For The Love Of Food

For The Love of Food
Welcome to Friday’s For The Love of Food, Summer Tomato’s weekly link roundup.
Lots of talk this week about the pros and cons of local foods. Also, congress says pizza is a vegetable, heritage turkeys are the greatest thing since bacon and coffee/tea may reduce your risk of mercury exposure from fish.
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Links of the week
- Eating locally is no longer such a longshot <<Isn’t it wonderful when the right thing becomes trendy? (Seattle Times)
- The Inefficiency of Local Food <<BS of the week. If you aren’t sure why biological systems shouldn’t be treated like machines, check out Joel Salatin’s new book Folks, This Ain’t Normal (review coming soon). (Freakonomics)
- Congress Blocks New Rules on School Lunches <<BS of the week, part deux. You’ve probably heard that congress decreed pizza is a vegetable this week. What I learned in this article was that the real question was how much sauce (certainly full of sugar) counted as a vegetable. Apparently if more sauce was required the pizza lobbyists would have been upset (but instead they’re happy). And no, this is not from The Onion. (New York Times)
- What’s the Deal With Heritage Turkeys? <<I never liked Thanksgiving food. Granted my family’s poor cooking skills are the primary reason, but another big one is that big, dry turkeys are not the best endorsement. Everything poultry changed for me when I discovered heritage turkeys and chickens. Mind blowing. (YumSugar)
- Eating at home is (almost) always cheaper than restaurants <<I’ve been saying this forever. Eating out is a luxury. (Christian Science Monitor)
- USDA: ‘Locally grown’ food a $4.8 billion business <<Apparently local food is not only popular, it’s also booming. (Associated Press)
- EASY TIPS FOR USING THE LAST OF SUMMER’S PRODUCE <<I love this. It’s harvest time, live it up! (Ecosalon)
- Coffee and tea reduce exposure to mercury when eating fish: Université de Montréal study <<I wouldn’t bank on this quite yet, but it’s a pretty cool finding if it pans out with further research. (Montreal Gazette)
- Is cheese better than butter for heart health? <<So this was funded by the dairy industry… BUT it is actually a well-designed study. Also it’s the third or fourth pro-cheese for health study I’ve seen in the past few months. The working hypothesis is there is added benefit because cheese is the leading source of vitamin K2 in the diet. (Medline)
- How To Make Candy Apple Cookies <<I’m generally not a huge fan of sweets, but if you’re going to have something every now and then apple-based “cookies” a pretty good choice. Personally I’d lean toward more natural and healthy toppings (dark chocolate, peanuts, dried fruit, etc.), but the proof of principle here is cool. Also, huge congrats to my friend Brit for launching her new creative living site! (Brit)
What inspired you this week?
Just a heads up, but that USDA release says nothing about local food being profitable. It just says sales amount to $4.8bn. Key difference. I certainly hope its profitable though!
Touche’! Consider the wording revised 🙂
4.8 billion dollar industry – hooray! And in the same week, pizza is a vegetable? Nothing quite like some good ole polarization to bring down morale.
re: What I learned in this article was that the real question was how much sauce (certainly full of sugar) counted as a vegetable.
I thought it was pro-tomato paste.
“Just “an eighth of a cup of tomato paste is credited with as much nutritional value as half a cup of vegetables,” my colleague Dina ElBoghdady explained last week.”
Also:
Lycopene (tomatoes) works with garlic (garlic) and rosmarinic acid (sage, basil) to protect LDL.
http://twitter.com/#!/Silverhydra/status/115123872642236416
re: What I learned in this article was that the real question was how much sauce (certainly full of sugar) counted as a vegetable.
I thought it was pro-tomato paste.
“Just “an eighth of a cup of tomato paste is credited with as much nutritional value as half a cup of vegetables,” my colleague Dina ElBoghdady explained last week.”
Also:
Lycopene (tomatoes) works with garlic (garlic) and rosmarinic acid (sage, basil) to protect LDL.
http://is.gd/OL9NyJ
Please delete above, link did not parse correctly in comment software
re: What I learned in this article was that the real question was how much sauce (certainly full of sugar) counted as a vegetable.
I thought it was pro-tomato paste.
“Just “an eighth of a cup of tomato paste is credited with as much nutritional value as half a cup of vegetables,” my colleague Dina ElBoghdady explained last week.”
Also:
Lycopene (tomatoes) works with garlic (garlic) and rosmarinic acid (sage, basil) to protect LDL.
http://is.gd/OL9NyJ