Google+

11.30.2009

Hazelnut & Fig Tartlets


Plump port-drenched dates tucked into a buttery hazelnut crust make a delicious teatime sweet. Ideal for parties or simply as an afternoon treat, these festive tartlets are perfectly paired with a medium black tea that won’t overpower the subtle balance of flavors.

Hazelnut and Fig Tartlets
Makes 12 tartlets
1 1/2 cups chopped hazelnuts, toasted and divided2 1/3 cups all-purpose flour, divided3/4 cup light brown sugar1 teaspoon ground cinnamon1 teaspoon salt, divided1 teaspoon ground nutmeg1/2 teaspoon baking powder 1 cup cold butter, cubed3 egg yolks3 teaspoons vanilla extract, divided1 teaspoon butter flavor*2 (9-ounce) packages dried figs, finely chopped1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar, divided1/2 cup water1 cup Port 2 1/2 tablespoons hazelnut syrup**2 eggs, lightly beaten, divided
1. In the bowl of a food processor, combine 1 cup hazelnuts and 1/3 cup flour. Pulse until nuts are finely chopped. Transfer mixture to a large bowl. Add remaining flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and nutmeg. Whisk to blend; add baking powder and butter.
2. Using an electric mixer at low speed, blend ingredients until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add the egg yolks, 2 teaspoons vanilla extract, and butter flavor. Beat until moist clumps form.
3. Gather dough into two balls. Wrap one ball in plastic wrap, and refrigerate until ready to use. Evenly press remaining dough into bottoms and up sides of 12 (4-inch) tartlet pans. Refrigerate until ready to use.
4. In a medium saucepan, combine the figs, 1 cup sugar, water, Port, hazelnut syrup, and remaining salt over medium heat. Cook 25 to 30 minutes, until mixture thickens; cool slightly.
5. Stir in remaining hazelnuts and one egg. Spoon fig mixture into prepared crusts. Refrigerate until ready to bake.
6. Place remaining dough between two sheets of parchment paper; roll into a rectangle approximately 1/4-inch thick. Freeze rectangle for approximately 5 minutes to firm.
7. Using a 1-inch star cutter, cut stars from dough. Place about 5 to 6 stars on top of filling on each tart. Brush stars with remaining beaten egg, and sprinkle with remaining sugar.
8. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until crust is golden brown and filling is bubbling. Cool tartlets completely on wire racks. Once cooled, remove tartlets from pans.
Note: Tarts can be made up to 2 days ahead, covered tightly and stored at room temperature.
*Butter flavor can be found on the baking aisle with other extracts.
**For testing purposes, our test kitchen used Torani Hazelnut Flavored Syrup, which can be found with fine coffees at specialty stores or in coffee shops.


From Teatime Magazine

11.25.2009

{Happy Thanksgiving}


Ah! on Thanksgiving day....When the care-wearied man seeks his mother once more,And the worn matron smiles where the girl smiled before.What moistens the lips and what brightens the eye?What calls back the past, like the rich pumpkin pie?~John Greenleaf Whittier
Happy Thanksgiving Janeites!
CNJ JASNA is enjoying the holidays and will return with all things Austen on 11/30/09.

11.24.2009

December Events at Allaire Village

Be sure to visit Historic Allaire Village during the month of December as they are hosting many wonderful events. F0r more information visit: http://www.allairevillage.org/

DECEMBER
5/ 6 Sat./Sun. Christmas at Allaire Sat & Sun.12 noon - 3:30p.m. $6/ Adult- $4/ Child (5-14 Yrs.) per day. Horse & Wagon Ride extra $7.50/ Adult, $5 Children under12

11 Fri. “A Christmas Carol” Performance in Allaire Chapel 7:30 pm Advanced tickets recommended $15/ person

12 Sat. Christmas Lantern Tours, 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. (90 min. tours every 15 min.) $15/ Person. Advance ticket recommended

18 Fri. “A Christmas Carol” Performance in Allaire Chapel 7:30 pm Advanced tickets recommended $15/ person

19 Sat. Christmas Lantern Tours, 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. (90 min. tours every 15 min.) $15/ Person. Advance ticket recommended

Main Exhibit: 100 Years of Christmas Gifts and Toys at Allaire running November 21 thorough December 19

Displayed will be gifts and toys representing what Allaire residents may have received if you lived at Allaire at any time during the 1830s to the 1930s - from the heyday of the Howell Works to the establishment of Arthur Brisbane's Allaire Estate. This Christmas Exhibit that will follow the art show.

The question of "what would the people of the village received for Christmas from the 1830s to the 1930s" will be answered - via an array of toys and gifts. The toys and gifts will come from collection pieces in storage, as well as from private collections of people who had ancestors that lived at Allaire during these years.

When we think of "Allaire" today, we think of just the village. But the "Allaire area" encompassed various farms and homes in the immediate vicinity. For example, the nearby Kessler Farms, Thompson Dairy Farm, and Allaire Golf Course - all had an "Allaire address" through the 1930s and beyond. Let alone those living and working for Arthur Brisbane at his Allaire estate in the 20th Century (the same buildings and homes that once were part of James P. Allaire's Howell Iron Works Company). This exhibit will explore the Christmas and Holiday Gift Giving Traditions which would have been experienced here.

11.20.2009

Jane Austen Exhibit at the Morgan


New York Times reports in the ARTS / ART & DESIGN in the November 07, 2009 edition on the Jane Austen exhibit at the Morgan Library. Follow this link: Exhibition Review 'A Woman: At the Morgan, the Jane Austen Her Family Knew for the article by EDWARD ROTHSTEIN "A Woman's Wit: Jane Austen's Life and Legacy," a new exhibition at the Morgan Library & Museum, includes many personal letters and early manuscripts by the author.

11.18.2009

Recipe for Pecan Tassies


When searching for an ideal cool-weather sweet, comforting, tried-and-true recipes are the first that come to mind. Just in time for fall, TeaTime reader Karen Haynes sent us her recipe for a season-perfect teatime treat.


Pecan Tassies
Makes 24 tassies
1/2 cup plus
1 tablespoon softened unsalted butter, divided

1 (3-ounce) package cream cheese, softened

1 cup all-purpose flour

1 egg

3/4 cup firmly packed light brown sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/8 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup chopped pecans

24 pecan halves


1. In a large bowl and using an electric mixer at medium speed, combine 1/2 cup butter and cream cheese; beat until well combined. Reduce mixer speed to low, and add the flour. Beat until combined. Wrap the dough tightly with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for 1 hour.
2. Preheat oven to 325˚. 3
. Shape dough into 24 (1-inch) balls, and place in the wells of a mini muffin pan. Press the dough evenly into bottoms and up the sides of the wells.
4. In a medium bowl and using an electric mixer at medium speed, combine the egg, brown sugar, vanilla extract, remaining 1 tablespoon butter, and salt; beat until well combined. Fold in the chopped pecans.
5. Spoon the pecan filling evenly into each dough cup, and top each with a pecan half. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until the crusts are golden brown. Remove from oven, and let cool for 10 minutes. Transfer the tassies to a wire rack, and cool completely.
Recipe from www.teatimemagazine.com

11.16.2009

{Jane Austen on Etsy}


Featured Etsy artist specializing in Jane Austen apparel and accoutrements: prettywhimsical has great pendants at very reasonable prices, that can adorn every Janeite. Follow this link to find a pendant for yourself: http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=33735512

11.13.2009

1836 Thanksgiving Day Celebration


Celebrate the Thanksgiving season at Allaire Village on Nov. 22. For more information: http://www.allairevillage.org/

"Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week. At which time, amongst other recreations, we exercised our arms, Many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest King Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our governor, and upon the captain and others. And although it be not always so plentiful as it was this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want that we often wish you partakers of our plenty." These words describing the first Thanksgiving, penned over 380 years ago, are attributed Edward Winslow, a leader of the Plimouth Colony...more

11.12.2009

More truths acknowledged!


A Truth Universally Acknowledged: Thirty-Three Great Writers on Why We Read Jane Austen

Edited by Susannah Carson

[Why] does the reader yearn with such helpless fervor for the marriage of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy? Why does the reader crow and flinch with almost equal concern over the ups and downs of Jane Bennet and Mr. Bingley? Jane and Elizabeth’s mother, Mrs. Bennet (stupid, prattling, coarse, greedy), is one of the greatest comic nightmares in all literature, yet we are scarcely less restrained than she in our fretful ambition for her daughters. Jane Austen makes Mrs. Bennets of us all. How? —Martin Amis


Question: What do you, C. S. Lewis, Harold Bloom, Eudora Welty, W. Somerset Maugham, Alain de Botton, Virginia Woolf, and all of us here at Bas Bleu have in common? Answer: a grand appreciation for Jane Austen! A Truth Universally Acknowledged—an engaging collection of essays (some decades old, some newly composed)—revels in the myriad reasons that Austen’s novels and characters have such wide and enduring appeal. The keen insights of thirty-three great writers, including the authors named above, are sure to delight and enlighten Jane-ites. (And how refreshing to know that we Austen-obsessed are in such good company!) (Text and image courtesy of Bas Bleu)

11.10.2009

Dominic West reads P & P Proposal Scene


The other day, you were able to hear Greg Wise's reading of Persuasion's "You Pierce My Soul" letter. There is a similar reading of the proposal scene in P & P. This time it features Dominic West.
Click here to watch the P & P video.


Thanks to Janeite Florence for link.

11.08.2009

"The Letter" from Persuasion


Greg Wise (1995 Willoughby) Reads "The Letter" from Persuasion


Thank you to JASNA-NY's Janeite Kerri for sharing this link. Plan on 15 minutes of pure enjoyment as Austen's words come to life.

11.06.2009

A Woman's Wit Gallery Talk at the Morgan



On November 20th, at 7pm, the Morgan Library in NYC will be having a special Gallery Talk of their exhibit on Jane Austen.

Our CNJ JASNA is planning to attend. If you are interested please contact our e-mail address (listed to the left) for more information.

See you there!

11.05.2009

It is a truth universally acknowledged...


that Barnes and Nobel is featuring our Miss Jan'es P&P as the text for their new eBook--Nook! It seems that our good taste is universal.

11.04.2009

Cheer from Chawton event


The New York Society Library presents

Karen Eterovich

Cheer from Chawton:
A Jane Austen Family Theatrical

with seasonal refreshments

Saturday, December 12, 2:00 p.m.
$20 per person


Jane Austen never traveled more than 200 miles from the town of her birth. She never married, nor left her family. Her novels were not published under her name while she lived. Yet they testify to a person of great wit, insight, and depth. Using original text woven with excerpts from Austen's novels, letters, and juvenilia, together with suitable speech, period movement, costume, and music, Cheer from Chawton reveals the humor, affection, character, and depth of a dependent "old maid" who write, with little fame or remuneration, some of the greatest novels in the English language.

The setting is Chawton Great House, the home of Austen's brother, where the family have gathered for a "theatrical," like the one in Mansfield Park, and instead urge Jane to share her pointed observations on them, their friends, suitors, and society, as well as her own hilarious early efforts as an author.


A member of Screen Actors Guild, Actors' Equity Association and the Dramatists Guild, Karen Eterovich has won international acclaim with her play Love Arm'd: Aphra Behn and Her Pen, which she has performed in over thirty states across American and throughout Europe. She is the writer/performer of Cheer From Chawton and is recognized as an authority on acting in Restoration literature.
JASNA-NY reports: Actress (and JASNA-NY member), Karen Eterovich, will be performing at the New York Society Library(NYSL) December 12, 2009 at 2pm. NYSL is saving 30 seats for JASNA members.

If you would like to attend, please register by contacting the Events Office at 212-288-6900 x230 or events@nysoclib.org, indicating your JASNA membership and the number in your party. The cost of this event is $20.


The New York Society Library
53 East 79th Street New York, New York (at Madison Avenue)
Thanks JASNA-NY for sharing!

11.02.2009

November Wallpaper

Looking back at Ackermann's Repository. The original Ackermann's Repository of Arts, Literature, Fashions, Manufactures, &c. was published monthly from 1809-1829 and featured a pair of fashion plates in addition to other illustrations and articles covering a variety of topics. These delicate aquatint illustrations and lovely fashions continue to delight and inspire us two hundred years later.

Throughout 2009, new desktop wallpapers will be posted each month showcasing two fashion plates: one from 1809 and the other from a different year during Jane Austen's lifetime. Enjoy a year-long tour through this popular late Georgian-Regency publication!

http://www.solitary-elegance.com/