Week 3 In Review

Yes, I realize that lately my weekly reviews have been coming in a little late. From here on in I will try to post on Friday night/Saturday morning.

In the meantime, week 3 went pretty well, but didn’t have anything really noteworthy. I ate food. It was all to code. I drank some wine Saturday night, and that wasn’t (don’t freak out, I’m adding it to the cheat list as soon as I finish posting this).

I’m still managing to snack frequently (which, despite how it sounds is a good thing), but am noticing that I really should be eating more leafy green stuff. Tuesday I picked up some bok choy and Thursday I did up a happy beef (Whole Foods has instituted a global animal rating and the beef had a step 4!) stir fry with bok choy, peppers, onion, garlic, carrots, and beef – served over more of the yummy volcano rice.

Wednesday however was a little bit of a write off. A friend came by and we ended up baking and eating brownies. All known ingredients, but still, nobody really needs to eat half a pan of brownies for dinner.

I didn’t get the lefsa done. This is mostly due to the fact that I didn’t make a list before grocery shopping, and therefore forgot the potatoes. Fail!!!

So there you have it, a pretty un-noteworthy week foodwise, another cheat and another realization.

Goal for the rest of this week: eat something green and leafy every day (tonight was a spinach salad with cucumbers and strawberries with some garlic toast and a few meatballs on the side).

Also, because I failed to do it last week, I’m going to get that lefsa done.

 

 

 

 

Mooving Forward in the World of Dairy

I am not a huge dairy eater/drinker, but will admit that over the last year or so I have upped my intake a little. I have switched from the hot water and cheap hot chocolate mix to the milk and real chocolate hot chocolate mix, or sometimes just melt chocolate into my milk. I cook with more cheeses (please note that Kraft Singles are not to be considered cheese under any circumstance). I have started drinking lattes and mochas on a much more regular basis. The idea of drinking a glass of milk on it’s own still makes me cringe a little though, and I will not go near yogurt or most unmelted cheeses with a ten foot pole (in the case of cheese it’s a texture thing, and in the case of yogurt, well, it smells kinda gross and I’m picky). I’m getting better though, and yesterday was another big step up.

Yesterday I got something new. Something that I’m pretty pumped about.

Hint: it’s white, liquidy and contains no additives whatsoever.

Yup.. I got milk.

I took this new item home and tried it in some coffee. While I couldn’t really taste the difference, the fact that I knew my coffee contained four simple things (coffee beans, water, milk and organic cane sugar) made me a little giddy.

The next problem was what to do with the bottle of milk that I still had left over. I was craving something sweet (and really, when am I not craving something sweet?) so, I made pudding for the first time ever.

It was easy too! Take 2 and a half cups of milk, a third of a cup of sugar, three tablespoons of corn starch, half a teaspoon of salt and throw it in a pot.

Heat it over medium heat until it thickens (about 10 minutes), then stir in a whole bunch of vanilla. How much vanilla you ask? I don’t measure it, so I really couldn’t tell you. I added a little bit, smelled the stuff and added more. Then you put the pudding into a conatiner and pop it in the fridge. Lick the spoon, clean up, and you’re done.

When I got home from work this afternoon I was soaked and cold. I threw on my slippers and a hoody, and made myself a snack. A wonderful dairy filled snack.

I used the exciting new milk for a hot chocolate. While that was warming up I chopped up some strawberries and a banana, threw them in a bowl with some blueberries and scooped a bunch of vanilla pudding on top. Please note that this is a non-yogurt eaters version of a yogurt parfait.. just with creamy, sweet vanilla pudding instead of weird smelly yogurt.

MMMmmmmm Yummy!

I noticed a difference in the hot chocolate. It was creamier, and the taste was, well, different. I wouldn’t say it was worse or better, just a little different.

I was about three quarters through this delightful dairy-fest when the thought that I often get a little gugley when I eat too much dairy popped into my head. I’m the kind of girl who works well on one scoop of icecream, but two scoops  kind of puts me over the edge a little. Funny thing: it’s now three hours later and I’m feeling fine.  I can’t say for sure that it has anything to do with the new milk, because the pudding was made with the other stuff, but I am curious.

All in all, I’m considering ths a win.

The Cheat List

It breaks me to have to start this thing, but the “know what I eat” part of the resolution is going to be a learning process, and admitting failures is part of that. So, without further ado, here’s what I put in my mouth that I shouldn’t have (please note that at this point I have that annoying PSA from my childhood with the song “Don’t you put it in your mouth” stuck in my head.)

Jan 1st: Sausage casings (I have since realized through talking to sausage makers that sausage casings are either pork based, or veggie based, and nobody can tell me what the veggie casings are made of, so have to expect the worse).

January 10th: Ms. Palmer’s Pantry Pita chips: pita bread (flour, water, yeast, salt, sugar), balsamic vinegar, white vinegar, butter, canola oil, sea salt, seasonings, spices

January 21st: 2 Glasses of Red Wine: who knows what was in it 😦

Week Two In Review

I have to be honest here, and week 2 was a little rough. I stuck to my guns, but went through what I can only refer to as Junk Food Withdrawal.

Everywhere I looked were delicious delectables begging for me to just put them in my mouth.. whispering softly into my ear that nobody was around, nobody but me would know: dessert squares at the coffee shop where I work, cookies at other coffee shops, the mountain of chips and crackers at the front of the grocery store, chocolate bars at tills. Everything with soy lecithin, maltodextrin, and loads of other ingredients I cannot identify (or can identify, but am refusing to eat).

Saturday night I wanted something sweet, so I made brownies. Win for me! I knew all of the ingredients and my taste buds were satisfied.

Sunday also went really well. I got up early for a tubing adventure, had some breakfast at home (where thanks to the great purge all is edible) and had an amazing picnic on the mountain of fruit, Holy Crap cereal, veggies, cracker with avocado and tuna. This was also the first time that I ate tuna from a can. It was the flavoured stuff, with all happy ingredients and it was so yummy that I went out and bought a couple of cans for myself.

Early in the week the cravings set in and I scoured the chip shelves at Whole Foods, reading just about every ingredient out there. I caved. I bought a bag of Ms. Palmer’s Panty Pita Chips, containing: pita bread (flour, water, yeast, salt, sugar), balsamic vinegar, white vinegar, butter, canola oil, sea salt, seasonings, spices. Doesn’t look that bad right? That’s what I thought in my initial “I’m hungry, and I want to eat it” rampage. Here are the problems (yes, more than one..). What kind of flour? What is in the balsamic vinegar? (I will admit that at first I thought this was an innocent ingredient, until Debra mentioned it and I remembered that just a week before I had to get rid of my own balsamic vinegar because of maltodextrin). Same goes for the white vinegar. Does the butter that they used say the words I have come to dread “may contain butter” on the wrapper? I don’t like the fact that canola oil was in there, but that’s another post. Which seasonings and spices did they use? They might as well have put those other dreaded words “natural flavours” on the list.

Tuesday night I made a chicken stir fry over volcano rice, using the stir fry sauce that I picked up at the Farmer’s Market (made with Saskatoon berries, salal berries, blueberries, huckleberries, onion, garlic, carrot, celery, sugar, lemon juice, salt, lime leaves and chili paste – double yum!).

Wednesday I made tacos. Yummy! I still think that I could have rolled my tortillas out a little bit thinner, but I am thrilled with what I got and will be repeating this again.

Thursday and Friday were leftover days and nights, with no fail.

Saturday I attended an event where food was provided. Though others have cooked for me this year (thanks!) this is the first time this year where I ate food that was prepared without first scanning the ingredients. Not to say that the options weren’t very healthy. In fact it all looked amazing and the smell of it made me drool. There were homemade chillies, ciabatta buns, rice, potatoes, salad, and pie for dessert. Unfortunately I had to assume that the beans in the chilli weren’t checked for EDTA and that the tomatoes in it were from cans, not jars, so chilli was out. The salad was predressed, so no go there and though the pie looked fantastic there was no way to tell if it was butter or margarine in the crust, and even if it was butter, if it was colour free. I still had an amazing lunch though of rice, potato, fresh chopped tomato, peas, and green onions. For a light dinner there was soup, buns and fruit salad. I skipped the soup and bun and went for the fruit salad. After wolfing down the first few bites I spotted the tell-tale cherry implying that the salad was the same kind that you get in your lunch when you’re a kid.Thinking that this was probably a cheat, I looked it up on the Dole website. To my happy amazement, the cherry mixed fruit is made with fruit, and packed in 100% juice! Turns out what I thought was a maybe cheat, actually wasn’t. There were also added bananas, grapes and kiwis. Yum!!

After the event we had a delicious veggie stir fry over rice and quinoa too. Considering that it was the first eating out experience of this whole thing, I am quite pleased. It was all healthy, ingredient happy, and now that I look back on it, it was also a vegetarian day (though I will never give up meat entirely, leaning towards more veg and less meat is something that I have been thinking a lot about lately).

That wraps up Week #2!

Two weeks, one cheat: not too bad!

This week I want to make some lefsa. I am sure that I spelled that wrong, but it’s one of my grandmas specialties. It’s actually a lot like a tortilla, but made with mashed potatoes, flour, butter and a pinch of salt, rolled thin and fried on a non-greased pan. What makes it better than a tortilla isn’t just the fact that it’s inspired by Grandma. It’s also incredibly yummy, and very versatile. I like rolling mine and dipping them in butter melted with sugar and cinnamon for something sweet, but they are also good just spread with butter, or when you drizzle lemon juice on them and sprinkle them with sugar.

I also want to try making a fully vegetarian meal, something new and inspired by a recipe off the Vegetarian Times site (which was forwarded to me by a lady at work – Thanks!).

Other highlights of the week include procuring a new top secret thing (I was supposed to procure said top secret thing yesterday, but there was snow and the delivery was cancelled) that will eliminate certain vitamin A palmitate and Vitamin D3 in my everyday life. Don’t worry, I will still be getting vitamin A, though not attached to palm oil derivatives, and my vitamin D will be coming from eggs instead of sheep’s wool. I am also in the works of securing some garden space for the spring, and after a 75$ Whole Foods shopping trip will be looking for a cheaper way to make this food thing work.

Stay tuned folks, and thank for reading!

Taco Night!!!!

Yup. Tonight I had taco’s for dinner.

Usually I pick up the El Del Paso Tako Kit, and that’s that.. just chemically seasoned meat and a hard, salty corn shell, but tonight was a little bit different. Tonight I made EVERYTHING from scratch.

First I made the tortillas (yeah, I made tortillas.. no biggie). I threw together some flour, butter, salt and baking soda (cutting the butter into the dry stuff until it looked like coarse cornmeal), then added about a cup and 4 tablespoons of water. Then it had to sit for 15 minutes before I divided it all up (I made 24), and rolled it into little balls (later to be flattened and rolled out with a rolling pin).

After they were all rolled out (this took some time) I threw them one by one into an ungreased frying pan until they got sort of brown and tortilla-looking. YAY! Next time I think I will try to roll them out a little bit thinner, as the are a tiny bit tough to fold into tacos, but overall I’m considering it a win (and, for the record: they also taste great warm with a little bit of butter).

While the tortillas were being paraded into the pans I started chopping for my salsa. Tomato, red onion and cilantro. Simple, easy and extremely tasty. I have used this one before for easy party dishes, and it’s also really yummy if you add some fresh pineapple. If you are going to whip this one up you should know that while it tastes great right away, it’ even better if you can do it the day before serving it.. it just gives all the juices a chance to mingle a little.

I also squicked some avacado, lime and black pepper for some guacamole. gain, this is a super easy party dish, and even better if you add some finely chopped fresh mango (I know, sounds weird, but trust me on that one).

Then came the meat. I found a recipe online for taco seasoning, but I didn’t have all of the spices, everything else was ready and I didn’t want to have to go out, buy the stuff, then come back.. dinner prep was already approaching the two hour mark and I was getting hungry. So I made do with what I had: chili flakes, cajun spice, paprika, onion powder and garlic powder. In retrospect (actually, as of first bite) I think I put in too much chili flakes, but I am also a bit of a wuss when it comes to spice things.

I assembled it all, paused just long enough to take a photo or two, and wolfed it down. So yummy!!!!!

Two Things That Make Fast Food Worse

I was browsing Facebook this morning after breakfast, and found a link to the Darth Vader Burger (below). Then I did a little more clicking on the CBC site, and found something even more disturbing about Mountain Dew and a current claim about them…

The Burger:

We all know that fast food chains like McD’s have teemed up over the years with companies like Disney, Hotwheels and the like to make eating their food seem fun and exciting. Most of us think to ourselves “That’s unfair! Of course kids will want to eat there. There’s playgrounds and they get toys!”.

Advertising movies through food is also nothing particularly new. Commemorative cups and fun movie-inspired names for food can be interesting, like when 7-11 introduced the Homer Simpson donut (yeah, I ate one).

I was browsing Facebook this morning and saw something that may be taking it a little too far.. Quicks (a fast food company in Belgium and France) has announced their release of the new Darth Vader Burger to mark the release of the 3D  Episode 1: The Phantom Menace.

It’s a burger, almost like any other burger, but with a black bun (not just kind of black.. BLACK black).

....ew.

When I first saw it, I laughed and thought that it was a funky idea. Then my food brain kicked in. Darth Vader and the Star Wars people are just after an extra buck, and are willing to taint the already terrible fast food burger with loads of food colouring to make it cool, and to help promote their movie. I bake. I’ve decorated cookies. I know how much black food colouring you would have to add to the bread dough to make that bun as black as it is, and trust me, it’s gross. Not to mention that that amount of food colouring is bound to leave that food colouring taste in your newly dyed mouth (even if you do get the good quality colouring, there would still have to be some taste to it).

The person who posted the link to the article (you can read the article for yourself here) posted it with the comment “Finally!!”. It turns my stomach a little to think of the amount of people who will pay for, and ingest, this thing without so much as a thought as to what makes that burger so black…

What about you guys? Would you eat that thing?

The Mountain Dew:

So, a guy in Illinois is suing Pepsi because he said that he found a mouse in his can of Mountain Dew. That in itself it disgusting. Even more so was Pepsi’s resonse: that it wouldn’t be possible to find a mouse in your can of Mountain Dew because the acids in the pop would have dissolved it.

Yeah… I kinda threw up a little in my mouth over that one too… not “we are a mouse free environment” or anything like that.. they claim that their pop has so much acid in it that it will dissolve AN ENTIRE MOUSE, and they still want you to drink the stuff.

The article (which can be read here) goes on to talk about what is in Mountain Dew, and whether scientists believe that it could really dissolve a mouse or not. I recommend reading it (it’s stuff like this that is going to keep me on track this year), but maybe don’t eat first, and definitely don’t read while drinking a soda.

Week One Review

Well Folks, the first week is through and I am happy to report that I am still kicking!

There were a few temptations along the way. On Monday I was offered the same chocolate three times, by three different people and it was tough, but I said no every time (It was a salted caramel too…). Tuesday I was wrapping cookies at work and they smelled soooo yummy, but again, I didn’t go with it. There were double-butter croissants and Napoleons on Granville Island, Florentines at Whole Foods, and chocolate pretty much everywhere I looked. I have become good at saying no. It also gives me a chance to talk peoples ears off about the whole “Eat” thing when they give me a funny look after I say no. It might not be a completely good-hearted thing to do, but I have to admit that I get a little bit of a sense of revenge when someone offers me something I can’t eat, and I can tell them what kind of weird stuff they just ate.. especially if it looks particularly yummy. Ha People! – you will learn, whether you want to or not, what is in the food you are eating…muah hah hah.

After the big purge I had to restock a few things, and did so at Whole Foods. It was a little on the pricey side. I picked up spinach, two apples, two pomegranates, bananas, dried beans, soy sauce, roasted red pepper pasta sauce, rice pasta, jarred tomatoes, three avocados, sugar, jam, and grape seed oil. It was $57.00. I also had to go back later in the week for some bread, rice, lettuce and green beans. The sugar, soy sauce, pasta, pasta sauce, oil and jam will carry me through more than a week though. It’s just good stuff to have around.

I cooked dried beans for the first time! I didn’t know what to do with them, so stuck them into a pasta sauce. I will need to find something more creative to do with them next time around, and probably cook them a little bit longer (they were a little on the tough side). Suggestions are most definitely welcome!

I realized towards the beginning of the week (I have been keeping a food journal out of curiosity) that I wasn’t eating very much, so have made a habit of snacking. Once upon a time, not all that long ago, I would have picked up some cheap granola bars (complete with chocolate chips), potato chips, crackers and that kind of thing, but this week was a biggie for extra fruit and vegetables.  I feel like I have a lot more energy because of it too.

Now that I look back on  it, I ate a pretty decent variety of animals this week as well.. chicken (and their unfertilized offspring), venison, bison and salmon. Yum! Both the bison and bambi were free range (bought at Oyama), and the salmon was wild sockeye caught in Northern B.C. and bought at the farmers market.

Basically this week I ate a whole lot of vegetables, quite a bit of fruit, switched my grain intake to whole grains (and ate less because of it), ate a bunch of different animals, and cut out probably about 75% of my sugar. The sugar thing didn’t happen on purpose, but it’s tough when you can’t eat the cookies, pastries, processed foods that have most of it. The sugar that I did have this week was only in my coffee, fancy pants hot chocolate (from Debra for Christmas) and the homemade marshmallows that went with it. I guess the honey that the salmon was marinated with counts too…

It was  pretty easy (knock on wood). I had already resigned myself to the fact that the only way I would get through this would be to home-cook the meals that I could, and pack lunches for the ones where I would be at work (or take enough snacky stuff to get me through). If I had gone into this thinking that I would just be able to pick stuff up on the way, I feel like I would be having a much harder time.

I also made a challenge with my Mom. The deal is that once a week she has to cook a healthy and nutritious meal for herself, and I will do the same and we will compare. When I spoke with her today she said that she hadn’t yet, but was trying to think one up. I’m counting Wednesday night’s dinner of salmon (marinated in ingredient-happy soy sauce, honey, the juice from half an orange, ginger and garlic), volcano rice (whole grain organic brown and red rice grown in volcanic soil), carrots, broccoli and corn. Pressure’s on Momma!!

Next week I would like to try making tortillas/wraps from scratch, finding something better to do with my beans, and making sure I drink more water. We’ll see how it goes!!

 

Eating Abroad Part 2

Susana lives in Peru, and very kindly answered my questions about food and eating there (in delicious detail!):

 

Q:  What kinds of different/ unique foods are there in Peru?

A:  Tons!! This is so hard to do through email… I might have to send you to some internet sources that have already compiled this information… or we could do a skype date… hehe.  Lately (last 5 years) Peru´s cuisine has become very popular. Here for example is a webpage on culinary expeditions that are now more and more popular. Yes, people come here just to EAT!

http://www.culturalexpeditions.com/peruvian_recipes.html

http://great-peruvian-recipes.com/

http://www.yanuq.com/english/recipesperuvian.asp

 

Q:  Have you discovered any yummy foods?

A:  Oh dear, lot´s and lot´s of them.

Some of my favorite are ceviche (raw fish cooked in lime with hot peppers and onions), arroz con mariscos (rice with seafood- cooked), ají de gallina (spicy chicken with rice… I found something similar in Vancouver Butter chicken from India!), chaufa (peruvian chinese fried rice)

 

Q:  Any gross ones?

A:  Oh yes! Mondongo (a stew made with cow fat, yes, just the fat, gross) and I don´t like anything that has things like liver, tounge, chicken heart, etc. People have that in stew or in some soups. Not me!!

 

Q:  Are you missing any foods that you can get here but not there?

A:  There are some food items that I miss from Vancouver more than meals themselves… Like scones with butter! And natural plain (really thick) yogurt. For some strange reason Peru has really watery yogurt!! That is why I spent some time making my own yogurt last year. Candy salmon !!! Smoked salmon!! Really chunky oatmeal, pine nuts, chai tea…mmmm

Other stuff I don´t get here is exotic food from other parts of the world so Indian food (only know of 3 restaurants), Tai Food (not many either) and cheap sushiiii!!! We have good sushi but it is still in the snob category of food here. Gotta love MSG sushi from Vancouver for that!!

 

Q:  Will you miss any foods when you come back?

A:  Oh I miss lots of it. Specially the desserts!! Remember that once I made that very sweet caramel – like dessert with soft merengue on top that I bought to Pam´s and almost no one could eat it… But I think you like it? IT was called suspiro de limeña (Limeña´s sigh) and yes I do sigh when I think of it!! I even miss it now because I am laying off sugar and carbs hehe. Oh yes trust me, this email is making me hungry!

(added by Sarah: YES I remember it!! The minute I read this I started drooling a little. SOOOOOOOOO yummy!)

Q:  Are there any food traditions?

A: Traditions yes! Let´s see…

On Sundays families usually have : comida criolla which is creole food (literal transltion) which is the fusion food between Spanish and native ingredients and recipes.

On holidays we have alienated northern hemisphere traditions, you´ll see:

-Christmas eve and New Years eve dinner: turkey or roasted pig, apple sauce, yam puree, potato salad, nuts and dried fruit (prunes, raisins, etc.)

-Easter Friday: most people eat fish because many people are Catholic and you don´t eat read meat while the J-man is resurrecting. For some reason it just interferes with the whole process (?). I love fish so I just follow along..

 

Q: How much importance does food play in daily life?

A: It is really important. I take time to eat. Where I work and at my home people sit down at the table for lunch and a (light) dinner. In Peru, the big meal of the day is lunch and people get at least an hour off work to have it.

More than fast food, if you work somewhere downtown you would probably go to a place called a menu. A Menu is a place, maybe a house or an garage- improvised restaurant where you can pay between 5 -12 soles (that would be around 3-5 dollars) for a 3 course home cooked meal. So you can get a salad or soup, then a main course. Say rice with chicken and potatoes and a fruit, jello or a pudding and a drink. The cooks may use MSG to cook or maybe potato puree from a box… but besides that it is all made from scratch. Why? Because here prime materials… as in veggies and fruit are cheaper than industrialized, dehydrated boxed things (thank god!)

 

Q:  Is there any interesting table ettiquite? (did you know that it’s rude to cut more than three bites worth of food at a time over here?)

A:  Whaaaat?! Really? No idea.

People are pretty big on table manners across social classes. I did not encounter those issues in Canada but in the US there were some pretty nasty table eating manners. But no crazy ones that I can think of, no.

 

Q: What would you say an average Peruvian diet consists of, and how would you rate the general health of the people who eat it?

A: Ok, this is definitely a weak point.

So we don´t have the industrialized crap in our bodies due to what we eat which is nice…but we are messed up nutritionally. Because there are so many traditional ways to eat things here, and Peruvian don´t like their ingredients messed around with (or else, it won´t taste like mommas or gandma´s home cooking, you know?) we eat very rich, fattening high caloric food. And we like it! There is this pork sandwich called ¨chicharrón de chancho¨ that is about 2,000 calories. And you usually eat it at the beach in your lovely bikini or after a party. Almost all of our meals have potatoes and rice in them (at least) Many of them have potatoe, rice, yuca (kasava, another carb!) and corn. So we carb up like you wouldn´t believe! As an example, because of the carb overload there are many poor people in the highlands who are obese and mal nourished because of this. Not getting all the nutrients they should but sure are getting fat off all those potatoes!

 

Q:  Are there any major (or minor) dietary concerns over there? As in something that people tends to be picky about (can I get a vanilla latte? oh wait! I need it to be soy.. and sugar free… and decaf)

A: I think I pretty much covered this one in my previous answer. Peruvians are picky about how each dish should be. How it really is, traditionally. No imitations please! And Peruvians love to eat and then critique food. Very typical. It´s like its part of the eating a meal ritual.

 

Q: What is food packaging like in Peru?

Do they have the same types of regulations as here where packaging and information are concerned?

A: Food packaging can go from no packaging to very sketchy packaging to normal (US or Canada style packaging). This has definitely picked up in the last decade. You can still find local cookies or crackers for example without that kind of information though.

 

Q: Is it easy to find basic, healthy options?

A: I would think so. If you are the one to eat out and cheap, then it is harder, because you will be bumping into potatos and rice all the time, since majority of people do not serve much veggies. Oh, and if you are a vegetarian that is really hard to handle. It seems to me that if you are Ok with eating the rice it works, but majority of meals have a meat or chicken component.

 

Q:  How about organic/ ethically treated options?

A: Tough. Each time there are more and more options, but I doubt the definitions of organic in scope of the whole process these foods are passed through.

 

Q: What is the grocery shopping experience there like?

A: You have up, mid and low scale shopping markets and also municipal markets that are basically a lot of stands with fruit, veggie, meat, fish … Like a farmers market, but produce does not necessarily come from small sale or organic farming. Ideally I get different things at different places. Fish, fruit and veggies for example, are much cheaper and riper in the case of fruit at the municipal market and all the other canned, boxed, etc. goods are better to get at the shopping markets.

 

Q: Do people seem to put thought into what they’re eating?

A: Peruvians put a lot of thought into food and eating, but in the culinary sense, not in the what is really in my food or where do the ingredients come from sense of it. I think this is natural and OK though in a society that still cooks mostly from scratch off raw vegetables and fruit.

 

Q: Are there a lot of fast food options? Restaurant options? What kinds?

A: Fast food yes. American-o options and a lot of Peruvian options.

American fast food chains:

MacDonalds, Burger King, Pizza Hut, Papa Johns Pizza, KFC.

Peruvian:

Bembos (Peruvian hamburger), Dinnos Pizza, Pollo a la brasa (Rostisierre chicken). These chicken fast food chains are all over the country. You usually get chicken with fries and a soda.


Q: Would you say food is generally more expensive or less expensive than here?

A: More expensive in Vancouver!!

 

Q: Is there any at home gardening going on? Community gardens?

A: No community gardens. Some people grow their own veggies and fruit but  again, that is more work than buying ok veggies and fruit for really little money so it makes more sense to buy than to grow.

 

Q: Anything else that I’ve missed or that you’d like to add?

A: Just to explain some of the backstory to all of this, I think a lot of the lack of organic, home gardening, knowing what is in your food, etc. comes from the fact that in Peru there are still a lot of small, mid and large scale farmers that are poor that supply vegetables and fruit for cheap to the country. Although these might be grown on fertilizer and bugspray, it is still not largely transgenic and mutant like in most first world countries and its cheap. Also, you have to remember that in a poor country like Peru people have primary needs like food and water and cannot put that much thought into selecting food. People are basically working very long hours and love eating. Home cooking is still around and popular because it is much cheaper to cook your meal from scratch for your family than eat fast food. I even read in the paper today that the ministry of health wants to put a special tax on fast food, to prevent people from eating it so much. So, although I have answered these questions from my standing point, at country scale looking after what you eat behaviors are still not very compatible with a developing country day to day survival –lifestyle. Higher social-economic class that have higher level of education can worry about these things and bit by bit people are demanding information on nutritional and caloric values of meals (for example served at fast food restaurants)

 

 

Thank you so much Suci!!

I LOVE the idea of food being made from scratch all over the place, and buying directly from farmers etc. at municipal markets as opposed to the big stores (I have fallen a little in love with the farmers market up here!). Even if it’s not organic, at least you know who it’s coming from, and can give money directly to the people who grow the food, as opposed to the grocery store, who pays the guy in the suit before the farmer.  I could definitely go for an hour long lunch, walk through the warm sunny streets and eat a three course home cooked meal at a Menu!

I also liked reading about how a lot of the eating revolves around tradition. I feel like tradition here (food wise at least) is reserved for the few feasting holidays (Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter), and while everyone has their mom’s favourite dish (mine is my Mom’s terryaki chicken wings), it seems like few people are trying to carry those things on.

Putting a tax on fast-food is a fantastic idea! If people had to pay 20% at McD’s they might rethink a little.. problem is, what would be classified as fast food? Salad Loop is fast, but not fried.. hmmm.

Thanks again Lady! I’ll have to get my bum down there to come eat with you someday (and do some knitting – Susana runs a weekly knit night!), thought I think I’ll skip out on the 2,000 calorie pork sandwich on the beach..

By the way.. The dessert that Susana mentioned is FANTASTIC! It’s a super sweet, creamy, milky custard-ish dessert with soft meringue and (if I remember correctly) cinnamon on top. I can almost taste it just thinking about it! I’ll have to get the recipe and try it out..

And We’re Off!

Well Folks, it’s January 1st: Day 1.

No more “Last chance for _______!”, no more not-knowing, no more junk. This begins today.

So far, so good.

This morning I was served a buffet of yummy ingredient happy food for breakfast : fruit salad, zuccini, carrots, toast (all recongnizable and good ingredients!), tomato, eggs, chicken sausage and a yummy (and with a cough still acting up: very welcome) hot cup of lemony tea. Basically, I was spoiled.

This afternoon I munched on some pomegranite, and had a latte. I will admit that the milk in the latte was most likely of the vitamin A palmitate and D3 added variety, but at least I can list that.. so I’m not adding it to a cheat list (in fact, because so far everything is on track, I haven’t even needed to start up a cheat list!).

I also cooked beans tonight. I have made canned beans before, but these are the type that you have to soak overnight. Now the problem was trying to figure out what to do with them. Hrmm.. I was going to throw them over a spinach salad, but I kind of wanted something warm. My next thought was a bean and rice burrito, but then I’d have to make up some tortillas, and the hour was getting late. Then I saw the jar of roasted red peper sauce that I had picked up at Whole Foods the other night. Mix together eans, said pasta sauce, some broccoli, carrots, spinach, and garlic and serve over some brown rice pasta, and dinner is served!

‘Twas sometime before New Years, and all through my place
Lurked unknown ingredients no one could trace.
My cupboards were full of things I couldn’t say,
Let alone recognize if I saw them today.
 
Frozen chicken fingers, sausages, french fries galore,
All snug in  my freezer, but wait there is more…
In my fridge there were sauces, salsas, juices and jams,
Beef pepperoni and peaches stored in their cans
 
The pantry was worse, taco shells and their spice
Crackers, white flour and short-grain white rice
Tomatoes in tin, beans in EDTA
“Get rid of it all!” I said, “Give it away!”
 
I’ve decided to change up the way that I eat
Because corn syrup and “colour” don’t seem that neat
Monosodium chlorides and “natural flavour”
Don’t sound like the food any humans should savour
 
I read a few books, watched some videos too
And had an idea, something not very new
“Eating food should be easy” I thought to myself
“Simple and yummy” so I cleared off my shelf
 
“Now Veggies! now, Fruit! now, Whole grains and Organic!
Where will I shop now?!” (I started to panic).Farmers markets and butchers all came into sight

And I realized, with effort, it would all be all right.
 
It will take some control to learn how to say “no”
But think of the things I’ll learn as I go:
Like how to cook lentils, and eat food while I’m out,
Where vitamins come from, and what’s good about trout.
 
I’ll learn to try new things, and read every label,
How to make lunches, and eat at the table,
Some things will be gross, and some things will be yummy.
At least I’ll know all things that go into my tummy.
 
I’ll be sure to keep posting, and keep you appraised
About how all the meat you eat must have been raised.
Some things will be scary, some things just plain new,
Some you won’t like, but what can you do?
 
Here’s the some good food, some good times and more!
Here’s the the new things I’m going to explore!
I hope you keep reading, and enjoy what you find,
And that this blogs help a little to open your mind…
 
(written and read aloud as she typed by Sarah Pearson)