Monday, April 13, 2026
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Watching TV and Reading
Netflix: A History of the New Yorker Magazine
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| Watching a documentary about the famous New Yorker magazine. It brought back memories of reading it since I was in college. I haven’t read it recently as much as I used to. Maybe start again? |
Reading This Week
Saturday, April 11, 2026
Friday, April 10, 2026
An Old Favorite
My blog has DOZENS of pancake recipes and photos of pancakes that I have made or that we’ve eaten somewhere else. Somehow I have missed one favorite: cottage cheese pancakes. Along with one or two other favorites, it came from a very old baking book that we have had for years:
This morning, Len made the pancakes.
| Today's pancakes have added blueberries. |
| We like real maple syrup on all kinds of pancakes. |
Recipe: Cottage Cheese Pancakes
2 oz butter1 tsp. baking powder
Melt butter. Stir in cottage cheese. Fold in eggs, then other ingredients. Cook pancakes on very hot griddle. Eat with Maple Syrup.
Original Recipe
When we make pancakes, we double this recipe, as it appears above. The two of us eat most of the pancakes.
Blog post © 2026 mae sander
Thursday, April 09, 2026
Nobody
Son of Nobody: A Novel by Yann Martel
“In The Iliad, not a single commoner speaks (with one notable exception). Homer’s omniscient perspective closely aligns with the point of view of the Greek ruling class. It is an aristocratic perspective. Whereas here [in the fictitious epic the Psoad], a commoner speaks so much he practically filibusters.” (p. 62)
Son of Nobody alternates between two stories, one modern in the US and England, and one in the ancient world of the Trojan War. The link between the stories is a classical scholar who has discovered a new epic about the Greeks at Troy, the Psoad, the history of a common soldier named Psoas. This scholar works at a library in Oxford, while his wife and child have remained in America. At the beginning of each chapter of Martell’s novel, we read an excerpt from the newly discovered epic (which of course exists only in the novel). Following each excerpt, we read the story of the scholar as he hears from his wife, who resents his absence from their home while he’s in Oxford.
Tragedy strikes: their child dies of a sudden infection. Martell suggests connections and similarities between the modern and ancient stories. I find the situation of a very sick child and remote father to be poignant, though contrived. Throughout there are vivid and significant details — such as the appearance of the pottery fragment where the previously unknown epic was recorded. Emotions like the suffering of the family, the grief of a bereaved father, and the fear of the mother all are vivid. But collectively, the descriptive passages somehow did not come together for me: I don’t think the book succeeds.
As far as I can discover, the character Psoas along with his name and the epic about him are the creation of Martel, not taken from ancient myth or history. There is an English word psoas, which refers to “a long, ribbon-shaped muscle in your back. It starts at your lower back and runs through your pelvis to the top of your femur.” (source) I see no connection between the word’s meaning and the character in the novel.
In short, I find the novel a bit puzzling and not entirely satisfying.
Artifacts from Homer’s Era
From our trip in 2025
| As I read, I was thinking about the objects we saw last summer when visiting the Greek islands. |
“The temptation is to see truth in the rational and mere embellishment in the myth.” (p.229)
Monday, April 06, 2026
Quiet Sunday
Tana French: The Keeper
“The townland is scattered with these places, homes emptied by famine in the 1840s, orphaned by emigration in the seventies, left behind in the millennium rush to easier city jobs. Mostly no one bothers to knock them down.” (p. 356)
I’ve read all of Tana French’s earlier police and detective stories, and I think I liked them better than this one.
The Power Plant
| Besides reading, we took a Sunday afternoon walk along the Huron River. |
Review © 2026 mae sander
Thursday, April 02, 2026
Happy Passover
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| At the table. |
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| Another view of the ceremonial items, as well as the gefilte fish that we like to have as part of the meal. |
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| Our main course was Chicken Marbella, a 1980s favorite that I had never cooked before. |
What it all means: From 2007
In the spring we celebrate the Jewish holiday called Passover. We have a special ceremony called a Seder, and we tell a story about Jewish history a long, long time ago. To tell this story, we have special food on the table. The picture shows the table from last year.At the Seder, we tell the story of how the Jews were slaves in the land of Egypt in this long-ago time, and how Moses, their leader, helped them to escape. We celebrate freedom and the coming of spring.
Moses and all the people ran away from Egypt so fast that they didn't have time to bake bread, but ate a flat bread called matzoh. For the holiday of Passover, many Jewish people do not eat any other type of bread or crackers for 8 days, because they want to remember the story.
When the Jewish people were slaves, they had to work very hard making big buildings for the Egyptians. On the Seder plate is a special fruit jam called charoses that tastes very good.Charoses looks like the mortar that holds a brick or stone building together, and we eat it to remind us of the lives of the Jewish slaves who worked on the buildings in Egypt.
The next special food is called "bitter herbs," or horseradish. This is a very bitter, sharp-tasting root. This taste makes all the people at the Seder remember the hard and "bitter" lives that the Jewish people had when they were slaves around 3000 years ago. They make us remember that freedom is a good thing.One part of the Seder is to eat matzoh with some charoses and ground-up horseradish on it, and remember the bitter and the sweet parts of the story.
Salt water on the Passover plate makes us remember the tears that people wept when they were not free men and women.
The egg on the Passover plate reminds us that spring is here.
Parsley or other mild-tasting green herbs is also on the Seder table to remind us of spring. Another part of the Passover celebration is to eat egg with salt water and matzoh, and to dip the parsley in salt water.
Also on the Passover plate is a bone from a lamb. We also drink wine as we tell the story.When Moses helped the Jews to escape, the first thing they did was to cross a big sea named the Red Sea. Here is the magical part of the story: the water of the sea opened up, and everyone could walk between the walls of water.
While they walked, Moses's sister sang and danced to help them on their way. Her name was Miriam, and she has an important part in the story. After all the Jews crossed the Red Sea and escaped from slavery, they lived in the desert for a long time. Miriam had a magic well so that wherever they went, they found water to drink. Even though the desert is a very dry place, Miriam's magic well was always with them.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
March in the Kitchen
New in My Kitchen in March
| New Mug Rack that Len made for some of our many mugs. Len has been doing a lot of woodworking. |
Good Meals in March
At Home
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| … and another roast chicken! |
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| For Saint Patrick’s Day, of course. |
| Alice made us some classic chocolate chip cookies. |
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| Len made Pad Thai — super good! |
| Another meal that Len made. |
Bacon on Special
A Take-Out Meal: Food from the Himalayas
At Slurping Turtle
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| Miso Soup |
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| Seafood plate. |
| Sashimi with raw tuna and vegetables. |
Final March Reading (not in my kitchen)
| I’m not sure I’ll keep reading this in April. The first 200 pages have been disappointing. I expected more from Diana Wynne Jones. |















