Outdoornews
A complimentary title to Wipfli s VENISON title
February 12, 2021
From water to table,
Fish author and chef Jonathan Wipfli’s follow-up to
Venison offers a contemporary approach to cooking North America’s most popular freshwater game fish throughout the seasons. Featuring 50 recipes for dishes with accompanying sides, as well as beautifully photographed images of the final presentations, Wipfli’s new cookbook will leave readers determined to recreate their own culinary masterpieces.
In
Fish, Jonathan Wipfli focuses on the practice of sustainable fishing by teaching readers the techniques for efficiently processing and cleaning game fish. With a wide, detailed spread of recipes that cover the most popular freshwater game fish in North America, you’ll become the star chef at every family cookout event!
Author Natalie Warren to discuss her new book
Hudson Bay Bound: Two Women, One Dog, Two Thousand Miles to the Arctic at a virtual launch, 7:00 PM CT, Tuesday, February 9, 2021. The evening will include an introduction by polar explorer Ann Bancroft, music, videos, trivia, poetry, storytelling, and a Q&A moderated by environmental activist and canoe expeditioner Lee Vue.
The event is co-hosted by the Friends of the Boundary Waters, St. Croix River Association, Friends of the Mississippi River, Voyageurs Conservancy, Magers & Quinn Booksellers, and University of Minnesota Press. Register at: Z.UMN.EDU/WARRENLAUNCH.
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Kim Hines’ young adult novella
Wingo Fly (2020) revolves around Christy Wingo, a 10-year-old Black girl in 1965 Minneapolis, Minnesota. The book is filled with humor, mystery and social justice issues. Based in Minneapolis, Kim has been a theater artist for 50 plus years and this is her first book.
“This book is really based on when I was ten years old in 1965. Christy is a lot like me,” says Hines. “We don’t have a lot of stories about Black people growing up in the Midwest. We were middle class. There’s not a lot of stories about Black kids growing up in a middle class family. There’s a lot of books out there about kids growing up in poverty and growing up in gangs and you know all the stereotypes that I think White America has about Black people. And growing up I don’t think I read anything that spoke to the way I was living.”