Friday, December 28, 2007
Happy Holidays!
Appetizers
* Honey-glazed Banana Chips
* Chinese Onion Pancake
* French Toast Bagels (with other special ingredients)
* Sesame Rice Balls
* Sweet Potato Chips with Mustard sauce
* Vegetable Spring Rolls
* Yukon Gold Potato Chips
Entrees
* Clam Chowder Soup
* Chinese Chicken Noodle Soup
* Chinese Vegetable Soup
* Chinese Vegetables with White Rice
* Hot and Sour Soup
* Italian Pasta
* Lemon Chicken with Fried Rice or White Rice
* Potato Pancakes with Turkey or Chicken and various vegetables
* Sweet and Sour Chicken Delights
* Swedish Meatballs
* Teriyaki Chicken
* Tomato Chicken with White Rice
Desserts
* Apple Strudels
* Banana Raisin Cornbread Mini-Muffins (with other special ingredients)
* Chocolate Chip Cookies (with other special ingredients)
* Crème DeMint Cake w/ Banana and Strawberry inside
* Honey Glazed Carrot Cake (with other special ingredients)
* Oatmeal Cookie with Raisins (with other special ingredients)
* Sweet Potato Pie
This coming year, we are planning to include more dishes from Asia and focus our attentions on a fusion of Pacific and European Cuisine. Wishing a Happy 2008 to everyone. Thanks for visiting.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
From the Desktop of Global Delights
I am a big fan of garlic. Learned to use it for many things. During the cold season, I love to drink Chinese green tea or Chinese Pu-Erh tea with green onion, garlic, and honey. You can get good tea at the Pu-Erh store in Indianapolis, Indiana or Red Blossom Tea in San Francisco, Ca.
One of my favorite Asian dishes is a Chinese Garlic Chicken. In a few months, we will serving Chinese Garlic Chicken at a future event. The key to this dish is the seasoning and sauce.
Here is a good NYT article on the benefits of Garlic.
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As an organic food advocate, this article on organic food got me thinking. It all starts with simple things like milk, potatoes, peanut butter, ketchup and apples. ... Do you know if the food that you are eating is pesticide free? ... Be aware, not scared. ... We are what we eat. ... Please check out this data table that shows what food has the least amount of pesticide to what food has the greatest amount.
A new entry on brainy food for kids
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A few more notes, here is a link to a great NY Times article on Alice Waters (my favorite promoter of organic food) and another link on her visiting Chicago (from SFGate.com).
Here is an informational link on "How to Properly Microwave Food"
Offer our thanks to Collaboration360.com (aka. Collaboration360 Consultants) for mentoring us in the launching of our business. We used their Compass AE process to develop our business strategy and our operational plans. Our experience with Collaboration360's Compass AE process can be found here.
The Benefits of Garlic

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Unlocking the Benefits of Garlic
In a study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers show that eating garlic appears to boost our natural supply of hydrogen sulfide. Hydrogen sulfide is actually poisonous at high concentrations — it’s the same noxious byproduct of oil refining that smells like rotten eggs. But the body makes its own supply of the stuff, which acts as an antioxidant and transmits cellular signals that relax blood vessels and increase blood flow.
In the latest study, performed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, researchers extracted juice from supermarket garlic and added small amounts to human red blood cells. The cells immediately began emitting hydrogen sulfide, the scientists found.
The power to boost hydrogen sulfide production may help explain why a garlic-rich diet appears to protect against various cancers, including breast, prostate and colon cancer, say the study authors. Higher hydrogen sulfide might also protect the heart, according to other experts. Although garlic has not consistently been shown to lower cholesterol levels, researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine earlier this year found that injecting hydrogen sulfide into mice almost completely prevented the damage to heart muscle caused by a heart attack.
“People have known garlic was important and has health benefits for centuries,'’ said Dr. David W. Kraus, associate professor of environmental science and biology at the University of Alabama. “Even the Greeks would feed garlic to their athletes before they competed in the Olympic games.'’
Now, the downside. The concentration of garlic extract used in the latest study was equivalent to an adult eating about two medium-sized cloves per day. In such countries as Italy, Korea and China, where a garlic-rich diet seems to be protective against disease, per capita consumption is as high as eight to 12 cloves per day.
While that may sound like a lot of garlic, Dr. Kraus noted that increasing your consumption to five or more cloves a day isn’t hard if you use it every time you cook. Dr. Kraus also makes a habit of snacking on garlicky dishes like hummus with vegetables.
Many home chefs mistakenly cook garlic immediately after crushing or chopping it, added Dr. Kraus. To maximize the health benefits, you should crush the garlic at room temperature and allow it to sit for about 15 minutes. That triggers an enzyme reaction that boosts the healthy compounds in garlic.
Garlic can cause indigestion, but for many, the bigger concern is that it can make your breath and sweat smell like…garlic. While individual reactions to garlic vary, eating fennel seeds like those served at Indian restaurants helps to neutralize the smell. Garlic-powder pills claim to solve the problem, but the data on these supplements has been mixed. It’s still not clear if the beneficial compounds found in garlic remain potent once it’s been processed into a pill.
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/10/15/unlocking-the-benefits-of-garlic/Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Brainy Food for Kids

Foods That Make You Smarter!
Want to ace your next exam or presentation at work? Ditch the soda, cookies, and candy.... Instead, load up on the following winning foods!
Your pre-test meal should consist of slow-release carbohydrate plus high-quality protein. This winning combination will help stabilize your blood sugar while fueling your brain with continuous glucose. Bottom line -- you remain sharp, alert, and ready to conquer.
Pre-Exam Breakfast Ideas
1. Oatmeal with Berries: bowl of oatmeal topped with 1-2 teaspoons sugar, fresh berries, and a glass of skim milk.
2. Egg Sandwich: 1-2 scrambled eggs between 2 slices of whole wheat toast; enjoy with a sliced orange.
3. Breakfast Burrito: whole wheat tortilla stuffed with a scrambled egg, shredded low-fat cheese, ½ cup black beans and optional salsa
4. Waffles with Peanut Butter and Bananas: whole-grain waffles, toasted and topped with peanut butter and banana slices.
Pre-Exam Lunch Ideas
1. Turkey/cheese sandwich on whole wheat bread with baby carrots and an apple
2. Cold pasta salad tossed with light canned tuna, vegetables and
low-cal dressing.
3. Leftover dinner; chicken stir-fry with rice
4. Bowl of hearty lentil or black bean soup with whole grain crackers
After-school Homework Helpers
* Low-fat popcorn
* Grapes (chilled or frozen)
* Apple slices with peanut butter
* Soy crisps
* Healthy dry cereal (Puffins, Mighty Bites, Heart to Heart,
Multi-Grain Cheerios)
* Baby carrots
* Pepper sticks (red, green, and yellow)
* Cherry and grape tomatoes
* String cheese
* Edamame (in the pod)
* Raw almonds or cashews
Extra Credit for Overall Brain Health
* Hydrate with plenty of water
* Load up on omega 3 fats (fatty fish, omega 3 fortified eggs,
ground flaxseeds, and walnuts)
* Eat foods rich in folic acid (spinach, oranges, broccoli, and fortified breakfast cereals)
* Get plenty of exercise
http://health.yahoo.com
Sunday, November 4, 2007
A Spotlight on the Green Side of Bottled Water (New York Times)

I only buy bottled water when I need to.
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November 3, 2007
Saturday Interview
A Spotlight on the Green Side of Bottled Water
By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
LAST summer, environmentalists took on the bottled water industry. On their Web sites and in their press releases, many environmental groups pointed to bottled water as a prime example of an unnecessary product that uses scarce resources and adds more plastic to overtaxed landfills.
The industry’s growth did slow down. But most industry experts and even some environmentalists concede that the outcry was not the reason. Instead, it was a combination of higher prices, relatively cool weather and, perhaps most important, the maturity of the industry.
“We weren’t even selling refreshment-size bottles of water until 1989, said Kim E. Jeffery, chief executive of Nestlé Waters, which sells Poland Spring, Perrier and five other branded waters. “But the per-capita increase in bottled water use is growing, and will continue to grow.
In a recent conversation, Mr. Jeffery maintained that bottled water would continue to sell briskly no matter how much criticism came its way. Following are excerpts from that conversation:
Q. Tap water is not only more environmentally friendly than bottled water, but it is also less expensive. Won’t that combination eventually woo consumers back to their faucets?
A. Bottled water wooed people away from soda and sports drinks, not taps. About 70 percent of the beverages people drink come in packages. All our research shows that if bottled water weren’t available, people would buy Gatorade, or fruit juice, or other sugared or diet beverages. Some 16 percent say they would drink tap water but you can’t go into a deli and ask for a bottle of tap water.
And you may pay $4 for a bottle of water at Fenway Park, but it costs you about 15 cents a bottle when you buy a case at the market. It’s still a lot cheaper than other convenience drinks. And, considering the obesity epidemic, a lot healthier.
Q. Healthier? But there have been scares over the years about contamination. That’s true of tap water, too but those problems can be solved with filter systems.
A. Sure, there have been isolated incidents but those were problems with contamination that was introduced at the store, not at the point of manufacture. Our whole industry adheres to a formal set of good manufacturing practices. Infant formula is the only other product regulated by the Food and Drug Administration that can make that claim.
Q. Still, environmentalists are trying to make people feel uncool, even guilty, about carrying around bottles of water. Don’t you fear a backlash?
A. Not at all. We’re aware of the heightened noise level, and ever since July, we’ve been doing telephone and Internet surveys every few weeks, checking on whether people’s perception of our industry is changing.
The research consistently shows that people are aware of the issues surrounding bottled water but they are not going back to sugared drinks, and they will not rely on their taps.
Q. But they may be buying bottled water despite its environmental impact. You’ve maintained that bottled water actually helps the environment. Isn’t that somewhat counterintuitive?
A. We’re not perfect. The entire consumer products industry is behind the curve on recycling, for example.
But we rely on a sustainable source of water, so we’ve always been conscious of conserving the springs and the land around them. When we find a new spring, we build a plant nearby. We are constantly reducing the distance our product must travel to customers. It would be rare for product to travel more than 250 miles from source to store.
Q. None of that addresses the issue of bottles. Can you really justify using all that plastic?
A. We use less packaging than sodas or other convenience beverages. Nestlé Waters is rolling out Ecoshape, a 12.5 gram plastic bottle that holds half a liter of water. It’s about 15 percent lighter than our current bottles, and we use 10 to 15 percent less energy to make it. By year end, all our brands will use it.
Think of it a half-liter bottle of Poland Spring will use less than half an ounce of plastic. The bottles for carbonated beverages are twice as heavy, and Gatorade bottles are three times as heavy.
Q. You make Nestlé Waters and its industry sound like a group of tree huggers. If that is so, why do you think so many environmentalists are trying to put you out of business?
A. They are trying to frame this as a fight between bottled water and tap water. And what they really want is to ensure the quality of municipal water supplies. Many of them are afraid that the easy availability of bottled water might take the spotlight off the need to manage the municipal infrastructure better.
Q. So why aren’t you fighting back? I haven’t seen advertising that extols the environmental benefits of bottled water.
A. I’ll happily answer questions like the ones you are asking now. And we have started airing commercials about our lightweight package because we see it as a point of differentiation for us.
But like any company, we have finite resources. Look, we’ve got the lightest-weight packaging containing the healthiest product. I want to spend our advertising dollars talking about the attributes of my product and of my company. I don’t want to spend them on some negative conversation that some other group has decided to start.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/03/business/03interview.html
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U.S. To Boost Testing Of Imported Canada Meat
November 3, 2007
U.S. To Boost Testing Of Imported Canada Meat
By REUTERS
Filed at 8:05 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Meat and poultry products being imported from Canada will be subjected to increased testing and inspection after an outbreak of E. coli in several U.S. states traced to beef from a Canadian company, the U.S. Agriculture Department said on Saturday.
The USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service said it would increase testing for salmonella, listeria monocytogenes and E. coli O157:H7. The agency said it would require the products be held until testing shows they do not contain any of those pathogens.
The bacteria can cause abdominal pains, diarrhea and dehydration.
Canadian meat and poultry products will also receive increased levels of reinspection by FSIS officials to confirm they are eligible to enter the U.S. market. Those requirements will begin next week.
The FSIS said it would also conduct an audit of Canada's food safety system. The audit will focus on plants that export beef to the United States.
"The audit and stepped-up actions at the border are being conducted because of concerns about testing practices at Ranchers Beef, Ltd that were discovered as part of the ongoing investigation," said U.S. Agriculture Undersecretary Richard Raymond.
Alberta-based Ranchers Beef, which has ceased operations, is believed to be the source of the multi-state outbreak of E. coli infections linked to the U.S.-based Topps Meat Co in September, the FSIS said. The agency delisted Ranchers Beef as an importer on October 20.
The recall of 21.7 million pounds (9.8 million kg) of ground beef was the fifth-largest meat or poultry recall in U.S. history and led to nearly 100 illnesses in the two countries. Topps Meat has since gone out of business.
The preliminary findings from the audit by the FSIS will determine whether the additional testing and inspection rules remain in place.
"These measures are being taken to further ensure the equivalency of the system already in place," said Raymond. "We continue to work together with our food safety partners both domestically and internationally to ensure imported meat and poultry products are
produced ... at least equivalent to those in the United States."
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters
Monday, October 29, 2007
Red Meat that Makes You Skinny?
Posted Mon, Oct 29, 2007, 1:39 pm PDTLamb chops or pork chops, bison burgers or veal breast, round roast or Porterhouse steak? Sure, you know meat’s high in cholesterol and saturated fat and that it's less healthy than fish and poultry, but what if you really, really need to tear into some red meat now and then?
Use this guide to find the slimmest, trimmest cuts and kinds. Now enjoy--not just the flavors, the health benefits: Most meat is rich in top-quality protein, iron, zinc, B12, and other nutrients that aren’t easy to get elsewhere.
What’s the leanest meat of all?
We hope you’re ready to expand your dinner horizons because bison (aka buffalo) is the big winner. (Deer and elk are right on its hooves, er, heels.) Believe it or not, bison has slightly less fat and fewer calories (2 grams and 122 calories per 3-ounce serving) than skinless light meat chicken (3g and 144 cals). Plus, it’s a terrific source of protein (24g) and iron. The taste? Similar to beef, though slightly sweeter and richer. Try your own burger recipe or this grilled buffalo steak dish.
Bonus: With bison (wild game, too), you aren't exposed to the cancer-linked growth hormones and antibiotics administered to farm-raised cows.
Things that go “Mooo!”
Beef and veal are skinniest when they’re loin or round cuts, such as beef bottom sirloin (6g fat, 150 cals) and top round veal (3g, 128 cals). Avoid veal cutlets and breast meat.
If you prefer pork...
Choose leg cuts, such as ham, or loin, as in boneless sirloin pork chops or top loin chops (both have about 7g fat and 170 cals).
Lamb lovers
Try cuts from the shank half of the leg (if labels aren’t clear, ask the butcher). Well-trimmed shank-half cuts have 5-6 grams fat and about 155 calories per serving.
So what's the reward for becoming your butcher's new best friend? Eating a low-fat diet--and eating healthful unsaturated fats when you do eat fat--can make your RealAge as much as 6 years younger.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Alice Waters in Chicago
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Wednesday, October 17, 2007 (SF Chronicle)
Alice in the Heartland/The Bay Area is well acquainted with the culinary philosophy of the Chez Panisse founder, but how does it play outside California?
Amanda Gold, Chronicle Staff Writer
(10-17) 04:00 PDT Chicago -- If you live in Northern California and have never heard of Alice Waters - or at least her Berkeley restaurant, Chez Panisse - you might have spent the last three decades burrowed underground in a fallout shelter.
But last week, I sent a mass e-mail to friends and relatives in the Midwest.
"Quick answer," I asked. "No Googling allowed. Who is Alice Waters?"
The first response came almost immediately from a friend who was a fellow classmate at the University of Wisconsin:
"Isn't that the name of a dorm in Madison?"
Nope, that's Elizabeth Waters. But as the rest of the e-mails poured in - from what can only be described as a smart, enlightened crowd - all but one of the remaining 35 people on the list were equally puzzled.
This came as a surprise, but maybe it shouldn't have. Many of us who live here - or travel in food-conscious or politically active circles elsewhere - think of Alice Waters as a revolutionary, a woman who has fought fervently since Chez Panisse opened in 1971 to change the way Americans think about food and where it comes from. She's credited with popularizing California cuisine, and her mantra of sourcing seasonal ingredients that are local, sustainable and organic has become a virtual cliche in restaurants all over the country.
But clearly, she's not a household name in Middle America.
I sent the e-mail in advance of a trip, where I would shadow Waters as she swept through Chicago to promote her new cookbook, "The Art of Simple Food: Notes, Lessons and Recipes from a Delicious Revolution." Three long days of book signings, a trip to the Green City Market, speaking engagements and a Slow Food dinner demonstrated that while many Midwestern chefs revere her as the doyenne of responsible eating and cooking, most of their customers have no idea who she is.
Yet, despite this, her message and philosophy have gotten through. Even those who confuse her with the name of a college dorm have begun to think about healthier eating habits and whole foods - they just don't know that Waters might have been the driving force behind those thoughts.
But, according to her, "the changes are simply not taking place fast enough."
Although Chicago has become one of the most exciting cities for dining out - described as well-rounded, ethnically diverse, inventive and avant-garde - it's certainly different from San Francisco. Plus, some of the best meals I've had there have often amounted to a neon green relish-topped hot dog, smothered with out-of-season tomatoes and canned sport peppers. (For
the record, when I tried to get Waters to join me for one - how do you go to Chicago and not have a hot dog? - she said, ever on task, "Well, I'd just like to see where that hot dog comes from." Um, Vienna? Not gonna happen.)
To that end, in trying to promote her message, the obvious challenges that Waters would face were further heightened by the circumstances of the weekend - the Cubs were in the playoffs, the city was gearing up for the marathon on Sunday, and the unseasonably warm October weather meant that the masses were much more intent on spending time outdoors than sitting in a lecture hall listening to her speak.
Still, by the time I arrived on Thursday, Waters had already hit the ground running, stopping in at pal Rick Bayless' Frontera Grill for a taco (organic, of course), and eating at other like-minded establishments like Blackbird, and new restaurant Sepia.
And, just two days earlier, she had met with Mayor Richard Daley to tell him about the Edible Schoolyard, her project at Berkeley's Martin Luther King Junior Middle School. The program engages children in every aspect of their school lunch, from growing food in an organic garden, to cooking and eating together, and integrating it into the curriculum wherever possible.
It's a cause she has championed tirelessly, and, as she told Daley in her persuasive and fluttering tone, she wanted them in every school in the city.
"Chicago has a benevolent dictatorship," she said later, when recounting details of the meeting. "By the time we were finished, the mayor had agreed to put edible schoolyards in six schools - one for each Chicago district." She was elated.
"Now it's up to us," she urged audiences throughout the weekend, "to stay on top of it and make it happen."
But with the exception of a devoted crowd at a fundraiser to benefit Slow Food (Waters is vice president of the international organization), the audiences weren't particularly sizable. Though a book-signing event at a cafe in the suburbs on Wednesday drew a bigger crowd and the Green City Market was bustling with fans on Saturday morning, a Thursday night signing at the Borders on Michigan Avenue was downright dismal, with only 16 people. Furthermore, a weekend lecture at Northwestern University filled fewer than a quarter of the hall's 800 seats. Rapt audience
Those who did attend the events, however, were engaged and curious. Many nodded furiously or scribbled copious notes. Some were either Chez Panisse or Waters devotees, while others, seemingly new in their quests for a healthier, more responsible lifestyle, had recently discovered the 63-year old dynamo as the guru.
Linda Pas, director of health services at School of the Art Institute of Chicago, recounted how she had been trying to figure out a way to encourage students to cook and eat better.
"I had never heard of Alice, but was going through an old Bon Appetit magazine a few months ago and found an article about her," said Pas, "so I brought it to the faculty. I've been researching her work ever since."
Pas, front and center, was visibly inspired by Waters' words.
Other audience members knew little about her philosophy - one woman at the Borders event insisted she was missing out if she didn't make it to the local branch of a Hawaiian-based chain restaurant.
Waters admitted that she had hoped for a better student turnout, since she feels they're the best medium to bring her message to the masses.
"The 18- to 25-year-olds are environmentally conscious," more so than any other age group, she said, adding that these were the people most concerned with going green. "There is a whole counter-culture movement going on right now, and we need to appeal to the student activists to get the word out."
She also feels strongly that people not dwell on the calories and compounds in food, but on the whole, real ingredients that go into making the type of dishes that people can sit down and eat together. It's why she wrote "The Art of Simple Food."
Her longtime message is one that seems to resonate with the new generation of chefs, especially in the Bay Area but also in the Midwest.
"There's a serious focus on integrity of product, and maintaining honesty in the food we create," said Chris Kronner, the 25-year-old chef of Slow Club in San Francisco. "What she did and what (Chez Panisse) does has had a huge influence in the Bay Area. It has become commonplace now, but can be attributed to her."
And in Chicago, the unassuming attitude, dedication to sustainable and local ingredients, and passion that went into a simple lunch at Lula Cafe brought Waters to tears.
"This really gives me hope," she said, sipping from a bowl of silken tomato bisque.
But what about restaurants like Alinea or Moto, where ingredients are made into something they're not - where pillows of lavender air, cinnamon perfume, and sushi rolls that look like spaghetti and meatballs grace the menus?
"The only difference between Chez Panisse and my restaurant is the way the food looks," says Moto chef Homaru Cantu. A native of Portland, Ore., Cantu recalls that his first fine dining experience took place at Chez Panisse on his 16th birthday, and Waters' philosophy has guided him just as much as his desire to experiment and create new things.
"Ordering organically is like getting unleaded versus leaded gas at this point," he says. "It's just what we do," speculating that his fellow chefs follow the same principles. Six degrees of Alice
It's a trickle-down effect. Watching Waters in a new city is like playing the "Alice" version of the Kevin Bacon game, although it often takes even less than six degrees of separation to connect Waters with all of the food-conscious changes taking place.
I ran into a few old friends at the Green City Market, the city's most well-known organic farmers' market, on Saturday morning. They had never heard of Waters, but they come to the market every Saturday morning. What they did not know was that the market was organized by Abby Mandel, a local chef, cookbook author and journalist. And it was at Waters' urging that Mandel kept to her organic, sustainable and local principles.
As Waters says, "I like to connect with people who will use a loudspeaker to get the message out." And she has many like-minded visionaries. But it's the dollars that still count the most.
"We wouldn't be able to do the edible schoolyard if it weren't funded by the Chez Panisse Foundation," says Waters, referring to the organization she founded as a way to concentrate on better school lunch programs and curriculum. It takes $450,000 a year to keep her Berkeley program running. That's a pretty tall order.
In the Midwest, there are other obstacles as well. I was able to coerce two people from my original e-mail to forgo the Cubs pre-game to attend Waters' lecture. As the crowd filed out, they voiced their frustrations.
"It's really inspiring," said 25-year old teacher Carly Leavitt, "but how are we supposed to get fresh fruits and vegetables all year-round here?"
Dana Abrams, a 24-year old social worker, added, "This is a very urban city, and it's hard to have access to the produce from rural areas."
Both agreed that while they saw the value in educating younger kids, it was difficult to find the motivation to change their own eating habits, especially given the expense of buying local and organic ingredients.
Throughout the weekend, others voiced similar concerns, but Waters was ready with an arsenal of rebuttals.
Winter? No problem. Plan ahead. Can tomatoes, pickle vegetables, preserve fruit. Enjoy nuts, dried fruits and grains. Start a greenhouse. It's all possible.
Most would call this an idealistic fantasy. Maybe, but in the 36 years she's been fighting for her cause, she's seen enough progress to keep her going, and her message hasn't changed. She wants a healthier, happier America, accomplished by eating delicious food, and eating together.
"Good food sends positive ripples through the community," says Waters, and she's intent on providing the means and ideas to make that happen. Reality check
As we drove through the city, Waters' thumb slid effortlessly over the face of her new iPhone. She looked every bit the part of the modern, accomplished celebrity. And in many ways, she is. But as we passed a McDonald's the size of an airport terminal, her face fell.
"Will you look at this?" she said, shaking her head in dismay.
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter to Waters that 36 people on a mass e-mail don't know her name. She just hopes that they're eating well.
But as long as fast food chains are still taking up full city blocks, she has her work cut out for her.
E-mail Amanda Gold at agold@sfchronicle.com.
Copyright 2007 SF Chronicle
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Five Easy Ways to Go Organic (NYT)

While surfing the NY times, I found this article on Organic food. I believe my readers would find it quite informative.
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Five Easy Ways to Go Organic
Got organic milk? (Tony Cenicola/The New York Times)Switching to organic is tough for many families who don’t want to pay higher prices or give up their favorite foods. But by choosing organic versions of just a few foods that you eat often, you can increase the percentage of organic food in your diet without big changes to your shopping cart or your spending.
The key is to be strategic in your organic purchases. Opting for organic produce, for instance, doesn’t necessarily have a big impact, depending on what you eat. According to the Environmental Working Group, commercially-farmed fruits and vegetables vary in their levels of pesticide residue. Some vegetables, like broccoli, asparagus and onions, as well as foods with peels, such as avocados, bananas and oranges, have relatively low levels compared to other fruits and vegetables.
So how do you make your organic choices count? Pediatrician Dr. Alan Greene, whose new book “Raising Baby Green” explains how to raise a child in an environmentally-friendly way, has identified a few “strategic” organic foods that he says can make the biggest impact on the family diet.
1. Milk: “When you choose a glass of conventional milk, you are buying into a whole chemical system of agriculture,'’ says Dr. Greene. People who switch to organic milk typically do so because they are concerned about the antibiotics, artificial hormones and pesticides used in the commercial dairy industry. One recent United States Department of Agriculture survey found certain pesticides in about 30 percent of conventional milk samples and low levels in only one organic sample. The level is relatively low compared to some other foods, but many kids consume milk in large quantities.
2. Potatoes: Potatoes are a staple of the American diet — one survey found they account for 30 percent of our overall vegetable consumption. A simple switch to organic potatoes has the potential to have a big impact because commercially-farmed potatoes are some of the most pesticide-contaminated vegetables. A 2006 U.S.D.A. test found 81 percent of potatoes tested still contained pesticides after being washed and peeled, and the potato has one of the the highest pesticide contents of 43 fruits and vegetables tested, according to the Environmental Working Group.
Go organic with kid favorites like peanut butter. (Lars Klove/The New York Times)3. Peanut butter: More acres are devoted to growing peanuts than any other fruits, vegetable or nut, according to the U.S.D.A. More than 99 percent of peanut farms use conventional farming practices, including the use of fungicide to treat mold, a common problem in peanut crops. Given that some kids eat peanut butter almost every day, this seems like a simple and practical switch. Commercial food firms now offer organic brands in the regular grocery store, but my daughter loves to go to the health food store and grind her own peanut butter.
4. Ketchup: For some families, ketchup accounts for a large part of the household vegetable intake. About 75 percent of tomato consumption is in the form of processed tomatoes, including juice, tomato paste and ketchup. Notably, recent research has shown organic ketchup has about double the antioxidants of conventional ketchup.
Organic apples are readily available. (The New York Times)5. Apples: Apples are the second most commonly eaten fresh fruit, after bananas, and they are also used in the second most popular juice, after oranges, according to Dr. Greene. But apples are also one of the most pesticide-contaminated fruits and vegetables. The good news is that organic apples are easy to find in regular grocery stores.
For a complete list of Dr. Greene’s strategic organic choices, visit Organic Rx on his website.
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/10/22/five-easy-ways-to-go-organic/
Sunday, October 14, 2007
High Tea, India Style

My friend Mr, Hom from Collaboration360 Consultants is a big Aficionado of Asian tea . Sent me this article on Indian tea.
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October 14, 2007
High Tea, India Style
By MATT GROSS
THE Himalayas rose almost out of nowhere. One minute the Maruti Suzuki hatchback was cruising the humid plains of West Bengal, palm trees and clouds obscuring the hills to come; the next it was navigating a decrepit road that squiggled up through forests of cypress and bamboo. The taxi wheezed with the strain of the slopes, and the driver honked to alert unseen vehicles to our presence one miscalculation, one near miss, could send the little car over the edge and down thousands of feet, returning us to the plains below in a matter of seconds.
For an hour or more, as we climbed ever higher, all I saw was jungle trees and creepers on either side of us, with hardly a village to break the anxious monotony. Finally, though, somewhere around 4,000 feet, the foliage opened just enough to allow a more expansive view. From the edge of the road, the hills flowed up and down and back up, covered with low, flat-topped bushes that looked like green scales on a sleeping dragon's flanks. Tiny dots marched among the bushes and along the beige dirt tracks that zigzagged up the hillsides workers plucking leaves from Camellia sinensis, the tea bushes of Darjeeling.
Flying to a remote corner of India and braving the long drive into the Himalayas may seem like an awful lot of effort for a good cup of tea, but Darjeeling tea isn't simply good. It's about the best in the world, fetching record prices at auctions in Calcutta and Shanghai, and kick-starting the salivary glands of tea lovers from London to Manhattan.
In fact, Darjeeling is so synonymous with high-quality black tea that few non-connoisseurs realize it's not one beverage but many: 87 tea estates operate in the Darjeeling district, a region that sprawls across several towns (including its namesake) in a mountainous corner of India that sticks up between Nepal and Bhutan, with Tibet not far to the north.
Each has its own approach to growing tea, and in a nod to increasingly savvy and adventurous consumers, a few have converted bungalows into tourist lodging, while others are accepting day visitors keen to learn the production process, compare styles and improve their palates a teetotaler's version of a Napa Valley wine tour, but with no crowds.
Still, such a trip requires a certain amount of fortitude, as I discovered when I set out to blaze a trail from estate to estate last March, during the first flush harvest, said to produce the most delicate, flavorful leaves. (The second flush, in May and June, is really just as good.) It wasn't just the roads once marvels of engineering, now tracks of terror that produce daily news reports of fatal plunges that made the journey a challenge. It was the egos.
The men who run the estates are royalty and they know it. When visiting their domains, you are at their disposal, not the other way around. At times, this can be frustrating; at others, delightfully frustrating.
I HAD my first such encounter the latter sort at Makaibari, an estate just south of the town of Kurseong, around 4,500 feet above sea level. Founded by G. C. Banerjee in the 1840s, during the region's first great wave of tea cultivation, Makaibari remains a family operation, run by Banerjee's great-grandson Swaraj better known as Rajah.
Rajah is a Darjeeling legend: He's arguably done more for Darjeeling tea than anyone else in the district. Back in 1988, he took the estate organic; four years later, it was fully biodynamic, the first in the world.
Today, it produces the most expensive brew in Darjeeling, a muscatel that sold for 50,000 rupees a kilogram (about $555 a pound, at recent exchange rates of around 41 rupees to the dollar) at auction in Beijing last year. You won't often spot his logo a five-petaled flower that resembles the underside of a tea blossom on grocery store shelves, but you'll find his leaves in boxes marked Tazo and Whole Foods.
After checking into one of the six no-frills bungalows he has erected for tourists, I marched into the Makaibari factory (opened in 1859), climbed the wooden steps to Mr. Banerjee's office and sat down across the desk from a vigorous patrician with thick gray hair, a clean-shaven angular jaw and black eyebrows in permanent ironic arch. What, he asked, smoking a borrowed cigarette, did I hope to accomplish at Makaibari?
Well, I began, as the smell of brewing leaves wafted in from the adjacent tasting room, I guess I'd like to see how tea is made.
Ha! You've come to the wrong place for that, Mr. Banerjee declared with an eager grin. This is the place to see how tea is enjoyed!
Then he poured me a cup bright but mellow, with a faint fruity sweetness that lingered on my tongue. It was to be the first of many perfect cups.
Enjoying tea at Makaibari was an involved business, one that began before I'd even woken up. At 7:30 every morning, a knock would come at the door of my bungalow, and Mr. Lama, the grandfatherly caretaker, would present me with a cup of fresh, hot bed tea, which I'd sip groggily before leaving my woolen blankets for the chilly mountain air.
At breakfast in the glassed-in common room, more tea, after which I'd march down to the factory. On one side of the road were the dragon's green flanks. On the other, the red, white, yellow and blue prayer flags of a tin-roofed Buddhist monastery fluttered in the Himalayan breeze. Uniformed children on their way to school would shout Hello! while their parents, many of them Makaibari employees, would put their palms together and quietly say, Namaste.
In Makaibari's wood-paneled offices, I'd have a cup while waiting for Mr. Banerjee to arrive it was with him, not some hospitality manager, that I would plan my days. Sometimes he'd show up early, other days late, but the office was filled with memorabilia with which to pass the time: portraits of Mr. Banerjee's father, grandfather and great-grandfather; certificates announcing new record prices; a chart of tea-tasting vocabulary; and a small tea plant that concealed two tea devas, curious insects whose bodies mimic the shape and color of a tea leaf.
After making his entrance sometimes on his black gelding, Storm, but always wearing a high-waisted safari suit he designed himself Mr. Banerjee would expound on everything from Rudolf Steiner's biodynamic farming theories to the fall of Atlantis to his youth on Carnaby Street in London, where he made a fortune before retreating to Darjeeling to grow tea.
Eventually, we'd move into the tasting room, where Mr. Banerjee would inspect the day's production. No tea bags here this was SFTGFOP, the labels noted: super-fine tippy golden flowery orange pekoe, the healthy, unbroken leaves from the very top of the bush. Earlier, an assistant had weighed out precisely two grams from several batches, steeped them in nearly boiling water for five minutes, and strained the tea into white ceramic bowls.
As with wine, tasting tea is no simple process of gulping and grading. Mr. Banerjee first inspected the infused leaves for color and nose, and only then sipped from each bowl, inhaling sharply to oxidate the liquid and release its flavors, and sloshing it loudly around his mouth before spitting it into a nearby tub. Then, with hardly a moment's hesitation, he'd move on to the next bowl, and the next, and the next.
Then it was my turn.
Taste those two, Mr. Banerjee ordered the first day, and tell me which you prefer.
I did as he said. Both had the gentle floral aroma typical of first-flush Darjeelings, but the second had a pronounced strength and astringency that appealed to me, even though I knew that Darjeeling growers try for subtlety over punch. I told him my decision.
Bah! he said after resampling them. That one only has undertones of peach. The first one has peach flavors and is much more complex. It's far superior!
I blushed I had much to learn. And for the next few days, I studied hard.
First, I followed the tea pickers mostly ethnic Nepali women into the fields, where they spent all morning and all afternoon moving across the steep slopes like mountain goats, with bamboo baskets on their backs. Dui path, ek suiro was what they plucked two leaves, a bud slowly transforming each bush from bright yellowish green to the deep sheen of the older leaves.
In the factory, massive steel machines were turning the harvest into drinkable tea by the orthodox method. After 16 to 20 hours in withering troughs that remove much of their moisture, the fresh leaves go into rollers that curl them into precise formations once achieved only by hand. Then comes the fermentation, during which the tea develops its flavor, becoming a half-fermented oolong or a fully fermented black tea. Next the tea is fired baked to stop the fermentation, and the leaves are sorted, graded, packed and sent to the tasting room for Mr. Banerjee's approval.
One day, he asked his manager, Deb Majumder, to bring me into the inner sanctum, the room where he prepares his special biodynamic fertilizer ingredients: oak bark, valerian flower, chamomile, dandelion. Another, quartz crystal, is ground up and mixed with large quantities of water in direct sunlight, supposedly absorbing cosmic energy and transferring it to the crops.
At first, Mr. Majumder said, I didn't think it would work. I thought things would go down. But after a few years, things began to improve.
The harvest increased, but he said he noticed other benefits: two troublemakers assigned to mix the quartz solution calmed down and became friendly, a result perhaps of the cosmic energy.
After a few days of studying tea, exploring Makaibari's hundreds of acres of wilderness and devouring home-style vegetarian meals, it was time to move on. For one thing, other teas were awaiting my taste buds, but I was also growing uncomfortable in my bare-bones bungalow, with its low-wattage lamps and frequent water problems. (Mr. Banerjee is in negotiations with hotel companies to turn the bungalows into an upscale eco-resort.)
A COUPLE of days later, however, I found myself no more relaxed. Instead, I was on a spine-shaking early-morning jeep ride down the worst roads I'd yet experienced. In 90 minutes, we'd traveled only 20 miles from Darjeeling town, the gritty, urban heart of the district, and I could hardly imagine a pleasant ending to the journey.
Then we reached an oasis, Glenburn. This century-old planter's house, meticulously restored, stood on the edge of a plateau, its porch, strewn with sofas and chairs, looking out to the terraced slopes of the valley. The suites were vast, kitted out in teak club chairs and four-poster beds that evoked the Raj.
Breakfast had just begun, a fabulous spread of fresh-baked croissants with pomelo marmalade, a spicy Parsi scrambled egg dish, bacon, sausage, papaya, custard apple, orange juice. ... I sat down among the other guests, a mix of 10 Indians, Britons and Americans, and gorged in bliss.
The man responsible for Glenburn's tea was Sanjay Sharma, 33, whose self-satisfied smile suggested he was well on his way to developing a Rajah-size ego. And perhaps with good reason at 28, he was appointed estate manager, the youngest ever in Darjeeling, he said. He has tried to push the production in new directions, and he asserted that Glenburn now ranked No. 17 in the district.
In my limited experience, it could have been No. 2 after Makaibari. Mr. Sharma's first-flush teas had that wonderful flowery scent and a long, lingering aftertaste, with just a hint of bite.
Alas, Glenburn was booked, so I endured the jackhammer trip back to Darjeeling, consoled by a single thought: soon, I'd be checking into Goomtee, a resort recommended by Nathmull's, the best tea shop in Darjeeling.
In terms of luxury, Goomtee stood somewhere between Makaibari and Glenburn. The comfy planter's house recalled 1950 rather than 1850, with huge rooms and a garden of azaleas in purplish bloom, and since the owners of the cypress-dotted estate were strict vegetarians, so were the guests myself and four Japanese women from a tea-appreciation society. After checking in and getting a traditional welcome dollop of green-tinted rice pressed to my forehead, I followed them and their translator to the fields.
And I began to fade. Maybe it was that I'd seen too many tea bushes, maybe that I couldn't understand Japanese, maybe that later I once again found myself waiting in the office of another estate manager, wondering if I'd ever get a taste of his leaves.
I was about to drop off entirely when an assistant brought in a full tea service and poured us each a cup. I sipped. This is what they mean by brisk, a bright flavor that fills your mouth and wakes you right up.
Oishii! the women cooed. So tasty!
I soon learned more about briskness, when I set off one morning for Muscatel Valley, Goomtee's far-flung organic fields. It was a more serious hike than I'd expected, about four and a half miles up narrow, rocky paths that eventually led to an awe-inspiring landscape.
If Makaibari had been wild and Glenburn a fantasyland, then Muscatel Valley was positively prehistoric, with massive stone outcroppings amid lonely fields of tea bushes stretching into the Jurassic distance. Sunlit mist shrouded the far mountains, and all traces of civilization vanished. There was nothing but me and the tea.
When I returned to my room, I flopped down in exhaustion. It wasn't the hike, though: I was tea'd out.
How, I wondered, could these professionals differentiate among the infinitely subtle gradations of flavor and scent? What stuck in my mind was the tea-ness of tea, floral aroma, hints of fruit and wood on the palate, and a fragile astringency that buzzed in my mouth long after the liquid had gone down. But which cup had that been, the Makaibari or the Glenburn? Or had I just imagined it?
A day later, on a slow Internet connection, I received an instant message from a friend in New York: Could I bring her some first flush?
It's for a dear friend from Darjeeling, she wrote. He's dying, and he hasn't lived in India for more than 60 years, but he still dreams about the tea.
I had a mission. On my way home, I bought a wooden box of Makaibari's first flush and delivered it to my friend soon after my return. A few weeks later, she forwarded me her 97-year-old friend's thank-you e-mail note.
It was so precious, he wrote, that I shared part of it with the Namgyal Monastery in Ithaca, N.Y. The beautiful little casket of tea now sits at the feet of the monastery's Buddha, he added, and in the major pujas to come, it is your gift that will be brewed.
Prayer ceremonies in the Finger Lakes, I thought: a fitting end for this tiny box of fragrant leaves. Namaste to that.
VISITOR INFORMATION
HOW TO GET THERE
Continental Airlines has daily direct flights from Newark to New Delhi; round trips start about $1,250 in early November. From New Delhi, Jet Airways (www.jetairways.com), Indian Airlines (www.indianairlines.in) and Air Deccan (www.flyairdeccan.net) fly to Bagdogra Airport near Siliguri, about 50 miles from Darjeeling.
The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway or Toy Train a quaint, steam-powered narrow-gauge railway will get you to Darjeeling town in seven hours from Siliguri; first-class tickets are 247 rupees; second-class, 38 rupees (about $6 and $1, at 41 rupees to the dollar).
A taxi ride will take three hours and cost 700 to 1,000 rupees. Hotels or tea estates can arrange for one.
VISITING THE TEA ESTATES
Makaibari (91-354-233-0181; www.makaibari.org) charges 750 rupees a person a night or 1,400 rupees for two, all meals included. Reservations can be made through its Calcutta office (91-33-2287-8560). Homestays with Makaibari workers can also be arranged.
Those seeking more comfortable lodging can book Cochran Place (132 Pankhabari Road, Kurseong; 91-354-233-0703; www.imperialchai.com), a colonial-style lodge about 15 minutes' walk from Makaibari. Doubles range from 2,200 to 3,700 rupees with breakfast, but 50 percent less during monsoon season, mid-August to mid-September. Cochran Place will also arrange tours of Ambootia, another organic estate.
Glenburn (91-33-2288-5630; www.glenburnteaestate.com) charges non-Indians $400 a night for two, all meals included; day trips from $50 a person, including transportation. Glenburn will arrange helicopter arrivals for those unwilling to brave the bumpy journey.
Reservations for Goomtee (www.darjeelingteas.com) are handled by Girish Sarda at Nathmull's Tea Room in Darjeeling (91-354-233-5066). Doubles are 5,600 rupees a night, all meals included.
The best place to stay in Darjeeling town is the Elgin (91-354-225-4082; www.elginhotels.com). Doubles with all meals are 6,445 rupees. It offers quite a nice high tea every afternoon (250 rupees).
BUYING TEA
Every estate sells its own tea at a good price, but for the full spectrum, head to Nathmull's Tea Room (Laden La Road, Darjeeling; 91-354-225-6437; www.nathmulltea.com). It sells the best of the district, except Makaibari.
MATT GROSS writes the Frugal Traveler column for the Travel section.
http://travel.nytimes.com/2007/10/14/travel/14Tea.html?
Sunday, October 7, 2007
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Saturday, October 6, 2007
From the Kitchen Table of Global Delights

I have been busy with current and future clients. Have not had any time to update my blog.
The last few months, have been interviewing my West Coast friends (who are foodies and food professionals) about their favorite comfort food.
After many months of interviewing, compiled a list of what they like. Will have this list on the blog sometime this month.
One of those items is a grilled cheese sandwich. I like my grilled cheese with slices of garlic chicken (my preference is chicken breast fillet) on wheat bread or Sourdough bread. Like to add my secret seasoning of thyme, parsley, mustard spice and some other good stuff.
My side dishes are roasted cauliflower and mushrooms and a bowl of tomato soup.
Whenever I have time, will take a picture of it.
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Following is a New York Times article on grilled cheese.

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In my next entry, will talk about my friend's favorite recipe of Chinese Chicken Noodle Soup and some of our latest entries to our International Party menu.
Some of those new entries are: Apple Strudel, Old-Fashioned Apple Crispy, Chocolate Banana Bread Puddings, Chocolate Chip Banana Bread, Crepes and a few of my favorite Asian dishes of global delight.
Friday, September 21, 2007
International Party Menu (1a)

Cheesy Chicken Party Special

Chinese Onion Pancakes

Homemade Baked Potato Chips
with Honey mustard dip
Homemade Baked Sweet Potato Chips
with Brown Mustard dip
Homemade Chocolate Chip Cookies
Home made Oatmeal Cookies
with Apple bits
Home made Oatmeal Cookies
with Raisins and Coconut

Click here for pg #2
International Party Menu (1b)

Mini- Burmese Sticky Rice Balls
Mini- Wheat Bagel
with French Toast Batter
and apple bits
(include Blueberry or Maple Syrup)
Nachos w. Thai Sauce
Pot Stickers

Rumaki

Spring Rolls

Vegetarian Spring Rolls
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For the party of 6 to 10, we
recommend a six item package.
We also have a eight item package
for a minimum party of 12.
If you are interested and want
more information, please contact us at
globaldelights[aat]gmail[dott]com
Please substitute [aat] with @ and [dott] with . !
Click here for Pg #1
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Indy Party Menu


Chinese Onion Pancake

Spring Eggroll (include Chicken and Pork)

The above menu is a six item package.
We also have a eight item package
for a minimum party of 10.
If you are interested in our services and want
more information, contact us at
globaldelights[aat]gmail[dott]com
Please substitute [aat] with @ and [dott] with . !
--- More to Come ---