Two of life's pleasures are reading worthy books and eating delectable foods. Often times reading a book is comparable to tasting, swallowing, chewing, and digesting food. Books are a buffet of flavors, colors, textures, and tastes -- rich, hearty, fiery, and spicy, smooth and chewy, bitter, sweet, and sour, meaty, tender and succulent, and on and on. Therefore, if we imagine our books as an edible spread to ingest, maybe we can build a twelve course meal of our favorites.
INSTRUCTIONS:
Here are the twelve courses included in this elaborate menu designed to give diners a tantalizing eating experience with food. If you were to assign your favorite books to the menu, as if they were food to be tasted, where would you place them? Pay attention to the italicized words in the descriptions, but you can be creative. Then briefly explain why you placed them in that category...giving the readers a taste.
The Twelve-Course Meal
1. Hors d'oeuvre : savory food, usually served in small portions, like bacon-wrapped scallops.
2. Amuse-bouche : smaller complimentary appetizer, like a cocktail, a teaser from the chef, or single bite finger food.
3. Soup : a light soup, like a bisque or consummé, to bridge between appetizers and the main dish.
4. Appetizer : food or drink that stimulates the appetite for more, like shrimp with cocktail sauce.
5. Salad : very small and usually a mixture of greens with dressing, or a hodgepodge of pieces of cold food, used to cleanse the palate after all those tempting appetizers.
6. Fish / seafood : a flavorful, light meat, delicate and simple, like scallops or oysters, or rich and dignified, like Salmon or tuna steak.
7. First main dish : Yes, after all that, it is time for the first main dish, which is a lighter meat, like duck, chicken, or turkey.
8. Palate cleanser : time to reset your taste buds with refreshing fruit, bread, or sorbet.
9. Second main dish : Yes, another meat...RED MEAT, high quality, prepared to sophistication, such as short ribs or stuffed lamb.
10. Cheese course : served as a simple variety of textures and flavors accompanied by crackers or nuts, kind of like a charcuterie board of diversity.
11. Dessert / wine : Yay! Pleasant deliciousness accompanied by an after dinner drink. Think of rich chocolate mousse or sweet berries and champagne.
12. Mignardise : Finally, the post-post meal treat is a tiny delicate, bite-size elaborate confection, like a macaron, served with coffee or after dinner liqueur, to aid digestion.
MY ANSWERS:
1. Hors d'oeuvre : The Little House series by Ingalls-Wilder
This could go with comfort food, like warm soup on a cold day; however, with all the descriptions of delicious foods within every story, this series is altogether small packages of savory, just like bacon-wrapped scallops.
2. Amuse-bouche : Far From the Madding Crowd by Hardy
Since many of Hardy's works tend to be distressing, this is one that could be a teaser to additional Hardy's works, if you did not know any better. His style is satisfying, and this one is a love story that ends better than the rest.
3. Soup : Wind in the Willows by Grahame
Enjoyable, pleasant, and just right. Like comfort food.
4. Appetizer : 1984 by George Orwell
4. Appetizer : 1984 by George Orwell
This classic will stimulate your mind. If you desire more, you may choose The Handmaid's Tale, Brave New World, or Lord of the Flies. Otherwise, you may be ready to cleanse your palate with salad.
5. Salad : Madame Bovary by Flaubert
The main character is a hodgepodge, a mixed bag, a mess. Then again, many of us can relate to her because we suffer from Madame Bovary Syndrome.
6. Fish / seafood : Persuasion by Jane Austen
A delicate and simple love story, but also refined and dignified.
7. First main dish : Don Quixote by Cervantes
7. First main dish : Don Quixote by Cervantes
The outward appearance is daunting...but it is both light and substantial.
8. Palate cleanser : Anne of Green Gables by Montgomery
Definitely refreshing and a reset from the heavier reads on our plate.
9. Second main dish : Anna Karenina by Tolstoy
Pure RED MEAT. This you will digest for a lifetime.
10. Cheese course : Reading Lolita in Tehran by Nafisi
10. Cheese course : Reading Lolita in Tehran by Nafisi
Nafisi wrote this story about reading books under the repressive and tyrannical Iranian regime, providing a variety of experiences from literature through the POV of women under threat. (P.S. if you are curious about what is happening in Iran now, read this book!)
11. Dessert / wine : The Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald
11. Dessert / wine : The Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald
Each time I read this, it ages well. I know the story is difficult to swallow, but it's more than a story; it is an experience. You don't want to look again, but you have to look; just like you don't want that piece of cheesecake, but you have to have one more bite.
12. Mignardise : Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
This is a treat! A well-thought out love story with truth and honesty and perfection. It will be just what you need; satisfyingly smooth and easy to digest.
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Want to participate? Copy the INSTRUCTIONS and menu from the top of this post, and create a post with your answers on your blog. Comment here when you've answered the tag, and include a link to your post.
Bon Appetit!
With the exception of #'s 1, 8, and 10, I have consumed (so to speak) all of the offerings listed on the festive board presented here. This includes three complete readings of the Hardy novel-I limited myself to two full helpings only of Tess, Jude, the Mayor, and The Woodlanders. I wanted to spare the sadness of partaking too heavily of the stronger dose of tragedy in these later works of the master of grief and sorrow. I enjoyed the clever pairings of the courses and the literary selections. Edward Behr would be proud!
ReplyDeleteLOL! Thank you!!! I have to say I totally understand why you would go light on the Hardy's. In all seriousness, I was not enjoying the Woodlanders. It felt like I was always waiting for a climax, and nothing was happening. However, I have hope to return to it one day. What was your opinion of it since you completed it?
DeleteThe Woodlanders is one of six Hardy novels that I read twice, Ruth, in 1987 and in 2023. (It took a long time to recover from the 1987 reading, ha, ha, and both readings were by listening for me.) I fully relate to your take on it, because the first third of the book or so with its measured pacing seemed interminably slow, and remember this was an audible experience. I didn't find it to be as piercingly tragic as Tess or Jude (especially Tess), but the story of the love of Giles for Grace will turn out to be fully absorbing for you, I think, if you are inclined to persevere and wade through this work. And I hope you eventually get to Wuthering Heights also, if you have an appetite for the dark side which is prominently displayed throughout that wild work.
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