Thank you to everyone who noticed that Dinner: A Love Story was down all day Friday. It was frustrating, but the sheer number of โI canโt log on!โ messages I received through social media channels warmed my heart. (They read me! They really do!) In addition to the nightmarishly long phone conversations I had to have with my web host, I was forced to scrap my weekly round-up (โthe reading & eatingโ series) even though it was all ready to go. I would just run that round-up today, but given the events of the weekend, I think you probably know that I canโt bring myself to head straight into cheese graters and Super Bowl menus. Like many of you, Iโm disgusted by the Muslim Ban, an executive order that has diminished this country and all we stand for with the stroke of a pen. The outpouring of action โ spontaneous rallies, heroicย judgesย and volunteer lawyers,ย boycotts, marches, postcard-writing mania โ has been inspiring, but I fear we have a long road ahead of us. So before I get back to regularly scheduled programming, Iโd like to follow the lead of two of my favorite food writers,ย Luisa Weissย and Julia Turshenย byย giving away free books*ย to the first ten people who donateย $100 or more to the ACLU. (Forward your receipt to jenny AT dinneralovestory DOT com and tell me which book youโd like. *You can choose not justย mine, butย Luisaโs,ย Juliaโsย or the book ofย any other author or bloggerย who would like to join forces with us.)
Iโll post the weekly round-up in the next few days, but please take a minute to read this storyย โA Clarifying Moment in American History,โย written by a prominent conservative, paying careful attention to the line about educating our children.
UPDATE: You guys are amazing. The ten books (fourteen actually, it was too close to call) are spoken for. But please continue to donate and forward me your ACLU receipts, if only so my faith in the goodness of this country stays strong. Thank you Katharine, Rachael, Rebecca O, Jay, Victoria, Margaret, Suzette, Jennifer, Rebecca C., Erica, Marian, Elise, Kim, and Tiffany.
NOTE
I want to acknowledge the readers who have told me in no uncertain terms that they come to this blog for recipes and dinner strategies and resent the fact that from time to time I use Dinner: A Love Story as a political platform. I hear you on that, and I understand the frustration. But Iโd like to point out that if you click on the โAboutโ section on the top of my home page, itโs been clear from the beginning that I envisioned this space as not only a forum to discuss whatโs for dinner, but also as a place to discuss whatโs happening around the dinner table. In the past seven years, Iโve posted too many chicken recipes to count, but Iโve also written about how to have meaningful conversations over a shared meal; how to raise compassionate kids; how to raise girls with healthy body images; how technology affects our childrensโ development; how to teach them about empathy and gratitude; where we are traveling; what music we are listening to; and close to a hundred posts about what books we are loving โ fiction, nonfiction, kids, YA, adult โ which, you might be surprised to hear, are perennially the most popular/most shared/most visited posts on DALS. (More popular than even Pork Ragu!) Do politics fit in with this list? You might not think so. A year ago, I wouldnโt have thought so. But I hope you understand, given the extraordinary circumstances of this administration, that it has started to feel disingenuous, almost irresponsibleย to write only about pork chops and apple pies without acknowledging a conversation that started 18 months ago at our dinner table (overlapping with many of the topics I hit on above) and shows no sign of stopping.
Lastly, I hope Iโm not naive in believing that we are in a unique position on this blog. I think itโs fair to assume every person reading Dinner: A Love Story wants what is best for their families and their childrensโ futures. Letโs remember that we have more in common than we donโt, and try to prove my tagline correct as we head into the next few tumultuous years: It all begins at the family table.
Reminder: I welcome reactions from every side here, but the same rule applies as always: If you strongly disagree with me, know that I strongly respect your right to disagree, but you must pretend you are at my dinner table sitting across from me when you post your comment. This corner of the Internet is not the Wild West. I will not approve comments that are flagrantly mean-spirited or that do not advance the conversation in a constructive way.
Thank you, just plain thank you. Iโm an avid reader of your blog and I own your cookbooks and try to cook from them regularly. I appreciate you not hiding your head in the sand publicly. I have to say that I find it very disconcerting to visit my favorite blogs and see just another regular โarenโt these prettyโ posts. It just seems wrong. Again, thank you!
Thank you for your beautiful, powerful words. I am a travel editor and it has been hard (impossible?) to get back to posting about fancy hotels and luxury trips. It all begins at the dinner table. Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU.
I applaud your saying something on the subject. I have a really hard time reading blogs that gloss over the fact that so much is wrong right now. They seem complicit by not saying anything! I understand not wanting to get political, but itโs so much more then that now. Itโs great to see, thank you.
Can I adore you and your blog anymore than I already do? Thank you for all that you share and inspire in this space.
Activism is my rent for living on this planet โ one of my new favorite quotes from Alice Walker
Thank you for using this space to talk about these issues! We are at too crucial a spot not to. Have been reading for awhile, and my admiration just grows! Thank you.
Iโm with Lora! ๐ thank you!!!
This is a great post and the Atlantic article was fantastic. You will be on the right side of history here. I love the commenter who said this is your table, your rules. Weโre all guests here. Thanks for your perspective on this and all DALS related topics.
Love this post. As always you are thoughtful and deliberate in your communications. XOXO
Thank you, so much, for this. These are times that demand courage โ however small, and from all sources. Keep up the great work.
The current political climate has absolutely has a place at the dinner table. Thank you for being an inspiration to talk openly with family, friends and the people we meet over food about the things that really matter.
THANK YOU Jenny for writing this post. Thank you for standing up for a just and generous society!
Thank you to every single person who took a minute to support the cause and comment on this post. It means so much to me. I also wanted to make sure everyone saw that the ACLU raised $24,164,691 this past weekend. They usually raise $4 million a year. #hope
Thank you! Its been really heartening to see bloggers I read stop and say this is too big not to acknowledge. Frankly you make me a more regular reader by saying I canโt just post about pork chops if I donโt post about what weโre talking about over the pork chops. The dinner table has had some really heady conversations lately!
These are extraordinary times weโre living inโsilence canโt be tolerated when there are lives on the line. I admire you so much for obeying the thing inside of you that said, โyou have to say something.โ
Jenny, thank you for your thoughtful post, and the lovely way youโve approached this difficult subject. I think this is a time when we all need to stand up for the world we want for our children, and the maturity of the way you approach it is inspiring!
Thank you. I am finding it harder and harder to read blogs that make no mention of what is going on in our country. Weekly roundups on Friday that didnโt mention any one of the horrors visited upon our democracy just felt completely out of step with our reality.
Thank you for this wonderful post. I just donated made my second donation (in two weeks) to ACLU.
Thanks for speaking up and thanks for sharing that fantastic article.
~ A loyal reader who owns all your books ๐
Thank you, Jenny, for everything you doโฆ.from strategies to rescue me when I am in a dinner rut, to ways to deal with picky kids (including husband) while trying to achieve the noble goal of a healthy family meal amongst hockey practices and piano lessons and homework battlesโฆand for your level-headed commentary. I love that DALS is a warm and comforting place to visit in these crazy timesโฆkeep on keepinโ on!
Jenny- As my 82 year old mother would say โ thank you for being you. I appreciate that your blog and books and outlook are much more than recipes โ you are talking about how we raise our children (and ourselves) and celebrate what we value.I donโt think we can separate what we serve from what we discuss at the family dinner table.
bravo to you, Jenny! thank you for sharing this post. like someone else said, your table, your rules. and thank you for the reminder โ have been meaning to donate to ACLU for days and seeing your post pushed me to do it.
Yes! Thank you for going there.
So well said, thank you!
I knew I liked you.
You rock. Total support, total love for this post. Been awhile since Iโve read DALS and I love you guys even more for speaking your hearts. Much love.