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15 posts from February 2012

February 24, 2012

We're taking a break!

Image of Slatless Gentleman's trunk
Slatless Gentleman's trunk.
American Box & Trunk Factory Catalogue, 1906

The Smithsonian Libraries blog is going on a short hiatus while we perform some upgrades and changes. For many years we have been at this location, but the environment has changed and we are moving to a new home. The digital suitcases are packed and the virtual moving van is being loaded to carry all of our authors, posts, comments and images to our new home. 

We expect that the move will take at most a week. Our last post here will be today, February 24, 2012. We'll leave this site up and running for quite a while and when we are moved into our new home and everyting is unpacked and ready to go, we'll announce our new location here. We hope that the new version of the Smithsonian Libraries blog is up and running by March 3rd.

Thank you for your patience in this move. We hope to minimize the growing pains, but we think you'll like our new, bright, airy home. 

–The SI Libraries Blog Staff

February 22, 2012

Planning for the NMAAHC branch library

NMAAHC Construction

When The President of the United States and the Director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) break ground on February 22, 2012, it will be the beginning of a new adventure for Smithsonian Libraries.  Plans for the museum include locating the library in wonderful space on a public floor with direct public access.  Mary Augusta Thomas and Bill Baxter have been working with the staff of the NMAAHC space planning team, including representatives from the education department, the center for media arts and collections. We all enjoy the challenges of planning for a highly interactive information commons and a research library with a program that is only now being defined.  Our joint vision is for a place that visitors will come with questions raised by their time in the exhibitions.  These might be about objects in the collections, or the location of a museum or cultural center in their vicinity. 

In addition, the museum and library will offer resources and training in genealogy, another first for SIL.  In addition, the library reference specialists will provide onsite assistance with databases, a collection expected to be about 20000 volumes’ and a scholar’s workstation for visiting fellows and researchers.  Library users will be able discover resources throughout SL and retrieve items quickly. SIL is also in discussions about offering services to support archives research.   SIL selectors have been tagging books for the new museum for several years so a beginning collection is currently located at the Anacostia Community Museum Library.   The Libraries will bring a new librarian on board in the next year to work with planners and researchers at the Museum on those important first exhibitions and ongoing programs.

 

NMAAHC Construction

 

—Mary Augusta Thomas, Deputy Director

Images: Construction from Constitution Ave (top) and Signage from 15th Street (bottom).

February 21, 2012

Cooking from the Collections: New Orleans Style!

Just in time for Fat Tuesday, our testers whip up some food with New Orleans flair: gumbo and sweet potato pone! Both come from The New Orleans Cookbook, published by folks that now seem like old friends to Cooking from the Collections, the "staff home economists" of the Culinary Arts Institute of Chicago.

 

2012-02-Gumbo.jpg  Left to right: Sweet Potato Pone, White Rice, Crab-Shrimp Gumbo. 

 

Crab-Shrimp Gumbo

This was a relatively easy dish to make. While it is not the traditional gumbo that one might expect, this was a tasty and filling dish that was well-received by my colleagues, wife, and two-year-old daughter. Since the recipe was published in the 1950s, I took a few liberties based on modern conveniences. For example, instead of preparing the shrimp separately, I used frozen cooked and peeled shrimp. I also replaced canned crab-meat with freshly-packaged crab meat. As far as flavor, one thing that surprised me about the finished product was that it was somewhat bland, which is not what one would expect of gumbo. As you can see from the ingredients list that the recipe went very light on the spices. I was left wondering if this was indicative of the time that the recipe was published. Anecdotally, I’ve heard that many Americans preferred their food, well…blander, back then. I had to do the other ingredients justice, so I ended up adding additional salt, ground pepper, thyme, parsley, and garlic. I also amended the recipe to include beef bouillon and white pepper. If I were to make this recipe again, I would also add additional cayenne pepper and chili powder. (This time I didn’t want to make it too spicy since I was feeding this to a large group!) I especially enjoyed cooking from a historic cookbook from SIL’s collection. This is a very fun way to literally make history come alive.

Ingredients:

  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 1 green pepper, chopped
  • 2 stalks celery, chopped
  • 2 tbs butter or margarine
  • 1/4 lb (about 1/2 cup) diced cooked ham
  • 1 clove of garlic, finely minced
  • 6 ripe tomatoes
  • 1/2 lb. okra (about 2 cups), washed and sliced.
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/8 tsp pepper
  • 1/8 tesp cayenne pepper
  • 1/8 tsp chili powder
  • 1/8 tsp thyme
  • 1 tsp chopped parsley
  • 1/2 bay leaf, crushed
  • 6 1/2 oz crab meat
  • 1lb frozen cooked and peeled shrimp, thawed
  • Prepared white rice

Directions:

  1. Heat butter in large heavy skillet over low heat. Add chopped onion, pepper and celery. Stir and add ham and garlic. Continue cooking over medium heat until onion is translucent.
  2. Bring a pot of water to boil and dip in tomatoes to loosen skins. Peel and cut, then toss in to skillet with okra.
  3. Add water and spices to the skillet. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes.
  4. Pick crab meat for loose shells and add to skillet with shrimp. Cook for another 10 minutes or until okra is tender. Serve over rice.

Dave Opkins

 

Sweet Potato Pone

Nothing says New Orleans and Mardi Gras better than  Gumbo, King Cakes and  Sweet Potato Pone.  Yes, that's right -  Sweet Potato Pone, a dessert-like casserole made from sweet potatoes.  After about an hour my dish was crusty and brown along the edges but seemed a little runny in the middle so I turned the oven off and let it bake about 10 minutes more. It did get brown and crusty on the edges a little too brown it seemed.  This recipe makes a generous 6 servings.

Ingredients:

  • 4 medium size sweet potatoes or yams (about 1 ½ lbs)
  • 2/3 cup of butter or margarine (I used unsalted butter.)
  • 1 teaspoon each of grated lemon and orange peel
  • ½ teaspoon of salt
  • ½ teaspoon of nutmeg
  • ½ teaspoon of cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon of ground cloves
  • ½ cup firmly packed brown sugar (I used dark brown sugar)
  • 4 eggs well beaten
  • 1 cup of milk
  • 1/3 cup of molasses

Directions:

  1. Grease a 1 ½ qt. baking dish. Heat water for boiling water bath.
  2. Wash, pare, cover sweet potatoes with cold salted water and set aside. (This is where is strayed a bit. I washed but did not pare the sweet potatoes.)
  3. Cream butter or margarine with salt and spices until softened.
  4. Gradually add brown sugar, creaming until fluffy after each addition
  5. Add eggs in thirds, beating thoroughly after each addition
  6. Stir in mixture of milk and molasses.  Set aside while grating sweet potatoes.
  7. Drain sweet potatoes and grate using medium size grater (about 5 cups, grated).
  8. Blend grated potatoes into liquid mixture. Turn into baking dish. Bake in boiling water bath at 350 degrees about 1 hour or until top is crusty and lightly browned.

Ninette Dean

 

 

February 20, 2012

Smithsonian Libraries Presents...George Dyson!

The Smithsonian Libraries Presents…

›“Turing’s Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe” by George Dyson

Lecture, Book Signing, and Reception

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

5:00 p.m.

National Museum of Natural History (10th St. & Constitution Ave. NW)

Baird Auditorium, Ground Floor

Join us for this event! It is FREE and open to the public!

Dyson

George Dyson

 Author, kayak designer, historian of science and technology, unconventional career. Despite (or because of) the absence of formal education, Dyson has always found time for intellectual pursuits, working on the edges of the academic establishment but contributing to the mainstream with a wide range of lectures and three successful books. Dyson’s kayak designs have been built by thousands of followers and his books have been well received. James Michener praised Baidarka as “a grand, detailed book that will be a standard for years to come,” Oliver Sacks wrote that Darwin Among the Machines was “a very deep and important book, beautifully written... as remarkable an intellectual history as any I have read,” and Arthur C. Clarke describes Project Orion as “essential reading for engineers/scientists involved with government bureaucracies and the notorious Military Industrial Complex... also vice versa.”


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