Tag: A. Catherine Noon

  • Monday Blues

    It\’s the first Monday in August.  Five months left in the year.  Here are some questions to get you thinking:

    1.  What did you miss doing this summer?  List all the things you can think of.

    2.  What do you want to make sure you fit in this holiday season?  Again, list all the things you can think of.

    3.  What do you want to be able to say, in January, that you did during 2012?

    Write a paragraph or more for each of these.  Then move on to the next step.

    1.  Take your list and pick one summer thing, and schedule it for this week.  Then tuck the rest of your list and tuck it in the back of your calendar to put in next year\’s day planner.  Or, if you use an electronic calendar, then put the list on May 1, 2013, and call it \”For Planning This Summer.\”

    2.  Take your list and pick 5 things you can afford.  Now, schedule each of these things somewhere between November 1 and December 31.  Put the rest of the list at the end of your calendar or make a calendar entry for August 1, 2013.

    3.  Take your list of things you want to do this year and write three pages in your journal.  Ask yourself which of the things you\’ve listed you most want to accomplish and what is standing in your way of doing so.

    4.  Now, schedule time in the next week to get started.  Even 30 minutes spent pursuing your goal means you\’ll be that much closer to accomplishing it.

    5.  Schedule another 30 minutes for next week.

    6.  Now, go do it.

    And above all, Happy Monday!

  • Sunday Box Talk – The Journal As Tool

    One of the best ways to get better at understanding our own boxes and their effect on us is through journaling.  I don\’t mean the stereotypical daily page-by-page, blow-by-blow accounts, but more like letters to ourselves.  In fact, writing a dialog with ourselves is tremendously useful.

    How does it work?

    As we write, sometimes we have other responses in our heads to thoughts we write down.  For example, we might write, \”I want to go to France.\”  A response might be, \”Yeah, right, like I have money for that.\”  Another response might be, \”Well, I could set up a savings account for it.\”  And then, \”Well, I\’d better set up an appointment at the bank to talk about options for savings.\”  If we label that first thought A, and then label each response, we can begin to follow a conversation:

    A:  I want to go to France.

    B:  Yeah, right, like I have money for that.\”

    A:  Well, I could set up a savings account for it.\”

    C:  I\’d better set up an appointment at the bank.

    \”C\” is the advisor that helps us get in touch with our deeper wisdom.  It might be D or E.  But if we dig deeply enough, we can find the inner strength to navigate many tough problems.

    What do you think about journaling?  Do you use one?

  • The Noonhour – A Children\’s Folktale

    Welcome to The Noonhour, a Podcast featuring essays, children\’s stories, and other items I find interesting.  It\’s an experiment that I\’m enjoying, so sit back, relax, and listen to
    The Noonhour



  • Saturday Showcase – Sitting with Selena Robins

    Saturday Showcase – Sitting with Selena Robins

    Selena Robins is a kindred spirit. We met through shared writing acquaintances and have become fast friends through Facebook and similar passions – writing, food, craft, and family. I\’m excited to bring you an interview with Selena in which she discusses her pursuit of culinary perfection. Please held me welcome Selena to Knoontime Knitting!

    KK: Tell me a little more about your passion for your craft. What do you like to make?

    SR: My craft is the oldest profession in the world—cooking. I’m a big time foodie, so I watch a lot of cooking shows. I love Iron Chef. I then try (the operative word here is try) to replicate what the Iron Chefs made. However, I won’t attempt anything that involves organ meats or gooey duck. My favorite things to cook is anything Italian.

    Italian food is food inspired from the soul, simple to make, delicious, nutritious and shared with family and friends with pride. Italian recipes are handed down from generations of great cooks from the mother country.

    Disclaimer: When I say recipes handed down, I’m not talking about the traditional cook book, detailing ingredients and exact measurements.

    KK: When did you learn to cook?

    SR: I learned how to cook at a young age from my mom, who was the best cook in the world. I know we all say that about our moms, but in my case it’s true. She could produce a seven course meal without ever turning a page in a recipe book or having state-of-the-art kitchen appliances or gadgets.

    It was a rite of passage in our family (daughters and sons) to learn how to make homemade pasta and tomato sauce. Emphasis on homemade. Heaven forbid an Italian is caught with store-bought sauce or worse have a can of Spaghettio’s in the cupboard. Open one of those babies and your FBI status (Full Bloodied Italian) would be taken away.

    My mom taught me to cook using my senses; sight, touch, taste, smell, listen. The latter was ultra important in our household. Always, listen to mamma.

    KK: Have you ever given your love of cooking to a character?

    SR: With my published novels, both my heroines do not like to cook, not only do they not like it, they can’t be bothered learning. However, I did give the skill to the hero’s. So sexy to see a man in the kitchen. With my two works in progress, the heroines do love cooking as much as I do.

    KK: What effect does your writing have on your cooking and vice-versa? Does one fall off when the other is stronger, or do they synergize?

    SR: The same techniques I use in cooking I also apply when writing, adding a lot of love into my writing craft. Using all the senses: touch, taste, sight and smell, creating characters, dialogue and plots that will give the reader not only a visual experience of what’s happening, but hopefully they can taste what the characters are tasting, smell the scents of the scenery, close their eyes and hear the voices (not the ones in our heads, that’s another story), but the tone of the characters, and most importantly feel the passion I (and other writer’s) have put into creating a wonderful story to draw the reader into a comical, suspenseful, mysterious and romantic world.

    KK: What do you dream of making when you have the time or skills?

    SR: The perfect pie crust recipe. I cannot master a pie crust. I can make homemade bread, cakes, pastas, pizza, but that perfect pie crust still haunts me.

    KK: Those of you who have been following the Saturday Showcase know that I include pictures of the authors\’ art. Selena has taken that one step further and included a recipe that we can try ourselves! If you try it, we\’d love to hear how you liked it in the Comments.

    Pasta e Fagioli

    This recipe can be made and eaten the same day, but it tastes even better if you make it a day ahead of time and serve it the next day, as all the ingredients and goodness marinate together.

    Ingredients:

    • olive oil
    • 5 chopped tomatoes (or a can of plum tomatoes)
    • 1 cup onion (finely chopped)
    • 2 cloves garlic (minced)
    • 6 cups beef broth (or vegetable stock)
    • 1 can red kidney beans (drained and well rinsed)
    • 1 can white kidney beans (drained and well rinsed)
    • 1 can chick peas (drained and well rinsed)
    • ½ cup fresh basil (chopped)
    • **3 cups meatballs (use your favorite meatball recipe and make them tiny bite sized)
    • Pinch red pepper flakes, optional
    • Freshly grated Parmesan Cheese
    • Pasta (your choice: penne, elbow, tubetti)

    **Note: If you don’t want to make meatballs, you can use ground beef, or skip the meat all together.

    Directions:

    • Coat soup pot with olive oil and heat oil on medium. Once oil is heated, add onion and cook until onion is transparent, then add garlic and keep stirring until garlic is infused with the onion.
    • Add tomatoes and cook for about 5 minutes, stirring.
    • Add broth and let cook (uncovered) for 45 minutes.
    • Add red beans, white beans, chick peas, meatballs or sautéed ground beef if you are using meat, and let cook for 15 minutes
    • In a separate pot, boil water and make pasta according to package directions
    • While the pasta is cooking, add the chopped basil, red pepper flakes and salt and pepper to taste and let the soup keep cooking.
    • Once pasta is cooked, drain it and add it to the soup pot.
    • Ladle the soup into bowls. Sprinkle with freshly grated Parmesan cheese and drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil just before serving.

    Note: If making soup the day ahead, then don’t add any pasta, make the pasta the day you will be serving the soup.

    Buon appetito!

    Biography

    Genre-defying, witty, humorous, suspenseful, romantic and sexy — words used to describe Selena’s novels. A self-professed foodie and chocolate guru, Selena loves to dance with her dog, sing into her hairbrush and write in her PJ\’s. In love with her family, friends, books, laughter, hockey, lively discussions and red wine, (sometimes all at the same time). Selena is a dragon slayer who enjoys reading and writing sassy heroines and hot heroes (the ones your mamma warned you about, but secretly wished she’d dated a few in her life).

  • The Noonhour – A Children\’s Folktale

    Welcome to The Noonhour, a Podcast featuring essays, children\’s stories, and other items I find interesting.  It\’s an experiment that I\’m enjoying, so sit back, relax, and listen to
    The Noonhour



  • TGIF!

    We survived to Friday!  What a relief, eh? I\’m ready for the weekend.  So ready, in fact, I forgot I wanted to do a post today.  So, instead of babbling about nothing, YOU tell ME – what are your weekend plans?

  • BLARG! THURSDAY!

    How did it get to be Thursday, AUGUST 2nd??

  • Announcing… A Noonorial!

    I\’m having so much fun with learning to use different multi-media presentation tools that I came up with a tutorial that I\’m calling a Noonorial.  (Don\’t laugh, this stuff is infectious and fun.  I mean, imagine what you could share with others, what cool screen tips you could share, just by playing around?  Don\’t believe me?  Check it out:  Screenr.)

    Today is Writer Wednesday and I\’m at the Writer\’s Retreat Blog with the debut episode of the Noonorial – How to Get a Permalink in Blogger.  Stop on by!

  • Tue Cent Twosday – Copyright

    Many of you will have noticed the recent kerfuffle on the internet about use of images on blogs.  Many bloggers have used images that do not belong to them, and for which they do not have license or permission, and one author got in trouble for doing so.  It kicked off a long discussion and many expressed surprise that using such images would be wrong.

    Since my husband is a professional photographer, this topic is near and dear to our hearts.  I asked him his opinion and he explained Creative Commons licensing to me.  For a longer discussion on the issues, I\’d like to refer you to the blog by Vacuous Minx, in which she points the reader to an excellent article on Dear Author on the subject:  \”How To Do a Google Image Search and Why You Might Want To\”. I wanted to add a link to the Creative Commons license itself, here.  I suggest reading it, it is enlightening.

    Also, for the record, the images on Lolcats and Loldogs are okay to use on our blogs, and are available under that license.  If you use other images, just check to make sure you are allowed to, first.  And, of course, use your own images as you wish.

  • Monday! Monday! It\’s Monday!

    It\’s the fifth Monday of the month!  I don\’t have any posts anywhere, so I can\’t use that as a topic, and it\’s Monday… which just isn\’t very exciting, right?

    But let\’s take a step back.  We have a lot to be grateful for.  So here\’s a quick list to kick-start your week and so we can remember all the abundance in our lives.

    1.  The internet.  It\’s a wonderful tool for communication!

    2.  Computers in general.  Again, wonderful tools that allow us to type, (so much so that my friends complain when I assign handwritten prompts!).

    3.  Good friends.  Both online and in-person, I am grateful for the connections I\’ve made.

    4.  Our pets.  If you\’re a pet person, you understand.  If you\’re not, you probably don\’t.  And that\’s okay.

    5.  Food in our bellies, roofs over our heads, and money in our pockets.  Abraham Maslow had it right – when the basics are taken care of, we can turn our minds to other tasks.

    For what are you grateful this week?  Tell me in the comments, I\’d love to know.

    I took this picture last October at the Skokie Lagoons in Illinois, USA.
    (Copyright 2011 A. Catherine Noon)

  • Sunday Box Talk

    On the Subject of Naps
    I\’m sitting here, exhausted after my first week of work after vacation, my second week of work ever at my new job that I love, and realized something.
    The reason I can\’t think of a good post is because I\’M TIRED!
    Duh.
    Then it hit me.  Sunday\’s Box Talk this week will be about – you guessed it – naps!
    When\’s the last time you took a nap?  When\’s the last time to got a good night\’s sleep?  If you have to think about it for a moment, it\’s been too long.  Do what you have to.  Take a sick day (only if you haven\’t just started a new job ~grin~), a personal day, a vacation day, hell, even a weekend day.  Declare it \”Nap Day.\”  If you have kids, outfit the living room with blankets, sheets, and build a fort out of the couch.  Lounge around in your pajamas and refuse to go outside.
    Rest.
    Most global traditions hold that the Creator rested at some point, be it the seventh day, or after weaving the world, or holding it up, or creating it out of dust.  Regardless of your religious traditions, or even in the absence of any, it just makes good sense.  Babies, cats, and dogs know it.  Horses know it.  Birds know it.  Naps are good for you.
    Excuse me, my couch is calling me.  It\’s time to nap.
    Happy napping!
  • The Noonhour – On Discourse

    Welcome to The Noonhour, a Podcast featuring essays, children\’s stories, and other items I find interesting.  It\’s an experiment that I\’m enjoying, so sit back, relax, and listen to
    The Noonhour