Volume 43, Number 2 Special Issue on Cooking
A magazine for parents and teachers of blind children published by
the American Action Fund for Blind Children and Adults in partnership
with the National Organization of Parents of Blind Children.
Deborah Kent Stein, Editor
ISSN-0883-3419
Copyright © 2024 American Action Fund for Blind Children and Adults
For more information
about blindness and children contact:
National Organization of Parents of Blind Children
200 East Wells Street at Jernigan Place, Baltimore, MD 21230 • 410-659-9314
https://nfb.org/nopbc • [email protected] • [email protected]
Join us for the biggest event of the year! Start planning your trip now!
Wednesday, July 3 through Monday, July 8, 2024
Orlando, Florida at the Rosen Centre
If this will be your first convention or if you need a refresh, access our First Timer's Guide (https://nfb.org/get-involved/national-convention/first-timers-guide).
For 2024 Convention room reservations, please call the hotel at (800) 204-7234. Ask for the NFB Convention block. Here are important things to know about the rates and booking the room:
Rates: Our 2024 convention room rate for singles and doubles is $129. The room rate for triples and quads is $139.
Taxes and Deposit: Occupancy taxes and surcharges are an additional 13.5 percent.
There is no charge for children under eighteen if no extra bed is requested.
At the time you make a reservation, a deposit of $146 is required for each room reserved. If you use a credit card, the deposit will be charged against your card immediately, just as would be the case with a $146 check.
Cancellations: If a reservation is cancelled before Saturday, June 1, 2024, half of the deposit will be returned. Otherwise, refunds will not be made.
To assure yourself a room in the headquarters hotel at convention rates, you should make reservations early. The hotel will be ready to take your call beginning January 1.
Online registration for convention will open in March. Registration will be $25 per person plus $75 per banquet ticket. Register early, because prices go up if you register on site in Orlando. Registration includes the biggest event of the year, access to the event app, and communications on the latest news and events.
Door prizes are submitted from state affiliates, local chapters, and individuals. Prizes should be small in size but large in value—at least $25. Cash is always appropriate and welcome. Please do not include alcohol. Drawings will occur throughout the convention sessions, with a grand prize of truly impressive proportions drawn at the banquet. If you have a prize that must be shipped in advance of the convention, please email affiliate president Paul Martinez at [email protected] to make arrangements.
Over two hundred sessions and meetings happen during Convention. If you are the leader of a division, committee, or group that will meet at Convention, please don't wait to organize. Start planning your agenda, goals, and connections now. Stay tuned for details from the Convention Chair, John Berggren.
Thank you to the hundreds of volunteers who help make the NFB National Convention a big success. If you are interested in learning more about how to get involved, please connect with your state affiliate president. Register early to get access to all volunteer opportunities.
The best collection of exhibits featuring new technology; meetings of our special interest groups, committees, and divisions; the most stimulating and provocative program items of any meeting of the blind in the world; the chance to renew friendships in our Federation family; and the unparalleled opportunity to be where the real action is and where decisions are being made—all of this means you will not want to miss being a part of the 2024 National Convention. We can't wait to be with you in Orlando in July. Visit nfb.org/convention for more convention details.
A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
Escape from the Tiny Kitchen
by Deborah Kent Stein
GETTING STARTED
Cooking Madness
by Carol Castellano
Kitchen Memories
by Rebecca DeGeorge
The Apple of My Pie: My Culinary Journey
by Cricket X. Bidleman
MEETING THE CHALLENGE
Charcoal and Challenges
by Dr. Marc Maurer
Making Espresso and Related Drinks Nonvisually
by Justin Salisbury
Step up to the Stove: Mixing Together Independence, Confidence, and Safety
by Elizabeth Rouse
“Oven Open!”
by Lauren Altman
PASSING IT FORWARD
Cooking for an Army
by Melba Taylor and Jim Papania
Dinner for Sixty: Building Skills and Confidence at the Colorado Center for the Blind
by Maureen Nietfeld
From Fear to Passion: A Blind Chef's Culinary Journey
by Cameron Loehr
Of Jams and Pickles
by Serena Olsen
MasterChef and Beyond
by Christine Ha
All Things Culinary
by Regina Mitchell
DINING
It's All about the Fellowship
by Eileen Rivera Ley
RECIPES
REVIEW
How to Communicate
by John Lee Clark
Reviewed by Jessie Kramer
NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Brief Recap of the National Association of Blind Students Mid-Winter Seminar
by Lauren Altman
Braille Readers Are Leaders
by Lisamaria Martinez
Unlocking Independence with a Free White Cane
Are you the parent of a blind/low-vision child? Don’t know where to turn? Have you ever wondered what your child will be capable of when he or she grows up? Are you concerned that your child’s future will be limited by blindness or low vision? Do you have questions about how to parent a blind child? We are here for you.
Founded in 1983, the National Organization of Parents of Blind Children (NOPBC), a proud division of the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), is a membership organization of families, friends, and educators of blind children. We have thousands of members in all fifty states plus Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico.
We have a very inclusive definition of blindness which includes children who have some usable vision. Instead of focusing on what the child can or cannot see, we focus on the child and what she or he wants to be.
NOPBC is for families, educators, and friends of blind children, including those who have some usable vision. We welcome all families of blind children, and many of our children have both blindness and other disabilities.
We help families and blind children themselves maximize the child’s abilities and opportunities; we hold high expectations for all of our children, regardless of any additional disabilities they may have.
As a division of the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), the largest and most influential organization of blind people in the world, the NOPBC is well informed about the societal, legislative, and technological issues that affect blind people. We enjoy the resources, support, and expertise of fifty thousand blind people who can serve as mentors and role models for us and our children. When we as parents join the NOPBC, our children belong to the Federation family.
The NOPBC:
Most states have an NOPBC affiliate chapter. You can find your state chapter at http://www.nopbc.org. If your state does not have a chapter and you would like to start one, please contact us. We may be able to offer training and other assistance to start a state NOPBC chapter.
We have been where you are, and we want to support you and your blind child. We know that blindness does not define your child's future. We can connect you with other families and blind adults who can serve as positive mentors and role models. They can teach you the attitudes and techniques that will enable your child to become independent and to succeed in life.
The NOPBC offers hope, encouragement, information, and resources for parents, families, and educators of blind children. NOPBC provides:
We offer a wide variety of programs, activities, and training to families, children, and youth. One of our most exciting activities is our annual conference. Every year since it was established, the NOPBC has conducted an annual conference for parents and teachers of blind children as part of the national convention of the NFB. This conference has grown to include five exciting days of workshops, training sessions, activities for all family members, including sighted siblings, and countless opportunities to meet blind adults and other families and children from around the country.
Contact Us:
National Organization of Parents of Blind Children
[email protected]
www.nopbc.org