Saturday, January 29, 2011

Wine Country

Hello again my friends...

Yes, I'm blogging again. Two days in a row. I know, that's pretty remarkable. But, I have many events in my recent history to chronicle so it compells me to blog a bit more frequently. Enough with the idle thoughts, let's get to the point.

So, as I informed all of you yesterday, I graduated from culinary school last week. For my ceremony, my family came out for a visit. And, as always, it was great to see them again. I saw my parents just a couple of months ago, but my brother came this time and that was the first time I've seen him in like 6 months. So I was very happy to see him. It was his first trip to California and to the Bay Area, so I wanted to show him much of the area. He got to see Fisherman's Wharf, the Golden Gate Bridge, Lombard Street, Haight & Ashbury, and even ride the Cable Cars (which I've yet to do). So, he made the most of his trip. We also went to Napa so that he could do some wine tasting while he was here.

Napa is definitely wine country, there's no disputing that. But with the great wines that they produce, much of the other food in the area gets overlooked. We visited three wineries including my favorite, V. Sattui. V. Sattui is a small place that offers far more than just wine. All of the employees are very friendly and knowledgable about all of their products, not just the wines. They offer an assortment of cheeses, jams, jellies, relishes, and cured meats along with the wines. A place like this has a way of opening the eyes of food people. You won't find any duck confit or foie gras or sauces strained 32 times here. It's very basic and very simple. Some salami, asiago, and a bottle of wine does more for human happiness than the pretentious imagination of some overpaid egotistical chef with a Michelin star. Sitting at that picnic table with my family, seeing them enjoying themselves, was one of the greatest moments of my life. It was a moment that was rustic, simple, and void of any false pretenses or judgements. And that is just the way that food, and life, should be.

Your Friendly Neighborhood Culinarian,

Jordan

Friday, January 28, 2011

Graduation

Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears...

I first must apologize for my long absence. Between the holidays, my iphone going by the wayside, my graduation, and my family visiting, I have not updated my blog in quite some time. And for that, I am sorry. Now on with the blogging...

Just under a week ago I graduated from culinary school. It was so recent that I've yet to even find a frame to hang my newly acquired diploma in. The months leading up to graduation I treated this event as though it had no real consquence, if it were no big deal. However, upon the day I was filled with an overwhelming sense of accomplishment. Yes, they usher us through this school like cattle at a slaughterhouse and after graduation throw us to the wolves, but it's not about that with me. It wasn't a normal college experience where you make life long friends to bail you out in 20 years and it wasn't about learning the basics of becoming a cook. I was proud that I finished. I started down a path that interested me and I saw it through until the end. And there is something to be said for that. All through life I've fought this inner struggle of finding what is right for me. Looking for a place where my creative self can be reconciled to reality and this is the medium. I love what I do and the experience of learning it more in depth is invaluable to me.

So I want to take this time to encourage all of you to do the same. Whether it be going to culinary school, med school, art school, or no school at all, I want to encourage you to strive for what you desire.

Take care my friends and happy eating,

Jordan

Monday, December 6, 2010

Child Nutrition

Happy Monday everyone, I hope that all is fine and dandy.

So, I'm not sure if many of you noticed last week, but a bill passed congress that was a near overhaul of child nutrition as we currently know it. Personally, I am very pleased to see this as I feel that it has been long overdue. Here is a link to the New York Times article on the passage of the bill if you would like to read it.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/us/politics/03child.html

The bill, which was largely a Democratic effort, has essentially set required nutritional guidelines for school lunches while providing more funding in this area. This includes an increased focus on the prominence of fruits and vegetables in school lunches, aspects of the meals that have been seriously lacking. Also, outside vendors will be forced to comply with nutritional standards, further shielding our children from the draw of flashy advertisements and empty calories. Another wonderful aspect to this bill is increased access for children to free/reduced lunches. Finally, more money, which is imperative because we all know that nothing in politics gets accomplished without it.

While I know there are some who will see this as another piece of misguided legislation or a waste of government money, and there are those who are perplexed at the contradiction of cutting funding for SNAP to pay for school lunches, this bill is a good thing, despite all of its quirks and compromises. Child nutrition, especially in low budget public schools, has been in dire straits for decades. With lobbyists for agribusiness and the fast food industry molding policies in Washington that allow them access into the schools, it's no wonder that child obesity, and hunger, are prominent social issues in this country today. At the same time, and for the same reason, it is no wonder that these are two of the most overlooked issues in our country as well. Opponents of this legislation may see this as an encroachment on our children's freedom of choice, but the reality is that supermarkets and the food industry destroyed that freedom years ago. And with the absence of health food options in low income communities(which is another often overlooked issue), these children are fighting a losing battle for their health from birth. School is a place of learning, holistic learning, and this should include a teaching of food and the role it plays in a healthy lifestyle. Without these lessons learned, children are doomed to a lifestyle of malnutrition, obesity, and an overall lack of health while furthering the disconnect between consumers and their food, it's nutritional value, its effects, and its origins. You truly are what you eat. So, I commend the Senate, the House, and Michelle Obama, who championed this issue, for their efforts in improving child nutrition before it deteriorated even further at the expense of this and future generations.

Healthy Eating Everyone,

Jordan

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Go Vegan Or Die

Good morning my friends! Welcome to my first December blog...

"Go Vegan Or Die!" These words are scraped into the sidewalk at the corner of Gilman & San Pablo in Berkeley, CA. Seriously. Right in front of the Chinese place. Go check it out if you want. While I applaud the author's enthusiasm, it could be a bit frightening to those who are still in the dark on this issue. So, as your culinary tour guide, I figured that I may attempt to shed a little light on the subject.

Firstly, who are vegans? Well, vegans aren't fanatics in the wilderness sharing a lingering embrace with an oak tree. Vegans are much like you and I. They are individuals with a strong system of beliefs that have made life choices based on those beliefs. So what is veganism? Veganism is a sustainable lifestyle that is based on getting all that we, as people, need from the earth through plants and such. It's largely characterized by the absence of using animals or animal byproducts as a means for food, clothing, cosmetics, etc.

So then why all the animosity toward vegans? Most people view vegans as left-wing liberal, environmentalist, tree hugging fanatics on the fringe of society and, while this may be true of some, most aren't. In fact, they're regular people just like us who have decided not to consume animal products. And I support that notion, though I have tried and have miserably failed at a vegan lifestyle. However, at the root of most of the public distaste for veganism lies two things: ignorance and unease. This post should help with the misunderstanding of it, but the reason we are uncomfortable around vegans speaks to something deeper. It is not the intent of these individuals to make us feel guilty about what and how much we consume. Instead they choose this lifestyle out of a concerted effort to conserve and to save. Or because their favorite celebrity is vegan, but I digress. Veganism is fundamentally about sustainability, which is an end that we should all strive toward in any way that we can. Whether that be through veganism or through consuming only sustainably raised products, we should take steps toward being more concious of our consumption. And I mean a holistic awareness. Not just how it effects the earth but how we effect one another through what we consume. Veganism isn't for everyone, but sustainability is. And if we can make the effort to understand one another, then we could learn how to live and eat more responsibly.

Eating responsibly one day at a time,

Jordan

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

In The News...

Hello again everyone. I hope that all is well.

I was checking my twitter this morning and I noticed a tweet from the NY Times Dining twitter people about the Senate putting together a revised bill concerning the FDA (Food & Drug Administration) and the food industry. It intrigued me enough, so I bit and read the article. Feel free to research the bill on your own but for the sake of brevity in my blog, I'll sum it up as best as I can. Basically, the bill will grant the FDA more power and will increase the frequency of inspections by said government agency. Also, food producers, processors, and suppliers will be hit with far more paperwork to ensure that they are complying with everything that the FDA deems necessary now that the agency will be overseeing farming. Oh yes, and the FDA is getting more cash flowing in their direction to make all of this possible. This bill has spawned in response to the influx of food borne illness outbreaks that seem to happen as regularly as national holidays now. Due to this bill, or so congress says, there will be fewer outbreaks and the outbreaks will more easily and more effectively contained. Forgive my cynicism, but I have to disagree.

Some small farmers have expressed concern over this bill, and rightfully so. This bill could do quite a bit of damage to small farms and organic farms that sell locally and at farmer's markets. Burried beneath a mountain of paperwork and constrained by a host of regulations, small farms will be under even more pressure than is already applied to these hard working individuals. But aside from that, the main fear is to be the increased power that the FDA will be granted as a result of this bill. Over the past three to four decades, the FDA, and the entire government for that matter, has been nothing more than a puppet for profit hungry agribusiness giants to pass laws that cater to their every desire and consolidate a shrinking agricultural marketplace until they have all but monopolized our food supply. So, small farms are going to bear the greater load of this burden as the FDA will continue to turn a blind eye to huge corporations that don't comply. That's the way it has always been and the way it will continue to be.

However, for the government and the FDA to place even more of an undue hardship on these small farms is morally corrupt and unjust. But let's face it, calling our representatives or protesting accomplishes nothing. They only way to get anyone's attention is to hit them in the wallet. So, I would like to encourage you to become more aware of your food, where you get it from, who's growing it and how. Shop at the Farmer's Markets, research some small farms in the area and find out where you can purchase their products. Not only will you be buying a better product, but you will be supporting individuals and families who actually need it instead of lining the pockets of agribusiness execs who make billions by exploiting the land and the people who farm it. Could this bill have some positive effects? Sure. But the negative impact that it could have on the food industry, as well as the agriculture industry would be insurmountable. Let's not let these small farmers disappear. We have to support them.

Happy eating my friends,

Jordan 

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Cold Weather

Wow, so today is cold. And I don't mean slightly frigid, I mean "cold" in all caps and blue font. Whenever I encounter this type of weather, I immediately have a fundamental desire to devour a bowl of soup. And, given the inluence of the Asian culture in my life, mainly my gf & her family, I automatically think of either pho, ramen, or soba. And today my yearning for a steamy bowl of noodles drowning in a hot tub of flavored liquid was realized.

At lunch, eating my bowl of ramen, along with some dumplings that accompanied a very tastey sauce, I felt warm. And not just physically. It's amazing to me how food can touch us on an emotional level. A bowl of ramen can warm us entirely. A slab of ribs can remind us of family. Or a piece of watermelon can place us at a summer picnic. We forge such emotional connections to food and through this connection it feeds us, not only physically, but it satisfies an emotional or even spiritual appetite.

Throughout history cultures and civilizations tied a deeper connection to food. It was more than food, it was part of the person. Buddhist monks will chew each parcel of food 30 times or more to reflect on the what they are eating, what it is composed of, and to be thankful for having it. They think of the sacrifices made in order to obtain this food. They do it to establish mindfulness. Maybe we should take some time to learn something from these people. We should all be more mindful of what we eat and of those who have sacrificed to provide it for us. And slow down a bit, enjoy your meal. It's feeding more than your stomach, it's nouishing the whole of your being. So take the time to appreciate it.

Stay warm my friends,

Jordan

Friday, November 26, 2010

Post Thanksgiving Aftermath

Well my friends, yesterday was Thanksgiving. As we're led to believe, yesterday was about family and counting your blessings. It is also a celebration of the pre-masacre feast shared between the pilgrims and their Native American "friends". But the purpose of this blog is not to go into great detail of what happened or how it effects us today. My blog is about food and culinary related topics. So in the reality that is Thanksgiving Day and the commercial beast that it has become, my objective is to find some shred of sanity within the madness.

So, let's talk about Thanksgiving. While I support the notion of giving thanks everyday and spending time with loved ones on a more regular basis, I like the idea of having one particular day that we set aside to enjoy one another's company. Also, I like the food. What I don't like is the amount of waste and the fact that while we indulge in a feast with more food than we'll be able to eat before it spoils, there are 800 million people on this planet who are starving. While we buy into the hype of what the media tells us Thanksgiving is, there are people, even in this country who would be thankful for one meal. We view this holiday as an opportunity to indulge and be thankful for what we have, but in this mindset of blind selfishness we forget to be giving. In our thankfulness I want to encourage you to remember altruism. Hunger is a very real issue that people deal with on a serious level and if we have the means to eat ourselves into a food comma, then it shouldn't be beyond us to help those who need it most.

I hope everyone enjoyed their Thanksgiving and will enjoy their shopping today.

Peace,

- Jordan