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What type of Cheese are you?

blue03Cheese Test: What type of cheese are you?

Sent to me by a friend (thanks Jeanne!). Pretty cool.

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A Step in the Right Direction

Last week, I was pretty discouraged  when reading that the National Organic Program administration had made changes to the intent of National Organic Standards.  There were a lot of problems with this - they did it without consulting the board or the public, and the changes really messed with the intent of organic -- saying that there were certain situations when you could administer antibiotics and still consider a dairy cow to be organic, certain situations where certain pesticides were okay as long as you made a "good faith effort" to figure out whether the pesticide was a bad one, etc., etc. 

It was a mess.  It was basically flushing the "USDA Certified Organic" idea down the drain.  While I didn't write about this on my blog, Jason has been having to hear me rail against it for about five straight days.

Well ... something very cool happened yesterday.  Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman rescinded the changes, and said that from now on, the National Organic Program has to run changes by the board and the public before any policy is set.  Yee haw!  It's very encouraging that someone in Washington heard the outcry and made a change due to that.

Read all about it in the Chronicle:  " 'Organic' outcry heeded Feds withdraw changes allowing more pesticides"

Soft Addictions

Inspired by mipmup's post "crack", here is my current list of soft addictions - the tangible items that you just relish in your day ...
Acme Bread, Berkeley
Bloglines
Chowhound San Francisco
Acme Bread Ciabatta Rolls
Rustichella D'Abruzzo Egg Pastas
Alias
Swanton Berry Farms Strawberries
Firefox
Capricious Feta Cheese
Hangar 1 Vodka
Everything iPodSwanton Berry Farms
Penzey's Spices
This American Life
My Le Creuset Dutch Oven
Macaroons from Golden Gate Bakery in Chinatown
Randy Cohen, The Ethicist
Blue Bottle Coffee Company

Marina Farmer's Market

marinamarketToday was opening day for the Chestnut Street Farmer's Market. It's on Steiner between Chestnut and Lombard, and is held from 3-7 pm on Tuesdays. Currently, it is being held through October, but they are petitioning to have this market be year-round. The sponsor is the Marina Merchants Association.

This is a bustling, busy market. There is no "lag time" happening here, where people have to get used to a market in the neighborhood. The crowd was pretty thick. The funniest thing we saw was a man coming home from work in a suit and tie stop and say to the person on his cell phone "Woah, there's a farmer's market in my neighborhood." There is definitely a high percentage of people that seemed to be walking by, a lot of seniors, and a lot of strollers. This is a great neighborhood to have a market - everyone is out and walking in that neighborhood and something like this will attract a lot of attention.

There was a guy from Claypool's BBQ dressed up as Elvis passing out samples, which was pretty entertaining. There was also live music and a cooking demonstration by the chef from Boboquivari's on Lombard (I didn't get to taste anything -- the senior factor around the free food booth was about as intense as a Vegas Buffet)

There is a good variety of farms, and you could definitely come here and purchase everything that you needed for dinner. The selection is representative of what's currently available at most markets. The farms were a mix of booths that were new to me, and familiar booths from the Ferry Plaza and Marin markets.

One farmer mentioned that, even though there were a lot of people, he thought that people had to adjust to the idea of a market before they'd start utilizing it as a true food source.

happyboykalePros of this market: Cool neighborhood feel, nice representation of food, in an area with a lot of prepared foods - so not having prepared foods at the market is not a huge deal.

Cons of this market: Of 21 booths I noted, only 5 were certified organic. No organic strawberries. Not sure where you'd park if you were to drive to this market (Lombard/Webster Lot, I guess)

Farmers at the Marina FM that I noted include:

Tres Classique. Dressings
Esther's German Bakery. (Mountain View)
Santa Cruz Salmon (fyi ... $11.99/lb)
Rodriguez Farms. Berries (Watsonvielle)
Apple-A-Day Ratzlaff Ranch. Apple Juice (Sebastopol)
Eggs
Joe Gotelli & Sons. Cherries (Acampo)
*Lagier Ranch. Cherries, Almonds.
Sorensen. Blueberries (Fresno)
Spring Hill Cheese. (Sonoma)
Rhodes Family Farms. Tomatoes, Zucchini, Cucumber. (Visalia)
Kika's Farms. Berries (Watsonville)
Bill Ferry Ranches. Oranges
*Hazel Dell Mushrooms. (Watsonville)
Hamada Farms. Stone Fruit (Kingsburg)
*Kashiwase. Stone Fruit (Winton)
Marshall's Farm. Honey
Blossom Bluff Farm. Stone Fruit (Parlier)
*Live Oak. Greens, Radishes, Olive Oil (Rumsey)
Living Water Farms. Greens, radishes, beets (Napa)
*Happy Boy Farms. Greens, pattypan squash, herbs (Watsonville)

* = certified organic

Choosing your organic produce

It's not always feasible to purchase all your produce as certified organic.  For many reasons -- budget, availability, etc -- you may end up buying some of your items conventionally grown.  As far as chemical contamination goes, here is the list of what foods you should pay the most attention to purchasing organically.  Also following is a list of foods that are low in pesticides -- those that you don't necessarily have to go out of your way to find organically grown.

This list was found in the "Organic Food for Less" article in Organic Style.  You can also download a pocket guide with the same info from the Environmental Working Group here.

FOOD HIGH IN PESTICIDES
Apples
Bell peppers
Celery
Cherries
Chile peppers
Imported grapes
Nectarines
Peaches
Pears
Raspberries
Strawberries
Tomatoes
 

FOOD LOW IN PESTICIDES
Asparagus
Avocados
Bananas
Blueberries
Broccoli
Brussels sprouts
Cabbage
Cauliflower
Eggplants
Grapefruit
Kiwifruits
Mangoes
Okra
Onions
Papayas
Pineapples
Plums
Radishes
Watermelons

Is my blog burning: Rice - Horchata

horchatamontage"Is my blog burning" is a theme event where many bloggers post about the same food topic on the same date. This, the fourth IMBB event, was hosted by Pim.. To see the hub of IMBB for the current rendition, see this link.

This is my first time participating in IMBB. My contribution: Horchata.

This was my first time making horchata. I gathered a few recipes from the web and tweaked here and there to create my own. I enjoy purchasing a good, housemade horchata when I am out, but I will probably never make it again. Not that the result was bad by any means, but given the work involved, the straining of finely-ground rice, and the mess in my kitchen I expected the result to be spectacular - which it wasn't.

Oh well, live and learn.

At first I thought it was my recipes, but a friend today confirmed that this is the way to make it, and that Susana Trilling's recipe is basically the same. Another friend suggested I ask my grandmother how to make it -- which I kind of cracked up about. While I actually do have a Mexican grandmother, I just talked to her and she has never made horchata. "It's not up my alley," I think was her exact phrase.


Horchata

6 tablespoons long grain white rice
1 1/4 cups blanched skinless almonts
1 cinnamon stick
approximately 1 tablespoon lime zest
1/2 cup white granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
5 cups water

preparation time: 24 hours (approx 45 min active time)

Grind the rice using a blender or coffee grinder, as smooth as possible.
Combine ground rice, almonds, cinnamon, lime zest, and 3 cups of water.
Cover and let stand overnight.
Blend the rice mixture until as smooth as possible - several minutes.
Add 2 more cups of water, half the sugar, the vanilla and blend a few seconds more.
Pour the liquid through a fine mesh strainer to get out most of the solids.
Pour the strained liquid through damp cheese cloth.
Add more sugar and water to taste.
Cover and refrigerate.
Serve over ice.

Source credit: Gourmet Sleuth, Food Network

Candied Citrus Peels

candiedmartini

I have never been much of a baker, or a sweets cook. But last year, I picked up some interesting varieties of citrus and decided to make candied citrus peels. They lasted me through the summer, and I made them again this year. I adapt Jacque Pepin's recipe, and just used whatever citrus I could pick up. This year, I told my favorite citrus woman what I was doing, and she picked out some fruits with extra thick peels (ie., pomelos). It's fun, and they are great in drinks or just to snack on. I am sure the bakers out there could also do some pretty cool things with them in baked goods.

Pepin's recipe is extra easy because he uses the white part of the peel as well as the outer peel. Makes the process pretty simple. I am not very exact about using his exact citrus types, but will post them here so you get an idea of proportions.

The most important part of this recipe is rinsing the citrus and the pot in the middle of the process to get rid of some of the bitterness.

3 large oranges with thick, shiny skin
1 grapefruit, preferably pink
2 large limes
2 lemons
1 1/2 cups sugar, plus extra sugar to roll the peels in

With a knife, make incisions through the skin of each piece of fruit to separate it into six sections. Separate the skin from the fruit.

Place the peels in a pot and cover with cold water. Use enough water so that the peels are well covered. Bring to a strong boil and let boil for about 30 seconds. Pour into a colander, rinse under cold water, and rinse the pot. Return the peels to the pot, add water, cover, and repeat. Return the peels to the clean pot again and add 8 cups of water and the sugar. Bring to a boil and boil gently, uncovered, for about 1 1/2 hours. The skins should be almost transparent, and there should be just enough thick syrup to coat them.

Transfer the peels to a cookie sheet covered with sugar.

Roll them in the sugar, arrange them on another cookie sheet, and let them cool, dry, and harden for at least 1 hour. Strain the sugar and return it to the sugar bin.

Store in a jar in the fridge.

Recipe Credit: Jacques Pepin, jacquespepin.net

candiedcitrusmontage

Best Mail Day

I just looked through my mail, and it left me giddy. It was like a red-letter mail day. I received:

* the June Organic Style
* the June Vanity Fair with Brad Pitt on the cover.
* THREE Netflix movies: In America, and Sex and the City, Season 6, Discs 1 & 2.
* ZERO bills.

Yippee!

I am ordering a pizza, and tucking in for the evening. But what to read or watch first?

10 Recipes

Yesterday on a comment in an Epicurious recipe, I saw a person make reference to a "10 Recipe" rotation -- 10 recipes that she has in her household that she rotates through. I had heard of this idea before, but have never attempted to implement it myself. But, given the amount that I should be focusing on other things at the present time, I have decided to try this out. As much as I'd like to think about it more, I think that this will help me focus my efforts in other directions besides dinner, and will help focus my shopping. It's so easy for me to go off on shopping tangents for a specific recipe.

The recipes I am choosing are pretty open-ended, and most have a lot of variations that will keep my interest. So .. Jason and I put together an initial list. I am sure it will change as we get into it, but I am excited about it. (By the way, looking at this list, it will be pretty obvious that we are not on Atkins ... ha ha)

1. Simple Stir-Fry with chicken or tofu, veggies, ginger.
2. Soft tacos with veggies or ground beef
3. "Crack Salad" with warm lentils and bacon. The crack salad reference is Jason's -- just referring to a green salad with good addictive dressing (for example, this salad counts as crack salad). Warm lentils and bacon recipe is from Mark Bittman.
4. Risotto with Farmer's Market veggies
5. Panini with whatever's around
6. Fish Stew from elise's simply recipes. So easy, and delicious.
7. Spaghetti with whatever's around. (ie., this spaghetti)
8. Grilled fish
9. Black beans with green rice
10. Frittata with whatever's around.

Spring Salad

springsalad

Realized that I had a lot of produce left this week, and so made a quick dinner for us of this salad along with warm lentils with bacon (lentil recipe from Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything -- a fantastic recipe that I make often).

The salad was just made with the fresh ingredients that I had on hand. So often in a salad, you look for something to add "just a bit of color" but this dish was remarkable in all it's greenness -- it was fresh looking and delicious.

I used (amounts are approximate):

1/2 cup shelled sugar peas.
1/2 cup asparagus, blanched in salty water for one minute and cooled.
2 cups arugula, torn or cut
1 tablespoon lemon zest
olive oil
juice from 1/2 lemon

In a bowl, mix asparagus with lemon zest.
Add peas and lemon juice. Toss
Add arugula, some olive oil. Toss.
Adjust taste with salt and pepper.

Cannery Farmer's Market

canneryfmThe new SF Cannery Farmer's Market opened up today.  It is going to be a Friday & Saturday market, which has gained the attention of many in the community. 

This market has a great feel to it.  The cannery folks were very smart in putting a market here -- get the locals to come to, what is essentially a very touristy area of SF.  I had not been down to that area in a couple years, and overheard others saying the same thing.

I was glad to see the farms that were represented at this market ... some of them are from the Ferry Plaza Market, and some I have only seen at other markets.  The booth I was probably the most excited about is the De Santis (?) citrus people -- they are from Fresno and I usually only purchase their goods at the Marin Civic Center Market.  She usually has such wonderful varieties of citrus.  My only purchase of the day was from this booth - a meyer lemon and pecans.  She had fresh almonds, which looked interesting.

Riverdog Farm was new to me, and had a great variety of goods - greens, radishes, turnips, sweet peas.

There was a live musician playing, and a great area with benches to sit and listen.  The market look and feel is great -- all the farmer's have booths that look similar, and the market fills the entire area.  There is a seafood and beer bar in the middle of the market, where it looks like you could sit and have a meal and a beer right in the middle of the activity.

I will be returning.

Pros of this market:  Really casual, laid back feel, easy parking, great group of farmers, easy to purchase everything you'd need for a meal here.
Cons of the market:  No cheese, no eggs, no prepared food booths for breakfast.

Farmers at the Cannery FM that I noted include:

Cedar Creek Salmon
Alioto-Lazio Fish
De Santis Farms, Citrus (Fresno)
Brokaw Farms, Avocados (Ventura)
Eatwell Farms (Yolo County)
Iacopi Farms, peas, fava beans
Capay Organic
Twin Girls Farms
Boudin Bread
orchid booth
Wilson Farm, tomatoes
Sunshine Organic Strawberries
Swanton Berry Farms
Kashiwase Farms, stone fruit.
Riverdog Farms (Yolo)
Santa Barbara Pistachios
Lagier Ranches, almonds
Orchard Farms (Sebastopol)
Solano Mushrooms
Cadillac Mountain Flowers

08.24.04.  update:  I returned to this market last Friday and there were a LOT less vendors ... probably one third of the original count, I would guess.  Still a good place to go and pick up a couple of things (I was craving fruit and found plenty), but almost too few vendors to make it a one-stop shop.  Of the vendors I can remember: Twin Girls, De Santis (a great reason to go to this market), Wilson, Sunshine Organics, an avocado vendor (not Brokaw), Santa Barbara Pistachios were still around (I think a couple others, but I wasn't taking notes).

07.01.05 update:  The Cannery Farmer's Market is now open only on Saturdays, from 9 am - 3 pm.  No more Friday market!

The High Price of Cheap Food

Helen Wagenvoord wrote an excellent article in the Chronicle last week:  "The high price of cheap food: Mealpolitik over lunch with Michael Pollan".

Michael Pollan is right up there with Alice Waters and Eric Schlosser and all of those people (lots of local people in these parts) who make you question what you are putting into your mouth and where it came from.  He is the journalist who wrote the article a couple years ago in the New York Times about grass-fed beef vs. corn-fed beef.  He made a vivid point -- one that changed my life -- by purchasing a cow and watching it's life as it was raised to be beef for sale. 

And lo and behold ... he is now in Berkeley teaching science & technology journalism at the School of Journalism.  I think I am going to become a groupie. 

I encourage you to read the article.  It's very interesting.  Here's a quote:

"It's about asking questions and knowing more. The more you know, the better you become at making good decisions for your health and the environment," he says, "and the more you realize that those are not separate issues. The other day I saw a woman ask the person behind the meat counter if the salmon was wild or farmed. When she heard it was farmed, she turned around and left the store. That sends a very powerful message"

Update: found a link to the full article - "Power Steer", which was the grass-fed beef article mentioned above.

Salon: How could women do that?

Interesting article in Salon over the weekend. "How could women do that?" explores the fact that women were involved in the torture of Iraqi prisoners ...

Of all the shocking photos to come out of Abu Ghraib, some of the most harrowing feature not a male but a female soldier, Lynndie England, an apple-cheeked 21-year-old from Fort Ashby, W.Va.

England has quickly become infamous for the photos in which she appears: There's the one of her jeering at hooded Iraqi prisoners standing in line, cigarette dangling from her mouth, pointing at the prisoners' genitalia. And there's the one that appeared yesterday, in which she's dragging a prisoner around by a leash attached to his neck.

She is now detained at Fort Bragg, N.C., where she has reportedly been denied legal counsel. (England, the only one of the accused to be dismissed from duty, is pregnant.) According to news stories, her family contends that she was a "paper-pusher" who wasn't trained to interrogate prisoners and was only "in the wrong place at the wrong time." Perhaps. But that doesn't change the global reaction to the photos: How could American soldiers gleefully torture other human beings? And then: How could a woman do this?

When the subject of women in combat was a hot topic in the 1980s, proponents argued that female soldiers would humanize the hypermasculinized machinations of the military -- perhaps even help prevent scandals like Abu Ghraib from happening. But the terrifying reports from the past week have thrown a major wrench into that theory. For centuries, women have been the casualties of mass rape and sexual torture during wartime, but for the first time in American history, women are accused of being perpetrators of sexual humiliation against male prisoners of war. Besides England, two other of the six soldiers who face court-martial for abusing Iraqi prisoners are women (Spc. Megan Ambuhl and Spc. Sabrina Harman). And, of course, there's former Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, the only female commander in the war zone, who oversaw Abu Ghraib and two other large jails until she was relieved of her position.

Full article can be read here with a subscription or after viewing an ad or two.

Happy Friday

Inspired by mipmup's happy list, here are the things that are making me smile today:

* Lunch plans
* Kate England's cool icons (via http://www.iconfactory.com/)
* A new book club book: The Life of Pi
* Leftovers for breakfast - rice and beans from La Palma Mexicatessen.
* iTunes new release: version 4.5 with party shuffle.
* Weekend plans with friends
* Izze Beverage Company - Clementine Soda

My Find of the Weekend

Nalgene Wide Mouth Insert

Anyone who uses Nalgene Wide Mouthed Water Bottles is aware of the issue: You so cooly try to take a sip of water from your bottle and the water pours all over you. The wide-mouths, while great for things like adding ice and cleaning, are horrible for drinking. That is, until the drinking insert came along. Some savvy business people are creating a insert that makes the drinking experience from the Nalgene a whole different experience. The only minor squabble I have with the insert is that it is easy to push down into the bottle, and that it adds another thing to wash and another possible germ site - but I will adjust to that.

I purchased my insert from REI (not from the company linked above), tested it out at home, and can confirm that these work.

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