Archive for February, 2010

Okay, so this post isn’t actually about Turkish Delight, but it does contain a delightful Turkish recipe, and it’s what real Turkish Delight would be if I ran the world.

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This exotic dessert is another favorite dish of ours—a recipe from the Tailor’s friends in Istanbul. I crave it pretty much all the time, and come January I’ll start bugging the Tailor incessantly until he finally hauls out the scale and sugar. But since it’s fairly labor-intensive, and depends on the seasonality of the pumpkins we store in the attic, we usually only get to enjoy it a couple of times a year. Trust me, though, it’s well worth the effort, and is one of the most elegant, flavorful and visually appealing desserts I’ve ever tasted (just look at that gorgeous translucent pumpkin!). Try it next time you have a special occasion and you want an alternative to pumpkin pie (no disrespect to my favorite pie, of course!).

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Candied Pumpkin

You’ll need: one small-to medium sugar pie pumpkin, one scale, and a whole lotta sugar.

Wash and peel your pumpkin (I’m not going to lie: peeling ain’t fun).

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Cut it in half and remove the stem and innards.

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Weigh the pumpkin; get as precise a measurement as you can, because this is important. Note: since our scale is metric, and since the original recipe is written in metric (those Turks!), we don’t bother to convert back. So all the measurements in this post are metric—if you need to convert to the English system, there are lots of online conversion calculators. And the ratios in this recipe are pretty straightforward, so conversion really won’t be difficult. A word of caution, though: double- and triple-check your converted measurements! If one of your proportions is wrong, you’ll have gone through a lot of work (and pumpkin) for a failed mess.

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Now it’s time to make your algebra teacher proud—get out a pen and paper and write up a little proportion equation. You will need 750 g of sugar (we use that raw organic cane stuff) for every kilogram of pumpkin—that’s a 3:4 ratio (by weight, remember, not volume!), if you’re converting.

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Slice each half of the pumpkin in half again, and then slice each quarter into strips, about 1 1/2 inches wide.

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Place the pumpkin strips in a heavy-bottomed stock pot and pour your carefully-measured sugar over the pumpkin.

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Cover and let sit overnight (or at least six hours). The sugar will draw the water out of the pumpkin and shrink the slices, resulting in smaller pumpkin pieces floating in syrup.

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Over low heat, bring the sugar/pumpkin mixture to a simmer. Stirring gently every 15 minutes or so, cook the pumpkin for about 1.5 to 2 hours, or until all the pumpkin pieces are translucent—this finishes the candying process. The thicker the slices, the longer this will take.

Turn off the heat, and allow the candied pumpkin to cool to room temperature. Transfer to a covered refrigerator dish and chill. Serve in small portions, sprinkled with chopped pecans for a nice contrasting texture.

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Candied pumpkin will keep in the refrigerator for at least ten days, but it doesn’t freeze well, so serve it fresh and enjoy it while it lasts! Try to refrain from sticking your face into the bowl to slurp up every last drop of syrup—but I’ll understand if you can’t.

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…it would be the unexpected blooming of an early spring.

First of all, an update: Just Desserts is going like hot cakes, and Adam is moving that Vandercook into his studio as we speak. A boatload of thanks to all your kind words, word-spreading, and huge support over the past couple of weeks!

And as if that weren’t enough excitement in my life, Jessica and I have had some seriously huge smiles for the past couple of days: we just received our copies of the latest issue (Spring 2010) of Kiki Magazine, which contains a feature on the Feminist Broadsides!

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Before we were contacted for an interview, neither of us had heard of the magazine, but I can tell you that we became instant fans when we read its mission. Unlike so many other magazines written for teenage girls, which usually (even if inadvertently) tend to focus on questioning one’s body, popularity, attractiveness and overall self-worth, Kiki aims to empower girls with self-esteem, confidence, and a wide variety of knowledge and skills. As someone who is generally dismayed by the lack of respect with which our society tends to treat girls and women (still! Why is “You throw like a girl” an insult?), and the self-loathing and doubts still being ingrained from their earliest experiences onward, Kiki seems like a breath of fresh air—and a huge relief.

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And hey—who are we really creating these broadsides for, anyway? What is it that we’re trying to change in our world? It’s not just about the social issues we cover with each piece—it’s about teaching the women and girls around us that they can be heard, that what they say and do matters.

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So Kiki gets an A-plus in my book, not just for the thoughtful content (no ads! No boy-crazy quizzes! All substance!), but for the fantastic design! This thing is seriously fun to read and gorgeous to look at. And look! My favorite part:

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Rock on, Kiki. We’re honored to be a part of what you do.

So if you have a girl in your life and you want to celebrate her girl-power, check out their website here.

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This is my friend Adam Agee, one of my favorite people on the planet.

Adam and I go way back—we were at RISD together, and shared a house in Rome, where he rode a unicycle everywhere and taught me to juggle. He also planted the seed that grew into an artist book: many years ago he told me of a fountain in Bologna, Italy, with a shocking secret that was obvious from a single vantage point, and invisible otherwise. No matter how much I pressed him, he would only answer that I had to go there myself to find out. The year we lived in Italy he finally took me there personally (it’s true: shocking!), and the experience became a clue in A Riddler’s Compass.

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Adam is probably the most talented person I know. In art school a teacher of ours was always saying Adam was born in the wrong century, and I’m inclined to agree. But like any Renaissance Man, his interests and skills range far and wide, from inventions (he majored in Industrial Design) to graphic design to painting to comics and back again.

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Many artists with diverse interests turn to printmaking for its versatility, and Adam is no exception. A few years ago he invested in a floor-model platen press, and created an ambitious series of prints called the Dream Press Cycle. You’d never know this was his first attempt at letterpress, but then this is Adam we’re talking about.

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Since then letterpress has been a staple in Adam’s personal and professional work.

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I’ve been able to have a front-row seat for his growth as a printmaker,

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and have collected a few pieces myself.

Now it appears that a golden opportunity has presented itself to Adam: a Vandercook cylinder press (the press every letterpress printer—including myself—dreams of having one day) in perfect working order is for sale, just minutes from his studio (Boulder, CO), and he’s got first dibs. The trouble is, he’s only got a few days before he has to say yea or nay.

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So to help fund the spur-of-the-moment purchase, Adam is offering extra-super-cheap custom poster printing and original artwork right now. Since this isn’t a chance that happens every day (try every decade or so), I told him to jump at it, and signed up to be his first customer. So if you’re looking for some seriously affordable custom design or handmade artwork, or if you’re in a band in need of a concert poster, read more about it here.

Best of luck, Adam!

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This year marks the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage in Washington—a feat only made possible by the collaborative efforts of many dedicated people of every walk of life and political stripe. In this spirit, we present our seventh Feminist Broadside, Just Desserts.

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Through our research at the Washington State Library and the Northwest Room at the Tacoma Public Library, we discovered that our state’s suffrage movement had many leaders, rather than one prominent figurehead. We also learned that there was so much head-butting, personality-clashing and partisan in-fighting going on within the organizations involved (Mesdames Hutton and DeVoe, I’m looking at you!) that it would be impossible to tell the whole story in one letterpress poster. So instead of quoting a single historical feminist, we cited a collaborative publication—the Washington Women’s Cook Book, published 1908-1909—and featured four women symbolic of the movement: May Arkwright Hutton, Bernice Sapp, Cora Smith Eaton, and Emma Smith DeVoe. The quote:

“Are not our desserts and salads things of beauty and the joy of the moment?”

The book was a clever piece of propaganda that operated on the principle that the way to a man’s heart—or vote—is through his stomach. All those jellied centerpieces and whimsical souflées must have done the trick—the following year, women got the vote.

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And for my part, the quote turned me into an almost-literal kid in a candy store; the design was just begging for elaborate confections and candy-coated typography. At first, though, I was turned off by the idea of having to draw salads (I wanted more ice cream!), until Jessica read off a litany of aspic salad and gelatin dessert recipes from the book. That’s when the light bulb turned on: Jell-o salad! The decade-plus I spent in the Midwest was about to serve me well.

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Turns out that Jell-o fit right into the turn-of-the-century theme: molded gelatin desserts were a Victorian favorite, and the name “Jell-o” was first coined in 1897 (and if you look carefully, the “J” from the original Jell-o box makes a cameo in the print). There seemed to be no end of antique recipes, advertisements and illustrations at my disposal.

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I might be horrified by the idea of eating gelatin salads, but drawing them was the most professional fun I’ve had in a long, long time. Zooey and I each spent hours researching vintage Jell-o molds—probably more for the pure fascination than for the value of the reference material.

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For the dessert portion of our little menu, I turned to an old favorite for inspiration: Andy Warhol.

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Forget what you know about Campbell’s soup cans or Elvis portraits; Andy got his start as an illustrator specializing in fashion and food. In 1959 he illustrated a spoof cookbook called Wild Raspberries (it’s been on my shelf since high school, and I finally found a direct use for it!), filled with ridiculous “gourmet” recipes for things like “A&P Surprise” (those of you in New England will get that one) and “Seared Roebuck.”

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The illustrations are fantastic (and the polar opposite of my style), but the thing that really drew me in was the lettering. Andy had his mother, Julia Warhola, write all of the text of his early illustrations in her shaky, school-girl script. Mrs. Warhola spoke little to no English, and simply copied her son’s notes letter-for-letter, so the text in Wild Raspberries has charming errors and misspellings throughout.

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I loved the down-to-earth quality of Mrs. Warhola’s cursive, so I wrote a recipe from the Washington Women’s Cook Book along the border of the broadside in a similar hand (though to warn you, it’s a recipe I wouldn’t recommend trying!).

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And of course, I couldn’t do without a little ice cream homage.

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Like The Curie Cure, this piece is printed in three colors—although the three we chose let us create many more. Our color scheme allowed us to print in a similar fashion to commercial printing, where a minimum of colors (CMYK—cyan, magenta, yellow, black) are layered to create a full-color image. Our layering of translucent pink, blue and yellow ink allowed us to create a full rainbow and a convincing depiction of foreign objects floating in Jell-o.

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Heaps of thanks to everyone who came to our talk at the State Library the other night, despite lousy weather and rush-hour traffic—we had a tremendous turnout, and a huge show of support for our state’s oldest cultural institution. For those of you who couldn’t make it, the staff made a video archive of our talk (they’re archivists! That’s what they do!), which will be available for online viewing in a few weeks. I’ll announce it here when it’s up.

One more thing: three cheers for the incredible staff at the Washington State Library (many of whom are among those whose jobs have been cut and will end very soon) who made our talk and this very piece possible. Because we couldn’t have done it without them, we have donated a portion of the projected proceeds of Just Desserts to support the State Library’s collections.

After all, it’s about preserving that joy of the moment for everyone to share, right?

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Just Desserts: No. 7 in the Feminist Broadside series
Edition size: 100
Poster size: 10 x 18 inches

Printed on an antique Vandercook Universal One press, each piece is printed on archival, 100% rag, recycled paper, and signed by both artists.

Colophon reads:
In 1909 suffragists saw an opportunity to forward their cause in Seattle at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific (AYP) Exposition. The Washington Equal Suffrage Association (WESA), led by president Emma Smith DeVoe, provided an AYP exhibition on the importance of women’s right to vote and hosted Women’s Days, distributing pamphlets alongside displays of domesticity. WESA treasurer Dr. Cora Smith Eaton, joined The Mountaineers’ AYP expedition to climb Mt. Rainier and placed a “Votes for Women” banner at the summit. Suffragists from eastern Washington, led by May Arkwright Hutton, came by the trainload to attend the AYP and WESA’s National Convention. Many of the details—from ideological clashes to victories—were archived at the Washington State Library, thanks to Bernice Sapp.

Women from around the country also contributed to the Washington Women’s Cook Book, published to sell at the AYP. Filled with recipes, domestic advice and inspirational suffragist quotes, it reassured male voters that the women in their lives would continue homemaking once they had the right to vote: “Give us the vote and we will cook, the better for a wide outlook.” Compiled by Linda Deziah Jennings, the preface extolled the virtues of making beautiful things, and the simple joy of desserts and salads. Suffragists in Washington worked through differences in personalities, social backgrounds and political parties to create a winning recipe, gaining their right to vote in 1910.

Illustrated by Chandler O’Leary and printed by Jessica Spring with gratitude to all the cooks. 100 copies were printed by hand at Springtide Press in Tacoma. February 2010

Price: $35 (plus tax and/or $12 shipping, when applicable)

Available now in the shop!

End of the Line (Harriet Tubman) and The Curie Cure (Marie Curie), the previous two prints in the series, are still available, as well. I’m posting these items in small quantities on Etsy (easier to keep track of that way—this is a dinky operation here!), so if you don’t see what you’re looking for in the shop, that just means I haven’t gotten around to relisting it yet. If something sells out I’ll post an update here.

We’re also still taking subscriptions to the Feminist Broadside series. The subscribers’ price is $30. If you are interested in becoming a subscriber, drop me a line at chandler [at] anagram-press [dot] com. And as a special Valentine’s Day thank-you to our many wonderful supporters, we’ll be including a little Feminist surprise to all new and existing subscribers: a mini “Dead Feminist” print featuring a quote by the lovely and talented Pearl Bailey.

The postcard reproductions of the first six Feminist Broadsides are now available, too, and are priced at $1.75 each. Every new subscriber, starting with either Just Desserts or the two previous prints, will also receive one free set of postcards.

(The next Feminist Broadside will be released in May 2010.)

The past couple of weeks have been an absolute whirlwind, and when I look in the mirror I see a walking, talking to-do list. The notes-to-self strewn all over the studio (among half-finished boxes, reference materials, pencil layouts, proof prints, watercolor pans, etc.) aren’t enough, so now I’ve taken to muttering little reminders under my breath—call this client, mail this order, drop off this pile of prints, invoice this subscriber, edit this illustration, proof these plates, cut this book cloth, list these cards, upload these photos, schedule these blog posts.

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As you can see, the latter has moved to the back burner while I line up the other ducks. Oh, there’s plenty to show and tell, but the new Broadside and tonight’s talk have completely taken over my brain (and my calendar). So instead of buckling down yesterday to sketch out the numerous future posts waiting in the queue, I bolted to Seattle to clear my head.

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Turns out one of my absolute favorite hobbies is wandering around the Market alone, especially on weekdays when it’s relatively empty. Losing myself among the fruit stalls and neon is as therapeutic as meditation.

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I wasn’t in the drawing mood this time, but the Market is also on my short list of all-time favorite sketching haunts. This is one from a year ago or so, on a completely packed, sunny Saturday, when I flattened myself against poles and ducked down onto the curb to draw without being trampled by tourists.

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I love it for the people-watching when it’s crowded, but there’s something special about having the place to myself. There is a downside, however (besides being heckled by bored fishmongers): it’s awfully hard not to splurge on sampling from the unbelievable smorgasbord of fresh goodies.

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Now how could I say no to that?