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Rachel Belle
Ring My Belle on KIRO Radio
Tune in to KIRO Radio on Saturdays at 5pm and Sundays at 3pm for Ring my Belle with Rachel Belle.
Who is Rachel Belle?
Rachel Belle's "Ring My Belle" segment airs Monday-Friday on The Ron & Don Show at 4:37pm and 6:37pm. You can hear "Ring My Belle Weekends" Saturdays at 5:00pm Sundays at 3:00pm. Rachel is a northern California native who loves anything and everything culinary, playing Scrabble, petting cats and performing improv.

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Between the Pages: Recipes & Love Letters Discovered by a Used Bookseller

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Michael Popek never intended on taking over the family's used bookstore.

"I graduated college and moved off to the west coast to try and find my own path. Somehow I ended up back here in New York, with my girlfriend, and slowly started putting in more and more hours here at the shop and now I'm basically running things."

Back in the smallish town of Oneonta, New York, running the family business, Michael soon found something that made his job much more interesting.

"I found a big pot leaf stuck in an old microwave cookbook and I was like, 'Oh, that's so funny because they get the munchies and stick it in the cookbook.' So I took a quick picture of it and I sent it to a couple people over email and they were like, 'Oh, this is great. You should post anything else you find.' That's basically how the blog got started."

So he started a blog called Forgotten Book Marks, that is now a book, containing all of the items Michael has found stuck in books over the years. He now has a collection of 1,700 items from to-do lists to feathers to a hairnet.

"My favorite are always the old letters, especially love letters. One of the earlier finds, there's a break up letter that's probably still my favorite. I found it in a pregnancy book. It just made me wonder what was going on in that relationship and who those people were. There were no actual names involved but I think it was the girl sending it to the guy."

The old, dusty books that come into the shop are a never ending treasure trove containing bits and pieces of people's lives.

"Let's say, in a given week, I'll sort about five or six thousand books. I'll probably find 50 or 100 items. I would say one out of every 100 or so books I go through, there will be something in there."

After a while, Michael realized how many recipes he was finding, many of them pressed between the pages of cookbooks, but he found them in novels as well.

book 1"There was a recipe for Mrs. Eisenhower's fudge. I guess it was a pretty popular fudge recipe. Mrs. Eisenhower originally published it in Family Circle or one of those magazines in the 60's. That was found in a Nabokov novel. It wasn't exactly what I pictured when I pictured someone making this old fudge recipe."

He picked through his collection of 500 found recipes and selected his very favorites for his new book Handwritten Recipes: A Bookseller's Collection of Curious and Wonderful Recipes Forgotten Between the Pages.

"This Chicken and Spaghetti Casserole was found in Michael Crichton's Fear, which is a sci-fi book. Then there was a recipe for zucchini bread found in a cookbook called 365 Ways to To Cook Hamburger. There's a double recipe for corn muffins and corn bread which was found in Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle."

The recipes are mostly hand written, and deciphering the chicken scratch was the biggest challenge of compiling this book. Which brings us to this question: Are these recipes any good? On Page 1 Michael confesses that he is not a cook, but he did send the recipes out to food bloggers for testing.

"I tried to include recipes that actually look like they'd be good to eat, but I thought it was important to also include some of the weird, strange-sounding recipes that I'd find as well. Some of the recipes were incomplete and didn't have the full instructions."

While I have no intention of cooking up Page 87's Meat and Cheese Loaf for my next dinner party, it is fun to see a recipe for potato bread, on the back of a Southern Bell bill, that was stuck into a copy of The Life of Martin Luther King Jr.

Really though, the moral of this story is: Finding old stuff is neat.

Rachel Belle, Ron and Don Show Reporter
Rachel Belle is a feature contributor and personality on The Ron & Don Show on KIRO Radio (weekdays 3-7pm), and host of Ring My Belle Weekends (Saturdays at 5pm and Sundays at 3pm).

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Comments (3)


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  • Snout wrote...
    The world of food has gotten better...and worse.
    There are more ingredients available to us. The never ending flow of Hispanics has meant that produce stands now have a ton of strange items for us to try. The average Joe can learn how to make all kinds of stuff by buying something strange and hitting up Youtube or asking the produce guy. But the downside is the increased number of food SNOBS. People who will lift their nose at a good meatloaf, casserole, patty melt, liver and onions or other things that don't cost a zillion dollars in odd spices, cookware, or other ingredients that the average Joe can't readily get their hands on or afford. These smarmy hipster idiots annoy me to no end. They watch a few TV shows on the Food Network hosted by mainly other hipsters these days who have the frosted hair, the low cut blouse, ultra-white teeth or are just so "authentically Southern" that it makes you want to toss the remote, "Y'All." Please. Tell us something interesting about our food and explain WHY you need to do certain things like Alton Brown does. Show us how to make something that we all can do like Jeff Smith did. But enough with the "foodie" plastic banana phoney bologna good-time rock and roll people who have the stupid shopping in a froofy boutique guitar music to go along while they dice a mamey or shred a daikon on the TV. I like the increased variety. I could do without the attitude that used to be reserved for French restaurants. Off to make a BLT.
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  • sghouse wrote...
    No more coffee for you today
    or try a little decaf. :-)
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • justanotheridiot wrote...
    PLEASE...
    MoRon and MorDon just go away. Dont you guys have like 23 home towns? Go to one of those and take this lady with you
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }