Tag Archives: nuts

bees, honey, mead, tomatoes, & more beezzz

On air on Byron Bay’s bayfm 99.9 community radio on 10 December, 2012

Today on belly we  talked about our precious bees.  Leah Roland from the Bangalow Cooking School  shared some honey stories & honey recipes, but in the first hour of belly we  focused mostly on the essential role they play in pollination.  Without them our tables would be pretty empty.  Some say the world as we know it will end shortly after the last bee disappears.  But this is not a gloomy belly, there are many people getting together to help the bees. We  met a wonderful panel of farmers and beekeepers, found out how we can get involved, & learned lots more about our Australian native bees.  Kat came from the new group Mullumbimbees,  Eric Smith and James Creagh from Federal, to talk about natural beekeeping of the European honey bee.  Eric is a very new beekeeper.  He has found that bees like very calm people, and he enjoys their company.  Actually all the guests, and Sister Cath who has several native hives, seem to love watching the bees. Frank Adcock, farmer,  native bee specialist & neighbour of Sister Cath’s came from Federal.  It was good to see them share knowledge, & the love of bees, together as well as with listeners.  We finished the show with a walk around Heather and Hugh Armstrong’s tomato farm at Cooper Shoot, where they also have the help of little blue banded native bees.  Frank says they are solitary bees, but Hugh and Heather like the work even just a few of these little creatures do.   All the more reason to have plenty of native and other flowers around our homes, and feed all the different types of bees.

 

 

TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BEES AND BEEKEEPING

 

There is loads of information about beekeeping both in books and the internet, but not all may work for you.  Malcolm Sanfordn& Richard Bonney in ‘Storey’s guide to keeping honey bees’, start by saying:

“Like the bees in their colony working together to survive, no individual human can succeed alone when it comes to caring for this social insect”.

So we are very lucky that the Northern Rivers is positively buzzing with beekeeping mutual help groups.  They have newsletters, workshops, order hive materials as a group, get together to make hives, and of course share lots of information.

 

James Creagh as the beekeeping prophet

James recommends you try to see the Queen Of the Sun – Documentary about the plight of bees with some positive approaches.

http://www.queenofthesun.com/

Planned screening in Mullum in February 2013.  Date to be announced.

Queen of the Sun is also available as a book from your local library.

T Siegel and J Betz (ed)   www.clairviewbooks.com

 

General info about bees –  http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/livestock/honey-bees/management/responsibilities/backyard

 

Contacts for Mullumbimbees Natural Beekeeping group –  mullumbees@gmail.com

http://www.facebook.com/groups/Mullumbimbees/?ref=ts&fref=ts

Workshop “Introduction to Natural Beekeeping ” –  January 2013 Booking mullumbees@gmail.com

 

General Info about “Natural Beekeeping” –  http://naturalbeekeeping.com.au/naturalbeekeeping.html

Nimbin Natural Beekeepers – jamescreagh@hotmail.com

Meet 1st Sunday of each month

Nimbin Natural Beekeepers - hive making work bee

 

Australian native bees

 

native bee box entrance

If you are in the Lismore/Casino area, our guest Frank Adcock is not only a farmer and native beekeeper, but a teacher.

Caring for Native Bees –  Tutor Frank Adcock

The course introduces you to Australian native beekeeping and gives you the knowledge and confidence to care for your bees. You will be studying the stingless social species trigona carbonaria, a true blue Australian bee which is native to our area. These little creatures are amazing to watch as they work, they don’t sting so the honey can be harvested safely, and they are great pollinators of local fruit and nut trees. If you think you might like to give a hive a home, come along to this

http://www.acecolleges.edu.au/colleges-courses/lismore/leisure-and-lifestyle-courses/practical-home-living/p/945#.UMVgWGdaeNU

when & where

Lismore Saturday 9 February,2013 and Saturday 11 May, 2013

Casino Saturday 23 February, 2013.

 

There are lots of photos and information about native bees on this website:

http://www.aussiebee.com.au/

 

native bee box in 8 year old macadamia trees

Even for those of us who don’t intend to formally set up a native bee colony, it’s a good idea to get to know them, so we don’t mistakenly kill them thinking they are wasps.  I had a chat to Kerry  & Lorraine from Monty’s Strawberries at the farmers market.  They decided to get some native bees this year, after seeing very few honeybees in their area.  They are very happy with them, not only because the strawberries had a great season, but because their grandkids can play among the bees with no danger of getting stung. We are lucky to have several stingless bees in Eastern Australia, including the commercially used variety trigona carbonaria.  Frank told us that in Brisbane, native bees are colonising water meters, not an ideal spot.  But if we put a specially designed box or two in the garden for them, they will set up there in preference to odd little locations around human houses.

 

 

 

 

PLANTS FOR BEES

 

James Creagh and Peter Stace (who is from Jiggi near Lismore), are putting together a list of plants that bees love.  The more food is available for bees, the more honey there will be for all of us, but more importantly, the more healthy productive plants, both in home gardens and local farms.

This list is a work in progress, feel free to contribute.

 

Flowers:

Alyssum, Balsam, Aster, Catmint, Cornflower, Convolvulus,

Cornflower, Cosmos, Crocus, French Marigold, Mallow, Nasturtium, Poppy,

Sunflower, Zinnia, Nasturtium , Sunflower

 

Shrubs:

Fuchsia, Geranium, Hebe (Veronica), Hollyhock, Kniphophia

(Red Hot Poker), Lavender, Marjoram, Salvias, Rosemary, Thyme, Veronica, Citrus

 

Natives:

Banksia, Bottlebrush, Calistamons, Eucalypts, Wattles,Flame Tree

Eucalypts – Most honey produced in Australia is produced from the nectar of Eucalyptus trees.

 

Herbs:

Lemon Balm, Basil, Hyssop, Lavender, Marjoram, Mint family

(Labiatae), Oregano, Rosemary, Sage, Savoury, Thyme, Oregano – have large numbers

of bee attracting flowers, Borage.

 

 

JAMES’S QUICK MEAD RECIPE

 

Mix 1 part cappings with 4 parts water.

If using honey use 1 part honey to 6 parts water.

Allow to stand overnight covered with cotton cloth.

Drain off wax next day.

Optional add juiced fruit in season e.g. Mulberries, plum, jaboticaba,ginger etc.

Allow to stand for a few days checking each day for taste. Depending on the temperature it will begin to ferment in a few days. Stir each day you check and when tasting good bottle up. The longer it ferments the more alcohol content in the mead.

 

 

LEAH’S GREEK HONEY & WALNUT BISCUITS

“Melomakarona” which happens to be a Greek Christmas Cookie

 

 

 

1 cup olive oil

1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice and the zest of 1 orange

1/2 cup brown or white sugar

4 ½ – 5 cups self-raising flour

1 cup of walnuts coarsely ground

1 teaspoon

¼ teaspoon of ground cloves

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Syrup

1 cup sugar

1 cup water

1 cup of honey

1 cinnamon stick

½ cup chopped walnuts, extra

 

1. Preheat oven to 180C (or 160C for fan-forced).

2. Make syrup ahead of time so it can be cool. For the syrup, combine sugar, honey, cinnamon & water. Bring to boil for 5 mins.

3. Mix the oil, orange juice, zest, sugar, nuts, spices and flour until smooth. The dough should be soft and not sticky you may need extra flour

4. Shape biscuits into elongated egg shape (approx 30-40gram each) Place on a lined baking trays lined with baking paper. Be sure not to over crowd as the biscuit will double in size in the baking process.

5. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes or until golden. Remove hot biscuit and place a few at a time in the cooled syrup. Allow the biscuit to drink up a little of the syrup.

Remove and place onto a cooling rack. Sprinkle top with ground up walnuts whilst still wet.

Once cooled, store in an airtight container.

Makes about 60 biscuits that keep well for a week great with a long black! Or a macchiato

 

Recipe by Leah Roland Bangalow Cooking School

 

BELLY BULLETIN

 

Happy Hanukkah to our Jewish bellysisters.  Hanukkah the Jewish festival of lights is on right now.  It is the time to light candles, sing, give gifts, & eat food fried in oil, especially olive oil, including fried potato pancakes and jam doughnuts.  Also eating cheese products is popular. Now that’s a good way to celebrate.

If you like to eat & drink with artists check out the open evening this Thursday on the Byron arts & industry estate arts trail.  Lots of galleries will be open & will have nibbles,& drinks, at some places you can take food to share & enjoy the art,entertainment, film screeenings, & company. Check out local papers or www.facebook.com/byronartstrail

Francisco Smoje’s last pop up dinner of the year will be in Federal this Saturday 15 December at 7pm.  Lots of lovely ripe tomatoes on the menu. BYO, $55 a head, vegetarian optios will be available, bookings essential.  More info & to book:

0416057705      www.facebook.com/FranciscosTable

 

BELLY TOMATO SAFARI

 

 

 

berry tomatoes

Heather & Hugh in the tomato jungle

 

A big thank you to Heather and Hugh Armstrong of Coopers Shoot Tomatoes for the tour of their farm and their advice on growing good tomatoes in our veggy patches.

You will find more audio from the visit in last week’s belly post.

If you only have a few minutes, listen to their top tips from 14 years of tomato growing, and their favourite ways to cook tomatoes, in this audio clip:

audio – tomato growing and cooking tips

 

If you have a bit more time, join Hugh, Heather and Sister T on a tour of the farm.  This is a longer interview of the tour than the one I played on belly, but for copyright reasons it doesn’t have the safari music samples.  I hope you enjoy your visit, it starts with a discussion of some of the animals that help out on the farm, from cows to bees.

audio – Sister Tess on belly tomato safari at Coopers Shoot Tomatoes

 

 

ox heart tomatoes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BUZZING MUSIC

 

Arthur Askey – the bee song

 

Itzak Perlman performing Rimsky-Korsakov’s flight of the bumblebee

 

Jez Mead – beard of bees

 

Slim Harpo – I’m a king bee

 

Taj Mahal – Queen bee

 

Francois Couperin, a little mead flavoured medieval magic – tracks from Concert Royal No4 in E minor, performed by Le Rondeau de Paris

 

Van Morrison – Tupelo honey

 

Minipop – my little bee

 

The Rolling Stones – dead flowers – sorry it was short Hugh, we talk too much!

 

 

Love and chocolate flowers (that’s to attract the bees that make nutella), sister T

 

Seven bellysisters improvise

On air on bayfm 99.9 community radio Byron Bay on 5 November 2011

 


 

In the grand tradition of how many people can you squeeze into a Mini, seven bellysisters seven were in the studio today for the first of our summer season bigger better bellys.

And since a studio filled with bellysisters is likely to be a pretty crazy place anyway, today’s belly was all about improvising and making do with kitchen tools and ingredients.  And we had plenty of help from our delicious listeners, who called with lots of stories of improvising with kitchen tools and ingredients, encouraged by a prizes donated by lovely Bangalow Farmers Market stallholders.

If the prize had been given to the most peculiar entry, the listener who used dental floss to get a stuck cake out of the tin would have won unanimously.  And our favourite internet suggestions were using a flat rock if you don’t have a mortar and pestle, and someone called Wharf on a fishing website who had a healthy orange juice for breakfast when camping, then poaches an egg using the empty orange half on the coals.  Genius.

 

LISTEN to a few of the interesting ways your neighbours have fun and improvise with food.  Sometimes because they are alone on a small boat charting the coat and living off the land, sometimes just to see if two things that look good together taste good together too.

 

Bangalow Farmers Market improvisers

 

Sister Rasela collects a few improvisers

 

And then we had a visit by Dr Siggy Fried, out and proud bad cook, who improvises on improvising, and believes on lashings of tomato sauce as a most effective way to fix unfortunate flavour developments in your cooking.  The bellysisters advise you to be extremely cautious when following any of Dr Siggy’s advice.  It has been known to lead to divorce, sudden loss of friends and severe intestinal discomfort.  and that’s just the entree.

 

Dr Siggy Fried improvises

 

EASY AS PIE WITH DEANNA – RANDOM BAKING


Sister Deanna, our fabulous home baker, who always gets her dough, is continuing her ‘Easy as Pie’ series with some “random baking”.  This time  it involves delicious big bags of mulberries.  But Deanna regularly is showered with large gifts of fruit, which the giver is kinda sorta hoping will come back baked into something delicious.  So she experiments a lot, and often with fruit that she has hardly seen before.

 

 

BUTTERMILK SCONES – by Deanna Sudmals

 

2 ½ cups self raising flour

1 tbsp caster sugar

¼ tsp salt

40g butter-chilled and chopped into small pieces

1 ¼ cups buttermilk

 

Preheat the oven to 220 degrees/200 fan-forced

Mix flour and sugar in bowl, rub in butter with finger tips

Make a well in the middle of the mixture and add buttermilk. Cut the buttermilk through the mixture with a knife till comes together in a sticky soft dough.

Gently knead on a floured surface until it is smooth, but do not over-mix or the dough will be tough!

Spread dough out to 2cm thickness, and using a dough cutter (I lost mine so I used a floured glass) to cut out rounds from the dough. Carefully knead scraps together and cut as many rounds as you can out of the dough.

Place on a baking sheet covered in baking paper and brush tops with milk.

Bake for about 12-15 minutes until tops are browned

Serve with jam and cream!

 

MULBERRY JAM – by Deanna Sudmals

 

8 cups fresh mulberries

1 package of jam setter (OR 2 tsp lemon rind and 2 tablespoons lemon juice)

4 ½ cups white sugar

Wash and hull the mulberries, removing stems and leaves (a tedious process that results in purple hands-but worth it!)

Crush the fruit a bit (whole mulberries are quite large)

Cook the mulberries in a large covered pot for approx. 10 minutes on a low simmer.

Mix the jam setter with about ¼ cup sugar

Add jam setter to the mulberries and heat on a medium/high heat stirring often.

Bring to a full boil.

Add the rest of the sugar and bring the mixture back to the boil, removing “foam” from the surface

To test if thickened, take a cold metal tablespoon (I keep one in the freezer) and scoop a spoonful of jam, leaving it to cool on the spoon. If it is set then you are good to go. If not, (which happened to me) you can add more jam setter OR…what I did was add lemon juice (high in pectin) and bring back to the boil until it achieves a desired consistency.

Pour hot jam into clean, sterilized jars, and turn upside down to seal. Once cooled, turn them right side up and you will see the lid “pop down” and seal.

Yum

Recipe adapted from/inspired by www.pickyourown.org/mulberryjam.htm

 

IN SEASON IN NOVEMBER

 

This week Miss November came to see me (and my noisy cat) in the garden, so I have a recording for you of the best fruit and vegetables of the month, followed by Alison’s recollections of some improvised but very good recipes.  I;m still not sure about using peoples’ wall hangings to make dessert though.

 

In season November

 

Alison improvises

 

Recipes by Miss November Fork in the Field –  www.forkinthefield.com

 

ZUCCHINI AND MINT FRITTERS –  or whatever you improvise with (corn and coriander, pea and spinach…)

 

• 4 zucchini

• 1 egg yolk

• 1 tbsp. plain flour

• red chilli

• mint

• lemon zest

• 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan

 

Take 4 zucchini matchstick them and then toss them with 1 egg yolk, 1 tbsp. plain flour, a deseeded red chilli, the chopped leaves from a bunch of mint, lemon zest and Parmesan; scrunch together. Whip the egg white with a pinch of salt until stiff and fold into the mixture. Shape into patties and fry.

Serve with a green salad and ideally a salsa verde sauce drizzled over or just with a squeeze of lemon.

 

POACHED NECTARINES in left over wine, lavender & lemon zest , with smashed toffee shards – ideally pecans or macadamias (local of course)


• 1 1/2 cups water, room temperature

• 1 cup wine rose, or whatever you have available champagne.

• 1 cup granulated sugar

• A handful of lavender

• 1 large piece of lemon zest

• 4 – 6 Nectarines, halved (I used 4)

 

Tips

Use firm, slightly under ripe fruits – they hold their shape well and stand less chance of disintegrating. Also the flavoured syrup compensates for the slight tartness of the under ripe fruit, balancing it out very nicely

Use a wine that has mild, clean flavours so it acts as the canvas (soaking up flavours) rather than the paint

Watch so you don’t over poach the fruits or they’ll soften incredibly

 

How to

Place the wine, 1 1/2 cups water and sugar in a wide bottomed saucepan, stirring to dissolve the sugar slightly then place the pan on the stove over medium heat and bring to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes and then reduce the heat, leaving the syrup to simmer gently.

Drop half the lavender leaves into the syrup, and then gently place the nectarine halves cut side down into the syrup. Poach for about 3 minutes and then gently turn over using a slotted spoon. Continue poaching for an additional 3 – 4 minutes, until soft (cooking time will depend on softness/ripeness of fruit). Carefully prick the cut side of the peaches to check for tenderness. The peels should be wrinkling up as well. You may cook the nectarines in two batches if all the halves will not fit in the pan at once.

Remove the nectarines s to a plate with a slotted spoon. When they are cool enough to handle, gently slide the skins off and discard. Add the rest of the herb leaves to the syrup and bring to a boil; boil until reduced by about half. Pour any juices that have collected on the plate with the nectarines into the syrup. Leave to cool to room temperature.

The nectarines can be covered with plastic wrap and kept at room temperature for several hours till ready to serve or refrigerated for at least a week.

Place 1 cup (220g) sugar and 1/4 cup (3 tablespoons) water in a saucepan or pan over low heat and stir until the sugar dissolves. Increase heat to medium. Without stirring, cook for 3-4 minutes until a light golden caramel. Remove from heat otherwise the caramel will darken too much. Sprinkle over nuts and then set aside for 15 minutes to cool completely. Break into shards, which can be used to garnish your nectarines or can be used on top of ice cream. (You can do this a day ahead, then store in an airtight container.)

 

 

love and chocolate covered bellysisters,

Sister T

 

 

filo & weeds

On air on bayfm 99.9 community radio Byron Bay on 17 September 2012

On belly today I welcomed back Deanna, the celebrated (drumroll) two time winner of the Mullum farmers market bake-off, who has been sharing the joys and challenges of various types of pastry doughs.  Some she was very familiar with, some, like filo today, she tried to make for the very first time the week before coming on the show.  As with puff pastry, most of us only ever use filo from a packet, so she did a recipe with each type.  But she is very happy with the result of her first time filo.  A couple of hours after telling us she would never make it again, because it turned out well but it is so much work, she went home and made number two.  And she reports that it was much better again than the first dough.  Step by step photos will get posted soon.  She bravely tried to email them last night from “a nightmare of a mess in the kitchen”…mmm, maybe not quite so easy to make.  But it is suck a lovely light way to wrap up all sorts of things, a good dough for spring I think.  And the packet stuff does work really well.

And we have a new bellysister, Sister Cath, who hopefully will be on belly lots in the summer.  She is an organic macadamia and coffee farmer from Rosebank, and used to present the bayfm program “don’t panic, it’s organic”.  She used to advise the government on matters organic, but now hopefully she will talk to and with us about all sorts of delicious belly matters.

Find out more about Cath Ford from:

http://www.training.nsw.gov.au/forms_documents/industry_programs/workforce_development/greenskills/macadamia_casestudy.pdf

http://www.yearofthefarmer.com.au/latest-news/our-stories/55-our-stories/story-submissions/456-organic-coffee-macadamia-farmer-cath-ford-nsw.html

http://www.ruralwomensaward.gov.au/2006Finalists.html

 

DEANNA’S EASY AS PIE – FILO PASTRY

 

mmm - not bad for the first baklava Deanna ever made - but the taste team didn't leave us one skerrick to check if it tastes as good as it looks!

 

Deanna went for one of the most famous dishes you can make with filo pastry, baklava.  Did you know there was a baklava procession in Istanbul, on the 15th day of Ramadan, during the Ottoman empire.  The Janissary regiments of the emperor each had the right to get 2 trays of baklava from the palace, which were then paraded in all their sweet glory back to barracks.  One way to keep the troops on your side.  According to the Oxford Companion to food it was the Turks who invented filo (shh, don’t tell your Greek friends, it’s probably as bad as the great pavlova debate with New Zealand).

Of course filo-type pastry sheets are used for many delicate dishes, sweet and savoury, from strudel to Tunisian pastilla (although brik pastry is a bit stiffer than filo, apparently made by tapping dough onto a hot plate and using the part that sticks and dries to a fine sheet.  But maybe we can just use filo and avoid 3rd degree burns).

 

Filo Pastry from Scratch – by Deanna Sudmals

 

1 1/3 cup bread and pizza flour

1/8 tsp. salt

½ cup water

2tbsp vegetable oil

½ tsp. cider vinegar

In the bowl of electric mixer with paddle attachment, mix flour and salt on low speed.

In a separate bowl combine water, oil, and vinegar. Pour the water mixture slowly into the flour, still mixing on low speed. Continue until in forms a soft dough. Swap the paddle attachment for the dough hook and knead on a medium speed for 10 minutes (or 20 by hand) until have soft, silky dough.

Remove from mixer and knead on flat surface for 2 minutes, whacking it down hard several times during kneading.

Rub with vegetable oil, wrap in plastic and rest for 2 hours minimum. The longer the better

When rested, divide the dough in half, then cut each half into thirds, and then into thirds again to end up with 18 sections. Roll each piece in a ball and place on a plate covered with cling film to rest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Roll out with a floured rolling pin until it is extremely thin (about 9” x5”) picking up the dough and reflouring the surface underneath it often. When it is as thin as you can roll it, carefully lift and stretch it with your fingers from underneath slowly and gently. When it is stretched enough to read through (if a written paper was underneath) then place on a floured baking sheet and flour between each sheet to stop them from sticking to each other.

[SEE END OF THIS POST FOR THE REST OF MAKING FILO IN PICTURES, & HOW TO ROLL SPANAKOPITA]

Above recipe adapted from: korenainthekitchen.com

 

As well as Deanna’s brave first time experiment and report on making filo pastry, we were lucky enough today to have a contribution from Ilias the Greek, and his long line of filo/phyllo/fillo-making ancestressess.

Here is what he sent to  belly, tune in for lots more from Ilias on October 29.

Fillo tips –  Use a teaspoon of olive oil, vinegar with a pinch salt and knead the mixture (with love) till you feel a smooth dough ( the longer the better) 5min minimum and rest the dough well (covered) min 1hr.

Mum and grandma’s technique is to then to roll the dough as fine as possible with a rolling pin the diameter of a curtain rod and then proceed to stretch the thin pastry by hand over a table lined with cloth until you can read a newspaper through the fine sheet of fillo( this requires an intimate connection with the pastry via the hands to avoid tearing it).

Fillings – The regional delicacy of northern Greece( where I come from) is bougatsa it is a baked fillo wrapped spiced semolina custard that is delectable straight from the oven with light crusty pastry and smooth yummy filling. It’s sister Galaktoboureko is similar and has the addition of a citrus scented syrup poured over it and eats well either warm or cooled.

Kali oreksi from the Greek ‘bon appetit

 

As for sister T’s suggestion to try adding 2 teaspoons of baking powder to each kilo of flour, and using corn flour beteween layers that had at least one Greek cook growling at the radio?  Well it came from the beautiful recent cookbook “Vefa’s Kitchen”, that I, sister T, made quite a few good things from.

 

 

Deanna's spanakopita with home-made filo pastry

 

Spinach Feta Filo (Phyllo) Triangles (Spanakopita) – recipe Deanna Sudmals


2 bunches English spinach or 2x 250 packages frozen spinach

2 sprigs fresh dill chopped (or 1-2 tsp. dried)

1 onion, diced

4 spring onions chopped

2 tbsp. vegetable oil

200 g feta cheese, crumbled

175 g fresh ricotta

2 tbsp parmesan or pecorino

3 eggs

Good pinch freshly grated nutmeg

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Packet of filo pastry (or 18 sheets homemade filo pastry)

150 g melted butter

 

•Chop and wash the spinach, discarding ends. Blanch in hot water.

•OR: Thaw and thoroughly drain frozen spinach, pressing down in colander to get all of the water out.

•Sauté onion and spring onions in a bit of vegetable oil until soft.

• Mix all the ingredients together thoroughly and taste for seasoning. This recipe is an approximate; I taste as I go along and adjust to taste. Some people add garlic to spanakopita, but I don’t think its necessary….feel free to add if you want more of a kick.

•Preheat oven to 180 C

•Cover a baking sheet with baking paper

•Unroll the filo dough on a flat surface and cover with a dry tea towel covered by a damp tea towel on top (this will prevent dough from drying out).

•Cut the filo sheets into 3 strips and recover with tea towels

•Use a pastry brush to brush one sheet with melted butter. Place a spoonful of filling on the end of the strip and then fold the end over the filling to form a triangle, and then continue to fold up the strip in triangles.

•Continue with remaining strips of dough, placing filled triangles on the baking sheet and covering with a towel until ready to bake.

•Baste triangles with butter and then bake for 20-25 minutes until golden and crisp.

 

Alternative option:

Grease a rectangular baking pan and then spread six sheets of filo down, brushing each with melted butter before adding the next sheet. Spoon the filling over and then cover with 6 more sheets, buttering each sheet. Score the top 3 sheets with a knife. Bake for 40-45 minutes. Cool slightly, and then cut into squares and serve warm.

I used homemade filo dough for the spanakopita.

 

 

BAKLAVA – by Deanna Sudmals

Adapted from Korenainthekitchen.com

 

Deanna's beautiful baklava

 


½ cup each: walnuts, pistachios and almonds

¼ cup sugar

1 tsp. cinnamon

Pinch allspice

Honey syrup:

½ cup sugar

½ cup honey

½ cup water

2 whole cloves

1 cinnamon stick

1 strip lemon rind

1 tbsp. lemon juice

½ cup melted butter

 

Process nuts in food processor until finely chopped. Combine with sugar, cinnamon and allspice.

Lightly butter bottom of rectangular (9”x5”) baking pan. Place 5 filo sheets in bottom of pan brushing melted butter between each layer. Sprinkle with 1/3 of the filling. Layer and butter 5 more filo sheets then cover with 1/3 more of the mix. Layer/butter 5 more sheets, cover with last 1/3 of the filling and cover with 5 more filo sheets. Cut the filo into squares or triangles and brush the top with melted butter.

Bake for 90 minutes:

30 minutes at 200 C

30 minutes at 150C

30 minutes at 100C

After the first 30 minutes re-cut the baklava following the cuts already made.

While the baklava bakes, make the syrup and allow to cool.

For the syrup:

Place all ingredients in a medium saucepan. Bring to the boil stirring constantly to melt the sugar. Boil for 10 minutes, then remove from heat and allow to cool. Remove spices and lemon rind.

As soon as baklava is out of the oven, pour the cooled syrup over the hot baklava.

Cool and enjoy!

 

Note by Sister T:  I learned how to make baklava at one of Leah Roland’s classes at the Bangalow Cooking School, very easy & fun if you just use the fresh ready made stuff.  You can play around with the syrup ingredients & the nut mixes (I use pecans & macadamias a lot just because they are the freshest & most local nuts here).  And you can use a standard rectangular oven tray, it fits the ready made sheets more easily.  Also you can control the amount of melted butter you use if you do it yourself, and end up with a much lighter product than the commercial ones – if that is what you want.

 

BELLY BULLETIN

 

In the UK: A report in New Scientist suggests that ‘junk food’ is one of the causes of Alzheimer’s; it explains that some experts are renaming the disease of Alzheimer’s as ‘Type 3 Diabetes’. Excessive eating of junk food has over several decades rendered the anti-junk movement ineffective with their message of human physical deterioration now one of mental deterioration as well. In a report by Viv Groskop in the Independent she quotes “Failure by the ‘Anti Junk Food’ lobby is because junk food is the symptom of a much larger problem. Existing only as part of another vast, spreading disease: the pursuit of profit o, ever common sense, the endless expansion of the work day and the elevation of success over contentment. Ever faster lives; ever bigger debts and ever bigger bellies!

In Australian Food News a website devoted to exposing web-scams called Hoax-Slayer has revealed that there is an email currently doing the rounds purportedly sent by the supermarket chain Woolworths but this time Woollies are not to blame. The email promises you a guaranteed 50 dollar gift voucher, but the scam is designed to trick recipients into revealing sensitive personal and financial information to internet criminals.  Such surveys are becoming quite common and usually target customers of high profile companies including McDonald’s; Coca Cola and Westpac.

In CHINA: According to China’s state media outlet, Xinhua-So far this year China has detected 15,000 cases of substandard food and shut down 5,700 unlicensed businesses since the beginning of the year. Dairy products, edible oils, seasonal foods and alcoholic beverages were among the major food categories targeted by inspectors. The announcement comes just days after the country’s Ministry of Health announced the introduction of more than 200 new national food safety standards under a five year plan.

In ITALY: The Vatican’s permanent observer at the UN in Geneva, Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, claimed market activities such as arbitrage , which is the buying and selling of goods to exploit price differences, and the use of derivatives trading in grain supply chains, are ‘hampering the poorest and the neediest’. In a Vatican radio interview, Archbishop Tomasi said that the worsening crisis in food price volatility ‘will have social consequences’. He said ‘poor countries require not only urgent help, but also investment to change to realities of life and make them more human.” The Vatican’s moral pressure on the G20 follows widespread condemnation of giant commodities trading companies for reportedly seeing drought and the resulting global food insecurity as opportunities for profit.Chris Mahoney, Director of Agricultural products for the Glencore Group said that ‘high prices, lots of volatility, a lot of dislocation, tightness and a lot of arbitrage opportunities; made for a ‘good’ environment for the company, prompting the UN and leading aid agencies to call for a fast track reform of international regulations.

In the USA: Huffington Post reports that concept of ‘food synergy’ has made new inroads identifying so called super foods that when coupled together may give you a ‘bigger bang for your buck’ when benefiting our health in complex ways. After 10 years of research, food synergy has come a long way according to Elaine Magee author of a recent book on the subject detailing how knowledge of phytochemicals like lycopene (making tomatoes famous) or anthocyanins and pterostilbene (which have propelled blueberries into the news) suggest the following foods are better paired together.

They are Tomatoes and Avocados

Rosemary and grilled meat

Oatmeal and Orange Juice

Spinach and lemon

Broccoli and tomatoes

Apples and grapes

Turmeric and black pepper

Garlic and fish.

And of course lovely listeners incredibly delicious!

In Malaysia: Royal watchers in Asia have there eyes peeled for all details concerning Prince William and Duchess Kate. The belly bulletin has done extensive investigations into what our listeners really want to know about the Royals!

Yes! lovely listeners we can confirm that Prince William’s favourite foods are : Cottage Pie and Banana Flan.  Duchess Kate’s favourite is Sticky Toffee Pudding.

And that is the Belly Bulletin for the week of 17.09.2012, compiled by Sister Cath.

 

WEEDS LOVELY WEEDS

To destroy raze to the ground utterly eliminate make like Russia with Napoleon, the scorched earth way to victory…. or see as part of the great natural world, live with, go gently, use.  Well we have done a lot of damage to this area by bringing in all sorts of plants that like it just a bit too much and swamp everything else, so there is lots to be said for both sides of that argument.  So get along to lovely Whian Whian this Saturday 22 September, where Sister Cath is involved in a debate called “to weed or not to weed”.

And let us know which weeds you most like to eat – yes it is all a matter of definition, is it a weed or is it a delicious food.  There are plenty of websites to help you choose the right weeds (aka free & wild plants) to eat.  But basic rules : make sure you know what it is, & I wouldn’t pick something that has has a whole lot of traffic fumes or other nasties around it, in the air or in the ground.

Whian Whian Memorial Hall – 7pm

Whian Whian Road Whian Whian NSW 2480

Ph: (02) 6689 5488 Ph: (02) 6689 5696

Email: menere@ozemail.com.au

 

MUSIC

 

Lanie Lane – Ain’t Hungry

Anouar Brahim – Kerkenah

Kristi Stassinopolou – Waves

Ilios, Akoustic Odyssey

Sian Evans – The definition of

Sarah Blasko and Ajak Kwai  – Nyiir Ienqarr

 

EDIBLE QUOTE :  “Eating is an agricultural act”, Wendell Berry, in “What are people for?”

 

love and chocolate-dipped nasturtium flowers, sister T

 

 

MAKING FILO CONTINUED

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROLLING SPANAKOPITA (SPINACH TRIANGLES – AND ANY OTHER STUFFED FILO TRIANGLES)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

voila' - only a few hours later...

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