resonant: Ray Kowalski (Due South) (Default)
[personal profile] resonant
I had a thought and I put it on the top of the list so that if anybody comes up with brilliant ideas, I'll have time to put them into action: What Frances (of Hoban & Hoban's Bread and Jam for Frances) would eat for Christmas dinner, if she celebrated Christmas and for whatever totally not topical reason she found herself eating Christmas dinner alone.

One of my fannish friends once told me she was working on the best project ever: re-creating (and eating) the final lunch from Bread and Jam For Frances:

A thermos filled with cream of tomato soup, and a lobster salad sandwich on thin slices of white bread, and celery, carrot sticks, and black olives, and a little cardboard shaker of salt for the celery, and two plums, and a tiny basket of cherries, and vanilla pudding with chocolate sprinkles, and a spoon to eat it with.


(I remember we talked about how the serving sizes must have been very, very small, or else little badgers must have very, very big appetites.)

I'm going to be alone for Christmas, as I was for Thanksgiving; I just can't feel safe eating an indoor dinner with people who don't live with me. And my experience on Thanksgiving was that I really missed the hospitality of cooking an uncommon meal and eating it with uncommon ceremony.

(Who, being a grade-school-aged badger, probably doesn't make her own lunches, but never mind; in my head I can be both Frances and Frances' mother. And I have a big freezer for storing leftovers.)

Possibly Frances would have one piece each of both ham and turkey, and a teaspoon each of both gravy and cranberry sauce, and both stuffing and mashed potatoes, and a salad the size of a cupped hand, and about two mouthfuls each of two kinds of pie?

Possibly Frances would decide to go directly to the leftover stage and eat a ham and turkey sandwich with carrots and cucumbers and a very small orange and a ring of canned pineapple and a couple of pieces of this really delightful chocolate covered toffee that was an excellent early gift this year?

I welcome badger-inspired menu ideas!


Specify a date if you want; otherwise I'll just answer them whenever.

This year, in addition to the usual kinds of questions, I'd also love to get storyish prompts. Storyish meaning you never know what you might get: two sentences of a story, or a description of a story that will never exist, or a love song about how much I like that trope, or a rant about my pet peeve about that trope, or I know nothing about that canon except what I see on social media and here's what I think it might be about, or Ten Reasons Why I Love/Hate/Am Indifferent To that character, canon, or trope, or ...

As always, I'd love to hear about it if you're doing the meme too.


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(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 05:44 pm (UTC)
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
From: [personal profile] ursula
Gingerbread badger with a Santa hat? Brussels sprouts cut in quarters? Hors d'oeuvres?

I have a reproduction first edition Joy of Cooking that I feel might be helpful here. There's a whole section on children's party favors that seems potentially appropriate (I remember the tiny candle in a candlestick made of a Lifesaver ring); let me know if you want me to investigate further.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 05:50 pm (UTC)
panisdead: (Default)
From: [personal profile] panisdead
About an egg cup's worth of butternut squash casserole: http://meljoulwan.com/2009/11/23/eat-your-vegetables-butternut-squash/

Huh.

Date: 12/19/20 06:25 pm (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
Wow...I read those books as a kid but I don't remember much about the food mentioned other than the bread and jam and hard boiled eggs. (Though now that you quote it, the cardboard shaker of salt kind of rings a bell.) I feel like the specific foods didn't make much impression on me at the time, but reading that quote now I'm suddenly struck that maybe that represents the food culture that would ostensibly be my cultural heritage (at least through one grandparent, but also the region my parents and I grew up in), except that my parents deliberately rejected it for a more urban, modern (they're at least a generation younger than Hoban), American-melting-pot-international food tradition.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 06:34 pm (UTC)
panisdead: (Default)
From: [personal profile] panisdead
Absolutely; my guess is butter and regular milk/half & half/cream would work fine as substitutes.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 06:51 pm (UTC)
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
From: [personal profile] ursula
There is a clear winner in terms of combined adorableness and edibility:


Fig and Raisin Cat.

Two pulled figs joined with toothpicks, split almonds for ears, raisins on toothpicks for legs, icing for mouth and eyes, straws for whiskers and a ribbon bow around the neck.


There is a companion Fig and Raisin Man whose head is "a marshmallow partly dipped in chocolate."

Re: Huh.

Date: 12/19/20 06:57 pm (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
Hm, I have the same reaction about the mayo, but on the other hand, tunafish sandwiches were totally a thing for a couple of generations, right? And mostly kids didn't die of food poisoning? (I'm in the "mayo is not food" camp and when I was a kid, I was also in the "fish is not food" camp, so no tuna sandwiches in my lunchbox. But I'm pretty sure it was a thing!)

A few years ago, I directed a production of The Importance Of Being Earnest, which features a lot of food on stage, including cucumber sandwiches. My props person felt that verisimilitude was important, and wanted to make real cucumber sandwiches with mayonnaise. Which I'm pretty sure is not what Victorian English people put on their cucumber sandwiches, and in any case, I'm in camp "if the audience isn't going to see it, let's prioritize logistical convenience over authenticity," but mostly I was just like "please, let's not food poison the actors!" (And then the actor who had to eat them weighed in with "also, I don't eat mayo, could we maybe substitute something else?")

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 07:06 pm (UTC)
princessofgeeks: Shane smiling, caption Canada's Shane Hollander (Default)
From: [personal profile] princessofgeeks
I HEART FRANCES THIS MUCH AND I WISH TO SUBSCRIBE TO THIS NEWSLETTER.

Frances and Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel are my favorite children's books of all time.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 07:51 pm (UTC)
superborb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] superborb
That cardboard shaker of salt reminds me of the puzzlement I felt as a child reading about someone carrying a bit of salt in a twist of paper for their lunch. I never seasoned anything with just salt and was so confused!

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 09:30 pm (UTC)
superborb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] superborb
IIRC, the use of the salt in the book I read was for an egg. But I've never felt that a hard boiled egg needed salt, so...

Re: Huh.

Date: 12/19/20 09:51 pm (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
Oh, actually, yes, I don't know the exact history of salmonella, but I have the impression it became more of a problem as farming got more industrial, so that actually might well have not been so much of a risk in our*/our parents' childhood as it is now (or, was 20 years ago? possibly it's declined again since?).

However, the internet seems to think that commercial mayonnaise is actually acidic enough to not only not grow bacteria but even perhaps kill salmonella in the fish or whatever it's mixed with:
https://www.thespruceeats.com/mayonnaise-spoilage-myths-and-safety-1808083

And I bet approximately no one makes homemade mayo for their kids' lunchbox.

*[From things you've posted, I think you're about 10 years older than I am. I was born almost exactly at the end of the Nixon presidency.]

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 10:25 pm (UTC)
lunabee34: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lunabee34
Oh this is adorable! You must have a perfect wee radish.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 10:54 pm (UTC)
laurenthemself: Rainbow rose with words 'love as thou wilt' below in white lettering (Default)
From: [personal profile] laurenthemself
Other things that Frances has been known to eat, according to the books I've got:
  • Oatmeal with banana (she prefers raisins, but had eaten them all); a box of prunes and five chocolate biscuits; chocolate cake (A Baby Sister for Frances)
  • Bubblegum balls; gum drops; chocolate-covered peanuts; presumably some of Gloria's birthday cake (A Birthday for Frances)
  • Chocolate sandwich cookies; a picnic lunch for herself and Gloria made up of hard-boiled eggs, whole fresh tomatoes, carrot and celery sticks, cream cheese-and-chives sandwiches, cream cheese-and-jelly sandwiches, salami-and egg sandwiches, pepper-and-egg sandwiches, coleslaw, potato chips, ice-cold root beer packed in ice, with watermelon and strawberries and cream for dessert; also black and green olives, pickles, iced lollies, pretzels 'and things like that', and they have the salt and pepper shakers again (Best Friends for Frances)
  • A glass of milk (Bedtime for Frances)
  • Bubblegum (A Bargain for Frances)
  • Eggs, jelly beans, chocolate and vanilla sandwich cookies, chocolate, hot dogsoatmeal with raisins again, poached eggs on toast, orange juice, hot chocolate with whipped cream (Egg Thoughts and Other Frances Songs)

Re: Huh.

Date: 12/19/20 11:02 pm (UTC)
laurenthemself: Rainbow rose with words 'love as thou wilt' below in white lettering (Default)
From: [personal profile] laurenthemself
I was in a production of Men at Arms, adapted from the Terry Pratchett book, and we used meringue for mashed potatoes, glued to the plate, because nobody was actually going to eat it. By the end of the week there were ants in it, and on the final night our Vimes actually put a spoonful of it in his mouth.

I was Sybil. It broke me.

(no subject)

Date: 12/19/20 11:55 pm (UTC)

Re: Huh.

Date: 12/20/20 03:05 am (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
:)!

(no subject)

Date: 12/20/20 03:06 am (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
Lorna Doones!

(no subject)

Date: 12/20/20 03:07 am (UTC)
desireearmfeldt: (Default)
From: [personal profile] desireearmfeldt
Srsly.

(no subject)

Date: 12/20/20 09:11 am (UTC)
mific: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mific
I'm a fan of Riddley Walker but have never read the Frances books. Will remedy that!

(no subject)

Date: 12/20/20 03:39 pm (UTC)
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
From: [personal profile] ursula
There's a drawing, but I think it's cuter than an ordinary human with ordinary icing skill could manage. You can see it here.

(no subject)

Date: 12/21/20 06:43 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: harbor seal's head captioned "seal of approval" (Approval)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k

Ooooo -- annotated!

There's several badger-setts-worth of digging at this fan site https://www.russellhoban.org/title/riddley-walker

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resonant: Ray Kowalski (Due South) (Default)
resonant

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