Book Cookin Thursday #6: Katniss’ Favorite Lamb Stew with Dried Plums

 

I love food and am a total believer in foods’ power over mood and circumstance. When something bad (or good, or neutral, or nothing at all ) happens, I’m all over it with the appropriate menu. Food can make anything better. Even facing certain death in a kill-or-be-killed arena where you are being sent to atone for crimes committed by your ancestors. Apparently.

“What’s impressed you most since you arrived here?” I rack my brain for something that made me happy here. Be honest, I think. Be honest. “The lamb stew,” I get out. Caesar laughs, and vaguely I realize some of the audience has joined in. “The one with the dried plums?” asks Caesar. I nod. “Oh, I eat it by the bucketful.”

And, so this week for Book Cookin’ Thursday, We will be making Lamb Stew with Dried Plums from Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games.
..or rather, the “No-Hunger Games”, if this stew works out!

* pauses for laughs*

Anyone?

Fine, all puns aside, the recipe I used is from the website notquitenigella.com , and you can find and follow it along here. She has some great pictures of every step in the recipe, and modifications for pressure cookers and stove top methods.

Let’s Cook! May the odds be ever in our favor.

Serves 4

  • 1 kilo, 1 inch diced lamb neck (also called scotch fillet-you can also use lamb fillet, diced leg or shoulder).
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/4 cup plain or all-purpose flour
  • 1-2 tablespoons oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, sliced
  • 2 onions, sliced
  • 2 cups beef or lamb stock
  • 2 large carrots, cut into chunks
  • 500g/1 pound small chat potatoes roughly the same size
  • 1/4 cup pitted prunes (am I the only one who didn’t know that prunes are dried plums?)
  • 1/4 cup Turkish dried apricots (Ah yes, the finest turkish dried apricots that the No Name brand makes…)
  • 1 sprig fresh rosemary
  • 1 sprig fresh lemon thyme (or use thyme and add some lemon zest)
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 cup ginger beer
  • Salt if needed
  • Serve with: wild rice, regular rice or Paddy’s potato scones

Step 1 – On a shallow plate, mix the flour, salt and pepper and dredge the lamb pieces shaking off any excess.

Step 1a– Regret leaving the prep work for this recipe until after work, especially when “after work” is midnight. Lousy evening shift. 😦

Step 2 – Heat your cast iron pot or a frying pan on medium to high heat and brown the lamb pieces in the oil in three or four batches. Then add the garlic and onion and stir until the onions become translucent.

Step 3- If using a slow cooker: Add the stock, sugar, carrots, potatoes, prunes, apricots, rosemary, lemon thyme, bay leaves and ginger beer to the lamb and onion mix. Cook on low for 6-8 hours. Taste to see whether salt is needed
Okay, I’m pretty tired, but I did not see sugar ANYWHERE in the ingredients list. What kind of sugar? How much sugar? I am adding no sugar, and I  do NOT appreciate deception when I’m trying my best to be good and follow the recipe.

Step 4– Clean up after yourself, because if memory serves, J HATES it when he goes to bed after cleaning practically the whole house only to then waking up to an unholy mess his wife made after work. It’s like his least favorite thing, aside from K-Os and people who don’t stand up during the national anthem.

Step 5- Watch an episode of Nashville, eat a handful of Ritz crackers and a Cheesestring and fall asleep

Step 6- Cook, add some salt and LOTS of pepper when you realize you added a bottle of ginger beer instead of a cup and therefore the stew is very sweet.

 
Verdict: Sweetness aside, this was actually pretty tasty. Make sure that you only add a cup of ginger beer and then I would actually recommend this. I’ve never prepared lamb before, because I didn’t know how, but this was easy, healthy, filling and yummy! Would I choose it as my last meal before entering the arena? No, but I would make it again! Success!

 

Mad about that Boy: A Hunger Games Rant (With a crazy amount of spoilers!)

 Being that this Friday marks the release of Catching Fire, the second Hunger Games movie (Super excited! Already pre-ordered my tickets for opening night!), I feel like it’s fitting to write a little bit about this trilogy.

There is so much that I love about the Hunger Games. Love the story, Love the writing, Love Katniss as a strong female lead whose inner dialogue is not comprised of hashtags (#boyz! #nailart! #hashtags!). I love that these books can be read as a simple adventure story or can be analyzed seven ways from Sunday (I doubt this will be the only post about The Hunger Games). I even thought the movie was well made, artfully filmed and very well cast (LOVE Jennifer Lawrence and think that we could be best friends!).

But today, I am going to talk about the only thing that I didn’t like, the reason I read the first two books in 4 days and then waited months to read The Mockingjay.

Peeta.

I know, I know, #boyz! But I think that she ends up with that guy speaks to a larger issue.

Also, seriously, He’s the WORST! Useless and whiny and absolute dead weight. He’s lucky he didn’t get them both killed on numerous occasions. Basically, he’s me if I were to be in a fight to the death situation! Not buying it? Let’s have a look.

Talents include:

  • Face painting for camouflage. super useful if you have 3 hours to spare and a palette of neutral tones.
  • Being in love *sigh*
  • Playing along with his captors to stay alive
  • Being too noisy to go hunting
  • Choosing poisonous berries to eat
  • Worrying about “being true to his soul” instead of worrying about being hacked to bits.

So why did this happen? Time for a theory!

Why Katniss ended up with Peeta: A Feminist Analysis

Okay, so we finally have a young, strong female in a non romantic role. She doesn’t get rescued, she doesn’t trip over a dog leash and fall into a fountain because she’s fallen in love at first sight. She is proactive, acting on her surroundings and circumstance instead of only reacting to things around her. Sound familiar? It shouldn’t, because it rarely happens in teen/ young adult media anymore. The problem with this? Empowerment doesn’t emblazen well on a tween-sized thong. Basically, this goes against the narrative being forced onto girls and women, and so, they broke Katniss using Peeta.

Now, from a character writing standpoint, Katniss had to break down a little bit after all the fighting for her life. I get it. But a male hero gets to go through his darkest hour, then a musical montage about getting back on his feet, then he’s back and more ass-kicking-er than ever.

What happens to our female hero?

  • Semi-comatose during the revolution
  • Dragged around half-heartedly on a mission led by men
  • One more heroic act (I at least won’t spoil that!)
  • Marriage
  • The Babies…which she had after being worn down by her lovely husband
  • Laundry

And all is right with the world, because while women can handle a little adventure, but then they have to cut it out before they permanently damage their feeble minds.

What does this have to do with Peeta? Who better to extinguish the Girl on Fire than the Boy who Frosts? He is the perfect wolf in sheeps’ clothing, a mechanism to subdue a powerful woman.

The crazy thing is that most women are happy that the series ended the way that it did. Peeta has a lot of the “Elijah Wood” effect. Cute? Sure. Sensitive? Definitely. Forgiving, perfect and kind. End up with him and you’ve got a life of deep conversation and socks-on lights-off overly respectful sex. He is familiar and non-threatening. All of these things are great, but his tranquilizing effect on Katniss is so obvious and drastic, that I think the underlying mechanism of patriarchy should be very obvious.

And I’m not saying that she had to end up with Gale (Strong, handsome, supportive Gale who fights for her and with her and is totally the kind of guy who would pull your hair in the bedroom- with consent ;)). Collins makes a decent case for why she doesn’t. But she could have ended up with someone else, or alone!

Shouldn’t we be showing young women that relationships should also be complex and challenging? That your chosen partner should bring out the best in you? Someone who can stand by you but also push you to be better?

Relationships built soley on familiarity and comfort are tempting but un-fulfilling, and will always keep both people from living to their potential. This type of relationship allows for the character of Katniss to be put back in her “proper place” as a docile wife and mother, not the role model we were presented with at the outset.