Not exact matches
I long to get my hands stuck in some dough or experiment with a new
recipe... and so my
notebook is overflowing with scribbles and
ideas.
My
notebook is filled with
recipe ideas.
Whether I'm brainstorming for a week's worth of meals with the pilot,
recipe developing for the blog, testing said
recipes, jotting down random
ideas in my handy dandy
notebook, or writing up my completed masterpieces for the blog...
recipes are kind of my thing.
I, too, have a
notebook where I jot down
ideas and
recipes - otherwise they are lost in my brain forever!
I constantly scribble
recipe ideas into my
notebook but never get round to trying them out.
The
idea for this blog has blossomed from this beautiful story, and I plan to work through my grandmother's, great grandmother's and great great grandmother's treasured dusty
notebooks learning and living their culinary history, while bringing those
recipes into the everyday with some sneaky healthy alterations.
So imagine me laying in bed, fantasizing about food, having my
recipe notebook ready on my nightstand so I can take notes whenever a good
idea pops up.
First, each student should have a writing
notebook for (a) recording «seed»
ideas for writing, such as memories, wishes, observations, quotations, questions, illustrations, and artifacts [e.g., a letter or
recipe]; (b) performing planning activities; (c) drafting writing pieces; and (d) logging writing activities and reflections [see Fletcher, 1996].
The most common one is to gather new materials, which will make Lydie and Suelle automatically discover a new
recipe and write it down in their
Idea notebook.
Create a simple nesting
notebook filled with your family traditions,
recipes, and decorating
ideas for each season.