Tip of the Day: Use technology to organize your recipes
Continue reading Tip of the Day: Use technology to organize your recipes
Dinner by spreadsheet
Making dinner every night can turn into something of a challenge. Without a little pre-planning, you can find yourself falling into the pattern of having the same things over and over again, every single week. However, with just a little bit of planning, you can make sure that you have everything you need to make terrific food every night of the week. Need some proof? Check out this article in the Philadelphia Inquirer's Food Section about Scott Murphy's dinner system. He reads cookbooks for fun and then enters the recipes that he likes into a spreadsheet. Then he'll decide what to make for dinner and create a shopping from the ingredients he's listed. His system might be a bit much for some people (especially for those of us who cook by inspiration), but there are some good tips that can be gleaned from it. Most importantly is to read and mark the recipes that intrigue you and then make sure to add the necessary ingredients to your shopping list.
Rachael Ray: Great magazine, lame TV show
How can someone who puts out such a fun food mag put on such an unbearable TV show?
I want to like Rachael Ray, the TV show. I really, really do. Honest. But it's just an annoying hour to me. Maybe it's because I'm a guy. One minute Rachael will be teaching us how to make some cool quick meal with pasta and vegetables, and then five minutes later she'll be talking about women in abusive relationships or how someone can organize the shoes in their closets. It just doesn't work for me. (And there's also the whole thing with her voice and bubbly personality, which I can take on 30 Minute Meals but when it's an hour every day...). But it's really popular, so maybe I'm not the right audience.
But Every Day With Rachael Ray? That's a great little magazine. It has a bunch of recipes that you feel you can actually cook (unlike some mags), quick guides to eating in various cities, tips on shopping, tips on buying wine, interviews. It's well-done. If there's one quibble I have is the whole "celebrity fridge" feature in the back of every issue. It's kinda funny to see what celebs have in there, but do we have to have some quiz about what they have? On the same page where we can see the answers?!? It seems to be a quiz made for people who find the TV Guide crossword difficult.
Green Tables Project
Green Tables is a project started by two health and eco-conscious
groups, Les Dames d'Escoffier (LDEI) and the National Gardening Association (NGA), that hopes to encourage people to be more aware
of their food, where it comes from and to make better food choices. Their program is called LDEI Civic Agriculture &
Garden Initiative and it involves the 26 international chapters of the LDEI getting out and running projects in their communities, from cooking demonstrations to
scholarships and other educational classes.
While many of the components of the initiative are public, most of them are aimed at encouraging youths to think about what they ear and, hopefully, to appreciate it more. Green Tables wants to educate people about why they might want to use locally grown foods and increase their environmental awareness. Ideally , participants will gain a deeper interest in community food, gardening and agriculture efforts, leading to both healthier foods and healthier lifestyles.
Eating up the Amazon
Greenpeace
is targeting European McDonald's as a catalyst for the destruction of the rain forest half a world away. According
to a report entitled "Eating up the
Amazon," the eco-watchdog organization says that the
soybeans that European fast food restaurants use to feed their chickens are grown in illegally deforested areas of
the rain forest.
In Brazil, soybean farming has become so profitable that ranchers are selling off their now-valuable pasture land to farmers. The reason that this is illegal, says the group, is that there are regulations in Brazil that require landowners to keep 80 percent of their land forested. Once the ranchers have sold their cleared pasture land, they simply clear new land. Selling of chunks of their property means that they are keeping themselves under the 80 percent margin set by the government, but it does mean that the rain forest is getting smaller. There is also talk of ranchers and farmers using near-slave labor to harvest and tend the crops and an insinuation that the fast food companies might be simply turning away from the problem, if not outright promoting it.








