Holiday Mains Your Family Will LOVE and Should I start a gratitude journal??


Hey Reader,

If you're new here, you're probably interested in This Week's Recipe Inspo. If so, scroll on down towards the middle and you'll find it, along with a few other suggestions for Holiday Mains. Otherwise, the beginning of this email will include my weekly musings on this or that--today, I'm talking about the Science of Gratitude.

But if you're really only interested in the recipes, I get that. Click here and from this point forward, you will ONLY get the recipes on Thursdays, with my Weekly Recipe Roundups!

Otherwise, read more for a more scientific look at the thing that's bringing so many of us to the dining table this week:

Thanksgiving.


A few weeks ago, a friend of mine mentioned she'd started doing a "gratitude journal" to battle a sudden bout of melancholy that had befallen her. I wondered to myself, curiously, whether gratitude journaling could possibly be an effective cure or even coping mechanism for a "chronic case of the blues" (how a psychiatrist in the ER once described my own depressive episodes--a description I rather like). How could jotting down a few words each night before bed really combat overwhelming feelings of negativity, sadness, isolation?

It turns out that gratitude, in general, as well as those things that inspire us to feel gratitude (like gratitude journaling) can have a measurable impact on both our physical and mental health. Studies have shown that:

  • Gratitude journaling or writing a letter of gratitude "can increase people's happiness and overall positive mood";
  • "[M]ore grateful cardiac patients reported better sleep, less fatigue, and lower levels of cellular inflammation";
  • "[H]eart failure patients who kept a gratitude of journaling for eight weeks were more grateful and had reduced signs of inflammation afterwards"; and
  • "[M]ore grateful people experience less depression and are more resilient following traumatic events."

It turns out there's quite a lot of science surrounding gratitude. And why not? If it is truly responsible for reducing "cellular inflammation" and fatigue, while improving sleep and resilience to trauma, gratitude sounds more effective than lots of over the counter medications.

Before diving in much further, though, what is gratitude? I like this definition proffered by Messers Emmons and McCullough: "recognizing that one has obtained a positive outcome" and "recognizing that there is an external source for this positive outcome." And by "external source," we're talking about those things that are over and above whatever is your due (you are not "grateful" to your employer for paying your wages--that "positive outcome" is dependent on your work).

This definition presupposes an awareness--of what you're due and not due, what's positive and not positive, and the source of that outcome. However, it seems that our current notions (and feelings) of gratitude have evolved from something far more primal and instinctive:

"Animals as diverse as fish, birds, and vampire bats engage in 'reciprocal altruism' activities--behaviors that one animal performs to help another member of their species, even at a cost to themselves, presumably because they recognize at some instinctual level that the other individual may repay the favor at a later date." Id. As such, some scientists posit that "gratitude may have evolved as a mechanism to drive this reciprocal altruism, thereby turning strangers into friends and allies who are more likely to help one another." Id.

In addition to these observed behaviors in animals, neuroscientists have "identified brain areas that are likely involved in experiencing and expressing gratitude, providing further evidence for the idea that gratitude is an intrinsic component of the human experience." Id.

Interestingly enough, there are some brains (i.e., personalities) that might be better equipped to feel gratitude than others. It turns out women, in general, report feeling more grateful than men (though, this could be as much a cultural thing as a genetic thing). Id. Some studies suggest that extraversion and agreeableness might be associated with higher levels of gratitude. Id.

Regardless, it is apparent that we could all stand to benefit a thing or two from the "disposition of gratitude." In that vein, as cliched as it sounds, I encourage you to spend a few minutes today to jot down five things that you are grateful for, right now. I'll go first:

  1. I am grateful that both my parents are relatively healthy, mobile, and financially stable.
  2. I am grateful that I have a very open, communicative, and loving relationship with my mom and dad.
  3. I am grateful that I get to wake up every morning and make a living doing something I really enjoy and sometimes even love.
  4. I am grateful that I have a husband who thinks I'm really smart and talented and fun to be around.
  5. I am very grateful for every single one of you reading this sentence right now.

And, as a bonus:

I am grateful for potatoes. Always and forever grateful for potatoes.

What are you grateful for?

I'll get you started:


This Week's Recipe Inspo.

Now that I have plied you with Seven Spectacular Sides for the Holidays, I give to you my favorite Holiday main: Kkanpoong Tofu!


More Main Energy.

Want a few more options for your Holiday Mains? I got you.

Vegan Wellington.

Puff pastry wrapped around mushrooms, Italian sausage, and veggies, topped with homemade gravy. Yum.

Korean Fried "Chicken."

This Korean Fried Chicken is a family favorite and will disappear quickly from your holiday table. Guaranteed.

Kimchi Tofu Dumplings.

Believe me, they look small, but these Kimchi Tofu Dumplings give BIG main energy!


Did You Get My Free Ebook?

Just in case you missed it, I created a FREE EBOOK containing Seven Spectacular Sides for the Holidays. If you haven't downloaded it yet, here's your chance!

Seven Spectacular Sides for the Holidays Ebook.pdf


More Korean Inspired Holiday Dishes.

Many people in my comments have asked for more Korean-y holiday ideas, which honestly warms me to my core! And it's sorta my thing...? If the mains above don't do it for ya, here are a few more traditional Korean dishes that will be a HIT at your holiday party!

J A P C H A E

Bindaetteok.

These Korean hi-protein mung bean pancakes are a staple of Korean holiday tables--now make them part of your holiday tradition!

Zucchini Pancakes.

Zucchini pancakes are so easy to make, so yummy, and so pretty, they'll likely be invited to every holiday party from here on out!

Gochujang Jjigae.

If you have my book, you know that no Korean dining table is complete without a stew. This Gochujang Jjigae fits that holiday bill perfectly!


What I'm...

Watching.

I know I'm a little late to the party, but I randomly started watching Monsters, a dramatized telling of the Menendez Brothers story--one that I was totally unfamiliar with. Suffice it to say, it was as harrowing as it was well-written. The show may also have impacted history, as its popularity has turned the heat up on California's newly elected DA to reconsider the brothers' sentence.

Reading.

I picked up a copy of the Artful Way to Plant-Based Cooking by Chloe Crane-Leroux and her mother, Trudy Crane. The book is absolutely stunning, packed with gorgeous photos, beautiful plant-based recipes, and revealing narratives from these two talented women. Great for your own kitchen, but also great as a gift!

Loving.

Because I've been working with HexClad this year, I get sent a bunch of their stuff. I'll be honest--I don't always use all the things they send me, especially if they're typically used to cook meat. But I gotta tell ya--this double burner griddle has been working OVERTIME in my house. I use it as a baking sheet pan and have been roasting potatoes, Brussels sprouts, asparagus, ALL THE THINGS.


Parting Thoughts.

I've spent the past few days in my parents' home in Wilmette, Illinois. This home is like a book. Flip open its worn cover and you'll read how often I've walked out the swinging screen door. How I've stepped down the short sidewalk to the driveway in sunshine, rain, and snow. Walked all the many dogs that have entered and exited the chapters of this book down to the fire hydrant at the end of the street, before turning back around.

Read further into this book, and you'll see hundreds of pages devoted to the number of times I sat on the front step, pulling off, one-by-one, the needle like leaves of the shrubs guarding the windows looking out onto the street, reciting, "He loves me, he loves me not," scattering them into the lawn no matter my destiny.

You'll also see a blurb about the time my uncle and his family moved in with us (when their apartment building burned down). My uncle would clear the driveway of snow using his truck, turn the engine of my car on so it warmed up before I headed out for class and Omma went to work. My aunt cooked something mouthwatering for dinner each night and the house was the warmest it had ever been, despite the coldest winter storm in years outside that front door.

You'll even read about the times my brother and I got locked out of the house because Daddy was out playing golf or listening to music so loudly he couldn't hear the doorbell. But it was all ok because the weather was nice and we'd while away the time playing games on the front lawn or wandering around the neighborhood or sitting down and reading a book.

Buried between long, boring dissertations on the weeds crowding the grass, the crabapple tree that was cut down one summer and then replaced with a peach tree, the way the snow dissolves into the soil each winter, you'll find a few pages devoted to the time I knelt into the soft ground waiting for my love to reappear. How my heart pounded so hard I could feel it throbbing in my hands as I pulled out another weed and my love's sneakers--a faded pair of Van's--appeared beneath my nose.

You'll read about how he pulled off the shirt I'd given him as a gift and threw it on the lawn before getting back into his truck and driving away. How the smell of the dirt caked between my fingernails, the brown leaves, the weeds still caught inside my fingers--how these smells stayed with me for years and years and years, long after the taillights of his truck disappeared past the fire hydrant around the bend.

This book holds so many thousands of tissue paper pages, it should honestly be divided into multiple volumes, like the encyclopedias my mother purchased from the door-to-door salesman with the funny hat and oily smile; but, no one wants to bother. And I can't say I blame them either. It's a humble book, packed with stories that will and should remain anonymous and unread.

For the most part.

Wishing you all the best,


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