Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Episode 4 of The Catholic Foodie is up - So What's for Dinner?


Gracebeforemeals.com, Christmas menus & recipes, feedback & more recipes, beer tasting and the O Antiphon of the day. Join us for episode 4 of The Catholic Foodie! Leave voice feedback: 985-635-4974.

Here are some of the links I mentioned in this episode:

Grace Before Meals

Inge's kale-hash recipe

Emeril's Wild Pecan Rice recipe

Poinsettia Cocktail

Leave voice feedback for The Catholic Foodie at 985-635-4974.

Download episode 4 of listen to it below:



*Photo by barcoder96: http://www.flickr.com/photos/leegillen/71825683/

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

More on the O Antiphons

I just came across an article posted on the Catholic Cuisine blog. It is a great article and I highly recommend it. You can find it here.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

The O Antiphons


This episode is a special contribution to the Catholic New Media Roundup Advent Calendar. You can find the calendar at www.catholicroundup.com.

Today, December 17, marks the beginning of the octave leading up to Christmas. This is the high point of the Advent season. The Church marks this period by inserting the O Antiphons into Vespers each evening. Listen to this episode to find out more about Vespers and the O Antiphons.

Listen to this special episode of The Catholic Foodie below, or subscribe in iTunes or in your favorite reader.

You can also download this special episode.



Photo by Per Ola Wiberg @ http://www.flickr.com/photos/powi/3090215585/sizes/o/#cc_license

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Beautiful Advent Mediation

Here is a beautiful and prayerful mediation that Inge Loots contributed to the Catholic Roundup Advent calendar. Check it out!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Episode 2 - Feasting on Asphalt is up!

Episode 2 of the The Catholic Foodie is up. Please subscribe in iTunes or with your favorite reader!

Also, please leave feedback at catholicfoodie@gmail.com. I forgot to ask for feedback in the podcast so I am asking for it now. Thank you!

Catholic Moments Podcast
Forgotten Classics
Franky & Johnny's
Plurk.com/alberione

You can download episode 2 or listen to it below:

Thursday, December 4, 2008

A Christmas Gift Idea


Yes, we are in Advent, preparing for Christ’s coming, but we are also preparing for family celebrations at Christmas. These celebrations often entail gift-giving. I don’t know about you, but I am often at a loss about what to give certain people. When I find myself at a loss, I usually just get them something that I would enjoy. And that usually works out well.

If you are wondering what to get the foodies in your life... why not get them a cookbook? I have a particular one in mind that I can recommend to you – Alton Brown's Feasting on Asphalt: The River Run. I purchased this cookbook a number of months back when Alton came to New Orleans for a book signing.

On a Wednesday evening the whole family made the 45 minute trip across Lake Pontchartrain to Octavia Books on Octavia Street in uptown New Orleans.. My kids had been begging to go to the signing. They love Alton Brown and his Food Network show Good Eats. As a matter of fact, they usually prefer to watch Food Network than to watch cartoons. I know, I have strange kids.But just look at their father!

Anyway, we made the trip across the lake and stood in line for about an hour-and-a-half. It was not easy to wait that long with three young children, but it really was worth it. It was cool to meet Alton Brown. We spoke with him for a few moments, took a picture with him, and he signed our copy of Feasting on Asphalt: The River Run. He addressed it to the kids. And they were so excited to have met him.

We ended the evening at a little hole-in-the-wall right down the street from the bookstore. Franky & Johnny’s. It’s known as a “New Orleans neighborhood restaurant” and it’s a staple of New Orleans culture. It’s been around forever and from the outside it looks like a shack. It’s actually more like a shotgun house. Walking in the front door gets you into the bar. You see lots of wood panelling. And it’s dark. The lighting is subdued in the bar area. To the left is the bar with several beers on tap and the liquor sitting on shelves right in front of a wall-sized mirror. To the right you see an antique juke box. It plays only 45’s. There is even a little space for dancing. There are two more rooms in the “house.” You have to walk through each one to reach the back of the restaurant. The tables are covered with red & white checkerboard cloths. Franky & Johnny’s specializes in seafood, but they also serve po-boys and muffulettas. But, they are famous for their seafood-stuffed artichokes. It was an awesome night.

So why do I recommend this particular cookbook?

Well, this cookbook does more than just catalog recipes. It tells a story. It chronicles Alton’s journey along the Mississippi River (from New Orleans to Missouri), a journey he made on his motorcycle. Along his route, he stops to eat in small family-owned restaurants. In one town he even ate at a church fair. He has a love for the down-home cuisine one finds in family-owned restaurants, a love he learned from his parents when growning up.

The presentation of the book is really neat. The cover is a heavy-duty cardboard. It’s colorful. And the inside looks more like a notebook or scrapbook. Lots of pictures of the food and people he met along the way. The publishers also reproduce some of the hand-written notes that Alton made on the trip. Really cool. I learned a lot reading this cookbook. A lot about culture... and food. Look it up. Here is a link to the book on Amazon.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

The Catholic Foodie Episode 1 is online!


Against my better judgment, I am posting episode 1 of The Catholic Foodie: Let's talk turkey.

I am a perfectionist. Yes, really, I am. And this episode is not perfect. But, I realized earlier that I will never record a single episode if I wait for it to be perfect. So... here it goes!

Please be patient with me. And let me know what you think! Do you have any suggestions, recommendations? Email me at catholicfoodie@gmail.com.

By the way, in recording the podcast, I have realized that I need to stop saying "whatnot." Lord, please help me!

Here are the links I referred to in episode 1:

Catholic New Media Roundup Advent Calendar

Emeril's Pepper-stuffed Turkey

Emeril's Turkey-bone Gumbo

Emeril's Real & Rustic

You can download episode 1 or listen to it below:

Advent is here!


Yes it is here! Advent. Our yearly time of preparation for the coming of the Savior. Wreathes, Advent candles, Jesse trees, Christmas trees, special hymns and carols, Advent is a special time of the year. Over the course of the next four weeks, I will share stories and customs of Advent. I will also include links for further information.

My family loves the Advent wreath. We keep it on the dining room table and light the appropriate candles just before dinner each night. We like to say a little prayer, read a short Advent meditation, and then sing a verse of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel. We also make a Jesse Tree.

For the last few years, we have had help keeping the Advent season. My children were in the children's choir. They sang Advent and Christmas songs ALL day EVERY day. It was awesome! This year, however, the kids are not in choir. Scheduling conflicts prevented their participation. So we will have to really work on staying in the season this year. I plan on trying to incorporate evening prayer each night.

There is something else that I will be doing for Advent this year... an online Advent calendar. Sean, the "Ductapeguy" from the Catholic New Media Roundup, has organized a special media morsel for each day of Advent. Here is the promo for the Advent calendar:



So, what are you doing for Advent? Leave a comment or send me an email at catholicfoodie@gmail.com.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Thanksgiving and Advent

Today we celebrate in the Church the Feast of Christ the King, which marks the end of the liturgical year. Next Sunday is the 1st Sunday of Advent, the beginning of a new liturgical year. It is also a very special time of preparation for Catholics around the world.

This year, in addition to beginning Advent, I am also beginning a new podcast. The first episode will be up this week. Can you guess the theme of the episode? Surprisingly enough it is Thanksgiving! Please check back this week as I will post the episode here. It will also be available on iTunes.

Today I am working on a promo for the show. I hope to complete it today and post it here as well.

400×300 CNM Advent Badge

On November 30, the Catholic New Media Roundup will begin an online Advent calendar. Each day of Advent a catholic contributor will provide a surprise (a special blog post, audio clip, podcast, music, short videos, or art). You can find the calendar here or click on the image above.