photo by zoyachubby

There has been a wafting smell reminiscent of maple syrup in the Big Apple lately - causing bioterrorism concerns for many.  The occurrence has happened as far back in recent memory as October 2005, the NY Times reports, and it has been so potent as to have sparked a press conference by Mayor Bloomberg (via Gothamist).  Bloomberg states, “It wasn’t exactly akin to searching for a needle in a haystack, but a smell over a very large area.”  How perspicuous.

Investigators followed the scent to a  fragrance company in New Jersey called Frutarom who the Wall Street Journal's Health Blog suspects may be using fenugreek to refine a substitute for maple syrup flavor.  I only know fenugreek from Indian Cuisine, but what immediately strikes me is that fenugreek is the only spice in our cupboard that requires extra sequestering.  

Our fenugreek is not only a sealed zip-top bag, but that bag needs to be placed inside a Tupperware also in order to keep it from scenting everything in the cupboard "curry."  I suppose if there is one spice that could cross the Hudson, frighten the pants off of tens of thousands of citizens of New York City and make them think they were under attack... it would have to be fenugreek. 

 

Posted
Authordavid koch
CategoriesHumor, Science

Ital Cuisine photo by svacher

Today, February 6th, is Bob Marley's birthday and it would have been his 64th.  I thought today would be appropriate to investigate Rastafarian Cuisine, also known as Ital (from vital).  The Ital diet adheres to Biblical guidelines, mostly GenesisDeuteronomy, and especially Leviticus.  Ital dietary guidlines are, like anything else, open to many different interpretations.  

At it's core, Rastafarian diets are essentially composed of foods that are fresh and natural; avoiding chemicals, additives, coloring, flavoring, and preservatives.  Most Rastafarians also do not consume coffee, alcohol, cigarettes, or even Western medicines.  

Herbs, however, are GRAS (Generally Regarded As Safe: an FDA term).  Many Rastafarians are vegetarian, but those who do not abstain from all meat generally avoid pork, shellfish, and often red meat.  Those who do eat fish, generally avoid fish more than 12 inches long.

Most also take measures to avoid consuming metal.  In order to avoid metal, some Rastafarians avoid cooking and serving food in metal vessels, and some even avoid metal eating utensils.  For the same reason, some also avoid foods that have been canned.  

Many avoid preparing food with salt and/or oil.  What's left you ask?  The bulk of their diet consists of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.  I found this recipe on Jamiacans.com:

ITAL SWEET POTATO PUDDING

Ingredients:

  • 1lb 8ozs to 1lb 14ozs sweet potato (I used 1lb 14ozs in this Pudding)
  • 3 cups coconut milk
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • ½ tsp ground ginger
  • ½ tsp grated nutmeg
  • 1 ½tsp vanilla essence
  • 1 to 1 ¼4 cup brown sugar
  • 2 cups soaked raisins (I have mine soaked in Sherry for over 5 years now. I top it off with more Raisins, Prunes and Sherry every time it gets too low in the bottle.)
  • ½ - 1 cup flour (More or less flour will make it firmer or less so I used half a cup)
  • 5ozs Beet Root or Carrots (optional)

Method

  1. Puree sweet potato and coconut milk in blender
  2. Pour mixture into a bowl
  3. Dice beet root
  4. Add all the ingredients to the bowl. Mix and pour into a well greased 8" or 10" round tin
    (vegetable shortening to grease the tin)
  5. Bake at 350F for 1 ½ hours then 300F for 25 mins
  6. Remove from the oven immediately.
  7. Best eaten the next day or at least 5 hours after cooking.
  • The pudding sets as it cools.
  •  

    And this book, specifically on Rastafarian Cuisine.

     


    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    2 CommentsPost a comment

    Following my original article Drinking Vinegars, I went and made my own "shrub" using frozen organic cherries and a bottle of Bragg organic unfiltered apple cider.  As instructed by Toby Cecchini in his NY Times article, I added the cherries to the Bragg vinegar, covered with paper towel, secured it with a rubber band, and waited... 8 days in this case.

     

    With the cherries, I smashed them up really good INSIDE the bag before I opened it.  The freezing process should have burst all or most of the cell walls already by the formation of ice crystals, but smashing is fun, and likely expedited the fermentation process even more.

     

     

    I found other brands besides Bragg at my local health food store, but this is made in Santa Barbara so it must be good, right?

     

     

    The bacteria responsible for making vinegar, called acetobacters, require oxygen to function.  A paper towel held in place with a rubber band should suffice for keeping other, stray bacteria and yeast from entering - while still allowing the acetobacters to boogie.  This vessel stayed at room temperature for 8 days in the kitchen.  My wife complained of the pungent vinegar smell but I liked it!

    When the 8 days were up, I strained it through a sieve and boiled it briefly to halt the fermentation where it remained.   I placed it in a glass container, covered it, and put it in the fridge.  According to Toby's article, it can remain there for up to 3 months.

     

     

    The end result is a pungent, piquant, puckering, punch that REALLY quenches your thirst.  Besides the tartness of the vinegar, there remained a good amount of cherry flavor which I thought would be gone after fermenting but it wasn't.  Full strength was way too pungent, I found myself diluting it with water 2:1 or 3:1 and sometimes adding some simple syrup out of my handy squirt bottle that sits on the counter.  The more simple syrup I added, the more of the fruit returned to the palate.  

    By putting it in a highball or similar glass, it really is like making a non-alcoholic cocktail.  What is most interesting to me is how I began to crave a glass of this after work.  I would come home and immediately go to the fridge and make myself one.   I even began to feel a little flu coming on and I still craved the Drinking Vinegar, unlike booze.

    After all is said and done, these are really fun to make, super easy, and I'm going to start experimenting with different fruits and flavors.  I suggest you do too.

     

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    CategoriesDrinks

     

    Following Denny's Super Bowl ad offering a Free Grand Slam Breakfast today, long lines like this one in Danville, CA were ubiquitous across the nation.  

    The LA Times reports that 5 of the top 40 searches on Google Trends were Denny's related, and that in some areas the Denny's servers went down due to the heavy traffic.  Likely from people searching for their nearest location.

    Denny's stock (DENN) saw a spike from close of Wall Street Friday to the close of Wall Street today of almost 14%.   I wonder how long it will hold on to the boost.

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    CategoriesHistory, Humor

    photo by southerntabitha

    I found this article from the San Francisco Chronicle's website, sfgate.com (via chow.com) and it so funny it is worth repeating.  SF Gate columnist Mark Morford discovered an evangelist named Jim Rutz from Megashift Ministries who is proclaiming that because soy contains estrogen-like compounds (isoflavones), it is turning society gay.

    Jim Rutz claims:

    "Research is now showing that when you feed your baby soy formula, you're giving him or her the equivalent of five birth control pills a day. A baby's endocrine system just can't cope with that kind of massive assault, so some damage is inevitable. At the extreme, the damage can be fatal.  Soy is feminizing, and commonly leads to a decrease in the size of the penis, sexual confusion and homosexuality.

    The danger zone is the first three months of both pregnancy and infancy, when male physiology and brain circuitry are still developing. In other words, a girl-chasing, football-playing college boy won't go gay even if he becomes a vegetarian or snacks all day on soy energy bars. (He might develop thyroid or other health problems or lose most of his libido, though.)"

     

    This increase in gay must because of the dramatic increase in the sale of soy products.

     

    From the FDA's website:

    "The problem, researchers say, is that isoflavones are phytoestrogens, a weak form of estrogen that could have a drug-like effect in the body. This may be pronounced in postmenopausal women, and some studies suggest that high isoflavone levels might increase the risk of cancer, particularly breast cancer.

    Research data, however, are far from conclusive, and some studies show just the opposite--that under some conditions, soy may help preventbreast cancer. It is this scientific conundrum, where evidence simultaneously points to benefits and possible risks, that is causing some researchers to urge caution."

    It sounds like Jim's claims are a big helping of crazy with a dash of pseudo-science just to throw off the sent of paranoid schizophrenia.

    Check out Mark's article where he goes "nuts" on Jim (soy nuts, anyone?).  It's hilarious.  Mark rants:

    "It is no secret, after all, that the consumption of excess Girl Scout cookies -- particularly Caramel deLites -- will make you a butch lesbian. It has also been reported in lesser-known scientific journals that eating lots of organic baby greens means you want to subscribe to the New Yorker and drive a Prius and get your genitals pierced, often at the same time.

    Stay in school, kids. Stay in school and for Christ's sake please learn something lest you end up like Jim, what with his trembling hands and his spasming colon and his violent nightmares featuring giant tofu robots leading perky armies of sashaying soy-fed children, marching into his yard wielding soy lattes and Barbra Streisand records and waving gay-marriage petitions like victory flags. Shudder."

     

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    6 CommentsPost a comment

    It was only about a year ago when I picked up my first copy of the magazine Real Simple and while reading it, my quick browse soon turned into a full blown peruse.  I like it.  The mag is like Martha Stewart Living only more practical and not so hoity-toity when it comes to cooking, and gardening, and well... life in general.  

    Now now, I have the utmost respect for Martha and the empire she has built, I really do.  I may be a big fan but nevertheless, it's still fun to post screenshots of her drinking an Olde English 40oz malt liquor and eating a Taco Bell burrito on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.  You can watch the whole clip here.

     

    Martha Stewart and a 40 of Old English "Old E" Malt Liquor

     

    So back to the story at hand...

    Real Simple recently did a piece online called 7 Common Cooking Mistakes and they added "What to do next time" instructions in the article.  Their original list consisted of the following:

    1. You didn’t read the recipe all the way through before you started cooking.
    2. You overcrowded the pan.
    3. You didn’t preheat the pan, and your fish fillets turned out soggy.
    4. You cooked pasta in a small pot and ended up with a pile of gummy noodles.
    5. You sautéed wet greens.
    6. You used dried herbs in a recipe in place of fresh ones, resulting in a heavily overseasoned dinner.
    7. You fried food in oil that wasn’t hot enough.

     

    Here are the more uncommon mistakes that I would have added:

    1. You thought it was sugar, but it wasn't.
    2. The last person to wash the blender didn't screw the bottom on tight, and you just made margaritas.
    3. You forgot to rinse your beans and now you just poured wall paper paste on your salad.
    4. You got all wrapped up playing Cranium and scorched the Thanksgiving turkey.
    5. "Baking Powder, Baking Soda... what's the difference?"
    6. "Jalapeno... Habanero, what's the difference?"
    7. You completely forgot about the rice...
    8. You fell asleep on the couch and just made a briquette from a frozen pizza...

    Feel free to add your own in the comments

     

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    CategoriesHumor

    Kurobuta Tonkatsu

     

    I recently had the opportunity to enjoy a Kurobuta tonkatsu at a pretty authentic Japanese joint (Tonkatsu Ginza Bairin) that serves tonkatsu almost exclusively, ten different ways.  The dish set me back $35 which was at first unsettling - but I considered how many times I've spent that much or more on a fine steak and I thought to myself, why shouldn't the pig deserve as much as the cow?

    The story goes that British traders were closed off from Japan until the 1800's when they brought over some Berkshire pigs.  The Shogun prized them so much that they agreed to trade as long as they brought more of those "Black Pigs" - or "Kurobuta" in Japanese - each time they returned.

    What a great story right?  Unfortunately, I can't find anything even remotely credible to confirm or deny it, but it continues to perpetuate out of sheer romance.  Nevertheless, the "Black Pig" has more marbling, a more ruddy flesh (some call it "the other red meat"), and much more flavor than your supermarket variety pig.  

    This "leaning" of America's pigs; however, was largely done on purpose.  The market desired less fat and according to Dr. Grant Walling on thepigsite.com, the lean % of our pork has increased by more than 37% since the 1960's.  I've already alluded to the National Pork Board's slogan, "The Other White Meat," which was so successful that in 2000 that a survey by Northwestern University found it to be one of the five most memorable taglines in contemporary advertising. 

    Your sauce is made with grinding fresh sesame paste

    Before we were served, my Kurobuta tonkatsu began with a mortar and pestle to grind up some sesame seeds fresh.  To this paste, we added some of their homemade katsu sauce, and for me, a dab of hot mustard on each bite.  My cutlet had a thick piece of fat, one inch in places, running down one side and my immediate American reaction was to trim it.  I didn't, and found it do be soft like a marshmallow and tasting of the essence of delicious.

    Cleansing your palate with sake is a "must do"

    The panko added a toasty aroma, a sharp crispness, and plenty of craggles for the sauce to gain a firm grasp on.  Between bites I would eat either some plain white rice, some cabbage, or drink some sake to clear my palate - trying my best to enjoy the next morsel like it was my first.  Their sauce is amazing, like a soy based sweet and sour, it was thickened possibly with molasses or malt extract.  When we do Kurobuta tonkatsu at home, I will enjoy trying to replicate this. 

    Katsudon

    My wife didn't opt for the Kurobuta but she got Katsudon instead which is tonkatsu served over a bowl of rice with a fried egg on top.  It was unbelieveably rich and [because the grass is always greener...] I preferred her dish over mine.  The next time I'm in a katsu shop, I'm going for the Katsudon.

    Kurobuta pork is my new favorite breed of swine.  Which honestly, wasn't difficult to move into that spot because hitherto, I couldn't even name another.  Now, with a burgeoning demographic of savvy consumers, fat is hip, and Kurobuta pork delivers. In fact, you can have Kurobuta delivered.  If we can't find Kurobuta locally, we're going to mail order some.  Here are some of the vendors I found.

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch
    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    photo by Dave Koch

    "It's a Dirty Kitchen!"

    I hear them exclaim. All too often I have taken foreign guests to my favorite roadside eating houses in Asia only to have them baulk at the lack of decor let alone matching dishes or cutlery.

    "When was the last time they cleaned that pot?"

    Believe me when I tell you - it's pot luck. As a veteran of 4 years living and traveling in Asia i can safely say that you could be in as much danger eating at a 5 star restaurant. Forget Michelin stars, sometimes the only stars you will be seeing are inside your eyelids after one too many cases of poisoning.

    So be bold! Be brave! What doesn't kill you only makes you stronger. You could be saved by having a bowl of Pho soup at a dirty shack beside the train station in Hanoi after enduring the worst food poisoning on the train from hell (that was after a Michelin 5 star meal I will never forget). And anyway, who needs that 3 day intestinal cleaning retreat in Koh Phangan after eating roadside food prepared by a crooked little old lady as shriveled as a preserved Chinese plum outside the temple of the reclining Buddha in Bangkok?

    Some of the best meals I've had have been in very obscure places - I will never forget being in Seoul eating barbecue Mackerel and drinking Makgeolli (unrefined fermented rice wine) in what looked like the inside of an old teacher's desk (complete with graffiti). Served to me in a tin bowl that looked like it had been used for football practice.

    So my advice is dear travelers, when in Asia, throw caution to the wind, try everything and after being well seasoned (both inside and out) you will find yourself in a roadside shack nonchalantly observing "Wow, that's the biggest rat I've ever seen." And...

    "Eating dirty Hor Fun!"

     

    Posted
    AuthorNatalia Richards
    CategoriesHumor
    Tagshumor

    shop at home. we deliver. safeway.com

    I am an unabashed 'Cheap Bastard' and I'm always looking for a good deal, especially on food.  I am also a self-proclaimed credit card 'Points Whore' - pardon the expression, but I'm at a loss for a more accurate moniker.  

    I will look at ads, I will complete surveys, I will eat at places that I would have otherwise never eaten at; as long as they give me points and/or miles.  Enter the "Safeway Triple Dip" stage left...

    Ever since they reinstated the 'Buy 7 Sandwiches, Get the 8th Sandwich Free' deal at Safeway, I've been frequenting their deli; stalking their deli may be an adjective more apropos.

     

    1. First, sign up with grocerymiles.com and link your Safeway club card with your airline partner.  I'm using United but I've heard some other airlines may be participating.  
    2. Second, be sure to swipe your Safeway card at checkout each time you shop for them to track it, or do as I do and enter your phone number.  They'll dump 125 miles into your airline's account for every $250 you spend.
    3. Third, use a credit card that earns you miles with the same airline you signed up with.
    4. Lastly, only eat sandwiches.  

     

    With the Safeway Triple Dip, you're getting free sandos, and earning 1.5 miles for every dollar spent... at the grocery store!  You need to go there anyway, you might as well eat lunch too.  Now, I may be a 'Points Whore' but I am also a 'Sandwich Snob'.  It amazes me how often establishments manage to screw them up.  In fact, making an excellent sando is a perfectly simple equation.  It is beautiful in its simplicity.

    When it comes to sandwiches, no matter where you go - the veggies are more-or-less all the same, the cold cuts are all the same, the cheese is all the same, the toppings, the pickles, and the dressings are all the same.  

    What makes a great sando is the bread.

    Safeway bakes their own bread, fresh, everyday and it is delicious.  I usually go for the Dutch crunch, the artisan, or the pesto, but the ciabatta is also good.  Always ask for spicy mustard instead of yellow.  If you are feeling more adventurous, they make a tasty muffaletta spread, a pesto spread, and a horseradish spread too.

    They'll even toast it for you...

    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    Mrs. Solanki’s Chicken Curry photo by Loren Tama

    My friend and co-worker, Milan Solanki, upon hearing that I had never cooked Indian curry before, provided this spectacular recipe from his own mother.  Other Indian friends have since bashed the recipe for its authenticity.  I have since learned that, to an Indian, the only truly “authentic” curry recipes are those cooked by one’s own mother.  Here is Mrs. Solanki’s recipe, copied exactly as it was provided to me:

    • 1lb chicken fillet cut into 1inch cubes
    • 3 tblspn olive oil
    • 2 medium size onions sliced thinly
    • 3 cloves
    • 1 small piece of cinnamon
    • 3 black peppercorns
    • 1/2 tspn crushed ginger
    • 1/2 tspn crushed garlic
    • 1or 2 green chillies cut in half length wise
    • 1tspn salt ( or to taste)
    • 1/4 tspn turmeric powder
    • little less than half a can of peeled tomatoes (liquidised)
    • 2 tspn coriander and cumin powder (buy it ready in shops namely dhana-jeera powder)
    • handful of fresh coriander roughly chopped, washed and drained
    • 1 tspn garam masala (readily available in indian shops)
    • 2 tspn lemon juice

    Heat the olive oil in a saucepan add the slit chillies, cloves, cinnamon, peppercorn and then add the sliced onions.   Fry the onions until golden brown,

    **add the chicken and stir gently for couple of minutes until the chicken is coated completely with the onions and olive oil,  add all the spices upto and including turmeric power and again stir and mix it in to the chicken, add half a cup of water, cover the lid and let it simmer (you can add more water if it looks too dry)  for 15 to 18 minutes add the tomatoes and again let it simmer for 3 minutes then sprinkle the garam masala and mix, add the lemon juice and after a minute take it off the flame add chopped coriander just before serving.

     ** variation for methi (fenugreek leaves) chicken.  add the washed and roughly chopped methi after the onions have browned and before adding the chicken.  Stir fry the methi with the onions for 2minutes then add the chicken and continue as above.

    All the above spices can be adjusted according to your taste after making it a couple of times. Also how runny or dryish - add water accordingly.


    Posted
    AuthorLoren Tama
    CategoriesRecipes

    With more than 11,000 U.S. locations, Starbucks strives to deliver a consistent product no matter where you are on the globe; however, they do offer up some regional nuances.  I first noticed this in Hawaii where they have simple syrup at the cream and sugar stations.  

    Brilliant!  I'll bet they have a much higher ratio of cold drinks to hot here.  I wish everyone did it because my go-to drink is Iced Coffee.  I began paying more attention to the goods behind the glass and in the cooler.  I found regional differences.  

     

    There is the Pineapple Bran Muffin, which is quite tasty, but unfortunately not available in the SF Bay Area.  

     

    There is also the Hawaiian Oatcake, which I couldn't discern any difference between the Oatcake on the mainland but it was like eating Medium-density fiberboard.

     

    An.other regional option, which I have not tried yet, is the Guava Bar.  This I could see flopping miserably in the contiguous 48.

     

    Doing a little digging I found some more regional fare.  Although they may not be limited to these cities, I found a Maple and Sausage Scone in New York City, a Blueberry Oat Bar with Organic Blueberries in San Diego, a Espresso Brownie in Cleveland, and a Hawaiian Bagel in Phoenix.  

    What else is interesting is that the Starbucks' website even states, "Most of our markets are serviced by local bakeries to assure the freshest product."  If you think your Starbucks may be offering up something local or regional, put it in the comments!

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    According to an article in the International Directory of Company Histories (which I found on findarticles.com) although the native peoples of Australia had been eating the nuts for more than a thousand years, the "discoverers" thought them to be poisonous:

    The macadamia tree... originated in Australia, and in 1857 was named after Dr. John Macadam, a chemistry professor at the University of Melbourne and a member of Australia's Parliament who apparently had nothing to do with the plants.

    His friends, Baron Ferdinand von Muller... [and] Walter Hill... were the first to classify the tree botanically, having discovered it on an expedition. The honor of providing a name fell upon von Muller, who elected to pay tribute to his friend Macadam.

    Hill removed the kernels from the shells in order to plant and cultivate the trees. He believed the nuts were likely poisonous, according to some aborigines at least, and was shocked to discover a young assistant happily snacking on some. When the boy seemed to suffer no ill effects, Hill tried the kernels, found them delicious, and became an enthusiast.

    In 1921 a man from Massachusetts, Ernest van Tassel saw the commercial potential of the Mac Nut and planted an orchard of them near Honolulu.  A year later the University of Hawaii began an extensive research program that observed 60,000 trees and tested selection and grafting.  In 1946 the Mauna Loa was established by Castle & Cooke, the owners of the Dole Pineapple Co. on the Big Island of Hawaii.

    Commercial production was reached in 1956 and a state of the art processing plant was built and designed to generate all its own power by burning the shells of the nuts.  Since 2004 Hershey's has owned and operated the Muana Loa plantation and production facility, which is in Hilo.

    photo by Dave Koch

    I was given a bag of Homemade Mac Nuts (thank you Dr. Akioka!) that are larger and far sweeter than anything I've found in the stores.  He shells and roasts them himself.  Recently he told me a story about how a 93 year old man came by his place and taught him how to fertilize the tree; more appropriately, when to fertilize the tree.  

    The man had been involved with the Mauna Loa plantation since its inception and knew a great deal about Mac Nuts.  Dr. Akioka's yields jumped from about 55 pounds one year to over 90 pounds the next!  Thank goodness he has enough to share with everyone.

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    photo by Libby

    I was standing in the cafeteria of my London office this morning, bemoaning the unhurried approach that the decrepit toaster was taking to the Maillard reaction.  Thetoaster has no respect for my time.  While I contemplated the toaster’s demise, my unfocused daze perused the various toast topping possibilities before me.  Butter, margarine, jam, honey, Marmite, cream cheese, marmalade.  Strawberry, raspberry, peach, orange.  Wait a minute, backup.  Marmite.  I’d never had Marmite before.

    From what I’ve heard about Marmite – and I think the same goes for Vegemite and Bovril – you either love it or you hate it.  In fact, www.marmite.com asks the question, “Do you love or hate Marmite?”  I stood there before what may have been the most critical decision of the day, and hesitatingly picked up the Marmite.  Ingredients: yeast extract, salt, vegetable extract, niacin, thiamine, spice extracts, riboflavin, folic acid, celery extract, vitamin B12.  Sounds terrible.  “Ding,” said the toaster.

    Back at my desk, I neatly buttered two slices of wheat bread and looked at the self-serving package of Marmite.  I turned it over.  Strange.  I wanted to see inside, so I peeled back the lid.  If I hadn’t already known that Marmite is some kind of yeast extract, I would have seen the shiny black paste and expected a chocolaty taste, something akin to Nutella.  But years of beer brewing and bread making conditioned my mind to the potential evils of yeast, so I knew what I was getting into.  

    I decided to spread the gooey mess onto one of the two slices of toast – that way if it was horrible, at least I’d have one decent slice left for breakfast.  Out of the container, the stuff is sticky and stringy.  It has an inherent heaviness, and a bit got away and stuck and smeared on the surface of my desk.  I couldn’t really smell much about it, so I dove right in.  The first thing I noticed is how salty it is.  Not good for high blood pressure, I thought.  And the taste?  I would say it is similar to eating a bouillon cube.  Beef bouillon, specifically.  What surprised me the most was that I didn’t hate it; I didn’t necessarily like it, either.  I thought I was going to be hopelessly flung into one corner or the other, instead I ended up somewhere in the middle. 

    I can understand why some people hate Marmite, but at the same time, I can understand where the cult following comes from.  Taste preferences are strange.  Would I eat it again?  Yes, but I wouldn’t seek it out or crave it, and I would say that 9 times out of 10 I would reach for marmalade or jam first.  

    So if you haven’t tasted Marmite, Vegemite, or Bovril, it may be time to give some a try.  There is a good chance you’ll hate it, but there’s also a good chance you’ll love it.  You never know, you could even end up indifferent. 

     

     

    Posted
    AuthorLoren Tama
    2 CommentsPost a comment
    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    When I first met Kevin Loscotoff, he didn’t eat anything from the sea. He wouldn’t have anything to do with capers or fennel, and still doesn’t. Anchovies? Never. I don’t even think he eats olives. 

    But food quirks aside, I decided to give Kevin a chance. Besides, even then we had several similarities in taste: we both liked earthy, fruity pinots and floral IPAs. He and I could sit drinking iced tea until the tea leaves ran out. And the Indian food...oh, the Indian food. 

    In the five years or so that I’ve known Kevin, his culinary tastes expanded and he has demonstrated a willingness to try new cuisines. Now he readily eats mild fish and most sushi, and even appreciates the salty/smoky/sweet (umami) characteristic of salmon. He has tried dishes with fennel - with much resistance and not necessarily by his own intention – and he continues to dine with an open mind. And that, while not the only reason I love Kevin Loscotoff, is emblematic of the perspective of his that allows me to look past the anchovy-hating. 

    I have not given up, and neither has he. All it takes is an open mind and a little willingness to expand his comfort zone. He may have to move into discomfort more than once. Heck, I don’t know of anyone who liked beer on their first sip. 

    Happy birthday Kevo, and keep that mind open. You’ll need to, because for my birthday this year I want one present from you: I want you to join me for a big bowl of pasta puttanesca. You’d better start practicing.  

     

    Posted
    AuthorLoren Tama

    We attended the Fancy Food Show at San Francisco's Moscone Center and found this sight in the Italy section, a large group gathered around a flat screen TV watching football.  Granted, it was the NFC Title game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Philadelphia Eagles but it was a funny sight nevertheless.

     

    Posted
    Authordavid koch

    The other day, I had a wonderful sheep's milk cheese from Corsica (which is technically part of France) called a Fleur du Maquis.  The cheese is covered in herbs.  There was a pungent lavender front along witha background of rosemary, juniper, and fennel.  I wasn't familiar with the style before and I thought it was fantastic!  I'm going to ask to see if my local Cheese Monger carries any regularly.

    I was instantly struck by the similarity of the idea behind the Fluer Du Maquis and the Herbes De Provence (which typically contains rosemary, marjoram, basil, bay leaf, thyme, and lavender).  The former is what is considered to be found in the typical Corsican landscape, the latter what is typically found in Provence.  

     

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    Authordavid koch

     

    We picked up some fresh eggs at a local farm in the Bay Area, I'm not sure they're allowed to sell to the public so we won't implicate them.  This is a recycled egg crate.  Among the brown and white eggs there was a single blue one (pictured, bottom left).  When I asked about it, they said it was from an Araucana hen

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    Authordavid koch

    Peanut Butter photo by sparktography

    New findings in the recent Salmonella Typhimurium contamination of peanut butter have authorities thinking that it has sickened more than 470 people and is implicated in as many as 6 deaths.  Epidemiology is tricky, and according to the FDA's website, this outbreak may go as far back as five months.

    "On January 16, [Peanut Corporation of America] expanded its voluntary recall to include all peanut butter produced on or after August 8, 2008, and all peanut paste produced on or after September 26, 2008, in its Blakely, Ga., plant because of potential Salmonella contamination. (via fda.gov)"

    Here is a chart that shows the onset of this particular outbreak; it's called an epidemic curve, or "epi curve" for short.  

     

     

    They say that these epi curves are "complex and incomplete" but there are key five points to understanding them better: 

    • There is an inherent delay between the date that an illness starts, and the date that the case is reported to public health authorities.  It typically takes 2-3 weeks for Salmonella infections. 
    • Some background cases of illness are likely to occur that would have occurred even without an outbreak.  This makes it difficult to say exactly which case is the first in an outbreak.  For some cases, the date when they became ill is not known because it takes time before someone from the health department can do an interview to ask for this information.
    • It can be difficult to determine when cases start to decline because of the reporting delay.  
    • It can be difficult to say when the outbreak is over, [also] because of the reporting delay. 

     

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    Authordavid koch