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Posts Tagged ‘vegetarianism’

News bites: Passover edition

March 29th, 2010

Passover starts tonight! Here’s some of what you need to know.

  • Healthy cooking for Passover? All it takes is tweaking [JTA]
  • Good to the last plague [Washington Jewish Week] Until last year I’d never seen this haggadah. I think it’s an American thing (?).
  • Recipes: Gluten-Free Matzo Balls [Gluten-Free Bay] It’s from 2007, but my friend Lisa shared it & I wanted to pass it on.
  • Gefilte fish: baked, not boiled [Toronto Star]  …With a little history lesson on gefilte fish in there.
  • Although it’s not food related: Passover Quotes, Greetings, And Passages For Passover 2010 [Huffington Post]

More to follow, no doubt.

Wishing my Jewish friends a happy and meaningful pesach. I leave you with the new acoustic version of the smash YouTube hit, “20 Things to Do With Matzah.” starring William Levin and Michelle Citrin.
(Thanks to Esther K. for the video.)

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Vegetarian Food Fair: Loving the sunshine, avoiding the soy

September 17th, 2009

P1050610The weather in Toronto last weekend was beautiful, a great weekend for the 25th annual Vegetarian Food Fair at Harbourfront. I went on Saturday intending to catch Meghan’s demo and got there in plenty of time to get a seat but the lure of the sunshine pulled me out of the room in which she was presenting. Anyhow, I figured that my parents and I may as well leave seats to those who don’t already know Meghan’s ideology, right? Those who don’t already read her blog (or her column in National Post but I rather give her blog the traffic) or belong to her Facebook group or occasionally chat with her online.  I’d been interested in the demo prior to hers (Marni Wasserman’s) but didn’t make it.

Lured out, we checked out the various vendors and marketplace. Attempting to avoid the vast array of fake soy products I had only a nibble of fake soy when my father got a plate from King’s Cafe (vegetable dumplings, soy “drumsticks”). Instead I noshed on kiwi, dipped into hummus and babaghanouj from Sunflower Kitchen (it’s my favourite line of hummus for its lack of preservatives and I know the owner), sampled and bought gluten free granola from In the Raw and savored gluten free daily free raw “cheesecake” from Living Sweets.

In the corner of the Brigantine Room I found Vita-Mix Corp.’s booth and inquired about price (show discount? tax free?), stating that I’ve wanted one for years. The lady beside me had just finished saying the same thing. The booth staffer stated that she’d wanted one for years and finally realized that “saving up for it” wasn’t going to happen (we agreed that people don’t put money away for purchases even when intentioned) sucked it up and put it on the credit card. Months later she went to work for the company. I’d suck it up if I hadn’t just bought this MacBook. Oh priorities.

I also sampled Mrs. Beans coffee (their website URL results in a 404 error but maybe that’s just right now). They serve fresh roasted, fair trade and organic coffee grown by small scale farmers in Guatemala, Ethopia, Rwanda, Mexico, Peru and Columbia, roasting small batches in an eco friendly hot air roasting system. I’ve heard that once roasted, coffee goes stale within a few days – less than a week. Mrs Bean’s weekly delivery service guarantees one fresh cup for coffee for 7 days with each serving individually vacuum packaged. Check their URL again to see if it’s up and get more information. (Here is where I’m glad that I take promotional material with me if I think I might read it.)

Was the coffee good? YES! And, I realized, for those who drink coffee regularly (I don’t) it costs less than or about the same as a Starbucks habit. A 14 day supply costs $1.50 per day. Of course, if you drink more than one cup a day or pour your coffee into a huge mug that’s a whole other issue entirely.  The coffee was also good paired with New Moon Kitchen cookies (my dad bought three bags because the were 3 for $10 – or in other words, he let himself be manipulated :) ).

Other offerings that I didn’t try included vegan truffles,  ice cream and vegan cupcakes, tea and Jamaican patties.

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At last year’s event I discovered some cool products and found the fair to have a more diverse group of vendors. I also liked the selection of presenters better last year. Planning an event of this magnitude isn’t easy, though, and when you’re trying to please everyone you take your chances.

Photo credit: saguarostrength from 2009 Vegetarian Food Fair Flickr Pool

Whereas I only got a photo of the human pea but saw the human banana BlogTO‘s Jen Brailsford got photo of the pea, the banana and… whatever the heck that is. A carrot?

After wandering around I sat by the water watching the people and boats and the airplanes flying into the island airport. Then it was a quick stop back to the Sunflower Kitchen booth to buy our dips before going home.

Numerous people have criticized the festival saying that there was too much fake meat. I can understand that but here’s my take on it: There’s something to be said for playing it safe for the masses and trying to please more people. Usually, and despite the fact that I try to, I’m of the opinion that you shouldn’t try to please everyone. However, at an event like this  there can be something for everyone.

They could preach exclusively to the converted (the current vegetarians and vegans), potentially intimidating everyone else and giving off the vibe that the outdated notions of vegetarianism is true. Or, they can offer something challenging to those people AND also make it accessible to the rest.

If fake meat is what it takes to ease them in than it’s a start. That’s Vegetarianism 101. Vegetarianism 201, however, should be “Now that you’ve made the transition, let’s decrease the amount of soy and increase the amount of vegetables and grains”.  I admit – shamefully when I speak to some people – that I sometimes like soy meatballs on my salad. However, I cook a lot with my favourite grain, quinoa.

(I’ve also been eating vegan dinners all week because of the bounty of local produce and the fact that after a summer of letting vegetables from the CSA and farmer’s market go to waste I’m trying to make an effort to use them.)

An idea: Borrow from the conference model of presentations being rated beginner, intermediates and advanced.

What other bloggers are saying about the Vegetarian Food Fair:

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Wednesday’s links: Something for everyone

June 24th, 2009
  • Staying sober a challenge in the alchol-heavy hospitality industry. [New York Times] I found the personal stories in this article very interesting.
  • Treehugger proposes a weekday vegetarian diet [Treehugger]
  • Ever wonder why lemon makes milk curdle? It involves protein, negative charge and bondage (er, bonding). [The Kitchn]
  • Creating satisfying food is central to home cooks and chefs — as well as to companies that have produced foods that have helped lead to the obesity epidemic. Mark Bittman on Making Food Satisfying. [New York Times]
  • In his article Bittman links the article “How the Food Makers Captured Our Brains“. It’s fascinating. Quote: “[Kessler] offers descriptions of how restaurants and food makers manipulate ingredients to reach the aptly named ‘bliss point.’”
  • According to this newsletter, the average child gets 5+ servings of pesticides in their food and water each day and the pesticide Atrazine is so toxic it is banned in Europe, but it is used so widely in the U.S., that it is found in 71% of the U.S. drinking water. (Thanks to my mother for forwarding me the newsletter. I went to the online archive so that I could share it with you.)
  • One woman’s changing relationship with food and what she’s learned in the process of doing so while getting healthier. [In The Raw] There’s some great tips in there. The theme of conscious eating comes up (in my life) again and again I forget to exercise it, in part because I eat while doing other things. She touches on multitasking while eating.
  • Torontist on Toronto’s a la Carte food cart program. Not all good news.
  • Meghan weighs in on milk and advises you not to drink conventional milk. [Making Love in the Kitchen] Milk bad. I know this and yet I can’t seem to give up cheese even though avoiding cheese would fit the reason I rarely eat meat.
  • Food industry propaganda: New Organic Logo Will Provide More Opportunities For Organic Producers. [Canadian Food Inspection Agency] “Canada’s Organic Products Regulations (OPR)…set out rigourous standards for the certification of products as organic by accredited certification bodies. Products that meet the production requirements and contain at least 95 per cent organic content may be labelled as “organic” and feature the new Biologique Canada Organic Logo.

No links for tomorrow likely because I’ll be away from a computer all day. However, I do need to write a post about Food Share’s open house from last weekend. I’d forgotten.

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To-WHAT-en??

November 26th, 2008

You’ve heard of turkeys and Tofurkeys, right?

Perhaps you’ve heard of turkuden, perhaps not. Here’s a description from the web page linked in the previous sentence:

What is turducken? It is a chicken stuffed inside a duck which is then stuffed inside a turkey. The term turducken comes from the combination of tur(key), duck, and (chick)en.

What happens when you make a turduken made with soy beans and wheat gluten (other than problems for celiacs)?

The answer is Tofucken.

And no, I’m no’tofucken kidding.  I came upon it in a post on Serious Eats called “Tofucken, the Vegetarian Turducken, and Other Interesting Meat Marriages“. My reaction when I read the post: Laughter, the thought “I MUST blog this and share as widely as possible”, and more laughter. Then I started blogging and bad puns such as “no’tofucken” popped into my head. Then I laughed some more at my own puns and at the word “tofucken”. Serious Eats picked it up from a website called “Table Manners”.  How’s that for irony?

Yes, sometimes I’m uncouth but the fact that I use such a word and know what it means speaks for a general presence of “couth”. This reminds me of the time that someone told me that I’m not vacuous because I know what it means and can spell it. Smrt, I am, and you know that Homer would be all over this “tofucken” until he found out what it is.

I’ve digressed.

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Links: Reviews, useful stuff, and local

September 11th, 2008
  • Cruelty of meat industry concerns vegan activist. The next time you call someone a chicken think about how those demeaning terms help people justify the cruelty to animals he says is rampant in North America’s livestock farms and slaughterhouses.
  • Product Review from Slashfood: The Handpresso. It’s a portable, manual espresso maker. Boiling water from a kettle is poured into the Handspresso and the coffee comes from espresso pods. The shot is pumped by hand. The unit sells for over $150 + price of pods. Still, an interesting product and a good addition to your cubicle.
  • Banana flour in the news: A resistant starch-rich powder from banana powder could boost the nutritional content of pasta, report researchers from Spain and Mexico.

I haven’t tasted any of these but have opinions anyway:  I don’t understand why people can’t make their own oatmeal. Throw some regular oats (not instant) and milk or water in a container, microwave while you’re going about your morning prep, and then it’s done. I don’t believe in instant oatmeal since regular oatmeal made in the microwave is pretty much instant – takes less time than boiling a kettle – and doesn’t have added sugars. Some of the other breakfasts seem easy to whip up, and lots of that stuff is available at small grocery stores. I could certainly find some on my way to work. Starbucks should stick to what they’ve always done: Coffee that melts your insides (or feels like it)

  • Taste T.O. on the upcoming Picnic at the Brickworks. I really wanted to go to this when I found out about it. So, but the $110 ticket price made that impossible. Instead I’m volunteering at it. Looking forward to it, even though it’s not the most glamorous of volunteer positions. My friend and I are shuttle bus attendants. Someone’s got to take those types of positions though, and I’m not opposed to it. I’m happy to help (and be part of a cool event without paying over $100 for it).

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Last six posts from my other blog

May 21st, 2008

Instead of moving the posts over here are links. Any comments can be left here.

Published May 20, 2008 (most recent): Popcorn prices rise, food snobbery, many Jewish references, a reference to Lost and more. Feeling spoiled, snobby and guilty, how corn stocks will increase the price of movie tickets, Tips for Feeding Grieving Friends and dog beer.

Published May 16, 2008: Friday’s food blog. I like pie. And tarts. Links to homemade yogurt, a review for a kombucha drink, and a note about using wakame with caution.

Published: May 14, 2008: Food blogginess. References posts about chocolate and an essay from Slate that I really like and will link again here. It’s called Meatless Like Me- I may be a vegetarian, but I still love the smell of bacon. I keep thinking about the following statement from that article:

“I try to represent for the animal kingdom, but take a look at my shoes—they’re made of leather, which, I am told by those with expert knowledge of the tanning process, comes from dead cows. This is the sort of revelation that prompts meat boosters to pick up the triumphant lamb shank once again and accuse us of hypocrisy. Well, sort of. (Hey, you try to find a pair of nonleather dress shoes.) My dedication to the cause might be incomplete, but I’d still say that doing something beats doing nothing.”

Published May 11, 2008: More food blog goodness. Stir fries, roasted vegetables, weird uses for vodka and some cool recipes.

Published May 08, 2008: Food blog #2: Fruit and cupcakes. Includes a link to a discussion about storing fresh herbs.

Published April 30, 2008: Experimenting with a new blog format: Food blog. There’s a good link in there to a post in David Lebovitz’s blog about food photography.

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