Showing posts with label Food Freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Freedom. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Review: Pure Beef




Local. Sustainable. Humane. Grass-fed.

Those are some of the buzz words foodies throw around these days when discussing what beef to eat or whether to eat beef at all. A new cookbook, Pure Beef: An Essential Guide to Artisan Meat with Recipes for Every Cut, is the go-to book for people having those kinds of conversations.

Food writer, Lynne Curry, herself a former vegetarian turned grass-fed beef aficionado, wrote Pure Beef as the definitive resource for those devoted to – or just curious – about cooking and eating more pasture-raised meat. Curry explains everything from the science and nutrition of grass-fed beef, the terminology, the different cuts, to how to thaw it, to how to cook it, and what side-dishes to make with it.

Curry begins each recipe chapter with a "learning recipe" to provide a foundation for cooking basics like meatloaf, grilled steak, stir-fry, roast beef, or stock with grass-fed beef. She follows these with more recipes for elaboration or variation for each beef cut. The recipes range from tasty basics like Cowboy Coffee Beef Stew to more exotic offerings like Feta-Stuffed Sliders with Tahini-Yogurt Sauce. She even includes a chapter on making some simpler homemade charcuterie such as summer sausage, chorizo, and corned beef.

Pure Beef would make a great gift book because it is as attractive as it is informative and user-friendly. Its bright, grass green cover has a lot of design appeal and there is a section of color pictures, as well as a pleasing layout with plenty of useful and attractive illustrations.

NOTES

Lynne Curry also has a terrific blog, Stories that Feed You, that is chock-o-block full of all kinds of interesting recipes and information about many sorts of food.  

OTHER REVIEWS

Good Food Neighbor
Oregon Wine Press
The Kitchn

If you would like your review of this book listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it. 


WEEKEND COOKING


Monday, September 10, 2012

Mailbox Monday


Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday! MM was created by Marcia, who graciously hosted it for a long, long time, before turning it into a touring event (details here).

Kristen at BookNAround is hosting in September.  Please visit her terrific blog for reviews of her favorite types of books, mostly contemporary/literary fiction, historical fiction, young adult, narrative non-fiction (travel, cooking, etc.) and memoirs.

Three books came into my house last week:



Room at the Top by John Braine. This is on Anthony Burgess' list of his favorite 99 novels, so I've been looking for it for years.  Mine doesn't have the cool Penguin cover.



My Mortal Enemy by Willa Cather. I really like Willa Cather, but forget to read her books. This is a novella, so it may get me back into practice.

 

Chocolat by Joanne Harris.  This has been on my French Connections list for a long time. 



Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Teaser Tuesday: Get Your Pitchfork On



If you have a cat that spends any time outside, the best advice is "don't get attached." . . . Coyotes, mountain lions, and owls will happily scoop up your kitty for a meal.
--  Get Your Pitchfork On!: The Real Dirt on Country Living by Kristy Athens, from the chapter on pets.


Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event. 



Saturday, June 2, 2012

Author Interview: Kristy Athens


 Kristy Athens is the author of the newly released Get Your Pitchfork On! The Real Dirt on Country Living (published by Process Media).  Her nonfiction and short fiction have been published in a number of magazines, newspapers and literary journals, most recently Jackson Hole Review, High Desert Journal, Barely South Review, and the anthology Mamas and Papas. Her text-infused, repurposed collage artwork appears in 1,000 Ideas for Creative Reuse and is available for purchase at her Etsy store.


KRISTY TOOK TIME FROM HER VERY BUSY BOOK TOUR TO ANSWER QUESTIONS FOR ROSE CITY READER:

You've written a practical guide to living in the country, but you are a city transplant yourself. How did you end up in the country?

My husband and I both grew up in a suburban area, and then lived in Minneapolis and Portland as adults. We were interested in the idea of rural life, so we bought seven acres in Washington State in 2003.

Your new book, Get Your Pitchfork On: The Real Dirt on Country Living, is charming and funny, but it is also chock-o-block full of practical advice on every aspect of rural life. How did you amass such an encyclopedia of useful information?

A lot of it came from my own experience and from conversations I had with friends. When I started turning my essays and vignettes into a proper book, I conducted research by visiting other rural places, interviewing other rural people, and reading books and Internet articles.

What was your inspiration for compiling what you learned about country living into a book?

While the books I owned (see below) were useful, some were also outdated. They gave advice about things I would never do (melt snow for bathing) and had no advice for things I needed (high-speed Internet). Also, no one had guidance for the social aspects of living in a rural community. Since the book I wanted didn’t exist, I decided to write it myself.


Can you give us an example or two of advice you wished you had before you moved to the country?

1. Buy a tractor. 2. Don’t burn oak firewood in October (save it for cold winter months).

What most surprised you about moving to the country? 

I was most surprised by the intensity of joining a rural community. You’re not just taking possession of a house, you’re being adopted into a large family. You don’t get to choose your new “cousins,” nor control whether they are nice to you or beat you up behind the barn when no one is looking. Everyone cares about you, in both a good way and an oppressive way.


Can you recommend any other books to help people prepare for rural life?

As a novice gardener, my main go-to books were: The Encyclopedia of Country Living by Carla Emery; The Garden Primer by Barbara Damrosch; and Introduction to Permaculture by Bill Mollison. And, to a lesser degree: Back to Basics from Reader’s Digest and Mother Earth News magazine.

When we got chickens, I picked up Storey’s Guide to Raising Poultry. The Storey’s guides are great but, as I remind readers in GYPO, focus on raising animals for profit. Lacking profit as a motive changed some of my decisions. For example, I let live a chicken that stopped laying after about three months; a regulation farmer would never tolerate that waste of resources.

What is your work background? How did it lead you to writing your book?

I started my career as a freelancer writer and editor in 1990, so it’s not surprising that I wrote a book. I have published dozens of articles and short stories. This helped me not only for the obvious craft reasons, but because freelancing forces you to explore unfamiliar topics on a regular basis, often by interviewing people you don’t know and by asking lots of questions.

A big part of good writing is being observant: noticing details and anomalies. So when I moved to the country, every time something struck me as different from what I knew as an urban person, I wrote it down.

What is the most valuable advice you’ve been given as an author?

The most important part of writing is to put your butt in the chair; the book is not going to write itself. A more refined expression (which, I think, comes from former Poet Laureate of Oregon William Stafford): “You can’t edit nothing.”

You have a terrific website, blog, and facebook page. From an author's perspective, how important are social networking sites and other internet resources to promote your book? 

I guess the answer to that question depends on one’s goals. Assuming you want to get your work into other people’s hands, Internet stuff is very important. The caveat with social networking is that you have to work hard to move the excitement beyond your circle of friends and family. Blogging and actively commenting—constructively and not “advertisingly”—on related blogs is one way to do that.

Do you have any events coming up to promote your book?
 
In June I head out to Eastern Oregon! I will read in Bend on Saturday, June 16, at the Nature of Words Center; Burns on Monday, June 18, at the Harney County Library; Baker City on Tuesday, June 19, at the Crossroads Carnegie Art Center; and Enterprise on Thursday, June 21, at the Fishtrap House.

This is a very special trip for me, as I used to bring authors to these towns when I ran the Oregon Book Awards program in the early 2000s, and I love to visit my friends from that time! I also wrote half of GYPO while on a two-month writer’s residency in Harney County.

When I return, I’ll read on June 28 at one of my favorite bookstores ever, Broadway Books in Portland. I will travel throughout 2012; you can find the rest of my schedule on the GYPO website.

You lived in the country for several years, but have since moved back to the city. Why the switch back and would you try it again?

Mike and I got caught up in the recession of 2009 and had to sell our farm. We hope to move out to a rural area again in the next few years.

What’s next? Are you working on your next book?

I have a bunch of ideas in the pot; I’m just letting them bubble around for a while to see what floats to the top. Generally, I’m interested in another book like Get Your Pitchfork On! -- not the country theme, but a guidebook about some kind of life passage or experience that people face but don’t receive adequate instruction for.

THANKS KRISTY!

NOTE


A big part of living in the country involves growing your own food -- both the animal and vegetable kind. Large sections of Kristy's book cover raising livestock, gardening, and preparing and preserving food, so I am including this as my Weekend Cooking post.   


WEEKEND COOKING



Friday, June 1, 2012

Book Beginnings: Get Your Pitchfork On


Please join me every Friday to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you are reading, along with your initial thoughts about the sentence, impressions of the book, or anything else the opener inspires. Please remember to include the title of the book and the author's name.

Leave a link to your post. If you don't have a blog, but want to participate, please leave a comment with your Book Beginning.



MY BOOK BEGINNING



So, you want to move to the country.
-- from the author's Introduction to Get Your Pitchfork On!: The Real Dirt on Country Living by Kristy Athens. 

After all the expensive massages, lavender footbaths and boxes of herbal tea that I had acquired as an urbanite, I loved that in the country all I had to do to relax was look around me -- the sun setting over the Cascades; the trickle of water flowing through the woods; the juncos shuffling around in the snow looking for fallen thistle seeds and leaving little footprints on the deck.

-- from "Land," the first chapter.

This is terrific! It is a practical, no-nonsense guide for urbanites who want to go live in the country -- and don't we all have those fantasies every now and again?

Thanks go to intrepid publicist, Mary Bisbee-Beek for my copy.  This is right up my Food Freedom alley!

Monday, May 14, 2012

Mailbox Monday


Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday! MM was created by Marcia at A girl and her books (fka The Printed Page), who graciously hosted it for a long, long time, before turning it into a touring meme (details here).

This month, Mailbox Monday is hosted by Martha's Bookshelf.  Please take the time to visit her wonderfully eclectic blog.

I got a short stack of books last week from a variety of sources:



Get Your Pitchfork On!: The Real Dirt on Country Living by Kristy Athens.  This is terrific! It is a practical, no-nonsense guide for urbanites who want to go live in the country -- and don't we all have those fantasies every now and again? Thanks go to intrepid publicist, Mary Bisbee-Beek for my copy.  This is right up my Food Freedom alley!



Songs of Power and Prayer in the Columbia Plateau: The Jesuit, the Medicine Man, and the Indian Hymn Singer by Chad S. Hamill.  This looks like a really interesting story about the connections between music, religion, and Native American spirituality.  Thanks go to OSU Press for my copy.



Skios by Michael Frayn.  I first saw Frayn's permanently-running and very funny play, Noises Off, when I went to London as a teen-ager in 1983.  His new novel looks like it could be just as funny.  Thanks go to the LibraryThing Early Reviewer program for my copy. 



Island by Aldous Huxley.  This shows up on the Anthony Burgess list of his favorite 99 Novels, so I've been looking for a copy. I found one at The Joy of Books in Libby, Montana when I was there for work.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Mailbox President's Day


Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday! MM was created by Marcia at A girl and her books (fka The Printed Page), who graciously hosted it for a long, long time, before turning it into a touring meme (details here).

Metroreader hosting in February. Please stop by her fun blog to see what she is reading on her commute!

Only one book came into my house last week, but it is a book I've had my eye on for quite a while, so I am very excited.




Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods by Sandor Ellix Katz, with a Foreword by Sally Fallon.

I've wanted a copy of this ever since Hubby gave me a German sauerkraut crock for Christmas.  Not romantic, I understand, but what I really, really wanted. 



Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Teaser Tuesday: Voodoo Vintners


In the wine world, the self-important Robert Parker, with his comb-over and air of gravitas, has come to represent fustiness and, worse, buffoonery.  The new wine celebrities are young, idealistic, and borderline certifiable.
-- Voodoo Vintners: Oregon's Astonishing Biodynamic Winegrowers by Katherine Cole. She doesn't pussyfoot around.

I've been interested in learning more about biodynamic winegrowers, especially local ones, ever since I read Rowan Jacobsen chapter on biodynamic wine making in California in American Terroir: Savoring the Flavors of Our Woods, Waters, and Fields, reviewed here.

OSU Press sent this to me and it is definitely a great reminder of what terrific books they turn out.

Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.




Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter. Click on the chicken for more information.




Saturday, October 1, 2011

Opening Sentence of the Day: Voodoo Vintners


In September 1982, Moe Momtazi sat on a motorcycle with his heart in his throat and his hands gripping the waist of a drug runner.
-- Voodoo Vintners: Oregon's Astonishing Biodynamic Winegrowers by Katherine Cole. Any book about wine making that starts out like this should be good!

OSU Press sent this to me and it has piqued my interest.  Rowan Jacobsen had a very interesting chapter on biodynamic wine making in California in American Terroir: Savoring the Flavors of Our Woods, Waters, and Fields, reviewed here.  I want to learn more, especially about what is going on here in Oregon.



WEEKEND COOKING


Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter. Click on the chicken for more information.



Sunday, August 21, 2011

Book Review of the Day: Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal



"But is it legal?" This is by far and away the most common question I am asked after doing a workshop on local food systems and profitable farming principles.

So begins Joel Salatin in Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal: War Stories From the Local Food Front . And no, he is not talking about growing pot or smuggling in truckloads of undocumented workers. He's talking about the kinds of things small farmers would like to do to build environmentally friendly, sustainable, economically viable, local enterprises – things like curing bacon, selling homemade pound cake, hiring teen-aged interns, selling a neighbor's pumpkins, milling lumber for local projects, allowing on-farm abattoirs, and building a house smaller than 900 square feet.

Salatin is the owner of Polyface Farms, "the farm of many faces," in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. He was featured in Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma and stole the show as the big-hatted farmer in Farmageddon.

He is quite a character. He describes himself as a "Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist" and pulls no punches when explaining his views on how farming should be done and people fed. Chapter by chapter, he explains how one-size-fits-all government regulations designed for large-scale, industrial, monoculture agriculture unfairly limit small farmers trying to serve local communities by providing a variety of healthy food, humanely produced.

Salatin is a master of what Pollan described as the Prairie Populist stemwinder, so the book has plenty of righteous sermonizing on freedom and responsibility. For example:
Ultimately, the government's involvement in medical care creates the justification to penetrate personal liberties with regulations that codify exactly what the wards of the state may or may not eat. . . .

You can drink 20 Cokes a day, but be careful about that homemade pound cake – it will surely get you. . . .

The only safety comes in our communities, our homes, our families, from the bottom up. And these institutions must be free to experiment, to innovate. . . .

The freedom to opt out of the mainstream paradigm is the cornerstone that preserves the minority view, differentiating between top-down societies and bottom-up societies. Our opponents favor coercing consumers to buy only government-approved food, thereby denying opt out freedoms.

He doesn't care whose ox he gores when trying to make a point. He criticizes liberals for looking to the government to solve problems and conservatives for being soft on corporate fat cats manipulating the system.

He's also a good writer with a sense of humor and a big heart. The book is a pleasure to read even while it gets your blood boiling over the petty tyrannies of government agencies doing their best to thwart small farmers and other agricultural entrepreneurs.


WEEKEND COOKING


Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter. Click on the chicken for more information.


This counts as one of my books for the Foodie's Reading Challenge, hosted by Margot at Joyfully Retired.




Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Teaser Tuesday: Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal



If it's the government's responsibility to make sure that no person can ingest a morsel of unsafe food, then only government-decreed food will be edible.  And when that happens, freedom of choice is long gone, because the credentialed food will be what the fat cats who wine and dine politicians say that it is.
-- Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal: War Stories From the Local Food Front by Joel Salatin.  
 
Joel Salatin is the owner of Polyface Farms, "the farm of many faces," in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley.  He was featured in Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma and stole the show as the big-hatted farmer in Farmageddon.
 
 
Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.

 

Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter. Click on the chicken for more information.


This counts as one of my books for the Foodie's Reading Challenge, hosted by Margot at Joyfully Retired.


 


Saturday, August 13, 2011

Opening Sentence of the Day: Everything I Want to do is Illegal



"But is it legal?" . . . . is by far and away the most common question I am asked after doing a workshop on local food systems and profitable farming principles.
-- Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal: War Stories From the Local Food Front by Joel Salatin. 

Joel Salatin is the owner of Polyface Farms, "the farm of many faces," in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley.  He was featured in Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma and stole the show as the big-hatted farmer in Farmageddon.

Salatin is quite a character.  He describes himself as a "Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist" and pulls no punches when explaining his views on how farming should be done and people fed.

He's also a good writer with a sense of humor and a big heart.  The book is a pleasure to read even while it gets your blood boiling over the petty tyrannies of government agencies doing their best to thwart small farmers and other agricultural entrepreneurs.



WEEKEND COOKING


Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter. Click on the chicken for more information.


This counts as one of my books for the Foodie's Reading Challenge, hosted by Margot at Joyfully Retired.




Sunday, August 7, 2011

Celebrating Food Freedom, One Pig at a Time


This week's police raid of the Rawsome Foods co-op in Venice, California got me thinking about the black market pig in my freezer.

I don't know much about my pig -- I don't know his name, for instance.  Or even if "he" is a he.  I do know that he grew up an only pig on a very small family farm in the outskirts of Portland, and lived a happy life until he, humanely, went on to his higher calling.  And that he is tasty.

But, because I bought 100 pounds of tidily-wrapped butchered pork and not a half of a still-living pig, the pig in my freezer is, technically, contraband.

So in a defiant act of Food Freedom, I decided to make something yummy out of my illegal pig this weekend.  I decided to make homemade-sausage stuffed mushrooms using two pounds of ground pork.

According to James Beard's American Cookery and this high-sodium gem, Pork, Sausage & Ham, you make bulk sausage by grinding pork shoulder with pork fat at a roughly two to one ratio, then adding a blend of seasonings.


I didn't actually have extra pork fat in my larder, but I did have a cube of cured salt pork, so I used that.  I ran it through my grandmother's hand-crank meat grinder, and then ran it through again with the ground pork and seasonings, as instructed.

Maybe my ground pork was already fatty enough, but the sausage at that stage looked like it had too much fat and not enough meat.  I didn't have any more thawed pork to add, so I re-named the "meat grinder" a "food grinder" and had fun running the mushroom stems, a half an onion, four garlic cloves, and a couple of roasted red peppers through it and blended that vegetable mix into the sausage.  Much better.

The stuffed mushrooms were delicious.  The sausage wasn't very salty, so it tasted more like a meatball than sausage.  But it didn't have any breadcrumbs in it, so it didn't have the texture of a meatball.  Between low-sodium for the Hubby and low-carb for me, maybe that is the best that can be expected.

The best part was knowing that, at least until I get caught, I was free to enjoy meat raised and processed the way I want it to be, purchased at a reasonable price agreed on between me and the farmer.  That's how every meal should be.

In the meantime, I'll continue to eat the evidence.



WEEKEND COOKING


Food Freedom is on Facebook and twitter.



Sunday, July 31, 2011

Opening Sentence of the Day: The Omnivore's Dilemma


What should we have for dinner?

-- from the Introduction to The Onmivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals by Michael Pollan.

Air-conditioned, orderless, illuminated by buzzing florescent tubes, the American supermarket doesn't present itself as having very much to do with Nature.

-- from the first chapter, "The Plant: Corn's Conquest."

Although it was enormously popular, I put off reading this because I feared political polemic over unbiased information.

But I am on a tear with food books now that I am on a Food Freedom campaign, so when I saw the audiobook at my library, I snatched it.

I am still in the first section on how corn has come to dominate America's food supply. It is fascinating! I'll reserve judgment on the political issues until I finish the book. So far, nothing is overtly political, so it is easy to keep an open mind.

THOUGHTS AND NOTES

This book inspired my former brother-in-law, Curt Ellis, to make the charming and quirky King Corn documentary.

This book, so far, has inspired me to stop by one of my favorite local markets,  Sheridan Fruit Company, and buy some local, grass-fed lamb chops for the grill last night. Delish!



WEEKEND COOKING



I have been reading food books because I am on a Food Freedom kick, which you can like on Facebook, or follow on twitter.

This counts as one of my books for the Foodie's Reading Challenge, hosted by Margot at Joyfully Retired.




Saturday, July 23, 2011

Review: American Terroir



"Terroir" means "taste of the place" and is a popular concept among wine enthusiasts. In American Terroir: Savoring the Flavors of Our Woods, Waters, and Fields, Rowan Jacobsen considers how the same ideas apply to a broad range of agricultural products.

Chapter by chapter, Jacobsen explains how certain combinations of geology, climate, and geography unite with human efforts to produce superior maple syrup, coffee, apple cider, honey, mussels, wild plants, oysters, avocados, salmon, wine, cheese, and chocolate.

The book is a thoroughly entertaining combination of food and travel writing, taking the reader from a Yupik Eskimo community in the Yukon to a remote Venezuelan village renowned for producing the world's finest chocolate. Jacobsen is witty, observant, and enthusiastic about his subjects.  He is also able to captivate his audience, even when explaining the science behind the story.

He focuses as much on the people involved as the weather and soil that create the raw materials, with interesting profiles of wild honey specialists, forest foragers, and avocado farmers capable of identifying which tree produced a particular avocado. As Jacobsen explains:
[Terroir is] a partnership between person, plant, and environment to bring something unique into the world. The soil and climate set the conditions; the plants, animals, and fungi respond to them; and then people determine how to bring out the goodness of these food and drinks.
Jacobsen and the people he writes about are not utopian food-fantasists -- the book also addresses the practical side of food production, especially in the chapters on biodynamic wine making and artisanal cheese production.  As Mateo Kehler, raw milk cheese guru from Jasper Hill Farm, told Jacobsen, "If it is not economically viable, it's not terroir. It's ego gratification."  That is a good lesson to remember.

American Terroir is a celebration of place and palate sure to inspire greater examination of ingredients often taken for granted. Jacobsen is sure to make food terroirists out of his readers.


OTHER REVIEWS

If you would like your review of this book listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it.

NOTES


WEEKEND COOKING



I have been reading food books because I am on a Food Freedom kick, which you can like on Facebook, or follow on twitter.

This counts as one of my books for the Foodie's Reading Challenge, hosted by Margot at Joyfully Retired.




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