[nabs-l] Fwd: Reminder-Upcoming Seminars: NO COOK Cooking! and Going Ape for Apps-Hot New Accessible Apps for Your iDevice
bookwormahb at earthlink.net
bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Wed Jul 20 01:56:14 UTC 2011
Arielle,
I need to learn cooking. What is the website for busycooks?
-----Original Message-----
From: Arielle Silverman
Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2011 8:09 PM
To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Fwd: Reminder-Upcoming Seminars: NO COOK Cooking! and
Going Ape for Apps-Hot New Accessible Apps for Your iDevice
Hi all,
To be fair to Hadley, I subscribe to a mainstream cooking E-newsletter (
busycooks.about.com
) and this week's issue was all about no-cook recipes, frozen
desserts, and other ways to stay cool in the kitchen during the
summer. So I think this is just a seasonal thing.
By the way, I would highly recommend the BusyCooks website, especially
if you are just learning to cook. They have a lot of great
five-ingredient recipes (which save money as well as time) and other
cooking shortcuts.
Arielle
On 7/19/11, bookwormahb at earthlink.net <bookwormahb at earthlink.net> wrote:
> Joeseph,
> Actually, I found this fine. I want to attend a hadley webinar but that
> time doesn't work for me.
> Maybe they are archived; the wording of it says its summer and they want
> to
> talk about food prep that doesn't require a hot kitchen.
> Also it says whether
> you are preparing for yourself or to impress guests.
> So therefore they are assuming that you will prepare for yourself, family
> or
> friends; whatever you need to do.
> Hadley targets many many people including teachers of the blind and
> visually
> impaired; newly blind adults and those blind from birth.
> I take it that this is an overview of cooking ideas and recipies. Its
> probably something basic that most could follow from the novice cook to
> the
> advanced cook who wants something simple.
> I didn't find it offensive at all; I think we read more into things
> sometimes. It does say they will discuss
> tips for people with visual impairments; I know NFB people don't like
> adaptive techniques sometimes, so you can take it or leave it. But
> we do need adaptive techniques and a newly blind person may not know what
> to
> do.
> Many blind cooks use a tray or something to put their pots and pans and
> bowls on while preparing food so any spills fall on the tray and its
> easier
> to clean up. Some blind people use liquid level indicators to know
> when their cup is full of the desired liquid. More often people use a
> finger
> to fill the bowl/cup or judge by sound. But for those who can't or don't
> want to use their finger, the liquid level indicator
> is an option.
> We often use the sense of touch instead of seeing to know the consistency
> of
> food and keep tabs on what we are doing.
> So those are adaptive techniques. Anyone may want simple cold food
> recipies; Hadley just decided to target it to blind people.
> However I do agree a sixty minute seminar is too short to cover such a
> topic. But I guess that is all the time they had. Well, anyone who
> attends
> can judge afterward.
>
> Ashley
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: T. Joseph Carter
> Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2011 3:10 PM
> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
> Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Fwd: Reminder-Upcoming Seminars: NO COOK Cooking!
> and
> Going Ape for Apps-Hot New Accessible Apps for Your iDevice
>
> I’m of two minds on this, perhaps I’m being overly sensitive.
>
> First, there’s the notion of a seminar for preparing food without
> cooking it. Where do I begin? Let’s start with the seminar itself:
> Most sighted people would never expect a seminar to teach them how to
> follow a recipe. Either you can or you don’t have the requisite
> skills to do it. If you don’t have the skills, I’m not sure how a 60
> minute webcast is going to help you get them. A list of recipes
> should suffice, and indeed our own Braille Monitor publishes recipes
> (though not often the no-cooking variety) with the assumption that
> fellow blind readers can follow them if they are so inclined.
>
> Then there’s the no cooking aspect. Inherently in this is the
> unavoidable assumption that the blind cannot or should not be cooking
> food. Any of you who live alone doubtlessly have SOME food prep
> skill, even if you’ve never learned to "cook" as such, and your skill
> mostly consists of using a microwave and boiling water.
>
> But as I said, perhaps I am being overly sensitive. The seminar
> format could allow for suggestions for improving the recipes a bit
> (in which case an hour seems too short for more than maybe two or
> three recipes), so maybe that’s what they’ve got in mind. Possibly
> the no-cook aspect has more to do with the idea that it’s summer and
> you don’t want to spend a lot of time in a hot kitchen—or that you
> would prefer cold foods to hot ones at this time of the year. Or
> perhaps they are targeting this to college students who live on
> campus and don’t have the means to cook in any traditional way.
>
> Or maybe, it’s because we’re blind.
>
> Joseph - KF7QZC
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 01:17:55PM -0500, David Andrews wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>Seminars at Hadley Presents: NO COOK Cooking!
>>>
>>>Date: Wednesday, July 20, 2011
>>>Time: 10 AM CDT, 15:00 GMT
>>>
>>>Keep your cool! It may be hot outside, but no need to get out of the
>>>kitchen. There are lots of NO COOK recipes to choose from whether
>>>preparing a simple, fast meal for yourself or something to impress
>>>guests.
>>>
>>>Panelists Patti Jacobson, Linn Sorge and Goldie Tarr will discuss their
>>>favorite NO COOK recipes, adding “cool†food preparation tips that
>>>work for the cook with a visual impairment.
>>>
>>>Moderator Dawn Turco will add a few of her favorites as we build a
>>>resource and recipe list during this 60 minute seminar. Consider adding
>>>your favorite recipe, too!
>>>
>>>Space in this seminar is limited. Please only register if you know you
>>>are
>>>
>>>available to attend so that others are not closed out. To register for NO
>>>COOK Cooking! on July 20, follow this link:
>>>http://hadley.edu/seminar_detail.asp?sid=94
>>>
>>>Seminars at Hadley Presents: Going Ape for Apps-How New Accessible Apps for
>>>Your iDevice
>>>
>>>Date: Thursday, July 21, 2011
>>>Time: 6 PM CDT, 23:00 GMT
>>>
>>>Apps for money identification, apps for GPS, apps for bar code reading,
>>>apps for color identification, and apps for games. If you have an idevice
>>>(iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch), you are bombarded with thousands of apps
>>>available for your device. Are you overwhelmed with the number of apps
>>>available for your idevice? Do you want to know more about the app before
>>>you download it to your device, such as features and accessibility? Are
>>>you confused about how to locate and download an app to your idevice?
>>>
>>>Join Seminars at Hadley as Hadley Instructor Amy Salmon and Korey Singleton,
>>>Assistive Technology Initiative Manager for George Mason University
>>>provide a list of the top accessible apps for your idevices, explain how
>>>to check an app for accessibility and features, and provide step-by-step
>>>instructions on how to locate and download an app to your idevice.
>>>
>>>This 60 minute open discussion seminar will be moderated by Hadley
>>>Outreach Coordinator Billy Brookshire. A question and answer session will
>>>be included as part of the seminar.
>>>
>>>Space in this seminar is limited. Please only register if you know you
>>>are
>>>
>>>available to attend so that others are not closed out. To register for
>>>Going Ape for Apps on July 21, follow this link:
>>>http://hadley.edu/seminar_detail.asp?sid=95
>>>
>>>This message was sent to Dandrews at visi.com from:
>>>The Hadley School for the Blind | 700 Elm St. | Winnetka, IL 60093
>>
>>
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