Katie CotugnoKatie Cotugno
Tellin' stories, eatin' snax. NYT bestselling author of messy, complicated, feminist love stories
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CSA Roundup

Katie

January 20, 2010

I sent off the final payment for our 2009 CSA the other day (late, because I am full of forgetfulness and fail). Overall, the farm share–our first and, I’m almost certain, not our last–was a really delightful experiment. I loved getting my giant green shopping bag home every week, unloading everything onto the kitchen table and imagining all the dinners I might make with the haul. I loved the tiny, sweet strawberries and the floppy bunches of dill and the chance to make kohlrabi fries. I loved our handsome farmer and the sweet  girl who checked my name off the list at pickup time. And I especially loved the bread share. Even if my ass did not.

Still, especially as we moved into the colder months and I wound up with twenty pounds of squash and kale and onions every week, it occurred to me more than once since June that a CSA–even a half share–isn’t particularly compatible with the way Tom and I live now. It was too much food, first of all. Even if we stayed home and cooked every night–which we basically never do–I’d still wind up with veg left over at the end of the week, a green bunch of something liquefying in my fridge. I gave away a lot of zucchini and lettuce and cabbage, and even though it made me popular at work and happy to share what we had, the CSA wasn’t exactly a cheap proposition–it was frustrating to feel so perpetually wasteful.

The cost was an issue in other ways, too. Our pickups tended to be really veg-heavy, and while that was awesome in theory, it also meant that I spent all of July and August walking past the farmer’s market fighting peach and plum envy because I had a crisper full of really expensive chard at home. And that’s when I was there to pick it up: this past summer, my schedule was so wonky that making sure somebody was there on Tuesdays between 3 and 6 to haul everything home became a project unto itself. Tom was more or less willing to go until the day he forgot the reusable bags and, he grumbled, “the woman yelled at me for polluting the environment!”

None of this is to say that I’d never do a CSA again. Quite the opposite, actually–I love the whole idea of being a part of an enterprise like this, and I’d absolutely recommend it to anybody who asked. But I think I’ll probably wait a few years before I do another round myself–’til we’re more settled, have more money–and can bear to look at another butternut squash.

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Slow Roasted

Katie

January 19, 2010

It snowed again last night, and the grey, frosty weather on top of last week’s restaurant-hopping had me all grabby for something a little bit special. I’d never attempted a slow-cooker pot roast before, though, and I was happy to take some help from the good people at William Sonoma (also purchased: sanding sugar, some tikka masala simmering sauce, and a ginormous ladle. After all, there was a gift card to be spent).

Five hours later, we wound up with a perfectly done, almost buttery roast, which (along with some smashed red potatoes and a quick Caesar salad) was a super-satisfying, day-off, January-type dinner.  Usually I sort of chafe at the idea of starting dinner from a jar, but this worked so well I might have to reconsider.  Plus, come on. That is a pretty jar.

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Weekender

Katie

January 18, 2010

Weekends with friends are wonderful–especially when they involve laid-back ladies, hilarious gentlemen, short-rib grilled cheese sandwiches, long walks through the Back Bay, dive bars with pinup-girl wallpaper, the first two episodes of Band of Brothers, and frequent, frequent renditions of this song (I’m sorry. I’m just not over it yet). Mike and Gianna: you are delightful. Come back asap.

How was everybody’s weekend? And what are you doing with your bonus day off?

Uncategorized 4 comments five good things

Five Good Things: Pants on the Ground Edition

Katie

January 15, 2010

1. We have reached the portion of our program where I start listening to a whole lot of Dave Matthews in order to avoid falling into a bottomless grey pit of sloppy winter despair. Hard to feel blue when you’re tromping down the street in your snowboots, rocking out to Listener Supported. Also, in a related story: the other night while cleaning out the fridge Tom made up a new song to the tune of  “Don’t Drink the Water” called “Don’t Eat the Roast Beef.” I may have peed my pants a little.

2. American Idol. I’ve probably told you before how much I love this show–the music and the joy and the fact that it starts every year in frigid January darkness and rushes full steam ahead until my birthday in May. Carrie Underwood. The golden tickets. That kid with the two broken arms. The distinctly American quality of the (supposedly democratic but possibly rigged) process. Simon Cowell’s  gross chest hair. The bridge jumper from Tennessee. Michael Jackson night. Everything about Kara Dioguardi.

3. My dad sent me the hugest, loveliest bouquet of tea roses yesterday, all pinks and oranges and yellows. Thanks, Dad! You’re a peach. (Pictures to come.)

4.  I did not turn the oven on once this whole week. It wasn’t on purpose or anything–things just kind of shook out that way. And you know what? I kind of liked it. I could get used to this whole “takeout and restaurants” thing.

5. We have houseguests this weekend! Woot.

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Boston Public

Katie

January 15, 2010

Dear Martha Coakley:

Way to screw the pooch.

No love,

Katie

PS: can everybody cross their fingers for this family? What a hideous, hideous thing.

Uncategorized 3 comments family

Katie

January 13, 2010


This my sister Jackie, who turns 22 today. Five minutes after the second picture was taken, I spilled a grande nonfat mocha from Starbucks all over that white coat she is wearing. Thank you, thank you. She took it like a champ, all things considered.

I could tell you the reasons I love her, the reasons she’s my best dearest friend: brains and style and a sense of physical comedy that would bust a gut in Lucille Ball herself. She is always up for iced coffee. She can talk to anyone at all. There is no one else in the world who knows my heart like she does, whose life has run so closely next to mine. She’s my backbone and my cheerleader and half of my soul, and if my hair is looking stupid she is the first person to let me know. What do people do, who don’t have sisters? They must have to carry little mirrors in their purses all the time.

I MEAN….Happy birthday, J. I pretty much dig you. I have something to send you, but I’m afraid your shifty mailman is going to steal it.

Uncategorized 1 comment book club

Mari, I’m not even going to tell them you didn’t toast the baguette.

Katie

January 12, 2010

Sunday’s book club was smashing (even if hardly any of us–me included–finished the book). I love potlucks because you end up with dishes as across the board as seven-layer dip, olive tapenade, and crab rangoons on the coffee table for picking–and every single of one of them was a winner. Dinner was pork tenderloin, pasta salad with pesto (thank you, new food processor!), a delicious salad courtesy of Lisa of the Delicious Salads, and a date and goat cheese tart (I KNOW RIGHT) that was maybe one of the most amazing things I’ve ever eaten at home. Just to be clear: DATES. AND GOAT CHEESE. IN A PIE CRUST.

OK good talk.

I took zero pictures because I was too busy drinking beer, scraping my jaw off the hardwood in the face of the storytelling prowess of a certain feisty redhead, and trying to convince Abbey not to do a dramatic reading of this blog. So you’ll just have to take my word for it that all the food was gorgeous. And that all of us are, too.

Next month: nonfiction and Tex-Mex in Cambridge. We’re pretty excited about it.

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swinging trapezes through circles of flame

Katie

January 11, 2010

You know how sometimes you forget you love a song for years and years and then you hear it somewhere random and all of a sudden you are like HEY THIS IS MY FAVORITE SONG, and you want to tell everyone you know about it, except all the people you really want to tell it to are far away?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xdt58T366xw]

Anyway. I love this effing song, and they played it at the bar on Saturday night when I went to visit Tom at work on my way home from Davis Square (partly because I think he’s nifty and partly because the lock on our front door has been freezing, and I didn’t want to be stuck outside the apartment by myself at 1:30 in the morning. One thing about Tom is he can always negotiate tricky locks).

Obsessions for the month of January: Idol auditions. Carla Bruni. That raspberry-flavored fiber stuff you put in your water bottle. My smart new kelly green planner. Coffee from the corner store. Northampton with the toy store girls. Short, naked fingernails. Canada. Dinner dates. Facebook. Watching the days get ever-so-incrementally longer.

What up, Monday.

Uncategorized 7 comments five good things

Five Good Things: “Basically Anything That is Awesome” Edition

Katie

January 8, 2010

Oh hello, Friday!

So…2010 is amazing so far?  Seriously, it’s off to such a bitchin’ start I’m almost afraid to talk about it.  But I’m gonna anyway.

001. You GUYS, I tricked another magazine into publishing my fiction. Looks like you’ll be able to find me in the January 2010 issue of The Broadkill Review. The story’s about a bakery and SECRET LOVE, which if you have ever met me (and probably even if you haven’t) you know are basically my two favorite things in all the world. I’m just saying, it’s nice to be able to share those passions with the population at large.

002. Speaking of writer-type stuff, my awesome former roommate Rebecca has super-graciously asked me to be a part of the 2010 Writer’s Challenge, a blog that encourages (wait for it) either 10 or 20 (or 20 or 10) minutes of honest-to-goodness creative output every day this year. Stop by each morning for a different writing prompt to get you started. And, you know. Tell your friends.

003. I made chili last night, and OH MY GOODNESS it was the best thing I’ve eaten since I got back to Boston. I can’t even take any real credit for it, since my chili recipe is as follows: 1) chop onion and peppers 2) open various cans and jars 3) dump everything into dutch oven and cook. BUT STILL.  Tom and I were happy puppies.

004. My hair is a really good length right now. I’m sorry but it is. I think I’ve got another few weeks before I start looking like I should be on The Jersey Shore, and in the meantime I am living it up.

005. I posted awhile back about Micaela and her awesome Pay It Forward challenge, and I am totally delighted to report that I got my package in the mail earlier this week. IT WAS SO GREAT. Among the bounty: a delicious-smelling candle + a coffee mug + the sweetest little clutch purse you ever saw. I nearly swooned. Thank you so much, M, and congratulations on your engagement! You are a star.

OKAY. I’m off to do work and eat leftovers and smile at everyone I see. Happy weekend, doves.

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Fresh Start.

Katie

January 7, 2010

Lose five. Finish the Pulitzers. Write it all, all the time. Drink more water. Get two published. Figure out the church thing. Recommit to this space. Mexico in the spring, New Orleans in the summer, London in the fall. S t r e t c h. Get this business off the ground (and stop being so damn cryptic about it here). Work on the family stuff. Save some dollars. Wear some heels. Eat some vegetables. Learn everything. Say yes.

Now you go.

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Love Junkie.

Katie Cotugno

Katie Cotugno is the New York Times bestselling author of eight messy, complicated feminist YA love stories, as well as the adult novels Birds of California and Meet the Benedettos. She is also the co-author, with Candace Bushnell, of Rules for Being a Girl. Her books have been honored by the Junior Library Guild, the Bank Street Children’s Book Committee, and the Kentucky Association of School Librarians, among others, and translated into more than fifteen languages.  Katie is a Pushcart Prize nominee whose work has appeared in The Iowa Review, The Mississippi Review, and Argestes, as well as many other literary magazines. She studied Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College and received her MFA in Fiction at Lesley University. She lives in Boston with her family. 

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