Foodie Film Fest – Sneak Preview

fffExtra, extra, listen to this! Some great foodie films are on offer at the Victoria Foodie Film Festival this weekend. I’ll be talking about it in detail on Thursday on my Food Matters column on CBC’s All Points West, but here’s a special sneak preview of the film fest via an audio clip from Victoria Foodie Film Festival Director Kathy Kay.

I’ve seen all of the trailers for the films and they all look like great foodie films. And I’ve watched the entirety of Jadoo: Kings of Curry (here’s the trailer) and it is not to be missed. Funny, touching and makes you hungry all in one go.

Two things to remember: One: Tickets are for sale IN ADVANCE ONLY. To purchase go to this link. Two: I will have some tickets to give away on my column on Thursday afternoon. Two tickets to the de Vine screening on Saturday, and two tickets to the Hey Bartender screening at Oak Bay Beach Hotel to give away. But don’t wait to win, go and buy some tickets now!

 

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Food Matters – Dairy Cow Abuse

The widespread circulation of an undercover video showing dairy cows being abused at a large farm in Chilliwack is having a ripple effect on the dairy industry. This week on Food Matters, I try help you navigate the maze of dairy products available here on Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands.

 

George Boyes and Jersey calf at Farmhouse Natural Cheeses in Agassiz

George Boyes and Jersey calf at Farmhouse Natural Cheeses in Agassiz

That video certainly wasn’t pleasant to look at and it was very unpleasant to see people who clearly did not have any thoughts for the welfare of the animals they were abusing. I think part of the problem with that particular farm in the size of the operation, 3500 cows. The animal rights organization that shot the video, however, is saying that because this was the first farm in which it managed to place an undercover worker, it thinks that the abuse is widespread. Personally speaking, though, with any dairy farm I have ever been to anywhere in BC, I found nothing but farmers who really care for their animals and their welfare. It’s part of their nature and part of their business…production from dairy animals, especially cows, can really drop off if they are stressed, injured or sick.

Nonetheless, the reputation of dairy farmers has taken a hit because of this news. On Tuesday morning when the news broke, I posted a Facebook status that basically said, don’t tar all dairy farmers with the same brush. And while I received a lot of support for that statement via likes and comments, some of my friends were still asking, ‘well, where can I get dairy products that I can trust come from animals that haven’t been abused?’

There is no easy answer to that question. I’d love to say that there is no abuse of farm animals in BC but we’ve just seen the proof that there is. But I can certainly point you in directions where you have a much great assurance that you are purchasing quality products from dairy animals that are treated with care and respect. So, let’s consider the main dairy products we purchase here on the island. Milk, cheese, butter, yogurt and ice cream. Let’s start with the easiest category, cheese. Many of the cheesemakers here on the island either source their milk from animals on their own farm, or a single dairy farm close by that they have carefully selected. Companies that make cheese from their own dairy herd would include Moonstruck organic cheeses on Salt Spring Island, and Little Qualicum Cheeses in Parksville.

Photos of water buffalo and their owner, Darrell Archer, at Pizzeria Prima Strada in Victoria. (where they use Natural Pastures water buffalo mozzarella)

Photos of Fairburn Farm water buffalo and their owner, Darrell Archer, at Pizzeria Prima Strada in Victoria. (where they use Natural Pastures water buffalo mozzarella)

Today I got an email from the wife of the farm manager at Little Qualicum, who told me that farm is the only SPCA-certified dairy farm in British Columbia and that her husband loves the cows more than he loves her, ha ha ha. Any certified organic farms also give you another layer of inspection that may turn up anything untoward in the treatment of animals. Other cheesemakers like The Creamery at Cheese Point Farm, Natural Pastures, Salt Spring Island Cheese, all get their milk from local sources they’ve carefully selected, be they goat, sheep or dairy farms.  Any water buffalo mozzarella you purchase from Natural Pastures comes from the very well-loved herd at Fairburn Farm in the Cowichan Valley.

 

 

 

Goats at Snap Dragon Dairy, milked for Legato Gelato

Goats at Snap Dragon Dairy, milked for Legato Gelato

So if you are purchasing a locally-made artisan cheese you have a pretty good assurance the milk is from a smaller family farm that takes care of their animals. And this would also hold true for businesses like Tree Island Gourmet Yogurt near Courtenay, and the Legato Gelato people near Fanny Bay. Legato Gelato has their own milking herd of goats, and Tree Island gets their milk from one farm in Comox that they carefully chose not only for the quality of the milk, but the kind of care given to the animals.

It becomes more difficult to know about the source of the milk you’re consuming when you’re purchasing products such as cheese, butter, yogurts and milk that are processed and packaged by large processors. They need large quantities of milk, which is available through the Milk Marketing Board quota system, and that milk is a pool of milk which may be produced anywhere in the province. So there is no way of knowing that a litre of Island Farms milk or ice cream, while produced here on the island, comes from Island farms, or farms that you may have visited here and have seen humane treatment of animals. And an individual can’t just go to any dairy farm in BC and purchase milk directly from the farmer….although I am aware of people who purchase something called ‘cowshares’ at dairy farms because they want to purchase raw, unpasteurized milk. It’s a way to try to circumvent the law in BC that prevents the sale of unpasteurized milk. I’m not part of one of those systems but I presume anyone who is would have access to having a tour of the farm, since they own shares in it, after all.

 Trying to buy dairy and other products if you want to keep in mind animal welfare, nutrition and growing practices is hard work! And the animal welfare nature of this particular story gives us another important angle to think about, but I still maintain you can put your trust in smaller, family owned and operated dairy farms in this area. I certainly can’t claim to have all the answers, but over the years I’ve met some very fine producers of dairy products here on the Islands. Check out this story about Farmhouse Natural Cheeses in Agassiz, and this story about two different dairy farms in the Fraser Valley, goat and cow.

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Food Matters – Lantzville Market and Sausages

Good weather means barbecue. Barbecue quite often means sausages. Great for serving a crowd, but of course you want a good quality sausage on the grill or dinner could quite easily go up in flames. I’ve returned from my early summer vacation with some tips on where to get a good sausage.

Lantzville Market

Lantzville Market

Is finding a good sausage kind of like finding the Holy Grail? Of course! Luckily I think there is more than one Holy Grail of sausages here on Vancouver Island but I am always interested in tasting the products of another artisan sausage maker here, and this week I acted on a tip from a friend who lives in Lantzville, just north of Nanaimo. If you’ve never been to Lantzville it’s a bit of a hidden treat most people just drive by on the highway. But it has a pub, a great restaurant called Riso (more on that later), spectacular ocean views and easy waterfront access…AND, the Lantzville Market, where you can find Darrell’s Sausages.

 

Darrell Pirozzini

Darrell Pirozzini

Darrell Pirozzini and his brother Dean have operated the Lantzville Market for the past 25 years. Tucked into one corner of the market is Darrell’s meat cutting and sausage operation. He likes getting in whole cuts of beef and pork, cutting and grinding and mixing them and stuffing them into casings pretty much by himself, with a little bit of help. And these sausages have become one of the main features of the market, especially Darrell’s Famous Bratwursts. That’s what they’re called and Darrell explained there’s a reason for that. “Well, years ago I used to work in this butcher shop with a German guy who made bratwurst. It took me years to get the recipe, he didn’t want to give it up. Then I finally got it, and now I’m not going to give it up…but the bratwurst is very popular, I sell anywhere from 80 to 150 pounds of it a week.”

sausages

Top: Beef and Sun-dried Tomato. Middle: Bratwurst. Bottom: Breakfast.

I grilled all the sausages for tasting today, and Darrell passed on a perfect method that I’ve used twice now. Barbecue on medium heat. Do NOT prick the sausages to let any fat out, because there just isn’t that much fat and you don’t want to dry them out. Turn a few times on each side, and when the casing starts to crack open, they are done.

Operating a small grocery store is tough this days. And yet this little market in Lantzville has stayed alive for 25 years now. Darrell says they have major competition in the area from Costco, Overwaitea and Walmart, but he says they survive on being there for people in the small town, selling top quality meats and sausages and relying on word of mouth. Darrell also sticks to something he learned when he was growing up in the business. “If it’s something you wouldn’t buy yourself, don’t sell it. And I stick to that rule today.”

The art of sausage making is still alive and well on Vancouver Island. Other sausages I have know and loved: Galloping Goose Sausage Company, Ravenstone Farm Artisan Meats, McLennan’s Island Meat and Seafood, and Nanaimo Sausage House.

Riso LunchIf you are in the Greater Nanaimo area I am hosting a market lunch and book signing with some of the artisans in that area at Riso Restaurant in Lantzville on the 17th of this month. Visit the Stir Cooking School Facebook page for more info, and hope to see you there! Oh, if you missed the column on the radio, click here to listen…

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Food Matters – Lentils

Courtesy of Canadian Lentils

Courtesy of Canadian Lentils

Fact: Sixty-seven percent of the world crop of lentils is grown in Saskatchewan. Fact: You can buy red lentils that are grown right here on Vancouver Island. Fact: The Saskatchewan Pulse Growers want to make sure you start eating a lot more lentils.

Even armed with those facts, although most people know what they look like and maybe even what they taste like, they’re not really part of our daily diet. The vast majority of those lentils grown in Saskatchewan are shipped out of the country and around the world. A nutritionist friend of mine who visited a lentil farm in Saskatchewan asked the farmers how they liked eating their lentils and they admitted to her, ‘we just grow them, we don’t eat them!’ But lentils have been cultivated for thousands of years in Egypt and have been found in prehistoric sites in Europe. They have the highest protein content of all vegetables at around 25 percent. They are in the legume family but more properly are called a pulse, which is the dried version of a legume. The protein made them a great substitute for meat in Roman Catholic countries during Lent, but that’s not where the name comes from. The Latin name, lens culinaris, comes from the lentil’s resemblance to a lens, and from lens we get lentils.

Lentil HunterA hoped-for rise in Canadian lentil consumption grabbed my attention while watching Top Chef Canada on the Food Network. And in episode 4, in the Quickfire Challenge that starts every show, the chefs were challenged to create a dish using Canadian lentils. The winner received a cash prize of five thousand dollars, courtesy of Canadian Lentils, the entity that is in charge of promoting lentils grown by the Saskatchewan Pulse Growers. So I got to see some creative uses of lentils. Then, also on the Food Network, I see a promo for a show called Lentil Hunter. Each webisode features everyone’s favourite tall chef, Michael Smith, travelling around the world in search of the world’s best lentil recipes. In a press release, Chef Smith says, “This is a big deal, just moving that needle 1%, keeping 1% more of those lentils here in Canada, would be huge for our farmers. It would be ever so much more profitable for them.” So there you have it, the campaign is aimed at getting more money into the hands of farmers since they would probably make more money actually selling lentils in Canada than shipping them overseas, and it seems like they are spending a lot of money in order to make money. That being said, lentils are a healthy and nutritious food item, so I can’t really argue with the idea of getting us to eat more lentils…and of course Chef Smith and Canadian Lentils are providing us with lots of recipes.

As far as buying local is concerned, you can find lentils grown right here on Vancouver Island. I have not yet tried this product, but my friend Chef Heidi Fink has, and here’s a link to her article about the lentils grown at Saanichton Farm on my blog. They grow red lentils there, and they are sold as the whole pulse, what we usually buy at the store are split red lentils, but it’s great that they are growing them and I think I should be doing a visit out there this summer to see how they’re grown.

Is this campaign is going to result in us eating more lentils? I think the timing is right, Canadians want to eat more local food, and they probably didn’t know that lentils are grown right here, and for those people trying to put less meat in their diet but still want some protein, here are lentils. You can even use them to cut down on the amount of butter in a cookie recipe, using pureed lentils instead. And they are not expensive. If you’re not a fan yet, give them a try.

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Food Matters – Gunnar’s Pastries

It’s often said food is art you can eat. The only problem with that is then it’s gone. A chef or baker could spend hours creating one small piece of edible art, only to have it devoured in minutes. Today on my Food Matters column on CBC Radio Victoria, I told the  story of a granddaughter who wanted to pay tribute to her grandfather’s creations.

Sophia Burke, formerly of Vancouver and Salt Spring Island, (and a former student of my Food and Travel Writing course) is now making her living as a multimedia artist in Montreal. But she did come back for a visit recently, to launch her gallery called Gunnar’s Pastries at the Pod Contemporary Gallery in Ganges. (previously seen as Sweet Mementos in Montreal) I saw the exhibit when I was on Salt Spring a couple of weeks ago, and it is still running for two more weeks, and while you can look at some of the exhibit online, it is really worth it to see them in person.

Gunnar's Princess Cake

Gunnar’s Princess Cake

Sophia has printed very large format photos of the pastries her grandfather, Gunnar Gustafson used to make over the years in two bakeries in Vancouver, Elsie’s and Liberty. He finally retired at age 88 earlier this year. But the pastries are the only thing in the photo, small in size, compared with a large, plain white background. I missed Sophia while she was there, but caught up with her  after she had returned to Montreal, and asked her about the decision to showcase just the pastries. She told me she didn’t want to do the photos like traditional food photography: “I wanted somehow there to be some emotion in the photographs, and by putting them with this large white background I think that it both focuses on the pastry itself and its craftmanship, and because it is all by itself it feels kind of lonely.”

Sophia spent a lot of time with her grandparents in the bakeries as a youngster, and you can only imagine what that must be like as a child:  “I would gladly hang out there all day, and just keep eating pastries. There’s one that he called a potato. I could maybe eat a quarter of one now. It’s covered in marzipan and cocoa powder and there’s cake and butter cream and brandy. I used to sneak one while I was in the bakery, thinking that he wouldn’t notice one missing out of the maybe 12 or 15 he was working on. And then I could probably eat another whole one, I can’t do that now!” 

It’s got me hungry just listening to the description. Sophia had been thinking for the past few years about how to capture the essence of the memories she has from the bakery, she took a lot of photos and video of the bakery and her grandparents, but it wasn’t until last year that she finally hit upon this way of stripping everything else away and getting to the essence of her grandfather’s craft.  I have to say that this exhibit, which also includes a short video of her grandfather icing a beautiful cake, to the music of Artie Shaw, which he always liked to have playing in the bakery, is not in the same vein as Sophia’s other work, which tends to be more abstract. Even in the video you only see his hands working on the cake. She likes to evoke emotion and narrative in her abstract work, so it was quite different for her to work in this format which started out as being very archival in nature: “In this work I use a much more representational type of photography, and video, but I still think it generates that type of emotion that I wanted it to. And even though it’s personal history, my personal story, I think it is accessible to other people as well, not only because it’s food, because food is cultural and exciting, and emotional to everybody, but the story is also very accessible, it’s not only my grandfather, but it could be somebody else’s grandfather who immigrated to Canada as well.”

And there’s really something in that, because I think of some of the old photos we have of my uncle, the only sibling of my father who was born in Italy, and there’s a photo of showing just him, trimming a big head of cauliflower in his garden, and it made me think of how he used his hands as a gardener all his life.  If you are on Salt Spring within the next two weeks you really should go and see them at the Pod Contemporary Gallery in Ganges, they are there until May 16th.

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Food Matters – Fermented Foods

Melanie Furman mixing kimchi

Melanie Furman mixing kimchi

Yogurt. Beer. Wine. Bread. Soy Sauce. They are all quite familiar food products that many of us eat every day. They all happen to be fermented food products. Sauerkraut and kimchi are not quite so familiar to us, and yet they are part of a growing trend in the consumption of fermented foods. This week on my Food Matters column on CBC Radio’s All Points West, I discovered that trend is feeding the growth of a couple of businesses in this region.

For me sauerkraut has been a special occasion food served to complement sausages or a choucroute garni, the Alsatian dish which includes sauerkraut and smoked and cured meats. Kimchi I eat mostly whenever I eat Korean food, but you won’t likely find a jar of it in my fridge and a jar of sauerkraut could sit in the fridge for months. But…these fermented foods are growing in popularity as people discover they are helpful as a digestive aid and have been associated with easing the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome. It hasn’t hit the fever pitch of the yogurt market, you walk down the aisle of a supermarket you’re likely to see 20 more kinds of yogurt as opposed to sauerkraut or kimchi…

Melanie Furman of 'culturalive'

Melanie Furman of ‘culturalive’

For food manufacturers yogurt is cheap and fast to make. Made in a few hours, and some yogurts don’t even have milk in them, just modified milk products. Sauerkraut and kimchi, on the other hand, take weeks or even months to ferment, and there is a lot of chopping and mixing involved with the cabbage and other vegetables used in the mix. That hasn’t stopped people from going into the business, though. Earlier this week I visited Melanie Furman in her commercial kitchen on Salt Spring Island, where she makes her ‘culturalive’ sauerkrauts and kimchis for sale at the Salt Spring markets and about a dozen stores. Like many artisans I’ve met here, they get into a food business not because they thought it was a great business idea, but because of their own experience with the food:

I had a bit of a health crisis, I was working a few jobs and going to school full-time and racing back and forth from Salt Spring to Vancouver Island…and my system kind of crashed. I started doing some research to see what I could do to get my health back up. I went on a few different diets and tried fermenting and I discovered that eating fermented foods  helped my body to actually digest the food as well as absorb it.

As Melanie became adept at making her own fermented vegetables, eventually the business seed was planted, curiously enough when she was teaching people about nutrition in Zimbabwe. It turns out they had a lot to teach her as well:

And I learned from the indigenous people of Zimbabwe that they had been creating fermented foods for who knows how long, their ancestors and ancestors before that. As I started to do more research I realized that almost every culture in the world does some sort of fermenting, whether it’s grains, vegetables, or fruit, or meat. So if every culture is doing this there must be some reason, some benefit, and then I looked for sauerkraut companies in Canada and found only one, so, why not start another one?

 

Mixing Kimchi

Mixing Kimchi

So now she’s been doing it for the past four years, just created a commercial kitchen in a renovated trailer and does all of her production and bottling in there. A lot of chopping and cutting goes into creating her products. She has an industrial food processor that helps her with the slicing of some of the vegetables, but the cabbage that goes into her kimchis, for example, is all cut by hand. After a first fermentation in a large food-grade plastic pail, the various recipes go into German-made crock pots to age in a temperature controlled closet…and those crock pots are expensive! The large ones cost $400 each, about half that for half the size, but even a small one costs about $150 dollars, but they create the ideal environment with a one way seal that lets gas from the fermented veggies out, but doesn’t allow any air to get in.

A Selection of culturalive Products

A Selection of culturalive Products

Fermented foods are supposed to be so good for you on a number of fronts, according to Melanie. First, the fermentation creates probiotic bacteria, and enzymes, which have started to break down the vegetables in the kraut or kimchi, so your body doesn’t have to take on the whole job of doing the digestion, and byproduct of the fermentation also includes lactic acid, which helps create an environment in your gut where bad bacteria or yeasts or viruses can’t grow. She has also used her knowledge of herbs and spices to use them in her products to add to the benefits already inherent in the ferments, so some of her products have spices like coriander and cumin and fennel seed in them, as well as fresh roots like turmeric, ginger and fennel. Her newest product is called Green Gold sauerkraut, all organic ingredients, including cabbage of course, but also fennel and fennel seed, stinging nettle, kale and orange zest. I also had host Jo-Ann Roberts try the spicy kimchi. I have found myself just eating these two products straight out of the far, they are very fresh tasting and not too salty, and Melanie likes to use as much locally grown vegetables in her products as she can:

Yeah, I’m very grateful to have three local farmers growing vegetables for me this year. Im so happy I can guarantee them sales which is always a challenge for a farmer. So they’re growing carrots, onions, cabbage, garlic, hopefully some sui choi and daikon radish this year. I can get the produce right from the island, the farmers harvest it the day I need it and I can pay them that day, it’s a great cycle.

DSC_3367

Zed Squared Food Co.’s smoked kimchi

Melanie isn’t alone in her passion for creating fermented foods. A young chef named Zac Zorisky at Z-Squared Food Company in Ladysmith has been working on a line of kimchis, ever since he was introduced to it when visiting South Korea a few years ago. His most unique product at this point is one he calls Zac-chi, and it is a smoked kimchi. What I’m really looking forward to is his soya sauce. Yes, he’s fermenting an artisan style soy sauce, which can take months if not more than a year to make. But I am very excited by that prospect, and excited in general that we have two artisan sauerkraut and kimchi makers in the South Vancouver Island area. 

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