Here's yet another selection of interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
A simple introduction to natural sweeteners and how to use them. (A Little Bit of Spain in Iowa)
An exceptional, if occasionally bitter, recap of 2011's biggest food stories. (Small Bites)
A visual history of champagne, minus the death and dismemberment. (1 Wine Dude)
How to live comfortably on $36 a month for food. (Andrew Hyde)
"The problem with society is we aren't materialistic enough." (Miss Minimalist)
Recipe Links:
One of the easiest bread recipes out there: Irish Soda Bread. (30 Bucks a Week)
Intriguing! Brown Rice Risotto. (100 Days of Real Food)
Off-Topic Links:
Looking for ways to save a ton of money in 2012? Go on an "apparel diet" and embrace a year of conscious consumption. (The Great American Apparel Diet)
Shoot your inner critic and save your dreams. (A Life of Spice)
When you find yourself in a difficult or uncertain situation, don't automatically assume the worst. (Your Voice of Encouragement)
Give up on the idea of "perfect" -- it’s never done anyone the least bit of good. (Food For the Thoughtless)
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!
Retro Sundays
This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
How to Use Food and Wine Jargon Without Sounding Pretentious (December 2009)
I learned two important things after writing this post: First, the people who really should read it most likely won't. Second, never create "composite characters" made up of people from your old career. I had three separate colleagues from my former Wall Street days ask me if this post was about them.
Eight Tips to Make Cooking At Home Laughably Cheap (December 2006)
This post was inspired by a know-it-all friend from Manhattan who claimed it was cheaper to eat out than to cook at home. Fool. I later created the meme Laughably Cheap and a ton of laughably cheap recipes to go with it, and well, the rest is history.
Wintry Tomato Vegetable Soup (December 2007)
This easy and inexpensive soup recipe has been a long-time favorite here at CK, and it's an absolutely perfect meal for a freezing winter day.
Capitalize on Your Cooking Core Competencies (December 2007)
Turn your household into a well-oiled cooking machine with the tips in this post--the final installment in my series on How to Team Up in the Kitchen.
Blog Improvement 101 Links (December 2008)
What are your plans to make your blog even better in the coming year? I put together this list of the ten best articles on blogging from 2008, and I'm still referring to each of them in my efforts to improve Casual Kitchen. These articles are as useful today as ever.
A Short Guide to Common Nicaraguan Foods (December 2009)
Laura and I spent a week in Nicaragua two years ago (we were there with a team of eye doctors giving free eye exams), and we simply fell in love with this country and its unpretentious foods. This post gets a surprising amount of search traffic--and a ton of comment spam from people selling Central American real estate. Go figure.
Eight Things Frugality Taught Me (December 2010)
Most people live in a state of constant fear of being different, and one result of that fear is our culture's voracious consumerism. What has frugality taught you?
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!
How to Use Food and Wine Jargon Without Sounding Pretentious (December 2009)
I learned two important things after writing this post: First, the people who really should read it most likely won't. Second, never create "composite characters" made up of people from your old career. I had three separate colleagues from my former Wall Street days ask me if this post was about them.
Eight Tips to Make Cooking At Home Laughably Cheap (December 2006)
This post was inspired by a know-it-all friend from Manhattan who claimed it was cheaper to eat out than to cook at home. Fool. I later created the meme Laughably Cheap and a ton of laughably cheap recipes to go with it, and well, the rest is history.
Wintry Tomato Vegetable Soup (December 2007)
This easy and inexpensive soup recipe has been a long-time favorite here at CK, and it's an absolutely perfect meal for a freezing winter day.
Capitalize on Your Cooking Core Competencies (December 2007)
Turn your household into a well-oiled cooking machine with the tips in this post--the final installment in my series on How to Team Up in the Kitchen.
Blog Improvement 101 Links (December 2008)
What are your plans to make your blog even better in the coming year? I put together this list of the ten best articles on blogging from 2008, and I'm still referring to each of them in my efforts to improve Casual Kitchen. These articles are as useful today as ever.
A Short Guide to Common Nicaraguan Foods (December 2009)
Laura and I spent a week in Nicaragua two years ago (we were there with a team of eye doctors giving free eye exams), and we simply fell in love with this country and its unpretentious foods. This post gets a surprising amount of search traffic--and a ton of comment spam from people selling Central American real estate. Go figure.
Eight Things Frugality Taught Me (December 2010)
Most people live in a state of constant fear of being different, and one result of that fear is our culture's voracious consumerism. What has frugality taught you?
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!
Labels:
Retro Sundays
CK Friday Links--Friday December 23, 2011
Happy Holidays!! Here's yet another selection of interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
That old wive's tale about adding a potato to fix an oversalted soup? A food blogger goes debunking and proves it doesn't work. (Kitchen Mage)
If you're having a craving, say it to yourself: I AM HAVING A CRAVING. Once you put it into words--and once you're honest with yourself--you'll control it. (Ombailamos)
Pssst: Mike Pollan's entire Edible Education 101: A Complete Course on Modern Food Production, is now available totally free. Bookmark it! (The Atlantic, via Mollie Katzen)
For lit geeks only: What if Virginia Woolf, Raymond Chandler or Geoffrey Chaucer had turned to food writing? (The Independent)
Recipe Links:
Make a pile of delicious Potato Latkes for a mere 50c. (Real Cheap Food)
Let citrus be your savior during the cold months with this intriguing Grapefruit Cake recipe. (A Thought For Food) Bonus Post: How to Segment Citrus.
A Brownie Recipe to end all brownie recipes. (The Clayton's Blog)
Off-Topic Links:
The curse of competition. (Lisa's Liberation)
A "mommyjacking" taxonomy. (Mommyish)
Getting paid to do what you love just ends up making you dislike doing what you love. (You Are Not So Smart, via Alosha's Kitchen)
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!
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
That old wive's tale about adding a potato to fix an oversalted soup? A food blogger goes debunking and proves it doesn't work. (Kitchen Mage)
If you're having a craving, say it to yourself: I AM HAVING A CRAVING. Once you put it into words--and once you're honest with yourself--you'll control it. (Ombailamos)
Pssst: Mike Pollan's entire Edible Education 101: A Complete Course on Modern Food Production, is now available totally free. Bookmark it! (The Atlantic, via Mollie Katzen)
For lit geeks only: What if Virginia Woolf, Raymond Chandler or Geoffrey Chaucer had turned to food writing? (The Independent)
Recipe Links:
Make a pile of delicious Potato Latkes for a mere 50c. (Real Cheap Food)
Let citrus be your savior during the cold months with this intriguing Grapefruit Cake recipe. (A Thought For Food) Bonus Post: How to Segment Citrus.
A Brownie Recipe to end all brownie recipes. (The Clayton's Blog)
Off-Topic Links:
The curse of competition. (Lisa's Liberation)
A "mommyjacking" taxonomy. (Mommyish)
Getting paid to do what you love just ends up making you dislike doing what you love. (You Are Not So Smart, via Alosha's Kitchen)
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!
Labels:
links
Share YOUR Best Post of 2011!
Did you write an article or a recipe for your blog during the past year that you're particularly proud of? Would you like to put in front of a wider audience?
Then share it right here at CK!
Readers know that one of my goals at Casual Kitchen is to match thoughtful readers with thought-provoking things that should be read. It's why I created my Friday Links series, and it's one of the ways I try to pay it forward to the many talented writers and bloggers out there.
So, just like I've done this week in each of the last few years, I'd like to give the floor to you, dear readers, and give you a chance to use Casual Kitchen to get the word out on your best work from the past year. It's my way of thanking you for your incredible support.
Here's how to participate: Just paste a link to your favorite post or your best recipe from 2011 in the comments section below, and add a sentence or two on what it's about. That's it! It can be your most popular recipe of the year, a great piece of food writing, or even something from outside of the world of food blogs.
(And if you're one of the infinitesimally few bloggers out there who's too shy to share your own work, feel free to nominate a great post from someone else's blog.)
Finally, as Casual Kitchen wraps up its fifth year, let me take a moment to thank you, my incredible readers, for all your support, comments, feedback and attention. I'm profoundly grateful.
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!
Then share it right here at CK!
Readers know that one of my goals at Casual Kitchen is to match thoughtful readers with thought-provoking things that should be read. It's why I created my Friday Links series, and it's one of the ways I try to pay it forward to the many talented writers and bloggers out there.
So, just like I've done this week in each of the last few years, I'd like to give the floor to you, dear readers, and give you a chance to use Casual Kitchen to get the word out on your best work from the past year. It's my way of thanking you for your incredible support.
Here's how to participate: Just paste a link to your favorite post or your best recipe from 2011 in the comments section below, and add a sentence or two on what it's about. That's it! It can be your most popular recipe of the year, a great piece of food writing, or even something from outside of the world of food blogs.
(And if you're one of the infinitesimally few bloggers out there who's too shy to share your own work, feel free to nominate a great post from someone else's blog.)
Finally, as Casual Kitchen wraps up its fifth year, let me take a moment to thank you, my incredible readers, for all your support, comments, feedback and attention. I'm profoundly grateful.
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!
Labels:
Best of...
Retro Sundays
This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
Mastering Kitchen Setup Costs (December 2006)
How to build a well-stocked kitchen at a surprisingly reasonable cost. This post--from the very first month of CK's existence--is one of my all-time most widely-read.
Three Strategies to Create Space in Your Kitchen (December 2007)
Do you have a tiny kitchen? Are you and your family members climbing all over each other rather than cooking? This post is for you.
Pernil: Puerto Rican-Style Roast Pork Shoulder (December 2008)
I'm not kidding when I say that this was one of the best Christmas meals I've ever had in my life. And it's hilariously easy to make.
Mint Melts: Teaching Kids to Cook With an Easy Cookie Recipe (December 2008)
Sure, cookies may not be healthy. But they are an ideal teaching tool to get your kids interested in cooking. Here's how.
Cheap Eats in Honolulu: Nine Inexpensive Restaurants You Should Check Out in Waikiki (December 2009)
Yes, you can find inexpensive meals in one of the USA's most expensive vacation spots. These nine restaurants are by far the best and cheapest restaurants in the Waikiki district of Honolulu.
How Have Your Tastes Changed Compared to Your Parents? (December 2010)
Back in my parents' era, making it to your second bottle of Tabasco meant you'd had a long marriage. Today, Laura and I go through a bottle a month. In this post, readers share the many ways their tastes have changed since growing up and leaving their parents' homes.
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!
Mastering Kitchen Setup Costs (December 2006)
How to build a well-stocked kitchen at a surprisingly reasonable cost. This post--from the very first month of CK's existence--is one of my all-time most widely-read.
Three Strategies to Create Space in Your Kitchen (December 2007)
Do you have a tiny kitchen? Are you and your family members climbing all over each other rather than cooking? This post is for you.
Pernil: Puerto Rican-Style Roast Pork Shoulder (December 2008)
I'm not kidding when I say that this was one of the best Christmas meals I've ever had in my life. And it's hilariously easy to make.
Mint Melts: Teaching Kids to Cook With an Easy Cookie Recipe (December 2008)
Sure, cookies may not be healthy. But they are an ideal teaching tool to get your kids interested in cooking. Here's how.
Cheap Eats in Honolulu: Nine Inexpensive Restaurants You Should Check Out in Waikiki (December 2009)
Yes, you can find inexpensive meals in one of the USA's most expensive vacation spots. These nine restaurants are by far the best and cheapest restaurants in the Waikiki district of Honolulu.
How Have Your Tastes Changed Compared to Your Parents? (December 2010)
Back in my parents' era, making it to your second bottle of Tabasco meant you'd had a long marriage. Today, Laura and I go through a bottle a month. In this post, readers share the many ways their tastes have changed since growing up and leaving their parents' homes.
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!
Labels:
Retro Sundays
CK Friday Links--Friday December 16, 2011
Here's yet another selection of interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
Could you feed a family of eight for a full day on $2 total? (Owlhaven)
A spectacular prep tip: how to peel an entire head of garlic in ten seconds. (Vimeo, via Nutmeg Disrupted)
For those who are really paranoid about bacteria on your fresh produce, here's an easy, inexpensive technique you can use at home. (Basically Vegan)
A wine blogger unearths a stunning pay-for-access scandal at the Wine Advocate, leading to the resignation of a well-known wine critic. Go citizen journalism! (Jim's Loire, followed by this follow-up story. See also: Wine Diarist, Gawker and The Baltimore Sun, and a bonus post: Why the wine world looks like a bunch of d-bags)
Recipe Links:
Drink this Nutella Hot Chocolate and all will be right with the world. (The Hungry Housewife)
Make Peter's Roasted Pork Shanks with Crackling and all will be right with the entire universe. (Kalofagas)
Wait. Did you just say Spaghetti in a Mild Curry Sauce? (A Life Of Spice)
Off-Topic Links:
This week's unsolicited book recommendation: The Investor's Manifesto: Preparing for Prosperity, Armageddon, and Everything in Between by William Bernstein. The best investing book I've read all year by a mile. Short, blunt, insightful and incredibly useful. Use it and stop getting separated from your money!
A fashion blog's fascinating take on minimalism and clothing. (Chictopia)
Finding it pointless and wasteful to blow $20 on wrapping paper that's just going to be torn to shreds Christmas morning? Some alternatives. (The Simple Dollar)
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!
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
Could you feed a family of eight for a full day on $2 total? (Owlhaven)
A spectacular prep tip: how to peel an entire head of garlic in ten seconds. (Vimeo, via Nutmeg Disrupted)
For those who are really paranoid about bacteria on your fresh produce, here's an easy, inexpensive technique you can use at home. (Basically Vegan)
A wine blogger unearths a stunning pay-for-access scandal at the Wine Advocate, leading to the resignation of a well-known wine critic. Go citizen journalism! (Jim's Loire, followed by this follow-up story. See also: Wine Diarist, Gawker and The Baltimore Sun, and a bonus post: Why the wine world looks like a bunch of d-bags)
Recipe Links:
Drink this Nutella Hot Chocolate and all will be right with the world. (The Hungry Housewife)
Make Peter's Roasted Pork Shanks with Crackling and all will be right with the entire universe. (Kalofagas)
Wait. Did you just say Spaghetti in a Mild Curry Sauce? (A Life Of Spice)
Off-Topic Links:
This week's unsolicited book recommendation: The Investor's Manifesto: Preparing for Prosperity, Armageddon, and Everything in Between by William Bernstein. The best investing book I've read all year by a mile. Short, blunt, insightful and incredibly useful. Use it and stop getting separated from your money!
A fashion blog's fascinating take on minimalism and clothing. (Chictopia)
Finding it pointless and wasteful to blow $20 on wrapping paper that's just going to be torn to shreds Christmas morning? Some alternatives. (The Simple Dollar)
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!
Labels:
links
A Thank You To Readers, And the Best of Casual Kitchen 2011
I want to take a moment, as I do every year at this time, to thank my readers for joining the conversation here at Casual Kitchen.
CK passed some big landmarks in 2011: a few weeks ago, this blog turned five years old. In October I published my 700th post. And if my math is right, sometime early this year CK had its one millionth pageview. I'm deeply, deeply grateful.
I took Casual Kitchen into some new and different directions this year, and I'm thankful that readers not only stayed with me, but that you added so many thoughtful, insightful--and most importantly, civil--comments along the way. It's thanks to you, my dear readers, that Casual Kitchen exists, and it's thanks to you that it's become exactly what I want it to be: a thoughtful forum for adult discussion about food, health, consumerism, frugality and many, many related issues.
So without further ado, here's the best of CK 2011. Once again, thank you so much for being here.
PS: next week, I'll give you a chance to promote and share *your* best post of 2011. Stay tuned!
********************************
Best of Casual Kitchen 2011
1) A Fund For... Who, Exactly? Addressing the "A Fund For Jennie" Controversy
I was one of very few writers to publicly address how Bloggers Without Borders spearheaded an enormous charity fundraiser for a fellow food blogger who, it later turned out, never needed the money. By an order of magnitude my most widely-read post in 2011.
2) The Tragedy of Ersatz American Restaurant Food
In nearly all high-volume restaurants, the idea that your dinner entrees are actually cooked for you is a quaint fiction. This popular post kicked off several heated discussions in the comments: whether cruises sucked or not, how I've ruined peoples' trust in restaurants, and even whether it's appropriate to use the word "tragedy" in a post about food.
3) The Top Lame-Ass Excuses Between You and Better Health
This post describes the entire taxonomy of excuses I get here at CK. I originally created it so I could refer commenters to it if they slipped into excuse mode (Hi, thanks for your comment. You've made a lame excuse. Please read this post on excuse-making, especially #4). The weird thing? I've gotten hardly any excuses at all since this post went live. Hmmm.
4) Never From Concentrate? Never Again
It's impossible to harvest totally identical-tasting juice from season to season and year to year. And yet every single carton of Tropicana Pure Premium orange juice tastes exactly the same. How? Read this post to find out. I promise, you'll rethink the value of "Premium" OJ.
5) The Sad, Quiet Death of Campbell's Low-Sodium Soup
When Campbell's killed off their "healthier" line of lower-sodium soups, were they putting greed and profits above the health of their customers? It depends on how you look at it.
6) Doing More Harm Than Good
Sometimes posts just come bursting out of you, and that's exactly what happened with this one, which I published right after the Bloggers Without Borders/A Fund for Jennie controversy. This is one of the posts I'm most proud of this year, and it seemed to resonate deeply with readers.
7) On Spice Fade, And the Utter Insanity of Throwing Spices Out After Six Months
The rule of thumb about throwing out your spices after six months is pure hogwash, and it needlessly costs consumers extra money. I explain why, borrowing from the science of... uh, radioactive isotopes. (NB: This post got picked up by Reddit, where, predictably, it sprouted a 96-comment thread which climaxed in a completely useless discussion of how to store spices in nitrogen gas.)
8) Companies vs. Consumers: A Manifesto
This post articulates many of my fundamental ideas about consumer empowerment, and how we give our power away to Big Food, often without even thinking about it. See also: What's Your Favorite Consumer Empowerment Tip?
9) How to Own the Consumer Products Industry--And I Mean Literally Own It
I describe step-by-step how to make intelligent investments in the consumer products industry, to help readers take control and ownership of the companies that sell to us. Quite honestly, this post was too long, too detailed and about as popular with readers as radioactive nutmeg. So why is it on this list? Because I was proud of it: it combined my former career on Wall Street with my goals to help consumers master their financial destiny, and in some ways it was the most empowering thing I wrote all year.
10) What's Wrong With the Government Limiting Food Marketing to Kids?
When the FTC rolled out new rules for limiting food marketing to children, my first question was Wait: is it children who actually buy these foods? I gave readers a chance to sound off on that and a few other choice questions, and the result was a thoughtful and counterintuitive conversation about parenting, paternalism and the role of government in our lives.
BONUS: A Simple Rule To Make Your Life Environmentally Sustainable and Worry Free
Why do we waste so much time worrying about minor aspects of our consumption and behavior patterns when they often have a pitifully tiny impact on the environment? This post shares a simple framework for your buying and eating decisions, so you can spend more time dealing with major things you can control--and stop worrying pointlessly about minor things you can't.
Honorable Mention:
How to Defeat the Retail Industry's Ninja Mind Tricks
Three Rules of Thumb for Tinkering with a Recipe
An Easier Way to Crack An Egg: Blunt Force Trauma
Can You Resist $107 Worth of Advertising?
What's Your Take On Restaurants Charging Mandatory Gratuity Fees?
Best/Most Popular Recipes of 2011:
1) Citrus Orzo Salad With Olives and Sundried Tomatoes -- One of the most striking and laughably easy pasta salad recipes in CK's history.
2) Easy Braised Red Cabbage -- My favorite recipe of the year. Plus, how often do you get to use the phrase "nestle the studded onion" in a recipe post? Not that often.
3) Curried Corn -- Adapted from the exceptional Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home, this is a healthy 20-minute recipe with a fascinating combination of flavors.
4) Hilariously Easy Chicken Soup -- When I say hilariously easy, I mean it. This recipe costs less than $1.00 a serving and takes fewer than 30 minutes of direct labor time.
5) Tomato Lentil Soup with Orzo -- A pot of this easy-to-make soup will feed your family for days at a cost of just 60-70c per serving.
6) Feta Walnut Dip -- Not exactly a frugal recipe, but it is the best and healthiest spread I've ever tried.
7) Fiery Sausage and Split Pea Soup -- Possibly the easiest recipe in Casual Kitchen's entire history.
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 passed some big landmarks in 2011: a few weeks ago, this blog turned five years old. In October I published my 700th post. And if my math is right, sometime early this year CK had its one millionth pageview. I'm deeply, deeply grateful.
I took Casual Kitchen into some new and different directions this year, and I'm thankful that readers not only stayed with me, but that you added so many thoughtful, insightful--and most importantly, civil--comments along the way. It's thanks to you, my dear readers, that Casual Kitchen exists, and it's thanks to you that it's become exactly what I want it to be: a thoughtful forum for adult discussion about food, health, consumerism, frugality and many, many related issues.
So without further ado, here's the best of CK 2011. Once again, thank you so much for being here.
PS: next week, I'll give you a chance to promote and share *your* best post of 2011. Stay tuned!
********************************
Best of Casual Kitchen 2011
1) A Fund For... Who, Exactly? Addressing the "A Fund For Jennie" Controversy
I was one of very few writers to publicly address how Bloggers Without Borders spearheaded an enormous charity fundraiser for a fellow food blogger who, it later turned out, never needed the money. By an order of magnitude my most widely-read post in 2011.
2) The Tragedy of Ersatz American Restaurant Food
In nearly all high-volume restaurants, the idea that your dinner entrees are actually cooked for you is a quaint fiction. This popular post kicked off several heated discussions in the comments: whether cruises sucked or not, how I've ruined peoples' trust in restaurants, and even whether it's appropriate to use the word "tragedy" in a post about food.
3) The Top Lame-Ass Excuses Between You and Better Health
This post describes the entire taxonomy of excuses I get here at CK. I originally created it so I could refer commenters to it if they slipped into excuse mode (Hi, thanks for your comment. You've made a lame excuse. Please read this post on excuse-making, especially #4). The weird thing? I've gotten hardly any excuses at all since this post went live. Hmmm.
4) Never From Concentrate? Never Again
It's impossible to harvest totally identical-tasting juice from season to season and year to year. And yet every single carton of Tropicana Pure Premium orange juice tastes exactly the same. How? Read this post to find out. I promise, you'll rethink the value of "Premium" OJ.
5) The Sad, Quiet Death of Campbell's Low-Sodium Soup
When Campbell's killed off their "healthier" line of lower-sodium soups, were they putting greed and profits above the health of their customers? It depends on how you look at it.
6) Doing More Harm Than Good
Sometimes posts just come bursting out of you, and that's exactly what happened with this one, which I published right after the Bloggers Without Borders/A Fund for Jennie controversy. This is one of the posts I'm most proud of this year, and it seemed to resonate deeply with readers.
7) On Spice Fade, And the Utter Insanity of Throwing Spices Out After Six Months
The rule of thumb about throwing out your spices after six months is pure hogwash, and it needlessly costs consumers extra money. I explain why, borrowing from the science of... uh, radioactive isotopes. (NB: This post got picked up by Reddit, where, predictably, it sprouted a 96-comment thread which climaxed in a completely useless discussion of how to store spices in nitrogen gas.)
8) Companies vs. Consumers: A Manifesto
This post articulates many of my fundamental ideas about consumer empowerment, and how we give our power away to Big Food, often without even thinking about it. See also: What's Your Favorite Consumer Empowerment Tip?
9) How to Own the Consumer Products Industry--And I Mean Literally Own It
I describe step-by-step how to make intelligent investments in the consumer products industry, to help readers take control and ownership of the companies that sell to us. Quite honestly, this post was too long, too detailed and about as popular with readers as radioactive nutmeg. So why is it on this list? Because I was proud of it: it combined my former career on Wall Street with my goals to help consumers master their financial destiny, and in some ways it was the most empowering thing I wrote all year.
10) What's Wrong With the Government Limiting Food Marketing to Kids?
When the FTC rolled out new rules for limiting food marketing to children, my first question was Wait: is it children who actually buy these foods? I gave readers a chance to sound off on that and a few other choice questions, and the result was a thoughtful and counterintuitive conversation about parenting, paternalism and the role of government in our lives.
BONUS: A Simple Rule To Make Your Life Environmentally Sustainable and Worry Free
Why do we waste so much time worrying about minor aspects of our consumption and behavior patterns when they often have a pitifully tiny impact on the environment? This post shares a simple framework for your buying and eating decisions, so you can spend more time dealing with major things you can control--and stop worrying pointlessly about minor things you can't.
Honorable Mention:
How to Defeat the Retail Industry's Ninja Mind Tricks
Three Rules of Thumb for Tinkering with a Recipe
An Easier Way to Crack An Egg: Blunt Force Trauma
Can You Resist $107 Worth of Advertising?
What's Your Take On Restaurants Charging Mandatory Gratuity Fees?
Best/Most Popular Recipes of 2011:
1) Citrus Orzo Salad With Olives and Sundried Tomatoes -- One of the most striking and laughably easy pasta salad recipes in CK's history.
2) Easy Braised Red Cabbage -- My favorite recipe of the year. Plus, how often do you get to use the phrase "nestle the studded onion" in a recipe post? Not that often.
3) Curried Corn -- Adapted from the exceptional Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home, this is a healthy 20-minute recipe with a fascinating combination of flavors.
4) Hilariously Easy Chicken Soup -- When I say hilariously easy, I mean it. This recipe costs less than $1.00 a serving and takes fewer than 30 minutes of direct labor time.
5) Tomato Lentil Soup with Orzo -- A pot of this easy-to-make soup will feed your family for days at a cost of just 60-70c per serving.
6) Feta Walnut Dip -- Not exactly a frugal recipe, but it is the best and healthiest spread I've ever tried.
7) Fiery Sausage and Split Pea Soup -- Possibly the easiest recipe in Casual Kitchen's entire history.
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!
Labels:
Best of...
Retro Sundays
Readers, a quick public service announcement: if you'd like to support Casual Kitchen, please consider doing so by using Amazon.com via any of the Amazon affiliate links here at CK. It's perhaps the easiest (and least expensive!) way to support your favorite blogs--every purchase you make pays a modest commission to Casual Kitchen, and there is absolutely no extra cost to you.
Thank you! Now, onward to this week's Retro Sundays...
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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
Using Salt = Cheating (December 2006)
Salt, when overused, blinds your taste buds and covers up your food's true flavors. Here's how to de-condition your palate away from salt. See also the bonus recipe for Easy Split Pea Soup.
Seven Ways to Get Faster at Cooking (December 2006)
Seven practical and specific tips that will make you into an efficient cooking machine. One of the first high-traffic posts in CK's history.
Shrimp in Garlic Sauce (Camarones Ajillo) (December 2007)
A spectacularly good and shockingly easy recipe from one of my all-time favorite cookbooks, Daisy Cooks. I promise it will be one of your best meals of the year.
Pasta With Roasted Red Pepper Sauce (December 2008)
A striking pasta sauce that's so easy it's almost unfair.
Survivor Bias: Why "Big Food" Isn't Quite As Evil As You Think (December 2009)
Who's really selecting the foods on our grocery store shelves? We are. That's right: fattening and unhealthy foods are on our store shelves because we put them there.
Roasted Zucchini and Chickpea Soup (December 2010)
One of 2010's best recipes and a runaway reader favorite. You can make this easy and unusual soup in under an hour (of which just 20-30 minutes is "active" time) for less than $1 a serving.
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!
Thank you! Now, onward to this week's Retro Sundays...
****************************
This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
Using Salt = Cheating (December 2006)
Salt, when overused, blinds your taste buds and covers up your food's true flavors. Here's how to de-condition your palate away from salt. See also the bonus recipe for Easy Split Pea Soup.
Seven Ways to Get Faster at Cooking (December 2006)
Seven practical and specific tips that will make you into an efficient cooking machine. One of the first high-traffic posts in CK's history.
Shrimp in Garlic Sauce (Camarones Ajillo) (December 2007)
A spectacularly good and shockingly easy recipe from one of my all-time favorite cookbooks, Daisy Cooks. I promise it will be one of your best meals of the year.
Pasta With Roasted Red Pepper Sauce (December 2008)
A striking pasta sauce that's so easy it's almost unfair.
Survivor Bias: Why "Big Food" Isn't Quite As Evil As You Think (December 2009)
Who's really selecting the foods on our grocery store shelves? We are. That's right: fattening and unhealthy foods are on our store shelves because we put them there.
Roasted Zucchini and Chickpea Soup (December 2010)
One of 2010's best recipes and a runaway reader favorite. You can make this easy and unusual soup in under an hour (of which just 20-30 minutes is "active" time) for less than $1 a serving.
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!
Labels:
Retro Sundays
CK Friday Links--Friday December 9, 2011
Here's yet another selection of interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
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Creepy ways food companies give low-fat foods that high-fat mouthfeel and texture. (NPR, via Summer Tomato)
Mastering the art of food gift giving. (Stonesoup) Bonus Post: Seven lessons from an Argentine grillmaster.
In case you hadn't heard: last week, Congress lifted a ban on horsemeat. (Eatocracy)
Speaking of politics: Did she or did she not? Questions about whether Michelle Obama has given up trying to get food companies to stop marketing junk foods to kids. Hey, it's an election year people! (Food Politics)
Why morning workouts are better. (344 Pounds)
Recipe Links:
How to make Whole Roasted Garlic. (Eating Rules)
Laughably easy Mushroom Stock. (Happy Herbivore) Bonus Post: How to freeze tofu.
Off-Topic Links:
The USA is a country of wildly imprudent and slobby people--especially with money. An except from Ben Stein's new book What Would Ben Stein Do. (Free Money Finance)
Smoking helps your distance running? How even the most idiotic health claims can be "proven." (PLoS Blog)
Tell the voice of negativity to take a hike and listen to that other voice, the one that gets drowned out. (Kitchen Bitsch)
Why on Earth do people idolize Steve Jobs? (Rachel Rofe)
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!
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
Creepy ways food companies give low-fat foods that high-fat mouthfeel and texture. (NPR, via Summer Tomato)
Mastering the art of food gift giving. (Stonesoup) Bonus Post: Seven lessons from an Argentine grillmaster.
In case you hadn't heard: last week, Congress lifted a ban on horsemeat. (Eatocracy)
Speaking of politics: Did she or did she not? Questions about whether Michelle Obama has given up trying to get food companies to stop marketing junk foods to kids. Hey, it's an election year people! (Food Politics)
Why morning workouts are better. (344 Pounds)
Recipe Links:
How to make Whole Roasted Garlic. (Eating Rules)
Laughably easy Mushroom Stock. (Happy Herbivore) Bonus Post: How to freeze tofu.
Off-Topic Links:
The USA is a country of wildly imprudent and slobby people--especially with money. An except from Ben Stein's new book What Would Ben Stein Do. (Free Money Finance)
Smoking helps your distance running? How even the most idiotic health claims can be "proven." (PLoS Blog)
Tell the voice of negativity to take a hike and listen to that other voice, the one that gets drowned out. (Kitchen Bitsch)
Why on Earth do people idolize Steve Jobs? (Rachel Rofe)
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!
Labels:
links
Ending Overeating: An Interview With Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler
Readers, today we have an enormous treat: An interview with a true thought leader in food, and one of Casual Kitchen's biggest influences, Dr. David Kessler.
Long-time CK readers of course know Dr. Kessler as the author of the exceptional book The End of Overeating, which exposed many of the food and restaurant industry's most pernicious and manipulative food processing techniques. His book completely reshaped how I think about food (you can read my rabidly positive review here), and it galvanized many CK readers to reconsider the suspect value of most processed foods and restaurant meals.
What readers may not know is that Kessler's book is just the tip of the iceberg of his career: Kessler ran the entire US Federal Drug Administration from 1990 to 1997, and he was a rare example of a senior government official who was able to work successfully under both a Republican and a Democratic President (George Bush Sr., who appointed him, and Bill Clinton, who kept him on). During his tenure FDA Commissioner, he was best known for dramatically increasing regulations on cigarettes, instituting many of our current food labeling requirements, and for stiffening the regulatory framework surrounding our food industry. After leaving government service, he served as the Dean of Yale Medical School.
I asked Dr. Kessler to talk about The End of Overeating for one simple reason: If there's ever a time of year we should read his book, it's right now during the holidays when we're surrounded and most tempted by processed, hyperpalatable and unhealthy foods. I'm grateful that he took the time to share insights about his book, about the food industry, and about the current state of overeating today.
Here's what he had to say:
CK: What's changed in the two and a half years since the publication of The End of Overeating? Are things improving in our culture with regard to obesity and our eating habits?
Dr. Kessler: It's been gratifying that new science continues to support the findings in The End of Overeating. I purposefully did not use the word "addiction" in the book, feeling it was a distraction, but scientists increasingly are using addiction science to look at the world of overeating and weight gain. The past two and a half years have seen an explosion in attention to this topic. Awareness and knowledge can only help us make informed decisions about what we eat.
What's the most important piece of advice you'd share with the average person who's up against the modern food industry?
It is most important to understand how huge portions of foods loaded and layered with sugar, fat, and salt can hijack the mechanisms of our brains. It's not always obvious what those foods are, so try to know what's in that chicken breast, as well as what's on that hamburger.
What's been the harshest, most unusual or most unsound criticism that you've received about The End of Overeating? And what reader responses to your book have most inspired you?
One criticism [I've received] is that I place the blame for the obesity epidemic on food companies, who are merely selling what the public wants, and not on individuals. I believe that corporations have a responsibility not to manipulate the brains of consumers. I believe individuals have the responsibility to understand they are being manipulated. I think that is clear to readers of The End of Overeating.
I am most inspired by readers who approach me after I have given a talk on the topics in the book and tell me that they felt for the first time as if someone knew what they were going through, that the science of that was a revelation, and their eating habits and lives had been changed forever. Heady stuff!
Some of the central ideas of your book--if taken to an extreme--can put us on uncomfortable ground. An example: if hyperpalatable food is truly bad, does this mean that the food industry should instead sell us "not-very-good-tasting food" so we won't eat so much? Is it really Big Food's fault that it merely sells the very food that we consumers consent to buy?
We've been conditioned to consume those loaded and layered foods. Believe it or not, once you know what's in those products, they can become "not-very-good-tasting food." Foods that are not highly processed, real foods, can taste good once we break the cycle of eating hyperpalatable foods. Food companies have long known what sells. Now they know the science of why. What is their responsibility once they have that knowledge?
You were appointed to run the FDA in 1990 under bipartisan support. You've successfully served under presidents of both the right and the left. If President Obama took you aside and asked you for your top policy suggestions on the subject of heath, diet and the business of food, what would you tell him?
What I tell all policy-makers is what I've said in my answers to your questions. Policies about truth in food marketing, food labeling, farm subsidies, etc., should be informed, as all good public health policy is, by the science.
Readers, share your thoughts and opinions!
Related Posts:
Four Steps to Put an End to Overeating
The Pros and Cons of Restaurant Calorie Labeling Laws
Obesity and the Obama Administration: A Blogger Roundtable Discussion
Who's Watching the Watchdogs? Ethical Problems in the "Ten Riskiest Foods" Report By the CSPI
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!
Long-time CK readers of course know Dr. Kessler as the author of the exceptional book The End of Overeating, which exposed many of the food and restaurant industry's most pernicious and manipulative food processing techniques. His book completely reshaped how I think about food (you can read my rabidly positive review here), and it galvanized many CK readers to reconsider the suspect value of most processed foods and restaurant meals.
What readers may not know is that Kessler's book is just the tip of the iceberg of his career: Kessler ran the entire US Federal Drug Administration from 1990 to 1997, and he was a rare example of a senior government official who was able to work successfully under both a Republican and a Democratic President (George Bush Sr., who appointed him, and Bill Clinton, who kept him on). During his tenure FDA Commissioner, he was best known for dramatically increasing regulations on cigarettes, instituting many of our current food labeling requirements, and for stiffening the regulatory framework surrounding our food industry. After leaving government service, he served as the Dean of Yale Medical School.
I asked Dr. Kessler to talk about The End of Overeating for one simple reason: If there's ever a time of year we should read his book, it's right now during the holidays when we're surrounded and most tempted by processed, hyperpalatable and unhealthy foods. I'm grateful that he took the time to share insights about his book, about the food industry, and about the current state of overeating today.
Here's what he had to say:
CK: What's changed in the two and a half years since the publication of The End of Overeating? Are things improving in our culture with regard to obesity and our eating habits?
Dr. Kessler: It's been gratifying that new science continues to support the findings in The End of Overeating. I purposefully did not use the word "addiction" in the book, feeling it was a distraction, but scientists increasingly are using addiction science to look at the world of overeating and weight gain. The past two and a half years have seen an explosion in attention to this topic. Awareness and knowledge can only help us make informed decisions about what we eat.
What's the most important piece of advice you'd share with the average person who's up against the modern food industry?
It is most important to understand how huge portions of foods loaded and layered with sugar, fat, and salt can hijack the mechanisms of our brains. It's not always obvious what those foods are, so try to know what's in that chicken breast, as well as what's on that hamburger.
What's been the harshest, most unusual or most unsound criticism that you've received about The End of Overeating? And what reader responses to your book have most inspired you?
One criticism [I've received] is that I place the blame for the obesity epidemic on food companies, who are merely selling what the public wants, and not on individuals. I believe that corporations have a responsibility not to manipulate the brains of consumers. I believe individuals have the responsibility to understand they are being manipulated. I think that is clear to readers of The End of Overeating.
I am most inspired by readers who approach me after I have given a talk on the topics in the book and tell me that they felt for the first time as if someone knew what they were going through, that the science of that was a revelation, and their eating habits and lives had been changed forever. Heady stuff!
Some of the central ideas of your book--if taken to an extreme--can put us on uncomfortable ground. An example: if hyperpalatable food is truly bad, does this mean that the food industry should instead sell us "not-very-good-tasting food" so we won't eat so much? Is it really Big Food's fault that it merely sells the very food that we consumers consent to buy?
We've been conditioned to consume those loaded and layered foods. Believe it or not, once you know what's in those products, they can become "not-very-good-tasting food." Foods that are not highly processed, real foods, can taste good once we break the cycle of eating hyperpalatable foods. Food companies have long known what sells. Now they know the science of why. What is their responsibility once they have that knowledge?
You were appointed to run the FDA in 1990 under bipartisan support. You've successfully served under presidents of both the right and the left. If President Obama took you aside and asked you for your top policy suggestions on the subject of heath, diet and the business of food, what would you tell him?
What I tell all policy-makers is what I've said in my answers to your questions. Policies about truth in food marketing, food labeling, farm subsidies, etc., should be informed, as all good public health policy is, by the science.
Readers, share your thoughts and opinions!
Related Posts:
Four Steps to Put an End to Overeating
The Pros and Cons of Restaurant Calorie Labeling Laws
Obesity and the Obama Administration: A Blogger Roundtable Discussion
Who's Watching the Watchdogs? Ethical Problems in the "Ten Riskiest Foods" Report By the CSPI
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!
Retro Sundays
Readers, a quick sneak preview: this week Casual Kitchen has an important post coming up--an interview with former FDA Commissioner, and author of The End Of Overeating, Dr. David Kessler!
This is an enormous "get" for me, and while I'm an admittedly shameless Kessler fan (his book has hugely influenced the views and philosophies here at CK), I made sure to throw some tough questions at him. I think readers will enjoy his provocative responses. Look for it on Tuesday!
**************************************
This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
Why Davis Baking Powder Put in a 23% Stealth Price Hike (December 2010)
A product we all use surreptitiously sneaks a gigantic price increase on consumers. I contact the company to find out why. Incredibly, they call me back to explain their position.
How to Whine About Big Food (December 2009)
Quite a few readers took my ironic tone literally and thus missed the point of this post. Ultimately, however, it went on to become one of 2009's most popular posts, and the first of dozens of articles I've since written on the theme of consumer empowerment.
Spicy Sauteed Beets (December 2009)
A striking and hilariously easy recipe that you can make in under 30 minutes. It's funny: this post got a collective yawn from readers when it first ran, but it's gone on to become a highly searched-for recipe.
15 Creative Tips to Avoid Holiday Overeating (December 2008)
This post contains my most powerful habits and tactics to help you control your food intake during those all-too-dangerous holiday months. Warning: a few of these tips are downright weird.
How to Team Up in the Kitchen (December 2007)
When Laura and I first got together, the kitchen was the site of some of our biggest turf battles (think two Napoleons trying to work together). Eventually, however, we figured out how to collaborate as cooks. This post reveals our best secrets.
Why I'm a Part-Time Vegetarian (December 2006)
The first post ever here at CK. It's not exactly my best writing, but it's where I haltingly outline some of my views on avoiding rigid dietary labels--and rethinking the amount of meat in the standard western diet. PS: At the end of this post there's also a bonus: a laughably cheap and easy Spanish Chickpea and Garlic Soup recipe.
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!
This is an enormous "get" for me, and while I'm an admittedly shameless Kessler fan (his book has hugely influenced the views and philosophies here at CK), I made sure to throw some tough questions at him. I think readers will enjoy his provocative responses. Look for it on Tuesday!
**************************************
This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:
Why Davis Baking Powder Put in a 23% Stealth Price Hike (December 2010)
A product we all use surreptitiously sneaks a gigantic price increase on consumers. I contact the company to find out why. Incredibly, they call me back to explain their position.
How to Whine About Big Food (December 2009)
Quite a few readers took my ironic tone literally and thus missed the point of this post. Ultimately, however, it went on to become one of 2009's most popular posts, and the first of dozens of articles I've since written on the theme of consumer empowerment.
Spicy Sauteed Beets (December 2009)
A striking and hilariously easy recipe that you can make in under 30 minutes. It's funny: this post got a collective yawn from readers when it first ran, but it's gone on to become a highly searched-for recipe.
15 Creative Tips to Avoid Holiday Overeating (December 2008)
This post contains my most powerful habits and tactics to help you control your food intake during those all-too-dangerous holiday months. Warning: a few of these tips are downright weird.
How to Team Up in the Kitchen (December 2007)
When Laura and I first got together, the kitchen was the site of some of our biggest turf battles (think two Napoleons trying to work together). Eventually, however, we figured out how to collaborate as cooks. This post reveals our best secrets.
Why I'm a Part-Time Vegetarian (December 2006)
The first post ever here at CK. It's not exactly my best writing, but it's where I haltingly outline some of my views on avoiding rigid dietary labels--and rethinking the amount of meat in the standard western diet. PS: At the end of this post there's also a bonus: a laughably cheap and easy Spanish Chickpea and Garlic Soup recipe.
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!
Labels:
Retro Sundays
CK Friday Links--Friday December 2, 2011
Here's yet another selection of interesting links from around the internet. As always, I welcome your thoughts and your feedback.
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
A brief history of tipping. (Food Woolf)
Is it a good thing or a bad thing that only 60% of farmers own the land they farm? Answer: It depends. (Sustainablog, via Appetite for Profit)
Tips to host a successful food-allergy-friendly potluck. (Eating Rules)
Scientists discover "cooking can be surprisingly forgiving." (Science News)
Recipe Links:
Traditional, homestyle Enfrijoladas. (Mexico In My Kitchen)
A quick and handy 49-second video on how to make Mulled Wine or Gleuwine. (Youtube, via Denver Doings)
A laughably easy and tasty recipe With No Name. Let's call it Hearty Chorizo and Bean Stew. (Stuff Yer Bake)
Off-Topic Links:
This week's unsolicited book recommendation: Lighten Up by Peter Walsh. If you know someone who wants to start down the road away from "stuff," this book would make a perfect gift. Useful, readable and encouraging.
If this article doesn't convince you to get on top of your estate planning, nothing will. (Get Rich Slowly)
How success really works, and why copying is better than begrudging. (Inc. Magazine, via Alosha's Kitchen)
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!
PS: Follow me on Twitter!
*************************
A brief history of tipping. (Food Woolf)
Is it a good thing or a bad thing that only 60% of farmers own the land they farm? Answer: It depends. (Sustainablog, via Appetite for Profit)
Tips to host a successful food-allergy-friendly potluck. (Eating Rules)
Scientists discover "cooking can be surprisingly forgiving." (Science News)
Recipe Links:
Traditional, homestyle Enfrijoladas. (Mexico In My Kitchen)
A quick and handy 49-second video on how to make Mulled Wine or Gleuwine. (Youtube, via Denver Doings)
A laughably easy and tasty recipe With No Name. Let's call it Hearty Chorizo and Bean Stew. (Stuff Yer Bake)
Off-Topic Links:
This week's unsolicited book recommendation: Lighten Up by Peter Walsh. If you know someone who wants to start down the road away from "stuff," this book would make a perfect gift. Useful, readable and encouraging.
If this article doesn't convince you to get on top of your estate planning, nothing will. (Get Rich Slowly)
How success really works, and why copying is better than begrudging. (Inc. Magazine, via Alosha's Kitchen)
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!
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