A 'Green' Fine Foods Co.


Delyte’s is proud to be members of 'Slow Food' and are champions of sustainable farming, organic and regional produce. This belief has inspired us to create delicious, soul-nourishing foods... SO DIG IN & Welcome to our blog.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Op-Ed Columnist "Food for the Soul"


I READ THIS ARTICLE THIS MORNING AND WOULD LIKE TO SHARE IT WITH ALL OF YOU!

New York Times- By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF


On a summer visit back to the farm here where I grew up, I think I figured out the central problem with modern industrial agriculture. It’s not just that it produces unhealthy food, mishandles waste and overuses antibiotics in ways that harm us all.

More fundamentally, it has no soul.

The family farm traditionally was the most soulful place imaginable, and that was the case with our own farm on the edge of the Willamette Valley. I can’t say we were efficient: for a time we thought about calling ourselves “Wandering Livestock Ranch,” after our Angus cattle escaped in one direction and our Duroc hogs in another.

When coyotes threatened our sheep operation, we spent $300 on a Kuvasz, a breed of guard dog that is said to excel in protecting sheep. Alas, our fancy-pants new sheep dog began her duties by dining on lamb.

It’s always said that if a dog kills one lamb, it will never stop, and so the local rule was that if your dog killed one sheep you had to shoot it. Instead we engaged in a successful cover-up. It worked, for the dog never touched a lamb again and for the rest of her long life fended off coyotes heroically.

That kind of diverse, chaotic family farm is now disappearing, replaced by insipid food assembly lines.

The result is food that also lacks soul — but may contain pathogens. In the last two months, there have been two major recalls of ground beef because of possible contamination with drug-resistant salmonella. When factory farms routinely fill animals with antibiotics, the result is superbugs that resist antibiotics.

Michael Pollan, the food writer, notes that monocultures in the field result in monocultures in our diets. Two-thirds of our calories, he says, now come from just four crops: rice, soy, wheat and corn. Fast-food culture and obesity are linked, he argues, to the transformation from family farms to industrial farming.

In fairness, industrial farming is extraordinarily efficient, and smaller diverse family farms would mean more expensive food. So is this all inevitable? Is my nostalgia like the blacksmith’s grief over Henry Ford’s assembly lines superseding a more primitive technology? Perhaps, but I’m reassured by one of my old high school buddies here in Yamhill, Bob Bansen. He runs a family dairy of 225 Jersey cows so efficiently that it can still compete with giant factory dairies of 20,000 cows.

Bob names all his cows, and can tell them apart in an instant. He can tell you each cow’s quirks and parentage. They are family friends as well as economic assets.

“With these big dairies, a cow means nothing to them,” Bob said. “When I lose a cow, it bothers me. I kick myself.” That might seem like sentimentality, but it’s also good business and preserves his assets.

American agriculture policy and subsidies have favored industrialization and consolidation, but there are signs that the Obama administration Agriculture Department under Secretary Tom Vilsack is becoming more friendly to small producers. I hope that’s right.

One of my childhood memories is of placing a chicken egg in a goose nest when I was about 10 (my young scientist phase). That mother goose was thrilled when her eggs hatched, and maternal love is such that she never seemed to notice that one of her babies was a neckless midget.

As for the chick, she never doubted her goosiness. At night, our chickens would roost high up in the barn, while the geese would sleep on the floor, with their heads tucked under their wings. This chick slept with the goslings, and she tried mightily to stretch her neck under her wing. No doubt she had a permanent crick in her neck.

Then the fateful day came when the mother goose took her brood to the water for the first time. She jumped in, and the goslings leaped in after her. The chick stood on the bank, aghast.

For the next few days, mother and daughter tried to reason it out, each deeply upset by the other’s intransigence. After several days of barnyard trauma, the chick underwent an identity crisis, nature triumphed over nurture, and she redefined herself as a hen.

She moved across the barn to hang out with the chickens. At first she still slept goose-like, and visited her “mother” and fellow goslings each day, but within two months she no longer even acknowledged her stepmother and stepsiblings and behaved just like other chickens.

Recollections like that make me wistful for a healthy rural America composed of diverse family farms, which also offer decent and varied lives for the animals themselves (at least when farm boys aren’t conducting “scientific” experiments). In contrast, a modern industrialized operation is a different world: more than 100,000 hens in cages, their beaks removed, without a rooster, without geese or other animals, spewing out pollution and ending up as so-called food — a calorie factory, without any soul. By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Thanks for reading.. thanks for visiting our blog. Now be off, forage good clean food and drag your family to the table as often as possible to break bread!

bon appetite mon amies
leah

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

Mastering The Art of French Cooking, in Temecula



40, is that old?

You know Julia was in her 40'a when she learned to cook.
It was 8 years, until she saw light at the end of the tunnel for Mastering The Art Of French Cooking.

Do we hold onto our dreams to a point that they cloud our vision? Or do we trudge upward and onward, wooden spoon in hand, pots banging, lobsters dieing, ducks to be trussed & mouths to feed. Well dear ones, give this old girl a glass of wine, a good 'bon appetite' kick in the ass and I'm off to the races again!

Like Julia, I've been working on my very own MTAoFC. Four years in the making - developing a cooking show that makes sex.. I mean sense. Slow, is how I like it. Slow is what so many of us need. If its made in 20 minutes, well I rather not dine. I want real food, real food that taste good, without any short cuts. Speak to my soul, rattle my taste buds. Is there another way? I Think not. I hold steadfast to my ambition of teaching others how to cook with good, clean ingredients in a hearty and very SASSY fashion!

The next Art de Cuisine class coming up for Chef Daragh and I, 'Mother Sauces'. So I am mastering the art of 'Mother Sauces'.. each and every one. The first of the three series is close to my heart- Red or Tomato based sauces. My nonna and grandfather Luigi passed this one down, my mother took her in-laws sauce, and perfected it. Every Friday my momma makes this sauce, and every Sunday I eat her pasta with red sauce- that has cooked, for two days.

Hence, our first of three is scheduled AUGUST 26TH, 2009 6-8PM at Leonesse Cellars.

First class: Red Sauces and from the Mother Sauces of Baking- Creme Anglaise


CLASS MENU
Pesto Sauce
A traditional basil pesto served over ricotta salata & yellow tomato

Marsala Sauce
Organic Chicken Marsala

Marinara
Over hand made Cheese Ravioli

Creme Anglaise
Creme Brulee


The Second Class will be SEPTEMBER 22, 2009 5:45-7:45PM


Second Class - Bechamel

CLASS MENU
Hollandaise/ Bernaise
Eggs Bennie

Veloute
Chicken & Tarragon Vol Au Vent

Bechamel
Cauliflower Gratin

Our third class will focus on emulsification's & Demi Glaze... my heart goes pitter patter, just waiting to be drenched in all that wondrous butter. We will be sure to shoot a bit on video and share our left overs with you! Food never looked so good. Me on the other hand.. well, lets just say I need to lay off the butter (temporarily, of course).

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Monday, August 10, 2009

Meryl Streep Mentions Slow Food on The Colbert Report

Insane weekend at the bistro. Probable fed over 1000... superfooderific!
'Small Bytes Bistro' at Leonesse Cellars is truly not to be missed.. come get saucy with us!

But what is so much cooler (and saucier) is the grand dutchess of the silver screen. Mrs. Meryl Streep, mentions the Slow Food Movement while on The Colbert Report. Check it out foodies..
The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Meryl Streep
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorMeryl Streep

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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Squash Blossom Quesadilla & Panzanella Salad While Listening To ABBA



My 7 year old, miss GiGi Rose, is in love with ABBA and it is the only thing we listen to over and over again, with dancing queen being at the top of the play list. So I am now, "the dancing garden queen". I think I need a T-shirt with this on it! Amusing, if I do say so myself.

I'm dancing my way through the garden, which thanks to GiGi is the only thing keeping me sane in this heat. GiGi says, "Mama Mia" the squash has taken over". It has, and all the cute little squash blossoms are being marched into my kitchen so I can fold them into a flour tortilla with Asiago cheese and make the worlds yummiest quasedilla! How I wonder if Fernando would appreciate this culinary treat. Sing along... "There was something in the air that night, the stars were bright Fernando, they were smiling down at you and me for liberty & Quesadilla's Fernando!"

Seriously, its that simple! Try it, you'll like it, or Fernando (or ABBA) will give you your money back.. ha!

Have I gone off on tear drop tomato's yet? My pop and I have 6 plants that produce 20lbs a week.. off the hook. The sweetness is pure and addictive, even for our schnauzer Nola, who insists on being the tear drop tomato vacuum (man, I hope tomatoes do not give dogs gas!). I have been serving these babies at the bistro at Leonesse. The reaction is great.. people want sides of them, or a basket to buy. I guess I could charge a small fortune for these gems, kind of like popcorn at movies.. you can just get away with it. Which is incredible twisted that I am thinking that way... alias, the heat, if not ABBA, has gotten to me.

Two bitchen recipes for you all.. summer goodness in all things!

Squash Blossom Quesadillas


* 2 flour tortillas- or flax seed
* 1/3 cup Grated or shaved Asiago Cheese
* 6-8 squash blossoms, washed, stems removed (pat dry)

Heat a nonstick (green pan is the healthies for non stick) pan over medium-high heat. Put tortilla in the pan, sprinkle cheese on top, and place the flowers over the cheese. Top with more cheese then the other tortilla and grill 1-2 minutes or until golden brown on the bottom, pressing with spatula a few times. Flip and repeat. Cut into wedges and serve. Garnish with Guacamole and creme fraiche! Easy peasy.. and guests will kiss you for these!

Panzanella Salad


Ingredients:
* 1/2 french baguette, cut into bite-size pieces (any tasty.. bread works as long
as it has crust).
* 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
* 3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
* 1 peeled and mashed clove garlic
* 1/3 cup red onion, cut in julienne (very thin strips), soaked in water and
drained
* 1/4 cup picholine olives, pitted and halved
* 1 cup fresh mozzarella cheese, diced
* Sea Salt
* Freshly ground black pepper
* 1/2 bunch basil & Italian flat leaf parsley
* 1 pound of tear drop tomatoes or mixed heirloom tomatoes- cut into small
chunks
* 1/2 seedless cucumber, diced (I like the lemon cucumbers.. they add so much
color!

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. On a baking sheet, toss the pieces of baguette with 1/4 cup of the oil & tab of butter. Toast until golden brown, 10 to 15 minutes per side. Let cool.

In a medium serving bowl, add the vinegar, garlic, red onion, olives, mozzarella cheese and remaining 1/4 cup oil. Season with sea salt and fresh cracked pepper to taste.

Fifteen minutes before serving, rip the basil into small pieces and add it to the bowl along with the tomato, toasted bread and cucumber. Toss to coat and let sit at room temperature until ready to serve. SO FABULOUS!

Nutrition Facts-
FOR ALL YOU CARB AVOIDERS- use flax bread from Trader Yo Yo's

Information per serving
Calories: 245
Daily Values*
Total Fat: 16g 25
Saturated Fat: 4g 20
Cholesterol: 12mg 4
Sodium: 319mg 13
Total Carbohydrates: 19g 6
Dietary Fiber: 2g 8
Sugar: n/a

Protein: 8g


Well kids, I'ts been fun, but I must go. My spandex, head band, and ruffled blouse call to me. GiGi insists we dance around the living room singing ABBA at the very top of our lungs. Mind you our neighbors sit in front, peering through our windows, eating pop corn, enjoying the show (at least I think they do)!

your truly,
the dancing queen

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