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Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love
Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love
Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love
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Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love

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“[A] unique combination of recipes, simple home projects, and entertaining ideas . . . Eat & Make is [Paul’s] first full cookbook, and it is a keeper.” —Kitchn

It began as a little blog highlighting the recipes and crafts of the Norwegian-born food and prop stylist Paul Lowe. Six years later, Sweet Paul is an online magazine followed by millions and a print quarterly sold nationwide in specialty stores. Praised by the New York Times as “a trove of seasonal delights,” it is turning heads with its easy, elegant food and style-setting aesthetic.

Divided into Morning, Brunch, Noon, and Night, with color palettes to match, Sweet Paul Eat & Make includes breakfast dishes like Morning Biscuits with Cheddar, Dill, and Pumpkin Seeds and brunches like Smoked Salmon Hash with Scallions, Dill, and Eggs. For lunch, there’s a super-quick Risotto with Asparagus, and for dinner, Maple-Roasted Chicken and a stunning Norwegian specialty, World’s Best Cake. Rustically chic craft projects—paper flowers made out of coffee filters, a vegetable-dyed tablecloth, and a trivet from wooden clothespins—will captivate even those who are all thumbs.

“His Nordic roots and New York tastes shine in the delicious and distinctive dishes he has created in Sweet Paul Eat & Make.” —Tyler Florence, chef and television host

“[Lowe] presents in stunning images both a collection of easy projects . . . side-by-side with delicious recipes. When it comes to creating a homey and fashionable kitchen table, Lowe proves that the combination of whisk and glue gun adds a touch of charm to everyone’s kitchen.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 1, 2014
ISBN9780544134447
Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love

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Book preview

Eat & Make - Paul Lowe

Eat & MakeSweet Paul Eat & Make: Charming Recipes and Kitchen Crafts You Will Love, by Paul Lowe

Copyright © 2014 by Paul Lowe Einlyng

Photographs © 2014 by Alexandra Grablewski

Illustrations © 2014 by Susan Evenson

All rights reserved

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

www.hmhco.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

ISBN 978-0-544-13333-4 (hardcover); ISBN 978-0-544-13444-7 (ebk)

Book design by Joline Rivera and Nellie Williams

v2.0514

You are holding in your hands a copy of my life, my dreams, and my thoughts. I dedicate this book to Mormor and Auntie Gunnvor, the two little old ladies who made my childhood so happy and magical. You are with me wherever I go. I will never forget you, and I love you both. xoxo Sweet PaulContents

Introduction

Why do they call you Sweet Paul?

Morning

Morning Eat

Morning Make

Brunch

Brunch Eat

Brunch Make

Noon

Noon Eat

Noon Make

Night

Night Eat

Night Make

My Favorite Sources

Acknowledgments

Index

Introduction

Dear friends,

This book is about the two things in life I love the most: cooking and crafting.

I was raised in Oslo, Norway, by two little old ladies: my great-aunt Auntie Gunnvor and my grandmother Mormor. Ever since I was small, I’ve been obsessed with cooking, crafting, and decorating. It’s in my blood. Both my grandmother and mother were excellent cooks and crafters with impeccable taste, but they were not perfectionists. Their cakes tended to be a little lopsided, and their craft projects definitely weren’t up to Martha Stewart’s standards. But they always had such fun!

I wasn’t the typical spoiled child. I didn’t whine and beg for toys and games. My tastes were a bit more sophisticated. If I wanted to go on a picnic, we went on a picnic; if I wanted to bake a chocolate cake, we baked a chocolate cake. Mormor and Auntie Gunnvor doted on me, but they also allowed me to participate in all the projects that I dreamed up. I owe them so much for inviting me into the kitchen to help and for feeding my culinary and craft inclinations at the same time that they fed my belly.

I loved helping in the kitchen. I had my own knife and cutting board, my own set of bowls, and my own space on the counter that I could reach by standing on a chair. Mormor was of the old school, and everything was made from scratch. Her food was rich and full of butter and cream, and we all know that tastes best. When we weren’t cooking, we were always working on some creative craft project or another, finding projects in books and magazines and making our own versions at home in the kitchen or playroom. Whether it was a recipe from a cookbook or a craft project from a kids’ magazine, our creations never quite looked the same as their inspirational photos, but everything tasted wonderful and our crafts made us happy.

Now, as an adult, I’ve adopted my grandmother’s motto, "fullkommenhet er kjedelig, which means perfection is boring," and I’ve incorporated it and her sheer joy of creating into everything I do. I’m quite sure that this is what allowed me to establish myself in my career as a successful food and craft stylist.

I started my blog, Sweet Paul, in 2008, and I would never have guessed it would grow big and turn into Sweet Paul magazine. I blogged about what I knew and loved: my food- and craft-styling work. Slowly but surely I started getting followers and fans from all over the world. By 2010 I had produced the first digital issue of Sweet Paul magazine, and because of persistent requests, we began printing the magazine and selling it across the United States, and then, in 2011, around the world. I’m living proof that magazines aren’t dead.

I really don’t care for visual perfection. I want the food I cook and the crafts I make to look like a real person made them. My philosophy is very simple: few ingredients, easy steps, and amazing results. With this book, you will always end up with something beautiful that will impress friends and family.

XOXO

Sweet Paul

Why do they call you Sweet Paul?

At least three or four times a week, I’m asked, Why Sweet Paul? Well, growing up in Norway I had a godmother who married an American NATO doctor in the early 1970s and moved to Texas. After only two years, she divorced him and returned to Oslo, but in that time, she had somehow managed to completely transform herself into what Mormor called a tacky American, with big hair and tight clothes. A Peggy Bundy type—not at all like young women in Norway at the time.

Her look may have been questionable, but she was the best babysitter ever. She told me stories about living in Texas, where everything was huge. You even had to use two plates to hold a steak! I listened with big ears about rattlesnakes in the garden, huge cars, fast food, and plastic surgery. I’m sure she’s responsible for my appreciation of everything American.

Somehow, over the course of her two-year stint in America, my godmother picked up an American accent that stuck with her. She would pepper conversations with American words, and I quickly became Sweet Paul to her. When I started my blog and had to think of a name, there was no question what it would be.

Thanks, Auntie Tove.

HeartPaul LoweMORNING Eat + Make

When I was six years old, I woke up early one Saturday morning with an idea. I was very focused, even at an early age, and that day I knew exactly what I wanted to do.

I was going to bake cookies. By myself. I had an LP record with a cookie-baking song that I was obsessed with, a funny little ditty, Pepperkakebakesangen—sort of a cross between The Cat in the Hat and Sesame Street—with step-by-step instructions on how to make pepper cookies.

I tiptoed down into the kitchen with my record player. It was still dark out. I grabbed a bowl and started playing the song over and over, singing along and completing each step of the recipe. What I didn’t realize was that the song was nonsense and it wasn’t a real recipe at all. After an hour of work and full kilos (a kilo is 2.2 pounds!) of flour, sugar, and butter and eight eggs, I gave up. There was a giant bowl of wet cement in front of me and flour was everywhere, even on the curtains. Thank god I didn’t have the wherewithal to actually turn on the oven. I’m afraid I would have set the kitchen on fire.

Worst of all, I was totally covered in a mixture of eggs, flour, and milk and I looked like I’d been battered and readied for the fryer like a big batch of fried chicken.

Suddenly I heard loud laughter from the doorway. There stood Mom, Dad, and my grandmother Mormor. They had all been awakened by the song and wondered what the heck was going on in the kitchen. I told them I was making cookies for everyone but that I had run into a few problems along the way. After a few more giggles, my mom gave me a quick rinse in the tub, while my dad cleaned the kitchen and Mormor whipped up a batch of Norwegian pancakes with blueberry jam. So much better than any old cookies!

Later that day, Mormor snuck out to the local bookstore and bought a present for me. It was my very first and my very own cookbook. It’s worn and beaten, but I have it to this day.

Eat Morning

Mormor’s Pancakes with Homemade Blueberry Jam

Pumpkin Pancakes with Hot Plum Syrup

Baked French Toast with Strawberries & Vanilla Syrup

Baked Snug Eggs

Herb & Goat Cheese Omelet

Morning Biscuits with Cheddar, Dill & Pumpkin Seeds

Breakfast Polenta with Hazelnuts, Honey & Pears

Maple-Roasted Granola

Breakfast Churros with Cinnamon Sugar

4 from 1 Greek Yogurt

Mormor’s Pancakes with Homemade Blueberry Jam

Mormor’s Pancakes with Homemade Blueberry Jam

Pancakes were not just a morning thing in my family, and it wasn’t uncommon for us to have them for lunch or dinner. Maybe that was because Mormor’s pancakes were so good. I wouldn’t have minded having them for every meal in the same day! They are more like crepes than traditional American pancakes and they serve as a delicate vehicle that transports any favorite topping to your mouth.

My preferred way to eat them was with a large dollop of blueberry

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