Showing posts with label -. Show all posts
Showing posts with label -. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Beef it up!

  Decide for yourself...
A.Bananas imported green from who-knows-where-international or B.hand picked veggies, green and garden fresh from my backyard?

Quick, easy, cheap. Mark down B for me.
Many thanks to global foods and their suppliers, much of what we purchase and consume uproots from China, Brazil, you name it. Exotic isn't it? Thousands of "food-miles" lengthen the link between your fork and your food source. 
Longer distances mean many a dirty working hands (like mine pictured above), rusty-machine-processors, chemical additives, and pathogenic bugs-munchers groping your food. This all done before the applied plastic wrap protection. 
For comparison, I ask all of you, avid cell phone users or Skypers: time and again, distance plays us for a sucker, no? Cross-country or international convos bring delayed responses, echos, maybe a pixilated picture. So, similar to that broken call, remoteness blurs our view of staple pantry items and their kindred sources, in-ground patchwork, the farms, the shepherds, the flock, or the agribusiness.
A backyard garden makes the identification of the source of our produce easy. Nevertheless, Americans disregard their food source. Instead, they hold the convenience of FAST FOOD as priority.
We could chalk up our fast food obsession to an urge for a mouth-watering, ambrosial bite of heaven.  I argue it as an activity that embraces reclusion--a hermetic avoidance of the fresh air that exists between you and your grocery store. In this state of mind, it would count as sin not to drive-thru the closest McDonald's (usually a 3 minute drive), where the grin of the omnipresent golden arches smiles down on us.
Let's switch from the McD's venue to Mexican; take Taco Bell for a try. Olay!
But wait!  They're taco meat contains a-whatttt?? Up to 65% fillers: water, wheat (an allergen to the gluten intolerant in beef??), oats, soy lecithin (an emulsifier or thickener that's cheap and available), maltodextrin (Sugar!), anti-dusting agents (soy bean oil to prevent spice powders from separating from their ingredients) and modified corn starch (thickener); find a full ingredient list here. Legally, it doesn't meet the FDA definition of "taco meat." The FDA says that , "[the] Product must contain at least 40% fresh meat to obtain the label: 'Taco Filling with Meat,' 'Beef Taco Filling,' or 'Taco Meat Filling.' " Here's the news and supporting material on this topic. Ohhh the politics of beef...
No vegetarians, this meat mimic is not for you!!  But it's so close you could almost taste it!
MORE ON THE FAST FOOD INDUSTRY AND THEIR MEAT
If traced to their origin, a single lot of meat in a processing plant is butchered from 443 cows. These animals face the peril of death at six different cross-country slaughterhouses! With this mix-match sourcing, no wonder Taco Bell "meat"  is dubbed a "taco meat filling". We lost track of our meat's identity in transport, processing, manufacturing, and translation (Safe Food: The Politics of Food Safety, Author: Marion Nestle). 
It's idealistic, friends and colleagues, to think that we might know the route of food. The more with our ravenous appetite demands processed and fast foods, the more governmental monitoring (run by the Federal Drug Administration or the FDA) has trouble keeping pace.  This means more meat goes un-inspected.  
It's a tough life and tight budget for the FDA. To obtain a safer sustainable food supply this system must change. Mark Bittman of the New York Times puts this into tangible terms: "....the FDA must be given expanded powers to ensure the safety of our food supply. (Food-related deaths are far more common than those resulting from terrorism, yet the FDA’s budget is about one-fifteenth that of Homeland Security.)"
Without efficient regulation, consumers and industry ask: Do we really know what Taco Bell's unpronounceable ingredient list (term defined here) do to us? 
My Answer: Well...um...yes and no.
In the next couple years, researchers will take the direct route to answer our pleas and inquiries!  The FDA, Pew Charitable Trust, food scientists, food industry, and public health advocates will take turns on the wheel--driven to modernize the approval process of food additives. 
Some of these substances were approved for use over 50 years ago???!! Others weren't tested at all!? Take Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS) food additives, for instance.  In 1958, the FDA established the Food Additives Amendment.  With it, came a list of 700 GRAS additives in our food supply before 1958. GRAS status exempted manufacturers from testing these food additives before putting them on the market.  Nothing big, just 700 free-bees for the food industry run with, one of these being arsenic. "Safe" amounts of heavy metal in my food? FDA, what dated studies and lab techniques support the allowance of this additive? When did you approve this one (if at all)?
Lucky for us, scientists now judge the safety of every food additive. But age old policy and research methods slow this process. Food industry takes advantage, and the FDA is left playing catch-up!   
Times like these make me feel like the crash-dummy taking a food additive vehicle for a spin. 
There's no emergency-break-answer to stop us. A convenience food nation as desperate as ours is a danger to itself. But tell that to a starved child and his grumbling belly. To him a super-sized dollar menu with all its additives isn't death; it's dinner.


What Consumers Wanna Know:
When it comes to selecting your food, check the ingredients list (located under the nutrition label). Enliven your curiosity, investigate the unpronounceable ingredients, evaluate them, and decide for yourself. Which ones do you want for your diet? Take your food into your own hands, then eat it too! 
One final note, if you are still weighing out the benefits to analyzing your food, at least take a peek at this brief: the Top 5 Additives to Avoid the Most.
Hold these thoughts, Eaters. 
Don't stop eating your favorite fast/processed foods. Just be a conscious eater and ask, "How many times do I head to these joints without a second thought?" Then dig deep, "Where is this food coming from? What's the implications of chowing-down these well-traveled foods? On my health? On the environment? How might MY fast-food purchases play into this long-distance system? Can I make a difference with my food dollars by choosing a different restaurant?"
Nutrition
 As a registered dietitian, I note that some of my clients must eat fast-food! I say to them, "Go for it! To each his own!" But before indulging in this pleasure, take a peek at the resources: calorieking.com or restaurant website nutrition facts (Qdoba's nutrition calculator, for reference) Let them help you find the finger-lickin' dish that fits your diet best. 
To this end, some restaurant menus tagged their foods with their calorie count...but nationwide menu labeling is still under deliberation. Other fast food restaurants are suggesting healthier options: Subway & McDonald's (hopefully coming soon). Hungry Girl extraordinaire gives some healthy pointers for fast-food survival here 
Fast-foodies of the "Go-BIG-or-go-home" mentality might scoff at this nutrition stuff. But, I challenge you, Drive-Through Guru, to reduce your restaurant window time to once-a-day or once-a-week or once-a-month.  Start easy and embrace whatever fast food schedule seems most manageable for you. Build from there. Don't let those TV commercials tantalize you! 
Try me on this one...if you dare! 
More on the Fast Food Skinny:
The top 10 fast food restaurant 2008 and 2009
Tips for Healthy fast food lunch & dinners
WARNING!!
 I'm a woman of discriminating taste. My blog usually denotes healthy, wholesome, and simple kitchen-play. Not this time, baby! Every foodista maintains the right. The right to bake 'em sweet, eat 'em, and blog 'em too!
Royally Iced Shortbread Cookies
"Cookie rampage" encapsulates the atmosphere at my farm house. For months, my family cherished the smell of fresh-baked cakes and shortbreads wafting into our nostrils, seeping from our pores.  Just call us, Bakers! 
Cookies inspire us to make them cakes!

Holidays inspire us to bake stockings and iced presents!
Farm animals inspire too! 
...cookies the color of Oakley's toy ball....

Baked biscuits..my answer to our horsey, Moon Beam's winter appetite!


Ooh! Looks like more animals joined the cookie-merrymaking!
O'Malley fainting goat
Mad-dawg, my bear!
Chick...chick...chickies!
Our chunky pony, Donnie Brasco! (He can stick to decorating the treats. For him, a small cookie for tasting.)
What else inspires cookie baking? Dreaming of the luxuries of spring! 


Hearts for February--my first batch ever!
Point blank, I don't take much heart in the Valentine's season. So, the second time around the hearts morphed to monsters. Predators spying on their prey, my wide-eyed owl.
Even after the Superbowl, these ones never went out of season. They inspire my family year-round. Many props to my step-sister for showing up all cookies in her first batch!
* ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** *
But we're not like these poor, crowded oinkers who pig-out on whatever they can get their snouts on!
(FYI: My family farm does not house these pictured piglets)


 Eat in moderation or else. . . . . . .

Monday, December 20, 2010

Good Eats for the Kiddies (and Y-O-U)

FNCE, aka “Fency”, aka The American Dietetic Association’s Food and Nutrition Conference and Expo, aka (in real-people lingo) a place where thousands of foodie-dietitians gather to talk food, learn food, eat food, and sample food! Salute to the grub!

But all hail the school food programs taking healthier action! With Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign on many dietitians’ front burners, it became one of the sizzilin' topic at the conference!!
The School Food Norm:
For breakfast? Why not a HUGE hunk of quiche with refined white flour crust and, to top it off: salt laden sausage, eggy goodness, and molten cheese?  Lunch serves mile-high creamed corn and French fries accounting for the children’s vegetables (though more like fatty, not-so-whole-wheat starches). Don’t forget a serving of seconds...maybe thirds. From the looks and tastes of it-school cafeteria food-past and present-has been a parade of unhealthy, with middle-of-the-road dishes.

Don’t get me wrong, I’ve nibbled, okay, downed my share of cafeteria fair.  It's tough to resist those faced-sized Otis Spunkmeyer cookies, grab-n-go Poptarts, or pizza doused in enough grease to oil a kid's tricycle. Yet, these unhealthy choices morph from food into bleary eyes and a bloated stomach. Preventable symptoms? Of course! But will children be likely to choose a salad over these McDonald-esc consumables? To this, a deliberate, “Auuhhh, heck NO!” might do.

I don't fault your favorite cafeteria lady for heating-up these fattening fixin's.  School cafeterias cook and serve, suffocated by tight-gripped budgets. They run on a year-round, subsidized agrobusiness--y’know the super-sized corn, beef, chicken, potato, soybean farms and their ultra-processed byproducts. The resultant foodstuff pinballs from the producers, suppliers, manufacturers, to the lunch line and student-consumers. During this bounce back and forth food miles rocket above the thousands, gas is guzzled, chow-quality squandered, contamination risk rises, and the food variety is limited.  This large-scale food distribution and processing, is but one factor causing corpulent children. Nonetheless, students are abject to normalize canned vegetable mush, mystery meats, and Twinkies for meals.
Unstable, unprofitable, and sometimes un-nutriticious is our current food system. This is why thousands of people (scientists, non-profits, parents, teachers, school dietitians) put up their advocating fists to brawl for the Child Nutrition Act.  No matter their political party, these fighters duked it out for THE FUTURE GENERATION. And they claimed victory when the Child Nutrition Act passed on December 13, 2010.


The Child Nutrition Act Basics:
1. It trades the extensive paper work with automatic enrollment for low-income children for kids eligible for free lunches.
2. A modest 6 cents increases the reimbursement of school lunches. This money is reallocated for healthier school food menus.
3. Financial support is given for the healthy-local-tasty-fresh input of the Farm to School programs.
4. Acknowledgements are provided for model food systems.
5. About $1.2 billion  will be given over the next 10 years for more meal provision after-school, during summer programs, and to all students in schools with high poverty levels.
6. An estimated $3.2 billion will fund the establishment of new nutrition standards, strengthening local wellness policies, and increasing reimbursement rates.

7. It increases food-prep training for cafeteria staff.
NOW, to Build & Forget
Building is the tough-love, foodservice modification, and school nutrition education provided for the cafeteria workers, policymakers, your local school board, the parents, and the students. Forgetting is the TASTY (healthful) lunch that  surpasses all other unhealthy meals before it's time.


The prospect of modifying a 30-year-old food system may be intimidating, added onto the tough market, limited moneys, and resources too! But I challenge you, parents, teachers, the young (my non-parenting friends), and old (elderly is a relative term) to remember when you were a kid and all you had was a dream!? Now, give these kids a healthy head start on their childhood dreams:
Educate yourself with tons of new resources. Find simple ways to join the movement!
1.http://civileats.com/2010/12/13/school-lunch-victory/
2.http://www.eatright.org/kids/
3.http://www.theatlantic.com/food/archive/2010/03/shtick-aside-oliver-understands-school-lunch/38211/
4.http://www.theatlantic.com/food/archive/2010/04/breaking-down-the-child-nutrition-act-q-a/38597/




Hurry up, time’s a-waistin’!

While We Wait, Let’s BAKE!
This season we’ve got butternut squash adorning the corners our kitchen pantry.   It's stored cool (55 degrees F) in dry, well-ventilated conditions.  Keep it for up to 8-12 weeks. 
Simply Stuffed Butternut Squash
Cook time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Serves: 3 people

Ingredients:
1 butternut squash

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon 
pepper
1/2 cup dried quinoa
3/4 cup water

1 onion, chopped
2 medium carrot sticks peeled, diced

1 tablespoon olive oil
1 apple, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
 1/4 cup olive orange juice
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger (2 Tablespoons fresh OR candied ginger)
1 tablespoons of cider vinegar
1 tablespoon honey
1/3 cup fresh cilantro, finely chopped (optional)

Kitchen Needs:
Baking dish
pastry brush (optional)
Large, flat pan (sauté pan) with lid
Large mixing spoon
Measuring cups and spoons
2 boiling pots with lids
Fork
2 small pieces of aluminum foil
Yourself and 2 other friends

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Cut the acorn squash in half and scoop out the seeds (save for later). Place cut-side-up in a baking dish and drizzle 1 tablespoon olive oil on top of the halves. Use your fingers or a pastry brush to coat all the flesh. Sprinkle a pinch of salt and pepper on top. Roast for 45 minutes or until the squash begins to get tender. Once tender, set aside but leave oven on.

Meanwhile, on top of the stove, use a saute pan to cook onion and sweat carrots in 1 tablespoon of olive oil over low heat. With a large spoon, mix every 1-2 minutes. Do this for 20-25 minutes or until onions are golden-brown (caramelized)Add apples after the first 10 minutes of cooking.  Put a lid on it to save energy. Once finished, set aside in a large bowl.

Place a small pot on high heat burner to bring 1/2 cup quinoa in 3/4 cup water to a boil. Once boiling, bring the heat down to low. Cover with loose-fitting lid and simmer (little bubbles). This allows some moisture to escape.  Cook it until small curly white tails spring from the quinoa and most of the water is absorbed (about 10 minutes). Stir and fluff quinoa with a fork. No liquid should remain.

In the pan that you sauteed the onion in, heat 1 teaspoon olive oil over medium heat. Add the garlic, saute for 1 minute until fragrant and golden-brown.  Add 1/4 cup orange juice, 1 tablespoon soy sauce, and fresh or ground ginger, and the tablespoon of cider vinegar.  Simmer until thickened. Turn off burner and mix in 1 tablespoon of honey. If you enjoy cilantro and have it on-hand, try mixing in 1/4 cup fresh and finely chopped for a flavor boost.

In the bowl where the onions are, combine the quinoa, caramelized onions, and orange juice sauce. Toss to coat everything. Spoon 1/2 of the quinoa mixture into the squash halves, cover with two small pieces of aluminum foil, and bake for another 15-20 minutes.

Let cool for 5-10 minutes, slice the butternut squash and spoon the rest of the quinoa mixture over each serving.
Nothing goes to waste in our house. Salt, pepper, and spice up your seeds. Throw them in the oven at 350 degrees F for 20 minutes (or until toasted light brown). Top salads, soups, sandwiches, or switch in the pumpkin seeds to make squash seed pesto!
There was a butternut half that was left naked and unstuffed. I pealed, mashed, and dressed it with white chocolate and pumpkin spice for these bite-sized treats! Any leftover butternut-mash filled my morning oatmeal and pancakes!
---
But, nothing molds my family together like buttered-biscuits pressed festive from a cookie-gun.  The best part? All the cooks (I mean kids) that helped!
Taylor and Jakie manned the mixer. They're such baking pros!!
Taylor taste-tested the batter (with no raw eggs). He approved.
Taylor and I are loaded our weapon…only to blast out 200 cookies.
Take Home Message:
1. Bring the kids into the kitchen! Teach them portion sizes, ingredients, cutting and mixing skills, and to have at it with their own creativity!
2.Cook or decorate with the family. Togetherness does not have to involve tasting (other than the here-and-there licking of the spatula)!
3. Let loose! Eat a cookie or two! The small press-cookies' portion create bite-sized snacks for everyone. If the overeating-temptation calls, freeze or gift-up any extra sweets. You could also try waiting out the craving; cravings usually last an average of eight minutes. Until then, occupy yourself with kitchen clean up.



HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL!
Here are the presents under my Christmas tree...
..and my nephew, Santa's little helper.