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Monday, November 25, 2013

At the Table

At the Table

Saturday night:  I was cooking a pretty fabulous dinner.  Chicken and mushrooms were braising slowly in a rich, garlic-peppercorn sauce.  Saffron risotto simmered along, absorbing more and more broth by the cup-full.  The smell of brownies wafted up from the oven.  Then... VOOP!  The power went out in our apartment.  The sizzling sounds quickly faded to silence upon the electric stove-top.

This would have been a gastronomic tragedy; however, our current housing above the camp kitchen permitted us to transport our pots and pans downstairs to continue cooking the meal over propane.  God bless propane.  If we have a real house someday, I so wish to have a propane stove!

The other alteration to our plans for the evening was that we ate at the table, by candlelight, over a tablecloth, with clean, cloth napkins.  Our previous plan was to put food on the coffee table and hunch over it, scarfing down dinner as we continued watching episodes of Breaking Bad.

The candlelit dinner (with a nice Zinfandel) was a much better experience for my husband and me.

Sadly, the two of us often resign ourselves to eating in front of the television.  We blame our surroundings for watching television daily (our home is very remote from friends, and it is too dang cold to play outside!); and yet we look forward to beginning school next year, since our work and new friends will keep us busy.  We also talk about how we don't want to watch television in the future when we have children, and CERTAINLY don't want to eat dinner with them in the living room.

I hope to continue the tradition of family dinners.  My parents had us stop homework or tv-watching every night to sit at the table and eat together.  They'd ask us what we learned at school ("Nooothinnggg.") and catch each other up on the events of the day.  Little did I know that this ritual was the foundation of our training as civilized persons.

In our "grain-bag society," people eat anywhere, anytime they want.  It's why we have drive-thrus at fast-food establishments.  It's why people stuff their purses with granola bars and candies.  It is this ubiquitous eating that has taken away any sign of etiquette and communal enjoyment of meals.

As you head into your Thanksgiving family get-togethers, take time to appreciate the effort put into the meal by the cook, the beautiful place-settings, and the faces of those you love.  Enjoy the conversation, in addition to all that gravy!

All this has been brought to mind because I've been doing a little reading about etiquette.  A very convincing. witty book by Judith Martin has been causing me to consider the implications of a "grain-bag society," and how I'd rather implement solid training-in-eating to my future children (forks and knives, not fingers).  Read on for your enlightenment and amusement:

Friday, October 18, 2013

I'm a fun guy...

Herb-encrusted chicken with porcini mushroom sauce.

It was on the lunch menu today.  It was delicious.

If you've ever driven past a mushroom farm, you wonder how a food so delicious can come out of a place that smells like so, so much poop.  Or, maybe you liken mushrooms to the very manure they grow in, inside those cinder block houses.

Fungi - is it on your menu?

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Banned! but not here

In a world where....

In a country where food companies' lobbyists persuade our government to look the other way while they put poison in the victuals they sell:

"Ten American Foods That Are Banned in Other Countries"

http://topinfopost.com/2013/07/10/10-american-foods-that-are-banned-in-other-countries

Read this!  Inform yourself!  And beware of shopping at the grocery store!

We are certainly living in an age where it's easy to slip into paranoia about all the icky nasties in our food.  It's why we choose to grow our own vegetables, and why we buy what we need from the Amish or from health food stores.  This article provides a list of ten foods to avoid - for good reason!  Here is a brief summary of the list:

1.  Farmed Salmon (contains antibiotics, GMO feed; may damage eyesight)

2.  Genetically Modified Hawaiian Papaya (GMOs cause cancer, organ damage, birth defects, and sterility)

3.  Meats Containing Ractopamine (reduces reproductive functions, causes mastitis & behavioral changes)

4.  Flame Retardant Drinks - Gatorade & Mountain Dew, contain brominated vegetable oil (endocrine disrupter; causes skin rashes, acne, loss of appetite, fatigue, and cardiac arrhythmias")

5.  Foods Containing Artificial Dyes - mac & cheese, cereals, Jell-O (behavioral problems, cancer, birth defects)

6.  Arsenic-Laced Chicken (known carcinogen; chicken waste leeches arsenic into local water supplies)

7.  Bromated Flours/Bread Containing Potassium Bromate (kidney & nervous system damage, thyroid problems, cancer)

8.  Olestrea/Olean - "calorie-free fat substitute" found in chips (consumption results in "leaky bowels!")

9.  BHA & BHT - preservatives found in many foods (allergic reactions, organ system toxicity, cancer)

10.  Dairy Products with rBGH - Bovine Growth Hormone (carginogenic; promotes antibiotic-resistant bacteria)

Scared yet?  We are!  It's great incentive to keep on supporting farmers' markets, CSAs, and community garden projects.  Grow your own!  Cook from scratch!  Read those labels!

Our only other option for safe food is to move to Canada or Europe.  Who's coming with?

Thursday, August 15, 2013

August

In the past two days, we have...

  • made pesto
  • made zucchini brownies
  • harvested & frozen herbs
  • made sauerkraut
  • baked a loaf of whole-wheat-flax bread
  • cooked summer squash stew
  • finished a batch of kombucha
  • blanched & frozen summer squash
  • eaten our first ripe tomato
  • drank a beer
  • cooked & canned hot pepper jelly
AND
  • not eaten any hot dogs.
Summer camp must be over!

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Now Eating

Now eating:  hot dogs, hamburgers, plenty of mayonnaise....

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!