Food News Daily: September 14, 2011

Published by Wednesday, September 14, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

From Russia with lovage – Moscow leads gastro revolution, The Guardian

Restaurant gambles on fish cooked in 2000-year-old sea water, The Sydney Morning Herald

Tipping the Balance for Kitchen Scales, The New York Times

The Ten Commandments of restaurant behavior, redux, The Seattle Times

Spiced Apple Pudding Cake With Caramel Sauce, The Washington Post

Poor pub hygiene link to rise in gastric infections, The Independent

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Meals For Our Soldiers: Fuel, Feed or Fatten?, Civil Eats

Roasted Asparagus with Cherry Balsamic Glaze, 6 Bittersweets

October Unprocessed 2011, Eating Rules

6th Annual StarChefs.com International Chefs Congress, Star Chefs

Chocolate Crepes with Orange-&-Chocolate Sauce, Kitchen Daily

Google’s Zagat Acquisition: Yelp Help for Restaurants, All Business

Food Photography

Strawberries, Cook Republic

Una Video-introduzione al Food Styling, Foodografia

Alternative Press/Sites

Eating While Black: How I Navigate Watermelon, Fried Chicken, and Frozen Yogurt, GOOD

California Defied Own Scientists With Pesticide Approval, Mother Jones

Jonathan Stich, Restaurant Delivery Farmer: A Week In The Life (Food Informants), Huffington Post

World

Nestlé: 200 M$ pour une nouvelle usine en Indonésie, Soho Choc

Smoky Curacha Cakes, 80 Breakfasts

Poire pochée à la crème de caramel et ses croustillants au chocolat, 750 grammes

Homemade Granola, Baker Street

Braised eggplant with pork, Hanoi Street Food

 

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Rosa’s Musings: The Last Of The Summer Days Have Arrived, Indulge In Tomatoes while You Still Can

Published by Wednesday, September 14, 2011 Permalink 0

by Rosa Mayland

Spontaneous Cuisine: Raw Tomato Sauce

 

I don’t know if you have the same uncomfortable feeling as I, but I have the impression this year is flying by, and that we are more than ever racing against time, without being able to get a grip on the present moment or connect with the now. It is insane and quite confusing…

As incredible and shocking as it might seem, September has already arrived and so has autumn (and by the way, just in case you have already got the creeps, we are dangerously approaching Christmas – only 3 1/2 months to go before the ludicrous craze!). Even if you try “lying” to yourself, you cannot do anything other than confirm that the hot season is over and the slow decline of nature is taking its toll. As sad as it might sound, we have no other choice than to bid goodbye to the joys of summer and to the delightful sensation of lightness as well as worry-free days, it is a harbinger for the cold, dark, gloomy days that gently weasel their way into our lives. All those changes are real, visible and can be perceived very clearly.

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Food News Daily: September 13, 2011

Published by Tuesday, September 13, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

Dinner with a side of yodeling, Chicago Tribune

The Next Big Thing: Peruvian Food, The Wall Street Journal

Lemon squares, New Zealand Herald

Nutrition app to ‘separate fat from fiction’, The Sydney Morning Herald

36 Hours in Bern, The New York Times

Antibiotics in Pork Draw More Scrutiny By Inspectors, The Wall Street Journal

Hunting for the great white grape, San Francisco Chronicle

Sous-vide cooking gives chefs an option (Thomas Keller), Los Angeles Times

How to Cook a Complete Indian Meal, Times of India

Food Photography

Cherry composition, Alessandro Guerani

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Blueberry Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting, My Baking Addiction

The Best Mashed Potatoes: Really What Does that Mean?, Creative Culinary

Dan Barber, Renowned Chefs Draft Letter to Young Chefs (video), Eater

Bratwurst with jalapeño-peach mustard, Broke Ass Gourmet

TV Dinners: Grand or Gauche?, Leite’s Culinaria

Alternative Press/Sites

Cooking Survey Reveals That 28% Of Americans Can’t Cook, Huffington Post Food

Flawed Fruit: The Not-So-Rosy Reality of Industrial Tomato Farming in America, Mother Earth News

The New Dirty Dozen: 12 Foods to Eat Organic, The Daily Green

World

Comer en la Escuela, A Table

Little Chefs, Best Shellers, Printing Food and Human-Derived Gelatin: The new gastro generation, Food Meditations

Salada com queijos, Vovó que ensinou

 

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Food News Daily: September 7, 2011

Published by Thursday, September 8, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

Eat insects for protein, EU suggests, The Independent

Chateau Lafite Sale Tops $500,000, The Wall Street Journal

Why the new McDonald’s menu won’t make us thin, The Guardian

Tamales, L.A.’s original street food, Los Angeles Times

Grilled Chicken With Garlic Purée and Shaved Zucchini Salad (Alice Waters), The Wall Street Journal

Food Photography

Alessandro Guerani

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Rick Bayless: The trailblazer (defender of Mexican cuisine), Culinate

Celebration Cake, According to Dina

Chocolate pencils for back to school at Patrick Roger, David Lebovitz

Whole hog butchering class, Access Atlanta

Chocolate capital of the world: now Paris wears the world’s sweet crown (David Downie), Gadling

Apricot Stilton Cheese Muffins (Esmaa Self), Foodista

Preserving in Oil and Vinegar, Culinate

World

Poondhu Puli Kuzhambhu : Chettinad Style, Kaarasaaram

Cheesecake Muffins, Baker Street

Chicken Soup with Braaied Mielies, South-African Style, Scrumptious South Africa

Sopa de beringela e tomate # Eggplant and tomato soup, Pratos e Travessas

Alternative Press/Sites

The food industry vs. nutrition standards: a First Amendment issue?, Food Politics

Study says eating with your left hand could prevent overeating, Bliss Tree

Just a Little Bit Longer: How to Keep All Kinds of Food Fresh, Mother Earth News

A Bowl of Eat Local Wisdom: Lemongrass Tomato Soup, Mother Earth News

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Food News Daily: September 5, 2011

Published by Monday, September 5, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

5 Ayurvedic mocktails, Times of India

Where Budding Magnates Experiment With Recipes, The New York Times

Secrets of a Blue-Ribbon Brewmaster (a woman!), The Wall Street Journal

Fast food goes gourmet: Fast food chains are trying to gain new market share with ‘gourmet’ products. Have any of them won you round?, The Guardian

Time called on gastropubs: Last orders for metro foodies as hard times see a move back to the bar stool, The IndependentHow to expand your kids’ diets, Seattle Times

Monsanto Corn Falls to Illinois Bugs as Resistance Probe Widens, Bloomberg

Beer as an Ingredient, The New York Times

Market Driven, Oaxaca-Style: In Oaxaca, Mexico, fresh, locally grown food is not a “movement,” but a way of life, The New York Times

Food Photography

 

Alessandro Guerani

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Irene’s damage not ‘overrated’ for farmers, Grist

The World’s Most Tech-Savvy Boutique Hotels, The Next Web

Peachy keen: How to pick a peach, Culinate

Lemon Cucumber Cocktail, Leite’s Culinaria

Eat Well, Spend Less: Homemade Substitutes for Grocery Staples, Simple Bites

World

Dad’s Favorite Date Slice, Inside Cuisine

A Few Healthy Pickle Recipes – Green Chili Pepper with Chickpea Flour and Spices, Lite Bite

Lemongrass shrimp, Rasa Malaysia

Alternative Press/Sites

Irene’s damage not ‘overrated’ for farmers, Grist

 Are IQ and vegetarianism linked?, PubMed

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Food News Daily: September 1, 2011

Published by Thursday, September 1, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

Gordon Ramsay’s Australian Nightmare, The Wall Street Journal

‘The Art of Eating’ from Flemish painters to Ferran Adrià, Phaidon Press

The Art of Picking the Perfect Meal for Beer, The Wall Street Journal

Cargill sees cocoa demand up 1 mln tons by 2020, Market Watch

Food is the ultimate security need, new map shows, The Guardian

How Many Calories Do You Need to Eat Per Day?, The Atlantic

Think outside the box: Top cooks reveal how to perk up your children’s packed lunches, The Independent

Nine Tips for Digging Through Local Farmers Markets, Dallas Observer

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

Praising farm wives: The spirit can exist in anyone, Culinate

A Cardiac Surgeon on the Glory of Saturated Fat, They’re Good for You, The LRC Blog

Plums – Food of the Month, Health Castle

Alternative Press/Sites

Potatoes reduce blood pressure in people with obesity and high blood pressure, Eurek Alert

A Classy Model-Egg Chicken Coop (Coupe) (shaped like a Model A),

How the Soaring Price of Bread Will Shake the World Economy, AlterNet

World

The Famous Anzac Biscuit, Honest Cooking

Red Velvet Crêpes, duhlicious

Melon au citron vert, Ma p’tite cuisine by Audrey

$1 Million Of (Mollydooker) Wine Destroyed In Forklift, Accident, Technorati

Food Photography

Coffee bean owl, Image Shack

The Evolution of Coke, Pete

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Food News Daily: August 31, 2011

Published by Wednesday, August 31, 2011 Permalink 0

Mainstream Anglo Media and Press

Ladurée Brings Its Macarons to New York, The New York Times

Lemon Pepper Macarons, by Meeta Khurana Wolff

 

Sesame crusted chilli and mint fish cakes with melon salsa, New Zealand Herald

China arrests 2,000 over illegal food additives, Irish Times

Dan Lepard’s nectarine strudel recipe, The Guardian

Making a brew, South American style, Irish Times

Wolfgang Puck picks London for his first venture in Europe: The US celebrity chef is scarcely known in Britain – and that’s good, he says, The Independent

The return of the fixed-price menu, San Francisco Chronicle

The palate’s Prozac, Brisbane Times

The Antibacterial of Coriander Oil, Journal of Medical Microbiology

How to make blackberry wine and whisky (to help us forget it’s the last day of ‘summer’), The Guardian

Best of the Anglo Food and Travel Blogs and Sites

A Beef With New Age Vegetarians, Zester Daily

In a Pickle: Pickled Red Tomatoes, Serious Eats

Freezer Tomato Sauce, Leite’s Culinaria

Sautéed Pork Medallions with a Ginger-Infused Balsamic Reduction, Feast on the Cheap

Alternative Press/Sites

How to Stay a Foodie Family on Food Stamps, Civil Eats

Sourdough Biscuits, Mother Earth News

Eating Sustainable for $5 a Meal (podcast by Josh Viertel), Edible Communities

Don’t like bothering with food safety rules? Sue the FDA!, Food Politics

Stumped in the produce section? No fail tips for picking perfect summer veggies, Eating Well

World

Lingonberry Dark Chocolate Buns, What’s for Lunch Honey

Chutney Surkh-e-Murch: Red Pepper Chutney in the Afghan Manner, The Spice Spoon

Ganesh Chathurti Recipes, I Love India

Butterscotch Pot de Creme, Dulce de Leche & Brown Sugar-Cumin Roasted Pecans, Eggbeater

Feuilles de brick – la recette en vidéo, Christophe Certain

Los Pedroches: por la ruta del jamón ibérico, A Table

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Wild Woman on Feral Acres: Backyard Poultry Skills; from chick to plate in mere weeks

Published by Wednesday, July 20, 2011 Permalink 0

by Esmaa Self

Insulted by misleading labeling U.S. laws that allow “free range” to mean the chickens had limited outdoor access, while “natural” meat can include a percentage of injected saline, for after all, salt is natural, and “fresh” chicken can be sold as such even if it has been kept at 30 degrees, we decided it was time to take matters related to the quality of the meat we consumed into our own hands.

Which is a wordy introduction to the following fact: this year we raised and butchered our own meat chickens.

Cornish chicks. Photo courtesy Wiki Commons.

Our goal was not to simply eat cheaply. If price per serving was the only consideration, we’d shop Sam’s Club and save the trouble of raising our own food. No, as always, our goal is to grow excellent food while reducing overall costs (shipping, packaging, additives, bacterial contamination, supporting factory farming). We hoped to produce this higher caliber meat for less than we could buy a locally produced ‘natural’ chicken. And we did. In 11 weeks we raised a baker’s dozen of Cornish roasters, realized 77 pounds (about 35 kilograms) of meat at an amazingly low $1.43 cost per pound. This figure includes butcher paper and freezer bags, feed and lighting, and, of course, the animals. Excluded from the weight are necks, giblets, wing tips, etcetera, reserved for making nutrient rich stock.

Keep in mind that what we produced is not organic meat, for we used a non-medicated, locally produced non-organic feed, however neither is local favorite Red Bird brand organic, and their skinless, boneless chicken breasts sell for $2.99. What we produced is an incredibly tasty, tender and truly farm fresh chicken meat without the factory, the trucking or the non-recyclable packaging.

Our Cornish roasters at 4 weeks

And zero labeling lies.

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Jonell Galloway: The many colors of summer tomatoes

Published by Monday, July 18, 2011 Permalink 0

by Jonell Galloway

Red, yellow, green, and orange tomatoes now available in Lake Geneva region

Tomato season is well under way, and here are a few suggestions for using them.

How to choose a tomato

Remember you can’t judge a tomato by its cover. By that I mean, the best tomatoes may well be the ugliest. They have not been sorted to meet some regulation as to size, shape and color. They can even be marked “Geneva,” “Lausanne” or “Vevey”, and never have had a root in the earth. Tomatoes can be grown hydroponically just about anywhere, so the fact that it’s marked with a local name is not absolute assurance that it will be full of flavor like a summer tomato should be and that it has been grown using traditional methods.

There are a lot of resellers in farmers markets, and then there are direct producers. Don’t hesitate to ask the vendors in your farmers market if they grew their tomatoes in a field or if they were grown hydroponically or in a greenhouse (often referred to as sous tunnel or en serre). “Field” tomatoes are obviously likely to have more taste.

The best way to be sure is of course to grow them yourself, but we do not all have the possibility, of course.

The appearance is just one factor. Smell is just as important. A natural, ripe tomato smells fragrant when you put it to your nose. A small tomato can have as much taste as a big one. Tomatoes should be soft, but not blemished or split open. If they are hard and are not aromatic, they are probably not field tomatoes.

A tomato can have hard black “calluses” on it, but that has no effect on its flavor. Simply trim them off.

In general the darker the color, the stronger the taste and the more acidic. Yellow and orange tomatoes are sweet, rather like fruit. Red tomatoes have more pizzazz. The darker, purplish ones are strong-flavored and not to everyone’s taste.

Green tomatoes tend to be more acidic. Most people prefer them cooked rather than raw, but this is a matter of taste.

How to eat a summer tomato

There are million ways to eat tomatoes, but ripe summer tomatoes need very little.

My favorite way of eating them is simply with salt and pepper, and perhaps a drizzle of olive oil. A beautiful addition to any summer lunch is a large plate of sliced tomatoes of different colors, served in this way. It is always a hit, both aesthetically and as a dish.

Tomatoes are also good grilled over the coals. For this, choose medium-size tomatoes, so they won’t fall through the grille. Simply cut them in half and grill for about 3 minutes on each side. This intensifies the flavor, giving it what the French call a confit flavor. What it really does is evaporate most of the water, leaving behind the most flavorful part, the flesh. The natural sugar in the tomato also caramelizes, making it taste sweet rather than acidic.

Tomatoes, courgette (zucchini), and aubergines (eggplant) — the classic Mediterranean vegetables — are all in season at about the same time. There are endless recipes one can think up, but one of my favorite is to mix finely diced tomatoes, zucchini and chopped onions marinated in a generous helping of vinaigrette made with Balsamic vinegar, Chardonnay vinegar and olive oil.

And then there’s the all-time favorite: mozzarella served with tomatoes and fresh basil. This too can be livened up by using tomatoes of different colors.

This article was originally published by Geneva Lunch.

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Wild Woman on Feral Acres: Backyard Poultry Skills

Published by Tuesday, July 5, 2011 Permalink 0

by Esmaa Self

We’ve had a backyard flock seven years and have sold extra eggs for about four. I have been around and kept my own layer flocks before moving here and working to massage a thriving farm from our rocky span of hogback. And we’ve been sold out of eggs for three full years, but I wouldn’t call myself an expert on chicken behavior.

One of our 'girls'.

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