Tag Archives: real food

Two Interesting Health Newsbytes

I found two really great bits of health/food information lately that I recommend catching and wanted to share

First up: The Splendid Table had a bit on willpower.  Not willpower, the fuzzy metaphysical concept; no, willpower the expenditure of mental energy to delay gratification, make good decisions, or otherwise act in a responsible manner.  And even the phrase “mental energy” doesn’t really belong.  We’re not talking about “energy” the way newage hippies talk about energy.  We’re talking about physically burning glucose to power your brain.  It’s a physical explanation for what isn’t typically thought of as a physical trait.    This has bearing for all facets of life, not just food.

Then, the BBC has some show called “The Truth About Food,” which is the kind of thing I wish were on the Food Network, instead of some horror show like Fat Chef, but is also the kind of thing that would never fly in the States.  There was an episode about slimming down that I think anybody thinking about their weight will find useful.  My wife had been doing the South Beach thing for a while, and (aside from the first two weeks), most of that seemed to me like good solid advice, rather than funky fad dieting.  And, a lot of the BBC show squared well with that.  But it had more information than the South Beach stuff, and I think clears up a lot of the bullcrap surrounding the discussion of healthy eating these days.

So I’m taking away a few things from this.  First, I (and probably lots of people) need to eat more protein.  Also, westerners typically relegate soup to a side dish, which is a shame.  And third, creating an environment encouraging good decisions is the best way to make them.

There are a number of reasons why you might not want solve the protein problem by just eating more meat, but doing so is slightly less intuitive.  But I have been recently reconnecting with my Mennonite homeboys, and their More With Less cookbook is stupefyingly prescient.  Not only is it about 35 years ahead of its time in terms of buzzwords like “sustainability” or even “Meatless Mondays” (see page 30, for example), but it also has some neato tips for increasing the protein in your cooking without adding meat.  You can make a dish with a milk-based sauce, or put hard boiled eggs on your salad.  Yogurt, for goodness sake.  Think Greek food, Tzatziki sauce.  Nuts, if you’re into that sort of thing.  It turns out that soybeans  are an even better source of protein than an equivalent number of calories of sirloin steak.  And if you think eating fast food is cheaper than real food, just start getting your protein from split peas ($0.49 / 100 grams), lentils ($0.56 / 100 grams), other beans, peanut butter ($1.47 / 100 grams), or chicken legs ($1.52 / 100 grams – cheaper than eggs, even).  Oh, and an adult male only needs something like two-thirds that amount daily.  Of course, there’s more to a diet the protein, surely, but a lot of those other needs are addressed by the cookbook as well.  Consider this an endorsement.  It’s probably the most comprehensive discussion on how to live and be healthy on either a severely reduced budget or a substantial ecological conscience I’ve seen anywhere.

Pho

From a while back.  Used the delicious pork stock made from some pork rib bones.  Fantastic.

Rooster sauce!

ATK Oven-BBQ’d Ribs

After botching some grilled ribs (note to self: buy a grill thermometer), I decided to try the America’s Test Kitchen Over-Barbecued Spareribs (lame paywall).  A bit fussy – like a lot of ATK recipes.  But it works well.  Grooooood ribs.  I think I was using babyback, rather than spare (because that’s what was on sale).

Incidentally, that wine is awesome.  Casillero del Diable – a Chilean Carmanere.  Pretty inexpensive, very very good.

Quick ‘n’ Dirty Sweet Potato Fries Recipe

The day Kristin, her parents, and I moved all our junk into our apartment in North Carolina, we ended up sweaty, tired, and hungry.  Around that time, Kristin and I remembered that it was in fact our wedding anniversary.  We needed some kind of tasty, relaxing dinner, for sure.

We ended up at The Pit in Raleigh, which solidly delivered.  People talk a lot about their pulled pork (they do whole-hog bbq down there), but Kristin and I both go for the ribs – best I’ve had anywhere.  Now, since this was North Carolina, the #1 producer of sweet potatoes in the U.S., providing a full 38.5% of all U.S. production, it will not surprise you to learn that sweet potato fries were on the menu.

I’d like to take a moment to apologize to the benevolent Creator for the atrocities perpetrated upon such a beautiful tuber.  We fallen humans have defiled the vegetable with all manner of unnecessary and haughty trappings, such as obscene amounts of butter, sugar, cinamon, and (blasphemy!) marshmallows.

Anyways, they were delicious.  And I tried to make them at home, and never found a great recipe that really told you all you needed to know…  Some of them produced mushy results, some missed important notes, some took a long while, and others were just too darn fussy.  It’s an oversight I wish to correct with this post.  You’re welcome, internet.

Sweet Potato Fries

Get ready: big pot of salted water, 2 sweet potatoes, olive oil, coarse (kosher) salt, freshly-ground pepper, a sheet pan, covered with a sheet of aluminum foil (for easy cleanup), colander and large bowl.

Initial prep: Set the pot on the heat, bring to boil. Preheat oven to 450 F.  Coat foiled pan with a little bit of olive oil – spread around with your fingers or a brush.  This helps keep the potatoes from sticking.

More prep: Take sweet potatoes, wash them well (potatoes grow in dirt, after all), trim the ends, and slice a narrow slice off the side, so that they lay flat and won’t move around while cutting.  With a chef’s knife (i.e. large, sharp, and non-serrated), carefully cut the potatoes into fries just over 1/4 inch thick.  Be careful – raw sweet potatoes are tough and fibrous.  Doing this with a dull knife or without caution is a good way to lose a finger.  Don’t let it scare you, just learn you some knife skills.  They’re kindof a big deal.

Is your water boiling?  Good.  Boil potatoes for 5 minutes.  Do not overcook.  Drain in colander – be careful with the steam.  Let them sit in the colander for a minute – you want them fairly dry. Put them in the bowl, add “some” olive oil – I dunno, 2 tablespoons? Add “some” salt and pepper.  Go a bit easy on the pepper.  Cumin is also good here if you like.  Toss a bit (be careful not to mash – some fry-damage is inevitable though).  Transfer to the sheet pan, spreading them out, and roast for 10 minutes.  Use a spatula to flip them over a bit (it’s impossible to do perfectly, just toss a bit again).  Roast for another 10-15 minutes.  The final roasting time will be determined by how large your julienne is, how waterlogged the fries were going in, and how crowded the pan was.  Watch them and pull them out when they start to look crispy and not black.  Sweet potato fries will get black fairly quickly once they start, so watching them is important.

The final product is a marvelous thing.  They aren’t deep fried, so they’re not going to have the texture of a fast-food fry, but they should be a little crispy on the outside, with a little color, and soft and tasty on the inside.

It may seem a bit involved, and it did take me a while to knock it out the first time I did it.  But I’ve done it several times since and can now get it done lickety-split while working other foods too.  Cleanup is a breeze – trash the foil, and you’ve got a pot, a colander, a knife and a cutting board, none of which are particularly nasty.

There are plenty of refinements possible – for instance, it’s nice to have the sheet pan a bit hot (but not smoking the oil) before adding the fries so the bottoms start crisping up as soon as they hit the foil.  But none of that is essential.  This recipe works for me, helps me get more vegetables on the plate, and eat real food without fussing too much about it, which is exactly what I want.

Happy cooking, and watch your fingers.

NC Steak Frites

You will nevermind, please, the intense mess behind the food.  And the fact that we’re always eating on TV trays. Dinner time is about the only time Kristin can take a break from school work to relax and watch some tube, so no judging, okays?

Steak, sweet potato “frites,” frisee salad w/ homemade vinaigrette, a really nice (and cheap) 2009 bordeaux (which I will be buying more of), not to mention fresh whole wheat bread and brie.  Holy North Carolina South Yet Somehow French, Batman!

I swear, sooner or later I’m going to stop with these probably jealousy-inducing posts and get around to some good old honest food talk, maybe share some recipes, that kind of thing.  Sorry folks.  In the mean time, I am in the process of planting one heck of a container herb garden.  More updates to follow!

Tuna, Celery Root, and Vegetables

Celery root Dijon salad thing (one of the few times recipes packaged with ingredients actually seemed worthwhile), roast Yukon Gold potatoes, zucchini, and Japanese eggplant.

Oh yeah, and a pretty well-cooked tuna steak.

Hollandaise, Fools

I still kind of suck at poaching eggs.  I’ve seen lots of people say that your water should be around 160-180 F when poaching eggs, but I’m starting to think this is too low.  I did them at 170F today, for 3:30 minutes or so, and the yolks were okay, but the whites were less firm than desirable.  So I watched Jacques Pépin do it, and judging by the activity of the water, he starts much higher than that, a bit under boiling, and then lowers the heat after adding the eggs.  So maybe next time I’ll try that.

Or I can just get one of those little egg-cup things Katie G. had that sit under the water and let you pour the eggs right into them.  They worked quite well, actually.

Made with a 1/3 batch of Julia Child’s hollandaise recipe from Julia’s Kitchen Wisdom.  My arm kinda hurts now :)

Black Eyed Peas

As I said in my post about pork stock, the basic recipe I was using to make my black eyed peas wasn’t much of a recipe at all – it was more like a sentence:


“Oil, Cajun trinity, andouille sausage, garlic, salt pepper, bay leaf, ham hocks, a bag o’ peas, some stock, cook for an hour, hour and a half.”

But, you know, you don’t need any more than that.  Like a lot of my favorite recipes, it’s dead simple, and yet you’ll never be able to figure out exactly what magic is at work to transform such ordinary ingredients into the delicious amalgamation it becomes.

Here you have your aromatics:

And you add that yummy pork stock you made (or whatever stock you have – homemade is seriously best.  Not only is it the most flavorful and has more gelatin for thickening potential, it’s completely without unnecessary additives).

Try it sometime.  It’s cheap, it’s easy, its redonkerously flavorful, and it will feed you for about a week.

Pork Stock

I was in Orlando a bit ago for some technology training for work, but before I left, I wanted to make Kristin some black eyed peas.  For those of you who haven’t been following a long, slow arc southward, black eyed peas are not really peas, but beans.  And when a southerner speaks of making black eyed peas, she’s going to do a heck of a lot more than boil them.

The recipe my bud John told me was roughly, ” oil, Cajun trinity, andouille sausage, garlic, salt pepper, bay leaf, ham hocks, a bag o’ peas, some stock, cook for an hour, hour and a half.”  Now, it’s not really necessary, but I thought it would be rad to make some pork stock for this, and I just so happened to have some rib bones I saved from some past gorging…  So here it is:

It smelled awesome.  Stay tuned for more details on the black eyed peas.

Lentil Soup

Just your basic lentil-based foodporn:

I *think* lentils are okay on the South Beaches.  Hope so!