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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

On Avocados

A Word (or several) on Avocados:

Until recently, we had thought that it may have been spelled avocadoes, similar to potatoes and tomatoes.  A visit to avocado.org confirmed that the California Avocado Commission deems them avocados.  Now we know...

...and knowing is half the battle.

 We are into 'cados.  We purchase them at our local farmers' market.  Obviously, they are acquired from a nearby produce option.  The day global warming develops so drastically that we can grow avocados in Pennsylvania, we'll be the first to plant a tree!  Most weeks, our household (two people) goes through two to six avocados.  We love making guacamole; and did so very frequently over the summer, blending in our abundant garden tomatoes.  Now, we keep a little chopped cilantro in the freezer, for when the mood strikes.

The very, very best guacamole we've ever had was at a party over the summer.  A Mexican woman had brought an enormous bowl of the stuff, and we couldn't stop eating it.  Her simple recipe included lots of mashed avocado, diced onion (not garlic) and copious amounts of lime juice.  It was so fresh, tangy and irresistable!  Sometimes, we'll mix in a little cumin, hot sauce, fresh chiles or chili powder to spice it up; we've never actually stuck to one recipe, ever.

The draw to avocados is that they're so fatty.  It's like eating vegan butter.  The mouthfeel experience of a food literally melting in your mouth is what makes those victuals with a 70-100 degree melting point so sumptuously succulent.  Think of eating chocolate, coconut oil, fudge, butter.  Surely, you are drooling at the thought.

We looked at avocado.org/nutrition to see what's up with the fat content.  The Nutrition Facts reads as follows:

Serving size:  1/5 medium [avocado]
Calories:  50
Total Fat:  4.5 g / 7% DV
Saturated Fat 0.5 g / 3% DV
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.5 g
Monounsaturated Fat 3 g
Cholesterol:  0 mg
Sodium:  0 mg
Potassium:  150 mg / 4% DV
Total Carbohydrate:  3 g / 1% DV
Dietary Fiber:  2 g / 8 % DV
Sugars:  0 g
Protein:  0 g
Vitamin C:  4% DV
Iron:  2% DV
Vitamin E, Riboflavin, Niacin, Vitamin B6:  4% DV
Folate:  6% DV
Thiamin, Magnesium, Zinc, Phosphorus, Copper, Manganese:  2% DV

Does anyone else see how ridiculous this is???  Who in their right mind is only going to eat one-fifth of an avocado??  Who is going to take the time to bother - after precariously peeling and pitting - slicing an avocado into fifths??

Clearly, CAC or the USDA or whoever has deduced this serving size to present a food with only 4.5 grams of fat per serving.  We find this very silly, because people eat avocados for three reason:

A.  They enjoy the taste of fat.
B.  They are vegan and/or dairy intolerant and can use avocados in place of butter.
C.  They understand the nutritional value of plant-based, cholesterol-free fats.

Personally, we think the CAC and/or USDA could just be honest and write out, "Serving:  1/2 'cado, 125 calories, 11 grams of fat; but... oh! 20% DV of fiber and 5% to 15% of lots of important vitamins and minerals!"

Food labeling comes down to marketing; and even though this food has abundant, healthful fats, North Americans still cringe at the thought of fat in their diets (or at least on the labels).

The recent push in marketing of avocados - seen in magazine advertisements and certain chain restaurants - is very interesting, considering how they weren't prevalent in temperate-climate groceries ten years ago.  Now, they're everywhere!

A friend told a story of when he lived in Southern California:  many folks had avocado trees growing in their yards, and the fruit would fall and rot and make such a goopy mess of their lawns, they thought it a nuisance.  They would feed the spare 'cados to their dogs.  How fascinating is that?  Those who live where it snows can shell out two or three dollars for one avocado at the grocery store; and a few home-owning Californians thought they were too numerous and too messy.  The avocados were so abundant, even the dogs were able to enjoy eating them.

Over the summer, we were traveling; and, in a pinch, needed a quick sandwich.  We stopped at a shopping mall, hoping to find a Chick fil-A.  There was none, so we went to a Subway restaurant.  Obnoxious, green signage convinced us that we needed to "Gooo 'Cadooooo!"  The young lady constructing our sandwich squeezed some putrid, green goo out of a pastry-icing bag.  It was kind of disturbing.

On the other hand, if you go to any sushi restaurant in the country, you can get some sort of roll that includes avocado.  These specialty rolls tend to go by names like "Dragon Roll" or "Caterpillar Roll," and there are delicate slices of 'cado atop rice, sesame, seaweed and all sorts of fish.  Every single time, the avocado is perfect!  Spotless, but not too mushy.  It's considered an amazing mystery how sushi artists always have perfect, whole, unbruised avocados on hand.  They must get them by the case - but also, must have some way of telling when they're exactly ready for eating.

Do you have problems getting a just-right avocado?  We do.  At the store or the market, they tend to be rock-hard; and it's hard to tell when they'll be soft enough to eat, but not brown and icky.  Usually, when trying to squeeze-check one, we'll over-grasp and bruise the thing.

One preventative measure we have learned (today, for the last time) is not to keep one's 'cados in the sun.  Our hanging basket by the kitchen window is home to lemons, garlic, whatever; and we've been popping the 'cados into it upon returning from the market weekly.  However, sun exposure turns the skin black, so they appear ready to eat.  Today, we cut into (a black-skinned) one and it was hard as stone and tasted like wood.  Another one was even rot-brown on the inside, but too firm to eat.  How crazy is that?

Apparently, the best thing to do - if you are a once-weekly grocery shopper - is to put one or two avocados on the counter to ripen while the rest of your stock sits in the fridge.  It seems that the cold retards the softening process.  We'll be keeping ours in a bowl, away from the window; all the while trying new recipes for guacamole on the regular.  Pass the chips!

Friday, November 16, 2012

The Blessing

Here's a lovely article by Anne Lamott on saying Grace at a family meal - something a lot of folks will experience as they prepare to tuck into steaming bowls of gravy and turkey.  (The former in greater quantity than the latter - at least on my plate!)

Views: Counting Our Blessings | Parade.com

Thanks, Anne!  Looking forward to getting our hands on your latest book.  :)

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Harvest

It's November.  It's mid-November.  It's cold.  Is anything growing out there?

We have come to the end of the growing season.  Now is the time for relishing those special fruits of Fall:  apples, pumpkins, winter squash, sweet potatoes.  There is a lot of orange in the fridge these days... not to mention bottles of pumpkin ale.

What are your favorite crops of the Autumn harvest?

What do you miss about the Summer growing season?

What recipes have you been enjoying lately?

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Cauliflower

ALERT:  COLOSSUS CAULIFLOWER ON THE LOOSE.
FIVE-POUND, THIRTEEN-OUNCE MONSTROSITY MAY BE SEEN AT A FARM STAND NEAR YOU.
ARMED WITH VITAMINS B6, C, K; FOLATE AND FIBER.
WARNING:  MAY INDUCE FLATULENCE.


This BEAST was found at our favorite local dairyBaily's of Pocopson Meadow Farm.  Isn't it just shockingly immense??  Amazing!!

Cauliflower was one of our favorite, most tolerable of vegetables as kids; probably because it is not green and can slide incognito onto the plate, posing as a starch.  It looks like it belongs to the same family as potatoes or rice.  AND a lot of moms prepare it wonderfully laden with cheddar cheese sauce.  Holy moly, what could taste better on a chilly fall day than a steaming pile of cauliflower, oozing with cheese?

Yes, it is the season (late summer/autumn) for this delicious, cruciferous vegetable delight.

Pictured behind the Beast in this photo is one of our most favoritest cookbooks.  Simply in Season is a Mennonite philosophy-based collection of recipes by season, not by category (ie. "Beef, Poultry, Fish, Pork and... oh yea, some Vegetables").  Authors (and recipe editors) Mary Beth Lind and Cathleen Hockman-Wert encourage cooks to peruse farmers' markets or grow produce at home and eat seasonally.  There's a spiritual connection between an eater and the earth; which is broken apart by grocery stores, whose shelves are filled with produce from far away, separating us mentally and spiritually from the climate where we live.  One cannot consider with gratefulness, or with words thank a farmer on the opposite side of the globe.  If one visits an orchard or a farm, the farm workers are seen and can be thanked when buying food and thought of at meal times.

We can also connect ourselves with seasons' changes as we enjoy different foods at different times of year.  If it's spring, we should eat asparagus.  Apples should fill our lunch-sacks in September.  Isn't that why we always enjoy apple and pumpkin pies at Thanksgiving?  We just love the tradition this book inspires (cellaring your root vegetables over the winter - who does that anymore?) and how its many recipes are wholesome and mostly plant-based, using meat sparingly as a flavoring instead of the main source of calories.

Here's a great recipe that includes cauliflower!  It's absolutely flavorful and healthful and we think you'll love it.  It's totally delicious, even without cheese.  Hey, it's even vegan!

Autumn Tagine
(submitted by Bethany J. Osborne, Toronto, Ontario)
Tagine (tah-ZHEEN) is a Moroccan stew named after the traditional heavy clay pot in which it is cooked... Serves 6-8
2 cups onion (diced) - In a large soup pot, saute in 1-2 tbsp oil until soft, 4-5 minutes.
6 cloves garlic (minced)
1 teaspoon ginger root (peeled and minced)
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon crushed hot chilies (optional)
Add and stir for 1 minute.
3 cups sweet potatoes (peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes)
2 cups cooked chickpeas
1 1/2 cups vegetable broth
Add and bring to a boil.  Cover; reduce heat.  Simmer 5 minutes.
1/2 medium head cauliflower (cut into 1-inch florets)
2 cups peas
Stir in cauliflower, cover and simmer until vegetables are nearly tender, about 12 minutes.  Add peas, cover and simmer until hot, 2 minutes.  Serve over steamed couscous or rice, garnished with chopped fresh cilantro.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Raw Milk

Jenna at Cold Antler Farm recently wrote a great post about why a lot of folks are interested in raw milk these days.  We love drinking raw milk when we can find it; it's super delicious, natural, healthful and much gentler on the tummy than pasteurized (read: scorched) milk in which helpful enzymes are destroyed.  Jenna also discusses how lobbyists are waging a political war against organic dairies who naturally raise happy, "pasture-ized" cows.

Check it out!

http://coldantlerfarm.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-raw-milk-debate.html

Also, if you're in Southeastern Pennsylvania, Baily's Dairy is a great place to do your body good.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bailys-Dairy-of-Pocopson-Meadow-Farm/109844495718927?fref=ts

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Nasturtiums

From the garden: Nasturtiums.

Nasturtiums, reaching out, to the left of the mint.

We discovered nasturtiums at a family meal where one of our cousins brought them to the table, literally. She's a professional landscape-artist-awesome-gardener; and her backyard is a mini-farm with just about every produce item you could imagine. The typical tomatoes, zucchini, peppers; but also blackberries, hops, asparagus, raspberries, radishes - anything that could possibly grow on her hillside in central Vermont! At this particular dinner, she presented a gorgeous salad of homegrown greens, freshly made vinaigrette dressing and these little, sweet-looking orange blossoms scattered on top.

For garnish?

Also for eating.

Yes, the blossoms and leaves are a nice, tasty touch to a salad. They are spicy! Not loaded with many Scoville units of heat; but they do offer a delicious, peppery touch to the dish. And they look wonderful!

When in the ground, they tend to spread out, so if you have a garden bed in your yard, they could fill it well. The lily-pad-round leaves present a beautiful appearance as ground cover. We've just been growing them in containers on our porch, so they kind of spilled out the front and created this wonderful cascading "waterfall" of bright orange blossoms. They blossom in shades from white to butter-yellow to fluorescent orange and hot red.

Nasturtiums are also super-easy to care for, so if you have a spare spot in your garden next summer, try them! You'll be able to create the most impressive salads, garnished with Nasturtiums; and bring them to all your picnics and pot-lucks.  Your friends will love it - ours do!

PA Taxes

...just discovered a secret reason why PA's state-controlled wine prices aren't so desirable.  Yes, if you live in Pennsylvania (Commonwealth residents know and disdain this), you have to purchase any wine or liquor at the Liquor Control Board's stores.  Yet, beer is sold separately at distributors; six-packs are available for take-out at some restaurants.  It is difficult trying to explain this system to out-of-staters, because - yes! - it is ridiculous, out-dated and seems to just be in place for the Commonwealth to make money off its resident-consumers.

H'okay, here's what we learned last night:  there is a "Johnstown Flood Tax" that has been present since the flood happened in 1936.  What was meant to be a temporary tax to raise funds to rebuild Johnstown was never repealed.  Suppose the Capitol still wants that money coming in, eh?





Here is an information site about the JFT:

http://www.johnstownfloodtax.com/

If you're a PA resident who purchases wine, consider what's going on here.  The personal is political.  Maybe we can vote to repeal this; in the mean-time, Delaware is a short drive away (for some of us).  *sigh*