Tuesday, June 29, 2010

"For the Love of Strawberries" - The Local – Maplewood Blog - NYTimes.com

"Healthy, Tasty and Unusual at the Fancy Food Show" - Diner's Journal Blog - NYTimes.com

"The Curious Cook - Leave the Barbecued Ribs to the Professionals" - NYTimes.com

"Association Sante Environnement de France" - Site de l'ASEF

"Advertising - China Has a Taste for U.S.-Grown Nuts" - NYTimes.com

"Recipes for Health - Asparagus and Herb Lasagna" - NYTimes.com

"Beers of The Times - Sampling American Pale Ales" - Review - NYTimes.com

Food testing in Chapel Hill

Does anyone or any organization do any food testing in Chapel Hill? Is there anyone local who occasionally checks the quality of things? In the Extension Service? At UNC? Elsewhere?

"Antibiotic Use in Animals Should be Limited, F.D.A. Says" - NYTimes.com

The very point made in the French documentary last night, see below, including the industry responses.

"France | Beekeping | Paris Opera"

"Piéces a conviction" - France 3

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Fire cooking

I got this in an e-mail today from the Town of Chapel Hill:

"Look Who's Cooking: Captain Byron Greeson


Posted Date: 6/22/2010

In January, Lieutenant Gordon Shatley conducted a routine fire inspection at A Southern Season. He was approached by the leader of the cooking school and asked if he knew any good cooks at the fire department. The name Captain Byron Greeson was offered based on his reputation among firefighters as an avid chef and one of the favored firehouse cooks.



Captain Greeson accepted the invitation and became the first Town of Chapel Hill Fire personnel to conduct a cooking class at A Southern Season. The class was held on Tuesday, June 8, 2010. The menu consisted of baby back ribs, rosemary potatoes, grilled vegetables and apple crisp.



To Captain Greeson's surprise the audience included about 25 students and three of those students were other Town employees from our Human Resource Development Department.



Along with divulging cooking secrets, Captain Greeson took this opportunity to educate the audience on fire safety tips, which made the event a true public education experience.



Captain Greeson says his affinity for cooking started "a long time ago". He can remember as far back as being in the kitchen with his mom as a young child. Captain Greeson is married and has two sons. He says that he and his wife share cooking duties based on their work schedules.



Captain Greeson has already been invited back by A Southern Season for a second program later this year."

"Pork Industry Apparently Can't Take A Joke" - NPR

"Soft Scrambled Eggs, Infused With Herbs" - Diner's Journal Blog - NYTimes.com

"Advertising - Mars Campaign Promotes New Pretzel M and Ms" - NYTimes.com

"Food Stuff - In Kosher Ice Cream, a Taste of Baked Goods" - NYTimes.com

"Recipes for Health - Apricot Purée" - NYTimes.com

"Food Stuff - Astor Bake Shop Opens in Queens" - NYTimes.com

"Food Stuff - Applewood-Smoked Bacon and Chicken Bacon Go to Market" - NYTimes.com

"Food Stuff - David Rosengarten Revives Food Newsletter" - NYTimes.com

"Heinz Has a Taste for Chinese Soy Sauce" - DealBook Blog - NYTimes.com

"Hey, Mr. Critic!" - Diner's Journal Blog - NYTimes.com

"An 'Edible History' Of Immigrant Families" - NPR

"A Challenge For A Top Chef: Make Sardines Tasty" - NPR

-> CULINARY SCHOOL IN MOUGINS - MOULIN DE MOUGINS - OFFICIAL WEBSITE - CULINARY SCHOOL NEAR CANNES

"Les Petits Farcis: Upcoming programs"

Food families of NC?

There was an interestig story in the Nice newspaper a couple of days ago about a chocolate shop here that has been around for a long time and run by the same family - since 1820, through 5 generations! Do we have anyone in NC with that kind of longevity? What are the oldest family food enterprises in NC?

Monday, June 21, 2010

"Recipes for Health - Summer’s Most Delicate Fruit - Apricots" - NYTimes.com

"Recipes for Health - Apricot Smoothie" - NYTimes.com

"Stores’ Treatment of Shoplifters Tests Civil and Legal Rights" - NYTimes.com

Taxes at restaurants

France reduced the tax on restaurant meals from 20% to 6% a year ago. It does not appear that the cost of meals has come down as a result and many people are up in arms over this. What tax is applied to restaurant meals in NC?

"Ralcorp Strikes Trio of Food Deals" - DealBook Blog - NYTimes.com

"Les Restos de Nice : Bons plans ou attrapes touristes ?"

"Picard.fr - Vente produits surgelés - Recettes & conseils cuisine - Produit alimentaire surgelé à domicile & en magasin"

"A Deal of the Day on Wine, in Your Inbox" - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

"The Temporary Vegetarian | Tacos de Calabacitas" - Diner's Journal Blog - NYTimes.com

Froody.fr Frozen Yogurt

I stumbled upon this place in the old city of Nice a few days ago. It looked like they were working hard to get the place ready to open soon. What's disappointing about them is that nowhere on their Facebook area or on their website do they tell us about themselves. Who are these people? And where is the link to the story in DirectNice that was supposed to have appeared on 1 June 2010?

"The Minimalist - The Secret to a Great Salade Lyonnaise" - NYTimes.com

"High-Protein Diet for Weight Loss"

This is being criticized in France as well.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

"Japanese Nationalists Aim to Block Screenings of ‘The Cove’" - NYTimes.com

"Mozzarella Gets the Blues in Italy" - NYTimes.com

Handmade pasta

When we first moved to Chapel Hill 11 years ago, I recall shortly after our arrival the opening of a little shop in Chapel Hill selling homemade pasta. It was a young couple with two parents from Italy, one still working in the business and the other deceased. They had a shop in Wilmington too. They disappeared one day.
Here in France, there was a full page story in the local newspaper a few days ago about a 75 year old man here still making pasta by hand, actually not all that unusual.
How different are our two places in valuing stuff like this. Who makes homemade pasta for retail in NC? And what are the forces at work here that begin to make the older man's story more unusual?

Yogurt taste test

Our local newspaper recently ran a full page story in which their food editor did a taste test on yogurt, a very popular item here as in NC. The story simply reported, item by item, what she thought of the major brands.
When was the last time anyone did something like this in NC? For any food product?

Food from other pars of NC or neighboring states?

Here in France, we are on the border with Italy. It's a little like being near the Virginia border to the west without being far from West Virginia either. West Viriginia for us is the Piedmont region of Italy.
Last weekend, a town here invited the producers of all sorts of foods from a town there to come and sell their products. I bet the French producers make a return trip.
Do we ever do this sort of thing in NC? are the products of different parts of the state or the surrounding states different enough to justify this?
Here the project is supported by the local governments in each town.

Protecting traditions?

One major food retailer in France is running full page newspaper ads saying that the store is proud of traditions in the region, and wants to preserve them and share them. To do this, the ad continues, we have regional products in our stores that you like and come from here.  And this, the ad concludes, is also good for the local economy. The theme at the bottom of the ad - "count on us to spend less".

Découvrez Outox

This is getting a lot of (controversial) attention here in France. In NC?

Minute Maid in France

The pitch in print advertising for Minute Maid juice in France is is "get a good start to your day" and a recent ad claims that a can of Minute Maid juice provides 1/5 the "recommeneded" amount of fruits and vegetables. In tiny print, the product is identified as orange juice and in even tinier print unable to be read without a magnifying glass, it says that you should have a varied diet and a sensible lifestyle as well!

"The Way We Live Now - Dysregulation Nation" - NYTimes.com

"A Good Appetite - Twice-Baked Crust for a Sour Cherry Pie" - NYTimes.com

"Food - A Modern Dairy Tale in Mississippi" - NYTimes.com

"Retailers Revive the Market in Women’s Plus Sizes" - NYTimes.com

Let's hope this does not reverse the efforts to slim down all those fat ladies.

"Government Cracks Down on Farmers Who Hire Children" - NYTimes.com

In NC?

Thursday, June 17, 2010

"Higher Prices = Less Soda Drinking" - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com

"Bisphénol A : le gouvernement reporte le débat à 2011" - LeMonde.fr

Price of olive oil in NC

I am in France where wine flows at very low prices, but not all that much cheaper than what one pays for wine in the US. The price difference, given the distance, seems to be appropriate. That said, I would put a $3 bottle of Trader Joe's syrah up against almost any lower priced wine here. So it is possible to find low priced wine in NC that is no more expensive than in France.

When it comes to olive oil, the situation is very different. Here in France, we have many olive oils that are priced very high, and perhaps they merit the price. We have many very expensive olive oils in NC as well, some of which were on offer at Southern Season in Chapel Hill recently. What we don't have anywhere in NC that I have found is cheap olive oil. Here in France, I can buy a bottle of perfectly OK and good for you olive oil - one liter - for 3 USD. Yes, Three USD. Now, why can't we find olive oils priced comparably in NC?

"Hypnose et compulsions alimentaires" - Santé /
Bien être - Santé - Télématin - Emission présentée par William Leymergie - France 2