CK Friday Links--July 31, 2009

I've changed the format for this week's links post to make it a faster and tighter read. As always, let me know what you think.

PS: Yep, you can still find me on Twitter.

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Don't let "the fantasy of being thin" make you delay important life experiences. (We Are the Real Deal).

There's a mindless rabble of food blogs out there--and Kate doesn't like it. (Accidental Hedonist)

The authors of Almost Meatless hosted a virtual potluck this week. (Crumbs on My Keyboard, What I Weigh Today)

It's always a pleasure to read a talented blogger's reflections after one year of food blogging. (The Dogs Eat the Crumbs)

I'm a new fan of Kimberly Morales' blog... (Poor Girl Eats Well)

...but I was appalled by the petty and obnoxious comments on her recent profile in the SacBee. (Sacramento Bee)

Most of the recipes on this unpretentious blog are under $1 a serving. (Frugal Healthy Simple)

Yvonne shares thoughts on what to do when things just seem "off" for you in the kitchen. (Cream Puffs in Venice)

Four reasons why Claudia's pesto is better than yours. (cook eat FRET)

The food at Denny's is laced with astounding amounts of sodium, and they've been sued for failing to disclose that fact to diners. (CSPI via Food Politics)

Several interesting examples of psychological manipulation and how to dodge them. (Yes to Me)

Reclaim your time and regain your opinions by giving up TV. (Balanced Life Center)

Recipe Links:
10 "beyond-the-basic" burger recipes, including Peking, Pesto and Moroccan-style burgers. (Dana McCauley's Food Blog)

An easy and laughably cheap spicy chickpea recipe. (Grow. Cook. Eat.)

Your guests will do anything for this Spiced Plum Soup recipe. (5 Second Rule)

The strangest pie recipe you'll ever see: Cauliflower Pie. (Banging on Pots and Pans)

Do you have an interesting article or recipe that you'd like to see featured in Casual Kitchen's Food Links? Send me an email!

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Important Update for Casual Kitchen Readers

An earlier version of this post contained an error: the upcoming Casual Kitchen Giveaway will be Sunday, August 2nd, not the 8th). My apologies for any confusion!
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The next several weeks should be an exciting time here. I've got a lot of things planned for Casual Kitchen, including a redesign of the site, some really good content queued up and ready to go (if I do say so myself), and a really juicy giveaway (tune in for that on Sunday, August 2nd).

Regarding my site redesign, I've been extremely fortunate to work with CPSCreative to design and implement Casual Kitchen's new look, a redesign that quite frankly was overdue and badly needed, especially considering CK's growing audience. I've already seen the preliminaries and I really think you'll love how it looks.

On top of that, I've launched an entirely new blog! It's a blog on writing: how to write well, how to write more efficiently, and how to make the most of the time you have to write. It's called Quick Writing Tips, and all of the content is in the form of extremely brief, twice-a-week posts that you'll be able to read in just a few minutes each.

Writing is one of the great loves of my life, and after spending some twenty years writing on subjects ranging from English literature to technology to stock market investing, I finally felt like I'd amassed enough truly useful insights on the discipline of writing itself to share them in blog format. Please stop by, have a look around, and add Quick Writing Tips to your RSS feedreader!

And to anticipate your next question, don't worry! I'll still be writing for Casual Kitchen just like always.

Thank you, as always, for reading. I hope you enjoy the upcoming changes here at CK as much as I'm looking forward to them!

Dan

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

African Peanut Stew

I'm always happy to support the authors of a good cookbook--and Almost Meatless by Joy Manning and Tara Desmond is one of the best new ones around. So when Joy and Tara asked me to participate in a "virtual potluck" and cook a recipe from their new cookbook with a group of other food bloggers, I was more than happy to say yes.

In fact, I already knew what recipe I wanted to cook--and readers who remember my rabidly positive review of this cookbook can probably guess which one: African Peanut Stew (on page 35, an already well-stained and splattered page!).


In short, this is the kind of recipe that I love. With lots of fresh, healthy ingredients, a fairly simple cooking procedure and a low cost per serving, this stew literally jumps off the page. But the most unexpected selling point of this recipe (and a feature I didn't fully appreciate until I'd actually made the dish) was how flexible and substitution-friendly it is.

As you'll see shortly, this dish calls for okra, a vegetable our grocery store rarely carries. Instead, I substituted fresh green beans. And it worked perfectly.

I had a ton of chicken in the freezer that I got on sale the other week, so I took the liberty of substituting it for the turkey meat specified by the recipe. It also worked perfectly.

And when I saw red bell peppers in our grocery store at $5.99 a pound, an absolute joke of a price in the middle of our summer growing season, I muttered to myself, "screw it, I'm going with green peppers at a fraction of the cost. Nobody's gonna miss a little extra color." That worked too.

It turns out that this dish is so flexible that it allows you to consider all kinds of adaptations and substitutions. You can make this dish with meat or without (try substituting very firm tofu, chickpeas or pink beans in place of turkey or chicken). You can make it spicier by adding extra cayenne pepper (which we did). You can even consider other leafy greens in place of Swiss chard (collards or kale would be excellent, and equally healthy, substitutes).

This kind of flexibility is rare in a recipe, and it provides enormous benefits to the cook. You can choose to follow the recipe as written (after all, the first time you make any new recipe, it's always a good idea to do it by the book), but you can also choose to tailor the dish to the best and most reasonably-priced veggies available to you.

If you can build a collection of recipes that are as flexible and adaptable as this one, you'll find cooking at home much more fun--and much less expensive.

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African Peanut Stew
With permission from Ten Speed Press, from Almost Meatless by Joy Manning and Tara Mataraza Desmond

Ingredients:
2 Tablespoons oil, divided
1 (12-oz) boneless, skinless turkey thigh, cut into strips
1/4 cup water
4 ounces okra, sliced thinly
1 onion, sliced into strips (see below)
4 cups stock
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 teaspoons garam masala
1 cup canned or fresh diced tomatoes
1/2 cup smooth peanut butter
4 cups thinly-sliced swiss chard or red chard
1 small red bell pepper, chopped
1/4 cup roasted salted peanuts, coarsely chopped
6 scallions, thinly sliced


Directions:
1) Heat 1 Tablespoon oil in a large pot or dutch oven on medium high heat. Add the meat and cook for five minutes, until lightly browned. Transfer meat and juices onto a plate.

2) Add the 1/4 cup water and deglaze the pot (see below), scraping up the bits from the bottom. Pour the liquid and bits over the reserved turkey and set aside.

3) Add the other Tablespoon oil to the pot, add the okra (or green beans, in my case) and saute on medium heat for about five minutes. Add the onion and saute for another 5 minutes. Pour in 1/2 cup of the stock and deglaze the bottom of the pot.

4) Add the garlic and cook for about 30 seconds, just until fragrant. Stir in the cayenne, garam masala, tomatoes, peanut butter, reserved meat and juices, remaining stock, and Swiss chard. Simmer over medium-low heat for 45 minutes. Serve over rice and garnish with red (or green, in my case) bell pepper, chopped peanuts and scallions.


Serves 6+.
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A few recipe notes:
1) For those of you who want a quick clinic on how to reduce an onion to a pile of thin strips in just seconds: cut the onion in half from top to bottom, lay each onion half flat side down, and starting along the side of the onion, systematically make cuts through its length, working all the way around the onion. See below:


2) A quick definition of the phrase deglaze the pot: deglazing simply means to add a little liquid to a pot (it can be stock, water or even wine), and then scraping up any bits of browned and caramelized food stuck to the bottom of the pot. The bits of browned food dissolve into the liquid, creating a rich and tasty sauce base, as you can see in the photo below:


3) Because Swiss chard typically comes in enormous bunches at the grocery store, you will have quite a bit left over after making this dish. It's quite delicious chopped up (stems and all) and steamed in a saucepan, and it's one of the most eye-healthy veggies out there.


4) A few words on cost: With the substitutions that I made above, my cost to make this dish came to $9.07, or a laughably cheap per-serving cost of $1.51. Your mileage may vary, but if you were to follow this recipe to the letter, the total cost will be perhaps an extra $3-$5 overall--still quite a reasonable bargain.

5) Finally, let me once again recommend this excellent cookbook to you. If you are looking for healthy, creative and inexpensive meals to cook in your home, consider adding Almost Meatless to your kitchen bookshelf.



Related Posts:
How to Tell if a Recipe is Worth Cooking With Five Easy Questions
How to Modify a Recipe: The Six Rules
Antioxidant Alert! Portuguese Kale and Potato Soup
Three Easy, Delicious and Inexpensive Homemade Salad Dressing Recipes



How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Guess What? We Spend Less Than Ever on Food

It's pretty easy to find articles in the media and in various food blogs complaining (or worse, whining) about how expensive food is these days. But the chart below tells quite a different story:

--chart courtesy of Professor Mark J. Perry's Carpe Diem Blog

This chart says that Americans spent well more than 20% of their disposable income on food during the 1930s and 1940s. Since then, food costs have plummeted relative to our income--so much so that we now spend just 9.6% of our budgets on food.

Now, long-time CK readers know I hate to be faked out by charts that, oh, might be rigged by, say, a biased journalist who massages data to make a point. In order to control for this, please take a look at the source data behind the above chart. You'll be rewarded, because the data gets even more compelling once you explore it a bit further.

The USDA breaks down aggregate food expenditures into two categories: food expenditures at home (includes purchases from grocery stores and other retail outlets as well as purchases with food stamps) and food expenditures away from home (includes meals and snacks purchased by families and individuals).

Over the past eighty years, the food expenditures at home category declined from 20.3% of income to a paltry 5.6% of income. A decline of this magnitude is quite simply remarkable, especially considering that this is the least discretionary portion of our food spending. Imagine our grandparents and great-grandparents spending almost four times as much of their disposable income on food.

Equally intriguing is the food away from home category. This kind of spending is highly discretionary--if we'd like to make meaningful cuts to our food budgets, eliminating a few monthly restaurant meals is the quickest and easiest way to do so. Yet this category of expenditure grew from 3.1% to 4.0% of income. Those numbers may look small, but the key point is this: while our spending on at-home food plummeted, our spending on discretionary away-from-home food increased to nearly half of our overall food spending (4% out of 9.6%). That to me is a staggering insight, and it suggests that we could spend still less--possibly far less--on our overall food budgets by eating out less and eating at home more.

Furthermore, this chart doesn't address the massive range of food choices available to consumers now that were unavailable decades ago. Admittedly, some of these choices include fattening and expensive second-order foods, but that doesn't mean we have to buy them.

A side note: for a shocking perspective on how insanely wealthy we've become as a society, consider the increase in absolute dollars spent on food away from home: it grew from $2.6 billion in 1929 (a local peak, right before the Depression set in) to $422 billion (!) in 2008. That's a 162x increase. The next time you feel like life is unfair, please have another look at these numbers.

All of a sudden, I have a lot more admiration for my grandparents and their era's culture of intelligent thrift.

Readers, what are your thoughts?

Related Posts:
A Recession-Proof Guide to Saving Money on Food

How are You Adjusting to the Economic Crisis? A Question for CK Readers
Ten Tips on How to Cut Your Food Budget Using the 80/20 Rule
How to Enjoy Wine On A Budget
What Have You Given Up That You Don't Miss?
All Casual Kitchen recipes tagged with laughably cheap

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

CK Friday Links--Friday July 24, 2009

Here's yet another selection of particularly interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.

PS: follow me on Twitter!

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The Size 10 Girl's Dilemma at What I Weigh Today
Joy tries to reconcile her ideal weight with the idea of feeling good about herself. This is a thought-provoking article on what it really means to want to be thin.

Faux Pho Consciousness at 30 Bucks a Week
Phil watches the watchers, and calls out one blogger for sanctimoniously criticizing another for wasting food. I love blogger controversies like this because they help us all think a little bit more before we type.

Spending on Food Reaches A New Historical Low at Carpe Diem
A stunning chart shows the shocking decline in household food expenditures as a percent of disposable income from 1929-2008. This is good news, and it belies all the complaints out there that food is too expensive these days. (via Abnormal Returns)

Gourmet and Bon Appetit's Meltdown at Eat Me Daily
Everybody knows that the dead-tree publishing industry is in trouble, but it's shocking to see Bon Appetit's ad pages down 40% year over year, and Gourmet's pages down 52% year over year. And that doesn't even include any likely declines in ad pricing. (PS: Here's the source data--almost every Conde Nast magazine, from Allure to Wired is badly negative.)

Paris in Six Days at BitterSweet
Hannah shows off her amazing photography in a six day food and sight-seeing pictoral of Paris. If you've been there before, these posts will bring back vivid memories, and if you haven't been, this will make you want to go! (Here are the posts in order: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5, Day 6).

Chocolate Mousse Pie at Eats Well With Others
Joanne (briefly) gives up her hardline approach to healthy foods and bakes an easy and sinfully delicious chocolate mousse pie. Must. Make. Take a look at the ingredients and see if you don't agree.

DIY Ginger Beer at Dispensing Happiness
A laughably easy and laughably cheap recipe for one of summer's great thirst quenchers.

Going to Extremes at The Art of Nonconformity
Chris writes a great post on why it pays to say "yes" to the universe. PS: An interesting and provocative debate emerges in the comments.

Fat Bottom Bloggers: Is Your Blog Killing You? at Awake at the Wheel
Jonathan Fields writes a really good post on balancing blogging, fitness and health, and he decrees "never accept physical decline as your inevitable demise."

Predictions About Immigration and Attractiveness at Marginal Revolution
Preposterously off-topic. One of my favorite economics blogs posts some laughably misogynistic (but nonetheless fascinating) musings about male vs. female immigration. Be sure to read some of the testy exchanges in the comments.

Do you have an interesting article or recipe that you'd like to see featured in Casual Kitchen's Food Links? Send me an email!

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Cooking Green by Kate Heyhoe: Making Your Kitchen Greener, Safer--And Saving Money While You're At It.

Casual Kitchen had the good fortune of receiving a review copy of yet another exceptional book: Kate Heyhoe's Cooking Green. As with any book or cookbook I review, my goal is to warn you away from the bad ones and draw your attention to the good ones. Here's another really good one.
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It's easy to write an environmental book that:

a) induces narcolepsy
b) makes you feel guilty
c) grosses you out
d) gives a laundry list of requirements that you must follow
e) does all of the above


Imagine my surprise, then, when I discovered an environmental book about home cooking that does none of the above: Cooking Green by Kate Heyhoe. It's a how-to on reducing your kitchen's environmental impact (or to borrow Kate's phrase, "shrinking your cookprint"), and it ties together many of the food philosophy issues I address here at Casual Kitchen. Best of all, it's so well-written and informative that I can say confidently that it's one of the few environmental book I've ever read that's actually fun to read.

Cooking Green's key gift to readers, however, is its surplus of creative and counterintuitive thinking--and its absolute lack of junk science.

A hypothetical example: let's say you have an old refrigerator that works fine, but you decide to replace it with a new one that runs 7% more efficiently. Did you do a good thing for the environment?

Most likely, no. Remember, there's a significant (and not so obvious) carbon footprint created by the materials, manufacture and transport of a new fridge long before it arrives in your home. And of course, your old fridge has to go somewhere--and that somewhere is likely a landfill. The one-time carbon impact of these two factors likely dwarfs your small annual gains in energy efficiency, even after you consider the sum of those gains over the entire 15-20 year life of the fridge. A better solution: follow Kate's advice (pages 17-18) to optimize and extract more usable life out of your existing fridge, and defer buying a new refrigerator until even more efficient models become available.

This is a counterintuitive, but critically important, way to think about the environmental impact of a major purchase for your home, and not many environmental advocates think this way. Fortunately, this kind of intelligent thinking is on display throughout this highly readable book.

[A quick side note: in my former profession, I watched plenty of companies make terrible economic decisions by focusing on minor operating cost savings (think of that new fridge and its 7% annual energy savings) and ignoring far more significant capital costs (analogous to the cost of the new fridge and the environmental footprint of manufacturing it, and tossing the old fridge into a landfill). Even big companies with armies of accountants can be penny wise and pound foolish. The same logic applies to us when we make major purchasing decisions at home with the environment--and our wallets--in mind.]

A few more fascinating tidbits from Cooking Green:

1) The double (or triple, depending on how you look at it) carbon footprint of charcoal means that it's the least green way to grill.
2) Slow cookers and crockpots consume less electricity than an incandescent light bulb (conveniently, this settles a long-simmering debate in this very blog on the crockpot's environmental impact).
3) An electric teakettle heats water far more efficiently than heating water in a pan or in a teakettle on your stove (to find out why, see page 37).
4) Ovens are by far the hoggiest energy wasters in your kitchen and they are by far the least efficient at transferring heat energy directly to your food. However, there are many ways to increase your oven's efficiency and reduce its carbon footprint (see pages 45-53).

5) The single greatest thing you can do to significantly reduce your carbon cookprint is to eat less meat.

Cooking Green is the kind of book you'll want sitting on your shelf as a reliable resource for decades of intelligent kitchen decision-making, and it's selling at a very reasonable $14.00 at Amazon. Use it to shrink your own carbon cookprint!

Stay tuned--in the coming months I hope to write more on the various environmental issues we face when we cook and eat.



Related Links:
New Green Basics--Kate's companion website to Cooking Green
GlobalGourmet.com--Cooking tips, international and ethnic recipes and culinary product reviews.

Other Books by Kate Heyhoe:
The Stubb's Bar-B-Q Cookbook
Harvesting the Dream: The Rags-to-Riches Tale of the Sutter Home Winery
Great Bar Food at Home

Related Casual Kitchen Posts:
41 Ways You Can Help the Environment From Your Kitchen
Almost Meatless: Cookbook Review
The Cornbread Gospels: Cookbook Review
How are You Adjusting to the Economic Crisis? A Question for CK Readers
A Recession-Proof Guide to Saving Money on Food


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Does Healthy Eating Really Cost Too Much? A Blogger Roundtable Discussion

Barely two generations ago we had a problem with hunger in our culture. Now, in an era where energy-dense food is cheaper and more plentiful than ever, we face an obesity epidemic, and the lower you are on the socioeconomic ladder, the greater your risk of being overweight.

There is an argument, held by some, that obesity is more common among low-income people because healthy food costs more. The logic behind that statement has always bugged me on some level. Perhaps it's because I write a food blog that features so many healthy and laughably cheap recipes.

So I decided to submit this thorny question to Casual Kitchen's Blogging Roundtable and see what our braintrust of bloggers thought about the issue. Here's what I asked them:

America's poor have an obesity problem because healthy food costs more than unhealthy food. Do you agree or disagree with this statement, and why?

Once again, this exercise yielded candid and exceptionally thought-provoking answers from some of the best bloggers out there. Here they are, in their own words:

Joy, author of What I Weigh Today:
I don't agree. It's true that if you go to a typical megamart the potato chips will cost less than the fancy organic snacks at a boutique organic grocery, but I can make a family feast based on mostly vegetarian whole ingredients for less than what a family will spend at the drive-through. Whole ingredients are a cheaper alternative than processed, packaged foods. Now the high-end whole ingredients may cost as much or more than the low-end processed foods, but conventional vegetables, fruits, legumes, and grains are cheaper than even cheap packaged meals and manufactured ingredients. And conventional whole ingredients, especially when meat is limited or eliminated, are healthy.

The real problem is that the basic skills that can turn a hamhock, a pile of beans and some rice into a delicious meal have been all but lost. Plus, economic pressures force parents to spend long hours at multiple jobs, leaving little time or energy for home cooking. We've created a situation where it's so much easier to grab the cheap, palatable meal from a fast food outlet that many have lost the will to learn to cook. When we decide, as a society/culture, to pursue social justice for all walks of life, the health of all Americans, including the poorest among us, will improve.


Tyler, author of 344 Pounds:
I disagree with this statement. I was the textbook definition of poor growing up and I don't blame anybody but myself for my obesity. Sure, I believe the rich or those of moderate means have easier access to food that is of a higher nutritional value due to its cost, but at the end of the day -- unless you suffer from a medical condition, being obese is a choice. While I might have only had access to unhealthy foods growing up, I also had the ability to control my portions and make sure I engaged in daily physical activity -- the exact same way I'm losing weight today.

I did neither when I was a child and I became overweight, then obese. It had nothing to do with my parents' bank account.


Tara, author of Beach Eats:
As a woman who's engaged in a life-long struggle with her weight, I'm here to tell you that its entirely possible to be fat on a diet of quality, healthy food. It's not the cost of food that's gotten me here, its the quantity! I avoid packaged foods, shop organic, eat fresh, local, foods as much as possible and have not seen the inside of a fast food restaurant in years ... yet ... I'm overweight. I'm overweight on high quality, expensive, healthy food.

Personally, I can't separate any discussion of obesity from the issue of personal responsibility. We all make choices and suffer their consequences. Will I go for a walk, or crash in front of the tube with a bag of chips? Do I really need a "Big Gulp" when water would suffice? Snack on an apple or throw down with a box of Twinkies? You get my point. Skip the walk and opt for the chips, Big Gulp and Twinkies and you're going to end up fat every time, regardless of income.

Yes, we absolutely need to address the rising cost of food in this country, but we also have to hold ourselves accountable for our choices.


Kris, author of Cheap Healthy Good:
I vehemently disagree with this statement. America's poor have obesity problems because many urban and rural areas lack decent grocery stores, there isn't enough overall nutrition and food education, and cooking at home becomes a negligible priority when a family is just trying to get by. Schools are attempting to combat this, but it's difficult when junk food is pushed at kids from birth, reinforced constantly by the media, and served every day at home. It's important to recognize that non-poor Americans have the very same issues, though, which is why two thirds of the country is overweight. It's not the economy. It's our culture.

Jules, author of stonesoup:
In Australia, we face a similar situation with obesity. I wish it were as simple as the cost of healthy food but to me there are many more factors involved. Sure there are plenty of cheap burgers and takeaway pizza out there but pulses (legumes) and fresh fruit and veggies aren't necessarily any more expensive--they just take time and knowhow to turn them into something delicious. The other key factor to me is the availability and convenience of fresh food.

So if you did have to point a finger to the cause of our expanding waistlines I'm thinking lack of education is really the key. Knowing what the best food choices are is really important as is having the skills to be able to prepare nutritious meals at home.


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Readers, here's your chance to sound off. What are your thoughts on this issue?

Related Posts:
All CK recipes tagged with laughably cheap
When High-Fat Food Can Actually Be Healthy For You
Ten Strategies to Stop Mindless Eating
Make Your Diet Into a Flexible Tool
The Pros and Cons of a High-Carb/Low-Fat Diet

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

CK Friday Links--Friday July 17, 2009

Here's yet another selection of particularly interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.

PS: follow me on Twitter!

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Trading Morals for Dollars in a Recession at The Daily Beast
Do "vulture consumers" compromise their morals by buying things on the cheap during a downturn? If you buy a foreclosure property, are you profiting off the backs of the prior owners? It's funny, but in my former line of work, the "vulture investors" were the ones who would put in a bottom in every down market--and the rest of us were always glad to see them. PS: Tempers run high in the comments.

XXXL: Why Are We So Fat? at the New Yorker
An exceptional roundup of books on eating and obesity, including former FDA director David Kessler's new book The End of Overeating (currently in Amazon's top 100), and Brian Wansink's book Mindless Eating, which addresses a subject near and dear to my heart. Thanks to Cheap Healthy Good for the link.

Why Weight Maintenance is Harder Than Weight Loss, and How to Help it Along at Cheap Healthy Good
Kris posts an excellent article listing the four key factors shared by people who successfully lost weight and kept it off.

Not Much Convenience in Convenience Food at Grist
A UCLA study of 32 families suggests convenience foods don't save any time at all for the families who serve them. Casual Kitchen readers will appreciate yet another strike against second-order foods. Thanks to The Simple Dollar for the link.

Austerity Parties at Simple Green Frugal Co-Op
A collaborative blog I stumbled onto for the first time the other day. Kate, from the blog Living the Frugal Life, reminisces about the really fun low-budget parties she and her friends used to hold, and she shares some interesting musings on how financial poverty doesn't have to mean cultural or intellectual poverty.

Cheap Eats 2009 at New York Magazine
For all you readers in the New York metro area, here's New York Mag's ninth annual Cheap Eats guide. But, uh, I gotta say, a cheap eats list that includes a $13 black angus burger, $14 ramen and an $18 skirt steak spells T-O-N-E-D-E-A-F. We're in a recession, people!

Is the Cheesecake Factory Gross? at the Washington Post
In a word, no. And that's the problem. A fascinating column by Ezra Klein on why it's not easy to limit your caloric intake at restaurants like the 'Cake (thanks Abnormal Returns).

How to Cook Fish: The Musical at Amateur Gourmet
Hilarious video of Adam singing, dancing and learning how to cook fish from restauranteur Rebecca Charles.

Traumatizing Imitation Crab Video at Eat Me Daily
Seafood salad will never look the same to you after you've watched how imitation crab is made.

The Michael Jackson Butter Sculpture Controversy at PETA's Blog
Judging by how shocked the author and the commenters act ("A sculpture made of butter! Icky! Can you believe it? Why not make it out of Earth Balance spread?"), I guess nobody at PETA has heard of that kooky, long-held middle-America tradition of the state fair butter sculpture.


Do you have an interesting article or recipe that you'd like to see featured in Casual Kitchen's Food Links? Send me an email!

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

POG: The Official Drink of Hawaii

Here's another installment in our series on the foods of Hawaii:
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What is POG? It's a rich and sweet mixture of passion fruit juice, orange juice and guava juice. You could think of POG as Hawaii's official drink, and you can find it everywhere on the islands.


Unfortunately, like many other special foods here in Hawaii, it can be nearly impossible to find on the mainland.

Now keep in mind that most of the brands of POG aren't exactly healthy for you, since they're typically only 15-20% juice, with water and sugar (and/or high-fructose corn syrup) added. Technically you can't call this juice, hence the term "nectar" on the box. I usually never drink sweetened drinks like this, but when I'm here in Hawaii I make an exception. As the saying goes: what happens in Hawaii stays in Hawaii.

Plus, POG reminds me of my childhood, when I used to drink a big glass of Orange Hi-C every day when I got home from school (believe it or not, back in the 1970s and early 1980s, kids could eat and drink as much sugar as they wanted).

The other important--some might say critical--feature of POG: it goes perfectly with vodka to make a glorious drink called the POG-tini.

Finally, a brief warning: drinking too much POG at one time can put you into a glucosal, semi-euphoric state known as pogging. Seriously. You see hundreds of pasty-looking tourists everywhere here, all with huge smiles on their faces, pogging up and down the streets of Waikiki. Come here and you'll see what I mean.

POG Makers:
Meadow Gold
Hawaiian Sun

Related Posts:
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
Calling All Coffee Addicts: 100% Kona Coffee
A Brief Tutorial on How to Cut Up a Pineapple
Countdown: The Top Ten Alcoholic Drinks of Summer
Countdown: Top Ten Low Alcohol Drinks


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

If It's So Cheap to Cook at Home, Then Why is My Grocery Bill So Huge?

This article discusses why we often spend much more money than we expect to in the grocery store, and it offers several solutions--including one counterintuitive idea that could help you save half off your grocery bill.
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The other day I made dinner for the two of us: a delicious Cajun meatloaf, courtesy of my favorite gourmand Paul Prudhomme. Despite being meat-heavy, the cost of this meal was an inexpensive $11.49--less than $2.00 per serving--and it should feed us for at least three meals each.

Ha! Further proof that cooking meals at home is practically free, right?

Wait. Then why did my grocery bill that day run me more than $70?

This, in a nutshell, is why many readers get frustrated with those of us in the world of frugal food blogs. We all love to talk about how such and such a meal costs only 60c per serving, or how many recipes are laughably cheap. And yet when I went out to buy supplies for a supposedly inexpensive meal, my grocery store bill ended up being six times the cost of the recipe.

Here's the rub: when people spend a lot more money than they planned at the grocery store, it makes cooking at home seem more expensive than it really is.

A cheap meal doesn't exist in a vacuum. There are other issues--and costs--to consider. That's why it's somewhat misleading to read the cost of a recipe on a food blog, choose a bunch of recipes for the week, add up those food costs and then assume that's roughly what you'll spend at the store. If you want to manage your food buying efficiently, your responsibilities won't end there.

Obviously, I did not manage my food buying efficiently in this grocery store trip. In this post I'll share what I did wrong, and I'll walk through five reasons why my grocery bill turned out to be so much steeper than expected. My hope is that you can walk away from this post with a handful of simple rules to help you dramatically reduce your grocery budget.

But let's have the conclusion first, and it's a piece of good news: almost all of these cost overruns can be easily avoided with a bit of awareness and a couple of good habits.

Reason #1: I bought items that weren't on my list.
We've been in Hawaii until a couple of weeks ago, so I just had to buy a pineapple. Um, make that two. I also bought fresh cherries (sort of on sale at $5.99/lb) and some local blueberries too. I also gazed at the delicious cheeses in our store's budget-killing gourmet cheese section and walked away with a $4.89 block of Jarlsberg cheese. Total extra cost: $20.11

Lesson: Make a grocery list and stick to it.

Reason #2: I mindlessly bought expensive splurge items.
On my grocery trip, I went wild and bought a 24 pack (!) of ice cream sandwiches (ostensibly for Laura, but I'm probably going to end up eating most of them), Klondike bars, and a big bar of dark chocolate. These were all examples of second order foods, all expensive, and--excluding the chocolate--all unnecessary. Total extra cost: $13.57

Lesson: Splurge items are fine if you make a willful, conscious purchase. Splurge items are not fine if you make them mindlessly.

Reason #3: I bought staples and pantry items.
We just returned from four months away, so I've had to stock up on some staples, including a 20-lb bag of white rice as well as brown rice and jarred pasta sauce. Both the white rice and the pasta sauce were on sale (the rice massively so at $9.99 for a 20-lb bag). The brown rice I could have postponed until a sale came along. Total extra cost: $15.97

Lesson: Stock up on pantry items only when you have to, or when there is a meaningful economic incentive (like a big sale).

Reason #4: My grocery list contained non-food items.
I also bought toilet paper, batteries and sandwich bags. Granted, these items have absolutely nothing to do with the cost of the food I made, but they did add costs to a grocery store bill that left me with a vague feeling of "gee, the food this week sure seemed expensive!" Total extra cost: $9.70

Lesson: Your overall grocery bill may not accurately represent your meal costs.

Reason #5: I had to buy more than I needed of most recipe items.
This is highly typical in cooking. I needed only 25 cents' worth of breadcrumbs, but I had to buy an entire canister for $1.29. I needed a 1/2 cup of ketchup, but I had to buy a full bottle (on sale) for $2.09. I only used about half of the meat that I bought. And so on. Most people cite this as a primary reason why cooking at home is too expensive, but keep in mind these items have now been paid for, so they'll essentially be free the next time I use them. Note with some perishables, especially fresh herbs and greens, this can still be a frustrating source of waste. Total extra cost: about $8.00

Lesson: Select additional recipes for your weekly menu that use many of the same bulk ingredients. You can scale your grocery purchases over several meals and significantly reduce your costs and any leftover ingredient waste.

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How to Save Half Off Your Grocery Bill

Okay. I'll conclude with one final (and surprising) conclusion from my grocery store run: Reasons #1 and #2--off-list items and unnecessary splurge items--together drove 50% of my extra costs.

Let me repeat that. Fifty percent.

Believe it or not, this is the most encouraging news of all. It suggests that you can save an enormous percentage on your grocery bill by making just two changes to your grocery store habits: 1) cut back dramatically on splurge items, and 2) don't buy anything not on your list. That's a powerful example of the 80/20 Rule in action, and it's something any of us can do.

Readers, what additional advice would you add?

Related Posts:
A Recession-Proof Guide to Saving Money on Food
Cajun Meatloaf
Applying the 80/20 Rule to Diet, Food and Cooking
A Simple Way to Beat Rising Food Prices
Cooking Like the Stars? Don't Waste Your Money


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

CK Friday Links--Friday July 10, 2009

Here's yet another selection of particularly interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.

PS: follow me on Twitter!

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A Few Lessons at Less is Enough vs. The Conversation Continues at One Dollar Diet Project
There's nothing better than a good smackdown snit between dollar-a-day food bloggers. In one corner is a couple of whining, know-it-all Californians who started with a stocked pantry, ate PB&J sandwiches every day (they didn't discover the inexpensive wonders of soup until day 21), and complained. A lot. In the other corner is a woman who started with nothing but one dollar on day one and succeeded in eating on a dollar a day for 30 days, writing humorously about it along the way. What's your take?

Top 10 Reasons Why The BMI Is Bogus at NPR.org
A good article debunking the junk science implicit in Body Mass Index calculations. See in particular #2, #3 and #4. Thanks to @bitman for the link.

Feeding a Group on Vacation at Cheap Healthy Good
Kris runs an extremely useful post on how to manage and divide up the costs and responsibilities of cooking on a group vacation. And the more money you save, the more you can spend on sweet liquor.

Behind the Scenes at Le Bernardin at Avec Eric
Le Bernardin's head chef Eric Ripert posts infrequently to his blog, but this post, where he reveals some fascinating trade secrets from his restaurant, is worth the wait.

10 Reasons Why Losing Weight is Hard at 344 Pounds
Tyler shares some of the realities of successful weight loss. I still consider this site to be one of the best examples of how you can use blogging to achieve amazing goals.

Favorite Recipes at For the Love of Cooking
Pam leaves us with a list of her favorite recipes while she's on vacation. A few favorites: Stuffed Bell Peppers, Asian Chicken Breasts and Tilapia with Lemon and Dill.

E. Coli Found in Cookie Dough at Food Politics
Marion asks her usual tough questions and shares several links on the outbreak of e. coli in Nestle's cookie dough. I have mixed feelings on this one: any off-the-shelf product that contains eggs and milk is at risk of spoiling, thus it's not a product a reasonable consumer should assume they could eat raw. Bonus post: sometimes contaminated foods are simply repacked and redistributed.

Chicken Ala Carte at Culture Unplugged.com
Watch this six-minute short video and tell me it doesn't put food and hunger into an entirely new perspective. Readers, what do you think?

Overnight Muesli at Kate in the Kitchen
I'm a fan of any breakfast that isn't made from overpriced branded boxed cereal, and Kate gives us an easy muesli recipe that can be a simple base for all sorts of creative variations. Thanks to 30 Bucks a Week for the link. Bonus post: Kate writes an endearing essay about why it can be really depressing to be a blogger sometimes.

DailyLit.com
Off-topic but worth it. Find yourself spending hours each day reading email when you'd rather be reading great books? Daily Lit will send you installments of books to your desktop or Blackberry via email or RSS. Most of the titles, particularly the great literature selections, are completely free. I've just started reading Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching.

Do you have an interesting article or recipe that you'd like to see featured in Casual Kitchen's Food Links? Send me an email!

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Countdown: The Top Ten Best No-Alcohol Drinks

There are plenty of reasons to enjoy an interesting and delicious non-alcoholic drink. You can be the designated driver for the night and still join in the fun. Maybe you just want to look like you're drinking and avoid having a hangover the next day while your friends suffer.

And of course, you can mix and enjoy these fun drinks with your younger family members--without breaking the law.

Order one of these the next time you're the designated driver and see if you can stump your bartender!

Finally, if you're not the designated driver, hop on over to our Top Ten Alcoholic Drinks of Summer post!
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10) The Designated Driver
Perfectly named, delicious, and guaranteed to earn extra points with your drinking friends, since they now know they can have a ride home with you.

2 ounces cranberry juice
2 ounces orange juice
2 ounces pineapple juice
2 ounces grapefruit juice

Combine in a tall glass with ice. Garnish with optional cherry or orange wedge.


9) The Rail Splitter
A drink that contains no alcohol, but it sounds like it should. Not to be confused with the Third Rail, a cocktail made with rum and either orange or apple brandy.

1 ounce lemon juice
2 teaspoons sugar or sugar syrup, to taste
Ginger ale

Combine lemon juice and sugar in a tall glass, fill with ginger ale.


8) Tomato Cooler
Both tangy and tart, this drink could also make a great base for a savory vegetable smoothie.

8 ounces tomato juice
2 teaspoons lemon or lime juice

Combine in a tall glass filled with ice and top off with tonic water. Garnish with a wedge of lime and an optional dill sprig.


7) Lime Cooler
The extra advantage of this simple and refreshing drink is that it looks just like a gin and tonic. If you're holding one of these in your hand, no one will be the wiser!

1-2 Tablespoons lime juice
Tonic water

Add lime juice to a tall glass filled with ice. Fill with tonic water and garnish with a lime wedge.


6) The Virgin Mary
A non-alcoholic take on the Bloody Mary, and known in England, amusingly, as The Bloody Shame. This drink can be made most easily by using store-bought Bloody Mary mix, but for the purists out there, here is a more traditional recipe:

Tomato juice
1 dash lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Tabasco sauce, to taste
Black pepper, to taste
optional 1/4 teaspoon horseradish

Fill a glass with ice and tomato juice. Add all other ingredients. Garnish with a stalk of celery. Optional: garnish the rim of the glass with kosher salt.


5) The Pac Man
Not to be confused with the energy drink of the same name. A fun drink and a likely bartender-stumper.

2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon grenadine
1 dash bitters
Ginger ale

Combine grenadine, lemon juice and bitters to a mid-sized glass filled with ice. Top off with a generous few splashes of ginger ale. Garnish with a cherry.


4) The Unfuzzy Navel
More colorful and more flavorful than the alcohol-based version.

3 ounces peach juice or peach nectar
1 Tablespoon lemon juice
3 ounces orange juice
1 dash grenadine

Combine with ice and strain into a wine glass. Garnish with optional cherry or orange slice.


3) Safe Sex on the Beach
An alcohol-free version of the well-known beach drink. You'll look like you're drinking just like everyone else when you're holding one of these, only this drink will never give you a hangover.

2 parts cranberry juice
2 parts orange or grapefruit juice
1 part peach juice or peach nectar

Combine in a tall glass filled with ice.


2) The Arnold Palmer
There are two stories about the birth of this drink: one says that it became famous in the 1960s when the golfing legend said it was his favorite; the other says that Palmer got angry at a clubhouse bartender for refusing to mix lemonade into his iced tea and browbeat him into relenting. Either way, there are few drinks more refreshing on a hot day.

4 ounces Lemonade
4 ounces Ice tea (sweetened or unsweetened)

Combine lemonade and iced tea into a tall glass with ice.


1) The Shirley Temple
Is there any drink that reminds you of childhood more than this one? Named after the adorable child star-turned diplomat, this perfect concoction isn't just for kids. It's for anyone who wants to be happily reminded of their childhood.

Ginger ale
Splash of grenadine, or juice from a jar of maraschino cherries

Add grenadine or cherry juice to a glass filled with ice. Fill with ginger ale. Garnish with optional cherry or orange slice.


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Readers, which of these are your favorites, and what other drinks should I have included?

Related Posts:
How to Start a Casual and Inexpensive Wine Tasting Club
27 Themes and Ideas for Wine Tasting Club Meetings
Countdown: The Top Ten Alcoholic Drinks of Summer
Countdown: Top Ten Low Alcohol Drinks



How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Glossary of Casual Kitchen Memes

Long-time readers here at Casual Kitchen have probably grown accustomed to my tendency to use idiosyncratic expressions for many cooking-related subjects.

But the traffic here at CK has gone up quite a bit over the past six months or so, and when I use expressions like first-order foods and laughably cheap, I'm sure many new readers wonder what the heck I'm talking about.

Hence this glossary of Casual Kitchen memes. In this post you'll see a list of the various expressions I use on this blog, along with definitions and links to relevant articles that illustrate these themes. Enjoy!
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Casual Kitchen Meme Glossary:

Brand Disloyalty: A pro-consumer mindset where you refuse to overpay for branded products in your grocery store or wherever else you shop. To drop a brand for a competitor's product at the slightest provocation.

Cookbook Exploitation: Making a habit of getting more use and value out of your existing stash of cookbooks rather than constantly buying new ones. Every April at Casual Kitchen is Cookbook Exploitation Month, when I encourage readers to pick a rarely-used cookbook off their shelves and exploit it for all it's worth.

Cost Stack: The aggregated costs involved in getting food to your local grocery store, including transport costs, advertising and branding costs, food processing costs, as well as freezing and refrigeration costs. All of the costs in any food's cost stack are ultimately borne by you, the consumer. See Second-Order Foods.

Do It By the Book: The most important rule of recipe modification. Making a recipe by the book first gives you valuable information about what recipe modifications might be needed. You can't really change a recipe for the better until you know where you're starting from.

First-Order Foods: Basic building blocks of our diets. Foods such as fruits, vegetables, basic juices, grains, etc., that are close to the bottom of the food chain, require little processing, and come to you in basic form. See Second-Order Foods.

The Five Easy Questions Test: A quick and easy test I've designed here at Casual Kitchen that you can use to determine if a recipe is worth cooking. See How to Tell if a Recipe is Worth Cooking With Five Easy Questions.

Heavy Rotation:
A term borrowed from pop radio that involves building a short list of your cooking “hits” (recipes that are popular with your family that you can make quickly and easily) and rotating one or more of these hit recipes into your weekly menu. Further, by making the dish regularly, you’ll get still faster at making it until you can practically do it blindfolded. If you create a list of five or six easy-to-make “hits” and rotate one of them into your menu each week, you'll save yourself a ton of time without ever getting sick of your favorite recipes.

Laughably Cheap: Any dish that is so cheap to cook that it literally makes you laugh out loud. See my black beans and rice, fried rice, fresh corn and tomato soup, or our pasta with tuna, olives and roasted red peppers. See Preposterously Cheap.

Part-Time Vegetarianism: To embrace vegetarian cuisine for its many health and cost benefits, but not become a vegetarian per se.

Preposterously Cheap: like Laughably Cheap, only better. And cheaper. See my Lentil Soup, or Smoky Brazilian Black Bean Soup.

Read the Recipe Twice: The single best thing you can do to eliminate cooking errors from your kitchen. Taking a mere 30 seconds to re-read a recipe before you begin cooking will save you from a lifetime's worth of frustrating mistakes. Rule #1 of my Seven Rules to Ensure Mistake-Free Cooking.

Recipe modifications: The subject of a three part series in Casual Kitchen where I explained how to break free from the bondage of recipes and learn to adapt them to your taste and budget. See especially the Six Rules of Recipe Modification, which is one of my most popular posts.

Scalability: A term used to describe the ease with which you can increase the batch size of a dish. Casual Kitchen favors highly scalable recipes where making a double batch is as easy as making a single batch, yet you get twice as much food for your efforts. See 2x the Food for 1.2X the Work.

Second-Order Foods: Foods derived from first-order foods, usually with the addition of extra energy, transport costs and other additional costs in one form or another. TV dinners, meat, boxed cereals and branded snack foods are typical examples of second order foods. See First-order Foods.

Stealth price hikes: To keep the price of an item the same, but reduce the net weight or amount of product in the package. Possibly the most deceptive of all consumer product tricks, and particularly prevalent in the boxed cereal aisle. When a product you regularly purchase puts in a stealth price hike you must punish the maker of this product by changing brands immediately.

2x the Food For 1.2x the Work: One of the key concepts underlying double- or triple-batch cooking that will help you become a much more efficient cook. Many recipes can be doubled with little or no extra work, giving you much more food for very little incremental work. Learn to identify which recipes are good candidates for this and which are not. See Scalability.

80/20 Rule: A principle widely and surprisingly applicable to food and cooking, which says that most of the output of a system typically comes from a very small number of inputs. You can use the 80/20 rule in dozens of ways to save time, money and effort when you cook. This rule can also be applied to your diet and even to cookbook purchasing.

Yes, But By Proxy: A nearly invincible form of excuse-making that involves claiming a solution will not work because it fails for others. A standard example: "Your solutions for eating healthy on very little money won't work for people living in food deserts" or "someone with five jobs won't have time to cook healthy food." The person making this statement doesn't actually have five jobs and doesn't actually live in a food desert, but she can use the existence of a theoretical person with those disadvantages as an excuse not to take action herself. Be extremely careful when discussing any issue with someone who regularly uses "yes, but by proxy" excuses--you will likely be blamed for being a bad person with no sympathy for disadvantaged people. For more on this concept, see my Avoiding the "Yes, But" Vortex post series.


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!