Happy New Year from all of ue here at Slashfood. We're looking forward to an exciting and food filled 2006!
So join us in a toast for all that has been and all that is to come.
[Photo by Nicole Weston]
Slashfood has a new home! Huffpost Food.
Click here to visit the new home of Slashfood!Filed under: Site Announcements
The year 2005 was a short one for Slashfood, as we were born in the late summer.
But still, we wrote over a thousand posts on everything from, um, acorn squash to zucchini. And we were all
blogging, and eating, and thinking about foods, food blogs and food news all year long. What dominated our
search strings, our comment threads, and our intra-Slashfood buzz? This was it:
Filed under: Site Announcements, Trends, On the Blogs, Lists

There are more than a few people out there who continue to give lawyers a bad name. Some of them are the lawyers who take on what many people deem to be frivolous lawsuits. Sometimes it is the lawyers who take it upon themselves to speak up for people and protest what they perceive is a legal violation or some sort. These may not be all the legal battles caused by food this year, but they certainly were noteworthy ones, whether they deserved to be or not.
1. Silver
dragées. This lawsuit isn’t new to 2005, but it is ongoing nevertheless. A
2. Bottled Fly Trauma. In , a hairstylist and his wife were awarded more than $300,000 after finding a fly in a bottle of water. Neither the man nor his wife consumed any water and, in fact, the bottle was unopened. The couple mentioned that they were “plagued by nightmares [and lost] of their sense of humour” as a result of the incident.
Filed under: Food Oddities, Trends, Newspapers, Lists, Did you know?, Ingredients, Drink Recipes
Last year around this time, the blogging world, in shock from the terrible disaster in
Indonesia, was responding with all its generosity of spirit and kitchen. That fervor continued throughout the year and,
it seemed, food bloggers felt imbued with the passion to change the world in whatever small way we could, even if it was
just creating pink
recipes to honor the fight against breast cancer.
And what is that saying? Charity begins at home? In August, a huge number of bloggers worldwide participated in an exercise in locality, challenging each other to eat as much from local vendors and farmers as possible.
My personal eat local campaign began with coffee (roasted locally) and continued with garlic. I'm lucky to live in a place from which lots of great products and produce hails; but I lusted over the local goodies in California and Provence. When we were done eating? We went around the world in a recycling bin.
Food
bloggers, and their readers, took their local charity to Kashmir this past month with Chez Pim's Menu for Hope, which ended up raising $21,716.32. Andrew Barrow and I both donated items (although I must
admit I practiced the two for me, one for you thing when I shopped for dried mushrooms at the
farmer's market).
Filed under: Food Porn, Spirit of Summer, Raves & Reviews, Trends, On the Blogs, Lists, Spirit of Christmas, Feast Your Eyes
I didn't keep track, but I must have eaten thousands of dishes in 2005, and tried hundreds of new foods. While I won't admit to how large a percentage "toast with peanut butter" and "breakfast: one cookie, one coffee" were in my personal dietary pie chart, I will offer up some of the unarguable highlights. The following is a photo essay on some things that warmed my stomach oh-so-well in 2005.
Marinated
salmon and onion with citrus and cucumber, Tani's Sushi,
November.
Crisp, melting, sweet, tangy, citrusy, flavorful, refreshing. One of my favorite dishes in the
city.
Filed under: Raves & Reviews, Lists, Chefs & Restaurants, Restaurants