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food books

Friday, February 24, 2006

A Nice Bit of Wensleydale

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Long before he became a nocturnal vegetable thief, Wallace was cheese-obsessed.  He read magazines with titles like Cheese Holidays and Cheese Monthly.  In “A Grand Day Out,” he chatters on about Cheddar and Lankeshire, mentions Philadelphia in passing, and builds a rocket to the moon -- “We’ll go somewhere where there’s CHEESE!”  -- when he finds the fridge empty. 

In his latest adventure, “The Curse of The Were-Rabbit”, he’s brought back from the dead with a whiff of Stinking Bishop, a hard British cheese with a rind washed in pear alcohol.  But his favorite and most often mentioned is Wensleydale, a somewhat lesser known English export than the ultra-famous Cheddar or Stilton. 

Wensleydale Wensleydale is a verdant area inYorkshire, the North of England, where the use of agricultural chemicals is restricted. Pastures sprout from earth rich in limestone and the cows graze naturally, free and happy.  What results from their milk is traditional firm white cheese based on a recipe dating back to 11th century Cistercian monks. Tart, nutty, creamy and crumbly at the same time, it bears some similarity to mild white cheddar.  It’s traditionally eaten on top of apple pie, a dessert combination found in the U.K. and reinvented in Canada as Apple Pie & Cheddar.

Wallacewensley The cheese is produced by Wensleydale Creamery, who have recently packed it up with a picture of their biggest fan and his wise dog.  Wallace & Gromit Wensleydale can be ordered online from www.cheesesupply.com and goes for about $23 a pound.  Much cheaper than a trip to the moon.

Friday, November 25, 2005

Festoon Me

Donuts_1

Let's talk shopping here, starting with our favorite genre, Food Art.

The remarkable thing about the above donut photo is that it isn't a photo at all -- it's a painting.  Scottish-Canadian artist Jason Walker likes to paint pictures of individual people...and pastries. 

Citing influences from Lucien Freud, Caravaggio and Diego Velasquez, his people paintings are sublime and often haunting,  his pastries lustworthy.  He lives in Toronto, but some of his work is viewable online through the Montreal gallery Gallerie de Bellefeuille.  For the record, Ms. Tomato would like the moderately sized orange donut for her end of year gift.

Curly_fork_2Here's a dude that has combined art, recycling, and coolness into a business.  Anthony McCann takes silver or silverplate utensils and turns them into jewelery.  If you have a favorite piece of your own, he can polish it up and bend it into a ring, bracelet, necklace pendant, or keychain.  He also has plenty of interesting pieces ready to go. 

Based in Miami, he travels quite a bit, but can be contacted through email. His pieces rarely top $50 -- for $25 we purchased a ring fashioned from a French collector's spoon made sometime in the 1930's.  Quite a bargain.  Anthony McCann, www.funkyforksilver.com, 612.669.9912.

The "Uncommon Goods" catalogue offers some interesting culinary accessories.  This is where you can find the bowls seen here that are made not for food, but from food. 

Vegiebowl_1 Dried and pressed papaya, zucchini, potato, and bell peppers are the medium for these 4"x5" containers, just big enough to hold a few salted nuts, jellybellys, or a votive candle.  They run $28 a piece. Libertymugs

Also for sale: a set of adorable cheese label plates, a bike chain bottle opener, a high-heel cake server and, in case you'd forgotten society is going to hell in a handbasket, the Disappearing Civil Liberties mugs are a must-have for that riveting morning wake-up call.

Chipotletabasco Is it our imagination or is the new Tabasco Chipotle Sauce the most divine condiment released in months?  It tastes good on just about everything, and doesn't have that vinagery tinge that regular Tabasco has.  Plus, it's hard to find -- in New York City, a supposed food mecca, a trip to Wholesome Foods, Garden of Eden, Sahadi's and Dean & Deluca found it missing from shelves.  That gives it cache and gift potential, as far as we're concerned.  Order it direct, for yourself and all your friends.

Lastly, Alejandro and Martin is an internet sales company that deals in Italian olive oil.  But not just any olive oil - dark green artisanal stuff sold by vintage, olive type, and producer, much the way wines are sold.  Beautifully and simply packaged, they do 80% of their sales the last two weeks of December, so if you want some, there is no time like the present. Home_small_100_gift_box

There we are, a little list of ways you and your cash can separate from each other.  Happy Holidays.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Sweet as Tupelo Honey

Ben and Glynnis Lanier's bees work the tupelo trees that grow on the swampy edges of the Chipola and Apalachicola rivers of northwest Florida, not so far from Alabama and Georgia. Ben, a third generation honey man, still has a picture of the steamboat used for harvesting in his grandfather’s day, and after that, the barge in his father’s day. His offices are in the family home, the same one where his daddy, LLLanier Jr., was born in 1923.

Bee_4“Very few people know how to separate the honey, it’s a lost art,” says Ben in a strong regional drawl, his voice the verbal equivalent of a bear hug. “Some label it tupelo when it’s mixed with other kinds, some even mix corn syrup in it, though it’s illegal. I don't. I watch the tree, when the blossom is the size of a pencil eraser, I clean off my hives. Takes a week to clean out the old pollen and honey. Then I let the bees work the tupelo tree for two weeks, so the honey I get is pure tupelo. “

Every April 20, give or take a day, the trees produce little white blooms with a sunburst of white hairs sprouting from their centers. They are gone by the second week in May. Their nectar results in a warm, light golden honey with a greenish cast and delicate flavor that falls on the back of the tongue with a floral, almost peachy overtone. It is not heated or pasteurized, which would destroy its nutritional value. It doesn’t need to be since it is unusually high in levulose, a kind of natural sugar that keeps it clear and non-granulating. At the top of the jar little flecks of beeswax and pollen gather.

Honey

Here in the U.S. we consume over a pound of honey per capita, per year. That makes an average of 210 million pounds, most of it commercially produced, by 2.4 million colonies of very busy bees. Only a handful of artisans remain, farmers that make specialized local honeys and don't cut or blend them. These folks, like many small-yield producers, face a few obstacles in maintaining the integrity of their goods.

Aside from rainfall fluctuations, competition from cheaper, adulterated honey, crossover poisons from nearby farms, and the spread of aggressive Africanized bees, the entire industry has battled a severe plague of poison-resistant mites over the last decade. A huge percentage of hives have been wiped out, putting many apiaries out of business. “Nine-tenths of the bees in the United States are gone in the last ten years,” claims Ben. ” I’m down to 600 from 1000, and I’ve had as many as 1500. These mites are just indestructible. They look like crabs, with a shell on them, and they’re big proportionately for the bee. It’d be like if you had a 5-pound parasite attached to your body, sucking out all the juices.”

All the more reason to support independent, traditional farmers like the Lanier's.

Beekeeping methods haven’t changed much in the last hundred or so years, perhaps even the last few thousand. Ben still uses smoke to clear the bees out of their hives so he can get the honey. Then he gathers it and clears it. After the flows, the bees are moved, en masse, to where they can find other sources of pollen for the rest of the year.

“One thing, they don’t make honey for you, they make it for themselves,” Ben says. “So I take them down toward the beach and let them keep the honey they make the rest of the summer.” When asked if he thinks of them as friends, or perhaps even a kind of pet, he perks up. “Well, sure I do! You don’t want to see ‘em die, you’d like to see them flourish.”

Honey_2In spite of the mites, and a disastrous lack of rainfall last year the Lanier's are determined to stay in business. ““I’m 47 and about wore out,” claims Ben. "But I love what I do, if I didn’t I wouldn’t do it,” Ben says. “I’m independent, my own boss, and I’m getting plenty to eat, got gas in my car.”

Glynnis didn't grow up in the business, but also seems fond of the bees. At least she's not shy around them. “You can’t have fear of bees around here, ‘cause you are going to get stung,” she states matter-of-factly. “But I’ve always been an outdoorsy tomboy type, never was afraid of them. It’s a struggle, like any kind of farm,” she says. “But Ben loves to do it, and we have a great product, and people say don’t stop.”

I too think they have a great product, and have been using it ever since my friend Virginia sent me a 5 pound jar several years ago. Beside its obvious uses, I add it to marinades and barbecue sauces instead of brown sugar, and use it in cocktails instead of the simple syrup usually called for. My favorite is a Side Car, made with fresh squeezed lemon juice, tupelo honey, brandy and orange liqueur.

They sell to individuals and retailers, through a little storefront of their own in Wewahitchka and also through mail order. This is a boutique sized affair -- they have two regular employees and during the honey flow hire another five or six. Still, they avoid raising prices whenever possible. It's lovely stuff - you can get to their website through the link on this page under "food purveyors" or at 850.639.2371.

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