Living With Poetry | Don't Hesitate + Potato Salad with Creamy Dill Dressing


Living with Poetry is an occasional series where we explore how poetry infuses our everyday lives. Catch up with past features here.


Potato Salad with Creamy Dill Sauce | Eat This Poem

If you ask me what I've been cooking lately, I might not be able to tell you. There was lasagna a while back, Saturday morning pancakes, and hummus slathered on pita bread. I've also been drinking a lot of almond milk and turmeric-ginger tea. The reason I can't remember my meals is because the past six weeks have been a whirlwind (the mostly good kind). (Also, more on that in an upcoming post.)

On occasion, monumental life events require our full attention. Although cooking remained constant out of sheer necessity (we have to eat, of course), I found myself relying on instinct and old favorites rather than seeking inspiration at the Sunday farmer's market or in my enormous stack of magazines. But now that the dust has settled, I'm starting to find my way back.

I'm not sure why, but I committed to posting a poem a day on Facebook and Instagram during the month of April, my busiest month on record this year, but once the idea shot into my head, I couldn't turn back. In some ways, it kept me grounded to this space, and allowed poetry to seep in for a few minutes each day, so for that I am grateful. 

Mary Oliver's poem "Don't Hesitate," resonated with me the most last month. This recent season was one filled with fear and uncertainty alongside profound gratefulness and joy. It's easy to run from the goodness, even though we want it so badly, because we're conditioned to grin and bear it, to not assume we're worthy of happiness. I tried to embrace the unsteadiness as much as I could, and poems like this one helped remind me that even in the midst of change and growth, "joy was not made to be a crumb." That might be the best line of poetry I've read in a long time.


Potato Salad with Creamy Dill Dressing

A recent Good Eggs order arrived with a gift of dill, and the potatoes in my yellow bowl on the counter were begging for a brightly-flavored fate. I've made Heidi's dressing with sunflower seeds before, and thought their addition here would go nicely with the lemon, sour cream, and dill. I've been warming up to dill, and the flavors here are not overpowering. If you'd like a bit more, feel free to adjust. Most of this is mere suggestion.

For the potatoes
2 to 2 1/2 pounds Yukon or red potatoes, quartered 
1/4 cup dill, chopped
Salt and freshly cracked pepper

For the dressing
1/4 cup sunflower seeds
1/4 cup dill, lightly packed
2 tablespoons sour cream
Juice of 1 lemon
Drizzle of honey
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 to 2 tablespoons warm water
1/4 teaspoon salt
Freshly cracked pepper

Bring a large pot of water to a boil and season generously with salt. Add the potatoes and cook for 12-15 minutes, or until tender when pierced with a fork; drain.

While the potatoes cook, make the dressing. Add the sunflower seeds, dill, sour cream, lemon, and honey to a food processor and pulse to combine. With the motor running, drizzle in the oil. If the dressing is too thick, add warm water a tablespoon at a time. Season with 1/4 teaspoon salt (plus more to taste), and freshly cracked pepper.

Pour the dressing over the warm potatoes and season with additional salt and pepper. Gently toss to combine, and finish with the chopped dill.

Literary City Guides: Boulder, CO and Austin, TX

If you were asked to name two of the coolest U.S. towns, Boulder and Austin might come to mind. Small enough to feel personal and friendly, but big enough to have extensive options for nightlife, culture, and food experiences, both cities are literary destinations worth adding to your 2014 must-visit list.


BOULDER, COLORADO


Boulder is home to a bookstore with the largest selection of poetry in all of Colorado (the shop's name is taken from a Yeats poem), and features more coffee shops than you could visit in a day. Tour guide Analiese Brown has a dog named Basil (after her favorite herb), so you know her recommendations will be perfect for travelers who build vacations around the best places to eat.


AUSTIN, TEXAS


Shelby Wardlaw has called Austin home for the past 11 years. Between attending readings at the prestigious Michener Center for Writers at the University of Texas, Austin, or frequenting coffee shops that moonlight as music venues and yoga studios, she's learned the best literary Austin has to offer.

What I'm Reading | April 2014

April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.
— T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land

April was not so cruel. Actually, April tends to be one of my favorite months of the year for several reasons, including the dawn of spring, a sense of renewal, and celebrating my wedding anniversary. The photo above is from Pizzeria Delfina in San Francisco, a spot that came highly recommended by Stacy, and did not disappoint. Between the Italian wine, saffron arancini, and perfectly charred pizza, we couldn't have asked for a better meal during a recent weekend getaway to the bay. 


Greece is dreamy. 

Why teaching poetry is so important.

Portraits of reconciliation.

"You can’t manage time. Time never changes. There will always be 168 hours in a week. What you can manage are the activities you choose to do in that time."

The evolutionary mystery of left-handedness. 

The how and why of dal.

Ever wondered what your victorian pen name would have been?

I should really bake more bread.

Don't mess with perfect.

When cooking is its own reward.

The crossroads of should and must.

What 15 famous landmarks look like from the sky. 

These recipes are making me hungry: crispy sweet potato fries, chocolate red wine cake, and baked almond pancake with strawberries.


"Reading is a solitary act, an experience of interiority. To read a book is to burst the confines of one’s consciousness and enter another world. What happens when you read a book in the company of others? You enter its world together but see it in your own way; and it’s through sharing those differences of perception that the book group acquires its emotional power."        -Really? You're Not in a Book Club?