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May 3, 2008

Jae-Yen's Kimchi Bap

One of the Korean postdocs in our lab taught me how to make kimchi bap (kimchi fried rice), and it's so easy but very good! It goes like this:

  • 3 cups steamed rice (preferably from a rice cooker)
  • 12 oz (340 g) kimchi (in its own juice)
  • 4 oz (120 g) lean steak
  • 4 tbsp butter
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
First spread out the steamed rice to steam off a little bit; you never want to make fried rice with really wet rice or it gets gummy. Dice the kimchi to small pieces about 1x2 cm, and cut the steak into thin slices about the same size. Melt 1 tbsp butter on a pan then stir fry the beef. Quickly add the black pepper, then take the beef off the pan and onto a plate before it's fully cooked (there should still be some red in it, but very little). Melt 1 tbsp butter in the pan again and then add the diced kimchi. Let it cook just until the green parts are starting to look dark and the white parts soften and turn clear, then take it off the heat and onto a plate. Cook the rice in two batches if need be... to each batch, melt 1 tbsp butter in a large pan, then add the rice and stir constantly. To each batch, add half of the kimchi, half of the kimchi juice, and half of the beef; stir on medium heat until everything is cooked. Salt to taste and mix again. Turn off the heat, add 1/2 tbsp sesame oil to each batch, stir and eat.

Optional: serve topped with a fried egg.
Yield: makes 3+ servings.

Delicious!

July 12, 2007

Interesting people 'round these parts

Saw David Gergen tonight, eating dinner at the table next to us. I didn't notice him, but Carlos recognized him from NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.

Weird.

July 8, 2007

Granny's Chicken and Rice Southern Casserole Recipe

Back in Texas, our grandmother used to make this really delicious rice casserole dish, and I always loved it as a kid. She made it for us almost every time we came to visit, mostly because we asked her to make it every time we came to visit. She passed away a few years ago, and I haven't had it since, but I remembered a little bit of the recipe so I tried to put it together recently. It came out almost exactly like she made it.

I've modified the recipe to make it a little less Uncle Ben and General Mills, and a little more whole natural foods you can find almost anywhere.

  • 2+ cups dry jasmine rice, uncooked
  • 1 large chicken breast, 1 deboned chicken thigh
  • 1 can diced tomatoes (not petite diced), drained and rinsed
  • 1 can cream of mushroom
  • 1 can cream of celery
  • 2 cans of water
  • 3 scoops/cubes of chicken boullion
  • 1 teaspoon ground thyme
  • 2 teaspoons onion powder
  • 2 teaspoons black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground sage
  • 2 tablespoons garlic powder
  • 2 fresh large jalepeños
Parboil the rice by cooking for 5 minutes in plenty of excess boiling water, then stop the cooking by draining and rinsing under cold water. Separately, boil the chicken in water for 20+ minutes, until it begins to separate. Keep the water from the boiled chicken around for later. Let cool, then remove any fatty parts and shred the chicken.

Add dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, then add everything together with rice. Mix well. Add enough of the broth from the boiled chicken to make the mixture nice and sloshy. Bake uncovered at 400°F for 45 minutes in a 9"x13" casserole dish.

Enjoy!

May 3, 2007

Spicy Chipotle Crock-Pot Chili Recipe

Just made some great chili yesterday in the Crock-Pot. Really fantastic stuff... here goes:

Stir together all of the following in a slow cooker:
  • 1 lb chunk steak for stew
  • 1/4 lb ground pork (beef also works)
  • 1 can diced tomatoes (not petite diced), drained
  • 1 can red kidney beans (rinsed and drained)
  • 1 can white beans (rinsed and drained)
  • 1 small can of tomato paste
  • 1/4 cup dried onion flakes
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon chipotle powder
  • 1 teaspoon cumin powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon chili powder
  • 3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 tablespoons garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon liquid smoke flavor
  • 2 pickled hot jalapeños, sliced
  • 15-20 grinds of fresh black pepper

Dissolve 3 tablespoons of flour in 1/2 cup water; add this flour/water mixture to the slow cooker and mix. If needed, add enough water until things just start to "slosh." Cook on low for 8+ hours. Stir well and salt to taste. Serve with bread, corn bread, or polenta.

Serves 4-6.

April 23, 2007

South Indian food with Aathi (or, "Cooking with Communists")

Yesterday, the lady and I made the long, three-block trek to Aathi's place to learn how to make South Indian food... there were about six of us, and we each made a little something, everything from scratch:

  • Potato podimaas (spicy potatoes with curry leaves, mustard seeds and fried daal)
  • Palak paneer with homemade paneer made just the previous night
  • Rajma masala (kidney beans with onions, tomatoes and lots of spices
  • Yellow pepper, plantain, eggplant and potato bajji (spicy fritters)
  • Chappathi (puffed wheat breads)
  • Vermicelli payasam (spiced vermicelli pudding for dessert)

Delicious! Who knew cooking Indian food could be so much fun?

Click here to see the photos!

UPDATE: Aathi sends a poem from the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore. We were discussing politics, and decided this poem was especially profound given the state of things abroad and at home:

My Country Awake

Where the mind is without fear and the head held high;
Where knowledge is free;
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls;
Where words come out from the depth of truth;
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection;
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit;
Where the mind is led forward by Thee into ever-widening thought and action;
Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake.

—Rabindranath Tagore

March 29, 2007

Dallas gets a positive review, even in New York

Dallas Does Dallas

The New York Times has a nice take on modern Dallas in the Travel Guide's "Dallas Does Dallas."

The city seems willing to throw off its long-held infatuation with glitz and glamour, while remaining obsessed with maintaining a reputation for impeccable, indisputable good taste.

[...]

At the heart of it all — this zeal for glamour and sophistication, a supreme faith in the transcendent power of surfaces — is a Texan’s pride and a Texan’s insecurity: you don’t leave the house without looking your best, because you never know whom you might see, and who might want to find you lacking.

The quick rundown... what meets the Times writer's approval?

  • NorthPark Center
  • Nasher sculpture garden
  • a new opera center by Norman Foster
  • a new theater by Rem Koolhaas
  • a proposed bridge spanning the Trinity River by Santiago Calatrava
  • a Latino Cultural Center by Ricardo Legorreta
  • a symphony hall by I. M. Pei
  • Philip Johnson’s Crescent Court complex
  • Dallas Museum of Art
  • Campisi's
  • Hotel ZaZa
  • Uptown/West Village
  • Oak Cliff/Bishop Arts District/Hattie's

I'd say that's a pretty decent list of things to do, see, buy and eat if you're going to be spending a few days in Big D.

February 8, 2007

Anthony Bourdain on the Food Network

Chef, author, and travel-show host Anthony Bourdain guest-blogs about what's become of the Food Network... one of the funniest things I've read in a long time:

"Screaming out loud at Sandra Lee in disbelief as she massacres another dish, then sits grinning, her face stretched into a terrifying rictus of faux cheer for the final triumphant presentation."

Don't miss the notes on Mario Batali and Rachel Ray.

Priceless.

January 13, 2007

Death by Oreos

Via the HB-3 blog:

With all the hullabaloo about the American consumer’s penchant for overeating, indulgence and general predilection toward obesity, it strikes us that we’ve encountered scant few artists who ever address these issues head on, especially with regard to consumer goods.

That’s why we were all the more excited to encounter a series of provocative images from artist Daniela Edburg’s current show Drop Dead Gorgeous at the Kunsthaus in Miami. Daniela explores the ramifications of food binging and indulgence, albeit with a (markedly) dark sensibility.

Check it out. Be sure to click through the entire sequence... So creepy.

October 4, 2006

Three really great posts from the HB-3 blog

It's been, like, a while since I read the hb-3 blog, but boy am I glad I checked it out. When they're not writing about langostino lobster, these folks really have it together. Go read these recent posts right now!

It's refreshing to see these points of view from a company-funded blog.

September 29, 2006

Local food makes you smarter

Many colleges are choosing local foods for feeding those starving students.

The campagin against crappy mass-market food has spread to the East Coast... next up: middle America!

August 28, 2006

The Best Margarita Recipe Ever

Have you ever gone to a restaurant because of their margaritas?

When I'm back in Dallas, I love the margaritas at El Fenix, Pappasito's, and even Chili's. But try to go home and find the recipes. All the recipes on the Internet are all the same: tequila, triple sec, lime juice, maybe some sour mix... make them and they always miss something. I've been buying out my local Beverages 'n More to find that missing ingredient, and I think I finally got it.

Below is the best margarita recipe, capturing the something that makes a restaurant margarita so much better than the homemade versions:

  • Two parts tequila (good tequila is always better...)
  • Half part Grand Marnier (this is a critical part... trust me, don't go cheap on the citrus liqueur. Cointreau also goes very well, but really doesn't have the same aromatic flavor that Grand Marnier has; try them side-by-side; they have totally different flavors... if you cheat here with Triple Sec or Orange Curaçao, you must add a dash of orange bitters!)
  • Half part fresh lime juice.
  • Half part fresh lemon juice.
  • Half part simple syrup.
  • Half part Limoncello (a fairly inexpensive type of lemon liqueur that isn't sour but has lots of big citrus flavor... this is, I think, the secret ingredient in most restaurant margaritas— that extra citrus flavor adds a lot without making the drink more tart).
  • Pinch of salt. Very little will go a long way... alternatively, rim the glass with coarse salt.

Mix with a bunch of ice cubes in a shaker and shake violently for about 15 seconds (until ice starts to crystallize on the outside of your metal shaker). Pour contents into an old-fashioned glass and, for a nice visual appeal, you can finish with a drop of grenadine (let it sink to the bottom for a sweet finish). Add a couple of skinny straws and a slice of lime if you like. Trust me!

Hint: too strong for your taste? Stir in some lemon-lime soda— don't shake!

(†) In Texas, we really enjoy our margaritas.

UPDATE: After fiddling with this for a while, I've found that it's better to use fresh lime and syrup rather than sour mix. Even though there are good sour mixes out there (I'm talking about you, Dr. Swami and Bone Daddy), I find they don't have quite the same freshness as when you use a fresh lime. In any case, if you can't get fresh limes or don't have five minutes to make simple syrup, you can substitute a quality sour mix—no neon yellow stuff, please!—for the lime juice and simple syrup above.

August 6, 2006

Can local foods catch on with large institutional food systems?

This local-foods thing is really catching on, at least here in the Bay Area. Kaiser Permanente, who runs 19 hospitals in Northern California, has decided to try a pilot program whereby they'll use local produce from farmers in Fresno County:

The results of Kaiser's experiment will answer a question vital to the future of sustainable agriculture, and to the livelihood of small farmers in California and across America:

Can an institution the size of Kaiser Permanente adopt the Chez Panisse model of buying locally and from many smaller sustainable farms — without busting the budget or bogging down its production of 5,000 to 6,000 inpatient meals every day for 19 Northern California hospitals?

If the pilot program works, Kaiser plans to expand it systemwide and also put it into place in its staff and visitor cafeterias.

This may be a watershed moment for the local foods movement. The idea is to turn the traditional distribution system on its head. The conventional food distribution system is a top-down model — large farms produce one type of food, like tomatoes, and these tomatoes get distributed to many different places. In Kaiser's bottom-up model, many small farms (many of them minority-owned, incidentally) will each send their crops to Kaiser's "big kitchen," where they will be distributed to the hospital's patients (then, if it works, to its workers and guests too).

You might think the cost would be higher, but this is where it gets interesting. Because food has become a more-or-less fungible commodity, then both Kaiser and the farms could come out ahead by opting out of the market: by choosing to buy local, Kaiser may pay more per food item, but on the other hand, doesn't have to pay for transportation from Ohio.

Plus, there is the social benefit of contributing to the local economy and reducing poverty locally.

I'm anxious to see how well this pilot program pans out! Now go read the article.

July 18, 2006

Holy friggin' crap, I'm literally swimming in the World's Best Food

Well I'll be damned. I stumbled across the Wikipedia entry that lists the top 50 world restaurants according to Restaurant Magazine. It turns out I've been a few times to what is supposedly one of the world's best restaurants.... EVER.

Yes, apparently Alice Waters' Chez Panisse is holding at number 20, and I should say it's well deserved (although personally, I've never been quite as delighted at C.P. as when I go next door, to César, and it isn't on the list... so there you go). I've heard much about French Laundry, up in Napa; it's rockin' out at the fourth-best restaurant in the world on this list. Maybe Giao and I should give it a shot? You know, because I've always wanted to drop 420 bones on a 4-hour meal.

Maybe after grad school...

UPDATE: After seeing this guy's detailed photodocumentary of his trip to French Laundry, I think I have no choice but to go. In the mean time, I can only dream about how good sous-vide lobster tail must be... oh, mama.

June 30, 2006

Follow-up: Michael Pollan helps change Whole Foods

Michael Pollan (writer for the New York Times, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma, and Professor of Journalism here at Berkeley) has been engaging Whole Food's CEO John Mackey in a blog-based debate about Pollan's portrayal of Whole Foods in The Omnivore's Dilemma.

In the book and in public talks, Pollan basically suggests that Whole Foods, while an overall improvement on the supermarket experience, sometimes "pretties up" the image of organics without really staying true to what organic foods are all about. In a nutshell, Pollan contended that Whole Foods sells foods that meet the bare minimum standard for organics and yet aren't really what people would think about as organic. As an example, he cited a story in the talk here at Berkeley about free-range organic chickens who were given the required opportunity to pasture access, and yet, because of the design of their coops and their unfamiliarity with open land, often chose not to spend any time out in it. For all intents and purposes, these chickens didn't live lives that customers would reasonably expect from "free-range, organic" chickens.

Pollan also criticized Whole Foods for not working to educate its customers about the social benefits, energy savings, and improved freshness associated with locally grown foods.

Anyhow, I wanted to follow up, because AS IT TURNS OUT, Whole Foods' CEO John Mackey listened, and has instituted an awesome and passionate five-point commitment to address Pollan's concerns. A teaser:

We've hired our first animal compassionate field buyer, Andrew Gunther, who is going to work exclusively on developing sources of animal products that meet our new strict animal compassionate standards...

Whole Foods Market is changing the job responsibilities of our Regional Buyers to focus more on sourcing local products for their stores...

Beginning soon, many of our markets where we have stand-alone stores (no other retailers sharing our parking lots) will close off major sections of the parking lots on Sunday to provide a place for local farmers to sell their products directly to customers. [emphasis mine]

Go read the whole thing!

May 24, 2006

David Lebovitz writes my new favorite blog about food

Through Treehugger, I stumbled across my new favorite food blog. David Lebovitz is, as Treehugger says, "a Paris transplant who spent years at the forefront of the US' local, organic movement as a pastry chef at Berkeley's Chez Panisse." His blog centers around his life in Paris, and many of his blog entries are unabashedly gastronomical in content.

In particular, this entry about organic foods in France caught my attention. Check out his photos of the delicate wild asparagus, real earthy carrots and the intensely purple kohlrabi. They're all gorgeous, and when you compare them to conventional produce, it's not hard to guess which one you'd prefer. I suspect that the reason the food looks so much more appetizing (even raw) is because it was picked closer to ripeness because it only had to travel a short distance from farm to market. You won't see food look like that at Whole Foods no matter how hard you try; you can only get access to foods like that through farmers' markets (or CSA programs... the food pictured has a similar "look" to the produce we have delivered every Wednesday from Full Belly Farm in Guinda, CA).

Lebovitz's blog is now on my short list... nice work, David.

May 8, 2006

OMG OMG D-LIST CELEBRITY ALERT LOL

I totally walked past Michael Pollan today at the dry cleaners between my house and campus. He was all like talking on his cell phone... I bet he chatting up his publicist about his photo on the NYT front page:

omg omg

I totally use the same dry cleaner as a D-list celebrity. Awesome.

April 19, 2006

Michael Pollan, NPR, and biodiversity

The other day, I came home early and caught a bit of "Fresh Air" on NPR. Terry Gross was interviewing Michael Pollan, faculty here at Berkeley and author of the recent book, The Omnivore's Dilemma.

Pollan's book explores four meals, and examines the ecological/commercial/cultural/industrial impact of these meals. One recurring theme is our current dependence on monocultures for food production. In particular, Pollan highlights corn as a food that finds its way into virtually everything we eat (you could eat corn flakes for breakfast, with milk from cows raised on corn; a typical fast-food meal will have high-fructose corn syrup in the soda, more corn syrups and starches in the french fries, corn starch and corn-based binders in the chicken nuggets, plus all the feed corn that went into raising the chickens that eventually became the nuggets, etc.). Pollan also manages to weave it together into a fascinating narrative.

I would encourage you to listen to Pollan's interview on Fresh Air.

He also gave a recent talk here on campus (which of course I attended). He was hosted by Davia Nelson (one-half of NPR's "Kitchen Sisters" and also faculty here at Berkeley), and gave a more extended discussion of the book. One of the take-home messages was that we are strangling biodiversity on farms by growing field after field after field of single species. He pointed out that while this agricultural strategy is wildly successful in terms of feeding people, it is a huge burden on the local ecology. One recommendation is to encourage local farmers to grow a variety of different foods by patronizing farmer's markets or by participating in CSA (community-supported agriculture) groups. This gives farmers a financial incentive to continue growing a variety of foods for a local community, rather than selling one specific food product to large-volume industrial purchasers.

Supporting this type of agricultural (and therefore biological) diversity also strengthens the resilience of our nation's food supply. To put things in perspective, European wine grapes were decimated in the 1850's by phylloxera, and blight destroyed the Irish potato about the same time. While the French didn't need wine to survive, the Irish were overly dependent on the potato, and almost one million died. Many now argue that we're overly dependent on corn. Should we be relying on so few species for the bulk of our nation's food supply? A consumer can vote with his or her wallet— simply avoid highly processed foods and cook with a variety of locally grown produce.

UPDATE: Supporting local agriculture is also an effective way to reduce energy consumption (you really don't need tomatoes shipped all the way from Chile if they can instead be grown 90 miles away).

UPDATE: Although this article in New Scientist sounds a little alarmist to me, I think it's worth considering the dangers of banana monoculture before it's too late.

March 26, 2006

More crude with your oatmeal, sir?

Jim of blogs for industry brings some much-needed data to the discussion of ag product transportation. After crunching some numbers from the Energy Information Administration (EIA), he concludes that:

[Commercial transportation adds up] to about 14% of total US energy consumption...which means that transportation of Ag products at "more than 20%" would be on the order of 3-4% [of total consumption.]

His estimates are probably good, and generally jive with other statistics provided by the EIA regarding petrol consumption. It is useful to keep in mind that the numbers he uses do not consider import of foreign products (and during the winter months, many fresh fruits and vegetables do come from South American sources). Huski may be correct in pointing out that eating only local foods makes an impact of questionable magnitude on the current energy market. But for many, the ethics of being earth-friendly are completely separable from economics. An article in today's San Francisco Chronicle illustrates that considering energy when choosing everyday foods is a growing habit for many people (†).

A decision clearly more important than food is in choosing good locations for cities before they are built. This may end up being a critical investment we can make in our nation's future; due to their scale and lack of density, our current urban models are overly dependent on abundant sources of energy for transportation. There are no guarantees that said energy will be around just two generations from now (‡).

The EIA says that the United States uses oil for transportation disproportionaly from the rest of the world. Mind you, this is not in a per capita sense (although I bet that's true too), but in a usage distribution sense. From the EIA:

In the United States, in contrast to other regions of the world, about 2/3 of all oil use is for transportation [...] (in most of the rest of the world, oil is more commonly used for space heating and power generation than for transportation.)

Why is this so? In part, because the United States is one of the only industrialized countries that has a high level of commercial activity even in the most inhospitable regions of its interior. North America contains regions of vastly differing climates, and time after time, we have chosen to plunk down entire communities where the local environments do not support agriculture (a.k.a. "life"). Life in a desert city, for example, would be impossible without access to cheap, abundant transportation. The "flourishing communities in the desert" require daily import of food for each of its citizens, a feat only an industrialized country could pull off, and one that is, if not unsustainable, then just plain dumb. I mean, seriously, why do people want to live in places like this? (Viewed along a different axis, the treeless suburban houses remind you an awful lot of the old Soviet-style apartment buildings...)

Why do people live there? I can only guess that it's the access to cheap housing. If true, this would suggest that we'll continue building "out" until we run out of fuel, literally. It's not apparent to me that there's a clear solution... but to be perfectly honest, Jim succeeded making me question whether or not there's a clear and present problem. I do know that I don't like the current method of urban outgrowth—it seems rediculous to plan urban, suburban and ex-urban communities the way we do now (which is to let the housing builders raze the local flora, construct entire residential zones consisting of identical houses in rows, then move on without planting more than 0.3 trees per hectare).

But this, I know, is an unpopular idea. Nobody wants the state dictating where to build housing (I certainly don't). I think the only way to fix this problem is to change the culture so that people would want live close to farms, close to clean water and close to public transportation. This is already happening in California, and as much as I would hate to admit it, the local/organic foods movement can take some credit for that. It remains to be seen if this attitude will be adopted elsewhere...

(†) See also: this article at infosthetics. Excerpt: 'OilStandard' illustrates a potential future when oil will replace gold as the standard by which we trade all other goods & currencies (thanks to Nick for the link).

(‡) For the record, I am certainly not proposing any Malthusian catastrophe. It's just that we may make life easier for future generations if we build cities in a way that has worked for thousands of years (i.e. densely, and close to water and agriculture), rather than the way we started just sixty years ago.

March 10, 2006

Technology may not fix America's energy problem (but food choices will)

While I am a big believer in the inherent good of technology, I also am secretly a bit of an environmentalist. I worry a lot about how the standard of living in most of America is so thoroughly enmeshed with The Automobile. In particular, I think we Americans need to think more about where we place our burgeoning towns, as well as put more thought into the planning of these urban centers. I would also claim that the demand for out-of-state agricultural foodstuffs are the source of many problems with regard to energy consumption. Fixing this problem may not be easy, but would have enormous benefits for national energy policy.

Continue reading "Technology may not fix America's energy problem (but food choices will)" »

March 7, 2006

Langostino lobster (is that like shrimp scampi?)

Sometime last week, Long John Silver's started running ads on the west coast promoting their "Buttered Langostino Lobster Bites." They promised "real Langostino lobster," which raised my B.S. meter to 11: code red. Thus began the search. The Oxford English Dictionary reveals that langostino is "a very large Mediterranean prawn." Wikipedia says that langostino is a Spanish word meaning "prawn."

So after digging more, I found that the FDA allows "langostino" as an acceptable market name for three species:

  • Cervimunida johni;
  • Pleuroncodes monodon; and
  • Munida gregaria

The common name for each of these species is "squat lobster," a name that undoubtedly didn't fare very well in the food industry's focus groups. So what are these little buggers?

You can see for yourself photos of langostino (if you don't read Spanish, the pictures alone are pretty illuminating—be sure to scroll all the way down!). According to Wild Catch Magazine, these mud bugs are less than 3 inches long, and top out at 7 ounces apiece. Compare this to the smallest common American lobster whose carapace alone is the size of the largest squat lobster. It weighs in at a hefty 16 ounces and only goes up from there.

The squat lobsters, while perhaps tasty, don't look too much like the traditional lobster to my eye and importantly, they are from a different phylogenetic family so they are scientifically not lobsters. Most consumers would agree that they look like hermit crabs minus the shell. Something perhaps along the lines of crayfish... in other words, not lobster.

We should be encouraging the companies selling "langostino lobster" (i.e. Red Lobster, Long John Silver's, Rubio's), to market their products as simply "langostino." Many, like myself, would feel better about buying their products because we wouldn't feel like sheep being duped by slick marketing tactics. Don't we as Americans deserve marketing that respects our intelligence?

UPDATE: Although I like the HB3 blog, this is precisely the wrong reaction to the "langostino lobster" marketing campaigns. Unfortunately, those misleading ads are intended to evoke this sort of irrational exuberance.

UPDATE: Here is a good example of how langostino could be presented to the consumer in an honest, ethical manner. Notice how you don't feel lied to when you read that site? Are you listening, Yum Brand foods? We consumers don't like corporations trying to fool us, and we vote with our wallets.

UPDATE: NPR's All Things Considered did a story on the Langostino controversy.

February 22, 2006

Carbon monoxide on meat: a good idea?

I can't decide if this is a good idea or not:

If some of the meat in supermarkets is looking rosier than it used to, the reason is that a growing number of markets are selling it in airtight packages treated with a touch of carbon monoxide to help the product stay red for weeks.

This form of "modified atmosphere packaging," a technique in which other gases replace oxygen, has become more widely used as supermarkets eliminate their butchers and buy precut, "case-ready" meat from processing plants.

I've got mixed feelings. Saying consumers should be able to use color to help distinguish which meats are fresh is kind of a bad argument, in my opinion. Color is often a bad indicator in that brown meat isn't always rotten. Of course, now we'll just have the opposite problem, which admittedly isn't much better for consumers. But I'm not convinced just yet if it's really all that bad.

But I do think the science of it is interesting! Does anybody know if CO inhibits bacterial growth (bacteria do use heme groups as well...)? Just curious.

June 27, 2005

Two nine words:

I have just two nine words for you:

Red potato pizza with pancetta, goat cheese and arugula.

+ +

Giao bought me a baking stone yesterday at Sur La Table (isn't she wonderful?). I used it to make a crunchy, brick-oven style pizza that night. This recipe is incredible; the creaminess of the goat cheese really complements the spiciness of the arugula. The salty kalamata olives pairs well with the pancetta, while the fresh rosemary and potatoes bring substance to it all and really make it pop:

Prepare a pizza crust and let rise in a warm place. Par-boil ten small red potatoes, drain and let cool. Cut pancetta into small pieces. When cooled, cut potatoes into small, thin pieces and pan-fry until lightly browned. A few minutes before removing from the heat, add minced garlic and a tablespoon of fresh rosemary. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Shape the crust then add to it a small amount of a strong cheese (e.g. gruyere) and a small handful of freshly crumbled goat cheese. Spread the potatoes on top of this, then add one more layer of the two cheeses. Sprinkle pancetta and halved kalamata olives on top, then cook at 475°F on a pre-heated baking stone for 15 minutes or until bottom is almost blackened. Before serving, top with fresh arugula.

Ooh, baby.

June 13, 2005

Let us break bread together

Commercial bread sucks. Down with mass-market wheat-candy!

Over the last few days, I have begun to experiment with making my own sourdough (I am in the San Francisco Bay area, after all, and where better to make sourdough than here?). So with my new standing mixer and a little experimenting, I made my first proper loaf of sourdough, along with a baguette and a small sour batard.

All of these breads were made using only wheat flour, water, sea salt, olive oil and wild yeasts and lactobacilli native to Berkeley.

"They are pretty," Giao says. These babies are my children. And much like my own children, I can't wait to rip open their brown skins and devour their flesh.