“Epic” S’mores (according to Jim)

Jim, my beloved, strongly suggested that I write a blog post about his “epic” s’more production last Sunday. So, this is for you, Jim. There was fire, chocolate, graham crackers, marshmallows. Yes, the s’mores were very delicious if not “epic.” The combination of a beautiful summer evening, building a fire, individual roasting and assembling, messy outdoor eating, make s’mores a magical and fun family experience. There was a moment of debate about the merits of new square marshmallows versus round marshmallows. I felt the round was better for uniform roasting over an open fire, while Jim sung the merits of the square’s easy consistent assembly over the also square graham crackers and chocolate. It is still an unresolved debate between whether the marshmallow should relate to the stick and fire or the crackers and chocolate. What do you, my fellow hungry philosophers, think?
   
Last weekend Jim also gleefully discovered roasted hatch chilies at our local super market. 

With help from a few boiled tomatillos (probably should’ve roasted those too… Next time), garlic, salt, cilantro, we now have yummy salsa verde waiting to become chicken enchiladas tonight and maybe something else another night.


 Good discovery, Jim. What a busy weekend we had! What are we doing for Labor Day Weekend?

(Food Poem) The Health-Food Diner by Maya Angelou

The Health-Food Diner
No sprouted wheat and soya shoots
And Brussels in a cake,
Carrot straw and spinach raw,
(Today, I need a steak).

Not thick brown rice and rice pilaw
Or mushrooms creamed on toast,
Turnips mashed and parsnips hashed,
(I’m dreaming of a roast).

Health-food folks around the world
Are thinned by anxious zeal,
They look for help in seafood kelp
(I count on breaded veal).

No smoking signs, raw mustard greens,
Zucchini by the ton,
Uncooked kale and bodies frail
Are sure to make me run

to

Loins of pork and chicken thighs
And standing rib, so prime,
Pork chops brown and fresh ground round
(I crave them all the time).

Irish stews and boiled corned beef
and hot dogs by the scores,
or any place that saves a space
For smoking carnivores.

From:

http://www.poemhunter.com/poems/food/

Milk Carton History

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I recently discovered the podcast Food: Non-Fiction where the hosts were discussing the history of the milk carton. Worth a listen if you ever wondered what happened to those wonderful glass milk bottles? Or, if you wondered why were there images of missing children on the paper cartons during the 1980s?

Here is a few interesting facts:

  1. The milk carton essentially developed along with the refrigerator. Its an example of one technology changing related objects. One, following Levi Bryant’s argument in Onto-cartography, could say that the gravity of the refrigerator mediated the shape of the milk carton.
  2. John Von Wormer developed and patented the carton in 1915. It took at least three decades for both the refrigerator and the milk carton to catch on.
  3. I wonder what prompts the gallon milk jugs? Thoughts?
  4. In the future, our refrigerators will be able to scan the bar codes and keep track when our milk spoils.

internet-of-things-5

LG Smart Refrigerator:  https://uxmag.com/articles/the-internet-of-things-and-the-mythical-smart-fridge

Other links:

http://www.foodnonfiction.com/2015/07/designing-milk-carton.html

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/08/the-surprising-history-of-the-milk-carton/260587/

http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/milkcarton.htm

image from http://antiques.lovetoknow.com/Antique_Milk_Bottles

Ugly is not Rotten: Wasteful beauty standards in supermarket food

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Before we blame the supermarkets for wasteful food practices, we must remember that those practices are in place because WE the consumers are complicit. The August 18th BBC news article entitled Is France’s supermarket waste law heading for Europe? cites that according to the French Ministry of Ecology 67% of food is wasted by consumers themselves. I am just as guilty. I have thrown out bananas, fruit with blemishes or squishy parts. Most of the time because I’m lazy and don’t want to take the extra few minutes to cut around bruises. A few days ago we had waffles with fruit toppings: blueberries, strawberries, mangoes and pears. The pears were soft and ripe, I diced them all but alas we did not eat them. In the trash they went. In retrospect, maybe I should’ve made a tart. The mangoes were declared the “best ever.” I pointed out that I had to cut around all the over-ripe and bruised parts to get to the juicy sweet perfect mango flesh. Let that be a lesson to myself. Don’t judge a mango by it’s bruises. In order to eat better, I’ve been buying more produce but I also find I’ve been throwing away a lot too. Mostly, because I don’t shop everyday and super market vegetables spoil quickly.  The number of eaters in my household fluctuates every week, one kid eats yellow peppers, sugar snap peas, the other eats strawberries and bananas, while another eats eggplant and pineapple. They are very hungry for very different tastes almost none of which they can finish on their own. Cravings also fluctuate. One week avocados are adored, other weeks neglected. Some weeks I have more time to cook than others. There are a lot of variables that come between my good waste-less intentions and well… The trash can. I have yet to figure out the optimal way to keep the fridge stocked while wasting little. This as much as a personal struggle as public.

As penance I’ve started to volunteer at Second Helpings. A wonderful Indianapolis organization that functions as a community kitchen making about 2500 meals daily out of rescued food from supermarkets while also offering culinary job  training. (My second shift was today. I spent four hours dicing zucchini and prepping them to be roasted. The scale of the kitchen is impressive. The organization deserves it’s own blog entry in the near future.) Very recently, I threw out some cucumbers that went soft and fuzzy white in my refrigerator bin. Yuck. Sorry cucumbers for not loving you enough. Yes, it was time to volunteer.

Here is my beginning research about food waste. Staggering numbers. According to the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization, “one third of all food produced for human consumption is lost or wasted before it is eaten.” Mindful eating can certainly reduce the number of hungry people and increase the number of hungry philosophers! In theory. The idea leads us back to childhood stories designed to help us finish the food on our plate. But, how does my not wasting food, help feed the hungry?

I’ll learn more before World Food Day: October 16th and report back.

Wishing you mindful and delicious eating,

Hungryphil

http://www.worldfooddayusa.org/food_waste_the_facts

http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-33907737

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-28092034

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/22/france-to-force-big-supermarkets-to-give-away-unsold-food-to-charity

http://thespiritscience.net/2015/05/30/france-has-made-it-illegal-for-supermarkets-to-waste-food-punishable-by-75000-or-jail/

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/05/law-france-supermarkets-food-waste/394481/

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/05/france-food-waste-supermarkets-150522070410772.html

http://www.foodwastemovie.com/about/

http://www.wastedfood.com/

http://www.bonappetit.com/entertaining-style/trends-news/article/fruit-vegetable-beauty-standards

Home

Image from CNN.com

Second Raw Spice Bar Journey: Jamaican Fish Tacos


My June culinary trip courtesy of my subscription to the online spice purveyor, Raw Spice Bar was to Jamaica. With all the summer fun and travel, it was August before we had the chance to use the delicious recipes and accompanying spices. The delightfully light and tropical menu involved jerk fish tacos, mango corn salsa and banana fritters.  The fish tacos were layered with smoky and fresh flavors, as was the ginger corn salsa.  The combination of heat and fruit gave the meal a distinct island feel. Really good. My food writing is not doing the meal justice. The recipes taught me a few new techniques, like grilling the corn in the husk for 20 minutes for the salsa. And, that salsa can have warm, hearty flavors like ginger and paprika. I also learned that white flaky fish can stand up to heavily spiced marinades and the substantive chew of corn salsa. These were not dainty and delicate fish tacos. I have to confess, like my first experiment and trip to Peru, the dessert was not my favorite. But, I was happy to be challenged by the unusual spicy sweet banana fritters. What a wonderful way to spend an Indiana summer evening on the porch with friends tasting far away flavors together! Thank you, Les and Kara for gastronomically traveling to Jamaica with us and bringing the pina coladas.

https://rawspicebar.com/june-jamaican-spice-box/

If as philosopher Levi Bryant writes, “A recipe is a machine that performs operations on a cook, leading that cook, in her turn, to perform certain operations on various cooking utensils and ingredients” then this culinary trip to Jamaica made me mindful of  all the negotiated details that involved the spice packets, the recipe directions, the ingredients, the cooking methods and utensils, the cultural tastes, my skill level and taste preference, online shopping, reliable mail delivery, producers and collectors of the spices, and more. It mediated a different organization of familiar ingredients. I’ll be thinking about the gravity and media of Jamaican Fish Tacos for a while. More later on recipes as machines, ala Levi Bryant’s machine-oriented ontology.

Garden to Table


  

Summer garden bhaji is what I decided to make with my friend Meg’s gift of fresh veggies this week. A bhaji is basically a stir fry of shredded vegetables with turmeric, onions and other spices ( if desired). Meg’s garden bhaji was a combination of cabbage, green peppers and okra. I added the juicy red cherry tomatoes to a dry shrimp sauté. Some simple dal, lentil soup and rice complete deshi dinner night. Stir fry or bhaji is an easy solution to having little bits of a variety of vegetables.  A good wok is worth having in a busy kitchen. Mine just lives on my stove. This garden to table dinner is a product of west Lafayette, good friends who garden, south Asian cooking techniques and spices. Its a dinner that reminds me of my friend down the street with her bountiful garden, my Bhabi (sister-in-law) who first  taught me how to make a bhaji, my baby girl’s craving for “home food,” my southern-raised beloved’s request for dal and how I need to make this for my vegetarian, Indian-food aware friend, Kathy.  Food is magic in its ability to bring such diversity together, just like a mixed vegetable bhaji. 

Who inspires your dinner plate tonight?

Splitting an Order – Food Poem by Ted Kooser

I like to watch an old man cutting a sandwich in half,
maybe an ordinary cold roast beef on whole wheat bread,
no pickles or onion, keeping his shaky hands steady
by placing his forearms firm on the edge of the table
and using both hands, the left to hold the sandwich in place,
and the right to cut it surely, corner to corner,
observing his progress through glasses that moments before
he wiped with his napkin, and then to see him lift half
onto the extra plate that he had asked the server to bring,
and then to wait, offering the plate to his wife
while she slowly unrolls her napkin and places her spoon,
her knife and her fork in their proper places,
then smoothes the starched white napkin over her knees
and meets his eyes and holds out both old hands to him.

“Splitting an Order” by Ted Kooser from Splitting an Order. © Copper Canyon Press, 2014. From the Writer’s Almanac

http://writersalmanac.org/page/2/

Visualizing Hungryphil: An Exercise of Food and Design

For the past few years this blog has been my space to play with tastes, images and thoughts that relate food, design and philosophy. You, my gracious readers, have endured the thematic restlessness between inauthentic recipes, food poems, food writing excerpts and random questioning. Still, sometimes I don’t know how to explain what this blog is about. So, I decided I needed to show it. Design to the rescue! I needed a visual representation of food, design and philosophy that was playful and somewhat irreverent (decidedly not authoritative). I whined and emailed my friend, graphic designer extraordinaire with a wicked sense of humor, David Wischer. Despite  his busy schedule teaching graphic design at the University of Kentucky he came to my rescue. He sent me about 4 initial ideas (which he doesn’t want me to show because he thinks they are not good….sheesh…artists). I assure you, all were funny and well executed ideas. We decided to merge two of the ideas and worked through the color combinations to arrive at this angry, straining to think owl with a fountain pen and steak knife encased by the web address. I love it!

BanuLisaColorSticker

I hope you like it (and the new blog theme) as well. I’m working out the new look, so please forgive awkward moments the next few weeks.

Thinking through the logo design was helpful in focusing my obsession with complex connections between organic and inorganic consumption.  What would your logo look like?

Find David Wischer and his work at:

http://finearts.uky.edu/faculty/art/david-wischer

http://www.davidwischer.com

instagram: @wischer

Cherry Tomatoes – Food Poem by Anne Higgins

IMG_0760

Suddenly it is August again, so hot,
breathless heat.
I sit on the ground
in the garden of Carmel,
picking ripe cherry tomatoes
and eating them.
They are so ripe that the skin is split,
so warm and sweet
from the attentions of the sun,
the juice bursts in my mouth,
an ecstatic taste,
and I feel that I am in the mouth of summer,
sloshing in the saliva of August.
Hummingbirds halo me there,
in the great green silence,
and my own bursting heart
splits me with life.

“Cherry Tomatoes” by Anne Higgins from At the Year’s Elbow. © Mellen Poetry Press, 2000. from the Writer’s Almanac

http://writersalmanac.org/page/5/

Why Hungry Philosophy?

Its late. My once dull headache now pounds furiously. My mouth, so dry, can no longer hold words. The murmur of bubbling, gurgling emptiness inside now pervades my whole body with an angry pulse. I feel like an imploding star and my stomach growls in angry protest. I am caving in, hungry.

For us fortunate ones, writing in the comfort of a home with a well stocked pantry and fridge, it is difficult to describe the primal animal pangs of hunger. We have the audacity and luxury to ask “what’s for dinner?” They are too many of us who know hunger all too well and are not reading this blog or scouring the net for recipes. It occurs to me that I have yet to explain why “the hungry philosopher.” I have not “known” hunger. I have been an occasional tourist, when fasting or skipping an occasional meal. My few years in Bangladesh, notorious for hungry people, I enjoyed a steady rhythm of four meals a day (including tea) surrounded by lush fruit trees and the heavy scent of sauteing ginger, garlic and onions lazily wafting from the distant kitchen across the veranda. I have seen hunger. It looks like a strange combination of restless anxiety and despondent lethargy. Famed Bangladeshi artist, Zainul Adedin’s depiction of the 1940s famine (now housed in the British Museum) may help visualize.

P19=====012

from http://departmag.com

It is disheartening for me to know that where I live, one of richest countries in the world, dehumanizing hunger is allowed to exist. I am not an expert on hunger and cannot not speak on it’s ruthless behalf. My reference to hunger is perhaps ashamedly cerebral and poetic. Consider this both an apology and a belated explanation.

The hungry philosopher thinks by visualizing and tasting, by confronting primal anxieties through an awareness of life sustaining small things ingested and shared, like kale, bread and blueberries. This is merely an account of my struggle to conjure meaning out of suburban existence marked by grocery at Payless, soccer games on cold wet mornings, weekday afternoon dance classes, rushed dinners, rattling washer-dryers, sink full of dishes and repeat.  No grand Pioneer woman prairie vistas, Anthony Bourdain exotic layovers, Ina Garten Hampton elegance or Giada ocean views. No. This is a bitter cold winter and long summer twilight Mid-western small town. I hunger and long for escape to either exciting coast only to rush back to the safety and ease of the empty Indianapolis airport. We make small meanings here. The popcorn festivals, the farmer’s markets, the ice-cream socials, the community bbqs, the Mainstreet festivals, the school fundraisers, the “diverse world community” celebrations and yes, the family dinner are all a part of that struggle. I once heard there are only one of three reasons to live anywhere: family, job or beauty. Confessedly, for most of the year, beauty is not the reason to live in suburban West Lafayette, Indiana. The charm of sleepy small towns is lost on immigrants, like myself, craving the support of big city economic, racial, religious, sexual diversity and comforting anonymity. This blog is about finding myself in that real and imagined larger world, beyond cosmopolitan cities, across space and time through internet magic. Here you are reading my words. What do we have in common? We are all struggling to make meaning of our everyday through the meals we eat. We are a community of eaters aware of our visceral and virtual dependence on others for emotional and biological sustenance and assurance. The hungry philosopher in all of us is hungry for a plated robust life. I don’t know why you are still generously reading this, except that maybe wherever you are, you are hungry and struggling to plate meaning too. This blog is not about helping you make meaning but helping you recognize that you already are.

I’d like to end with how chef Gabrielle Hamilton’s describes her taste of hunger and why it is the organizing principle of her restaurant having “understood hospitality and care from a recipient’s point of view.” She writes,

I came to see hunger as being as important a part of a stage as knife skills. Because so much of starving on that trip led to such an enormous amount of time fantasizing about food, each craving became fanatically particular. Hunger was not general, ever, for just something, anything, to eat. My hunger grew so specific I could name every corner and fold of it. Salty, warm, brothy, starchy, fatty, sweet, clean and crunchy, crisp and watery, and so on.”