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November 15, 2007

All You Can Eat - Two Meatballs, Vol. 43

Img_6082Okay, that's more than two meatballs you see here, but this podcast is about four chefs putting their best meatballs forward in a somewhat impromptu competition at Barbara-jo's Books to Cooks in Vancouver.

The Two Meatballs in the title are Mark Strausman and Pino Luongo, chef/partners in Italian restaurants in New York City.  They have just published a new cookbook called 'Two Meatballs'.


Two_meatballs

The cookbook goes much further than meatballs, but I have to admit, after watching these guys cook their favourite meatball recipes, I've been inspired to make more of my own.  You can order Two Meatballs via this link to amazon.ca and save 37% off the cover price.  You can see a few more pictures of the 'guys with balls' on my Facebook album.

This episode of All You Can Eat was brought to you in part by Hamilton Beach, makers of the Eclectrics line of kitchen appliances.  Check out the great all-metal stand mixers at www.hamiltonbeach.com or www.hamiltonbeach.ca.

You can also find all of your website hosting and design needs at my other sponsor, www.godaddy.com.  You can save on the products there by entering the code eat1 when you check out.


October 28, 2007

All You Can Eat, Vol. 42 - One Smart Cookie

Img_6018This woman is One Smart Cookie!  She is Julie Von Rosendaal, and she helped me bake healthier cookies on this edition of All You Can Eat.  Julie has a blog, as well, so if you want to check out what's going on in her crazy cookie-cutter life, check out Julie Was Here.
Listen to the podcast by clicking here

Oh yeah, the contest winner from All You Can Eat. vol. 40 is Debbie Vargo!  She picks up a copy of Cinda Chavich's 'The Guy Can't Cook'.


Cookie
One Smart Cookie is an updated version of the original version Julie wrote several years ago.  I like this book a lot, as it's one of those cookbooks that have you saying as you page through it, "oh, I want to make that, and those, and these, too!"

You can order the cookbook through Amazon.ca by clicking here, and you'll help me support the costs of this blog while saving 37%!

Img_6016 This episode of All You Can Eat was brought to you by Hamilton Beach, makers of the new Eclectrics line of home appliances.  Here you can see the fantastic looking and working Apple Green Standmixer I used in this episode.  To find out more about this mixer and other appliances in the line, American listeners should go to Hamilton Beach.com, while Canadian listeners can visit Hamilton Beach.ca.

All You Can Eat is a member of the Culinary Media Network, where we have a cookie baking challenge on the go, so make sure you listen to the podcasts of other members. 

All You Can Eat is also brought to you in part by www.godaddy.com, where you can find all your web domain needs.  Go shopping there and enter codes eat1, eat2 or eat3 to save.

September 25, 2007

All You Can Eat - The Guy Can't Cook!

Img_5572On this episode of All You Can Eat I welcomed Calgary cookbook author Cinda Chavich to my test kitchen.  We chatted and I cooked a couple of dishes from her latest book, The Guy Can't Cook, a super collection of recipes that even the most challenged of cooks can handle. To listen to the podcast, click here.

During the podcast you will hear details of how you can win a copy of Cinda's book!

And to see some more photos of the dishes we cooked, you can view an album on my Facebook page.  To save money on your website needs, check out www.godaddy.com.  When you finish shopping, enter code eat3 for savings.

August 29, 2007

All You Can Eat Vol. 38 -Sustainable Seafood

Img_3379This edition of All You Can Eat is all about Sustainable Seafood.  In this show you will hear 2 documentaries.  One is about  Red Fish, Blue Fish, a great new take out fish and chips and more place on the Victoria, BC waterfront.  You can get all the info on Red Fish, Blue fish by going to this blog entry for the documentary.  The picture at right shows some of the most delicious anchovies I have ever eaten at Slow Fish in Genova earlier this year.


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You can see the blog entry for Slow Fish here. As you will hear in the podcast, it was weird to go to a city and see your last name plastered everywhere!  But the Italian pronunciation is different from the way we say it here in Canada, where we put the emphasis on the second syllable instead of the first, like they do in Italy.  On the above blog entry, you will also find many links to websites concerning sustainable seafood.

Someone else I met and interviewed was Anne Mosness, from Bellingham, Washington. She fished in the Gulf of Alaska for 28 years, now is part of the Go Wild Campaign and was also distributing some fact sheets from the Food and Water Watch.

Salmon_farming And for a great book that lays out all the pros and cons about the salmon farming industry, check out Peter A. Robson's Salmon Farming, the Whole Story.

August 15, 2007

All You Can Eat - Back Home in Canada Vol. 37

Img_2631Well.  After nine months of living in Italy, studying for a Masters of Food Culture at the University of Gastronomic Sciences near Parma, I have completed my class work and have returned to Vancouver. (that's me and my wife Ramona on the Stanley Park Seawall)  I'm still working on my final project, and will return to Italy for a week in November to present my project and graduate.

In the meantime, I'm back in the podcast saddle again.  This edition of All You Can Eat features three of the documentaries I did for CBC Radio in the last few months of my Italian sojourn, and includes reports from a barrel-making factory in Burgundy, the public market system in Barcelona, and food highlights over the year as related by some of my classmates.  Click here to listen to the mp3 of the podcast or subscribe to the feed, or here to find a link on the Podshow network.  Don't forget I'm part of the Culinary Podcast Network, where you will find more great audio and video on food.

May 15, 2007

All You Can Eat Vol36 - Classic Crete

Img_3050This week on All You Can Eat, I take you to the Greek island of Crete where I experienced an excellent week full of culinary tourism.  In the program you will hear two of my Food For Thought documentaries, then a feature interview with the man who was our guide for these amazing adventures.


Img_3052 One day we started our morning atop a mountain where shepherds (or are they goatherds?) were milking their herd of goats.
On top of the mountain there are no milking machines, not even any electricity to run them if there were!  Instead, the men use highly trained dogs to round up the goats from wherever they are on the mountain, then herd them into a pen, pushing them forward so the men can grab them and milk them by hand, rapidly squirting the milk into a large can set into a concrete holder.



Img_3057 Here are my classmates MJ, Bronwen and Betsy enjoying some fresh cheese and raki.  This was all taking place at about 10am, and raki is a fairly powerful liquor, somewhat like Italian grappa.  Hour of the day means little to the Cretans, however.  When I met the grandmother of the man whose place I was staying at around 8 one morning, she quickly offered me a shot of grappa.  Since I had already imbibed what seemed like 25 shots in two days of our trip, I graciously declined.

Img_3069 From the mountain we descended a few minutes into a village where the local cheese makers process the milk we had just seen being obtained from the goats.  They make several kinds of fresh and aged cheeses there, which we got to taste...along with more raki!

Just when we thought we had had enough drinking for the day, and were chock full of cheese, it was back into our vans to visit another tiny mountain village...where the whole complement of villagers was waiting for us.






Img_3132 The typical dress for the men of Bis-dye-ee (phonetic spelling) are these hunter-style pants, usually black or tan, and black shirts, with a sharp knife stuck into their waistbands.






Img_3128 Before we went inside the village community hall we were treated to the sight and smell of goat roasting beside hot coals.  This is a traditional way of roasting meat in Crete, skewering the meat on spikes and resting it on stakes pounded into the ground so the fat drips away from the meat without creating flare-ups.




Img_3140 When we were finished with the greetings outside, we trooped inside the village community centre to see a massive display of foods lining the perimeter of a large room. Each woman in the village had brought a different traditional dish for us to try.... over 40 in total.  There were pastries made with homemade strawberry and apricot jams, tiny fried pastry pockets filled with sweet cheese, savory pockets stuffed with spinach or wild greens, pork with wild greens, cured olives, umpteen artichoke dishes, rabbit and much more.  There was no way we could try everything, but we did our best, along with tasting as many homemade wines that were pressed upon us.





Img_2972 The days that you hear about in the documentaries are a prime example of the kind of culinary tourism Kostas Bouyouris wants to bring to Crete.  As you saw on my blog last week, Kostas is an agronomist who is also involved with a Soil Health association and culinary tourism.  He was with our class for the entire week and really gave us an authentic taste of Cretan life, not just through the food, but the music, art and above all, the people.  If you are interested in reading more about what Kostas is involved in, visit the Mediterranean Association for Soil Health website. Much of the English side of the site is under construction, but there is an email address to contact for further information.  For culinary tourism on Crete, which I highly recommend you experience at some point in your life, visit the Agrion Terra website.

SPECIAL BONUS FEATURE!!!  My classmate Marta loves taking portraits, both posed and candid of all of us when we are on our field trips, or 'stages' as they are known in our program.  I downloaded some software called Photoshow which allows you to mix music and photos together with some special effects, and so I sifted through all the photos and put together "Classic Crete" .  It is a .wmv file and hopefully it will just start playing in whatever player you have on your computer once enough of it has downloaded. The file is about 50 megabytes.  Enjoy!

All You Can Eat is brought to you in part by GoDaddy.com, a domain and webhosting company. And to take advantage of GoDaddy.com offers such as 10 percent off any order, use this code when you check out:  eat3

May 04, 2007

All You Can Eat - Living the 100-Mile Diet

100mile_cover To get the audio file for this week's All You Can Eat podcast, click here. Volume 35 features an in-depth interview with two people who really know how to 'eat local'.  The 100-Mile Diet , a Year of Local Eating, is a book by James MacKinnon and Alisa Smith, based on their experience from March 2005 to March 2006 of eating only ingredients produced or procured within 100 miles of their homes in downtown Vancouver.  You can click on the link above to order the book from amazon.ca and save 37  percent off the cover price!  You can also learn more about their experiences by visiting the 100-Mile Diet website.



All You Can Eat is brought to you in part by GoDaddy.com, a domain and webhosting company. And to take advantage of GoDaddy.com offers such as 10 percent off any order, use this code when you check out:  eat1

March 29, 2007

All You Can Eat - 500-year Old Olive Trees

Img_2167This posting for volume 34 of All You Can Eat is a work in progress, as I want to add some photo albums and video clips as I go along.  So if everything isn't quite here yet, keep checking for the added content in a couple of days.  The podcast takes you through part of my most recent field trip to Puglia.  You will find a couple of other postings with photos here and here, so this one is meant to fill in some of the blanks not yet covered.  The photo you see at the right is of a traditional Pugliese song and dance troupe that entertained us the first night we arrived at our hotel.  They were truly energetic and had our class all up and dancing with them even before dinner and wine, so you know they were good.  One of their specialties was the tarantella, a frenzied dance that was supposedly invented in the 16th century to help cure victims of tarantism, supposedly caused by tarantula spider bites.  Here's a short video clip of one of the dances.  And dinner was pretty good, too.  Here's a captioned photo album of a few of the dishes we enjoyed that first night.

Img_2608 Our last day in Puglia involved a lot of raw fish.  Here is just one of the platters we were offered to eat at lunch.  The squid and shrimp were fine...but the octopus.  Well, I took too big a bite and I chewed and I chewed and I chewed, and then it started to get a little much for me so I ended up spitting it into my napkin as surreptitiously as possible.   The other platter consisted of raw mussels and clams as well as two kinds of sea urchin, one 'regular' and one that was in the midst of spawning, to the roe was milky with a spermy-looking substance.  The mussels and clams were sweet and fresh, but the urchin couldn't compare to the sweet, mango-like urchin I've had on the West Coast of Canada. Here is a clip of classmates Betsy and Daniel getting up close and personal with their mussels.  Nice face, Betsy!


Img_2678 This box of unlikely looking seafood contains something the fishermen on the docks of Brindisi were calling 'white truffle of the sea'.  Right. Not exactly to all tastes, including my own, it was very strong, but I managed to choke it down, even though what was inside the thick skin of the 'sea truffle' looked like a big ball of phlegm.  I've put together a little sequence of my tasting of this seafood in this photo album.  Photos by Betsy, thank you.  I was using my still camera when she had her own try, and I think I caught her face just at the moment when she was struggling not to throw up her particular 'ball of phlegm'. Have to wait to have the photos developed...gee, what a concept in this age of digital technology.


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The first documentary you hear in this podcast is about olive trees in two different places, the Marche, and Puglia. Two quite different groves, with the most mystique, if I can call it that, about the trees in Puglia, a grove where the age of the average tree has been pegged at 500 years.  Also just as fascinating, a trip underground to a subterranean olive oil mill...quite the undertaking for the time it was built, which was sometime before 1423.  The people who restored the mill know this, since they managed to find a document from 1423 which detailed the expansion of this mill.  When you think about it, it was a pretty remarkable feat of engineering to carve a cave out of solid rock that would fit 15 to 20 workers, a couple of horses or donkeys, and the olive mills and presses.  Why underground?  Apparently back then it was cheaper to dig than to build, easier to secure, lower, constant temperatures which were more conducive to making quality oil, and the presses could use the roof of the cave for support.
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Here is a nice wide shot of part of the mill, but it is really much larger than what you can see in the photo.  I've put together a photo album of Betsy's pictures of the olive grove and the mill, along with this short video clip of the mill owner showing how the press worked.

I also promised to repeat the tips about the purchase and storage of olive oil:

So how do you choose a good quality oil?  If it says extra-virgin on the label, that means it is the first, cold pressing of the olives. UPDATE: In studying for my olive oil technology exam today, I realize the idea of first cold pressing is out of date.  Because modern mills use a continuous centrifugal press, there is no second pressing of the olives.  To read more about the grading and production of olive oil visit the Olive Oil Source. If you choose to purchase extra-virgin, then you  need to smell and taste.  Unfortunately, it’s not like going to a wine bar where you could try 3 or 4 different wines in an evening.  Some gourmet grocery stores may have tasting stations and that’s a good start.  An oil should smell fresh, perhaps grassy or fruity, not rancid.  The taste is a personal discovery.  Some people like oils with a real peppery finish that leaves a bite in the back of your throat.  Others want something smoother.  It depends on what you are using it for, dressing a salad, drizzling over some warm vegetables or garnishing a soup.  Buy small bottles to start with until you find something you like. Keep your oil away from heat and light, and use it up within a few months. And remember, like wine, every year brings a different harvest and different flavours.

March 18, 2007

All You Can Eat - Tetra Pak Wine and Natalie Maclean

Nat250On this edition of All You Can Eat, you'll hear some advice on wine shopping and her take on modern wine journalism from popular Canadian wine writer, Natalie Maclean. You can find out all about her and her take on wine by visiting her extensive website.  On her website you can also subscribe to her free e-newsletter, and make sure you check out her comprehensive food and wine matcher.




Red_and_white_1 Don't be fooled by the 'glamour' photo of Natalie you see here.  She is a very down-to-earth person who carries an infectious enthusiasm for the world of wine.  To follow some of her travels, you could order her first book from Amazon.ca and save 37 percent off the cover price!  Red and White and Drunk All Over is the story of her visits to some of the most important wine production in the world. 

At the beginning of this podcast I mentioned a fun way my wine journalism instructor Richard Baudains taught us of doing a blind wine tasting that can also reveal how different, or similar, your perceptions of wine colour, aromas and tastes are to your friends.  I would say having about 10 people to do this would be fun, but you could go even higher and put people into groups of two.  Here's what you do:

  • Buy five bottles of red or white wine.  They should all be the same colour, and there should be some variety in the way they taste, but not that much.  Try mixing different vintages, and varietals. 
  • Cover the bottles in foil or paper and number them 1 to 5. 
  • Then give each taster five pieces of paper on which they will describe each wine in three different categories:  Colour, aroma and taste.  Make sure they are smaller pieces of paper so they don't go wild!  Each taster writes their name on each piece of paper.
  • But they don't write the number of each wine on each description.  They make themselves a letter key.

The key would look like this, for example:
1  2  3  4  5
D O N N  Y   

  • So when they describe wine number 1, on the sheet of paper they write 'D', on the next sheet for number 2 they write 'O', and so on.  For the descriptions, colour could contain red, dark red, ruby red, brownish red, etc.  Aroma could be tobacco, fruit, blackberry, etc.  Taste can be tannic, soft, acidic, plummy, jammy, etc.  There are really no rules as to what you write down for the descriptions.
  • When everyone has finished tasting and writing throw all the descriptions into a hat.  Then each taster picks out 5 descriptions, none of which can be his or her own.  Then after reading the descriptions each person writes the number of the wine they think it is, and write their own name beside the number they think it is.  Then everyone returns their descriptions to their respective owners.
  • The fun begins when you see whether people have recognized the wines they tasted by the way the other people described them.  The better the job you do describing your wines, the more people should guess which is which, right?  Well, maybe not...that's where the fun comes in when you discover whether your describe your perceptions in the same way as your friends or colleagues.

Frenchrabbitad_2 In this podcast I also talked about Tetra Pak wines and how they are turning up more and more often in liquor stores and wine shops not only in Canada, but around the world.  Here's the Tetra Pak story of how French Rabbit wines in Tetra Paks first came to Canada. If you go to this link on the BC Liquor Distribution Branch website you can download as a pdf file the spring edition of Taste, which is relatively new publication from the LDB, very ably put together with help from my friend at the branch, Anne Gilmour.  Nice work, Anne!  On page 61 you will find a feature about the new line of Tetra Pak wines you can find soon in BC Liquor stores, and even if you're not from BC, check out Anne's very useful story on outfitting your bar with glassware depending on how much space and how much money you have!  That's on page 30.  Update: The Globe and Mail's wine writer, Beppi Crosariol, just wrote an amusing little feature with a hint of insouciance on wines in boxes and plastic bottles.  Here's the link.  Hopefully it will remain active and not go immediately into the 'pay' archives of the newspaper.  Let me know if it goes down....

thanks to my sponsors for this week, Folgers Gourmet Selections and GoDaddy.com.

For free samples of Folgers Gourmet Selections coffee, visit www.folgers.com/podshow.  While quantities last, act soon!

And to take advantage of GoDaddy.com offers such as 10 percent off any order, use this code when you check out:  eat1

 

March 09, 2007

All You Can Eat - Venice, Milan, and Teaching Kids About Food and Nutrition

Img_1422Hi everyone...this is a bit of a multiple purpose post.  It gives you information on my recent visits to Venice and Milan which I mention briefly at the beginning of my most recent podcast, All You Can Eat Volume 32.  And it has some details about the people I spoke with in my panel of Home Economics teachers at their conference I spoke at last fall.  On the right is one of the covered malls lining the Piazza San Marco in Venice.  The tiles are under about an inch of water, as was the part of the rest of the piazza, something that happens when the water rises up through the ground.  Reminds me of the old Spirit of the West song, 'And If Venice Is Sinking'.

We saw some of the platforms they have to put in the square so that people can walk into the duomo without having to wade through water when it gets really high!  I have many more photos to upload in an album for you.  Click here to view it. I'm also experimenting with putting some low-quality Real Video clips here.  This is one of a 'stroll-by' I did of some street musicians .

Img_1466 We hit the city of canals right at Carnivale time and both the streets and canals were jam-packed with people sporting amazing masks and costumes in the Venetian tradition.  Traditional foods and drinks we enjoyed included deep-fried bits of sweet bread called frittelle, which were moist, puffy and not soggy with oil…then there was a sweet which almost tasted like fruitcake but was pistachio green because of all the pistachios used, and topped with almonds.  I think a fist-sized square of it cost about 4 euros, but it was worth it!

As far as beverages go, at night you could buy hot and spicy mulled wine called vin brule, yes they used the French term, but by day we started our meals with a glass of bubbly prosecco, or before we sat down we would have an aperitivo of Campari, soda, a slice of lemon and a big fat olive.  That’s the way Venetians like their Campari!  And don’t try to order it much past 12 noon.  The bartender will say, ‘it’s finished’.  They just don’t make them in the afternoon!

Img_1454 Two restaurant suggestions for you, the first one is right near the Fondamente Nove Vaparetto stop, which are the boats that ply the waters in and around Venice like bus lines.  It’s called Algiubagio…and we actually enjoyed two great meals there, the first one featuring a delectable trio of seafood antipasti.  This pic shows a salad of arugula,tomatoes, carrots and tender, tender rings of squid. 


Img_1511The other restaurant where we enjoyed a meal with some of my classmates who were also visiting Venice that weekend was called La Cantina, which is right on the Strada Nova near the Ca d'Oro vaparetto stop, although the actual address says it is at Campo san Felice, 3689.  Don't worry if you get lost in Venice at some point, everyone does.  The second night we were there we made our way from our hotel to the Rialto district and then Piazza San Marco in just a few minutes.  Think we could find our way back?  No way.  We found ourselves way out of the way late at night when there was hardly a person on the street.  We found a restaurant open...three of the staff pored over the little map that was on the brochure for the hotel and finally said, 'well, we don't know where this is but if you walk down this street and kind of head off to the left you should find it.'  Not a chance, but the instructions did lead to a square and I spotted a name on the square that matched a name on our map and YAY!, we finally found our home sweet home after what seemed like hours of wandering.

Img_1506 Anyway, at La Cantina we started with raw oysters, and a savoury lentil soup, then eventually the wait staff brought out huge platters of roasted pork with crispy crackling and mustard, green beans, and even dill pickles!  I was in heaven, my favourite food groups!  The place was quite busy and we found ourselves waiting quite a while to get our food and wine once we ordered, but we found the food to be quite tasty and I think it was around just 25 Euros each.

Img_1622_1 A week later Ramona and I found ourselves in the Piazza del Duomo in Milan, and wondering what the heck was going on!  It was some sort of children's festival and the piazza and pedestrian streets around the duomo were filled with thousands of people.  Every kid from 2 to teen was dressed up in some sort of costume, but what we noticed the most were all the mess-making accoutrement's available. Big bags of confetti, cans and cans of silly string and some sort of shaving cream-like foam were for sale in the square, and the stuff was all over the place.  Coming from Canada we were naturally shocked at what we would consider to be 'littering'.  I'm just glad I wasn't on the clean-up crew responsible for trying to get rid of all that confetti.  On the other hand, this is Italy.  They might just wait for the rain to wash it into the sewers. Here's a real video clip of people standing over a subway vent, at least that's what I think it was, as the confetti and streamers fly about.

Img_1626 Our Milan highlights included an expensive but mostly very satisfying lunch at a restaurant called Peck.  Ramona had been looking forward to her saffron-laced risotto Milanese and she wasn't disappointed. Our problem was that we went for a full-fledged lunch but we totally full after the antipasto of Culatello di Zibello and primi of her risotto and my pasta with mushrooms and walnut sauce.  After Peck the restaurant we went to Peck the deli and Peck the wine shop and the foods in the deli are so beautiful they made me want to cry.  Of course the prices made me want to cry as well.  I guess they get too many gawky tourists so they have a sign on the door saying 'no photos'. :(

That's okay, I don't think a photo would do it justice.  Rows and rows of beautiful chocolates, cheeses galore, spotlessly clean and well-stocked shelves full of olive oils and vinegars and....


Img_1639_1 Here at least is a shot from across the street, in case you're wandering the streets of downtown Milan and you need a 'lighthouse' to guide you. The sign says that the shop was founded in 1883.  Now that's longevity.

 

H9antiqueslicersmThe other beautiful things strewn around Peck the deli were these amazing Berkel meat slicers.  We'd seen them in use in Venice and a classmate's boyfriend is gaga over them.  They really are stunning pieces of fine machinery.  They had one from the 30's that had a real art deco feel to it, and one from the 50's that had that sleek sort of rocketship styling common to that era.  Here's a picture of one I found on a website that sells these things refurbished.  I think they go for about $7500 U-S....meat not included. More pictures of Milan in this photo album.

Okay, now you're at the point where the rest of the podcast material comes in.  First, thanks to my sponsors for this week, Folgers Gourmet Selections and GoDaddy.com.

For free samples of Folgers Gourmet Selections coffee, visit www.folgers.com/podshow.  While quantities last, act soon!

And to take advantage of GoDaddy.com offers such as 10 percent off any order, use this code when you check out:  eat1

Thanks also to the teachers from THESA who took part in my panel discussion on what kids need to know about food and nutrition when they finish high school: Judy Chan, Joy Galea and Denise Lemard from BC, and Jane Edwards from Australia, for taking part in the discussion.  (sorry if I got the spellings wrong!)

Marabio You also heard a piece from my Food For Thought archives that featured Mara Jernigan, formerly of Engeler Farm, now of Fairburn Farm, a bed and breakfast and cooking school in BC's Cowichan Valley.  Mara is still heavily involved in the Slow Food movement and is always looking for volunteers to help out with projects on southern Vancouver Island.