Category Archives: WIDE WORLD OF VEG

less food waste & more delicious salami

   salumi_4 Today on belly, sister T & sister D spend the first hour with the aptly named Aime Green, who travels the country helping
festivals to manage their waste and focus on sustainability.  And we'll be talking compost, yei! 

Then we are off on a belly safari to Billinudgel, to the Salumi Australia factory, to learn how artisan smallgoods (salumi in Italian) are made, and how they differ from the home made and the big fast factory methods.

 

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To contact Aime Green:

http://greenchief@sustainability.com<mailto:greenchief@sustainability.com>

 

To find out more about Salumi Australia, especially where they will be next

https://www.facebook.com/SalumiAustralia

And the website, which should have lots of recipes after Easter, they promised

http://www.salumi.com.au/

 

Meantime, here are a couple from the bellysisters

 

FROM THE BELLY LAB – PIGGY ROOTS RECIPE – by sister T

 

piggy roots

 

small onions, whole, peeled
medium or small potatoes, whole, peeled or unpeeled
mixed roots such as parsnips, carrots, beetroot, cleaned, left whole or halved or quartered lengthways
(opt) whole chillies and halved and seeded capsicum
fresh rosemary or thyme sprigs
smoky pancetta
good olive oil

This is a way to simply dress up veg to accompany roast meats, or makes a very good meal on its own.  And if you eat the potatoes on the first night you can mix the rest through cooked rice and reheat in the oven the following night.  So you can feel at one with our peasant ancestors, who could make a little bit of 'his majesty the pig' go a very long way.

pre-heat oven to 180-200 degrees C
oil base of a wide oven dish, add veg and herbs, salt, pepper, light drizzle of olive oil
cut pancetta into 1 cm thick slices, then 1cm wide strips (similar to French lardons)
add to veg – the only slight trick to this dish is to have the pancetta on top and not stir the veg until the strips have rendered their fat into the veg and gone crispy, so the roots absorb (and cook in) the fat and smokyness.  You don't need a lot of pancetta to make a big difference to the flavour.  I used about 3kg of veg to 2 thick slices of pancetta.
The capsicum adds a moist element, but it's not essential, and the chillies are good left whole so they don't burn and can be left to the chilli lovers only.

 

ITALIAN CLASSIC – BUCATINI ALL'AMATRICIANA RECIPE

translated by sister T from Slow Food Ed 2001 – "Ricette di Osterie d'Italia" – Italian tavern/bistro dishes
recipe from ristorante La Conca, right in the town of Amatrice

 

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This recipe from the  mountains of central Italy  is as famous within Italy as Ligurian pesto is around the world.  Even by Italian standards it gives rise to more growling about "the one and only proper recipe" than most – often because guanciale, cured pig jowl, is supposed to be the one and only piggy bit to use.  But if you can't find guanciale, use a good pancetta.

For 4 people

500 g bucatini pasta
1 kg peeled tomatoes
400 g guanciale
1/2 glass (say 100/150 mL) dry white wine
aged pecorino cheese (not Parmesan)
extra virgin olive oil
chilli powder, salt

Cut any hard bits off the guanciale and cut into small dice.  Brown in a cast iron pan with a little olive oil and chilli powder.  Add the wine, then squashed peeled tomatoes, salt, cook 15 minutes.
Meantime cook bucatini in plenty of salted water.  Drain well.
Add to tomato sauce pan and stir with pecorino until well combined.
Serve on hot plates.

Obviously a pretty simple recipe that relies on good ingredients – but you are allowed to use tinned tomatoes I think.  Absolutely no garlic or onions according to Mrs Perilli from La Conca.

 

SALUMI SAFARI

 

If you would like to listen to the audio of Sister T's belly safari at the Salumi Australia HQ in Billinudgel, please just click on the audio files below, or check out the great pics by the belly photographer, Madam Zaza.  You can almost smell the salami!  Actually one of the most interesting things is that the aging room, which was simply loaded with all sorts of good things (roughly 10 tons of cured meat), smelled more of pleasant moulds, like a cheese room.  I was constantly reminded of the similarity of techniques and natural processes between cured meats and cheeses and winemaking – the magic of fermentation, and the temperature and hygiene control that skilled producers can use to work with nature, rather than bombing our food with chemicals designed to counteract hurried and potentially harmful industrial processes.  Though I still have strong doubts about pig fat actually being mostly unsaturated (as Michael says in our interview), I love his idea that animals don't make bad fats, factories make bad fats.  If you know who first came up with that one, please let the bellysisters know.

 

Salumi safari Part 1salumi_2

 

Salumi safari Part 2 – drying room

 

Salumi safari – Part 3 – aging room

 

Salumi safari Part 4

 

 

 

BELLY BULLETIN

Research out of Duke-NUS Graduate Medical school in Singapore published in the Journal of Hepatology has discovered a link between consumption of coffee and prolonging the lives of those with cirrhosis of the liver.‭   ‬The study found that people living with cirrhosis of the liver caused by non-viral hepatitis were less likely to die if they consumed at least one cup of coffee daily.‭  ‬The research also indicated that the more coffee the patients drank,‭ ‬the better their chances for survival were.‭  ‬The results are not connected solely to caffeine,‭ ‬and tea and caffeinated soft drinks did not have the same benefit.‭  ‬The researchers believe the results are due to coffee lowering the level of enzymes in the blood that cause cell breakdown and inflammation of the liver.‭  ‬It is believed that coffee reduces oxidative stress‭ (‬stress on the body caused by cumulative damage of free radicals over time‭)‬.


Local company  Madura Tea Estates is the official sponsor of Cancer Council’s Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea .  Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea is a national fundraising event, mostly help in the month of May, that invites Australians to host or attend a morning tea and raise funds for cancer research, prevention, early detection and patient support programs. Over the last two decades, $110 million has been raised for the Cancer Council.   Stephen Bright of Madura Tea Estates says : ‘We have made it simple for the host by creating special host kits on our website.’  The company is also going for the Worlds Biggest Tea Bag title.  The record currently is 150kg. As host kits and specialty marked packs in store are purchased more tea is added to the tea bag. The Worlds Biggest Tea Bag will be on show at the next public event  at the Byron Lighthouse on May 20th.  ‘We currently have 79kg in the tea bag’ We hope to have well over 100kg at our Byron Bay event’ said Mr Bright.  Host packs are available online at www.maduratea.com.au

 

The international Union for Conservation of Nature‭ (‬IUCN‭) ‬reported in‭ ‬2010‭ ‬that sturgeon had become the most critically endangered group of animals in the world due to humans desire for caviar.‭  ‬When this report was released,‭ ‬85%‭ ‬of the species was at risk of extinction.‭  ‬It is the usual practice that pregnant sturgeon are killed before their eggs are harvested.‭  ‬As the fish do not reproduce annually,‭ ‬it can take many years for the population to recover from a decline.‭  ‬To continue to fulfil the worlds demand and yet preserve the life of sturgeon,‭ ‬some sturgeon farmers have been using alternative‭ “‬no kill‭” ‬methods of roe collection.‭  ‬Vivace a small farm in Loxstedt Germany has perfected the technique of‭ “‬massage‭” ‬to extract the eggs.‭ ‬The massage method involves first observing a sturgeons eggs by ultrasound,‭ ‬and if ready a signalling protein Is given to the fish several days before the egg harvest,‭ ‬to induce labour,‭ ‬and the roe can then be pumped out of the fish with a gentle massage.‭ ‬There are many benefits to this process,‭ ‬including sustainability and financial viability as the same sturgeon can be‭ “‬massaged‭” ‬several times throughout their lifetime,‭ ‬not just live for‭ ‬7‭ ‬or‭ ‬8‭ ‬years to mature and be killed.


Cheeses Loves You Cheesemaking Classes
Debra Allard from Cheeses Loves You has announced her latest cheese making classes at Burringbar Hall.
Friday, 2^nd May – Drunken Goat, Washed Rind Reblochon, Persian Feta.
Saturday, 3^rd May – Colby, Camembert, Goat Chevre, Cow Cream Cheese/Quark.
email Debra for more information – cheeseslovesyou@bigpond.com


Popular local caterers Open Table are running cooking workshops through May

Middle Eastern Workshop  Sunday May 25th.   Raw Food- Sunday 4th May
Moroccan Cooking- Sunday 11th May
 Gourmet Wholefood- Saturday 17th May: look for Open Table on facebook for more details


And finally, an interesting new publication to check out if you like to think about food issues.
The Graduate Journal of Food Studies is a US based online publication, that publishes food research stories from graduate students of food issues around the world.  The first issue includes the social history of the "trophy kitchen", food and agriculture propaganda in North Korea, a Detroit food justice group, and lots of great photos and drawings for those of us who like to look at the pictures – www.graduatefoodjournal.com

 

MUSIC – For info and videos of tracks we played today go to – http://bayfm.org/programs/belly-/

or at least check out the gorgeous Fabio KoRyu Calabro' on Youtube, singing about everything from veg to salami to managing to fool his cat – all in Italian, just helped out by his uke

 

SALUMI AUSTRALIA VISUAL TOUR – All images on this post copyright Isabelle Delmotte – id(at)idbytes(dot)net

Thank you very much Michael for a very interesting experience, I only wish internet scratch and sniff technology was available.

 

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citruses, choko cake and a farmers market in the volcano

ON AIR ON BYRON BAY’S BAYFM 99.9 ON MONDAY APRIL 4, 2011

Today on belly our seasonal bellysister Alison was talking about the good things of April, even a choko cake if you want a very different birthday.  Also a new farmers market is starting up in Murwillumbah, so we had an interview with the new market manger Deborah Fuller about all the tasty produce of the Murwillumbah/Tweed area, and lots of local news.  So grab a snack to stop the belly rumbles and stay right here with sister Tess.

THE FRESH REPORT – IN SEASON IN APRIL

April is the month of conserving and preserving what’s left over as it is a little bit of an in between time as it is not late enough for the winter vegetables the brassicas broccoli, kale and cabbages yet its evening cardigan time so we need something a little heavier on our plates.

Pumpkins are abundant and especially in my garden. Warm salads are great for April. There is some rocket around and new lettuces coming up with the cooler weather.

It is a good time to buy citrus fruits on the side of the road limes and lemons so make marmalade or on your trees or neighbours. Marmalade is a great was to glaze meat and ensures that you are not using sauces with added chemicals and additives and your saving money.

Seasons

It is important to note that seasonal guides really vary from region to region and within a region so that as an immediate start you need to look to buying and cooking with what is in your area.

This is our wrap up of what is in season around NSW and then for the Northern Rivers.

April is the season for:

Apples
Beans
Capsicum
Dragonfruit
Eggplant
Grapes
Lettuce
Persimmon
Pumpkin
Quince
Tomatoes

Northern Rivers

Pumpkins
Rocket
Shallot
Silverbeet
Snowpeas
Beans
Eggplant – still around
Sweet potato
Pineapples
Chokos of course
Bananas

CHOKOS

Chokos are like tripes they can be really amazing if cooked well. Yes it is amazing but true.
Whatever you do don’t boil them

Contain fibre, vitamin C, they’re low in fat and they can even taste good!

CHOKO CHIPS

Peel the chokos. Cut in halves lengthwise.
Pop out the seeds.
Cut into chip shapes.
Pan fry or deep fry until crispy on the outside.
Serve with salt and pepper to taste.

Choko vines everywhere are bearing now (Autumn) – when other veggies are a bit scarce (This veggie is technically a fruit). The choko originated in South America and was still ‘new’ in Australia in the 1880’s.

Recipes by Alison Drover www.thealisonprinciple.com

CHOKO AND PECAN CAKE WITH LIME MARMALADE AND SOUR CREAM FROSTING

CHOKO CAKE

•    2 cups plain flour
•    1 teaspoon bicarb soda
•    2 teaspoons ground ginger
•    1 cup brown sugar 100g butter melted (careful to do so slowly so your butter does not split)
•    2 eggs lightly beaten
•    1⁄2 cup chopped walnuts
•    2 cups grated pecans
•    (about 2 chokos)

Combine flour, soda, ginger and sugar in bowl, add butter & eggs, and mix well. Stir in choko and pecans. Put into greased 14cm x 21cm loaf tin. Bake at 190 degrees for 80 minutes or until cook

This is great served alone however if it is a special occasion it is great with icing.

LIME SOUR CREAM ICING

11/2 cups icing sugar mixture
¼ cup sour cream
1 tablespoon of lime marmalade – see recipe

Other ideas

Chokos are great in pear crumble they take on the flavour of the pears and caramelize if you add brown sugar, & add cinnamon – very good.

ROASTED PUMPKIN, RED CAPSICUM, DUKKA SALAD WITH LOCAL GOATS CHEESE

•    ½ Pumpkin or more depending on how many you have to feed
•     a small bunch Oregano
•    2 teaspoons Paprika
•    2 teaspoon Cinnamon
•    Salt
•    1 tablespoon brown sugar
•    200grams Goats curd – this region has great cheeses try Tweed Valley Whey, Nimbin, Bangalow
•    3 tablespoons of Dukka – buy a local one made from macadamias
•    4 tablespoons Olive oil or macadamia oil
•    1 -2 capsicums

Cut up pumpkin and slice it wedges. Try not to make these too thin they should be about 5 cm diameter. Mix up your spices and rub pumpkin with salt, paprika, cinnamon, and oregano

Place pumpkins flat in a deep oven proof baking tray.

Slice capsicums in half remove seeds and then slice capsicums in strips and then place alongside pumpkin.

Place tray in the pre heated 220 oven and roast for 15 -20 minutes
Hint: the pumpkin needs to caramelize as it will sweeten and should hold its shape but not break up.

Take pumpkin out of the oven and place on a platter. Sprinkle Dukka mix over the pumpkin and arrange roasted capsicums. Arrange cheese over the pumpkin and some fresh oregano leaves.

LIME AND LEMONGRASS MARMALADE CHICKEN

Organic chicken is widely available from supermarkets and farmers’ markets, so there is no excuse.
•    1 unwaxed organic lime– hopefully off your or a friend’s lime tree
•    4 cloves of local garlic, chopped
•    1 x 1.6 whole, organic chicken
•    125g butter, room temperature
•    2 tablespoons lime marmalade
•    Lemon grass
•    pinch of sea salt
•    black pepper, to taste
Pre-heat oven to 190° Celsius fan-forced (slightly less for a regular oven).
Zest the lime and chop the zest finely. Set aside the rest of the lime for later.
In a medium bowl place your butter, lemongrass all of the garlic, the lime zest, salt and pepper. Mix together with a spoon.
Place your chicken on a baking tray. If you have a wire rack, place the chicken on top of this and then in the tray.
Carefully lift the skin on the top of the chicken and push your butter mix under the skin on both sides. Using a wooden spoon or spatula helps.
Warm your marmalade a little by placing it out of the fridge on very low heat for few minutes and then taking it off.
Take a pastry brush and then brush over the chicken
Cut the lime in half. Squeeze over the chicken. Rub the salt and pepper over the outside of the chicken.
Place in the oven and cook for approximately 60 minutes.
Place a skewer or knife into the chicken. Juice will run from the chicken. This should be clear. If you notice the skin is pink or there seems to be colour in the juice return to the oven for another 10 minutes and check again.
Remove the chicken from the oven and serve.

LIME & KAFFIR LIME MARMALADE

•    12 limes
•    6 Kaffir Limes
•    White granulated sugar

Makes about 2.5kg (5lb 8oz)
12 limes,
6 kaffir lime leaves, bruised
about 1.75kg (5lb) white granulated sugar, warmed in a low oven
Wash the limes. Cut them in half and juice them (reserve the juice). Cover the skins in cold water and refrigerate overnight. The next day drain the skins, cut into quarters and scrape out the flesh and membrane. Put this on to a 40cm (16in) square of muslin and tie into a bag with string. Slice the skins into fine shreds lengthways. Place a small plate in the fridge to chill.
Put the shredded limes into a preserving pan with the muslin bag, lime leaves, 2 litres (3½ pints) water and the juice, cover tightly and cook gently for an hour and a half or until the fruit is soft. Limes have tough skins; so make sure you are happy with the softness – once the sugar is added the skins will harden slightly. You don’t want to lose too much water, so cook it gently. Remove the lime leaves and the bag, squeezing out as much pectin-filled juice as you can; squeeze it between two plates for maximum efficiency.

To sterilise your jars wash them and the lids in warm soapy water and place in an oven preheated to 110°C/225°F/gas mark ¼ for half an hour. It’s easier to lift them in and out if you put them in a large roasting tin. Leave them in the oven while you finish the jam. The jam has to be potted in warm sterilised jars. You should also sterillise the ladle you use and any jam funnel in boiling water.

Weigh the fruit and liquid, then put it back in the pan and add the same weight of sugar. Gently heat the mixture until the sugar has dissolved, then turn up the heat and bring to the boil. Once it has reached boiling point, test for a set. This jam has a very high pectin level so setting point is reached quickly. Jams set at 105°C on a sugar thermometer, but if you use the ‘wrinkle test’ you can manage without a thermometer: put a teaspoonful of the mixture on the cold plate, leave it to cool for a minute then see if it wrinkles when pushed with your finger. Take the pan off the heat while you do the test, so you don’t overcook the jam. If it hasn’t reached setting point, put it back on the heat for four minutes and try again.
Stir and remove any scum from the top of the marmalade while it is still warm. Once the marmalade has reached setting point leave it to cool for about 12 minutes (this helps distribute the rind more evenly in the jars) then pot in the warm, sterilized jars and seal.

The April Fresh report and all recipes by Miss April herself, Alison Drover

 

Australia's groovy chestnut mascot : Mr Chesty!

CHESTNUTS

Absolute comfort and nostalgia food for sister Tess.  Like many foods, they are a poor people’s staple which is now a bit of a luxury.  In season briefly now in Australia.  You must always slit the skin before cooking to avoid exploding chestnuts. The easiest way to cook them is in boiling water with dill or fennel tops or seeds.  Taste, ready when soft.  You can eat them hot or cold, or use them in recipes after boiling.
Or put holes in an old thin, definitely not non-stick coated frypan, and roast over coals. Eat hot.  mmm

 

 

 

 

THE NEW CALDERA (MURWILLUMBAH) FARMERS MARKET

From this Wednesday April 6, the Caldera Farmers’ Market will be held every Wednesday from 7am to 11am in

The Dairy Pavilion (enter via the Harry Williams Gate),
Murwillumbah Showground
Queensland Road, Murwillumbah NSW

It will focus on the wide variety of fruits and vegetables grown in the surrounding Tweed Valley.  And it is called caldera in honour of the beautiful huge volcanic formation that Murwillumbah sits in, and of the Caldera Institute that has championed the market.

Thank you to Deb Fuller, market manager, for speaking to belly.  She can be reached on 0401 306 818.

“As we are starting as a growers market, only farmers who already provide
value added products such as relishes & jams from their farms will be
permitted to sell them.
One of main objectives is to strengthen the local economy by providing a regular income for farm businesses therefore keeping the money within the local community as well as shorten the food supply chain within the area which hopefully will lead to reduced  food miles and fuel costs. The primary driver is to assist the area in
becoming self sustainable longer term. Our preference has be given to
farmers within the Murwillumbah area. Our growers must reside within a 50km
radius of Murwillumbah. Whilst we have selected our first round of growers
we would love to hear from others in the area.”  Deb Fuller

Deb also told belly that the market is particularly looking for a breadmaker, and that hopefully at a later stage the range of food on offer will be broader, especially if they get lots of customer support, so get thee to the market, bellysister!

BELLY BULLETIN

Lots of local happenings in the belly bulletin this week.

The Byron Bay Slow Food group is closing.  It used to be one of the largest Australian rural groups for the international group that fights for good, clean and fair food.  Secretary Janene Jervis believes other local groups have now taken up the fight.  And they have a bit of spare cash to give away to a suitable local group, maybe a community or school food garden.  Contact janene via email, janenejarvis@bigpond.com

If you make, bake or grow something delicious, and you like in Byron, Ballina. Lismore or Tweed councils, you may want to take it along to a special Easter beachside market on saturday 23 April, in Byron Bay.  Contact the Byron Community centre or www.byronmarkets.com.au

And the Echo reports that people living near the Myocum tip are suffering severely from stinky fumes at the moment, identified as mostly methane, carbon dioxide and rotten egg gas.  Which all sounds very much like the gases produced by food and garden refuse, so wouldn’t it be good if we had a separate organics rubbish collection in Byron Shire.  Meantime, I strongly recommend the composting and waste course run cheaply by Byron Community College.

And if you are involved in a sustainable local food business, contact Byron council.  They are producing a sustainable food guide to distribute at tourist and council outlets, also an online version will be available.

Another good council initiative is the Foodlinks Project – a regional sustainable food initiative of  the 7 Northern Rivers Councils and Rous Water.

Last week, Foodlinks facilitator Sharon Gibson delivered a workshop for YAC students to learn about growing organic food and they helped build a beautiful vegetable garden to feed young people attending courses at the YAC.  Local businesses donated goods and skills for the project.

Composting workshops will be held at the City Centre Produce Market on Thursday 7th April.  Many short free demonstrations will be conducted from 4.30 to 6.30 in Magellan St Lismore. Sharon Gibson will be demonstrating how to turn your kitchen scraps and garden weeds into soil building compost. Bring your questions and get inspired!

And Leah Roland of the Bangalow Cooking School is running several kids cooking workshops starting next week, and welcoming kids accompanied by an adult to her adult classes.  If you’d like your kids to be as talented in the kitchen as those at the Bangalow Public school, check out the bangalow cooking school website.  Then lend me your children so they can make me dinner.

Finally, if you enjoyed our Thai belly with Thome, the Thai New year celebration, Songkran, is on this Sunday april 10 from 9.30 to 5 at the Bodhi Tree Forest Monastery.  There will be chanting, offerings to the monks, Thai dancers, and most importantly lots of free delicious Thai food.  Everyone welcome.  See www.buddhanet.net

EDIBLE QUOTE

from the Godfather movie : “Leave the gun; take the cannoli.”
Which obviously is good advice – if you point  delicious ricotta filled, chocolate covered cannoli at someone, they will do anything you ask and you can’t shoot yourself in the foot.

Love and chocolate cannoli, sister T

MUSIC

Yma Sumac – gopha mambo

Abbie Cardwell and her leading men –  future’s so bright

Harry Belafonte – the banana boat song

Arrow Tour – mahalo hotel, from Fish smell like cat

Nina Simone – here comes the sun

Juryman mix of felicidade- from Suba Tributo

And our regularly played tracks are:

The Mighty Imperials, Thunder Chicken

Belly street food special

ON AIR ON BYRON BAY’S BAYFM 99.9 ON MARCH 21, 2011

On belly today we hit the streets to check out fast and fabulous street food from around the world.  I was lucky enough to be in the great city of San Francisco recently, & recorded a talk about the street food revolution that has hit San Fran & many US cities recently.

But street food is on the rise around the world, as it gets faster and more urbanised, and is also seen as a way to preserve local food traditions.

According to  www.streetfood.org:

“From Akume in Togo to Pho in Vietnam, street food constitutes up to 40% of the daily diet of urban consumers in the developing world.

Yet, the rich cultural importance of street food is fragile.  Globalisation and urban development threaten these age-old traditions and, despite street food’s vital importance to local communities, there are serious health issues to contend with.

Consumers International (CI) is working to preserve street food life, so that local consumers, street food sellers and inquisitive travellers can enjoy these great dishes safely.

CI is campaigning for safe access to street food.

CI aims to:

Achieve recognition that street vending is a legitimate activity.

Persuade local authorities to improve access to sanitation and waste disposal for vendors.

Persuade local authorities to provide basic, accessible and affordable hygiene courses for vendors.”

So check out the website to find out more about their campaigns, and street food around the world.  They are looking for more content, and encourage schools and community groups to use their information.

And they have recipes!  (well only 3 so far).  I chose this one from Benin in West Africa because it is the first cooked one ingredient recipe I’ve ever seen, and it is vegan yet can’t possibly be good for you – but it sounds pretty delicious.

 

KLUI-KLUI : DEEP FRIED PEANUT BUTTER STICKS

Blend roasted unsalted peanuts until you get peanut butter.

Let it sit at room temperature for a day or until the solids settle to the bottom and the oil rises to the top.

Drain off the oil to use for frying or cooking.

Take the peanut solids and roll into stick shapes and fry in oil.

 

Yum!!!  Probably enough to give you a peanut allergy in a single hit, but it sounds dlish.

 

 

Tamara Palmer,Olivia Ongpin,Roger Feely and Brian Kimbell at Noise Pop in San Francisco - on belly candid and crappy cam, good camera died

 

CREATIVE STREET FOOD IN SAN FRANCISCO

Is going through a huge boom.  In the last 2 years all sorts of interesting entrepreneurs, cooks, chefs and food lovers have set up anything from a wok on wheels to massive specialised trucks – the food truck builders are going through a boom thanks to specially adapted gourmet fast food trucks costing anything up to US$250,000.

“We’re seeing demand for customization based on specific menus or food concepts, which may mean installing a pizza oven or a baking oven for cupcakes,” said Richard Gomez, customer sales engineer and plant controller at AA Cater Truck, the largest food truck manufacturer in the country. “There’s also a lot more emphasis on marketing and graphics. Trucks used to be just white, but now customers want to make their trucks look like celebrities.”

The people who were nice enough to let me record their talk this February come from a very different perspective.  They are involved with the underground, do it yourself, independent music and art scene.  Tamara writes about it on sfoodie and the feast.  Olivia has a gallery called Fabric8, where she shelters not-quite-fully-legal food vendors, at the same time as providing her punters with food that is vastly superior to the usual gallery opening nibbles.  Roger has a cart business called Soul Cocina,  is a trained chef, and also holds regular parties called Inside Out.  Brian is a curry vendor, his magic curry kart has even been all the way to the desert for Burning Man.

a man, a bike, woks and much mobile curry

To see a few of the characters involved with the street food scene in the US, check out www.roaminghunger.com

or this episode of a really entertaining web food series by 2 phat boys, that also includes things like the farmers market rapper

 

 

 

And what did I eat from all this feast of interesting stuff? Not much unfortunately, it was a quick visit, but I did have the best coffee I’ve ever had in the States from Curbside Coffee, and a deep fried chicken sandwich from this lot, parked outside the Noise Pop culture club – it was the only meal I needed all day really, lucky SF is a great walking city, but very tasty.

 

 

 

 

I wasn’t sure if this topic would be of interest locally, then a few days after I got back Sue Bennett in the Sydney Morning Herald wrote a story called ‘Sydney’s ready for street food’.  Both the story and the more than 80 comments talked about how much we need more street food, how great it would be to have outdoor good food vendors or markets.  And the barriers to it like regulations, hygiene concerns, traffic, complaints from restaurants and residents.

I’ve just talked to a friend who heard the show.  She’d love to see an evening outdoor market of stalls, a venue for all the creative locals with tasty ideas, we certainly have plenty.  San Francisco is a  city and we are a collection of villages, but in many ways we are similar – lots of artists, musicians, people from all sorts of backgrounds used to thinking outside the square, lots of wild and woolly diy, lots of good cooks too.  But I think one link that really makes it work in SF and could help here is the use of new(ish) technology, the twitter and yelp and facebook that helps the public find and recommend (or not)their favourite food vendors.  I was looking for food and found a whole music/art/underground festival with a few mouse clicks, they go together well.

a taste of the SF street food scene on belly Believe it or not, finally some belly audio on the belly site!  Well I’m excited… Learning all the time

and if you’ve only got a minute, listen to the cookie story sf_streetfood_cookie_story

get a string and start baking now – only problem is, we don’t have any tall buildings.

if you look for food carts or trucks, you may also get live, written to order poems

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

STREETSAFE SNACKING

A bit of  advice from various government and travel websites on tasting street food without ending up confined to the smallest room.

Where local tap water is not safe:
* only use bottled water to drink and brush your teeth and always check the seal
* do not put ice in drinks – freezing preserves germs, rather than kills them
* avoid uncooked food, including salads and fruit that you cannot peel

* in Africa they say to look for a neatly dressed, clean vendor
* wash your hands before you eat
* go with busy clean, organised places, look & smell
* eat food that is freshly and thoroughly cooked and served hot, not sitting around
* seafood dishes are notorious for causing intestinal problems. Smaller fish tend to be safer.

Obviously all this advice goes for restaurants too, I think sometimes more so as you can’t see the kitchen.  My only bad bug overseas was from  hotel room service.  According to the Australian government, you should also think about immunising against hepatitis A before going to countries where it is prevalent.

Love and chocolate klui-klui, sister T

MUSIC

Mo Horizons, Hit the road Jack/Pa ma estrada

Elvis, Hot Dog

Apricot Rail, Pouring milk out the window

Claude Hay, Get me some

Faux Pas, Chasing waterfalls

 

on air March 7: Italian in season flavours, women’s voices & Danish Mardi Gras

It was a March hare’s mad tea party of a show today. Alison Drover was our guest fresh reporter and she was in an Italian mood, she prepared a whole lot of info on fruit and veg in season in March, especially zucchini eggplant and figs, then she couldn’t get to the studio so sister T has to pretend to be much blonder and nicer and better dressed (you can tell in the voice) and read out all Alison’s info and recipes. On the first belly in April though, she will be live on air in person. Also, straight from the belly lab, a wonderful new discovery, lychee choc tops, the belly bulletin featuring breast milk ice cream, stories from fabulous community radio food shows, lots of women’s voices to celebrate 100 years of International Women’s day, Danish mardi gras, and this week’s markets as usual.

ALISON’S GUEST FRESH REPORT : IN SEASON AROUND AUSTRALIA IN MARCH

This month March and I tend to think I am very Italian because it is the season for many fruits and vegetables, which characterize a lot of Italian cooking…  The fig, the zucchini flower, the eggplant, the zucchini, pumpkins and basil.

It is about using the seasons in abundance having a lot of something like eggplant and adding something special to it like an artisan cheese or some prosciutto but taking time to prepare the vegetables well. The Italians are inherently sustainable in the kitchen and supplement vegetables, which are low carbon footprint with small amounts of meat or often than not any meat and also make flavorsome cheeses, curds and intense pestos.

Zucchini Flowers – are at the markets however they disappear. Harris Farm and other groceries stock them however it is worth talking to your grower and even asking to reserve some. They are fragile and therefore you need to consider this with regards to price. They price can vary from anything to $4.00 a punnet upwards. The best incentive to grow food is to taste it.  The recipe that I have provided is for zucchini flowers and is a little “special” however worthwhile and then another that can be whipped up easily.

Corn …is ready and its arrival was celebrated in Corndale at the Chicken and Corn night in a few weeks ago at the Community Hall.

March is the month of figs. This is a time to seek them out and dedicate meals to them. I love figs grilled with cheese, salad, balsamic and roasted macadamias however they are good in so many ways especially on top of cakes.  Finding the Fig – figs are not going to be everywhere like the custard apple or the lime however this makes them more treasured. Look for them at local stores ie Bexhill Store has some great ones bought in by locals or the markets.  They have only a very short window at their peak so check out the local market now to see if you can get them. Figs grow quite well on the North Coast, despite coming from a more Mediterranean climate. The delicious plump fruits are highly perishable and can only be stored in the fridge for a few days. You can poach, grill and bake figs and add them to salads.

Custard Apples – love to grow in this region and are plentiful and often found on the side of the road at stalls as well as at the markets. More and more recipes for using them http://www.custardapple.com.au Peter Gilmore from the Quay restaurant in Sydney made them famous with the Custard Apple ice cream which is great.

Eggplants are glossy purple and in abundance. Many people overlook this vegetable however it is such diversity. The recipe I have included is for an eggplant stack with roasted tomato sauce, feta and basil. Whole eggplants can stored for two weeks in the fridge but once cut, they quickly discolour. Eggplant can be sliced and fried for use in lasagna but this method soaks up a lot of oil. Whole eggplants can be sliced lengthways and roasted for half an hour or so in a moderate oven until they collapse. The skin can be easily peeled off and the flesh pureed with tahini, lemon juice, a hint of crushed garlic, a teaspoon of cumin and a little olive oil and salt to make a brilliant dip – Baba Ganoush.  Of course you can mix eggplant with other ‘in season’ vegies such as tomatoes and zucchini to make a  ratatouille, which is basically a mixed, or roasted vegetables and onion in a tomato sauce. I take out all the tomatoes that I harvested in December from the freezer and mix them with the zucchini and eggplant.

Zucchini are robust and will keep in the fridge for a while and can be grated to make fritters with, chargrilled and layered like the eggplant, diced and fried with pasta or can be oven roasted with oil and garlic and rosemary make a great salad for a bbq.

March is the month for harvesting and eating beans, beetroot and Bok Choy. Beans of all sizes and shapes including green (or French), butter beans (yellow), scarlet (actually purple) and runner beans are in season now. One idea is steamed with basil, chopped boiled egg, macadamia oil and some red onion.

Baby beetroot should also be ready now and available at your local market. If you grow your own, you have the added bonus of using the tops – the smaller leaves in salads or the larger leaves in cooking, as you would use spinach. The roots are good sources of vitamins B1; B2 and the leaves are high in Vitamin C.

March is the month for:

• Making lime cordial so that you can top up your vitamin C in winter when limes are going to be very expensive

• Celebrating the fig – bake a cake, roast them poach them grill them

• Eating eggplant every which way and how

• Enjoying berries blueberries and strawberries before they disappear.

• Eating plums the last of the stoned fruit although in this area look for the sugar plums as they grow better here

Fruits in season this month:

• Apples – galas and red delicious have been in the shops for a few weeks, while Jonathons are coming off the trees at the moment

• Avocadoes – Hass are finishing up, but Shephards are coming into season

• Bananas

• Berries – this is the end of the season, but blueberries and blackberries are still very good

• Figs

• Fuji fruit

• Guava

• Mangoes – Kensington Prides have finished but the end of season Palmer mangoes are beautiful

• Pears – William, Sensation and Bosc

• Pineapples – Bethongas are still great

• Plums are gorgeous at the moment – particularly radiance and I’ve seen the first of the tiny sugar plums

• Pomegranates – mostly still fruit from the US, but the local supply will start later in March

• Quinces

• Rhubarb

Vegetables in season this month:

• Asian greens

• Beans

• Broccoli

• Brussels sprouts – the season is just starting

• Capsicums are good and cheap

• Cucumbers

• Chestnuts should be coming in later in the month

• Chillies

• Eggplant – the long thin Italian eggplants are particularly good

• Lettuce – although they’ve been small recently

• Mushrooms

• Okra

• Potatoes – Dutch cream and Sebagoes are the best

• Snow peas

• Sugar snap peas

• Sweetcorn

• Sweet potato

. Zucchini – excellent small zucchini available at the moment

ZUCCHINI FLOWERS STUFFED WITH FETA AND WHITE WINE BATTER – by Alison

Tips – If you open a bottle of wine mid week and don’t finish it take a freeze bag and freeze it and write across it “White White” . This is a great way of ensuring you have wine for cooking when you need it without opening a bottle especially

Ingredients:

Vegetable oil, to deep fry

140g feta  (try to go to the Farmers Market and get a local feta as it has so much flavor and you are supporting farmers who we rely on for the skills of traditional cheesemaking)

¼ cup parmesan, grated

2 Tbs thickened cream

6 zucchini flowers

1 cup plain flour

1/3 cup white wine

½ cup corn flour

Method:

Fill a saucepan half full with oil and place over a medium heat until hot enough to deep fry.

Combine the feta, parmesan and cream in a small bowl, season with salt and pepper. Spoon into a piping bag, pipe the mixture into the zucchini flowers and twist the flowers closed.

Place the flour, and white wine in a bowl, add a cup of water and using a whisk, whisk to make a batter.

Coat the zucchini flowers in corn flour, then carefully place in the hot oil. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until golden and crispy. Drain onto a plate lined with kitchen paper.   Sprinkle with salt to serve.

ALISON’S RAT (ATUILLE)

If you have some left over bread make it into breadcrumbs lay them on a tray with some olive oil on low heat to crunch them up and you can use this as a topping.  I also add some finely chopped rosemary and thyme from the garden which I have hung to dry.

5 red capsicum

70 ml olive oil

4 garlic cloves, thinly sliced –(please use local garlic)

1 onion, finely chopped

4 cups peeled and diced tomatoes -passata

800 gm eggplant (about 2), cut widthways into 5mm-thick slices

400 gm green zucchini, cut widthways into 5mm-thick slices

6 Roma tomatoes, thinly sliced horizontally

140 gm (2 cups) fresh coarse breadcrumbs or leftover bread finely chopped

100 gm finely grated cheddar or your choice hard cheese

2 tsp thyme leaves

Preheat oven to 180C. Place capsicum in a roasting pan, drizzle with 2 tsp olive oil and roast until skin is blistered (10-15 minutes). Transfer to a bowl, cover with plastic wrap and cool.  When cool, peel and remove seeds (discarding peel and seeds), thinly slice lengthways and set aside.

Meanwhile, heat 2 tbsp olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add garlic and onion and sauté until soft (5-7 minutes). Add tomatoes, season to taste and simmer, stirring occasionally to combine (4-5 minutes), then pour evenly into the base of a 3 litre-capacity deep baking dish.

Layer eggplant, overlapping slightly, over prepared base. Season to taste and repeat with zucchini and roast capsicum. Scatter anchovies over and finish with a layer of Roma tomatoes.

Combine breadcrumbs, cheddar or your choice of hard cheese and thyme in a bowl. Season to taste, then scatter over vegetables and drizzle with remaining olive oil. Pop in the oven and bake until top is golden about 55 minutes.

Alison Drover

 

FROM THE BELLY LAB

One other delicious thing in season this month is lychees, a bit of an odd up and down season this year, but there are quite a lot around at the moment.  Look out for small stone ones, a whole lot more flesh in even the small looking ones.   I had a lovely lychee martini in Brisbane recently, the best part was 3 frozen lychees on a stick as decoration/swizzle stick.  I took the idea back to the belly lab, and after much product testing, highly recommend to you…

LYCHEE CHOC TOPS

Peel and remove the stone from lychees, trying not to open them up too much.

Soak in a white spirit – white rum works well, vodka is drier and lets you taste the fruit more.  Skip for kids of course.

Freeze.  When frozen, coat in warm tempered chocolate and re-freeze.

Eat straight from freezer with great delight.

You could also experiment with filling the centre of the lychees with nuts, chocolate ganache, another fruit….too much is always good!

 

DANISH MARDI GRAS

Yes they are dancing in the streets in the biggest Carnival in the world today, in Rio, and all over Brazil and the Catholic world, celebrating life and love and rich food before we all get very serious and give up all animal products and sugar until Easter.

Most of us have heard of the Rio mardi gras, and the Sydney one, but have you heard about Danish mardi gras, or fastelavn?  It evolved out of the Catholic tradition, but as Denmark became mostly Protestant, it turned into “a time for children’s fun and family games” like whipping your parents.  It is celebrated the Sunday or Monday before Ash wednesday.

Some towns in Denmark hold  large Fastelavn  parades and festivities , including hitting a wooden effigy of a cat filled with sweets – which once used to contain an actual cat.

Of course there is a special food associated with Danish carnival, a sweet bun sometimes filled with cream.  It is made with potatoes, flour, egg, sugar and butter and deep fried.  Typical carnival food, sweet fried dough seems to be popular all over the world for mardi gras.

The other typical Danish tradition is a good flogging, now done mostly by children to wake up parents on the Sunday of fastelavn.  They use bunches of twigs or willow, decorated with sweets or feathers, egg-shells, storks and little figures of babies.  Apparently it started as a fertility ritual, when it was mainly the young women and the infertile who were flogged.  Then very pious parents would flog their kids to remind them of Christ’s suffering.  Now the kids get their revenge.  But the flogged ones always get a sweet bun in return.  If you are living at home with mum and dad, you could just go multicultural and be Danish for a day.

FASTELAVN BUNS – from this unadorned but great collection of Danish recipes, a lot from his mum, bless him.

* ½ pound potatoes

* 1 cup potato water

* 1 package dry yeast

* ½ cup water

* 2 cups flour — sifted

* 2 tablespoons soft butter

* 1 egg — beaten

* ¾ cup sugar

* ½ cup warm water

* 1 teaspoon salt

* 5 cups flour

Cook potatoes. Drain and reserve potato water. Mash potatoes. Mix mashed potatoes, potato water, yeast cake soaked in the 1/2 cup water, and the 2 cups flour. Let stand overnight.

In the morning add the butter, the egg and the sugar, and cream well. Add the lukewarm water, salt and the 5 cups flour. Beat well. Let rise in a warm place until doubled in size.

Punch down and roll ½ inch thick. Cut into rounds with a cookie cutter and drop each round into hot fat, browning on both sides. Remove and drain on paper towels.  Roll in sugar while still warm.

AND TO CELEBRATE 100 YEARS OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

I played a few minutes from a couple of my favourite community radio food shows.  Because on community radio you can be involved no matter your gender, colour, sexual orientation or fanciability.

This is a story from the American network NPR, by those other fabulous sisters, the Kitchen Sisters, about an indomitable woman who fed and helped the black civil rights campaigners, including ML King.

And this is from the Melbourne station 3CR, a piece from their long running food show ‘Food Fight’.  If you are chasing up info on all the benefits of coffee grounds for your garden, or you are thinking of starting up a coffee grounds recycling system where you are, the website is http://groundtoground.org/

 

AND FINALLY …. sometimes it’s hard to believe belly only goes for one hour:

THE BELLY BULLETIN

CARE Australia is  launching the Walk In Her Shoes challenge  in celebration of the 100th year of International Women’s Day.  Women and girls make up 60 per cent of the 1.4 billion people currently living in poverty. Millions walk over six kilometres a day in search of food, water and firewood. This leaves little time for anything else.  So if you want to Help break this cycle of poverty, Walk 10,000 steps per day for one week and get sponsored – the week is Monday 28 March to Sunday 3 April 2011.
You can raise money towards firewood, water, food, health care, safety or education to reduce the burden.  Go to www.careaustralia.org.au for details.

In other news, the 2 big supermarkets are fighting over milk, Mallams has closed down in Mullum, but I’d rather tell you about life-saving honey, soggy pizza and breast milk ice cream.

Honey made from an Australian native myrtle tree has been found to have the most powerful anti-bacterial properties of any honey in the world and could be used to treat antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections that commonly occur in hospitals and nursing homes.   The myrtle is (leptospermum polygalifolium), which grows along the Australian eastern seaboard from the south coast of NSW to Cape York.  The honey is being tested by a Brisbane-based research group.  Meantime cover yourself in honey, it can’t hurt, just watch out for ants.

What does it take to break the  the record for the world’s longest pizza?   One-and-a-half tonnes of flour, 650 kilos of mozzarella, 1,500 litres of water, 30 or 40 kilos of salt and about 15 kilos of yeast, also one-and-a-half kilometres of chicken wire, and a special oven that can cook one-and-a-half metres of pizza per minute.
And no rain.  So maybe they never should have tried this in Melbourne, especially this year.
More than 40 chefs from Melbourne pizza restaurants were working since midnight last weekend on Lygon street, to make the 1.2-kilometre long pizza and were halfway through when rain-affected soggy dough brought the attempt to an end.
The pizza was going to be distributed to charities across Melbourne.
Judges from the Guinness World Records Association were there to decide if the pizza broke the previous record which is held by Poland.
Organisers say they might try again next year.

On my last belly show I told you about how popular baby food is with many adults.  Now you can go straight for the ultimate baby food.  A cafe in London has started selling ice cream made from women’s breast milk.  It is called Baby Gaga, and it’s made with milk expressed by 15 women who replied to an ad on an online mothers’ forum.  One of the milk donors, Victoria Hiley,  said that if adults realised how tasty breast milk was then more new mothers would feel happier about breastfeeding.  She expressed the milk at the cafe and it was pasteurised before lemon zest and vanilla pods were added as it was churned. Ms Hiley, is paid $23 for every 10 ounces of milk.
The man behind Baby Gaga icecream, Matt O’Connor, said he could not understand people being squeamish about the product. “If it’s good enough for our children, it’s good enough for the rest of us,” he said.  “Some people will hear about it and go yuck – but actually it’s pure organic, free-range and totally natural.”
Already a pretty good story, but now it’s much better because singer Lady Gaga has had her lawyer send a stern legal letter telling the ice-cream makers to : “cease and desist from in any other way associating with Lady Gaga any ice-cream you are offering,” .  The letter accuses The cafe of “taking unfair advantage of, and riding on the coat-tails of” Lady Gaga’s trademarks in a manner that is “deliberately provocative and, to many people, nausea-inducing”.
The ice-cream was a big hit. One serve costs $22.50 and it’s brought out by waitresses wearing flamboyant outfits, a bit of a  Lady Gaga trademark.  But breast milk icecream is now off the menu because Westminster City Council seized it for health and safety checks.  “We are taking the ice-cream away for samples,” a spokeswoman said.  “It’s not a ban. The owner has voluntarily agreed not to make any more or sell any more until we’ve got all the results.”  Breast milk could carry viral infections, including hepatitis, she explained.
The manufacturers have said they use the same screening procedures as blood donation centres or milk banks in London.

 

MUSIC

Still celebrating wonderful crazy community radio,  the tracks I played today were from a compilation done to support a Sydney community radio licence aspirant station that unfortunately never became permanent, Out Fm.

From “Inside Out”, Warner records 1999

authority over the fish –  by artificial

flowers in the sky – by boo boo and mace

miss del ray – by jo jo smith

 

love and chocolate cake, sister T

 

 

 

July 19 radio show: tasting the Byron Bay Writers Festival

Today Srs T and B were having such a good time talking with the Director of the Byron Bay Writers Festival and the Northern Rivers Writer Centre, Jeni Caffin, that we ended up spending most of the show with her.  It turns out that the whole staff of the NRWC (about 4 people who work enough for 20) are completely food obsessed – that explains all the great food events at the festival.  And the way they make sure the many volunteers get tasty and healthy food on their shifts.  And Jeni’s 19 year old cat wears a small tea cosy as a hat right through winter – who knew?
The 2010 Festival will include breakfasts lunches and dinners with writers, a cooking workshop with the Red Lantern’s Luke Nguyen, a book launch by popular local food writer Victoria Cosford, and plenty of sessions that touch on food, especially “Eat me: writing food, glorious food” on the Saturday.  Jeni’s advice is  to look out for these authors : Monica Trapaga, Ramona Koval, Luke Nguyen, Victoria Cosford, Juanita Phillips, Joanna Savill and Simon Marnie.
Go to the Festival site for author biographies and details of all the events.
And of course here’s the eggplant tart – a tartless tart, well tested by everyone at the writers centre, guaranteed to work and be delicious.

Jeni's glamorous cat, Perfect Tiger, recommends wearing a stylish tea cosy in winter

EGGPLANT TART


For a round tart made in a dish about 8 inches across and about 2 inches
deep you will need approximately:
3 medium eggplant;
2-3 large brown onions;
a little balsamic vinegar and sugar to taste to caramelise the onions
a large cup of grated parmesan;
herbs to taste, whatever you like, I use basil and parsley
olive oil with crushed garlic in it, to taste
Cut the stem end off and slice the eggplant in 5mm widths lengthways,
discarding the first skin slice on each side. Brush both sides with garlic oil
Put baking paper or alfoil down and grill each side till lightly golden and
transparent
Cook the onions, balsamic and sugar slowly till caramelised. Lightly grease your tin
Lay the eggplant slices, overlapping to fill gaps,
Put caramelised onion, cheese and herbs mixed in between each layer of eggplant
Press down firmly each layer of eggplant. Last layer should be eggplant slices
Bake in moderate oven for 45 mins, allow to cool down to eating temperature
before putting a plate on top and inverting it.

radio show 24 May 2010 : veggie warriors, geminis and chestnuts

…yes a bit of an odd mix when you put it like that.  It’s a bit hard to explain what Kieran is doing in 2 words, go to the fundraiser and let him explain. Today’s topics were the dangers of industrial food and seed production and some grass (or veggie patch) roots solutions, the deliciousness of chestnuts, and Lilith is cooking with the stars  for  Gemini. And at least one famous Gemini chef, Jamie Oliver, is a bit of a veggie patch warrior too.

GUESTS : Kieran Weston, organic heirloom seedling grower
Lilith, astrogourmet

KIERAN’S SCHOOL/NURSING HOME PROJECT :

“Seed Sowers Organic Seedlings with Life Changing Documentaries is hosting a fund raising movie night at the Byron Services Club on the 1/6/2010 [at 4 pm and 6 pm]
The not for profit event is focused on raising awareness of major issues that confront our local and global communities along with future generations.
Proceeds from the evening are intended to fund the installation of Organic Gardens in Schools, and assist in the formation of community cooperative programs, which are hoped to foster a closer community.
The first 200 people to register online for this event will be invited to participate in the installation of the garden at the school,at which time Seed Sowers Organic and friends will conduct free workshops related to Gardening, Fermentation, and Raw Food Preparation.
Seed Sowers Organic would welcome expressions of interest on the night from schools retirement villages and other community groups that feel they would like to be involved. ”
[see contacts/links below]

Seed Sowers last school garden workshop...

...and the flourishing vegetable garden

GUEST RECIPES :

SOME HEALTHY SMOOTHIES FROM KIERAN :

Abundant Vegetable Smoothie

2 roma tomatoes
1 small carrot
1 small zucchini
1 clove garlic
1 tablespoon onion
2 stalks celery
1 red bell pepper
1 tablespoon fresh parsley
2 cups water
1 Avocado
Blend all ingredients together until creamy.

Contributed by: Brenda Cobb (www.LivingFoodsInstitute.com)

“When I Eat This, Life is Bliss” Smoothie

3 bananas
1 cup raspberries
2 golden delicious apples
2 big handfuls of spinach
½ – 1 cup of water

Blend and indulge!
(best if your blender is 800 watts or more for the ultimate consistency)

ESPRESSO GRANITA SPIKED WITH COFFEE VODKA  – from LILITH

­ like Geminis it’s light, but it’s got bite

Ingredients: 2 cups brewed espresso, sugar to taste, coffee vodka.
Garnish: Dark chocolate curls, fresh pomegranate, Italian cats tongue biscotti, up
to you…

Directions: Combine espresso and sugar in a bowl and stir till sugar is
dissolved.  Pour into shallow dish and freeze till ice granules start to

form around the edges, about 1 hour, then stir with a fork to break up
granules.  Refreeze and restir every 20 minutes till the mix becomes an icy
slush, about 2 hours.

To Serve: Spoon crystals into goblets, pour coffee vodka over, garnish as
you fancy.

Australia's groovy chestnut mascot : Mr Chesty!

FROM THE BELLY LAB – by sister Tess

BOILED CHESTNUTS:

choose fat, shiny chestnuts, with skin that feels tight and full, make a small cut on each so they don’t explode

boil in plenty of water with a few few fennel fronds or a good pinch of fennel seed, and a pinch of salt, until the inside is soft

cut one open to check

eat warm or cold after peeling off both the outer and the inner skin, they keep for 2-3 days in their skins
or peel and use in various recipes (labour of love)

LILITH IS COOKING WITH THE STARS : GEMINI

Today we’re wishing happy birthday to all the Shire’s busy Geminis, for whom constant change and variety are the spice of life, and who just love eating with others: they adore the stimulating buzz of gossip over plutonic coffee while snacking on interesting nibbles at the latest nook with the look, or doing lunch at the newest smart little eatery serving tiny portions for high prices to celebs.

So it’s no surprise that Gemini celebrity chef Delia Smith baked the cake on the cover of the Rolling Stones album Let It Bleed, and received an OBE last year for her contribution to British cooking.  She shot to fame with Delias How To Cook TV series which actually  taught Brits how to boil an egg, a show which led to a 10% rise in egg sales.   From bread machines to pasta makers to panini grills, Geminis love their gadgets, and Smith’s use of particular kitchen utensils caused overnight sell-outs ­ a phenomenon which came to be known as the Delia Effect, and that phrase is now in common use to describe a run on a  product as a result of a high profile media recommendation.

Gemini chefs also tend to be ultra moderns who love coming up with novel combinations and techniques like Gemini kitchen chemist Heston Blumenthal whose signature dishes include snail porridge, parsnip cereal and bacon-and-egg ice cream (must have an Aquarian ascendant).  Famous for his scientific approach to cooking, culinary alchemist and molecular gastronomist Blumenthal promotes the use of vacuum jar cooking, cooking in sealed bags and low temperature, ultra­slow cooking of meat that doesn’t melt fat or release juices, keeping the meat so moist it doesn’t need sauce.

His Fat Duck restaurant was voted best in the UK and best in the world, and his TV program Heston’s Feasts recreate Victorian, Medieval, Tudor and Roman themed dinner banquets with celebrity guests ­ all very Gemini.  The Edwardian feast was based on the last meal
eaten on the Titanic and the Christmas feast included dormouse, hot ice cream and a dish made from gold, frankincense and myrrh.

While they’re the zodiac’s people people, Gemini chefs aren’t all celebrity showponies turning out moreish little morsels of elegant party tucker and Naked Chef Jamie Oliver, restaurateur and frequently outspoken media personality, has been awarded an MBE, voted Most Inspiring Political Figure of 2005 for lobbying the British government about British kids being served junk school lunches, and for creating a foundation which takes 15young adults a year from disadvantaged backgrounds,  and trains them in the restaurant business.  Another cheffy success story who left school at 16 with no qualifications,  his TV series continually emphasize fresh organic produce and interesting low joule cuisine, and campaign to change poor cooking habits andunhealthy diets.

Sophie Grigson is another Gemini cookand author who’s a keen supporter of organic local food suppliers andadvocate for healthy children’s food.

by Lilith

radio hula pic by KK - just to prove that Lilith really does wonderful hula performances while us bellysisters vainly try to keep the show on the rails


EDIBLE QUOTE
:

“For any chef, supermarkets are like a factory. I buy from specialist growers, organic suppliers and farmers”.

by Jamie Oliver, who got into a bit of trouble for saying this because he does ads for UK supermarket chain Sainsbury’s

CONTACTS/LINKS:

http://lifechangingdocos.com/northernnsw/blog – to book for the Future of Food screening in Byron Bay

Seed Sowers Organic seedlings are at several markets and farmers markets around the Northern Rivers, including Byron Bay and Mullumbimby

http://www.chestnutsaustralia.com.au/recipes.html – oodles of chestnut recipes aand tips and the fabulous Mr Chesty

a few links to the attempted Jamie Oliver US conquest:

http://www.jamieoliver.com/campaigns/

http://www.jamieoliver.com/campaigns/jamies-food-revolution

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/mar/25/jamie-oliver-us-healthy-eating – worth clicking just to see him dressed as a pea

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/news/west-virginia-eats-jamie-oliver-for-breakfast-1925393.html – good article on the uphill battle Jamie is facing in the US

some more healthy veggies planted in by the student volunteers and Seed Sowers at a local school

belly 29 March 2010 – travels with seedsavers, wild harvest, easter chocolate

TOPICS : Seedsavers catch up – travels, wild harvesting, autumn recipes; chocolate and more chocolate

GUEST : Jude Fanton, director of the Seedsavers Foundation

PRESENTER : sister T

JUDE AND MICHEL’S LATEST TRAVELS:

August – we were three weeks in Vanuatu to film for Centre for
International Research into Agriculture and Development (CIRAD) based in
Montpelier, with a long term programme in Vanuatu. We filmed in remote villages
(one 70km from roads – went in by canoe) a film called “Our Roots” that will be
out in a month. It covers the re-diversification of root crops (yam, taro,
cassava and sweet potato) through seed reproduction.

October – a three week speaking and filming tour for Biodiversity Network
in Japan.

Mid November to mid January – in Rajasthan and then a month in Malaysia to
mid Feb. We were filming agricultural biodiversity and resilience and trialling
the running of Seed Savers from afar. Thanks to iPhone and excellent mobile
phone coverage and wifi connectivity in both countries we were constantly
connected and could field emails and update our website.

Autumn is a good time for fruit harvests; beginning of
citrus; acerola; guavas of all types, e.g., cherry and strawberry guavas; Ceylon
hill berry; bananas; pomegranate.

Wild harvesting

Guavas – we have found two types on side of road.
Mushrooms though it does not seem a big season this year.
Pecans – story of tree in neighbouring lane cut down.
Mangoes – story of huge old trees cut down in three public carparks. We have
several seedlings of each growing in our gardens here as a rescue operation.

During the show Jude and sister T were throwing around ideas for saving fruit trees and vines that are on public land, before they suddenly disappear due to development or old age.

Possibilities :
* a map/register of fruit bearing plants so they aren’t wasted/annoy landowners/council with fallen fruit
* a course as part of the ACE sustainability series on how to take cuttings/seeds/graft
* Jude will look at putting info on seedsavers site/through local seed network
* cuttings/fruit should be taken for propagation from plants that you know give great fruit, well before they are at risk
* us bellysisters would be happy to collate information on the www.belly.net.au site if you send it in, or link to any info
* please comment!

GUEST RECIPES
– from Jude

GUAVA JELLY

Cut up guavas roughly. Put them in a thick bottomed saucepan and add enough water to fill to one quarter the height of the guavas.
Boil twenty minutes to soften and bring out their juices.
Pour all this mush (don’t mush it) into a muslin bag or pillow case or bank bag and hang with a shoestring (!) over a bowl to allow juice to drip out overnight.
Do not squeeze, cajole or in any other way interfere with the dripping process, or the juice will go murky.
Weigh the juice and pour into the same saucepan as before. Add equal (or less, say two thirds) weight in sugar.
Boil slowly until setting point. Ah ha! How is that achieved? How judged? The jam and jelly makers’ dilemma!
It takes any time from 20 mins to an hour. It will take less time if you have put in a lot of sugar, and if you add pectin in the form of apple pips or Jamsetta.
It will take more time if you put in a lot of water in the first process, or little sugar in the second.
To test when you have reached setting point, take a cold plate and drip a bit of jelly on it. Let it cool and observe whether it is set by tipping it sideways.
Be careful at this point as setting point is reached fairly quickly.

VEGAN PALAK PANEER

Take any edible leaf that you normally use as spinach (i.e., cooked), such as
spinach, chicory (I used the prolific perennial spreading monk’s beard chicory),
dandelion, Brazilian spinach, farmers’ friends, other edible weeds – all called
horta in real Greek spanikopita. Boil in plenty of water for a few minutes,
drain and chop.
Fry chopped eschallots, or if you have to, onions in olive oil or similar. And
garlic if you like.
Add more oil and some flour to make a roux.
Add ground nuts (food processors do a good job) such as cashews, hazelnuts,
macadamias or almonds.
Add soya milk and/ or water, stirring til smooth and cook a few minutes.
Add salt and pepper and/ or nutmeg.  I then blend it all with a bamix.

Recipe, or rather a treatment, for NON-TRADITIONAL PESTO

Use any herb such as coriander, oregano (with others as it is a bit strong),
parsley or fennel.
Use any nut such as cashews, hazelnuts, macadamias or almonds ground in food
processor.
Use any tree oil, such as olive or macadamia.
No need for parmesan cheese, garlic optional.

CHOCOLATE FOR EASTER:

Easter is named after Eostre, a version of Astarte/Kali, the goddess of fertility and birth, worshipped  at the spring equinox.  Of course Easter is spring in the Northern Hemisphere. Christian missionaries often adopted pagan events as Christian holidays to increase acceptance of their god.

Eggs are ancient symbols of fertility.  In an Orphic myth, the goddess gave birth to a world egg – the 2 halves are heaven and earth, from the egg comes the god Eros – the bisexual god of love, the first ever surprise from an Easter egg – should keep everyone happy! The ancient Persians, the Chinese, many ancient cultures were also into eggs as a symbol of the new year starting in the spring.. And they were a forbidden food during Lent, so good reason to eat them when Lent is over. There are many Easter rituals associated with eggs, decorating, throwing, rolling or hiding them for kids to find.

The Easter bunny or rabbit comes from the hare, another ancient, pre-Christian symbol of fertility associated with spring & the goddess. In one story the goddess Eostara changed her pet bird into a rabbit to entertain a group of children, and the rabbit laid brightly coloured eggs for them.

And why are all these rabbits, eggs, chickens and bilbies now made of chocolate?  Well, if you can make something out of chocolate – why wouldn’t you?  This delicious development came much later though, in the 18th and 19th century when European confectionery geniuses were experimenting with their craft in many ways.

Easter is also a great time for chocoholics to stage their own war on drugs by converting all their addictions to chocolate.

Chocolate contains a variety of wonderful substances.  So if you are hooked on:

CAFFEINE – chocolate can provide theobromine, chemically similar to caffeine.
POT – chocolate has anandamide – a cannabinoid which is also naturally produced in the human brain.
ECSTASY – party happy with tryptophan, an essential amino acid that is a precursor to Serotonin, an important neurotransmitter involved in regulating moods.  This is the same way an E works.
SPEED – in chocolate there is phenylethylamine,a neurotransmitter from which amphetamine is derived. Often described as a ‘love chemical’.  The wonderful wikipedia, to which I owe the rigorous scientific research, says that “it is quickly metabolised by monoamine oxidase, so it has no effect on the central nervous system”.  Well we know the answer to that problem don’t we?  Eat more chocolate, faster.

And remember, dark chocolate good for you – especially your circulation.

The 12-step chocoholics program:
NEVER BE MORE THAN 12 STEPS AWAY FROM CHOCOLATE!
get the t-shirt if you like this motto, at virtualchocolate, you will find lots of chocolate dipped quotes there too – many of these seem to have been copy/pasted all over the chocoweb, but you’ll see why, they are delicious [maybe chocoholics can’t resist the instant gratification of grabbing these]:

Twill make Old Women Young and Fresh; Create New Motions of the Flesh. And cause them long for you know what, If they but taste of chocolate.
from “A History of the Nature and Quality of Chocolate”, James Wadworth (1768-1844)

Put “eat chocolate” at the top of your list of things to do today. That way, at least you’ll get one thing done.

Don’t wreck a sublime chocolate experience by feeling guilty. Chocolate isn’t like premarital sex. It will not make you pregnant. And it always feels good. Lora Brody, author of Growing Up on the Chocolate Diet

Life without chocolate is like a beach without water.

“Las cosas claras y el chocolate espeso.” (Ideas/things should be clear and chocolate thick.) Spanish proverb – and they should know, they have the best hot chocolate in the world – and churros, fried sugared dough to dip in bitter chocolate – perfect – good reason to visit the Spanish part of town

Forget love– I’d rather fall in chocolate!!!

If it ain’t chocolate, it ain’t breakfast!

Money talks. Chocolate sings!

If chocolate is the answer, the question is irrelevant.

Once you consume chocolate, chocolate will consume you.

“Exercise is a dirty word. Every time I hear it I wash my mouth out with chocolate.” ~ Charles M. Schultz peanuts cartoon

Save the Earth! (It’s the only planet with chocolate.)

CONTACTS :

your bellysisters would love to hear from you – please leave a comment or send an email to belly@belly.net.au

Seedsavers (also in the local phonebook) :

PO Box 975, Byron Bay, NSW 2481, Australia,Tel (61) 02 6685 7560. Mobile 0432 549 825
02 6685 6624 is no longer in use.
See Seed Savers’ extensive and interactive website: www.seedsavers.net

Michel Fanton receives emails at michel@seedsavers.net

General enquiries should be sent to  info@seedsavers.net

www.virtualchocolate.com
– chocolate quotes, and chocoholic t-shirt

seedsavers 2005 Byron Bay feast

Seedsavers is a wonderful organisation started in Byron Bay by Jude and Michel Fanton, in a suburban house and (bare) garden.  Seedsavers now has projects around the world, supporting biodiversity and traditional farmers and home gardeners too.

And occasionally they have wonderful get-togethers in their garden (which now is a paradise of food plants from all over the world),  talk and share wisdom and of course cook and eat.  In 2005 sister T watched this being cooked over an open fire – right in Byron Bay, not on a small tropical island.

Solomon Fast Food! – Roots in Fire with Johnson of the Solomon Islands

Bamboo (we used Dendrocalamus latiflorus) cut between 2 nodes approx 45cm long
Cut up any root crops eg. Taro, cassava, yam, sweet potato, … & place in bamboo tubes according to type of root (don’t mix) & stuff open end with banana leaves.
Put bamboo in fire flames & cook, turning often, until bamboo is black
Transfer bamboo tubes to fire’s embers & wait until the tubes steam & smell cooked.
Bamboo wall thickness affects cooking times – thinner bamboo walls means the roots cook more quickly & different root crops take different times to cook
approx. 40mins on average.

Fish in Palm Leaf with Atai of East Timor

Make a fire and let it burn down to the coals.
Take: Any fresh fish
Herbs, eg. Fennel
Garlic
Salad: Lettuce, garlic & tomato
Stones that are hot from the fire
Put all in one parcel made of a big banana leaf & tie together.
Put on top of embers & cover with stones & more whole banana leaves for one to one and a half hours.

Fish Wing Parcel with Atai

Big fish wings marinaded in bush lime juice for 1/2 hour, garlic, onion, pepper, (curry powder can also be added), Lemon Grass, Salt, (Finely chopped Chilli can also be added)
Put all ingredients in Banana Palm Leaves & stitch up using palm fronds along the sides of the parcels.
Put parcels on the fire’s hot coals & cook for half to one hour.
Enjoy!

And there were more good things from the Fanton kitchen, which is a hungry alchemist’s dream  of jars filled with strange preserved things – all from the garden of course.

Pickled Bamboo by Jude Fanton of Seed Savers

Dendrocalamus latiflorus & Bambusa oldhamii (which can grow in cool climates eg. NZ)
Harvest in hot months
Cut longitudinally then peel off husks
Boil 20mins (if still bitter then pour off & reboil)
Pickle in strong brine
LATER: Slice & soak to remove salt
Lime juice, fish sauce
Lemon, lime juice lemongrass Kaffir LIme leaves & young cinnamon leaves (+palm sugar or something to sweeten if desired)
Leave to marinate.

Yacon (Polymnia sonchifolia) by Jude Fanton of Seed Savers

“The Yacón is a perennial plant grown in the Andes for its crisp, sweet-tasting tubers. The texture and flavour have been described as a cross between a fresh apple and watermelon which is why it is sometimes referred to as the apple of the earth.” Thank you wikipedia!
Slice then marinade half an  hour or so in orange, lime or mandarin juice

Curry Powder

In heavy frypan, put coriander, cumin and  fennel seeds and dry roast.
Warm some mustard seeds towards the end.
Chilli if desired.

And it must have been lima bean season…

Lima Beans can be cooked in the following three ways:

Lemon/Lime Lima (Madagascar) Beans with Jude Fanton of Seed Savers

Fresh Madagascar Lima Beans (if green don’t need to soak ie. If they’re just been picked from vine. If dried, soak and boil until soft)
Add any citrus and any oil and any herbs (for example, you could use chervil)

Hommus

To make hommus, mix cooked lima beans with tahini and any citrus.

Fried Lima Beans

Soak and then boil lima beans until soft (with no salt) and then drain.
Refry with onion, garlic and curry powder (see above recipe).

And to finish, after all that healthy home-made vegetarian goodness,  a healthy home made cake!

Johnson’s Birthday Cake

( also an excellent all-round cake mix) from Jude Fanton of Seed Savers

2 eggs – separates yolks from whites and beat egg whites with sugar
Add some liquid such as coconut milk, orange juice or any citrus
Could put some butter or oil in.
Add any dry ingredients, such as millet flour, wheat flour, linseed or almond meal plus a teaspoon of a raising agent, such as cake raising mix (1 teaspoon to every cup of flour)
Mix everything together and bake in a moderate oven.

Yummy Caramel Cake Topping from Mara of  Puerto Rico

Mix together 1 – 1 1/2 cups of sugar and 1 cup of lime/ lemon/ orange in a pan on the stove top and stir until sugar dissolves but don’t caramelise it (ie. Remove before it darkens)
At that point of caramelisation, add cream until it’s a bit runny.
You can also add a bit more citrus so it doesn’t harden too much.
Then mix cocoa from the seed and mix with macadamia, cardamon and cinnamon in a mortar and pestle.
Sprinkle over cake and caramel topping – bon appetit!

But wait there’s more recipes!  Maybe this was the next day – they have fun on those Seedsavers conferences.

Pigeon Peas by Rob

Soak pigeon peas overnight in hot or boiling water and then drain off.
In a pan, fry some onions, curry powder, garlic, ginger.
Add soya sauce to deglaze (ie. To get the caramel off the pan).
Add hot water, bay leaf and thyme.
Cook for 1/2 hour on stove.

Chilli Guacamole (Guacamole Picante) by Pablo of Argentina

3 soft avocados, 5-6 cherry tomatoes, a little spoon of coriander, 1 chilli, 1/2 an onion, and juice of half an orange or lemon, pinch of salt, 3 soup spoons of olive oil.
Mix all ingredients in the blender to make a paste.

Golden Oven Potatoes and Sweet Potatoes (Papas Doradas) by Pablo of Argentina

Cut potatoes into cubes and put in a pan with olive oil and a little salt
Place in a hot oven of 230 – 250 degrees Celsius
Leave for approx. 45 mins
For sweet potato do the same as for potato and cook for 20 minutes.

BBQ Leg of Lamb (Pierna de Oveja Asada) by Pablo of Argentina

Can’t get any simpler than this…
Cook leg of lamb with sprinkled salt on bbq.

Green Salad (Ensalada Verde) by Pablo of Argentina

Lettuce, onions, fennel bulb with olive oil and salt.

Aussie Fish Cakes by June

Fresh fish (or tinned, eg. Mackerel, Salmon, or Fish Cutlets)
Mashed Potato (double the quantity of the fish)
1 egg
1 small onion
herbs (e.g. Parsley, thyme & oregano)

cook & mash potatoes
mix all ingredients together
make into patties
roll in flour
shallow fry for approx. 5 minutes on each side

Not enough?  Here‘s a link to another feast (this a recent one in India)

belly 8.3.10 – glitter’s glorious grains and cooking with pisces

TOPICS : food labelling laws, tuna, website launch, quinoa, millet and buckwheat, autumn foods, cooking with the stars for pisces

GUESTS: Glitter Girl, bayfm presenter, poet and grain lover
Lilith, astrogourmet and hula dancer

PRESENTERS : Sister B and sister T

GUEST RECIPES:

MILLET AND MUSHROOM BAKE adapted by sister Glitter from: Food for the Seasons : Eat well and stay healthy the traditional Chinese way, by Professor Lun Wong and Kath Knapsey

Serves 4

Like all the grains, millet is fine for any season.  But it is particularly good for autumn as it gets rid of heat (that maybe a summer leftover), moistens dryness(the most  common autumn problem) and supports yin and kidneys for the upcoming winter.  Mushrooms ease coughs and get rid of phlegm as well as strengthening the lungs.  If you have a great deal of phlegm, swap the millet for rice.

3 cups millet
pinch of salt
1 tablespoon of olive oil/ or avocado oil
1/2 cup of flour (unrefined) can be millet, rice, buckwheat
1/2 onion, chopped
200 gm mushrooms, sliced
3 tablespoons tamari
bunch parsley

Soak millet in water overnight.  Drain.  Add millet, fresh water (8 cups) and salt to a pot and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat and simmer for 35 minutes.

While you prepare other ingredients, preheat the oven to 180 degrees.  Place millet in an oiled casserole dish.  In a frying pan, saute onions and mushrooms
until soft.  Then add flour, and stir in with the mushrooms and onions, before adding 1 1/2 cups of water.  Stirring continuously.  Bring almost to the boil, then
cover, reduce heat and simmer for five minutes.  Add tamari and simmer for a further ten minutes.  Pour contents of frying pan into the casserole dish and stir very lightly
with millet.  Bake for 20 minutes.  Cut into four slices, garnish with parsley and serve with lightly steamed spinach.

This could also  be accompanied with steamed carrots, pumpkin, and asparagus


BUCKWHEAT NUT LOAF
– a sister Glitter favourite from : The Australian and New Zealand Book of Wholemeals, by Marcea Weber

Serves 4-6

1 1/2 cups of buckwheat (roasted)
3 cups water
1/2 teaspoon of himalayan pink salt
2 cups sliced mushrooms
1 tbs minced ginger
2 teaspoons minced garlic
1 cup diced red onion
1/2 cup grated carrot
4 tablespoons of coconut oil/ avocado oil/ ricebran or olive oil (cold
pressed)
6 large cabbage leaves
1 cup roasted, ground almonds or walnuts
3 organic eggs, beaten
2 tbs miso (young)
1/2 teaspoon each thyme, basil, oregano (dried)
1/2 cup chopped parsley
3/4 cup of LSA (linseed sunflower and almond) or millet meal

Firstly bake buckwheat kernels in 200 degree C preheated oven until lightly
browned.
Then bring 3 cups of water to the boil.  Add buckwheat, salt, cover and lower
heat, simmer 15 minutes.  Meanwhile, cut the rest of the vegetables.  Heat the 2
tablespoons of chosen oil and saute mushrooms for 5 minutes.  Remove from skillet or wok, set aside and add the 2 remaining tablespoons of oil to wok.  Saute the rest of the vegetables in order listed above.  Cover and simmer for 5 minutes.

Now, bring a pot of salted water to the boil.  Add cabbage and blanch 1-2
minutes.  Drain and rinse under cold water.
Preheat oven to 190 degrees
Roast and grind nuts.
Oil bread tin.  Line tin with cabbage leaves, covering the bottom and sides.  Leave enough overhang to fold over and cover the top.

Combine half the buckwheat with the cooked vegetables and the roasted nuts.
Beat eggs and miso, combine with buckwheat mixture and add the rest of the ingredients.
Spoon into cabbage-lined loaf tin (9 1/2 cm x 23 cm) ( 4 x 9 inch), press down firmly and fold overhanging leaves over the mixture.  Cover the pan with a double layer of oiled paper.
Reserve other half of buckwheat for another recipe ( e.g. stewed fruit and buckwheat )

Place the loaf pan in a baking dish and pour enough water into the
baking dish, so that it reaches halfway up the sides of the loaf pan.  Bake for 45-60 minutes or until firm to the touch.
Cool before slicing.

Serve with steamed spinach, bokchoy or kale and  steamed squash and sliced
avocado..

LILITH’S COOKING WITH THE STARS – PISCES

Fish live in water and water sign PISCES more than any other sign need
to keep their fluids up, they’re notoriously fond of liquid refreshments ­
they drink like fish, and are usually partial to liquid rituals around food:
dipping chilled grapes in dessert wine in a pool strewn with rose petals,
sipping exotic liqueurs beside a moonlit sea or eating mangoes in the bath:
undeniably the most appropriate setting.

As you’d imagine they favour sensuous slithery food: oysters, rice noodles, the sexy texture of melting brie, the  perfume of lusciously succulent, juicy fruits.  Mood is as important as food to a Pisces. They need a feel-good ambience because romantic Pisces likes to feel the luuurve in the cooking,to eat with loved ones and yes, you can open that wine now.

Famous fish foodies include the exuberant “Dances with Saucepans” Ainsley
Harriott of the BBC cooking show More Nosh, Less Dosh among many others –
posh Swiss chef Anton Mossimann who runs his own exclusive private dining
club in London – and the photogenic Hell’s Kitchen gourmet spunk
Jean-Christophe Novelli who became personal chef to the Rothschilds at the
age of 20.

Other well known Fish are Mrs. Beeton, the most famous
cookery writer in British history, and the notorious and formidable Fanny
Craddock.  Even though her only claim to culinary fame appears to be the creation of the prawn cocktail she was billed as the Queen Of The Kitchen, probably because she presented her TV shows in ballgowns, big jewels and mega-make up when nineteen-fifties housewifes all wore aprons. One of the pitfalls of being a fabulous Piscean is a constitutional vulnerability to substance abuse,and Fanny had a major amphetamine habit which made her so explosive and rude to her guests the BBC had to sack her.

And another Pisces foodie was Adelle Davis, the American health author who
pioneered the fledgling field of nutrition  during the mid-20th century,
advocated whole unprocessed foods , recommended dietary supplements to prevent disease and was an outspoken critic of food additives, but also published in 1961,
under the pen name  Jane Dunlap, a classic of psychedelic  literature
called Exploring Inner Space: Personal Experiences Under LSD.

Being the sea creatures they are, Pisces are ruled by Neptune and I’ve
chosen one of my personal favorite recipes for the healthy protein of their
totems

GRAVLAX SALMON ­ A Scandinavian recipe for  raw salmon cold-cured with salt,
sugar, pepper, dill and alcohol.  No cooking is required, but it does take
2-3 days to cure.

Ingredients:
1 fresh salmon, and it must be fresh
3 tablespoons salt
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 good-size bunch dill, roughly chopped, stems and all
1 tablespoon spirits: aquavit, lemon vodka, your choice..

Method:
Fillet the salmon, or have the fishmonger do it for you; it needn’t be
scaled, but leave skin on.

Lay both halves, skin side down, on a plate. Sprinkle with the salt, sugar
and pepper, spread with all of the dill, splash over all of the spirits.
Sandwich the fillets together, tail to tail, then wrap tightly in plastic
wrap.  Cover with another plate and weigh down with something heavy on top.
Refrigerate.

Open the package every 6-12 hours and baste, inside and out, with the
accumulated juices.  On the second or third day, when the flesh has lost its
translucence, remove skin and slice thinly on the bias, and serve as you
would smoked salmon – with rye bread or pumpernickel, potatoes and home made
mayo, anything really.

BY Lilith

EDIBLE QUOTE

we ran out of time to tell you our Pisces icon Mrs Beeton quote – we would have had to interrupt Lilith’s hula dance, unthinkable!

but just so good for international women’s day, so here it is:

“The rank which a people occupy in the grand scale may be measured by their way of taking their meals, as well as by their way of treating their women. The nation which knows how to dine has learnt the leading lesson of progress.”

CONTACTS:

http://www.greenpeace.org/australia/issues/overfishing/our-work/save-our-tuna
to find out more about the best brands of tinned tuna and sign the Greenpeace petition

http://www.foodlabellingreview.gov.au/internet/foodlabelling/publishing.nsf/Content/pubconsult
to contribute to the government review of all food labelling issues – submissions due by May 14 – or go to the food label review page of this site

[I have to close comments on this page as it is generating a ridiculous amount of comment spam]