School Days
Snap Crackle Pop Snack Bites
by Susan Salzman
Back in the day, I did buy pre-packaged granola bars. The ones that we were told were “good for you”. The more I got into making homemade everything, the more I realized that most things in a package, bottle, or can contain lots of ingredients that are not only manufactured but one’s that I cannot pronounce.
As of last week, packing lunches has become part of my morning routine. Always a protein, some sort of veggie, a fruit, rice crackers or nuts, water, and if I have it on hand, a little sweet treat. Cutting out gluten is not as challenging as one would assume. It’s more the sweet treat that’s a challenge. I don’t have a” cookie jar” filled with the latest and greatest. Instead, I bake off frozen cookie dough, 8 or 10 at a time, which doesn’t leave a lot of room for leftovers. However, it was more the “granola” type bar that my kids were missing.
After several attempts at a no bake “granola” bar, I was frustrated with them not staying in one piece. Although they tasted good, they fell apart in my kids hands, making them the perfect topping for homemade ice cream. However, I wasn’t looking for toppings. I wanted a bar that I could put in their lunch for snack time. After the first batch, I pulled out my silicone muffin cups and voila, something magical happened.
Back to School
by Laraine Newman
Jane Curtin, my former colleague on Saturday Night Live,
characterized school cafeteria food in a way I’d never thought of. One
day, on the set, I was waxing poetic about the fact that I loved the
stuff. I think Spaghetti Day was my favorite.
“I don’t know what it is. It was pretty simple. Tomato sauce
with ground beef and noodles. I usually had chocolate milk with it. You
know, the holy trinity, savory, starchy and sweet. It was just so…
divine..”
“Oh, yeah.” Jane said, as she tugged slowly on her cigarette. “Institutional food”.
“Hmmm.” I thought. “Really?”
I pictured all the movie close-ups I’d seen of miscellaneous slop being slammed on to metal trays in various pre-riot prison scenes. Some burly lifer upends the new ‘fish’s' meal. But what he doesn’t know is, the new “fish” was often Jean-Claude Van Damme or Chuck Norris. Usually canned corn and peas, white bread and mystery meat. Probably saltpeter as well.
Happy Graduation
by Pamela Felcher
I have
taught English for over twenty years and the reading, planning,
grading, and yes, the teaching consume much of my waking time from
August 28th until June 20th every year. I have never had children of
my own. But I guess you could say, I'm "the village." I have taught
about 3200 students in all, ranging from the kids whose mothers clean
the homes and care for the children in Santa Monica to the kids in
Santa Monica whose moms employ the other moms.
I have taught future lawyers, doctors, rabbis, curators, filmmakers, poets, art historians, scientists, and I have taught future crack addicts, pregnant teens, suicides, and criminals. I have taught the ambitious and the indolent, the focused and the preoccupied, the optimistic and the pessimistic, the successful and the not so successful.
The Battle
by Cathy Pollak
Now that school is back in full swing (our second week), the dreaded morning scuffle has also returned.
I was hoping a more streamlined ritual would fall into place, but alas it's business as usual.
You see, I have one child who does everything he's supposed to, when he's supposed to do it. I have another child who couldn't be bothered with the type of work and effort it takes to get to school on time.
It's time to get up....."I can't".......It's time for breakfast....."I'm busy"....Are you dressed...teeth brushed...hair combed....shoes on....."no".
Ugh.
It makes me crazy. I feel like I've tried everything to help facilitate the morning madness but nothing seems to light a fire under his behind.
One Less Egg To Fry
by Laraine Newman
My husband Chad went to New York recently to drop our oldest daughter
Lena off at college. That same week, our 14-year old attended a cheer
camp at UCLA for four days giving me a rare glimpse into the gaping maw
of my Empty Nest Future and lemme tell ya, it was bleak.

I won’t mince words. I walked around the house weeping. No kidding. I
went into Lena’s room and smelled her pillow and the skeletal remains
of her wardrobe. Each article of clothing summoned a sweet memory that
only served to drive the knife in further, launching another torrent of
bawling.
“Oh, those Gladiator’s from Urban Outfitters that I warned her not to
wear at Coachella. But didn’t we have a kick-ass time?’ (Sob) “Oh, and
look at this high collared floral shirt that she called “sexy
secretary” when she wore it with that over-the knee pencil
skir-hir-hir-hir-hirt, oh God, oh God, my ba-bee-he-he-he-he-heeeee.” I
just stopped short of falling to my knees, pounding my chest and
bellowing “WHY, WHY?”
It's All Coming Back to Me Now
by Tracy Newman![]() |
The song you’ll hear after the jump is about driving my daughter Charlotte’s teenage carpool in 1998. The absolute horror of it. All I can remember about it was how much I hated it. Then, today, I was reading through my journal from back then, and come across the following entry. I must have been writing things for Charlotte to read in later years. She’s 26 now, so Charlotte, this is for you:
After School Snack: Pizza Muffins
by Susan Salzman
I am going to miss our lazy days of summer. Breakfast, lunch, snack, and dinner doesn’t seem as daunting during the summer as it does during the school year. First of all, I get a bit of help with the prep, the
clean up, and my sons culinary suggestions inspire me.
The school year brings it own set of hurdles. Breakfast and lunch have to be prepared at the same time – unless I can get my act together to prep the night before. Then there is the after school rush. Piling them into the car only to hurry home, get their homework done, give them a healthy snack, and hustle them to their various after school activities. Oh boy am I going to miss summer.
For the past few weeks I have been experimenting with a few ideas. My kids love pizza, but the stuff in the box leaves much to be desired and I just don’t have enough time to make one from scratch – given our schedule and how limited our time is (sadly said). Solution: pizza muffins.
Memories of School Lunch Sandwiches
by Susan Russo
You know how I made it through sophomore geometry? My mom's meatball sandwiches.
I dreaded geometry. Measures, angles, slopes, points. Coordinates? I thought they were clothes. It didn't help that my class was right before lunch, last lunch, actually, so I never knew if it was the geometry or the hypoglycemia that was causing my sweaty palms and headaches.
Nothing made me feel better than pulling my sandwich out of its paper bag. I'd take a whiff, know instantly it was a meatball sandwich, and give praise for Italian mothers. Then I'd carefully open the crinkly aluminum foil and discover three of my mom's homemade meatballs snuggled lovingly inside of a chewy Italian roll and doused with just the right amount of red gravy. It was as close to Nirvana as I would get, at least until I read Siddhartha.
Restaurant News
Baby Blues BBQLos Angelesby Telly Kousakis | Loteria Grill on the Santa Monica PromenadeLos Angelesby David Latt
| The BazaarLos Angelesby David Latt | "Breakfast at Berthillon"Parisby Brenda Athanus |













