Entertainment

August 2013 - Posts

  • RED Hearts: Entertainment: Easy, Freeze-y Popsicles To Make

    By Emily-Nicole Johns, reporting from Brooklyn, NY, on how adulthood improves on the recipe for her favorite summer treat

    Growing up in the south, popsicles were a serious summer staple. The sound of the ice cream truck would have my neighborhood crew running from all corners to get our hands on crazy delicious, sticky treats.

    Now as an adult, when the summer temperature really starts cranking up and my New York apartment is boiling, all I can think about making is my favorite bit of nostalgia on a stick. Popsicles are super simple to concoct, and you don’t even have to think about turning on the oven. Plus, you can make them as healthy and full of fresh fruit and low-calorie as you like (if you’re into that sort of thing).

    Frozen treat technology has advanced since the 80s, with products like the Zoku Quick Pop Maker. But I still like to keep it simple with a classic popsicle mold, like this one I got at Whisk.

    So as the summer months start coming to an end, try out one of these popsicle recipes. It's important. Grab the sunscreen, bring out your inner child and get going!

    Orange Creamsicles
    Ingredients:
    8 oz. orange juice
    2 1/2 cups vanilla ice cream
    1 tablespoon orange zest
    1 cup heavy whipping cream

    Blend together the orange juice, ice cream and zest until smooth. Pour into popsicle molds, but leave the top 1/4 empty. Using a whisk, whip the heavy whipping cream until soft peaks form. You want it just firm enough that it won't too quickly seep into the other liquid. Spoon the whipped cream on top of the creamsicles, add popsicle sticks and freeze overnight.

    Minty Watermelon Fizz Pops
    Ingredients:
    1 1/2 cups pureed watermelon (3 cups watermelon, diced)
    1 tablespoon of fresh mint, thinly sliced
    2 cups coconut water
    1 cup sparkling white grape juice

    Pour the sparkling grape juice into a measuring cup and allow to settle for at least 5 minutes (to reduce the bubbles). In a blender, puree sliced watermelon pieces. Stir together the watermelon and the coconut water. Add the sliced mint and sparkling grape juice, and stir into the watermelon mixture. Fill each popsicle mold, leaving about 1/4 inch of space from the top (the liquid will expand slightly as it freezes).

  • RED Hearts: Entertainment: Must Rrrread Riot Grrrls

    By Olive Panter, 23, reporting from Brooklyn, NY, on a book that she finds perfect—and perfectly revolutionary

    I read Girls To The Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution by Sara Marcus over the course of four days. Every day since I have been forced to proclaim it perfect to anyone who stumbled into my path. I found myself gesturing to the book as it sat next to me--this worn-out stained library copy, published in 2010—amazed at how it was exactly the right punctuation to the point I was currently making.

    Here’s the point: Most girls and women have had something bad happen to them because they are female, whether that was something life-altering or something that just felt kind of wrong. It's acknowledged but rarely confronted.

    This is why I think Girls To The Front should be mandatory reading for everyone, male or female. Sara Marcus does an incredibly good job of laying out the movement from its start 20-some years ago to its supposed finish.

    Riot Grrrl has been mostly labeled as a musical genre, rather than a political revolution. But as third-wave feminism, it encapsulated something singular and deeply important. These were alienated and confused girls—mostly teenagers, whose sadness masked their anger (and vice versa)—who were taking control of their bodies and gender relationships, in a world that didn't particularly respect either. Girls shouted their views from their beautiful, caustically intelligent collaged pamphlets. They cobbled together (great) bands, using immersive media that could explain what was wrong, with language and noise and cut-and-paste pieces. And all of this sprang from regular all-girl meetings that were part-counseling, part-activism.

    The problems and feelings Riot Grrrls dealt with have never gone away. There is inequality, there is fear. There is hate, there is love. That's why Riot Grrrl stuck and has amassed new generations of fans. It's why so many people turn to those resonant Bikini Kill and Bratmobile songs again and again.

    But what's gotten lost is the foundation of Riot Grrrl: ten girls sitting in a room, telling the stories that keep them up at night. As a result, they wind up feeling less alone and more powerful. So much of the movement’s essentials just haven’t been handed down to girls who weren't the right age, in the right time, in the right city.

    We should all read this book and confess what we think is just ours. Start new zines or start new bands or something. Leave tangible things for someone who feels alone to stumble onto. P.O. boxes are due for a comeback. At the very least, read it and know it actually happened. We gotta do this again, keep doing it. Double dare ya. Triple dare myself. Maybe it can save some of us.