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Slashfood is going retro Tuesday, January 31

retro cookery
When I was focusing on slow cooking last week, I picked up a couple of 1950s and 1960s cookbooks. Immediately all we could talk about on the Slashfood chatline was retro cookery, casseroles, and fifties recipes. We were tittering about "Oriental cookery" and the overuse of canned, condensed soups. We were waxing eloquent about tuna casserole. (Well, I was waxing eloquent about tuna.)

Tuesday, then, we'll be taking you back to the 1940s, 50s and 60s. We'll be making tuna casseroles 20 ways. We'll discuss MSG - then a miracle ingredient called for in nearly every cookbook - and we'll reprise our favorite meatloaf and macaroni & cheese recipes.

We'll take you through a few more vintage cookbooks, we'll explore the wonders of 50s-style Chop Suey, we'll delight in frozen peas & carrots, we'll put "hidden surprises" in everything we can. We'll bring you back 50 years to the era where "housewife" was a designation of pride and little boys wore sailor suits. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have Chicken Pie De Luxe to start baking...

Filed under: Site Announcements, Retro cookery, Ingredients

Have Allergy, Can Travel

Allergy CardA boon for travellers who have special dietary requirements-a set of cards that could help out in countries where English is not widely spoken.

The wallet sized cards are available in 15 languages (French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, German, Swedish, Russian, Polish, Japanese, Thai, two forms of Chinese and of Portuguese - plus English). They come resplendent with a picture of the offending food stuff and can have stronger warnings for particularly hazardous foods. Over 40 different food stuffs covering peanuts, wheat, milk, fish, eggs, onions, lactose, gluten and monosodium glutamate are detailed. You select the language and the cards are printed off to order.

They are available through www.selectwisely.com for US$10 A$13.30. A boon for the traveller with dodgy intolerance's or more serious life-threatening conditions.

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Filed under: Food Gadgets, New Products

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Cereal that saves the planet doesn't save taste buds, says NYT

cereals from the new york timesWhy do you buy your breakfast cereal? Peace Raspberry Ginger cereal carries a quote from Mother Teresa, along with a promise to send 10% of profits to a "foundation for peace." Barbara's Bakery, which makes the Cinnamon, Peanut Butter and Honey Rice Puffins cereals, sends a percentage of its profits to a wildlife refuge (to help puffins... maybe). Envirokidz Panda Puffs (my fave of the brands mentioned) has a box 10% smaller than other cereals to contribute to "global sustainability."

They're part of a growing trend of "alternative cereals," says Marian Burros in the New York Times. But: "one thing few of them can boast about is taste. I sampled about 100, and words like cardboard, sawdust, soggy and stale often came to mind. And natural dried berries don't taste any better than artificial ones."

After reviewing all the labels and pointing out the offending high-sugar (Peace Maple Raisin and Mother's Cinnamon Oat Crunch) and high-sodium (Peace Mango Passion, Cascadian Farm Hearty Morning 360) varieties, Burros picks out only five that she would eat, if she ever gives up stone-ground oatmeal: Arrowhead Mills Shredded Wheat, Cascadian Farm Wheat Crunch, Kashi Mighty Bites, Kashi 7 Whole Grain Puffs and Kashi 7 Whole Grain Flakes. And then she predicts that consumers won't put up with tasteless cereal for long, even if it is sustainable and high in fiber.

I don't find that to be true in my family - we eat the healthy, organic varieties and I actually enjoy them. I've even found that some varieties are quite low in sugar. I'd add Mother's Peanut Butter Bumpers and the yummy, low-sugar Heritage Flakes from Nature's Path. Do you eat planet-healthy cereals? Do you like them?

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Filed under: Vegetarian, Vegan, Non-GMO, Raves & Reviews, Trends, Newspapers, Stores & Shopping, Ingredients

Umami

msgWhat do soy sauce, parmesan, and tomatoes have in common? They all contain free glutamates, which makes them have a savory taste--what the Japanese call umami. Literally translated, it means "delicious taste", and some argue it's another taste sensation that our mouths can detect.

In modern chemical form, MSG (monosodium glutamate) is sometimes used in dishes to induce a big umami flavor. Critics have said that MSG can cause headaches, but no actual scientific link has been found. And, the fact is, many Asian cultures have used naturally occurring MSG like in bonito flakes and seaweed to flavor broths for centuries without problems. Other foods like cheese, walnuts, mushrooms, and even broccoli contain glutamates. Some suggest that the whole MSG syndrome is a form of mass psychosis.

I have met only one friend who is allergic to MSG--so allergic that if he would be able to tell if MSG were present in a room. What I wonder is if he's only allergic to the artificial chemical MSG, or just any MSG? I would find it hard to believe that any food with glutamate in it would cause a reaction, because that's one long list. Does anyone else have MSG allergies?

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Filed under: Science

Gwyneth Paltrow chooses death over Cup-A-Soup

Reason Not to Like Gwyneth Paltrow #70: she gets irrationally dramatic around convenience foods. According to the NY Daily News, the actress, who just finished directing a short film called Dealbreakers, flipped out when she spotted a box full of Cup-A-Soup on the set. "Who eats this stuff?" she demanded. When a crew member admitted that his kids were actually really into the additive-laden snack, Ms. Paltrow-Martin said – and you can wait for it, because it's totally worth it – "I would rather die than let my kid eat Cup-A-Soup." Gwynnie famously adheres to a macrobiotic diet, but she once told the Evening Standard that she would be understanding if baby Apple "didn't want to be vegetarian or [wanted] to eat hydrogenated oils ... I'm not going to be a controlling, overprotective hippie." Guess she changed her mind, huh?

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