Nice Family Meals photos
Check out these family meals images:
Family meal: falafel and goat sausage sandwiches with fennel cream and arugula pesto 🙂

Image by Special*Dark
Family meal: Channeling a Pluto’s-style salad. Bay area peeps know what I’m talkin’ about 🙂

Image by Special*Dark
Crispy porchetta, garbanzo beans, cucumbers, fennel, arugula, ‘shrooms, frisee. Red wine vinaigrette with anchovy.
Just Another Photo of Allan Foster – 93/365

Image by foshydog
We did our family Easter get together today and had some lasagna for lunch. I like switching up the family meals from ham and turkey to a lasagna or even pizza. We played a few little games to just have some fun which ended up being super hard but fun to see somebody win. We did an egg toss and a frisbee toss. My mom invented the games and everyone gave it a shot. I have to admit that I did not win anything but it was fun to give it a try.
For today’s photo I grabbed my uncle and snapped off a few shots of him before we left. I am actually named after him which is kind of neat. Growing up I called him "Uncle Al". I don’t if that was decided upon because I was born or if he always just went by "Al". I should probably find that out. He was a good sport about getting his picture taken and even said I should try to find my niche in photography and just stick with it. I wish I knew what this niche was so I could get going in some direction. Dare to dream.
Side note: I know Lance has pointed out that some of my shots have had too much red in them so I tried to work on this one for a little bit. Let me know what you think.
Here is a pic of my dad and uncle when they were younger.
strobist info: flash camera left through a white umbrella at 1/4 power.
Cheeeeeeeeeeeeese!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
04/03/2010
Cool Cook Books images
A few nice cook books images I found:
cook the books

Image by Rakka
street finds

Image by ella novak
my friends gave me seven cooking books they found in the street entitled: l’ecole de cuisine. the recipe to banana jam looks most tempting.
Cool Cook Books images
A few nice cook books images I found:
Book Page Detail

Image by Lori L. Stalteri
Farm Chicks Christmas book – retro truck and trees.
“Silent Hostess” Treasure Book: Lemonade
A few nice cook books images I found:
“Silent Hostess” Treasure Book: Lemonade

Image by litlnemo
The "Silent Hostess" Treasure Book was a cookbook and instruction book published by GE for owners of their Monitor Top refrigerators (though the term "Monitor Top" is never used in the book). It contains recipes and information on how to use the refrigerator — remember, for most owners, this would have been their first electric refrigerator.
We have a Monitor Top, so I was looking for a copy of this cookbook, and found one on Etsy!
The book has lots of gorgeous color pictures as well as neat 1920s style line drawings.
The copy of the Treasure Book I have was published in 1930.
“Silent Hostess” Treasure Book

Image by litlnemo
The "Silent Hostess" Treasure Book was a cookbook and instruction book published by GE for owners of their Monitor Top refrigerators (though the term "Monitor Top" is never used in the book). It contains recipes and information on how to use the refrigerator — remember, for most owners, this would have been their first electric refrigerator.
We have a Monitor Top, so I was looking for a copy of this cookbook, and found one on Etsy!
The copy of the Treasure Book I have was published in 1930.
“Silent Hostess” Treasure Book: Tasty drinks

Image by litlnemo
The "Silent Hostess" Treasure Book was a cookbook and instruction book published by GE for owners of their Monitor Top refrigerators (though the term "Monitor Top" is never used in the book). It contains recipes and information on how to use the refrigerator — remember, for most owners, this would have been their first electric refrigerator.
We have a Monitor Top, so I was looking for a copy of this cookbook, and found one on Etsy!
The book has lots of gorgeous color pictures as well as neat 1920s style line drawings.
The copy of the Treasure Book I have was published in 1930.
Cool Healthy Food Choices images
Check out these healthy food choices images:
Dance Your Health Out

Image by Christiana Care
Christiana Care hosted women from across New Castle County, Del., for an evening designed to inspire attendees to improve their health through exercise and smart nutrition choices.
Combining dance, fun and education, the first ever Dance Your Health Out event, held at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Wilmington, provided free Zumba instruction, healthy food preparation demonstrations and health screenings to more than 200 women.
Attendees took part in a 50-minute Zumba workout led by instructor Davi Mozie that had them dancing, clapping and moving to the music. Zumba combines Latin and international rhythms with a fun, aerobics-style workout. The group included women of all ages—from teenagers to a woman in her 90s—with varying movement abilities, including “newbies” and skilled dancers.
Christiana Care employee Cindy Noble was one of the more experienced dancers in attendance, having lost 47 pounds in the past year thanks to Zumba and an improved diet. She was impressed by the number of first-time dancers at Dance Your Health Out.
“Every time I would turn around just to see what was going on in the room, I was amazed at the volume of people who were there dancing and into it,” Noble said. “People kept coming onto the floor, and they weren’t intimidated.”
“I think the group was exceptionally energetic,” commented Mozie. “When we got started I really didn’t think they would be able to last. We ended up going 10 minutes longer than we had planned because the group just didn’t want to stop. It was great.”
Others took advantage of the free health screenings available throughout the evening. Staff from Christiana Care’s Imaging Services and Center for Heart & Vascular Health assessed attendees’ risk for bone and heart disease, while members of Christiana Care’s Department of Family & Community Medicine calculated body-mass index and provided body-fat analyses.
Following Zumba, Jenn Barr, with Christiana Care’s Center for Community Health, conducted a healthy-cooking demonstration. Attendees sampled low-calorie dinner options provided by caterer Food for Thought and learned about the importance of nutrition in maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
A post-event survey of attendees offered insight about the effectiveness of the inaugural event. More than 97 percent of respondents said they were motivated to eat healthier and increase their physical activity.
The event was a collaboration of several departments within Christiana Care, including: Women’s Health Services; the Center for Heart & Vascular Health; Family & Community Medicine, Center for Community Health; Food and Nutrition Services; Imaging Services; Preventive Medicine & Rehabilitation Institute’s Food & Nutrition Services; Employee Health; and Volunteer Services.
Dance Your Health Out

Image by Christiana Care
Christiana Care hosted women from across New Castle County, Del., for an evening designed to inspire attendees to improve their health through exercise and smart nutrition choices.
Combining dance, fun and education, the first ever Dance Your Health Out event, held at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Wilmington, provided free Zumba instruction, healthy food preparation demonstrations and health screenings to more than 200 women.
Attendees took part in a 50-minute Zumba workout led by instructor Davi Mozie that had them dancing, clapping and moving to the music. Zumba combines Latin and international rhythms with a fun, aerobics-style workout. The group included women of all ages—from teenagers to a woman in her 90s—with varying movement abilities, including “newbies” and skilled dancers.
Christiana Care employee Cindy Noble was one of the more experienced dancers in attendance, having lost 47 pounds in the past year thanks to Zumba and an improved diet. She was impressed by the number of first-time dancers at Dance Your Health Out.
“Every time I would turn around just to see what was going on in the room, I was amazed at the volume of people who were there dancing and into it,” Noble said. “People kept coming onto the floor, and they weren’t intimidated.”
“I think the group was exceptionally energetic,” commented Mozie. “When we got started I really didn’t think they would be able to last. We ended up going 10 minutes longer than we had planned because the group just didn’t want to stop. It was great.”
Others took advantage of the free health screenings available throughout the evening. Staff from Christiana Care’s Imaging Services and Center for Heart & Vascular Health assessed attendees’ risk for bone and heart disease, while members of Christiana Care’s Department of Family & Community Medicine calculated body-mass index and provided body-fat analyses.
Following Zumba, Jenn Barr, with Christiana Care’s Center for Community Health, conducted a healthy-cooking demonstration. Attendees sampled low-calorie dinner options provided by caterer Food for Thought and learned about the importance of nutrition in maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
A post-event survey of attendees offered insight about the effectiveness of the inaugural event. More than 97 percent of respondents said they were motivated to eat healthier and increase their physical activity.
The event was a collaboration of several departments within Christiana Care, including: Women’s Health Services; the Center for Heart & Vascular Health; Family & Community Medicine, Center for Community Health; Food and Nutrition Services; Imaging Services; Preventive Medicine & Rehabilitation Institute’s Food & Nutrition Services; Employee Health; and Volunteer Services.
