The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, May 07, 2015, Image 29

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    Take a spring cooking class
North Coast Chorale sings spring concerts
Teresa Dufka teaches at Seaside library
25th anniversary performance features American folk music
SEASIDE — Breeze into the
season at 1 p.m. Saturday,
May 9 at “Yippee for Spring
Cooking Workshop.” The
event is sponsored by the
Friends of the Seaside Li-
brary and will be held in the
Community Room of the li-
brary. The workshop is lim-
ited to 20 people, and you
can sign up at the library’s
circulation desk or by phone.
“Yippee
for
Spring
Cooking Workshop” will
be taught by local chef and
entrepreneur Teresa Dufka.
The workshop will feature
cooking instruction and
hands-on demonstrations of
three delicious appetizers
that will be the talk of your
Mother’s Day repast or lawn
party. Dufka will instruct in
the preparation of rice noo-
dle salad rolls with classic
dipping sauce, barley miso
soup with local seaweeds,
and raw fruit candies made
with dried fruits, seeds and
surprises. Attendees will
have a full experience of
ASTORIA — The North Coast
Chorale will present its 25th an-
niversary spring concert, “Amer-
ican Traditional & Folk Music,”
at the Clatsop Community Col-
lege Performing Arts center at 7
p.m. Saturday, May 16 and at 2
p.m. Sunday, May 17. Admis-
sion is $10.
The chorale’s spring concert
is not to be missed. Attendees
will hear standards such as “Na-
tive American Prayer,” “Down
by the Riverside,” “America
the Beautiful,” “Simple Gifts,”
“Country Style,” and “Beautiful
Dreamer.”
Spring cooking
1 p.m. Saturday, May 9
Seaside Public Library
1131 Broadway, Seaside
503-738-6742
prepping, cooking and serv-
ing these tantalizing items,
as well as receiving a reci-
pe book with simple how-to
procedures.
This terrific menu cele-
brates fresh and raw, natu-
rally gluten free, and foods
rich in complete proteins,
raw veggies, brown rice and
natural sweets.
Dufka is a graduate of
the Culinary Institute of
America in Hyde Park New
York. She has been a chef at
the Rockefeller Resorts, Le
Normandie Massenet and
the bakery chef at the Hilton
Hotel in Portland. Dufka is
currently the owner and chef
&
Present
102.3 fm
the Classic Rock Station
Quarterflash
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Friday, May 22
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Submitted photo
Learn to Make Holiday Appetizers will be
taught by local chef and entrepreneur Te-
resa Dufka.
of T. Rands, a local busi-
ness that produces artisan
sweets and savories, which
are handmade with locally
sourced organic ingredients.
The Seaside Public Li-
brary is located at 1131
Broadway. For more infor-
mation call 503-738-6742 or
visit at www.seasidelibrary.
org
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AUDITIONS
for Sha ngha ied in Astoria
20 | May 7, 2015 | coastweekend.com
goal is to present the best of
choral music with an empha-
sis on quality and authentici-
ty.”
In keeping with the American
traditional theme, quilts will be
contributed for PAC lobby décor
during this concert by a quilting
group at Our Savior Lutheran
Church in Seaside; they will be
for sale with proceeds going to
the food bank. Other decorations
at the PAC will be quilts and
some family heirlooms, on loan
for the event.
For more information, visit
www.northcoastchorale.org
‘Sunland’ author talks in Cannon Beach
Northwest Author Series hosts Don Waters on May 9
CANNON BEACH — Don Waters,
author of “Sunland,” will be
the May speaker at the Cannon
Beach Library’s Northwest Au-
Crossword Answer
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The Clatsop County Chil-
dren’s Chorus, founded by De-
nise Reed in 2013, will be join-
ing the chorale for this concert.
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came on the scene in 1990 with
Matt Hardin as conductor. He,
along with other past NCC mu-
sic directors, returned to conduct
portions of the NCC’s 20th an-
niversary concert in 2010. Reed
has conducted the group since
2007.
“The North Coast Chorale
has a varied and sophisticated
repertoire of music of numer-
ous genres,” says Reed. “Our
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thor Series. The event will take
place at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 9
at the library. The event is free,
and the public is welcome.
“Sunland” is the story of a
mid-30s man, between jobs and
short on funds, who moves back
to Tuscon to take care of his be-
loved grandmother. Finding his
grandmother’s pharmacy drugs
much cheaper across the border,
he becomes a prescription drug
mule. This book takes the read-
er across all kinds of borders,
yinning and yanging between
Mexico and the U.S., youth and
age, faith and betrayal, legal and
outlaw, sober and stoned, and
last but by no means least, love
and the void. The writing is gor-
geous, the characters ring true,
and the story hurtles along with
many a hairpin twist and turn.
Waters, also author of a sto-
ry collection, “Desert Gothic,”
sneaks some serious issues into
what is most often a lightheart-
ed, sometimes zany account of
a compassionate man who cares
about his elderly clients, keeps
meticulous records of the meds
he supplies them, and genuinely
enjoys their company.
Waters won the Iowa Short
Fiction Award for “Desert Goth-
ic” and has spent years living in
the Southwest desert, which is
evident through his beautiful
description of the harsh, unfor-
giving and often gorgeous land-
scape. The real achievement of
“Sunland,” however, is the way
Waters develops his main char-
acters.
Waters has been antholo-
gized in the Pushcart Prize, Best
of the West, and New Stories
from the Southwest. A frequent
contributor to the San Francis-
co Chronicle, he has also writ-
ten for the NYT Book Review,
Outside, The Believer and Slate,
among other publications. He is
a graduate of Skidmore College
and the Iowa Writers’ Work-
shop. Originally from Reno,
Nevada, he now lives in Port-
land.
M O N D AY M AY 11TH a n d
T U E SD AY M AY 12TH | 6-8PM
ASOC PLAYHOUSE
129 W. BOND ST. • ASTORIA
17 & older N O EXPERIEN CE N ECESSA RY
Ca ll 503-791-1037 fo r m o re in fo