About Wednesday Food Blogging

  • Why Wednesday?
    On my main blog, I devoted Wednesday to posting food news and recipes, just like your local paper publishes food-related articles on Wednesday. But here you'll find food-related content posted on any day of the week.
  • What's your main blog?
    It's called What Do I Know? and in it I talk about my life here in England.
  • Recipe index
    Here you'll find over 100 recipes previously posted at WDIK.
  • Who are you, anyway?
    An American, living and eating in Britain. You can read more here.
  • So are you vegan?
    I try hard to be. There are still a few trace elements in my diet, I still wear wool, and when I eat out, I don't always ask if there's butter or egg in the pasta.
  • Where are the cows?
    Right here!

News

Food News you can believe in

Now that the political season is over, it's time to re-focus on food news here at WFB.

What I've been saying for two years now: It's not food miles! (via)

We can't afford factory farms: The effect of factory farms on the environment.

That burger you're eating? Mostly corn.

We need more research on cancer-fighting beer.

The NY Times tells us to counter food shortages with potatoes. Lovely idea.

More news from the NY Times, this time not-so-lovely: Europe relaxes rules on sale of ugly vegetables. Good; maybe now I can find kohlrabi.

Among Prevention's 14 Surprising Signs You'll Live Longer are: You eat purple food, you avoid diet soda, you're a tea lover, and you don't like burgers. You should also walk a lot.

You probably also shouldn't eat a lot of these: Trader Joe's Lumpy Bumpy Bars. They look like the roads around here after a good rain.

But we can't forget about politics completely, can we? Here's what they're eating at the G20 summit. "Quinoa risotto"? Is that anything like "Bush's intelligence"?

And speaking of intelligence, here's Matthew Yglesias on The United States of Arugula. Because if Republicans are afraid of arugula, how can they govern our country?

That's all I've got. Give it another week to sink in.

Gardens of Andorra

Apparently the tiny European nation of Andorra is doing its best to be self-sufficient. On our recent visit there, we saw several vegetable gardens:

Garden

We saw this garden in Ordino, Andorra.

Gardeninandorra

And this one, with that artichoke just begging to be snatched, in Canillo.

Potatoes

These lovely potatoes were in our hotel garage.

Maybe there's a logical explanation for why life expectancy in Andorra is over 85 years for women, and almost as long for men—one of the longest anywhere, in fact.

Food News comes in pairs

The End of Food? That's the title of a new book by Paul Roberts that I haven't read, but here's an excerpt from an interview with him: (via)

Why don’t you believe that local food systems are going to answer the global food demand?

There’s a limit to how much land area we have to devote to local food production. Land is really expensive when it’s close to cities. And local farms are often smaller, and small farms, as wonderful as they are for some things, don’t have the efficiencies that larger ones have for their economies of scale. So it’s sort of tough to imagine [them] feeding large populations.

He also says this:

Do you have any tips for things we can we do in the U.S. to lessen our impact on the food supply?

If you want to go meatless one or two times a week, or just reduce the amount of meat you eat, or go completely vegetarian in a thoughtful way, then that would be great. Understanding where your food comes from and seeing where you can make local decisions [when] it makes sense, but also understanding that not all local food is equal in terms of its impacts and its benefits. But both of those sort of bespeak a greater understanding of food.

If your preschooler is on the Chocolate Diet, you should read this: 6 Food Mistakes Parents Make

If you're searching for a presidential candidate or maybe some fruit, my friend made this comment about McCain:

Reasons not to buy this fruity pair:
He is past his sell by date and she was prematurely plucked from the vine.

Speaking of strange pairs: Oreo Banana Split Creme. One word: Why?

Slow Food News Day

Slow Food for Thought by Eric Schlosser, on the social movement of slow food.

You can fool some of the people some of the time...what do we really know about what we eat anyway?

That's right; it's another article on Meat Production and World Hunger:

Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation on Economic Trends in Washington, DC, states it succinctly: “People go hungry because much of arable land is used to grow feed grain for animals rather than people.” He offers as one example the Ethiopian famine of 1984, which was fueled by the meat industry. “While people starved, Ethiopia was growing linseed cake, cottonseed cake and rapeseed meal for European livestock,” he says. “Millions of acres of land in the developing world are used for this purpose. Tragically, 80 percent of the world’s hungry children live in countries with food surpluses which are fed to animals for consumption by the affluent.”

Dining with Dionysus, about a cooking school in Greece: "Even bad stuffed grape leaves are good, but these were better than any I’d had, for the vivid and cooling flavors."

A solution to the food crisis:  A kitchen garden in every home.

An interview with the author of Stuffed and Starved, Raj Patel.

Another reason to fear factory farms: Superbugs.

Six guilt-free reasons to love carbs. You mean I needed a reason?

Forget carbs; eat broccoli. Especially if you have diabetic heart damage.

Next time I'm in France, I'm going here.

Are there bovine growth hormones in your fish? 

Not to frighten you, but check out this: green tea Kit Kats.

Food News, Weekend Edition

Mark Bittman from the NY Times visits Campo de Fiori in Rome. If you can get through the first few horrific minutes, where he examines all the varieties of fresh tomatoes* available there, it's a pretty interesting video. I wrote about Campo de Fiori here, but I don't remember seeing so many tomatoes.

What to eat: Curcumin.

What else to eat: Peanuts.

What not to eat: Pretzels.

Don't feed the ducks

Don't tease me like this.

Don't give me this: Bacon Salt makes everything taste like bacon. (If you sprinkle it on your tomato, will you have 2/3s of a BLT?)

Cake wrecks, a blog about cakes that never should have been. 

*I do not like fresh tomatoes. Or anything that can be described as "flesh".

Sunday Food News

DSCN1030
How do French women stay so slim when they eat cocoa puffs for breakfast?

Will someone please explain why all the cereals in France have chocolate in them? There was even chocolate muesli. (Yes, we were the stupid Americans taking photos of cereal at Auchan.)

If you haven't been over to Fat Free Vegan lately, Susan posted some great resources: Her veg blog search now has its own url, so it's easy to bookmark and use whenever you need a recipe for, say, cauliflower.

And also, Erik Marcus has a series of podcasts on transitioning to veganism. (For those of you in France, note that chocolate is vegan.)

Speaking of cauliflower, Cookiecrumb made cauliflower steak the other day. Yes, I said steak. I suspect the next cauliflower who rambles over my way will meet its end that way.

What to eat: peanuts.

Guess who got a solar oven? Sadly, such a contraption would never work over here. A wind powered oven, maybe.

One bad apple really can spoil the whole bunch. Girl.

Organic on a budget. Some good advice there.

Fired up? Ready to bake! That's right, there's a bake-off for Barack Obama's birthday. Send your photos here.

Food News, exotic produce edition

When they weren't talking about fixing world hunger, G8 leaders were feasting on an 18-course dinner, and a six-course lunch. Read the menu and see what sort of tidbits those lucky ducks enjoyed. Then try to imagine George Bush's face as he dug into  "Water Lily Bulb and Summer Savoury".

The article The 11 Best Foods You Aren't Eating for some reason doesn't include water lily bulbs.

Don't eat rock hard pears. At least not immediately. And, could "water lily bulb" be a fancy name for rock hard pears?

So now I can't brag about being mad-cow free: "Even vegetarians may not be safe from mad-cow prions." Perhaps fertilizer-free water lily bulbs aren't such a bad thing for our leaders to be munching on.

I'm always looking for new tips for making pizza, since ordering out isn't a great option for vegans. Here's "10 paths to painless pizza-making."

Harold Pollack, prompted by Tim Russert's death, says we must take better care of ourselves.

Eating the world's priciest burger doesn't qualify as taking better care of ourselves, by the way. It does qualify as the most expensive heart-attack-on-a-plate you'll ever have.

Finally, bookmark this for future reference. You'll need it at your summer barbecue when someone mocks you for being vegan. (Also, remind them that water lily bulbs are good enough for George Bush.) 57 Health Benefits of Going Vegan.

Food News, Local Edition

What do you call Coke? That, of course, depends on where you live.

Speaking of drinks...America's unhealthiest drinks, exposed

Speaking of unhealthy, this man eats nothing but Mars bars. And he only weighs 14 stone!

If Obama and McCain were food...what food would they be? Favorite answer:

Obama: an arugula salad with heirloom tomatoes (locally grown and organic, naturally), fresh figs, goat cheese and lemon-pepper dressing.

McCain: beef jerky

The downside of locavorianism: the inefficiencies of scale involved. Like building your home from scratch.

A user's guide to optimal caffeine usage. (I take the green tea approach.)

More bad news for locavores: Turns out what you eat matters much, much more than where it's grown.

Another article on the same topic:

"Shoppers concerned about the environment should not place "buying local" at the top of their list of priorities when purchasing food, according to a study published online on April 16 in the journal Environmental Science & Technology. The fuel burned in transporting food items from farm to marketplace creates just a small percentage of the total greenhouse gas emissions associated with the food. Instead, consumers should shift their diets to include more foods that require less energy to produce in the first place."

Eat a little extra veg and live longer.

Now, what should you do about breakfast?

Adding tequila to tofu is such a perfectly good idea; yet inexplicably, I haven't come up with it before.

Food News, Campaign Edition

When the McCain campaign posted recipes on his website of "family favorites" they turned out to be Rachel Ray's family favorites, like Ahi Tuna with Napa Cabbage Slaw, instead. Now Barack Obama has provided his own recipe, for chili, which he says he brings to potlucks. You can read it here, and also see a Q&A with him on the farm bill. Among other things, he supports more meat inspectors. Since the laws on the books now regarding animal health and human safety aren't being enforced, that's a good start. 

Some Obama supporters have created an "Obama Campaign Family Cookbook" which you can download here. Who can resist " Yes We Can Thai Peanut Chick-Can"? Although the download is free, they ask for a donation.

In Minneapolis, where the Republicans plan to hold their nominating convention, the FBI is soliciting informants—moles—to keep tabs on protest groups. For instance, they suggest you show up at vegan potlucks. That's right; vegans—who can't stand to harm an insect, much less a human—are considered dangerous protestors by the American government. Words fail me.
 
Forget energy independence. If you really want to save the planet, you'll eat bugs instead of meat. (Hint: Cut the stingers off first.) 

"Baptized in Vegan Land"

After a show featuring Kathy Freston, author of Quantum Wellness, talk show host Oprah Winfrey has gone on a 21-day animal product -free diet. In other words, a vegan diet.

You can read Oprah's blog here:
Wow, wow, wow! I never imagined meatless meals could be so satisfying.
See her recipes here.

Today, Oprah goes vegan...tomorrow, Martha Stewart?

Food News, With Extra Hardee's

The gastronomically incorrect Hardee's: Selling high-caloric, unhealthy food increases the bottom line. (Sometimes the puns just write themselves.)

Speaking of burgers...did you know the oyster was last century's hamburger? "A little over a century ago, the New York street food of choice was the oyster, which grew so abundantly that rich and poor alike ate them in vast quantities." Despite the mindbending historical reference, I suspect reading the book review of Josh Ozersky's The Hamburger is more edifying than reading the book itself:

"One serious omission, though, is a realistic discussion of the scale of the industry it describes, which we all know is staggeringly large, but it is in fact even larger than most appreciate.  The amount of beef McDonald's alone uses in a year is so great that if the cows supplying its restaurants were all in one herd, and were being killed Blackfoot-style by stampeding them off a cliff 20 feet wide, McDonald's gauchos would have to be rushing the herd off that cliff from dawn to dusk, every day of the year, to satisfy demand. The pop and sizzle of hamburgers conceal the frantic moos of an unfathomable number of animals, and it would be nice to have some acknowledgment of their sacrifice."

After reading about such vast consumption of hamburgers, you should spend some time wondering: Is the world's food system collapsing? Cautionary quote: "As the world becomes richer, people eat too much, and too much of the wrong things—above all, meat." (Look for this slogan to appear on a Hardee's cup near you.)

"Why do Americans think they deserve to eat more than Indians?" Good question, and one that should be put not only to George Bush but to the CEO of Hardee's, Andrew Puzder.

The NY Times argues we should "leave our agricultural future to chefs and anyone who takes food and cooking seriously. We never bought into the “bigger is better” mantra, not because it left us too dependent on oil, but because it never produced anything really good to eat." Again, talk to Andrew Puzder.

Brewer's first baseman eschews the Wisconsin state vegetable, the bratwurst, in favor of avocado dumplings. Turns out a vegetarian diet and professional baseball are not incompatible. Take me out to the ballgame, just not to Hardee's.

Now the payoff: Free veggie burger! (Seriously. Click and print.)

Vegetarian Myths, Debunked

Here's an article all of us vegetarians and vegans need to send to our friends: Vegetarian Myths, Debunked.

I've been vegetarian for a decade, and when it comes up, I still get a look of confused horror that says, "But you seemed so … normal." The U.S. boasts more than 10 million herbivores today, yet most Americans assume that every last one is a loopy, self-satisfied health fanatic, hellbent on draining all the joy out of life.

And, since this is a blog about food:

Every vegetarian is used to slim pickings when dining out, so we're not asking for much—just for something you'd like to eat. I'll even offer a handy trick. Pretend you're trapped in a kitchen stocked with every ingredient imaginable, from asiago to zucchini, but with zero meat. With no flesh available, picture what you'd make for yourself; this is what we want, too.

Read on.

Food news...

...when you ain't got nothin' else.

Test tube meat is closer to reality than I thought: "Meat grown in giant tanks known as bioreactors would cost between $5,200-$5,500 a ton (3,300 to 3,500 euros), which the analysis claims is cost competitive with European beef prices." I'm not sure if I would ever eat it, but it's not nearly as gross as the thought of eating dead animals.

Let them eat cake...or bread. It all costs the same: "What all that means is that if you think bread is already pricey, think again: it will almost certainly go higher. A loaf of Hovis Classic White, that staple of school lunchboxes, now goes for around £1, already far above what it fetched a year ago. But the company behind Hovis, Premier Foods, warned last month that it would have to raise prices again."

John McCain's favorite family recipes...lifted from the Food Network? And isn't Ahi Tuna with Napa Cabbage Slaw just a bit...ummm, elitist?

If you want to multitask, you should eat better fuel.

For a flat belly, fill up on whole grains.

Should you drink 8 glasses of water a day? Maybe. Maybe not.

Some people like to do weird things with food, and then take pictures of it.

Watch a 20 minute preview of the movie King Corn.

People still think it's weird that you can make delicious cupcakes without eggs and dairy. Even the Washington Post is getting in on the act.

Some food news for Wednesday

Chris says rheumatoid arthritis sufferers may do better with a vegan diet. (Even though Chris himself would never consider it. Let's hope he never develops RA. /smug)

The NY Times, meanwhile, says that skipping breakfast isn't a good idea: "Why eating breakfast should lead to fewer unwanted pounds is unclear, but the study found that breakfast eaters consumed greater amounts of carbohydrates and fiber, got fewer calories from fat and exercised more." See? Carbs (especially non-refined carbs) are good for you.

Got rBST? The New Pennsylvania Attack on rBST-Free Milk Production.

The Washington Post provides a vegetarian Easter meal. Actually, it sounds like a good meal for any day, not just Easter. (Especially the Smoky Slow-Cooked Roman Beans.)

Peaceable Imperatrix tells us how to organize a week's worth of menus. She also gives us tips for making flaky biscuits. (I haven't tried it yet, so cannot give this the official Flake Seal of Approval.)

Did you know there's an herb that will fight cancer?

Ten percent of Ohio's population is on food stamps. And the jobless rate is 5.3 percent. File this under: The economy sucks.

And finally, a recipe for Chris: Tournedos d'Seitan with Fig Confit, Braised Carrots with Tarragon, and Roasted Potatoes.

UPDATE: You can have dinner with Barack Obama. No, really!

Food News, now with video!

Twinkies: You can't skimp when it comes to your children.

The road to well-being is steeped in tea.

Foie gras a faux pas, says Prince Charles. Now if only he could issue a royal edict and ban it everywhere.

The History of War through Food. You have to watch this, it's the neatest thing, wherein the hamburgers (U.S.) beat up the sausages, etc.

Some stuff you probably didn't know about "naturally raised cows."

Nigel Slater has an indecent amount of fun with his vegetable box. (Wish I'd written that. I haven't had much fun with mine, ever since I cancelled the service.)

Joss Stone is a vegetarian. Here she talks about her diet. If you haven't listened to Joss Stone, you don't know what you're missing.

Food News Happens, Even When It's Not Wednesday

Wondering what to do with all that club soda left from your party? Things you can do with food other than eat it.

The campaign heats up: Obama Bean Cakes.

Yes, we read Foreign Policy magazine. Doesn't everyone? Especially for ground-breaking articles like this: The world loves chocolate! Really! (Hard to believe, but true!)

Food prices: going up as demand for corn, wheat rises. (Stop eating animals that eat corn and soybeans, why don't you?!)

Interesting demographics on veg*ns.

How whole grains are used to make belly rolls.

After previously reporting that fruit eating is overrated, WFB is now reporting the opposite: Eat fruit.

I'm as happy as anyone to have a healthy cookie, but isn't this taking it too far?

Finally, don't miss this: The round-up of soup recipes from No Croutons Required I posted about previously. I could eat one a day and still not be out of recipes by the time it's summer. All are vegetarian, and all look supremely delicious.

Food News I've been saving for a special occasion

Okay, not really. Although every day is special here at WDIK world headquarters.

Quickly now, here's what I've come across since last time...

Everything you wanted to know about ketchup but were too bored to ask.

Someone wants to ban restaurants from serving fat people. (And yes, he's a Republican. No, not Mike Huckabee.)

Fortunately, someone has made a Google map of NY City vegetarian (and notable non-veg) restaurants. Now, if someone would just do this for Europe I'd be happy.

Put down the Diet Pepsi. Now. Diet sodas are apparently tied to metabolic syndrome.

The NY Times has also taken note of what happens when vegans fall in love with meat eaters.

If you're in the mood for some vegan music, try this: The Vegetable Orchestra.

Finally, the answer to the question you've all been waiting for: When to use your leafy greens.

That's all the news from your "Hezbollah-like splinter faction" journalist today. Go eat your greens.

Have yourself a vegan Mardi Gras

I've been so excited about Super Tuesday tomorrow I almost forgot it was also Fat Tuesday. As you know, I grew up in Louisiana, and have veganized many of my favorite recipes.

So, after you vote, you might head home and cook one of these authentic Cajun or Creole dishes:

Vegetarian Gumbo with Smoked Tofu (You can also make this with fake sausages)

Maque Choux (A corn stew served in rural South Louisiana)

Mushroom Etouffee (Just like MeeMaw loved at the Piccadilly!)

Red Beans and Rice (Soak the beans tonight!)

Jambalaya with Smoked Tofu (Best served with Aaron Neville)

Enjoy these dishes while you watch the Super Tuesday returns on the news. If you don't live in the US, you'll probably be out voting in the Democrats Abroad Super Primary, so you'll have to make one of these dishes ahead.

Food News I almost forgot

Sorry for my dereliction of duty when it comes to bringing you the latest in food news. I have been too consumed with other news lately to wonder about where my next meal is coming from, sadly.

But in the spirit of the primary campaigns, you can vote for the candidate you'd most like to have a beer with here.

Tuna's not good for you. Unless you're lacking in mercury, that is.

Traveling to Vienna? I hope to, soon, especially if it means eating chestnut and hazelnut soup or this: "The main course, a hearty porridge of spelt, walnuts, blackened red peppers and roasted pumpkins, dressed with a sour tomatillo sauce and chunks of a funky hard cheese from Vorarlberg, the westernmost part of Austria, gave the lie to the notion that meatless dishes can’t be both filling and flavorful."

The myths of fruit. Just eat your veggies, okay? In particular, broccoli.

Meat substitutes? Or cloned meat?

How many cheeseburgers can you eat before it damages your body? One. Here's why.

Why your freezer is the next best thing to the farmers' market.

What the Hell Does a Vegan Eat Anyway celebrates their 6th blogiversary with Armagnac Cake.

Did you know 2008 is the year of the potato? Foodie does, and here she and Mr. Foodie are on NPR talking about the Potato Museum. (Foodie needs her own radio show, imo.)

And finally, Weighty Matters crunches the numbers on lean beef. Personally, I'd rather crunch carrots.

Sunday Morning Ketchup

Time to catch up on my food news, and Sunday morning is always an excellent time to do that.

Restrictions? Call it possibilities instead! Via Too Many Chefs, this article on how dietary restrictions  (particularly within the Jain community and the Jewish kosher tradition) being the inspiration for delicious recipes is worth a read, particularly if you've wondered what it is exactly that Jains eat. And as Barrett wrote at TMC, becoming vegetarian and especially vegan has forced me, in a good way, to become much more innovative in the kitchen.

Beets have more than one use, it appears. And according to many people, pouring them on the roads would be a fine use for beets. (Beets—beetroot, rather—are (is) much more common, and presumably, appreciated, on European plates than on American plates.) If you'd like to put beets to a more culinary use, try Beet Salad with Horseradish and Fried Capers.

From the NY Times, the deep-fried truth about food miles.

I saw this interesting site linked at Roxanne's (I think): Foodpairing. I never knew durian and asparagus were made for each other.

I have decided to train the dog to sniff truffles. Who knows, we could find a fortune: Giant truffle sets record price.

The Guardian gives us, finally, a vegetarian Christmas (vegan too!). And for dessert, try this Chocolate Orange Cake.

And finally, in Sunday ketchup news: Organic ketchup is better for you, containing three times more lycopene. (I'm also told that adding avocado to your salsa helps you absorb 400 percent more lycopene.)

Friday Food News

Guinness sales are down. (Note to self: Must drink more!)

Speaking of Guinness—World Records, that is—the restaurant that made the world's most expensive dessert has been shut down by the health authorities.

Meanwhile, food banks are more needy than ever.

I see Safeway has stocked up on organic bottled water.

Why a salad costs more than a Big Mac. Yeah, I know this. Ever hear of a farmer cashing his broccoli subsidy check?

Why home-baked is best. Yeah, knew that too.

A reminder to myself: try out this new vegan restaurant in London, Rootmaster. Although, I'm still a fan of home-cooked.

Cassia or cinnamon? Turns out they're both cinnamon, just different kinds. In fact, there are lots of different kinds of cinnamon and depending where you live, you're probably used to one or the other.

Alec Baldwin fights for healthy school lunches. Meanwhile, the CSPI has graded the states on their school lunches. Surprisingly, many of the highest scoring schools are in the South.

I'm still worried about this Guinness news. Idea: Let's all donate a few pints to our local food bank!

A Traditional Thanksgiving, Without Sacrifice

Soyseitan

Vegans don't need to sacrifice anything to have a delicious holiday meal like this Soy Seitan "Turkey".

Thanksgiving seems to be the meal most likely to trip up vegetarians, especially new veggies with little or no support from their families. In fact, I think the last meat we ever served in our home was turkey at Thanksgiving. We'd invited international students over, and my husband wanted to show them a "real" American Thanksgiving. I also remember our guests were so full after the meal, they insisted we walk around the block, in freezing Wisconsin weather.

There is something about roasting, smoking, or frying a huge bird that signifies traditions long held in our American consciousness. The early Pilgrims, who supposedly started this whole thing, were celebrating the harvest, not the kill. So what is it about a dead bird that Americans feel a need for on Thanksgiving?

The Pilgrims had barely survived the winter before, to hear them tell it. Perhaps the dead bird represents, paradoxically, survival to modern Americans. Survival of the fittest, anyway.

What's a vegetarian to do, in the face of centuries of tradition? How does one convey the same sense of safety and conformity without buying and cooking a Butterball? Are three hundred and sixty four days a year of cruelty-free eating to be tossed aside like plastic wrap, in favor of a familial ritual?

They don't have to be. I've always enjoyed making an elaborate centerpiece dish for Thanksgiving and Christmas. One that my family especially likes involves chicken-flavored seitan, whole-wheat bread stuffing, and homemade gravy, covered with lengths of puff pastry. Sometimes I cut out fall leaves from the excess pastry and decorate the top. Other times I've made turkey-like loaves, and recently I made an elegant meal of pressed tofu stuffed with cornbread stuffing.

My family always enjoys my festive centerpieces, much more than if I just stuffed a squash. The preparation itself—making whole-wheat bread, basting the loaf, stretching out pastry—recreates the traditional event and all its rituals without the guilt associated with eating the flesh of an animal.

When I served my last turkey, all those years ago, I insisted, in my lighthearted way, on saying a prayer for his life. That may have dampened some appetites, but, like native American hunters before me, I couldn't have allowed this bird's sacrifice to go unremarked. We thank the cook for his or her labors in the kitchen; why not the animal who suffered for our meal?

Maybe it's because the third Thursday in November is just like any other day here in England, but I've come to see that Thanksgiving has nothing to do with what's served, or when it's served, or who it's celebrated with. This year, I'm invited to some friends' house, the Saturday after. I'm going to bring a vegetarian centerpiece, probably Bryanna Grogan's Soy and Seitan Roulades. I hope sharing my own traditions will help others see that the good feelings associated with Thanksgiving can be shared fully by vegans.

Real American Thanksgiving celebrations don't have to involve dead birds, or even family, or don't even, it turns out, have to be celebrated on the third Thursday in November.

Food news, just in time for Thanksgiving

I've posted recipes for lasagna twice in the last month, but oddly, it never occurred to me to make it in my dishwasher. (via)

There's a new record for hot sauce consumption: almost 3 bottles of Tabasco in 30 seconds. Immediately afterward, he set a record for uttering the F-word and then for ice water consumption. At least I'm guessing that's what happened.

Move over, espresso: The Clover threatens to push espresso off the counter. What I want to know is: $6 for a cup of coffee? You coffee drinkers are insane. Give me a glass of Chardonnay, please.

But wait: $3000 for a pound of fish? I smell something fishy.

15 reasons to stop hiding from vegetarianism. Come out of the closet, people! Embrace the tofu!

This (pdf) is what the presidential candidates ought to be addressing in Iowa. Simply put, more people, less pigs: “In certain parts of Iowa, the lost opportunities may have been substantial,” said Jan Flora, lead author of the new report for the nonpartisan Iowa Policy Project (IPP). “Hog confinement growth in the 1990s may have hampered the chances for communities to prosper with tourism and recreation, and in making their towns the kind of places people choose for retirement.”

And also via The Ethicurian, should we suck it up and get used to E. coli?

And how about bird flu? Should we get used to that as well? With Britain experiencing its fourth outbreak in a year, maybe we've decided the risk of a human pandemic isn't as bad as giving up turkey for the holidays.

Here're a few ideas for a turkey-free Thanksgiving. If I were in the States, I'd get me one of these. E. coli- and H5N1-free. (One of our worst Thanksgiving memories was the time half the family got sick and I ended up driving Mom to the ER, due to the smoked turkey Grandma bought.)

Food News You Won't Get Elsewhere

Last week I brought news of felony cheese making. This week, it's pickle assaults.

The Jones Soda Experiment. Proving that people with too much time on their hands should never be allowed internet access.

The Jones Soda Company's Christmas (and Chanukah) pack. Proving that imagination is wasted on soda company developers.

Silicon Veggie (now, there's an image!) talks about expectations and dining experiences, and how she got a good meal at a Chicago steakhouse and ended up walking out of an "ethical" eatery.

In the "solutions to problems I didn't know I had" department: RealAge on how to wrestle seeds out of pomegranates without getting red juice all over yourself.

Your FBI at work: Following the falafel trail to root out terrorists. (In fairness, the head of their criminal investigations division decided to can the program. Thank goodness saner heads prevail, at least sometimes.)

What to eat: Onions.

What not to eat: Fish.

Urban Vegan's Autumn Express: 101 simple vegan meals ready in 10 minutes or less. All of them look fall-ishly fantastic. (But you try that Sh*t on a Shingle with your kids, let me know how it goes.)

I'm starting a campaign to get these people to come over here and open a vegan restaurant. It'd be a smash, especially with dishes like this and this and this. And this. See? The menu's already done.

Finally, on to local news: Why is that Tesco were able to open a shop in Los Angeles without incident, yet they are taking ten years to complete the one in my town, and along the way collapse a train tunnel, shut down our local train station for 51 days, create an environmental nightmare, and turn little old ladies into jeering protesters? All the while costing the company £35 million.

For your weekend reading pleasure, some Food News

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This week's big food news in the UK was that lifestyle factors like eating red meat, bacon, and drinking alcohol raise the risk of cancer. The World Cancer Research Fund presented evidence gleaned from thousands of studies that 1/3 of all cancers are due to dietary factors. The story got lots of press, then the backlash started, from folks like chefs, newspaper columnists, and food producers. (None of whom, apparently, have ever read a single scientific study, much less thousands.)

And still more evidence that a low-fat diet cuts risk of ovarian cancer after menopause.

And in case you didn't know, organic produce really is healthier.

Did you know there's an £8 billion mountain of wasted food in Britain?

Felony cheese making? Bathtub cheese? Have vegans taken over the world and someone forgot to tell me? (via)

The 6 most terrifying foods in the world, too late for Halloween. (Not vegan-safe.)

God forbid global warming means we have to resort to this.

Sadly, scientists have taken the joy out of chocolate by determining that our craving for chocolate is caused by bacteria. (And I love the last line, "J. Bruce German, a professor of food chemistry at the University of California Davis, said the Kochhar research made so much sense that people should have thought of it earlier.")

Lookie here! There's a new vegan cream on the market. Sadly, not in the UK, but it fits into a suitcase. (Hint hint!)

Via VeggieGirl, I've discovered vegan dinnerware. And other cool stuff.

Herbivoracious has a couple of interesting posts (here and here) about interning at Cafe Flora in Seattle, a restaurant I'd love to be able to visit.

We're not so much trouble after all: Tastes Like Home cooks for vegetarians. Can I be invited?

Good Stuff

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