BNL INSIDER
vol 2, issue 6
Summer 2015
HEAD’S UP
FUEL
YOUR IMAGINATION By Joanne Brangman
Director, Bermuda National Library
“Libraries store the energy that fuels the imagination. They open up windows to the world and inspire us to explore and achieve, and contribute to improving our quality of life. Libraries change lives for the better.” ― Sidney Sheldon
I
nspiring participants, young and not so young, to explore, expand their minds and learn something new is the goal of our Summer Reading Programme. This year we here at BNL are encouraging you to bring out your adventurous side for your Summer reading. Whether it is exploring new books, music, languages or computer skill, BNL has lots to offer both in-house and on-line. A comment we have heard frequently from participants of the reading programmes is that they have enjoyed being forced to read books outside of their usual tastes. So be adventurous in your reading choices this summer. Not sure what to pick, visit our website www.bnl.bm and click on Novelist. Using Novelist you can search by genre for a book that you will enjoy. If you are not ready to be too adventurous, you can search for your favourite book or author and then select Read-Alikes to get suggestions of other books you may enjoy. If the book you select is not already part of the BNL collection, let us know and the book can be considered for purchase. Looking for books to read during your vacation but do not want the added weight in your bags, try e-books for Newsletter Committee
The BNL: Insider V o l 2,
issue
6
Summer 2015
A publication of the Bermuda National Library
Par-La-Ville • #13 Queen Street • Hamilton HM 11
2
SUMMER 2015
Nikki Bowers Keith Caesar Contributors Fredrina James Ashley Stone Randy York
any of our four e-book collections or e-audiobooks from OverDrive. Books can be downloaded onto your device or if you have multiple devices, you can stream it, so no matter which device you are using, it will sync to the last place you were reading or listening. If you are planning an adventurous trip to an exotic place where English is not the native language; surprise your family by learning a few words and phrases using Mango Languages or Rocket Languages, which are also available on our website. Or, you can make learning a new language a family activity to prepare for your vacation. For those of you who want to enjoy music with your reading, we offer Freegal which is an adventure into an eclectic music site with over 9 million songs ranging from Acapella to Zydeco. As part of the READ to the Rhythm Summer Reading Programme we will be offering sessions on how to use Freegal and the other online services the Library has to offer. So come and let us fuel your imagination, open up windows to the world and inspire you to explore and achieve. Change your life for the better @ your library.
299-0030 ● www.bnl.bm ● libraryinfo@gov.bm
CONTENTS HEAD’S UP 2 READ TO THE RYTHM
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FROM PAGE TO SCREEN
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HOT PICKS THE BIG EASY IT HAPPENED HERE PERFECT PAIRINGS
7 11 13 15
HOURS OF OPERATION MONDAY 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. THURSDAY FRIDAY 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Read To The
Rhythm BNL’S
SUMMER READING PROGRAM 2015
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ummer is here! Now is the perfect time to get some reading done. If this sounds like music to your ears, then we’ve got something for you. Our Summer Reading Program “Read to The Rhythm” starts from June 29 until August 15 you can be a part of this exciting event. Stop by or visit www.bnl.bm for more details.
SUMMER 2015
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4
SUMMER 2015
From the page to the screen...
Why your next theatrical/tv adventure is only a book away. .. By Keith Caesar and Nikki Bowers
T
oday it seems that all the movies making the most cash are the tentpole films based on action and comic books films. But that’s not all. You may be surprised to know that many of the films headed your way by the end of 2015 into 2016 are based off of novels. Many of the books we have on loan here at the Bermuda National Library. It brings up a fun debate which is better? The book which spawns a film/television show or the actual movie themselves? A good example of this is Game of Thrones which is one of the biggest television properties on HBO. All
based on the seven book series A Song of Fire and Ice by George R.R. Martin. Season 5 ended in June. Then there is the Graphic Novel juggernaut on television like, The Walking Dead. It has become such a hit that it’s spawned a spin off series airing this summer. Maybe you’re a fan of something darker, like say Vampires. The Strain based on the books and graphic novel series by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan, starts it’s second season on FX this month. The influences of books to film are many, so we’ve complied a list of some of the books that are making the transition from page to the big screens. Impress your friends and read the book first!
See PAGE TO SCREEN, Page 6 SUMMER 2015
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Black Mass by Dick Lehr The true story of Whitey Bulger, the brother of a state senator and the most infamous violent criminal in the history of South Boston, who became an FBI informant to take down a Mafia family invading his turf. The film stars Johnny Depp, Benedict Cumberbatch, Dakota Johnson
Dark Places by Gillian Flynn Libby Day was only seven years old when her family was brutally murdered in their rural Kansas farmhouse. Twenty-five years later, she agrees to revisit the crime and uncovers the wrenching truths that led up to that tragic night. The film stars ChloĂŤ Grace Moretz, CharlizeTheron, Nicholas Hoult
Maze Runner: Scorched Earth trials by James Dashner. Based in the hit Maze Runners. After having escaped the Maze, the Gladers now face a new set of challenges on the open roads of a desolate landscape filled with unimaginable obstacles. The film stars Dylan O’Brien, Nathalie Emmanuel, Aidan Gillen
Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy In Victorian England, the independent and headstrong Bathsheba Everdene attracts three very different suitors: Gabriel Oak, a sheep farmer; Frank Troy, a reckless Sergeant; and William Boldwood, a prosperous and mature bachelor. The film stars Carey Mulligan, Matthias Schoenaerts, Michael Sheen
In the heart of the sea based on the book by Nathaniel Philbrick Based on the 1820 event, a whaling ship is preyed upon by a sperm whale, stranding its crew at sea for 90 days, thousands of miles from home. The film stars Chris Hemsworth, Cillian Murphy, Brendan Gleeson
The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman A lighthouse keeper and his wife living off the coast of Western Australia raise a baby they rescue from an adrift rowboat. The film stars Alicia Vikander, Michael Fassbender, RachelWeisz
The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry
See PAGE TO SCREEN, Page 14
6 SUMMER 2015
S ummer S izzlers books for ...
the Beach F BAL
Memory man By David Baldacci
F ATK
A God in Ruins
By Kate Atkinson
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M
n A God in Ruins, we become reacquainted with Teddy Todd, the beloved little brother of Ursula from Atkinson’s last book. As with Life After Life, this novel skims back and forth in time, and we see the last half of the 20th century through Ted’s eyes and the eyes of his loved ones. At times funny and at others heartbreaking, Atkinson revels in the beauty and horror of life in all its messiness.
M ILE
M SAN
ore than a year after the most tragic event in Amos Decker’s life, a man confesses to murdering his family and Amos, called to help with the investigation, struggles with the memories.
The Bone Tree By Greg Iles
B
ased on a real series of unsolved murders from the civil rights era in Louisiana, and the crusading journalist who uncovered the story, Iles’ novel shines a bright light of truth upon one of America’s darkest secrets. Iles’ compelling writing makes this complex tale of good versus evil a must-read for those who love thrillers, and those who want to learn a little bit of American history not normally taught in school.
Gathering Prey
By John Sandford
T
hey call them Travelers. They move from city to city, panhandling, committing no crimes-they just like to stay on the move. And now somebody is killing them.
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F BLU
F KIN
By Judy Blume
By Stephen King
In the Unlikely Event
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fter Morris Bellamy discovers that notebooks and money belonging to his favorite author were taken by Pete Saubers, only Bill Hodges, Holly Gibney, and Jerome Robinson can rescue the Saubers family from the deranged and vengeful criminal. (Bill Hodges Novel; No. 2)
F JUL
LP F SWA
By Miranda July
By Peter Swanson
A
haunted woman’s reclusively ordered world is thrown into chaos by a houseguest who bullies her into reality and brings love into her life.
The Kind Worth Killing
A
dark and devious literary suspense novel about a random encounter, sex, and a conversation that quickly turns to murder--a modern reimagining of Patricia Highsmith’s classic Strangers on a Train--from the author of The Girl with a Clock for a Heart”.
M HAW
M COB
By Paula Hawkins
By Harlan Coben
The Girl on the Train
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achel is a washed-up thirty-something who creates a fantasy about the seemingly perfect couple she sees during her daily train ride into London. When the woman goes missing, Rachel manages to insert herself into the investigation of the woman’s disappearance. In the vein of Gone Girl, this dark psychological thriller is fast-paced and features some very unreliable narrators.
The Stranger
T
he Stranger appears out of nowhere, perhaps in a bar, or a parking lot, or at the grocery store. His identity is unknown. His motives are unclear. His information is undeniable. Then he whispers a few words in your ear and disappears, leaving you picking up the pieces of your shattered world.
M MAC
M BOR
By Sophie McKenzie
By James O. Born
nvestigating her best friend’s suspicious suicide, Julia uncovers horrifying clues that her friend may have been murdered by the same man who killed her sister 18 years earlier, a person who may be someone close to her family. By the award-winning author of Girl, Missing.
fter being disciplined for using extreme tactics to catch a child molester, Tim Hallett joins a K-9 unit, but when a series of kidnappings and a murder lead back to his original suspect, he and his other officers trust the instincts of their canine partners to catch the killer.
You Can Trust Me
I SUMMER 2015
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he obvious ‘unlikely events’ of Judy Blume’s latest–the three plane crashes afflicting Elizabeth, NJ in one horrifying winter–set the framework for everyday unlikely events around love, family, friendship, relating all that can go so wrong, and so right, with all three.
The First Bad Man: A Novel
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Finders Keepers
Scent of Murder
A
M SPI
M KEL
By Erica Spindler
By Jonathan Kellerman
The First Wife
L
Motive
T
ogan Abbott and Bailey fall deeply in love. Marriage quickly follows. But when Logan brings her home to his horse farm in Louisiana, a magnificent estate on ninety wooded acres, her dreams of happily-ever-after begin to unravel.
he #1 New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman writes razor-sharp novels that cut to the quick. Now comes Motive, which pits psychologist Alex Delaware and homicide cop Milo Sturgis against a vicious criminal mind--the kind only Kellerman can bring to chilling life.
F HEP
F WON
By Sally Hepworth
By Cecily Wong
The Secrets of Midwives
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etermined to hide the identity of her baby’s father from others, a third-generation midwife is separated from and bound to her mother and grandmother by a similar secret from the past.
Diamond Head
T
he rise and fall of a wealthy shipping family in China and Hawaii is observed by four generations of a murdered patriarch’s secret-keeping daughters and granddaughters, who endure tragic love and painful sacrifices.
F KNO
F GRU
By Jessica Knoll
By Sara Gruen
Luckiest Girl Alive
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At the Water’s Edge
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rooming herself for an ideal life involving a successful career and a happy marriage, a rising young journalist confronts a violent episode from her past that threatens to unravel everything she has worked to achieve.
et in Loch Ness, right in the middle of WWII, a foolish group of rich Americans arrive in search of the famous monster. Narrator Maddie must make sense of the circumstances that have brought her to this wild locale. Only then can she discover the strength she needs to make her own decisions.
SF OLD
F KNI
Old Venus
Edited by George R. R. Martin
T
his original anthology of all-new stories harkens back to the Golden Age of SF, when science fiction was filled with tales from our own solar system, at a time when no one knew what lay on the surface of our nearest galactic neighbors and speculation ran rampant. And though that old solar system was “disproved” in the 1960s, when space probes showed that the real worlds were very different from those of our imaginations.
Disclaimer
By Renee Knight
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eading a mysterious novel that recounts in haunting detail the day she became the victim of a dark secret, documentary filmmaker Catherine Ravenscroft is forced to confront the past to prevent her world from falling apart.
SUMMER 2015
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SF STE
M CLA
By Neal Stephenson
stories
S
By Mary Higgins Clark
M ATK
F CHI
By Ace Atkins
By Lincoln Child
Seveneves
tephenson’s back in fine form with this hard science fiction masterpiece, combining the detail of Cryptonomicon with the fast-paced action of Reamde. Fans of Anathem will appreciate Stephenson’s speculation about the possibilities of human evolution.
Robert B. Parker’s Kickback
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hen 17-year-old Dillon Yates is sentenced to a lockdown juvenile facility for a minor prank, his mother asks Spenser to investigate why so many youngsters from their town have received similar sentencing from the local get-tough judge. The ugly answer has to do with commerce. The titles in Edgar-nominated Atkins’s continuation of the Spenser series have all been New York Times best sellers.
The Forgotten Room
J
eremy Logan is an “enigmalogist”—an investigator who specializes in analyzing phenomena that have no obvious explanation. In this newest novel Logan finds himself on the storied coastline of Newport, Rhode Island, where he has been retained by Symposikon, one of the oldest and most respected think tanks in America. Just days earlier, a series of frightening events took place in the sprawling seaside
F SMI
By Toni Morrison
By Jane Smiley
S
pare and unsparing, God Help the Child is a searing tale about the way childhood trauma shapes and misshapes the life of the adult. At the center: a woman who calls herself Bride, whose stunning blue-black skin is only one element of her beauty, her boldness and confidence, her success in life; but which caused her light-skinned mother to deny her even the simplest forms of love until she told a lie
F HEA
Elizabeth Is Missing By Emma Healey
M
aude sinks into a confusing world in this gripping psychological mystery written in the voice of an aging woman with Alzheimer’s. She can’t remember what she’s doing or where she is, but she is obsessed with one thought–her good friend Elizabeth is missing. Book groups will enjoy this satisfying and entertaining read!
SUMMER 2015
A
collection of short stories by the “Queen of Suspense” features her first published short story, “Stowaway”.
F MOR
God help the child
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Death Wears a Beauty Mask and other
Early Warking
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n the second book of the Langdon trilogy, the Pulitzer Prize winning novelist follows the next generation of the unforgettable Iowa family introduced in Some Luck. Beginning with the death of the patriarch Walter in 1953, Smiley chronicles the social consciousness in America of the 1960s. The book goes up to events in the 1970s and early 1980s that touch each family member in unforeseen ways.
F MON Bad Blood
By Mary Monroe
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hen the man of her dreams, Seth Garrett, dumps her because of her far-from-perfect relatives, beautiful and successful Rachel McNeal, done with forgiving and forgetting, sets out to take his world apart piece by piece.
The Big easy...
...you can’t not not have a good time By Keith Caesar
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, like the next Bermudian look forward to the day I can get off the rock. Traveling to some distant land ready to meet adventure at its door step. But most often the adventure you have in mind is not the adventure that you thought you would experience. I had the most excellent opportunity to visit the Big Easy, New Orleans, or Nawlins for a friends wedding. I know, I know it is a popular place for many Bermudians and I’m sure there is no part of New Orleans that Bermudians haven’t explored. I gotta admit that for me a lot of my preconceived notions are based on Television and film. You know the guys with the sweat ridden shirts, that New Orleans twang. That’s not real is it? Maybe it’s the food, maybe it’s the music, maybe it’s the culture, that sultry heat, (even
at night), maybe just maybe its the women. For me the biggest draw to New Orleans is that it is a city that genuinely knows how to have a good time. Of course I packed my bags with the intention to visit museums lots of them, and take my trusty cameras and snap away. Like most, I was interested in what happened after Katrina, close to a decade ago and the damage it had done to the city. The adventure for me started in the famed French Quarter. I was in awe of the architecture. It gives you that old French feel. One morning I woke and spent the next few hours just walking around. For me it was the little nooks doors which lead to a surprising store or off beat museum. Most importantly is that it is all within walking distance. Something I noticed. If Bermuda has the
See NAWLINS, Page 4 SUMMER 2015
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NAWLINS, from page 11
highest number of churches per capita, New Orleans has the highest number of pharmacy/store ala Walgreens and CVS. I swear there is one on every other block. Bourbon Street! Like many the sudden flash of lights; the many restaurant which lead on the block on block of bars can be… Fun. Full disclosure, my time of the strip is hazy with glimpses popping back and forth. I cannot fully remember the events on dear Bourbon Street. But my greatest impression of said street came during the day, walking alone and wonder what New Orleans had done to create such an iconic street. I gotta admit being able to have a beverage in the middle of a street has it’s benefits… Wait did that happen? At my core I’m a film buff. Louisiana has become one of the epicenters for the film industry. Even though New Orleans is scattered with locations which appear in multiple films and television series. It was cool to see them in real life. It’s like you’re walking through a movie set. So I found myself at Lafayette Cemetery no 1. I had taken the trolley to the Garden District and went past it on first go around. While I was looking to do a little ghost busting maybe... not that I believe in that stuff! Being there was a reminder that life should be about adventure and not just the norm. So if you’re ever in town it might be interesting to take a tour of the cemetery. Interesting to note that some of the damage to the cemetery has come as a result of the various film crews. One the one things I fondly recall about this experience was the opportunity to visit the Whitney Plantation Museum in Wallace. When you look at the instead of Slavery coming from a
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SUMMER 2015
About the pictures: (above) Lafayette Cemetery no.1 often used in film its a popular attraction. It is the size of a city block. (Below) Picture one: an inscription from a slave about the perils of being in slavery. Picture two: an actual slave house which housed two families. But it is believed more than 16 people lived in the homes with many sleeping in the roof area of the quarters. Picture three: A slave jail. Slaves were put in these metal hotboxes. There were four cots bolted to the wall but not a lot of space.
IT HAPPENED HERE!!! It’s been a while. Here’s a quick run down of some of the events that happened at the Library. The Portuguese Association of Bermuda donated 600 Portuguese boos to the library. The books explore the vastness of the Azorean culture and are mostly written in Portuguese. The books will be added to the library’s foreign book collection.
Pictured from left to right: Dr. Paulo C Teves, Regional Director for the Communities; Andrea Moniz-DeSouza, Honorary Counsel for Portugal in Bermuda; Mr. Rodrigo Oliveira, Regional Secretary of the Presidency for External Relations; C. Joanne Brangman, Director, Bermuda National Library and Heather Whalen, Director, Community & Cultural Affairs
Video collector Michael Murphy donated about 4000 DVD’S to the library. They range in genre but have been collected over the years to include the best International films as well as boxed sets of films and some television shows. Now you have a choice of classics and some pretty stellar foreign films to check out. Same rules apply, the DVD’S can be checked out for up to a week and late items acquire a fine of three dollars per day.
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PAGE TO SCREEN, from page 5
A woman keeps a diary of her extended stay at a mental hospital. The film stars:Aidan Turner,
Theo James, Rooney Mara
Every Secret Thing by Laura Lippman A detective looks to unravel a mystery surrounding missing children and the prime suspects: two young women who, seven years ago, were put away for an infant’s death. The film stars:Diane Lane, Elizabeth Banks, Dakota Fanning
Brooklyn by Colm Toibin In 1950s Ireland and New York, young Ellis Lacey has to choose between two men and two countries. The film stars Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson, Michael Zegen
Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
troubled young assistant’s dark origins, his redemptive friendship with the young medical student Viktor Von Frankenstein, and become eyewitnesses to the emergence of how Frankenstein became the man - and the legend we know today. The film stars Daniel Radcliffe, James McAvoy, Jessica Brown Findlay
A Hologram for the King By Dave Eggers A failed American businessman looks to recoup his losses by traveling to Saudi Arabia and selling his idea to a wealthy monarch. The film stars Tom Hanks, Tom Skerritt, Sarita Choudhury
Room by Emma Donoghue A young boy is raised within the confines of a small shed. The film stars Brie Larson, William H. Macy, Joan Allen
Told from Igor’s perspective, we see the NAWLINS, from page 12
HAPPENED, from page 13
place like Bermuda it’s something not really talked about. Brushed under the carpet maybe. Swept under the rug. Same thing. It was for me one of those moments where I really felt a strong connection to the past and to the journey which we all share. We viewed how the slaves lived, how they survived under the heat of the Louisiana sun. You can feel so removed coming from Bermuda but when you step on the plantation, you engage in the narrative, you learn that you are a part of a journey that began long before you. One of the things that stuck with me were the conditions slavery presented and the stories that came forth. At the end of the tour we met with Mr. Cumming, the owner of the Whitney Plantation who spent over eight million of his own dollars to turn the plantation into a place one can meditate on the road which has been travelled. While watching TV a voodoo priestess on a CNN show said that New Orleans is the place where anyone who is on the outskirts (different) can find a place. I will say they got me. I will be back to the big easy someday. I recall the driver of the airport shuttle saying. “You cannot not have a good time in New Orleans.”
Brenda Jackson, noted best selling author was in the house. She stopped by for a book signing while in Bermuda on a cruise. Happily she paid a visit to the library to sign copies of her new book as well as earlier works.
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SUMMER 2015
Compiled by Asheley Stone
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ew Orleans has to be one of the must fun places to visit in America. The food, the drinks, the culture makes it such an attractive party city. It is a place they has the remnants of its past scattered around. As reminders maybe that in the world around is you can never fully escape what you are. But you sure can have a good time doing it.
Chicken Étouffée
New Orleans Louisa Shafia
917.6335 N
½ cup corn oil 1 chicken (about 4 pounds) cut into 12 pieces 2 tsp. salt 2 tsp. black pepper 1 tsp. cayenne pepper 1 pound andouille sausage, cut into ½ inch slices 3 cups chopped onion 2 cups chopped green pepper 2 cups chopped celery 2 tsp. garlic powder ½ cup water 2/3 cup sliced green onions 1/3 cup chopped fresh parsley 4 cups cooked rice (about 11/3 cups raw)
1.
Heat the oil in a large heavy skillet or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Pat cchicken dry with paper towels. Combine the salt, black pepper and cayenne pepper and sprinkle over chicken/ 2. Brown the chicken pieces (in 2 batches) for about 3 minutes per side, removing the chicken as pieces are browned. Turn up heat for 2-3 minutes when adding second batch of chicken to return heat to medium-high.
In a Cajun Kitchen by Terri Pischoff Wuerthner 917.6335 N
3. Pout the oil into a measuring cup and return about ¼ cup to the pan (no need to clean pan first). Turn the heat back to medium-high. When oil is hot, add the sausage, onion, bell pepper, celery and garlic powder and cook until onion is soft, about 15 minutes 4. Return the chicken to the skillet, add the water, spoon the sausage-vegetable mixture over chicken, cover and simmer for 40 minutes over medium-low heat. Sprinkle with green onion and parsley and serve over rice Note: to get 12 pieces of chicken, cut each breast into 2 pieces, each wing in 2 (discarding the tips or saving them for stock), and separate the legs from the thighs. You will have 4 breast pieces, 4 wings, 2 thighs and 2 legs. SUMMER 2015
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Makes about 2 dozen
Beignets
3 cups all purpose flour 3 Tbsp. baking powder 2 Tbsp. sugar 1 tsp. salt 1 ½ cups whole milk 3 Tbsp. corn oil plus oil to fry in (about 4 cups) 2 Tbsp. vanilla extract 2 large eggs Confectioner’s sugar for dusting
1 Sift flour, baking powder, sugar and salt together in a large bowl. 2 Whisk together the milk, the 3 Tbsp. corn oil, vanilla and eggs. Stir into the dry ingredients until no traces of flour are visible, but don’t over mix. The batter will be thick 3 Heat the oil for frying in a large Dutch Oven (or other large – about 6 quart pot) to 375°F (use a candy thermometer to gauge the temperature). When the temperature is reached, carefully drop large tablespoons of the dough into the hot oil. Fry a few beignets at a time without crowding for about 4 minutes, turning once. The temperature will drop when you add the dough; adjust the heat to maintain temperature between 350°F and 365°F. 4 Remove the beignets to paper towels, and immediately sprinkle with confectioner’s sugar. Note: These are dropped into the hot oil from a spoon, rather than being rolled and cut before frying. They are not only easier to make this way, as the entire rolling out and cutting steps are deleted, but they have a crispier texture because the surface isn’t perfectly smooth, so there are tiny nooks and crannies to get crisp.
The first recorded cricket match to take place in Bermuda occurred on 30 August 1844. The Bermuda Cricket Club was formed one year later and had support from locals as well as British troops. Some international games were played against American sides, principally from Philadelphia in the late 19th century, but the cricketing strength of the island diminished greatly after the First World War. Indeed, the only significant tour in the inter-War years was a five-match tour by a team led by Sir Julien Cahn in 1933.
The first formal fitted dinghy race in Bermuda started in August 1880. There were different types of small boats used in different classes. And the dinghies were restricted to amateur crews. It was decided that the maximum length of the dinghy would be restricted to 14 feet. All dinghies would have 40 foot masts and over 1000 feet of sail.
.
By Randy York 16
SUMMER 2015
Bermuda has the most golf courses per capita of any location in the world. There are seven 18-hole golf courses and two 9-hole courses in its 20.75 square miles.