Kitchen Adventures

Food You (Still) Don’t Know What to do With

Sheila Squillante




In 2012 I had (among many other things) a love of food, two small kids and a memoir I was trying to write about a father I had lost who liked to eat.

I also had the suspect knowledge that sometimes writers could get the attention of readers and publishing bigwigs by keeping an interesting blog project going. I thought, I have a blog! I have three or four readers! Why shouldn't it be my work that Oprah's minions find as they trawl the internet 24-7 seeking the next best-selling title for her book club?

Dream big, Sheila.

So, I cooked (heh) up the idea of Food You Don't Know What to Do With, in which readers would participate in prompting my writing and cooking. It went like this:

I am planning a new, weekly column here called Food You Don’t Know What To Do With, in which you, my readers, suggest foods that perplex you, stump you, terrify you, intrigue but evade you, and I write about them, offering some background, history, photos, tangential-but-hopefully-engaging musings and, most importantly, some actual suggestions on how to approach them in the kitchen! 

Each week I would put all the foods into a blue mixing bowl on slips of paper (I'm Gen-X. We're analog as hell.) and have one of my kids pick: kale, zucchini, beets, saffron. Then, I'd cook. Then, I'd write. It was great fun and guess what?

We're bringing it back!

Only this time, I'm going to have a sous-chef: my son, Rudy! Rudy who I write about in All Things Edible as having inherited my father's adventurous palate and my love of cooking as connection. Rudy, who had his own cooking project not long ago, for which I was his very willing sous-chef.

We're planning two posts per month, and we're going to draw from my world and (hopefully!) from his. I'll cook and he'll help. Then he'll cook and I'll help. We'll have posts you can read, videos you can watch and, most importantly, recipes you can make with your new-found confidence. Now you'll know what to do!

So, if you'd like to participate--and we hope you will!--you can either drop a comment below or reach out on any social media post this appears on to me, Rudy or CLASH with the food you don't know what to do with and we will pick randomly from something that looks like this:

The Magical Blue Mixing Bowl of Happiness & Possibility...I don't have this one anymore, sadly. But we'll find something appropriate.

Rudy, age 11, having just pulled a name from the mixing bowl.

Rudy, age how-is-he-almost-18??, having just filled out his voter registration application!

Deadline to submit for our first post will be July 16, but we'll take your food stuffs anytime for future posts.

You can email me at sheila.squillante@gmail.com

Thanks, friends, for giving me something to do with my kid. He's an awesome kid. I like him a lot.

 

PREORDER ALL THINGS EDIBLE, RANDOM & ODD

COMING NOVEMBER 2023

Through lyrical and intimate personal essays, All Things Edible, Random and Odd delivers a portrait not just of a father who died, but of a daughter who kept living. 


SHEILA SQUILLANTE is a poet and essayist living in Pittsburgh. She is the author of the poetry collections, Mostly Human, winner of the 2020 Wicked Woman Book Prize from BrickHouse Books, and Beautiful Nerve, (Tiny Hardcore Books, 2015) as well as three chapbooks of poetry: In This Dream of My Father, Women Who Pawn Their Jewelry and A Woman Traces the Shoreline. Her debut essay collection, All Things Edible, Random and Odd, will be published by CLASH Books in 2023. She directs and teaches in the MFA program at Chatham University where she serves as Executive Editor of The Fourth River, a journal of nature and place-based writing. She is also an Editor-at-Large for Barrelhouse Magazine, an unlikely bulldog lover and an abstract visual artist. During the pandemic she ripped out her front lawn and planted a garden.


CLASH BOOKS