Category Archives: RADIO SHOW POSTS

on air 27 December 2010 – wrapping up a delicious decade

The final belly of the year, and a favourite final guest, the very charming Belinda Jeffery.  Belinda has made time for belly over the years even though she is a multi media foodie dynamo, several years presenter on Better Homes and Gardens, award winning cookbook writer, regular columnist for ABC Delicious magazine, regular on another radio station – she’s even famous in the Netherlands!  We almost thought Belinda would be flooded in today, as one of the wettest Christmases we can remember keeps the Northern NSW frog population very happy.  But she made it and we had a lovely chat about the most delicious people and food developments of the year just ending.  And the decade, as we just managed to work out.  Belinda loves some of the changes she has seen since moving here, the booming farmers markets, the emphasis on local,organic and sustainable food, the school veggie patches and cooking programs.  We both remembered the dreaded Swiss roll as the only thing we had learned in our own school home ec classes.

Belinda’s latest book is The Country Cookbook: Seasonal Jottings and Recipes (Lantern, 2010), and she is aware that she has been very indiscreet, talking so glowingly about the Northern NSW area.  The secret is well and truly out now.  It is a beautiful book, full of photos of local wildlife and plants, stories and Belinda’s trademark carefully explained recipes.   Madam Zaza, occasional Belly assistant, who was dragged in to help out on this public holiday Monday, said it is the first time she actually feels like trying out something in a cookbook.  Congratulations to Bayfm subscriber and regular listener Bridget, who was a very very happy winner of a copy.

For the rest of us, Belinda also brought in a recipe that she particularly recommends for this time of year, when many of our homes are full of visitors.  Easy to make and easy to multiply.

COCONUT CHICKEN WITH SPICY CUCUMBER RIBBONS

This scrumptious chicken dish is perfect for times when you’ve been out and
about much of the day and the thought of getting home and cooking something
from scratch is less than inspiring. The marinade only takes a few minutes
to make and basically you just plonk the chicken into it the night before
you need it, make sure it’s well coated (and covered, or your fridge will
smell rather exotic!) and leave it be until you’re ready to cook it.

I nearly always serve this with a bowl of jasmine rice and something
cucumber-y, as their cool freshness is a lovely balance for the spicy
chicken. The cucumber ribbons look really pretty but if time isn’t on my
side I’m just as likely to seed and slice the cucumbers then mix them with a
little plain yogurt, fresh mint and salt, and serve this instead.

2x 270ml cans coconut cream
3 heaped tablespoons of your favourite curry paste
3 tablespoons finely chopped fresh ginger
Inner hearts of 3 stalks of lemongrass, finely chopped
1/3 cup finely chopped coriander
8 chicken chops (or 8 skin-on chicken thighs)

Salad:
800g Lebanese cucumbers, washed and dried
2 tablespoons light olive oil
2 tablespoons very finely shredded ginger
1 large clove garlic, finely chopped
1 tablespoon rice (or white wine) vinegar
1 teaspoon caster sugar
2 small red chillies, finely chopped
3 teaspoons sesame oil
Up to 1 tablespoon lime juice
Sea salt, to taste
Garnish: a few lacy coriander leaves (and, if you are lucky enough to have
them, coriander flowers too)

# I use Patak’s terrific Tikka Masala curry paste for this

In a large bowl thoroughly mix together the coconut cream, curry paste,
ginger, lemongrass and coriander.

Line a container that will fit the chicken chops with a large sturdy plastic
bag. Sit the chicken pieces in the bag and scoop the marinade over the top.
Tie a knot in the top of the bag, then squish it about in your hands so that
the chicken is thoroughly coated in the marinade. (Make sure you use a good
strong bag for this or, as I’ve found to my cost, as you squish the chicken
about, if the bag is too thin it can tear making rather a horrible mess!)
Put the bag back into the container and cover it tightly with a lid. Now
just pop the lot into the fridge for at least 3-4 hours, or better still,
overnight. If you remember, from time to time give the chicken pieces
another squish so every part of them is well coated.

When you’re ready to cook the chicken, preheat your oven to 190C. Line a
shallow oven tray with baking paper and sit the chicken pieces on it,
skin-side up. Squeeze any leftover marinade in the bag over the chicken.
Slip the tray into the oven and cook the chicken for about 40 minutes, until
it is deep golden-brown on top.

While the chicken is cooking, make the cucumber ribbons. To do this, run a
vegetable peeler, repeatedly down the length of a cucumber to form long
narrow ribbons; stopping when you get to the seeds. Rotate the cucumber and
do the same again. Repeat this with the remaining cucumbers. Put the ribbons
into a large bowl, cover them with cling film and chill them. (I discard the
seedy cores and the first ribbons on each side as they are all skin and a
bit chewy.)

When the chicken is nearly done, put all the remaining ingredients, except
the lime juice and salt, into a small saucepan and mix them together. Sit
the pan over medium heat and bring the mixture to the boil. As soon as it
boils, remove it from the heat and stir in a little of the lime juice. Taste
it and add salt and more lime juice, if necessary. Pour this over the
cucumbers and thoroughly mix it in.

When the chicken is ready, sit one or two pieces on each plate and scoop a
little cucumber salad alongside. Finish off with a sprinkling of coriander
leaves. This is delicious with a bowl of jasmine rice. Serves 4 hearty
eaters or 6 lighter ones.

We also had the first ever Belly Awards – yes not the Oscars, the Bellys!

Queasy for the naughty ones, happy for the nice ones – feel free to contribute yours, just email belly@belly.net.au

BELLY AWARDS

Queasy    Bellys

– worst food porn – Eat, pray, love the movie, with Julia Roberts- extreme Hollywood version of food porn – overdone visuals, soft music, slowed motion, only eaten by beautiful people. And size 8 women struggling into skinny jeans are not very believable saying admittedly admirable things about not letting a few extra kilos get in the way of a wonderful eating experience – super clean super pretty food porn – not sexy.  A sister T award, yes I know lots of people loved the food in this, I just like my food porn a bit less Disney.

– mobile phone behaviour – cafe and restaurant patrons on the phone while ordering a meal or paying – a sister B award on behalf of exasperated restaurant staff and patrons – some local cafes have signage that you will not be served while on the phone – good on them.

– most dubious restaurant practice – ringing up 10% extra on my credit card bill when I left the tip line blank on the card receipt, and left a cash tip – in Byron Bay!  I carefully fill in every line in most places, will do so here too in future.

Happy Bellys

The Belinda Jeffery Blessed are the Cheesemakers Happy Belly award goes to all 3 wonderful local cheesemakers, all sprung up in the last 5-6 years, all inventive and delicious, each very different : Bangalow Cheese, Nimbin Valley goat cheeses, and Moo Ball’s Tweed Valley Whey.  From market and local shops.

From Sister T :

– best new leaf – broad bean tops – seasonally at the markets or grow your own
– most cooked from new cookbook – Vefa’s Kitchen, a big beautiful blue and white bible of Greek cooking, lots of unusual recipes that work
– strange but good flavour combination – eggplant and chocolate
– best thinking food lover’s publication – Griffith Review – quarterly essays and stories published by Griffith University –  # 27 is called “Food Chain” – lots of info on sustainability and ethical eating, agriculture and the food industry, and fiction

From sister B :

– best new addiction and dentist’s friend – chocolate covered peanut brittle

From listeners
Nicky : best episode of a tv food show – Heston Blumenthal’s recreation of Willie Wonka’s chocolate factory, with lickable wallpaper;
and best food movie – the German movie Soul Kitchen
Isabelle : best new member of the pumpkin family : little green squashes sold as Mexican squash (a pointier version of the little yellow ones, with much better flavour) – from markets

If any winners want to get in touch with the bellysisters, they can have a signed copy of Sister T’s belly as a prize, otherwise just the glory.  Please comment if you agree/disagree with the awards, or have suggestions.

Speaking of markets – remember farmers markets are on rain or shine, in case of really major flooding local radio will broadcast cancellation advice.  This week Bangalow Farmers Market is on Friday not Saturday.  Byron, New Brighton, Mullumbimby as normal, others check with contact numbers on belly market page.

And we finished the show and the year with some useful advice on food and music combining, and the legal definitions of murder, manslaughter and bad cooking (really) by bad cook evangelist Dr Siggi Fried.  Follow at your own peril.

And I did not have time for a very 2010 Happy New Year message(oh, ok, I forgot to take this in to the studio).  If you are so with it that you not only send all your greetings by sms, but you don’t even bother writing your own, this is the place for you – http://sms4smile.com/category/new-year-sms/

A couple of examples :

My wishes for you in year 2011
Great start for Jan,
Love for Feb,
Peace for march,
No worries for April
Fun for May,
Joy for June to Nov,
Happiness for Dec,
Have a lucky and wonderful 2011.

Oh my Dear, Forget ur Fear,
Let all ur Dreams be Clear,
Never put Tear, Please Hear,
I want to tell one thing in ur Ear
Wishing u a very “Happy NEW YEAR“!

And my personal fave :
There have been many time in 2010
when I may disturbed you
troubled u
irritated u
bugged u
.
today I just wanna tell you
.
I plan to continue it in 2011.

You have been warned.  Happy New Year,

Sister T

MUSIC

Two tracks brought in by Belinda Jeffery :

Renee Fleming, Hallelujah, from the release Dark Hope

Melody Gardot, , Baby I’m a Fool, from My one and only Thrill

Babylon Circus,  Ici [‘here’], from La Belle Etoile

Cygnet Repu – We Sing Kumbaya – From the release entitled Home -A collection of songs from QLD Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Artists.  A solo indigenous artist from Torres Strait – Mabuiag Island

Faux Pas – Chasing Waterfalls -From the release entitled Noiseworks
A solo electronic act from Melbourne, VIC

Christmas belly 2010

Merry Christmas and Happy everything, from the Summer Solstice to whatever wonderful feast you are celebrating or using as a thin excuse for getting together with friends and family.  On this belly Christmas special we had Carols (yes! not nearly enough!), lots of listeners voices sharing their holiday cooking and eating plans, and the wonderful Alison Drover with lots of ideas to inspire you in your holiday cooking and shopping for food and presents.  Also seasonal updates from the farmers markets and the Liberation Larder.

Alison Drover came on belly a couple of months ago when she organised the first Northern Rivers Regional Food Celebration, part of the 2010 Lismore Show.  She has organised many other major food related events.  The most entertaining thing for Sister B and myself during the show was watching Alison’s pen flying as I played the short interviews with various people around the community centre and the markets.  Each comment sparked up at least 3 new ideas.  These are a few of them, and we are still waiting for Alison to forward a few others.  For more, go also to her site, The Alison Principle.
Waste – quality over quantity at Christmas
Leftovers – there should not be any – plan and don’t be greedy buy less.

Salads
Greens, roasted zucchini,
Nectarine, mint salads – great with seafood
Brown rice, currants, macadamia nut, cinnamon perfect for turkey for the
traditional dinners

Dessert
Last minute ideas which are not the pudding – Passionfruit roulade or
blueberry and strawberry summer pudding with double cream

Alcohol:
Make a punch, you can control the amount of alcohol and include a variety of  ingredients, even beer

Sustainable Christmas

Alison believes in going beyond sustainable to inspirational.
“For example I make my nephews pillowcases , decorate them differently every year saves on

packaging and they love seeing what I have done better than the present!”

Giving at Christmas – think about how you can make a
difference at Christmas in some way and how rewarding this is.
I.e. – if you are making a Christmas Cake make another and take it in to a
refuge of shelter.  Thinking about the people who made the things you are buying this Christmas  and in landfill where they will go

Alison got in touch with the Fishermen’s Coop to check on most people’s favourite holiday food, prawns.  Local is always better, not imported, as the industry is more controlled.  You may see some black on local prawns at the moment because of the excessive rain, this does not affect quality or taste.  More info on sustainable seafood in last week’s belly post.

And she brought us some lovely recipes!

CHRISTMAS COUNTRY TURKEY TERRINE

Important: Before you shop for your meat, give your butcher a call and ask
them to reserve it for you so it is ready and minced which will save you
time You can do this when you order your Christmas turkey.

12–14 slices rindless smoked bacon – buy from a Farmers’ Market or find a
local butcher which will do a free range pork bacon

1 bunch baby English spinach, stalks removed

300 g skinless turkey breast coarsely minced

200 g chicken livers, coarsely minced

300 g hard pork back fat, minced

1–2 cloves garlic

½ teaspoon cinnamon

½ teaspoon black pepper

50 ml brandy

½ cup parsley, washed and roughly chopped

6 sage leaves

6 sprigs thyme

1 egg, lightly beaten

Preheat oven to 160ºC.

Line a terrine mould, 25cm in length and 10cm high and wide, with baking
paper cut to size, and then layer with the strips of bacon lengthways to
create rows. Let the ends of the bacon hang over the edge of the terrine as
these will form the base.

Using a medium-sized bowl, mix all the ingredients together. If you have
time, leave the mixture for a few hours to marinate.

Spoon the mixture into the terrine, press down firmly and fold the
overhanging bits of bacon over the top like you are wrapping a Christmas
present. Cover the terrine with foil and place the dish in a bain marie
(water bath).

Place in the oven and cook for 1 hour. Reduce the temperature to 140ºC. and
cook until the internal temperature is 70ºC. If you do not have a
thermometer put a skewer in and the juices should run clear which will
indicate that the meat is cooked through.

Remove from the oven and the ban marie. Place something heavy on top (I use
a house brick wrapped in foil) until it cools. This ensures all the contents
come together.

PEACH, DATE AND GINGER CHUTNEY

Makes about 3½ cups of chutney depending on the size of peaches.

This is a versatile chutney for turkey, venison and chicken, and it is
especially good with the Country Turkey Terrine. It also makes a lovely gift
bottled for when you pop into Christmas parties, summer barbeques or
picnics. If you are fortunate enough to be near a farmers’ market which has
dried, chemical-free apricots and peaches you can add some of these
approximately ½ cup.

1 onion, finely chopped

6 large peaches, peeled, pitted and chopped

2 cups pitted dates, roughly chopped (not too small)

1 tablespoon freshly peeled and diced ginger

½ cup packed brown sugar

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1 tablespoon mustard seeds

¼ cup cider vinegar

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

½ teaspoon salt

¼ teaspoon white pepper

1 teaspoon freshly grated ground nutmeg

In a frypan, fry onion in olive oil on a low heat until then are translucent
cooked through.

Add the cooked onion and all other ingredients to a slow cooker like a
stockpot which does not have a sticky bottom.  Leave uncovered  bringing it
to  the boil, then reduce heat. The mixture will form a sticky mass and the
dates will soften. Stir to combine the ingredients but pay attention not to
overcook or squash the ingredients as part of the appeal of the chutney is
its chunky ingredients. Remove the lid and let it cool.

NECTARINE SALSA

Serves 6.

Perfect for leftover turkey, summer fish, barbecue prawns or chicken skewers

6 ripe nectarines – you can pop these on the BBQ beforehand for a few
minutes if you want to increase the flavor of the salsa.

1 red onion, diced

½ red chilli, seeded and finely chopped – optional

2 tablespoons red wine vinegar

handful mint – about ½ cup

Slice nectarines in half and remove stone. Slice and cut into evenly shaped
pieces so that they are about double the size of a dice.

Remove stalks from the mint and tear mint into strips

Mix together all ingredients in a bowl, however, pay attention not to mash
them so you retain the appearance of the nectarines slices, the texture of
mint and the onion.

Alison is sending us a couple more party recipes soon.  You can contact her at :

E:     <mailto:contact@alisondrover.com> info@thealisonprinciple.com

W:   www.thealisonprinciple.com

MARKET UPDATE

A few fruit and veg in season from Don, Byron Bay/Bangalow Farmers Market manager.

Corn – very sweet this time of year
Blue berries- wonderful taste and high in anti oxidants, Bananas
Capsicums – yellow variety especially flavoursome
Egg plant,           Beans – very crisp
Macadamia nuts and chocolate coated make a great gift
Beetroot – superb roasted and heaps of vitamin C

MUSIC

Santa claus is coming to town , by Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie, from Cool Yule

White Christmas, sung by Elvis (in a white jumpsuit we hope), in memory of Alison’s dad

The Little Drummer Boy, by Bing Crosby – for the lovely Byron Muffin Men, who gave us lots of  delicious stuff  to give a couple of subscribers who didn’t have to cook anything for Christmas

on air 6.12.10 : December’s fish and fruit and fiery Sagittarians

Today the belly astrogourmet Lilith beamed down to the belly kitchen to talk Sagittarius for her regular “Cooking with the Stars” segment, we went around Australia to see what’s in season in December, lots of fruit and veg as usual but a fish focus this month as it is so popular leading up to the holidays, lots of local events in our Belly Bulletin , and some of your holiday cooking and eating and drinking plans.

Cherries in a Chinese Bowl, by Gatya Kelly, part of the Eat/Paint/Love opening Friday 10.12.10 at Still At the Centre in Byron Bay. © Gatya Kelly

IN SEASON IN DECEMBER:

FISH AND SEAFOOD

All you need to know is on 2 really good websites – the Sydney Fish Market and the  Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS).

The Sydney Fish Market has a season guide, what’s in peak season or good availability so cheaper,better fish that hasn’t travelled the world to get to you.
Peak in December -Sydney rock oysters, school prawns (lovely Yamba prawns locally), loligo squid peak but southern calamari good availability, blue swimmer crabs – lots in local fish shops
Fish peak availability – atlantic salmon, tiger flathead, gold band snapper and big eye tuna, but unfortunately all problematic according to the AMCS – on their avoid list

The good news is that  on the AMCS better choice list,  there are lots of choices of fish and seafood in season:
wild australian salmon, blue mussels and blue swimmer crabs, all farmed oysters, school and bay or greentail prawns in NSW, the squids, farmed scallops, whitings and trevally

Lots of recipes on the fish markets site too.  And you can even find out how to tell the gender of a squid.  If you want to.

VEGETABLES

Asparagus, Hass avocadoes, beans, beetroot especially small young ‘uns, broccoli, capsicum (skip the green ones, they are just unripe red and yellow caps), celery, cucumbers fat and thin, eggplant, onions, peas, radishes, corn, tomatoes hit full flavour, and zucchini and their flowers if the rain doesn’t rot them all.  Try pumpkin flowers if you have a vine.

FRUIT

As we said in the bulletin, rain is really playing havoc this year, and not just locally for once.  But look for stone fruit now : glorious cherries and apricots,  berries (locally strawberries on their way out), blueberries in full swing, raspberries, rock, water and honeydew melons, bananas, mangoes, valencia oranges, passionfruit, pineapple, and starting a bit late, so maybe at the end of the month, lychees.

BELLY BULLETIN

Honu tells us the  Liberation Larder Christmas is on, free and veg and delicious at the Byron Community Centre, 12.30 on December 25th.  All welcome.

This Friday December 10 the Eat, Paint, Love art exhibition kicks off with plenty of real food and drink and music at Still at the Centre Art gallery on the Byron arts and industry estate.  But look closely at what you put in your mouth, as they have gathered more than 60 artists and 90 artworks all on, or around, food.  Table Manners  a ceramic installation by various artists will also be on for 2 days only, the 10th and 11th. Veet, will launch “Veet’s Cuisine” her first cookbook with 100 Vegetarian Recipes and beautiful drawings.  The exhibition runs until the end of January.  For more info listen to Arts canvass on bayfm around 9.30 this Thursday.

Look out for a new local magazine, focused on Northern rivers cooks and food producers, a quarterly called Sample.  It is edited by the Echo’s food writer Victoria Cosford, and produced by Remy Tancred of Lennox Heads, who was behind that handy guide to local restaurants, and record of many great girl nights out, Ate Phat Ducks.  You can find some tastes online, including a scallop risotto and an interview with the very successful macadamia producers from Brookfarm, at www.samplennsw.com

And wonderful Mullumbimby cook and food writer Belinda Jeffery has a new book out, called “the country cookbook”.  In Belinda’s own words, “This book… chronicles a year of my life in one of the most beautiful corners of Australia, the Far North Coast of NSW. It really is a celebration of the ‘Rainbow Country’ as it’s called, and of the simple pleasures and food that mean so much to me.”

If you are into learning to grow and cook with plants suited to our sub-tropical environment, check out the Starseed Nursery website or see them at a Farmers market.  They sound like they are doing really interesting projects, and we plan to get them on belly soon.  Lotus, mushrooms and papaya are all upcoming workshops, as well as the fabulously named coconut day.  This weekend, 11 and 12 December, they are cooking in and with bamboo, exploring bamboo and fire, and making bamboo bio-char which is a soil conditioner. It’s a 2 day workshop with food and music.  www.starseed.co

In national news, cereal company Kelloggs has been crowned Australia’s most misleading junk food advertiser for the fourth year running in this year’s Fame and Shame Awards.  They are organised by advocacy group The Parents Jury, which fights against junk food advertising to children.  Kellogs won both the pester award for their LCM snack bars, and the Smoke and Mirrors Award for claiming Nutri-Grain is good for aspiring athletes.

If your favourite Christmas food is fruit, be ready to pay more and accept slightly damaged fruit.   Australia’s wettest spring on record and a rainy start to summer threatens fruit and grain harvests all across the south-east.  Hail and rain has wiped out 80 per cent of some cherry crops at Young in New South Wales.
Mango growers in Queensland and the Northern Territory are also badly affected.Trevor Dunmall from the Australian Mango Industry Association says the wet conditions are damaging what was already a light crop. He says there will be fewer mangos around this season, and those that make it into the supermarkets will be slightly damaged. “To pick mangos you really need dry conditions, the rain can damage the skin and leads to easier marking and blemishes … so the appearance may not be ideal,” he said.
The National Farmers Federation says fruit and grain harvests across the south-east are under serious and continued threat.

But we like to finish on a positive note, so if you are on social networking site facebook, you may soon be getting slices of virtual pizza.  And if your facebook  friends send you enough virtual pizza you will be able to redeem it for slices of real pizza.  Well sort of…real major chain fast food pizza.  And of course you can find the branches with the GPS on your mobile phone.

And if your food dreams are more of the fancy restaurant variety, you don’t need to go all the way to France to eat in a 3 Michelin star place.  There are now as many 3 star restaurants in Japan as in France, 26.  Japan also has more than twice as many restaurants as France, roughly 500 thousand to 200 thousand.  So just pop off up the road to Japan and make a start.

Lilith’s Cooking with the Stars for

Sagittarius is here

or click above the rainbow

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL ON BELLY DECEMBER 20

You don’t do Christmas?  We are happy to hear about whatever you like to use as a reason to get around a table with loved ones, and most importantly, what you will eat!  As I type this I remember the Christmas phonecalls to grandparents, in the dark days before skipe or cheap calls of any kind.  One of the first questions was always : “What are you eating?”  And the longest, most detailed answers.

So now everyone within radio or computer or phone range can join that conversation.  So go on, tell your bellysisters, what are you eating this year, and who will be around your table?  (don’t do tables?  that’s ok too)

Sister T

MELLOW SUMMER TUNES (rain? what rain?)


Watermelon Man, sung by Les Mc Cann
Summertime, delicious version by Angelique Kidjo
Distant Shore by Chieko Kinbara
Sarah Vaughan with Gotan Project – Whatever Lola Wants

Conversations with Dr David Jubb

Thanks to our guest Dr David Jubb for breathing life into the belly show today. He is believed to be one of the World’s leading Neuro-Behaviour Physiologists and a cell rejuvenation consultant, specialist in brain and gut dysfunction, microbial imbalances, metabolic neuropathic conditions and resulting cognitive and emotional processing dysfunction. Specialist in non-surgical, non-druggist approach to healing through vitalization.

Dr. David Jubb was a breatharian for over 20 years whilst living in New York. He runs Jubb’s Longevity and has written many books. He promotes lifefood, which is distinct from raw or living foods in that it still has it’s lifeforce intact, ability to reproduce, and can be found growing somewhere in the wild. He is also a blood formation specialist, shaman, and founder of colliodal biology which is the understanding of life below the level of the cell.

If you heard the show you will know that Dr David Jubb is hugely entertaining as well as ridiculously informative. There were definitely too many subjects to discuss with David in the short 1 hour that we had but by touching on a small variety of subjects, we hoped to ignite the little spark living within all of us that ultimately wants to lead a healthier life.

My intention on belly is to help bring awareness where it may be lacking, to increase the knowledge you may already have and to encourage you to make your own informed and educated decisions on the foods you choose to eat and the way you choose to look after your own unique planet… YOU!

The state of our precious planet and the state of your own health go hand in hand. I believe that by loving yourself from the inside out and understanding the inner workings of the gut and your digestive system to start with, you may begin recognize the similarities that exist in the delicate balance of both ecosystems and ultimately work towards a better life for all involved

May i suggest that you check out some of the links provided to hear Dr David Jubb’s discussions and teachings on a vast array of topics. What you decide to take on board is an individual choice and one that is suited to you and your own situation, at any given time in your life.

Listening to Dr David Jubb’s pod-casts is hugely inspiring for me coming from a Nutritional background. There were however many things that i would not have understood had i not studied it, so to our gorgeous listeners i would say, go easy on yourself and perhaps start with some of the YouTube presentations which may be more suited to people newer to the world of big long complicated words!

So, i’ll leave it with you to adventure into the world of Jubb and look forward to sharing many more interesting and informative belly shows with you in the future.

Dr David Jubb

Here is part of a short interview with him from he CBS interactive Business Network –

Dr. David Jubb was the scientific advisor to live foods expert and internationally-acclaimed author Anne Wigmore. Based in New York City, Dr. Jubb and his wife, Annie, have been teaching workshops and classes for 24 years in many aspects of healing, including fasting and “life food.” Life food is Dr. Jubb’s term for his program of natural foods and fasting. I’ve benefited from Dr. Jubb’s life food training, and I jumped at the opportunity to interview him for this issue of New Life Journal.

Why do you use the term life food as opposed to raw or live food?

DJ: Life food is food that has its life-force intact. Raw food people do raw flesh and raw grains and raw legumes. This is not life food. Raw food is just uncooked, that s all. Life food is food that is nutritionally available and easy to digest.

Living food is a term that Ann Wigmore coined. When people ate simply raw food, she realized that there were a lot of enzyme inhibitors in that food, and so she called what she does living food to define this principle of releasing the enzyme inhibitors from the food through sprouting.

I became her scientific advisor, and as I looked at her program, I saw that she included a lot of food that couldn’t be found growing in nature. And, under the microscope, that food just became mold, fungi, and yeast fairly quickly. And as a microbiologist and a cell histologist, I saw that the flora that makes up that food is only one step away from a mold, fungi, and yeast. Fermentation is the chief undertaker.

Banana and dates, and corn and wheat, and rice and carrots and beets, are composed symbiotically of a flora that really won t ecosterilize against mold, fungus, and yeast in nature. And they wreak havoc in the body and cause more mold, fungus, and yeast.

If this tickles your fancy then here are some links below to help you on your way.

Patrick Timpone’s podcasts – http://www.oneradionetwork.com/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=236F93Hj4nY

Jubbs Cell Rejuvenation: The Science Behind … – David Jubb – 2006

Alofa,

Sister Rasela

on air 22 November ’10 : Quentin and Katrina’s family recipes

The very fabulous Quentin and Katrina getting ready to cook up a storm

Sometimes none of the regular bellysisters can be in Byron to present the show – not sure why, we are all affected by wanderlust.  This is usually a bonus for listeners as there are so many wonderful food lovers among the Bayfm presenters.  Quentin Watts, who presents the very wonderful Q’s Jazz ‘nBlues on Bayfm, has presented belly before and always plays the most wonderful and obscure food-themed music.  Her sister Katrina has been a guest on belly, to talk about feeding Japanese, and Australian, sumo wrestlers.  For this show they teamed up and shared some family memories, and recipes.

Our father went to uni in London and learned to cook in the south of France, and a few dishes from various ski resorts he visited. He was such a good cook, our Mother told him she couldn’t cook at all : a lie as her mother – our gran, was a wonderful cook, Oz style so we always ate well – our mother would threaten to feed us meat pies and peas like other people ate if we were no so keen on some dish she had slaved over in the kitchen.

We two sisters got a taste for almond rocca via the Americans who my mother met in Sydney during WW2.  Plus she had a Spanish girlfriend who taught her some of her family’s favourite dishes. A very easy Spag bol using 6 cloves of garlic. olive oil, minced beef allspice, and cloves with concentrated tomato paste. Later in my own life I would make the left overs into chilli con carne by adding cumin, and a few other bits.  Plus we got to know more interesting foods through our own multicultural friends at primary school.

CHILLI  CON CARNE – FROM SCRATCH

2 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed
700g lean minced beef
1 large onion, finely chopped
1 tsp ground cumin
2 tbsp dried oregano
1 tbsp coriander seeds toasted and ground
1 – 2 fresh green jalapeños, (a small, hot green chilli) thinly sliced.
1 tsp dried chilli flakes
a few shakes of Tabasco sauce
If you like it Very Hot add a pinch, a 1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper to taste.
1 tbsp Dijon mustard
2 tbsp tomato sauce
425g can tomatoes, chopped
180g 1 cup red kidney beans soaked overnight or a can of red kidney beans, drained and washed
200ml beer or red wine
Sea salt and pepper

Method

1. Place dried kidney beans in a saucepan, cover with cold water, soak overnight. Rinse add fresh water and bring to the boil. Cook for 20 minutes or until tender. Drain and set aside. Or use the tin of rinsed kidney beans.

2. Heat 1 tbsp olive oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium heat and cook mince, breaking up with the back of a spoon, for 5 minutes or until brown, transfer to a plate. Add 1 tbsp oil to saucepan, add mince and cook for 5 minutes or until brown, then add remaining olive oil to pan, add onions, garlic and jalapeño chillies and cook for 5 minutes or until soft. Return meat to pan with stock, tomatoes, oregano and spices. Season to taste with sea salt, freshly ground black pepper and ground chilli. Bring to the boil, reduce heat and simmer for 2 hours stirring occasionally until tender. Add beans and cook for another 20 minutes or until sauce is thick. Adjust seasoning and chilli heat to taste. Serve with boiled rice and 2 tbsp coriander to garnish with sour cream or toss with chopped avocado and tomato tossed with lime juice. You can serve this with corn chips as well.


SPANISH SPAGHETTI BOLOGNESE

500 – 700g lean beef minced
2 tablespoons olive oil
6 large cloves garlic chopped fine
1 heaped teaspoon of allspice
4 whole cloves
4 tablespoons of concentrated tomato paste
sea salt and black pepper to taste

Method
Gently heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large fry pan, add 6 large cloves of chopped garlic, and simmer till golden. Garlic can be removed for a more subtle flavour. Add 500 – 700g lean minced beef and fry on med heat until browned. Take care not to burn the garlic. Add 1 teaspoon allspice, 4 whole cloves, 4 tablespoons of concentrated tomato paste and black pepper to taste.

Stir in ingredients and cook tomato concentrate into the mince. Add water or beef stock to cover and simmer 1 hour. Taste for salt after one hour as some tomato pastes are slightly salty. Add salt to taste plus a jigger of brandy and a splash of red wine. Simmer for 1 hour. Remove the 4 whole cloves. Serve on spaghetti or other pasta with a topping of grated Parmesan cheese and a sprinkle of freshly ground black pepper.

When using the leftover Spanish Spaghetti Bolognese

In a large pan place coriander seeds – lightly toast. Remove and set aside to cool in pestle and mortar. Crush finely when cool.

Add to the pan:

1tbspn olive oil
1 large onion chopped fine
1 clove of garlic chopped

Fry until softened and just golden, then add
1 – 2 fresh green jalapeños, (a small, hot green chilli) thinly sliced.

NB if you do not eat chilli, add a chopped green capsicum instead. Leave out the Tabasco, dried chilli flakes and cayenne pepper.

Cook chopped pepper or chillies into the onion and garlic.
If you like Very Hot Chill Con Carne add a pinch, or a 1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp of cayenne pepper to taste. Less is best – Remember you can always add more later.

Add :
1 tsp dried chilli flakes
a few shakes of Tabasco sauce
2 tbsp tomato sauce
1 tbsp Dijon mustard

Cook to combine flavours and add:
1 tbsp coriander seeds toasted and ground fine
1 tsp ground cumin
2 tbsp dried oregano
425g can tomatoes, chopped
400g soaked overnight or a can of red kidney beans, drained and washed
Sea salt and pepper
Simmer on low for a few minutes as you gently stir through the cooked beans. Add the leftover Spanish Spaghetti Bolognese.
Add about 200ml red wine and simmer till wine has almost absorbed.

Serve on Boiled rice with 2 tbsp coriander to garnish and sour cream. Or toss chopped avocado and tomato with lime juice.

IN SEASON

Fruit:
avocados, bananas, blueberries, grapefruit, paw paws, peaches, strawberries, tamarillos. It’s berry season – so make the most of it.

Vegetables:
artichoke, asparagus, bok choi, broad beans, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflowers, chinese cabbage, celery, coriander, cucumbers, dill, fennel, garlic, leeks, lettuce, onions, potatoes, peas, silver beet, spring onions, squash, zucchini
and look out for fresh garlic at local Farmers Markets from now on.

Quentin and Katrina also spoke with Louise and Bruno Bouget from Mullumbimby French restaurant La Table – and gave away a voucher  to a lucky subscriber.
The second anniversary of La Table is around the corner & to celebrate they are hosting a special Provencale Dinner with accompanying Aperitif and Wines from Provence – Friday 3th and Saturday 4th of December.  The event will also feature Live Piano, Guitar & Chanson with a European flavour, offered by discerning local musicians Vasudha and Jem. Plus two very special guests from Provence who will be dining at the Long Table with those who enjoy the age old French tradition of a shared meal.  And the launch of ‘Green Food Generation – A Culinary Adventure’ by Hayden Wood, a new book that features a chapter on ‘La Table’…  “This delectable collection of chefs restauranteurs, caterers, and food personalities are a new generation of conscientious consumers and creative cooks, as passionate about Green Food as they are about the planet”

La Table Restaurant & Cafe 72 Burringbar St, Mullumbimby NSW 2482 02-66842227 www.latable.com.au

Another lucky BayFM subscriber won a packet of Australian Sea Salt from our good friends at Australian Sea Salt Pty Ltd. This salt retains all naturally occurring trace elements, has no silicon or aluminium, no bleaches or free flow agents.  auscsalt@easy.com.au.

THE PEPPERCORN TREE

Also called a Pepperina – Schinus molle is a quick growing evergreen tree that grows to 15 meters (50 feet) tall and 5-10 meters (16-33 feet) wide. It is unrelated to true pepper Piper Nigrum but like the berries of its close relative, they are sold as “pink peppercorns” and often blended with commercial pepper.
The fruit and leaves are, however, potentially poisonous to poultry, pigs and possibly calves. The sticky, clear sap may cause dermatitis in sensitive individuals. When flowering, the tree may cause respiratory irritation, sinus congestion and headache. Records also exist of young children who have experienced vomiting and diarrhoea after eating the fruit.
Extracts of S. molle have been used as a flavour in drinks and syrups.
The Inca used the sweet outer part of ripe fruit to make a drink. Berries were rubbed carefully to avoid mixing with the bitter inner parts, the mix strained and then left for a few days to produce a refreshing and wholesome drink. It was also boiled down for syrup or mixed with maize to make nourishing gruel.
There is also significant archaeological evidence that the fruits of S. molle were used extensively in the Central Andes around 550-1000 AD for producing chichi or chichia a fermented alcoholic beverage.

In traditional medicine, fruit of the peppercorn tree, S. molle was used in treating a variety of wounds and infections due to its antibacterial and antiseptic properties. It has also been used as an antidepressant and diuretic, and for toothache, rheumatism and menstrual disorders, with recent studies providing some support for its antidepressant effects. It has also been speculated that S. molle’s insecticidal properties make it a good candidate for use as an alternative to synthetic chemicals in pest control.



Belly Roll
Phil Woods This Is How I Feel About Quincy (Quincy  Jones) Jazzed Media Allegro #1004  Brian Lynch tpt, flhn; Bobby Routch flhn, fh hn; Richard Chamberlain tbn, euphonium; Nelson Hill fl, bar, t sax; Phil Woods cl, a sax; Bill Charlap p; Steve Gilmore b; Bill Goodwin d. 2007

Peel Me A Grape Anita O’Day & Cal Tjader Time For Two (David L Frishberg)  Polygram #559808    *1962 Anita O’Day voc; Cal Tjader d, bvoc; vibes; Lonnie Hewitt p; Robert Corwin p. 2003

Peppercorn Trees
Tinpan Orange The Bottom of the Lake (Emily Zmira Lubitz) VItamin Records Jesse Lubitz and sister Emily Lubitz voc, g; Alex Burkoy v, g, mandolin. 2009 Mullum Fest

Pass the Salt Higher Ground Black & White – Faded and Torn (Dave Devlin) Orchard #966 *L+ Higher Ground: Fred Bolton voc, g; Duke Weddington voc, bj; Dianne Lujan vocals; Dave Devlin mandolin, dobro; Mark Smith bass. 2005 Protected

Cos’ Groove
Steve Herberman Action:Reaction Steve Herberman CD Baby.Com/Indys #105933    *L+ Steve Herberman g; Drew Gress b; Mark Ferber d. 2006

Swedish Pastry
Stan Hasselgard Sextet West Coast Jazz – Early Years (Barney Kessel) MC #046    Stan Hasselgard cl; Red Norvo vibes; Arnold Ross p; Barney Kessel g; Rolo Garberg b; Frank Bode d. 18/12/1947 LA

Red Beans and Rice
Charmaine Neville Band Up Up Up (Horace Silver)
Gert Town #1116 *D Charmaine Neville voc; Amasa Miller keybds; Reggie Houston sax; Detriot Brooks g; Jefferey Cardarelli b; Jesse Boyd db; Gerald French d. release date May, 21, 1996  CD 2003

I can tell you sitting for two hours playing music was like a holiday after the exciting pace of Belly. You sisters do a wonderful show every week – hope it was not too carnivorous for your listeners.  Hope we didn’t sound like the silly sisters.

Love and Light, Quentin and Katrina

I’d love to stay home and listen to the silly sisters every Monday – thank you Quentin and Katrina, extra chocolate cake for you – sister T

Sometimes none of the regular bellysisters can be in Byron to present the show – not sure why, we are all affected by wanderlust.  This is usually a bonus for listeners as there are so many wonderful food lovers among the Bayfm presenters.  Quentin Watt, who presents the very wonderful Q’s Jazz and Blues on Bayfm, has presented belly before and always plays the most wonderful and obscure food-themed music.  Her sister Katrina has been a guest on belly, to talk about feeding Japanese, and Australian, sumo wrestlers.  For this show they teamed up and shared some family memories, and recipes.

Our father went to uni in London and learned to cook in the south of France, and a few dishes from various ski resorts he visited. He was such a good cook, our Mother told him she couldn’t cook at all : a lie as her mother – our gran, was a wonderful cook, Oz style so we always ate well – our mother would threaten to feed us meat pies and peas like other people ate if we were no so keen on some dish she had slaved over in the kitchen.

We two sisters got a taste for almond rocca via the Americans who my mother met in Sydney during WW2.  Plus she had a Spanish girlfriend who taught her some of her family’s favourite dishes. A very easy Spag bol using 6 cloves of garlic. olive oil, minced beef allspice, and cloves with concentrated tomato paste. Later in my own life I would make the left overs into chilli con carne by adding cumin, and a few other bits.  Plus we got to know more interesting foods through our own multicultural friends at primary school.

CHILL CON CARNE – FROM SCRATCH

2 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed
700g lean minced beef
1 large onion, finely chopped
1 tsp ground cumin
2 tbsp dried oregano
1 tbsp coriander seeds toasted and ground
1 – 2 fresh green jalapeños, (a small, hot green chilli) thinly sliced.
1 tsp dried chilli flakes
a few shakes of Tabasco sauce
If you like it Very Hot add a pinch, a 1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper to taste.
1 tbsp Dijon mustard
2 tbsp tomato sauce
425g can tomatoes, chopped
180g 1 cup red kidney beans soaked overnight or a can of red kidney beans, drained and washed
200ml beer or red wine
Sea salt and pepper

Method

1. Place dried kidney beans in a saucepan, cover with cold water, soak overnight. Rinse add fresh water and bring to the boil. Cook for 20 minutes or until tender. Drain and set aside. Or use the tin of rinsed kidney beans.

2. Heat 1 tbsp olive oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium heat and cook mince, breaking up with the back of a spoon, for 5 minutes or until brown, transfer to a plate. Add 1 tbsp oil to saucepan, add mince and cook for 5 minutes or until brown, then add remaining olive oil to pan, add onions, garlic and jalapeño chillies and cook for 5 minutes or until soft. Return meat to pan with stock, tomatoes, oregano and spices. Season to taste with sea salt, freshly ground black pepper and ground chilli. Bring to the boil, reduce heat and simmer for 2 hours stirring occasionally until tender. Add beans and cook for another 20 minutes or until sauce is thick. Adjust seasoning and chilli heat to taste. Serve with boiled rice and 2 tbsp coriander to garnish with sour cream or toss with chopped avocado and tomato tossed with lime juice. You can serve this with corn chips as well.

SPANISH SPAGHETTI BOLOGNESE

500 – 700g lean beef minced
2 tablespoons olive oil
6 large cloves garlic chopped fine
1 heaped teaspoon of allspice
4 whole cloves
4 tablespoons of concentrated tomato paste
sea salt and black pepper to taste

Method
Gently heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large fry pan, add 6 large cloves of chopped garlic, and simmer till golden. Garlic can be removed for a more subtle flavour. Add 500 – 700g lean minced beef and fry on med heat until browned. Take care not to burn the garlic. Add 1 teaspoon allspice, 4 whole cloves, 4 tablespoons of concentrated tomato paste and black pepper to taste.

Stir in ingredients and cook tomato concentrate into the mince. Add water or beef stock to cover and simmer 1 hour. Taste for salt after one hour as some tomato pastes are slightly salty. Add salt to taste plus a jigger of brandy and a splash of red wine. Simmer for 1 hour. Remove the 4 whole cloves. Serve on spaghetti or other pasta with a topping of grated Parmesan cheese and a sprinkle of freshly ground black pepper.

When using the leftover Spanish Spaghetti Bolognese

In a large pan place coriander seeds – lightly toast. Remove and set aside to cool in pestle and mortar. Crush finely when cool.

Add to the pan:

1tbspn olive oil
1 large onion chopped fine
1 clove of garlic chopped

Fry until softened and just golden, then add
1 – 2 fresh green jalapeños, (a small, hot green chilli) thinly sliced.

NB if you do not eat chilli, add a chopped green capsicum instead. Leave out the Tabasco, dried chilli flakes and cayenne pepper.

Cook chopped pepper or chillies into the onion and garlic.
If you like Very Hot Chill Con Carne add a pinch, or a 1/4 tsp to 1/2 tsp of cayenne pepper to taste. Less is best – Remember you can always add more later.

Add :
1 tsp dried chilli flakes
a few shakes of Tabasco sauce
2 tbsp tomato sauce
1 tbsp Dijon mustard

Cook to combine flavours and add:
1 tbsp coriander seeds toasted and ground fine
1 tsp ground cumin
2 tbsp dried oregano
425g can tomatoes, chopped
400g soaked overnight or a can of red kidney beans, drained and washed
Sea salt and pepper
Simmer on low for a few minutes as you gently stir through the cooked beans. Add the leftover Spanish Spaghetti Bolognese.
Add about 200ml red wine and simmer till wine has almost absorbed.

Serve on Boiled rice with 2 tbsp coriander to garnish and sour cream. Or toss chopped avocado and tomato with lime juice.

IN SEASON

Fruit:
avocados, bananas, blueberries, grapefruit, paw paws, peaches, strawberries, tamarillos. It’s berry season – so make the most of it.

Vegetables:
artichoke, asparagus, bok choi, broad beans, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflowers, chinese cabbage, celery, coriander, cucumbers, dill, fennel, garlic, leeks, lettuce, onions, potatoes, peas, silver beet, spring onions, squash, zucchini
and look out for fresh garlic at local Farmers Markets from now on.

Quentin and Katrina also spoke with Louise and Bruno Bouget from Mullumbimby French restaurant La Table – and gave away a voucher  to a lucky subscriber.
The second anniversary of La Table is around the corner & to celebrate they are hosting a special Provencale Dinner with accompanying Aperitif and Wines from Provence – Friday 3th and Saturday 4th of December.  The event will also feature Live Piano, Guitar & Chanson with a European flavour, offered by discerning local musicians Vasudha and Jem. Plus two very special guests from Provence who will be dining at the Long Table with those who enjoy the age old French tradition of a shared meal.  And the launch of ‘Green Food Generation – A Culinary Adventure’ by Hayden Wood, a new book that features a chapter on ‘La Table’…  “This delectable collection of chefs restauranteurs, caterers, and food personalities are a new generation of conscientious consumers and creative cooks, as passionate about Green Food as they are about the planet”

La Table Restaurant & Cafe 72 Burringbar St, Mullumbimby NSW 2482 02-66842227 www.latable.com.au

Another lucky BayFM subscriber won a packet of Australian Sea Salt from our good friends at Australian Sea Salt Pty Ltd. This salt retains all naturally occurring trace elements, has no silicon or aluminium, no bleaches or free flow agents.  auscsalt@easy.com.au.

THE PEPPERCORN TREE

Also called a Pepperina – Schinus molle is a quick growing evergreen tree that grows to 15 meters (50 feet) tall and 5-10 meters (16-33 feet) wide. It is unrelated to true pepper Piper Nigrum but like the berries of its close relative, they are sold as “pink peppercorns” and often blended with commercial pepper.
The fruit and leaves are, however, potentially poisonous to poultry, pigs and possibly calves. The sticky, clear sap may cause dermatitis in sensitive individuals. When flowering, the tree may cause respiratory irritation, sinus congestion and headache. Records also exist of young children who have experienced vomiting and diarrhoea after eating the fruit.
Extracts of S. molle have been used as a flavour in drinks and syrups.
The Inca used the sweet outer part of ripe fruit to make a drink. Berries were rubbed carefully to avoid mixing with the bitter inner parts, the mix strained and then left for a few days to produce a refreshing and wholesome drink. It was also boiled down for syrup or mixed with maize to make nourishing gruel.
There is also significant archaeological evidence that the fruits of S. molle were used extensively in the Central Andes around 550-1000 AD for producing chichi or chichia a fermented alcoholic beverage.

In traditional medicine, fruit of the peppercorn tree, S. molle was used in treating a variety of wounds and infections due to its antibacterial and antiseptic properties. It has also been used as an antidepressant and diuretic, and for toothache, rheumatism and menstrual disorders, with recent studies providing some support for its antidepressant effects. It has also been speculated that S. molle’s insecticidal properties make it a good candidate for use as an alternative to synthetic chemicals in pest control.

Belly Roll        Phil Woods This Is How I Feel About Quincy (Quincy  Jones) Jazzed Media Allegro #1004  Brian Lynch tpt, flhn; Bobby Routch flhn, fh hn; Richard Chamberlain tbn, euphonium; Nelson Hill fl, bar, t sax; Phil Woods cl, a sax; Bill Charlap p; Steve Gilmore b; Bill Goodwin d. 2007

Peel Me A Grape    Anita O’Day & Cal Tjader Time For Two (David L Frishberg)  Polygram #559808    *1962 Anita O’Day voc; Cal Tjader d, bvoc; vibes; Lonnie Hewitt p; Robert Corwin p. 2003

Peppercorn Trees    Tinpan Orange The Bottom of the Lake (Emily Zmira Lubitz) VItamin Records Jesse Lubitz and sister Emily Lubitz voc, g; Alex Burkoy v, g, mandolin. 2009 Mullum Fest

Pass the Salt    Higher Ground Black & White – Faded and Torn (Dave Devlin) Orchard #966 *L+ Higher Ground: Fred Bolton voc, g; Duke Weddington voc, bj; Dianne Lujan vocals; Dave Devlin mandolin, dobro; Mark Smith bass. 2005 Protected

Cos’ Groove    Steve Herberman Action:Reaction Steve Herberman CD Baby.Com/Indys #105933    *L+ Steve Herberman g; Drew Gress b; Mark Ferber d. 2006

Swedish Pastry    Stan Hasselgard Sextet West Coast Jazz – Early Years (Barney Kessel) MC #046    Stan Hasselgard cl; Red Norvo vibes; Arnold Ross p; Barney Kessel g; Rolo Garberg b; Frank Bode d. 18/12/1947 LA

Red Beans and Rice     Charmaine Neville Band Up Up Up (Horace Silver)
Gert Town #1116 *D Charmaine Neville voc; Amasa Miller keybds; Reggie Houston sax; Detriot Brooks g; Jefferey Cardarelli b; Jesse Boyd db; Gerald French d. release date May, 21, 1996  CD 2003

I can tell you sitting for two hours playing music was like a holiday after the exciting pace of Belly. You sisters do a wonderful show every week – hope it was not too carnivorous for your listeners.  Hope we didn’t sound like the silly sisters.

Love and Light, Quentin and Katrina

on air 15 November 2010 – journeys in time and space to Mexico and the ’70s

Mexican belts - photo © Shutterstock

The belly kitchen was bubbling today, 3 wonderful women  shared stories of what cafes and restaurants were like in this area back in the 70s – some of you not born,some just can’t remember anything from that era, the rest of us have probably forgotten how fast Australian restaurant food has changed.  And we’re also off to Mexico, to the region of Tampico with Nancy Jo and her Tampico aunts and cousins, and to modern Australian Mexican food with writer and reviewer Barbara Sweeney. The first wonderful woman was hula goddess Lilith, ready to Cook with the Stars for Scorpio, seasoned with a little sultry Scorpio tango from Gotan Project.  Who are touring Australia in early December, even coming to Brisbane, but not Byron Bay unfortunately.

Nancy Jo Falcone is a classic Aussie, she grew up in the  US with an Italian father, Chilean step grandfather, and mum and grandma Mexican from the region of Tampico, today we talked about the Mexican bit. Nancy Jo is has also been involved in  bayfm for a long time, right now she is on our program team, she is the Monday mentor, so blame her if the bellysisters stuff up please.  She started a Mexican restaurant in Coolangatta in 1974 , with some of her mother’s recipes.  About 10 years ago she wen to Tampico and managed to link up again with lots of long lost aunts and cousins, and discover many wonderful new recipes.  Tampico  is on Mexico’s Caribbean coast, reportedly a very friendly place, and there is so much water and seafood there that the inhabitants are known as ‘crabs’.   But it is also known for the Tampico style bbq beef, and sauces made with pumpkin seeds.

See these websites for more information about Tampico, and lots of recipes:

http://www.hackwriters.com/Tampico.htm

http://www.travellady.com/Issues/January07/3797FoodTampico.htm

http://www.foodbanter.com/mexican-cooking/119293-tampico.html

Nancy Jo almost never uses recipes, but she gave us two favourite salsas.  She is especially in love with the pineapple one, much more than the sum of its parts.

PINEAPPLE CHILLI SALSA

Makes one cup (Great with roast chicken)

sombrero muy lindo - image © Shutterstock

1/2 cup Finely chopped pineapple
1/4 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup chopped Jalapeno or mild green chillies

Mix together, store in airtight jar in fridge.
Will last for over one week.

TRADITIONAL SALSA

Makes around one cup

3 small roma tomatoes blanched and peeled
1/4 cup finely sliced spring onion/or finely diced onion
1 clove garlic crushed to smooth paste
1 small jalapeno chilli chopped fine
1.4 cup finely chopped fresh parsley
1/4 cup finely chopped fresh coriander
2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh oregano
1/2-teaspoon cumin powder
1-tablespoon olive oil
1-tablespoon lemon or lime juice
Salt to taste

Chop tomatoes fine (Do not put in blender)
Add all other ingredients
Mix together, store in airtight jar in fridge.

Our other delicious guest was Barbara Sweeney. She was visiting from Sydney, in theory having a writing working holiday, but we managed to distract her for a while.  She is  food and features writer with Country Style magazine, organises major food events, is a restaurant reviewer, and used to edit that student bible, Cheap Eats.  She suggests a few places to get good Mexican food if you can’t get to Tampico, or Nancy Jo’s house.

happy Mexican men after a good meal

Guzman y Gomez
Californian-style Mexican food.
Seven outlets in Sydney
and one to open in Fortitude Valley,
Brisbane in December.
www.guzmanygomez.com

Vera Cruz
Once of the first Mexican restaurants
in Sydney to go beyond Tex-Mex
314 Military Road, Cremorne. (02) 9904 5818

Fireworks Foods
Supplies Mexican ingredients
including fresh corn tortillas.
www.fireworksfoods.com.au

And I can’t resist sharing this other gorgeous man with you,

a delicious bed of corn chips

an image from a commercial spoofing the great

“American Beauty” bed of roses

We did also manage to head off to the 70s in Lismore briefly, as Barbara ran a cafe in Lismore as sweet 19 year old, in 1979.   Her claim to fame is that for six months they had the first and only real coffee brewer in town, until a much bigger cafe got an espresso machine.  Think of this as you drive or fly past all the coffee plantations in the Northern Rivers.  They had to go to Sydney to get the beans, and for those six magic months the first coffee maker in Lismore, that pulled coffee lovers in the door by their noses, was … a drippolator.  Yes, everybody else was serving instant, or tea of course.  But they had great shoes!  (Shoes are important)

Love and mole (Lilith has promised to bring her renowned Mexican mole recipe back to belly soon, the last version has gone to cyber heaven)

sister T

Lilith’s Cooking with the Stars for Scorpio is here


THE SONGLIST :

Gotan Project : Epoca  (look out for this fab Paris based group, touring Australia at the moment)

And a few favourite Mexican songs chosen by Nancy Jo:

La Calaco :  Rogaciano

La Calaco :  El Tecolote (The Owl)

Los Bravos Del Norte De Ramon Ayala :  Andan Deciendo (They Go Around
Saying)

on air 8.11.10 – the food of the elves – or at least of the Finns

On the belly menu today,the man who invented the menu, the rudest chef in the world and the one with the cutest little boy smile, reindeer week in Helsinki, peach Melba and the Kylie Minogue mango.  To celebrate the return of sister Bernadette (of the Canonised Casserole this week) we finally took off to weird and wonderful Finland, and the magnificent Lilith the belly astrogourmet will be cooking with the stars for those sexy troublemakers, Scorpio.  Seasoned with plenty of tango, which just seems right for Scorpio.
Well that was the plan…. Then we talked about elves just a bit too much, always a dangerous thing to do in Byron Bay.  I swear mischievous gods and creatures of all kinds keep a close eye on the rainbow region – too much teasing and your day goes banana shaped.  Anyway the lovely Lilith was mugged by elves as she stepped into the studio and all her fabulous scorpio info disappeared.  She looked under various toadstools and in the car, no good, so for all those predictably fascinating Scorpio chefs please tune in next week.  Revolutionary Auguste Escoffier (he got his chefs to drink barley water while working rather than booze for a start), bad boy Gordon Ramsay and cute boy Curtis Stone will definitely feature.  The bonus is that next week’s guest, Nancy-Jo, and Lilith are old friends and larger than life, so it should be fun.
We did manage to bring you lots of news and talk about Finland before the elves stepped in.

One of the most popular Finnish foods - cheese!

THE BELLY BULLETIN

The Tenth Biodiversity conference finished late last Friday in Nagoya, Japan.  It covered many issues aimed at stopping the current rapid loss of species, and brought together countries with very different priorities.  The most difficult discussion was aimed at fighting biopiracy, the unauthorised use of genetic material.  Several cases have involved traditional foods which have also been used for their medical benefits for many generations, like South African rooibos tea or turmeric in India.  Many food seeds have also been “collected” without compensation to the traditional owners.  Unexpectedly, the conference managed to come up with an agreed protocol on how to handle access and benefit sharing of genetic materials, although commentators are already saying key sections are very vague and subject to the future interpretation and goodwill of participants.  But the protocol is at least a start on a very  contentious area, and also includes compounds that are derived from the original genetic materials.
Lots more info at :
http://www.unep.org/Themes/Biodiversity/Information_materials/cop10.asp
http://ictsd.org/i/news/bridgesweekly/92903/#respond
or search for “access and benefit sharing ”

If your parents were born overseas in a country where most people are svelte and slender like most of Asia, you might think that your genes protect you from becoming a chubby Australian.  Professor Bruce Hollingworth from Monash University has just conducted a study that proves you’d better watch out and eat your greens.  In just one generation, Australian children of migrants are catching up with the obesity rates of their peers – getting a whole lot tubbier in the case of children of Asian migrants, and a little thinner for the kids of migrants from Suthern Europe.  The Professor thinks this is either due to giving up traditional diet and exercise, or  that “overweight and obesity become normalised by peers”.  Nearly 33% of Australian adults are overweight.

US researchers from the University of North Carolina say they have found a “tipsy” gene that explains why some people feel the effects of alcohol quicker than others.
The 10 to 20 % of people who have the “tipsy” version of the gene break down alcohol more readily, so they feel the effects of alcohol much faster.The gene may offer some protection against alcoholism, as people who react strongly to alcohol are less likely to become addicted.  Meantime in Lebanon, organisers of a wine festival in Beirut poured around 100 bottles of Lebanese wine into a giant glass, 2.4 metres high and 1.65 metres wide, to successfully break the world record for the biggest wine glass.

Mango season is hotting up, and you could soon be slurping into a ripe juicy Kylie Minogue. The ABC reports that three new varieties of mango have been developed in the Northern Territory, and Primary Industry Minister Kon Vatskalis wants one of them named after our Kylie.  “I think Kylie should be so lucky to have this mango variety named after her,” Mr Vatskalis said.
The mangoes have been developed over 16 years under the National Mango Breeding Program, a joint venture between the Northern Territory, Western Australia, Queensland and the CSIRO.

Are you inspired by food and are you an artist or is the thought of food enough to drive you to become an artist right now this minute?  Then submit an artwork in any medium to Still at the Centre Gallery on the Byron arts and industry estate by November 27.  Details of the Eat/Paint/Love exhibition are on the web at www.the-centre.com.au.  The opening on December 10 sounds like it will be fun too if you just want to look at the foodie art.

FABULOUS FINLAND


There’s a wild, underpopulated country, about as  far away from Australia as you can get – not in outer Khazakstan, but in much visited Europe – it’s called Finland, and if you’re thinking of taking your very valuable Aussie dollars for a spin, I strongly recommend it – maybe even for some of the food.  After all, Scandinavia is the new Spain among foodies.
Finland is the size of  Germany, but only has 5.3 million inhabitants, only 2%foreign born, and has been veryisolated for most of its history, so many Finns look similar – like smiley, well fed elves.  They live among 200 thousand lakes, 70% of the dry land is covered with forest.

They are the world’s no. 1 coffee consumers, 10kg a head, almost 6 cups a day,
friendly, welcoming, English speaking (they have one of the world’s most obscure languages, only similar to that popular lingua franca, Estonian). They like a drink – so there are many good bars, but apparently in winter many people only go out after a few too many drinks at home, so the bars get a bit rowdy)
They invented the sauna and there is 1 for every 2 people – cos  Finland is cooold – all year round apart from the occasional heat wave.  Winter is long and dark, we went in June, early summer, and it was colder than our North Coast winter, but light almost 24 hours a day.  It is really the place to  experience the seasons – in summer Finns are out in the streets, at open air markets, summer restaurants on lakes, or out to lake or seaside holiday houses, almost all Finn families have one – each with a sauna.
Until very recently there was little choice of foods, because of the short growing season, so there are lots of traditional pickles,preserves, rather than fresh veg, although root vegetables, especially spuds, are popular.  One reason for the Vikings to sack Europe – get food supplies!
The government is trying hard to get Finns to eat a healthier diet – butter is still sold in minimum 1 kilo packs, and there is lots of cheese in the diet, but they now have a ‘vegetable of the year’.
Finland is a good place to experience real seasonality in food, even these days when most of our food is shipped all over the world. Even in the capital, Helsinki, you will see a lot of the same basic ingredients depending on the season, with the provenance very proudly and prominently displayed when locally grown/made, and usually much more expensive.  If something is Suomi – Finn for Finn – you will know.
Our early summer visit was the season of  salmon and strawberries, although in restaurants there were still many meaty casseroles, often stodgy and heavy.
Smogasbord rules and is often a good option – for breakfast in hotels, lunch in restaurants, it includes many salads, and breads,smoked

lunchtime smogasbord on Finnish design crockery - simple and satisfying

fish – all sorts and sizes – even smoked small prawns, which were great.
We also tried a bit of Rudolph – smoked reindeer. You can also get reindeer salami and dried meat, lean,dark red,intense. Right now is the time to get fresh reindeer, it is all sold in October/November when the herds come back from roaming the tundra.  Helsinki restaurants have 6 week “reindeer weeks”, at other times it is mostly only available frozen.
Helsinki has some highly regarded fusion restaurants.  The best known is the Michelin starred Chez Dominique.  Others are part of a Scandinavia-wide rediscovery of food traditions, and serve a  locally focused “Helsinki menu”, local food from reputable local producers.
We found the most interesting food was at markets. In summer, all year covered market halls sprout open market stalls which are lively meeting spots.   Kauppahalli and kauppatori are in various parts of town and offer fresh veg and meats, pies, soups, pastries, cheese, including the very traditional ‘bread cheese’- like a big round paneer,baked on an open fire.

leipa juusto-bread cheese or squeaky cheese

There is also a strong coffee and pastry culture, most times of day are good occasions for a coffee and sticky bun – or pulla, cardamom scented yeast temptations that come in many varieties.  The breads are so good that I went looking for a Scandinavian bread cookbook (I didn’t find one by the way, if you know a good one).  Fabulous shapes,huge loaves, loaves with holes to store on a rod,small and square, different grains, textures, crispbreads. And often really healthy tasting but delicious.  Rye is so popular that apparently there is even a  Mcrye under Finnish golden arches.

And finally, the food was occasionally a bit basic but  Finnish glassware, crockery, cloth,furniture will always make it taste better – clean but quirky, designs several decades old that still look cutting edge but often fun, playful, colourful but stylish.  Famous Finn design names like Iittala, Marimekko,  Arabia,  have both fancy stores and outlets in Helsinki. Flea markets are also very popular and cheap,and part of a really strong commitment to reusing and recycling.  If you think a red bin and a yellow bin is hard, try about a dozen types of bins!

Here are a few links that will tell you more – there are tons of websites with information about Finland.

http://eat.fi/helsinki – this is an amazing site with real time indications of which restaurants are open – I’ve never seen one like this in Australia, very useful, also links to reviews

http://www.transitionsabroad.com/listings/travel/travel_to_eat/food_in_finland_quiet_culinary_revolution.shtml – a good summary of the current Finnish food scene

http://www.finlandforthought.net/2010/06/21/which-finnish-grocery-store-should-i-choose/ – a funny discussion on Finnish food that starts in the supermarkets and ends up commenting on the whole social structure

http://www.finlandinsider.com/finnish-food-attraction.html – a description of a Finnish market hall

http://www.helsinkitimes.fi/htimes/eat-and-drink/13128-gourmet-touch-brings-out-subtleties-of-reindeer.html – all about reindeer on your plate, and lots of other articles from the Helsinki English language paper

And here is sister T’s favourite recipe.   I am pretty sure I ate these rolls and they
are delicious.

OAT FLAKE BREAD

600 mL        (rolled oat flakes)
250 mL         (dark wheat flour)
1½ tsp             salt
1 tsp                 baking soda
600 mL       sour milk
50 grams (2 oz.)   melted butter
Mix the dry ingredients. Add the sour milk and the melted butter; make a smooth batter. Allow the batter to swell up for approximately thirty minutes. Spread the batter on a greased baking paper placed on an oven tray and bake at 250 degrees Celsius (480 F) in the middle of the oven for approximately 20 minutes, until the bread is golden brown. Cut into pieces and eat while warm with butter or cheese.

www.foodfromfinland.com

SOUR MILK
– In recipes, soured milk created by the addition of an acid or by bacterial fermentation can often be used interchangeably. For example, 1 cup of cultured buttermilk, a soured milk produced by bacterial fermentation, can be replaced by 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or vinegar plus enough milk to make 1 cup. The chemically soured milk can be used after standing for 5 minutes.

And this one is sister B’s.  You’ll need somewhere to make an open fire, just right for outdoor-loving Finns.

GLOW FRIED SALMON

from “Under the Midnight Sun” by Liisa Rasimus
Ajatus Kirjat 2005
A lovely cookbook that follows the Finnish Seasons

serves 6

a whole 1.5 Kg salmon
1 tbsp sea salt
1 tbsp sugar
1/2 tsp white pepper
100mL/7 tbsp melted butter

Open up the fish on the belly side and carefully remove the backbone without damaging the skin, so that the two fillets remain joined on the dorsal side.  Sprinkle the inner flesh with salt, sugar and pepper and leave for a few hours in a cold place.  Fasten the salmon, skin side down, onto a wooden board by means of wooden nails.
Prop the board up against an outdoor open fire so that the glow of the fire heats and cooks the fish.  Brush the fish several times during the cooking process, which will take 1-2 hours depending on the size of the fish and the distance from the fire.

Sister T

EDIBLE QUOTE

NICK BARLOW in the Helsinki Times reviewing reindeer tenderloin
“if I closed my eyes when eating I could taste the Arctic tundra and the Northern winds on my tongue, smell the scent of fresh lingonberries and hear the lowing of the reindeer themselves.”

…  wonder if Rudolph the red nosed reindeer is a popular carol in Finland : “Rudolph the red nosed reindeer, had a very tasty sauce…” But seriously, it is a local, sustainable ingredient, lean and healthy, ticks all the boxes.

on air 1 November 2010 – the secret life of spaghetti

Pasta spaghetti cannelloni lasagna macaroni and maccheroni – and so on with the hundreds of names and shapes of Italian pasta – most of us cook it at least once a week, from Africa to Antarctica to the space missions you can find people cooking versions of Italian pasta.  It is even popular in Asian countries that have a fine tradition of their own styles of noodles, like Japan.  But is it good pasta and do we cook it well, do we understand all the secrets of this simple mix of flour and water?  Well, no.  Today’s belly guest is the very charming and passionate Luca Ciano, Australia and New Zealand Executive Chef with Barilla, Italy’s biggest pasta company.  Barilla are trying to conquer the Australian market by teaching us all about good pasta, in dedicated pasta cooking schools.  Right now you can buy some of their products and book in for a free class if you have access to a capital city.  Go to the Barilla site for details, and for lots of recipes and pasta cooking tips.  It’s well worth a look, as is the Italian version of the site if you happen to speak the language.

Luca Ciano

Luca says in all the classes there are people who thought they knew all about pasta, and come away with lots of new insights.  This was certainly my case after our phone interview.  We talked pasta for 40 minutes and I could have kept going for hours.  A few things I didn’t know:

* all good pasta is made from durum (hard) wheat, but not all durum wheat is good.  Although we grow some great durum in Australia, some pastas are made from lower quality wheat which is only used for animal feed in Italy.  One way to tell is the colour which should never be brownish unless the pasta is wholemeal.

* the bronze extruded pastas on the market, which also tend to be the most expensive, are harder to cook properly al dente, so experiment first and maybe leave them for special occasions.  They are also not necessarily more of an artisan product than the smoother more common pastas.

* the common habit of adding oil to the cooking water is not only useless, but can stop the pasta from properly binding with the sauce in a “beautiful marriage”.

For a new type of pasta to try, Luca recommends we look out for “casarecce” a short twisted Sicilian style of pasta as it works well with lots of sauces, including a simple tomato sauce.

He talked about saving the pasta cooking water to add to the sauce, which caused concern with at least one listener.  This is a common little trick.  In Italy cooks try to use a minimum amount of sauce to coat and flavour the pasta, and often the mix can be a little dry when you put pasta and sauce together, so a spoonful or 2 of the cooking water is added to get the preferred consistency.  The cooking water is the right temperature, and contains a little starch and salt which help to make the “beautiful marriage” work.  If you are making a sauce which includes blanched veg, you can also use the same pot of water, before cooking the pasta, to make the most of the boiled water and lose as few nutrients and flavour as possible.

Below is an extract from the Barilla site with some basic rules of  recognising good pasta and how to cook it well.  Obviously they aren’t the only good pasta in the world, but there is a lot of pasta out there that is hard or impossible to cook well.  And luckily the good stuff is often the same price or not much more than the bad.

Wrong. All pasta isn’t the same. The quality of the pasta depends on the quality of the ingredients. A simple cooking test will tell you. If the water doesn’t froth intensely when boiled, remains clear after cooking and the pasta’s golden, you’re on a winner.

[bellysis note – this is because low quality pasta releases lots of starch and nutrients in the water]

Most people don’t use a big enough pot and enough water. The rule is one litre per 100 grams of pasta.
Salted water helps flavour the pasta as it absorbs liquid and swells. Add 10 grams of salt per litre of water.
With a premium quality pasta, there’s no need to add oil. It will just coat the pasta causing the sauce to slide off rather than bind. Poor quality pasta can require oil to combat the amount of sticky starch released when cooked.
Again if it’s Barilla there’s absolutely no need to rinse. Only a small amount of starch is released during cooking, so the pasta doesn’t stick together. Rinsing in fact removes the pasta’s light starch coating which is important for holding the sauce.
Dry pasta contains carbohydrates but no fats are added to the dough so the total fat in dry pasta is minimal. The sauce you add is another matter. If it’s rich and creamy then this will contribute significantly to the fat and calorific content of the dish.
Pasta is digested differently to other carbohydrates. That’s because pasta is high in complex carbohydrates which provide a slow release of energy. The carbohydrates become glucose stored in the muscles, which is then released when required.
Pasta should be cooked ‘al dente’. Quite literally this means ‘to the tooth’ or slightly firm to the bite. Ideally it should be tasted from the pot and finished in a frypan combining with the sauce over heat. One of the benefits of ‘al dente’ pasta is to encourage chewing as this aids in the digestive process.
Italians use less sauce than we do. That’s because they want to taste the pasta as well as the sauce. So if it’s good pasta don’t drown it. The general rule is to use as much sauce as pasta. However, pesto sauce should be used as a simple garnish. In Italy there are over 300 types of pasta, often the signature dish of a particular region. Different shapes suit different sauces. For instance short pasta like Penne go with chunky meat and vegetable sauces. Fettuccine or Pappardelle suit rich creamy sauces and Bucatini and Cannelloni are ideal for baking.
Better pasta is in fact made from semolina which is produced by grinding kernels of durum wheat.

And here are …

The Casa Barilla 10 Italian Kitchen Commandments:

  1. Thou shalt not add oil to the pasta water.
  2. Thou shalt not cook with subordinate produce.
  3. Thou shalt not use old wine for cooking: if you drink it, cook with it.
  4. Thou shalt not ban the man from the kitchen:  encourage him to use his hands!
  5. Thou shalt not add masses of sauce to a pasta dish: the beauty of Italian food is its simplicity and honesty of simple flavours and combining.
  6. Thou shalt drink an Italian wine whilst cooking – this will make you feel Italian even if you aren’t
  7. Thou shalt respect the seasons – they are what make us alive and what keeps the Earth in harmony. Watch, learn, listen to the produce and people who grow it.
  8. Thou shalt respect tradition and what Italian mamma says. She knows from her mamma, who knew from her mamma who knew from her mamma and so on. It’s been tried and tested.
  9. Thou shalt come to Casa Barilla to learn how to cook, enjoy and share Italian food.
  10. Thou shalt share Italian food with your loved ones. It is what life, love and family are all about.

So them’s the rules bellysister – straight from the horse’s mouth – now follow them or break them, it’s only pasta……brrrr, I can feel the bolt of lightning building up to strike me down already!

And btw the word is linguine not linguini, even my spell check knows that – not really relevant to the topic, but it bugs me severely.

Also I should thank Barilla for sending the biggest box I have ever received of pasta goodies, biscuits and aprons etc – enough for 2 prizes for subscribers, we are still not sure if it came all the way from Italy.  Also a pasta timer which we are keeping to play with on air – maybe we should time ourselves when we are raving on too much, what do you think?

Today’s EDIBLE QUOTE was Italian of course, a saying from Victoria Cosford’s “Amore and Amaretti”

“A tavola non s’invecchia” – at the table you do not age

And yes it’s been a lot of talk about Italian food on belly lately, so if you are or know a good cook from another background, come along and talk to the bellysisters please please please

In NOVEMBER IN SEASON NEWS, the banana growers council says it is a great year and time for good looking cheap nanas, so don’t pay too much, local blueberries have started, and I’m experimenting with chocolate eggplant – eggplant, tomatoes, zucchini, and lots of juicy melons and berries are in season now.

Sister T

Herbie Hancock, ‘Watermelon Man’ and ‘Cantaloupe island’, from “Watermelon man the ultimate Hancock!”

Havana Mambo, “Malanina”, from Putumayo, “Salsa around the world”

Bandabardo, “Il Principiante” – the beginner

belly show 11 October 2010 – a little bit country and a little bit lentil

hello belly lovers, I am still waiting for some recipes and info to come in to finish this show post, but meantime here’s a lovely pic of the Lentilicious girls and one of their recipes.  To find info about the inaugural Northern Rivers Food Celebration go to http://www.lismoreshow.org.au/

Or to last Monday’s post

Sharna and Anthea

CORN AND LIME FRITTERS

1 packet Lime Time Lentil Mix

1 1/2 cups wholemeal plain flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1 cup corn kernels (about 1 cob)

1 tablespoon chopped fresh coriander

1/2 cup milk

2 tablespoons sunflower oil or ghee

1. Cook Lentilicious mix following packet instructions, allow to cool.

2. Sift flour and baking powder into a bowl, stir in lentil mix, corn and coriander.

Slowly add milk and mix until smooth. Allow to stand for 30 minutes.

3. Heat a little oil or ghee in a large frypan. Add 2 tablespoons batter to pan and cook until bubbles appear on surface.

Turn and cook other side.

* Serve topped for breakfast with eggs and roast tomatoes or make smaller fritters and serve as finger food topped with ricotta and chutney.

Makes 18 fritters

Lentilicious:

PO Box 594 Mullumbimby NSW 2482


www.lentilicious.com.au

belly October 4 – loving and cooking in Italy

Victoria Cosford

For today’s belly radio show sister Tess had a lovely long chat with Victoria Cosford, author, restaurant reviewer, cooking teacher, and food  writer for the Byron Shire Echo,  about her book Amore and Amaretti.  My movie-pitch description of the book is Bridget Jones’s Diary meets Anthony Bourdains Kitchen Confidential under the Tuscan Sun – but with much better recipes and more realistic descriptions of Italy.  It covers a period of over 20 years of visits to central Italy, when Victoria was quickly swept up into cooking in various restaurants and tempestuous  affairs with Italian cooks.  Victoria isn’t 100% sure about my movie pitch description, but she did admit that she has Scarlet Johansen picked out for the lead role.  A very good choice as you can see.

A few snippets :

– we are starting a campaign to get local butchers to cure pig cheeks – “guanciale” in Italian – join in and ask your butcher

– Victoria’s advice on finding good restaurants in Italy : if you are somewhere where you have eaten well, ask the waiters where they eat.  In Perugia, just go to ‘Vecchia Perugia’, and tell them ‘la Veeky’ sent you

– the recipes in her book look like good home cooking because that was the specialty in most of the restaurants where Victoria worked, apart from the odd ‘amburger’, so they are well and truly tried and tested

– if you like the sardine recipe, try the same or a similar crumb mix on opened mussels and bake

Victoria shared a sardine recipe from her book (see below), on the grounds that it is extremely popular with friends so there must be something to it.  Of course sardines are also very good for you and a good sustainable fish.  Victoria was also today’s guest for the fresh report, some favourite veg at the moment are spinach and silverbeet – do as Italians do, and make the most of the delicate white stems of silverbeet, great steamed with a light dressing or pan cooked or baked  with plenty of cream and parmesan.  Just like asparagus, also in season.  And I love Victoria’s way with artichokes.  She trims and slices them, and sautes them in olive oil with chopped onions and garlic, then adds risotto rice and keeps going with a normal plain risotto recipe.  but we both agree that it is hard to find good artichokes around here, let us know if you know of good sources.  I’ve also just found a good info source for seafood in season on the Sydney Fish Market site.  One of our favourite fish, Spanish mackerel, which can be expensive in Australia, is at peak availability in October.  See here for more information.  We have several mackerel recipes on belly, I fell in love with this fish in the U.K.  (Yes I know, normal people fall for the culture, the green green hills…).   I certainly did not fall for its pretty face though.

BELLY BULLETIN

Lots of foodie events coming up, so today’s bulletin is a bit of a what’s on, including more lovelorn women tasting their way around Italy.

Byron Bay Writers Festival are putting on a special  premiere of Eat Pray Love with a  screening at the Dendy Byron Bay cinema this  Wednesday, 6 October. Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat Pray Love was a publishing phenomenon, as the cliche goes, the story of a woman’s           quest to travel the world and rediscover herself. Mainly by going to beautiful places and making love to beautiful men in the movie version. Julia Roberts is in the lead role and the ‘eat’ part is set in Italy of course. According to reviews the food is beautiful too. Bookings advised.  At Dendy box office or phone 6680 8555.
There will be Champagne which I suspect means lovely Aussie bubbles as we are still being very free with that word ‘champagne’ decades after our winemakers have stopped using it for our sparkling wine,  and a theatre snack from 6pm, screening at 7pm and you get to meet Candida Baker the new writers festival director.
The 200th Octoberfest has just finished in Munich Bavaria, because of course it starts in september, but this saturday 9 October you can do octoberfest at the  Lismore Workers Club
For more information  Contact Lismore Workers Club
you get a 2 course German Oktoberfest Dinner * Fun German Entertainment * German Games & Competitions AUTHENTIC GERMAN BEER. In Munich someone was testing odour eating bacteria, because the event is now smoke free and they need to find new ways to get rid of the smell of sweat and stale beer that used to be covered up by cigarettes, but Octoberfest does last 2 weeks in Germany and attracts millions of people – probably better off with the Lismore version.
If you live in the Nimbin area, there is a Local Food Self Reliance Slide Show
on Thursday 14 October from 7.30pm at the Tuntable Falls Community Hall
Bookings are essential. For more information and to make bookings please contact the Nimbin Food Security Project Manager on (02) 6689 1692
They have received $50 000 funding through Northern Rivers Food Links for a village Showcase Project. International community development facilitator and trainer Robina McCurdy will show  projects from around the world and help identify new ways that the Nimbin Community can work towards local food self reliance.
In a couple of weeks , on 21st to 23rd october there will be a Northern Rivers Food Celebration at the Lismore Showground.
Over three days, visitors can enjoy local  produce, meet the growers and producers, and discover the great biodiversity of the region from macadamias, to tropical fruits, chocolate, coffee, organic meats, biodynamic muesli, fruit and vegetables, artisan breads, and cheese.The Food Celebration will be the largest regional show in Australia, and include a Sustainable Living Expo.
There will be demonstrations by local chefs, and schools will participate in a competition,  cooking exclusively with local produce.
To book a site phone Leanne Clark on (02) 6621 3413
New Brighton Farmers Market will be staging a bake-off as part of the Sydney International Food Festival -this year they have encouraged Farmers Market and regional NSW involvement .
Get creative using market produce. Go to the market on Tuesday, October 5, 8-9.30am and purchase specified surprise seasonal products to create either a sweet or savoury dish.  Entry is free, one entry per person.
Take your creation to the market the following Tuesday, October 12, for display and judging, 8-8.30am.  Prize presentation at 10am.
There will be both chefs’ prizes judged by Manfred Rudolf from the ‘Yum Yum Tree Café’ New Brighton and Steve Tuckwell from ‘Contis’, Brunswick Heads and a peoples choice prize judged by a small panel of market regulars, all prizes are NBFM vouchers.
Enquiries and entry registration : 6677 1956 [ah] Tony Hinds
UPDATE – bake-off at New Brighton has been cancelled due to a lack of bake-offers, but will happen at the Mullumbimby Farmers Market (on every Friday morning).  You will find the Mullumbimby details if you click on the New Brighton link above.

SARDE AL BECCAFICO – Baked Stuffed Sardines


2 slices day-old rustic bread
2 tablespoons sultanas

Australian sardines

2 tablespoons pine nuts
80 – 100 grams mortadella, as finely chopped as possible
(optional)[ndsis – you can use any cured pig bits or no pig,
but Victoria loves the unctuousness of mortadella]
2 tablespoons grana or parmesan, freshly grated
Grated rind 1 lemon
2 fat cloves garlic, finely chopped
2/3 bunch parsley, finely chopped
Salt and pepper
750 grams fresh sardines, filleted and butterflied
Bay leaves
White wine
Olive oil
Milk
Preheat oven to 200 C. Soak bread in milk briefly, then squeeze dry. Place in a bowl together with sultanas, pine nuts, mortadella, cheese, lemon rind, garlic and parsley, season with salt and pepper and combine well. Place about a teaspoon of mixture in the middle of each sardine and arrange on baking tray with  a bay leaf between each. Sprinkle wine over the top and drizzle with olive oil. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes. Serve as part of an antipasto.
This is a recipe from Victoria Cosford’s book ‘Amore and Amaretti’ – Wakefield Press 2010
available at Mary Ryan’s ABC Shop and Collins Books (used to be Book City) both in Byron Bay
EDIBLE QUOTES
We love a good food quote on belly and Amore and Amaretti is bristling with fabulous Italian sayings.
My fave:
“cio’ che si mangia con gusto non fa mai male “- whatever you eat with pleasure can never make you ill – which is basically my whole eating philosophy.  Victoria’s is the much darker:
“non c’e’ amore senza amaro” – there is no love without bitterness
And speaking of amaro, the Italian for bitter, I love amaretti, Italian biscuits which literally mean ‘little bitter ones’, used a lot as ingredients – and I was looking forwards to amaretti recipes in “Amore and Amaretti”, but Vic says the title came from her publisher, and she doesn’t really like amaretti much – though she advises you to try pumpkin and amaretti ravioli.  So look forwards to a big amaretti rave from me soon on belly, first I need to experiment with one of the weirdest recipes I’ve ever seen, chocolate, amaretti, ricotta and eggplant cake.  And a few hours after first seeing that peculiar recipe from the Naples region, I ate a similar chocolate eggplant dish from a new Byron restaurant – oddly compelling, but no amaretti.
Sister T