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Archive for July, 2010

Just My Opinion by Steve

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Just my Opinion

A couple years ago I paid for a full year to use a gym.  As a result I worked out 7 times that year.  There’s something about paying up front that stifles the desire to work out . Just my opinion.  “I already did that!”, I think to myself.  When in fact all I did was “Pay” for it.
This summer I have gotten into hiking (mostly day hikes) for the first time in years.  It’s motivating to walk as far as you can, to a destination, and then realize that you’ve got to walk back  before it gets dark. I would never push myself that hard in a gym.
I am tempted now to spend hundreds of dollars on hiking gear, i.e., an extremely light-weight tent. I will resist.  I recognize that urge. My brain wants to buy my body off, so that when the time comes to head into the mountains I will hear myself say, “I’ve already done that.!” Instead I’ll bring good string and a tarp,  like they taught us at Camp Nanamake when I was 12. Yo ho Nanamake! I wonder if that camp is still around.

Whole Foods Cafeteria

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Cookus Interruptus is part of the recently approved King County “Communities Putting Prevention to Work” grant tasked with developing a whole foods certificate program for school nutrition staff in King County (and hopefully statewide).

The work starts this fall; workshops for school staff will begin in 2011.  Cookus Interruptus will be doing curriculum development; planning workshop activities (including hands-on cooking!), creating learning materials and training workshop teachers.  We are very proud to be a part of implementing this program.  You’ll be hearing us brag about it more in the future.  Here’s to better school lunches for our children!!!

More Videos Please!

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Close to 100 people have donated to help keep Cookus Interruptus production going.  Yee haw!  Our goal is to get 10% of our subscribers or 1% of our monthly viewership to donate.  We’re well on our way!  Only 300 more supporters to go!  Help us prove that high-quality, entertaining education is needed and wanted on the web!

They’re cheese quesadillas

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Yup.  That long list of ingredients turns out to be simple cheese quesadillas school-lunch-ized.  I make quesadillas with a sprouted whole wheat tortilla, some grated cheese, cilantro and jalapenos plus a little oil or butter for the pan.  Stunning how such a simple dish can be made so complicated….

Just My Opinion

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Just My Opinion by Steve

We should all take the train more.  Just my opinion. A perfect example is the Seattle to Portland run. After considering the time it takes to get to and from the airport it only takes a couple hours longer than flying.  The drive is faster, but it’s Interstate 5 all the way.

I took that trip on the train last month and it was exquisite.   Small foot print.  Amazing scenery. There’s even a dining car. Warning: I heard that if you don’t buy a business class ticket, and the coach if full, they’ll put you on the bus.  Yikes!

If we all start taking the train more often, they’ll start building more tracks.

Please don’t condition my dough

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

(Enriched wheat flour, malted barley flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, ribflavin, folic acid), water, partially hydrogenated soybean oil with artificial flavoring, artificial coloring, citric acid, baking powder [sodium bicarbonate, sodium aluminum sulfate, cornstarch, monocalcium phosphate, calcium sulfate], salt, dextrose, dough conditioners [wheat flour, salt, partially hydrogenated vegetable oil (soybean, cottonseed and/or canola oil), L-cysteine, ascorbic acid, fungal enzyme], wheat gluten, xanthan gum, calcium proprionate, potassium sorbate), Cheddar Cheese (Pasteurized part skim milk, cheese cultures, salt, enzymes, cellulose gum [anticaking]), Cheddar Flavored Mozarella Cheese Substitute (water, partially hydrogenated soybean oil with citric acid, milk protein concentrate, casein, modified food starch, contains 2% or less of the following: sodium aluminum phosphate, salt, cheese blend [cheddar, blue, and semisoft cheese {Pasteurized milk, cheese cultures, salt, enzymes}, water, whey, salt, citric acid}, lactic acid, disodium phosphate, sorbic acid, nutrient blend {magnesium oxide, zinc oxide, calcium pantothenate, riboflavin and vitamin B12}, paprika annatto blend, [natural extractives of annatto seeds and paprika with soybean oil, mono-, di-, and triglycerides, other flavors, tocopherol, and potassium hydroxide], romano cheese flavor [cheese {milk, culture, rennet, salt}, milk solids, disodium phosphate], mozzarella cheese type flavor {cheese {milk, culture, rennet, salt}, milk solids, disodium phosphate}, provolone cheese flavor {milk, culture, rennet, salt}, milk solids, disodium phosphate, sodium glutaminate, salt, cheese flavor {maltodestrin, acacia gum, 1,2-propolyene glycol, trisodium diphosphate, sodium polyphosphate], beta carotene [partially hydrogenated cottonseed and soybean oils, corn oil, beta carotene, tocopherol], vitamin A palmitate), water, tomato paste (31% NTSS), Shredded Mozarella Cheese Substitute: (Water, partially hydrogenated soybean oil with citric acid, milk protein concentrate, casein, modified food starch, contains 2% or less of the following: sodium aluminum phosphate, salt, lactic acid, disodium phosphate, sorbic acid, romano cheese flavor [cheese {milk, culture, rennet, salt}, milk solids, disodium phosphate], mozarella cheese type flavor [cheese {milk culture, rennet, salt}, milk solids, disodium phosphate], provolone cheese flavor [cheese {milk, culture, rennet, salt], milk solids, disodium phosphate, sodium glutaminate, salt, cheese flavor {maltodextrin, acacia gum, 1,2-propylene glycol, trisodium diphosphate, sodium polyphosphate}], nutrient blend [magnesium oxide, zinc oxide, calcium pantothenate, riboflavin and Vitamin B12], beta carotene [partially hydrogenated cottonseed and soybean oils, corn oil, beta carotene, tocopherol], Vitamin A palmitate), salsa seasoning (salt, sugar, dehydrated onion and garlic, dehydrated jalapeno pepper, citric acid, xanthan gum, spice, dehydrated cilantro, potassium, sorbate), vinegar, releasing agent (water, mono and diglycerides, polysorbate 60 and lecithin, acetic acid, citric acid, potassium sorbate, propyl gailate, sodium benzoate and polydimethylsiloxane), cellulose gum.   CONTAINS MILK, WHEAT, SOY.

Think about all the labor that goes into making  the ingredients that food manufacturers use.  You can’t make Cheddar Flavored Mozarella Cheese Substitute in your kitchen.  Even the many ingredients that make up the highly processed “dough conditioner” are highly processed.

What is this?  Anyone want to take a guess? (Hint: it’s something that is regularly served in the school lunch program.  No I’m not kidding)

Eat More Kale T-shirt Contest Winner!

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Drew a number out of the orange bowl and came up with #27!  Susan wins the t-shirt.  Her entry:

“Oh the joy of eating the super food kale,winner-theme is to see my son it, raw,  inhale”

Thank you everyone.  Our best turn-out ever.  Stay tuned.  I have a gorgeous book on canning and preserving to give away next month.  And if you’re bummed about not getting the t-shirt, visit Bo’s site and order one.  He deserves your business.

Can Food Win by a Nose?

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Top ten superfoods! Nutritious foods you must include in your diet!  My curiosity is piqued by such claims.  I usually bite and scan the list.  But why are we so enthralled by the magical nutrients concept?  Carefully chosen daily food can heal.  I’ve experienced it.  But how do we really know which foods have the most nutrients?  How can I tell if my broccoli is chalk full of vitamin C without sending it to a lab?  Do I have to carry “Bowes & Church’s Food Values of Portions Commonly Used” in my shopping cart to get feel I’m getting the maximum nutrients for my dinner?

This from Michael Pollan’s article Our National Eating Disorder: “So we’ve learned to choose our foods by the numbers (calories, carbs, fats, R.D.A.’s, price, whatever), relying more heavily on our reading and computational skills than upon our senses. Indeed, we’ve lost all confidence in our senses of taste and smell, which can’t detect the invisible macro- and micronutrients science has taught us to worry about, and which food processors have become adept at deceiving anyway. Most processed foods are marketed less on the basis of taste than on convenience, image, predictability, price point and health claims — all of which are easier to get right in a processed food product than its flavor. The American supermarket — chilled and stocked with hermetically sealed packages bristling with information — has effectively shut out the Nose and elevated the Eye.”

When I first read this it sank in deep.  I mean, I teach for the nutrition department at a university.  Am I enabling this disorder?
I made a decision.  When students or participants ask me if they get more nutrients from their broccoli when it is steamed or if it is raw I ask them, “Which way tastes best?”  That’s right.  I’ve come to believe when a food is at its peak of flavor (fresh, in season, not too many miles on it, not under or over cooked) you are likely getting the most nutrients.  When enjoyment is added to the equation, I bet the absorb-ability of nutrients triples.  Raw broccoli tastes nasty to me, blanched is nice, but blanched with some groovy sesame dressing to dip in– now that’s a dish worthy of a smile.  Numbers be damned.

Eat More Kale T-Shirt Contest!

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

I was introduced to Bo’s site Eat More Kale by one of our viewers.  Bo, who resides in Vermont, became a farmer’s market sensation with his made-one-at-a-time soft cotton t-shirts.  You’re going to want one.  Here’s Jane wearing one (and munching on the appropriate leaf):

eat-more-kale

How to enter:

Add a comment that is a  second line to the phrase “Oh the joy of eating the super food kale”. Your  line has to rhyme.  For example the entry could read “It keeps my complexion rosy, never pale”.  You get it. Extra points that don’t count if you incorporate a rhyming word that hasn’t already been used. Only ONE entry per person please.  I’ll delete multiples…

We’ll draw a winner on July 14th.  The winner will be able to choose any t-shirt from Bo’s site (men, women or children sizes, lots of earthy colors, several designs) and he cheerfully agreed to mail the shirt to the winner directly from Vermont. You might want to check out Bo’s you tube video on Screen Printin’ 101.  Scary fun.

What could be better?  New t-shirt, ode to kale, good times.  Get going! (tell your friends). Bale, dale, fail, gale, hail, hale, mail, nail…

WE HAVE A WINNER.  DRAWING TOOK PLACE 7/14/10.

Just My Opinion

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Just My Opinion by Steve

I recently took 9 van loads  from our garage to a huge community rummage sale. I haven’t felt this good in 2 years. My wife was out of town and I made decisions that will never come to light. I  called her a couple  times to ease her anxiety about losing something essential, and I did so artfully.

You must be proactive about these calls. Call #1 concerned something I knew she would want to keep.  Call #2 was about something innocuous, and designed to make her think that I was being overly cautious. Call #3 was just to say hi.

Lots more could go, but my garage floor is back. Someone could actually park in there. And I can sell the stuff I kept on eBay, after Cynthia registers that it’s still around. But whenever in doubt, throw it out. I’m telling you, I feel alive.  Colors are vivid. The view from one end of my garage to the other is as meaningful as any vista.

 
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