insists he
remembered her beautiful face all those years. They were married
just before my grandpa joined the navy, and my mom, their first
child, was born at Pearl Harbor.
Neither one of them grew up in religious homes, but when they
married, they decided that religion was important and that they
wanted to join a church. They visited all sorts of churches before
settling at Lake Center Bible Church. Over the years they were
members at other Bible churches for a few seasons, but these days
theyre active members and volunteers at Lake Center once again,
almost sixty years later.
My dads family is 100 percent Dutch, and they built a large
produce company in Kalamazoo, Michigan. They owned farms all
over the world, and a warehouse, and their trucks delivered produce
to stores, restaurants, and hotels all over the country. My dad and
his siblings all worked at the warehouse or in the fields or driving
trucks. When each child turned five years old, they began spending
Saturdays at the warehouse with little wagons, moving produce
around, filling orders.
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They were faithful members of a Christian Reformed church in


Kalamazoo, a church that was strict and orderly, that emphasized
observance of the Sabbath and thriftiness and looked down on
frivolity and high emotion.
They were meat-and-potatoes people, men who worked long
days on the farm and ate accordingly. Some days the farm lunch
was a loaf of white bread and a pound of bologna per person.
Theyd fry the bologna in a frying pan with butter and make a tall
stack of sandwiches for each of them.
And then six brothersmy grandfather and my dads five
unclesall died of heart attacks before they were fifty-five. When
I was born, my parents knew something had to change, that my dad
had inherited those same dangerous genetics, and that nutrition
was a way to stand up to what seemed terrifying and inevitable.
My mom was enamored, like all new moms are, with how
perfect and pure her new baby was. She only wanted to feed me
things that were healthy and whole. Because of that, and because
of my dads scary family health history, my mother became a health
food person way before it was fashionable.
When other kids were eating Froot Loops in whole milk and
Twinkies and Little Debbie snack cakes, my mom fed my younger
brother and me whole grains, tofu, and skim milk. We ate almost
no processed foods and very little red meat, and we never had
junk foodsoda, chips, store-bought cookiesin our home.
While our friends were having hamburgers and sloppy joes on soft
white buns, we were eating tuna over whole grain pasta and lentil
burgers and muesli.
This was a time and placethe suburbs of Chicago in the
early 1980swhen yogurt was weird and hummus was downright
horrifying. In my school lunch, I had whole grain bread, all-fruit
preserves, and the kind of peanut butter that had been ground
from peanuts at the health food store, a place that smelled like
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my moms blueberr y crisp

vitamins and mulch. I also had a massive bag of carrots and


sometimes an apricot fruit leather, which is just as luscious as it
sounds. Why would anyone ever want to eat something whose
greatest selling point is its textural similarity to leather?
These were the days when trading at lunch was a major feature
of social politics, and I was deeply embarrassed about my lunch.
I longed for white bread, American cheese, Cheetos, Hawaiian
Punch. This was before Whole Foods and Trader Joes and farmers
markets with live music and cute, scruffy organic farmers peddling
kale. This was when health food stores, tofu, and lentils were all
vaguely suspect, and not at all upscale and respectable. Now half
my friends get CSA boxes and many of our playdates involve the
farmers market. Our friends and family are an assortment of glutenfree, dairy-free, vegetarian, vegan. Whole grains and quinoa are
ubiquitous. Back then, though, this kind of stuff made you weird.
Exhibit A: the year my mom handed out mini-toothbrushes on
Halloween, feeling that after all that sugar, a good brush would be
thoughtful. Seriously? I was already hanging by a thread socially. I
was already a pastors kid, which is uncool on a thousand different
levels. I already had a weird, organic, all-brown lunch. Now were
the toothbrush-on-Halloween family? Mom, youre killing me.
Now that Im an adult, I appreciate how much effort this must
have entailed, how expensive it was, how loving it was for her to
feed us in that way. But as a child, all I knew was that my lunches
were weird and that my cousins didnt want to sleep over at our
house unless they could bring their own breakfast because they
were absolutely terrified about what might turn up on their plates
at our house. My cousin Melody always packed her own cinnamonraisin bagel because she didnt want to risk Grape-Nuts or whole
wheat pancakes for breakfast.
My parents and their friends started a church the year I was
born, and part of being a church family means that your weekly
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calendar runs on a different rhythm than other families. Sunday


mornings were workdays, and often Saturdays too, so the weekend
really began for us on Sundays after church.
After we got home from the early service, my mom and my
brother and I would wait to hear my dads heavy footsteps coming
down the long, tiled hallway after the last service. He always
went straight to his closet to change from his church clothes into
his Chicago Bears sweatshirt, and when he walked through the
study door, the weekend began. He was tired but happy, loose,
easygoing.
Sunday afternoons were family timeprivate, casual, silly.
We got to watch the Bears game while we did our homework in
the study instead of doing it at the kitchen table like we usually
did. My mom made sushi for lunch, and for dinner, blueberry crisp.
My mom baked her blueberry crisp in a round, blue
earthenware baking dish, deep enough for there to be several
inches of warm, bursting berries under the sweetness of the crisp
topping. The dish had a fitted lid and handles on each side, and
she would bring it down to the study with potholders and with the
lid on, so that even if we had seconds, it was still warm.
She topped each bowl of crisp with a scoop of Breyers vanilla
bean ice cream, flecked with dark specks of vanilla, and the ice
cream melted into the crisp layer and the hot berries in thick,
creamy rivers. Those Sunday nights were some of the only times
we had ice cream at home, a special treat. More than that, it was
a treat to taste summertime in the middle of winter, to taste the
flavors of the lake back at home in the suburbs.
Since my brother, Todd, and I were little, our family spent every
summer in South Haven, Michigan, on the shores of Lake Michigan.
South Haven is a beach town an hour from where my parents
grew up. My dads parents had a cottage there, and both my
grandfathers had sailboats in the marina. Its the town where my
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my moms blueberr y crisp

parents had their first date, and the setting for most of our familys
richest memories.
South Haven is the blueberry capital of the country, and at the
end of the summer every year wed bring home bags and bags
of blueberries to freeze. I remember getting home from the lake
just in time for school to start, and while we unpacked and sorted
sandy towels to wash, my mom covered the kitchen counters with
towels, picked through the berries, washed and sorted them, and
packed them into freezer bags so that all year long we could have
blueberry crisp on Sunday nights in the study.
And now Aaron and I spend our summers in that same town.
Henry swims on the same stretch of beach that Todd and I did,
that my dad and his siblings did. We take the boat up and down
the river that both my grandfathers sailed on all those years ago.
My mom keeps a small shelf of cookbooks at the cottage, and
I reread them over and over every summer, lazily, almost from
memory. My favorite is a small book the size of a paperback novel,
called Keeping Entertaining Simple by Martha Storey. On the topic
of fruit crisps, she recommends that you premeasure the fruit
and freeze it in individual bags, and also that you make up a large
batch of crisp topping and freeze it in individual bags too, one bag
containing enough topping for one pan of crisp.
When we came back from the lake this year, on our way out of
town we stopped at Bardens Farm Stand so I could buy twenty
pounds of blueberries and a peck of peaches. When we got home,
while I should have been unpacking and sorting laundry, I instead
washed, dried, and sorted all those blueberries and then measured
them into individual bags, each one with the perfect amount for
one pan of crisp. Then I measured out batches of crisp topping and
froze that too. And now we have blueberry crisp at the ready all year
long, perfect for cozy Sunday nights, just like my mom had all those
years ago.
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Blueberry Crisp
There are all sorts of ways to make a fruit crisp, and most recipes are some
version of flour, sugar, butter, oats, and cinnamon, but I asked myself:
What would my mother do? This crisp is definitely her stylehealthy and
lightly sweet, fresh and simple.
I wanted something without flour so that Aaron, who eats gluten-free,
could eat it, and I wanted to avoid sugar and butter if possible so that I
could eat it for breakfast and feel virtuous. After a summer of doughnuts
and cobbler and croissants for breakfast, I need a little virtue.
Ive landed on this maple pecan version thats great with both blueberries and peaches, and a combination of the two is fantastic. I bet it
would be lovely with apples or pears toowell try that this fall.
Some fruit crisp recipes call for cornstarch, lemon, or sugar mixed in
with the fruit, but I find that the cornstarch sometimes makes it a little
gelatinous, like canned pie filling, and Id rather a crisp be a little runny
and full of sweet, warm, bursted berry juice than too gummy. And I want
a short recipe list, especially in the summer. I can manage oats. Almond
meal is the outer edge. Cornstarch? Impossible.
I eat this for breakfast, sometimes with a few spoonfuls of Greek
yogurt. And its great after dinner, still warm, with melty scoops of vanilla
ice cream.
Like all my favorite recipes, this one is endlessly adaptable. When
Im out of maple syrup, brown sugar does the trickit adds a little more
sweetness and a little more crunch. And if Im out of pecans, walnuts are
great too.

Ingredients

4 cups blueberries (or almost any fruit, really)

Crisp topping:

1 cup old-fashioned oats


cup raw, unsalted pecans, halved or chopped

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my moms blueberr y crisp

cup almond meal (available at Trader Joes or health food


stores, or made easily by putting almonds in food processor
until fine, but before they turn to almond butter)
cup maple syrup
cup olive oil
teaspoon salt

Instructions
Mix together the crisp ingredients.
Pour the berries into an 8 by 8 pan, and then layer the crisp
topping over it.
Bake at 350 degrees 35 to 40 minutes, or up to 10 minutes longer
if topping and fruit are frozen, until fruit is bubbling and topping is
crisp and golden.
Serves: 4 to 6

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C hapte r 2

what the table is for


The light is fading, the sky bleaching from blue to white and then
warming to the softest blush pink, like ballet tights, like a rosewater
macaroon. Im worn-out and the house is ragged, but my mind and
heart are full from last nights little celebration for Brannons baby,
the fourth Cooking Club shower in a year.
It was a lovely, wild nightbabies everywhere, dishes sprawled
all over the kitchen, platters of brisket and plates of macaroons
fighting for space among wineglasses and forks and ramekins that
used to hold bread pudding.
Brannon insisted it wasnt a showershe insisted on no
invitations, no fuss, nothing formal or showery. But we reminded
her that shes not the boss of us, and if we wanted to celebrate
her baby boy, we could celebrate all we wanted. A compromise
was reached: Cooking Club as usual, with a few extra friends and
a special mini theme to celebrate the new mini-man who would
join our little family in a few months.
The Cooking Club began when Aaron and I moved back
to Chicago from Grand Rapids three years ago. There are six
of usmy cousins Melody and Amanda, who are sisters and
both teachers; our friend Casey, whom Melody and I have
known since junior high; Brannon, my stylish and sophisticated
college roommate and dear friend; and Margaret, an actor and

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what the table is for

screenwriter and friend from church. Our friend from South Haven,
Josilyn, was an original member until she moved away.
We meet once a month, and sometimes more, and whoevers
hosting picks the theme and cooks the main course, and then the
rest of us fill in around thatappetizers, sides, desserts. Or at
least thats how we started. Its a little looser now. Amanda tends
to remind us of the themes we keep saying we want to do. Melody
and Casey cook main courses. I tend toward appetizers and side
dishes. Amanda almost always does a salad and a dessert, often
an ice cream. Margaret is also a baker, and Brannon always brings
cocktails.
True to form, on that night, Melody brought mini-brisket
sandwiches on soft white buns, and Margaret made tiny ramekins
of chocolate chip bread pudding. I made mini mac & cheeses
and cups of tomato soup with little grilled cheese sandwiches
balancing on top. Casey poured her famous green goddess
dressing into the bottoms of juice glasses, then filled the glasses
with raw veggiesslim carrots and celery and cucumber. Our
friend Emily came in from Michigan with mini loaves of her
grandmothers poppy seed cake, which I requested because I love
it, especially with coffee, for breakfast.
Theres always a little chaos right when everyone arrives
bringing in hot dishes, shrugging off coats, lifting babies out of
car seats. We bump the oven temp up and down; we go into one
anothers drawers for knives and cutting boards and platters. We
chop herbs, assemble sandwiches, dress and toss salads. The
once-empty spaces of our homes become overrun with baskets,
coats, shoes, things weve borrowed and are now returning, cake
plates, baby clothes, cookbooks. We swirl around each other,
hugging hello, opening wine, lifting down glasses from the highest
shelves.

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Mel and Amanda are always early. Margaret is always late. Mel,
Brannon, and I all collect red Le Creuset pans and bakeware, so
it can get a little confusing, but Casey has orange everything, so
you can always tell whats hers. Brannon is always arriving with
what seems like a truckload of furniture and bagsthings shes
bringing for us to borrow, things she picked up at the store that
reminded her of one of us, bassinets and baby slings and bottles.
That afternoon, as I got the house ready for Brannons dontcall-it-a-shower shower, I thought that even though the Cooking
Club always, always sits around the table, this time it might be
nice to sit in the living room. I moved furniture, made a place for
presents, and set up a buffet on the round table in the living room.
When everyone was assembled, when there was a fork or
serving spoon on each platter and everything was sliced and warm
and ready, I tried to move everyone to the living room, and it just
didnt work. I kept urging them toward the buffet, toward the
couches and chairs in the living room. Finally, though, I admitted
defeat, and we pulled a love seat up to the dining room table for
extra seating and settled in happily. Thats where we belong, it
seemsaround the table.
When Josilyn moved to Haiti, she wrote us a letter to say
good-bye. And in that letter she wrote this line: I cant imagine life
without a table between us. Yes. Yes. Exactly that. I cant imagine
life without a table between us. The table is the life raft, the center
point, the home base of who we are together.
Its those five faces around the table that keep me sane, that
keep me safe, that protect me from the pressures and arrows and
land mines of daily life. And it isnt because we do all the same
things, live all the same ways, believe all the same things. We are
single and married, liberal and conservative, runners and adamant
nonathletes, mothers and not. Those of us who are mothers do
it differently, from cry-it-out to family bed, from stay-at-home to
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what the table is for

full-time work. Around this table weve mourned the loss of eight
pregnancies, and even as I write those words, it seems a cruel and
unusual number.
Weve gone to funerals and birthday parties together, reported
bad test results, gotten advice about sick kids, made trips to
the ER, walked together through postpartum depression. Weve
visited each others babies in the hospital, and weve brought over
meals and sleepers and blankets. Weve talked about faith and fear
and fighting with our husbands, sleeping through the night and
anxiety and how to ask for help when we need it.
On the hardest days, when Brannons daughter Emme had
surgery, or when Caseys stepdad passed away, when something
breaks apart or scares us, we send around a quick group email,
even as our hands are shaking, even while the pain is slicing. We fill
everyone in, ask for prayer, let everyone know how they can help
with meals or with the kids, and at the end of the email, someone
always says, Thanks for being my people. Or, Glad youre my
people. Or, What would I do without my people?
Thats what this is about. This isnt about recipes. This is about
a family, a tribe, a little band of people who walk through it all
together, up close and in the mess, real time and unvarnished.
And it all started around the table, once a month and
sometimes more. We bump into one another in the kitchen,
sliding pans in and out of the oven, setting and resetting the
timer. We know one anothers kitchens by heartwhere Casey
keeps her knives and how many pans will fit in Brannons oven. It
seems like weve been meeting together forever, but we realized
last night that its been three years this month, and thats worth
remembering for methat it doesnt take a decade, and it
doesnt take three times a week.
Once a month, give or take, for three years, and what weve
built is impressivestrong, complex, multifaceted. Like a curry
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b re a d & w i n e

or boeuf bourguignon, something you cook for hours and hours,


allowing the flavors to develop over time, changing and deepening
with each passing hour on the heat.
You dont always know whats going to come of it, but you put
the time in anyway, and then, after a long, long time, you realize
with great clarity why you put the time in: for this night, for these
hours around the table, for the complexity and richness of flavors
that are so lovely and unexpected youre still thinking about them
the next day.
Thats how I am today, still kind of mesmerized by last night,
by the taste of Amandas butterscotch budino and the little pile of
baby clothes for the boy who will be born later this month, by the
laughter and the baby noises, by the faces of my people, feeling
like this is what life is for, this is what Sunday nights are for, this is
what the table is for.

Mini Mac & Cheese


This is a mash-up of Grace Parisis three-cheese mini macs from Food &
Wine and another Food & Wine macaroni & cheese called, appropriately
enough, Macaroni and Cheese.1
Be generous when you dust the Parmesan, both in the empty cups
and on top, because thats what holds them togetherthat and the egg
yolk.
These can be made gluten-free, obviously, by using brown rice
or corn pasta, which is usually what I do. Watch the cook time on the
pasta, as gluten-free pastas seem to be a little more unpredictable than
conventional pastas.

Ingredients

pound elbow macaroni (or 4 cups cooked)


2 cups sharp cheddar cheese, shredded

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what the table is for

2 tablespoons butter, plus more for pan


1 tablespoon Dijon
2 dashes Tabasco
teaspoon salt
1 egg yolk
cup grated Parmesan cheese
Smoked paprika

Instructions
In a pot of boiling water, cook the macaroni for about 5 minutes,
to just al dente, which is just a touch firmer than how youd like to eat
it. Drain.
Brush mini muffin pan with melted butter, then sprinkle half the
grated Parmesan into the muffin cups.
On medium-low heat, warm butter and cheddar cheese, and
whisk till smooth.
Off heat, add Dijon, Tabasco, egg yolk, and whisk again.
Add macaroni and mix until well coated with cheese.
Spoon into muffin cups, making them slightly rounded and
packing them lightly. Top with grated Parmesan.
Bake at 425 for 12 to 14 minutes, until golden on top.
Let cool at least 10 minutes before serving, because they will set
as they cool. Sprinkle with smoked paprika.
Serve warm or at room temperature.
Makes: 24 mini macsthe perfect amount for an appetizer at a
dinner party for 8. For a cocktail party, double the recipe, using a
whole box (1 pound) of pasta.

1. Three-Cheese Mini Macs recipe, first published in Food & Wine magazine,
December 2007; Macaroni and Cheese recipe; first published in Quick from
Scratch Pasta, 1996.

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C hapte r 3

hungry
Years ago, when I worked at a church in Grand Rapids, I drove
in early on Sunday mornings, when 28th Street was still silent
and gray, as the pale morning sun rose over the pawn shops and
used-car dealerships. I worked all morning, talking with people,
holding a thousand tiny details in my mind, and when I left in the
afternoon, head spinning and feet tired, I always hoped I was in
the car in time to hear The Splendid Table on NPR. It was a good
day if I made it to the car in time for it, and a bad day if I missed it
and turned on the radio only to hear A Prairie Home Companion
instead, because it meant Id stayed longer than Id intended
and because, to be honest, I really dont like A Prairie Home
Companion.
Lynne Rossetto Kasper, the host of The Splendid Table, says
there are two kinds of people in the world: people who wake up
thinking about what to have for supper and people who dont. I am
in the first camp, certainly. But it took me about twenty years to
say that out loud.
Ive always been hungry. Always. I remember being hungry
as a small child, as an adolescent girl, as an adult, and just after I
locate those feelings and memories of hunger, in my peripheral
vision another thing buzzes up, like a flash of heat or pain: shame.
Hunger, then shame. Hunger, then shame. Always hungry, always
ashamed.
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hungr y

I have always been on the round side of average, sometimes


the very round side and sometimes just a little round. I was a
round-faced, chubby baby, a little girl with soft, puffy cheeks, a
teenager who longed to be skinny and never was, who routinely
threw all her pants on the floor and glared at them like enemies.
A woman who still longs to be skinny and never is, and who still,
from time to time, throws all her pants on the floor and glares at
them like enemies. After all these years, the heaviest thing isnt the
number on the scale but the weight of the shame Ive carried all
these yearstoo big, too big, too big.
Ive always wanted to be thinner, and Ive always loved to eat,
and I felt betrayed by my appetites. Why couldnt I be one of those
people who forgets to eat? Or who cant eat a bite when shes
stressed or sad? When Im stressed or sad, I eat like a truffle pig,
hoping that great mouthfuls of food will make me feel tethered to
something, grounded, safe. And I eat when Im happy toowhen
the table is full of people I love, when were celebrating.
My appetite is strong, powerful, precise, but for years and
years, I tried to pretend I couldnt hear it screaming in my ears. It
wasnt ladylike. It wasnt proper. So I pretended I wasnt hungry,
pretended Id already eaten, murmured something about not
caring one way or the other, because I was afraid that my appetites
would get the best of me, that they would expose my wild and
powerful hunger.
I learned something about hunger from my friend Sara. Sara
was one of the first women I knew who ate like a man. When she
was hungry, she announced it. And then she ate. A lot. We were
traveling through Europe together in college, when I was in the
throes of a deep and desperate hatred toward my body. I watched
Sara with confusion and fascination, the way a child watches an
animal hes never seenwide-eyed and kind of nervous. If Sara
was hungry while we were on our way to a play, shed ask us to
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stop. Because she was hungry. All of us stopped because she was
hungry. I would have sooner lost consciousness on the sidewalk
than draw attention to my hunger and, therefore, my body.
I realized that even most of the thin women I knew had learned
to demur about food and hungerI already ate; I couldnt
possibly; Im absolutely stuffed. But Sara loved to eat and believed
it was her right, and a pleasure. She didnt overeat or undereat,
cry or hide food. She just ate, for sustenance and enjoyment both,
and I was fascinated. Still, it took almost a decade more for me to
say those wordsthose words, Im hungrywithout feeling
ashamed.
It took becoming pregnant to finally say to the world, out
loud and without embarrassment, Im hungry. My first pregnancy
shifted so many aspects of my understanding of my body and,
with it, shifted my view of hunger. Even if at twenty-nine years old
I couldnt claim my own hunger without experiencing a shiver of
shame, I could claim hunger on behalf of my baby, and that small
step might as well have been a mile for all it unlocked inside me.
Several years later, Im learning to practice gratitude for a
healthy body, even if its rounder than Id like it to be. Im learning
to take up all the space I need, literally and figuratively, even
though we live in a world that wants women to be tiny and quiet.
To feed ones body, to admit ones hunger, to look ones appetite
straight in the eye without fear or shamethis is controversial
work in our culture.
Part of being a Christian means practicing grace in all
sorts of big and small and daily ways, and my body gives me
the opportunity to demonstrate grace, to make peace with
imperfection every time I see myself in the mirror. On my best
days, I practice grace and patience with myself, knowing that I
cant extend grace and patience if I havent tasted it.
I used to think the goal was to get over thingsto deal with
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hungr y

them once and for all, to snap an issue closed like slamming a
locker door, washing my hands of it forever and always. What I
know now after all these years is that there are some things you
dont get over, some things you just make friends with at a certain
point, because theyve been following you around like a stray dog
for years.
Thats how this is for me. Ive been catastrophizing about my
weight since I was six. Ive lost the pounds and gained them, made
and abandoned plans and promises, cried tears of frustration,
pinched the backs of my upper arms with a hatred that scares me.
And through all that, Ive made friends and fallen in love,
gotten married and become a mother. Ive written and traveled
and stayed up late with p
eople I love. Ive walked on the beach and
on glittering city streets. Ive kissed my babys cheeks and danced
with my husband and laughed till I cried with my best friends,
and through all that it didnt really matter that I was heavier than I
wanted to be.
The extra pounds didnt matter, as I look back, but the shame
that came with those extra pounds was like an infectious disease.
Thats what I remember. And so these days, my mind and my heart
are focused less on the pounds and more on what it means to live
without shame, to exchange that heavy and corrosive self-loathing
for courage and freedom and gratitude. Some days I do just that,
and some days I dont, and that seems to be just exactly how life is.
Back to Lynne Rossetto Kasper. I wake up in the morning and I
think about dinner. I think about the food and the people and the
things we might discover about life and about each other. I think
about the sizzle of oil in a pan and the smell of rosemary released
with a knife cut. And it could be that thats how God made me the
moment I was born, and it could be that thats how God made
me along the way as Ive given up years of secrecy and denial and
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embarrassment. It doesnt matter at this point. What matters is


that one of the ways we grow up is by declaring what we love.
I love the table. I love food and what it means and what it does
and how it feels in my hands. And that might be healthy, and it
might be a reaction to a world that would love me more if I starved
myself, and its probably always going to be a mix of the two. In
any case, its morning and Im hungry. Which is not the same as
weak or addicted or shameful. Im hungry. And Im thinking about
dinner, not just tonight, but the next night and the next. There are
two kinds of people, and Im tired of pretending Im the other.

Nigellas Flourless Chocolate Brownies


Adapted from Nigella Express
I have a serious thing for Nigella Lawsons cookbooks. I read them like
novels, and at the end of especially long days, I read them in bed before
I go to sleepcomfort food for my brain. She writes about food in a way
that connects with me, that captures appetite and passion and celebration
and flavor in a way that moves me. Back when I couldnt admit my own
hunger, Nigellas books became very dear to me because she did just that
in a way that I wasnt yet able to do. Shes not at all daunted or afraid of
her appetites, and she has been a guide for me along that path.
Im not always wild about flourless chocolate cake, and its not for lack
of trying. Because Aaron eats gluten-free, weve tested lots of flourless
chocolate cakes and tarts and brownies, and often they seem kind of eggheavy to me, kind of like a not-so-good custard. But the almond meal in
these brownies makes them heavy and dense in such a good way, and the
addition of almond extract makes them even more fragrant and rich. I cut
them into quite small pieces, almost like fudge. Heavenly.
And Ive found that almost any good chocolate works for these
semisweet chips, a dark chocolate bar cut into chunks, anything. You really
cant go wrong.

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hungr y

Ingredients
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
1 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon almond extract
3 eggs, beaten
1 cups almond meal or ground almonds
1 cup walnuts, chopped

Instructions
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Melt the chocolate and butter
over low heat in a saucepan, stirring until glossy and smooth.
Take the pan off heat, mix in the vanilla, sugar, and almond
extract, and let it cool for just a few minutes.
Stir the eggs into the saucepan, then add the ground almonds
and chopped walnuts and stir again. The batter will be a little grainy
at this point because of the almonds, but dont worry a bit.
Pour batter into an 8 by 8 pan, and bake for 25 to 30 minutes,
until the top has set but the brownies are still a little wiggly. Let cool
completely, then cut into 16 small squares.

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Bread & Wine


A Love Letter to Life Around the Table with Recipes
by Shauna Niequist

As a follow up to her two


bestselling books, Bittersweet
and Cold Tangerines, author
and blogger Shauna Niequist
returns with the perfect read
for those who love food and
value the community and
connection of family and
friends around the table.

BUY NOW
Praise for Bread & Wine
Bread & Wine is a new book about an ancient meal, but
more than a meal, a book about the people seated at
the table, and about the laughing, and about the joy of
saying hello and the pain of saying good-bye. After
reading this book you may feel as you do driving away
from dinner with a friendgrateful and full.
~Donald Miller, author of Blue Like Jazz and
A Million Miles in a Thousand Years

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