The Gastrocast

The blog behind the Gastrocast Cooking show

August 31st, 2005

Live New Orleans Blog

 This via The Seattle Post Intelligencer–a live blog from New Orleans.  It seems this guy is holed up inside his office tower keeping his data center up and running with a generator. The blog posts and comments are a wild commentary on the scene you won’t hear anywhere else. Looting by citizens, AND police. . . . Recently he just had to go down to the ground floor to re-secure the entrances to keep people out–seems like there’s a Highlander episode, or Bruce Willis film like this. . . .

Not only is he blogging about everything–he’s got a live camera feed going as often as he can manage to keep it up. Right now the main live feed is down, but there is an alternate of somewhere else. It must be on some sort of underground mainline data trunk cable or something because he’s got bandwidth.



Anyway, I strongly urge you to check this out as the information and scenes from this event have the potential to teach us a lot about what could happen just about anywhere else under any other circumstance. My thoughts are really with everybody affected by this tradgedy. I once thought to call New Orleans my home. It’s a cool, beautiful city and I am sure it will climb out of the present craziness, but I don’t think it will ever be the same.

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August 26th, 2005

Gastrocast #22

At last, Gastrocast #22 is here. Mexican Style Spare Ribs and a Roasted Chipotle & Tomatillo Salsa. I also talk about the proposed NAIS–the National Animal Identification System. The Ingredient of the Week is the Tomatillo.

Flicker photoset.

Please take the survey if you haven’t.

Contact me at podchef AT gmail DOT com

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August 11th, 2005

Podcasting goes Current

Never heard of the station before, but Current TV mentioned the Gastrocast, and two other Podcasts on air today! Guess it’s time to set up another subject catcher in the DVR. Now I just wish I knew what they said. . . .It’s a bit freaky knowing Al Gore is involved and he has been in the neighborhood where I live before and I was just speaking with people in the know about his last visit. . . .It might not sound too odd, but I am in the MIDDLE of no where, so it’s a bit unbelievable. I only wish I’d had the chance to cook for the man–things might be better. . . . Props for the mention tho!

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August 10th, 2005

Librivox, eSemminars, Podcasting time

A new Collaborative Audio Book project has begun. Librivox is currently requesting readers for Joseph Conrad’s The Secret Agent. I am going to record Chapter 2. Check out Chapter One.



As I began to rehearse the chapter I found it to be mildly relevant to today’s world in a strange way. I haven’t gotten through reading the whole chapter yet because I broke off to join an eSemminar with Adobe on using Acrobat 7 Pro. What a waste of time! But more importantly what an opportunity for Podcasting or something other than Microsoft Office’s Live Meeting. Streaming Audio or something. I wanted to hear the presentation, or be able to download the thing, not have to call up on a phone and sit at my computer as well. In fact I don’t have an un-interupted hour of time where I can focus both on the computer and listen/talk on the phone–all the while watching the same 37 slides over and over.

I gave up 10 minutes in to the thing. I downloaded the slides to see what I could learn from them, but an online, actual, real time demonstration would have been better than slides.



This is probably to the same reason I never participate in the IACP’s teleconferences they hold once a month. I belong to three chapters which I could be sitting in on each month over the phone–but who has time for that. I suppose with Skype Out or something it would be productive, but I’m on the phone enough during the day I don’t need to seek out one hour specifically just to listen in.



Well, with an extra hour in my day now that I’ve closed the browser on learning I guess I should have time to finish recording this week’s Gastrocast so I can get my Chapter done.

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August 10th, 2005

Oxford

Wow. The conference I wanted to attend in Oxford on Food and Sustainability was just cancelled. I’m both glad I didn’t have tickets, and disappointed that more people didn’t want to attend. It looked like it was going to be an awesome event. With a deficit of $71,000 at this late a date, I guess it was the right choice. Still I wish I was in Oxford right now anyway. Hell, anyone wanting to pay may way there–I’ll give a mini-conference on Sustainability for the cost of being there. ;-}



This does, however, make me reconsider scratching together the dues for the IACP which I owe next month.  If they don’t have a large enough draw to make an international conference happen, and I haven’t been able to afford to go to all but one of the USA events–the one I went to was in Seattle and I happened to be working there that week–do I really want to continue shelling out moola for something I haven’t seen any benefits from?



I originally joined to meet other professionals and be part of the clout of such a large and prestigious organization. But to date no one seems to know or care who they are and my efforts into getting them to podcast meetings and events have been meet with silence.



Well, I have a month yet before I have to cough up. I’ll be doing some serious thinking. . . .

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August 5th, 2005

I’m a Looser!

 Like I said before, I didn’t expect to win the people’s choice awards–and I DIDN"T!



But thanks to ALL who voted. I really appreciate it. It was indeed an honor to be nominated. I’m going to give the Winning Show a listen to see if I can work some of their mojo–not.



We’ll see whose around next year and try then.



Congratulations to Franklin and Chris, both for your wins and your great shows!




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August 3rd, 2005

Repeat after me. . .

. . .Buy Local, Organic and Seasonal. . . . This is not just a mantra or a battle cry–it is going to need to be a way of life.  With the death of the Saudi King and the fluctuations of oil prices over that, we are going to need to curb our expenditures on transportation. I was horrified when I went to buy Wild Salmon wholesale for the wedding. The price had more than doubled, in the height of the fresh, local Salmon season, from last year at the same time.  There are several reasons for this, the least being a smaller salmon run this year. What I found out is that much of the cost increase has to do with transportation costs–the salmon I was buying was coming from a few hundred miles down the coast–and new Bioterrorism regulations, meant to protect our food supplies from contamination. All this, when I was buying as local as I could at the time. This week I can support a local fisher and have the salmon delivered to my dock without the hassle–the only hold up is that it isn’t legal to use in public food service because it doesn’t have the government’s stamp of taxation on it. Pish Posh.



But wait, there are other reasons to buy Local, Organic and Seasonal than helping to keep costs down. Not only is local food less environmentally harmful, but it is actually more beneficial to the environment locally and globally than you would think. A BBC article  this morning claims that the typical smaller field size and lack of harmful chemicals of organic farming cause an increase in wildlife species across the board–bird, animals, native plants. Another benefit is improved soil quality. These benefits, alone, of organic farming make it worth the effort to demand our suppliers only deal with organic farmers. Maintaining local bio-diversity is a crucial step to controlling global environmental changes.  We need to stop foisting the demands of Western Argibusiness on the third world and start learning from their farming techniques as we re-discover successful organic farming principles ourselves.  The 20th century brought us so many great advances, but on the back of those advances has grown a hideous goiter which is undermining our environment, health and food supply.  Any changes we can effect involving decreasing our reliance on crude oil and it’s derivatives–agrichemicals–are hugely important now, before it gets any later.



I only own one vehicle. Not by choice, but by circumstance. This to me isn’t a bad thing. Sometimes I wish I had another vehicle–a van for the business, but I am so glad I am no longer wrapped up in the days of 3 vehicle ownership. The cost was incredible then, I can only imagine what it is now.  There is no petrol available on the island. On some of the other islands it is available but exceeds $3 per gallon. (I hear the Brits and other Europeans crying boo hoo. . . for us.) I must go to the mainland to fuel the car. This is not a bad thing to me. It forces us to be conscious of how much we drive and where. Cycling and walking are our main options when they are practical.  If there was public transportation here I would heartily support it.  Here is a great article on the cost of driving a mile. It’s an eye opener.



It wasn’t so long ago when  people cycled everywhere. What’s changed? Goods and materials were frequently transported locally by cycle.  How many of us have seen workbikes in use without giving them a second thought? So let’s get out there and use pedicabs, Butcher’s Bikes and other useful, non consuming forms of transportation while we’re out and about purchasing locally. The cost of living is only increasing and so is the toll on our environment.

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August 2nd, 2005

Gastrocast #19

Gastrocast #19 is here.

This week I Thank everyone who has voted for the show, discuss the final episode of Hell’s Kitchen, talk about the Ingredient of the Week–zucchini; mention some problems with highly-processed cooking oils and finally finish cooking the Ginger Pork with Cashews on Crispy Rice we began last week.

For those wanting the special, bonus recipe–here is the link to the survey: Click Here to take the survey

Very good Hell’s Kitchen Blog and another one.

Grapeseed Oil article

More about Grapeseed Oil

Flickr Photoset here.

Check out these products–the Braun hand blender is what I use to pulverize ginger, the Kaffir Lime leaves and lemongrass:

Thanks for subscribing and listening. Comments–audio or otherwise–can be left at podchef AT gmail DOT com

Recipe

Ginger Pork with Cashews on Crispy Rice

(served 8 to 10)

Adapted from “The Elephant Walk Cookbook”

  • 2T Grapeseed Oil
  • 6 Clove Garlic, thinly sliced
  • 6 shallots, thinly sliced
  • 1lb ground pork
  • 1T Tamarind paste disolved in 2T hot water
  • 6T brown sugar
  • 2 large pinches salt
  • 4T finely chopped/shredded ginger
  • 3/4 cup peanuts or cashews
  • Cilantro and red pepper (sweet or hot, your choice) for garnish



Saute the sliced shallots and garlic in the oil until crisp. Drain and set aside.

In the same pan, brown the ground pork, making sure to break it apart.

Add tamarind liquid, brown sugar and salt. Stir to combine. Add reserved ginger and garlic. Stir to combine.

Lower heat and continue to cook until thick. Stir in the nuts.

Remove from heat. Serve on crispy fried rice cakes or thinly sliced, toasted baguette. Garnish with Cilantro and red pepper. Makes a great appetizer with drinks.

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