Retro Sundays

I created the Retro Sundays series to help newer readers easily navigate the very best of this blog's enormous back catalog of content. Each Retro Sundays column serves up a selection of the best articles from this week in history here at Casual Kitchen.

As always, please feel free to explore CK's Recipe Index, the Best Of Casual Kitchen page and my full Index of Posts. You can also receive my updates at Twitter.

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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:

Don't Pay Up For That Cookbook! How to Spend Next to Nothing on a Great Recipe Collection (July 2010)
It may seem like there's a constant oversupply of heavily marketed, celebrity-endorsed cookbooks in bookstores everywhere, many of which can cost forty, fifty or even eighty bucks a pop. However, after reading this post, you'll think entirely differently about cookbooks--and you will never again be suckered into overpaying for one.

Best Practices to Raise the Level of Discussion on Your Blog (July 2010)
Thought-provoking conversations are a rarity these days, in blogging and everywhere else. If you want to improve the conversation on your blog and get rid of pixel-wasting comments like "MMMMM! Looks delish!"--read this post.

African Peanut Stew (July 2009)
It shouldn't be a surprise to CK readers that this recipe was cheap, easy, healthy and delicious. What was a surprise was how flexible and substitution-friendly this dish was. From one of the best cookbooks of the past few years, Almost Meatless.

Homemade Corn Tortilla Chips (July 2008)
Once you try these, you will never go back to industrially-manufactured Tostitos. I promise.





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 29, 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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The environmentally responsible food choice may be more counterintuitive than you think. Read with an open mind. (Megraeb's Blog) Bonus Post: concerned about hormones in your beef? Don't be.

Campbell's ignominiously gives up on selling healthier, low-sodium soups. Whose fault is it? (Food Politics)

Six easy principles for common-sense healthy eating. (Nourishing Days, via Alosha's Kitchen)

Hints for thrift store success. (Owlhaven)

Recipe Links:
Creative and hilariously easy: Phyllo-Wrapped Shrimp. (Kalofagas)

Sloppy Joes, the real food way. (A Little Bit Of Spain in Iowa)

An incredible Asian Chicken Salad that's just perfect for the recent hot weather we're having. (Food & Fire)

Off-Topic Links:
Ever wondered what "gerrymandering" is? Still more reasons to distrust Congress. (The Awl)

Realistic advice to teenage girls. (Backwoods Mom)

Free (free!) recordings of the complete organ works of J.S. Bach. (Block M Records)


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!

Ask CK: How Do You Like Your Prices Raised?

If you have a question you'd like to ask Casual Kitchen, send it in!!
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Reader Julia at Grow. Cook. Eat. asks me an exceptional question:

I'm curious to know how you would prefer to see companies raise their prices. Inflation is inevitable. As the cost of inputs goes up (not just the cocoa, but also fuel for transportation, etc), so does the cost of production. We can't expect food-companies to keep prices the same indefinitely (or can we?).

This is a fascinating question, although I'd like to first take minor issue with Julia's premise: In my view, price inflation isn't always inevitable. It's common, granted. But pricing trends have been anything but consistent over the past decades across many products and services. And hidden in this wide range of pricing trends is a key to becoming a more empowered consumer.

Again, granted, some prices only seem to go up. The price of most meats and almost all branded cookies, crackers, soda, etc., rise consistently--as do many personal services, like haircuts and restaurant meals. At the same time, however, prices of many other foods have stayed surprisingly stable. Quite a few products, like dried lentils, canned and dried beans, potatoes, carrots, cabbage and other foods can often be purchased at prices not much higher than what I paid when I first moved out on my own some twenty years ago.

Further, some areas of the grocery store, thanks to new competition, are facing falling prices: for example, I can now buy most of my spices at lower prices than I paid just a few years ago, thanks to increased competition from some new spice suppliers now on grocery store shelves. (Long time readers will know exactly why this warms my heart.)

Finally, there are some segments of the consumer products world where prices go through secular declines: consumer electronics, computers, cellphones and cellphone service all cost a fraction (and in some cases a tiny fraction) of what they cost a decade or two decades ago. Even our cable bills, long a bastion of steady annual price increases, are starting to sag in the face of other, less expensive ways to watch TV. (If you haven't called your cable company recently and asked for a price concession, please do so. Right now. I'll wait.)

Okay. Eons ago, when I was getting paid to pick stocks on Wall Street, we had an expression for companies that tried to put through price increases. We'd ask, "So, is their price hike going to stick?" In other words, would their customers accept the price hike? More importantly, did their customers have other suppliers or substitutes that they could turn to if they wanted to resist the price hike? These were the key factors that drove whether a price hike would "stick"--or if the company had to cave in and roll that price hike back.

And this, I firmly believe, is the key to empowering consumers when we face price hikes.

I'll even go further, and argue that we consumers have simply conditioned ourselves to accept regular price increases with certain products. Among the worst offenders: branded, heavily-advertised products and second-order foods. Yes, we notice them (usually), grumble a bit to ourselves, and maybe even mentally shake our fists at Big Food. But then we willingly take these products to the checkout line and buy them anyway.

Maybe, just maybe, we should entirely rethink these purchases. What if we quit buying them--or drastically cut back--and made the makers of those products cave in and roll back their prices? We are already beginning to see this happening across some branded food categories, as consumers are rising up, adjusting their purchasing habits, and finding substitutes for branded products that are priced above their real value. As a result, companies like Unilever and Proctor & Gamble, after years of subjecting us to steady, consistent price hikes, are finding a the rules are changing. They've had to step up discounting and cut prices in order to maintain sales. In other words, consumers are pushing back--and these companies are caving.

So with that as a backdrop: here's how I'd like my price hikes: I'd like them to be clear, not hidden. Overt, not stealthy. In other words, pretty much the exact opposite of what Hershey's and Davis Baking Powder did.

Look: if you're going to raise prices, don't hide it. Just admit it and own up to it. If your product is worth the extra value, I will still pay for it. And if you try to sneak a stealth price hike past me, I will drop your product like a bad habit.

Readers, what's your view? How do you like your prices raised?

Related Posts:
The Do-Nothing Brand
Divorce Yourself from the False Reality of Your Grocery Store
Ten Thoughts On the True Value of Brands
Brand Disloyalty


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!

The Mysteriously Shrinking Hershey's Bar

The other day a wonderful thing--and an awful thing--happened to me.

I was sitting at my computer, drafting up a monumental multi-part post that when published will shake the earth to its very core. Suddenly, Laura came up behind me and placed two wonderful things on my desk: a stack of twenty dollar bills, and a half pound Hershey's Special Dark Chocolate bar.

Okay. A couple of things. First don't start thinking that Laura lost some bet or that we have some kind of weird financial relationship (well, we do, but it's way weirder than you could ever imagine). She just happened to stop at the ATM on her way home from running errands. You see, now that I've been out of my Wall Street career for three years and am embracing my new role as Laura's stay-at-home cook/cabana boy, the one remaining manly thing I still do is hold the cash. So she got some dough and gave it to me.

Second, and even more weird, I'll admit up front that for me, a bar of Hershey's Special Dark is a deeply guilty pleasure (or as they say more elegantly in Spanish, un placer culpable). Look, there are so many additives in this chocolate that it's iffy even to call it "chocolate." But for some reason I have always been mindlessly sentimental with this brand of chocolate--I think because at a very very early age I developed a taste for dark chocolate (a regrettable genetic trait in our family), and Hershey's Special Dark was hella better than the crap milk chocolate Hershey bars that were so widely available back then.

Milk chocolate. Sheesh, what a waste.

Now, where was I? Ah yes, the awful thing. Well, this "half-pound" chocolate bar, as everybody knows, no longer weighs half a pound. It faced the grocery store shrink ray years ago, and now this bar of chocolate weighs 6.8 ounces.

What's insidious about this, of course, is that Hershey's can keep the price the same, slash the product's weight, and effectively extract a 17.6% stealth price increase from consumers. Nice. Heck, they can even claim that their "food" doesn't contain as many calories as it used to.

But what really, really frosted me was that they had the temerity to write "Giant Bar" on the label. Giant? Giant compared to what?

Yet another reason to practice brand disloyalty if you ask me. Readers, what's your view?


Related Posts:
Understanding the Consumer Products Industry (Full Archive)
What's Your Favorite Consumer Empowerment Tip?
Organic Food, Chemicals, and Worrying About All the Wrong Things
On Spice Fade, And the Utter Insanity of Throwing Spices Out After Six Months


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

I created the Retro Sundays series to help newer readers easily navigate the very best of this blog's enormous back catalog of content. Each Retro Sundays column serves up a selection of the best articles from this week in history here at Casual Kitchen.

As always, please feel free to explore CK's Recipe Index, the Best Of Casual Kitchen page and my full Index of Posts. You can also receive my updates at Twitter.

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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:

Ask Casual Kitchen: Do You Make Money Blogging? (July 2010)
Where I explain the second oldest lie of the internet. The short answer is, yes, I do make money blogging. But it's kind of complicated.

Review: Cooking Green by Kate Heyhoe (July 2009)
By far the best book I've ever read on how to reduce your kitchen's carbon footprint, yet still cook healthy, affordable food for your family. An absolutely exceptional read that is still teaching me new things. Highly, highly recommended.

Guess What? We Spend Less Than Ever on Food (July 2009)
This post probably made more enemies than all my other writing combined in 2009, because it challenges all of our conventionally-held assumptions about food.

A Brief Tutorial on How to Cut Up a Pineapple (July 2008)
With pineapple on sale these days for a glorious $2.99 (at least in our local grocery stores), I've suddenly found this post quite useful.

Shrimp in Tomato Sauce: Middle Eastern Cuisine (July 2007)
This post features a striking mix of flavors and spices in a delicious and hilariously easy recipe. A favorite from Casual Kitchen's very first year.


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 22, 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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The Center For Science in the Public Interest is at it again: now giving out awards for the worst mega-calorie meals at top restaurant chains. (CSPI.org) Readers, note that the CSPI has a prior history here at CK.

Not every factory farmer is a faceless evil corporation. Read with an open mind. (Life as an Iowa Farm Wife)

Make a Starbucks Frappuccino for 32c, just one-tenth the regular price. (Squawkfox)

Still more insights on the question of whether cookbooks go out of date. (Dad Cooks Dinner)

Recipe Links:
One word: Wow. Grilled Pineapple with Brown Sugar Rum Sauce. (Cookin' Canuck)

It seemed weird to me at first, but I cannot wait to try it: Strawberry and Avocado Salsa. (Closet Cooking)

Interesting! Carrot Cake Cookies. (Very Culinary)

Off-Topic Links:
Five simple tips for better communication. (Stepchase Lifehack)

How to do everything wrong. (Steve Pavlina)

On learned helplessness. And please, don't just settle for "micro-revolts." (You Are Not So Smart)


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!

The 911 Frittata

This outrageously easy recipe can function as a delicious quick dinner, a filling lunch, or an incredibly fancy breakfast.

We've discussed the remarkable value of the frittata previously here at Casual Kitchen. It's a supremely flexible dish that can stand in as an emergency meal at any time. And it's one of those recipes that seems really fancy for the minimal amount of work it takes to make.

Therefore, if you don't already have a basic frittata recipe as part of your cooking arsenal, I strongly encourage you to add it to your repertoire. There are few recipes this flexible, this healthy and this easy to put on the table. Enjoy!
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The 911 Frittata

Ingredients:
6 eggs
Black pepper and salt to taste
2-3 Tablespoons fresh parsley, coarsely chopped
2 garlic cloves, pressed or minced
2-3 Tablespoons olive oil
1 medium or large onion, sliced coarsely
1 medium unpeeled potato, sliced thinly
1 large tomato, chopped coarsely
2 teaspoons Tabasco sauce, more or less to taste

Directions:
1) Beat eggs together with black pepper, parsley and one of the two minced/pressed garlic cloves. Set aside.

2) In a large, deep, broiler-proof non-stick pan, saute onions in oil on high heat for 3-4 minutes, until they begin to brown. Add potatoes and the second minced/pressed garlic clove, reduce heat to medium-high, cover and cook for approximately 7-10 minutes--stirring periodically--until the potatoes are al dente but not too crunchy.

3) Add the chopped tomatoes and Tabasco and saute for another 3-4 minutes, until everything is hot and the tomatoes begin to soften slightly.

4) Then pour the egg/parsley/garlic/black pepper mixture over everything in the pan. Reduce heat to medium. As the eggs begin to set, run a spatula around the edge of the skillet, lifting the mixture to allow uncooked portions of the egg mixture to flow underneath. Continue cooking and lifting until the entire egg mixture is almost totally cooked through (the top surface should still be slightly moist).

5) Place pan under your broiler about 3-4 inches from the heat source. Broil for 4-6 minutes until the the frittata is cooked through to your liking. Cut into wedges and serve.

Serves 4.

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Recipe Notes:
1) Obviously the amount of Tabasco you add to this dish can a variable. If you like a lot of heat, double it. If you're a total wimp, go ahead and cut it in half.

2) A quick word about the cost. I made today's recipe for about $2.25, or a per-serving cost of about 56c. That's just laughable.

3) Finally, a word about the innate flexibility of the frittata, by far its greatest strength. You can pretty much put anything into it: whatever greens or veggies you happen to have handy in your fridge are fair game and can be tossed in. For me, there's only one constraint: there's gotta be something green in every frittata. It's like a law. Otherwise the dish just looks too... yellowy.

Readers, what are your favorite ingredients to put into a frittata?



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

I created the Retro Sundays series to help newer readers easily navigate the very best of this blog's enormous back catalog of content. Each Retro Sundays column serves up a selection of the best articles from this week in history here at Casual Kitchen.

As always, please feel free to explore CK's Recipe Index, the Best Of Casual Kitchen page and my full Index of Posts. You can also receive my updates at Twitter.

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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:

Knowing When Not to Be a Food Snob (July 2010)
I call out Michael Ruhlman on his abysmal behavior in a national restaurant chain. One of my most-commented, most controversial and most widely read posts of 2010.

Does Healthy Eating Really Cost Too Much? A Blogger Roundtable (July 2009)
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? I asked this question to five well-known food blogging colleagues. You'll be surprised by their candid and provocative answers.

Beef and Beer Stew (July 2008)
One of my all-time favorite stew recipes, adapted from, of all places, the Wall Street Journal. Who says fatcats can't cook inexpensive and healthy food too!

What's the Most Heavily Used Tool in Our Kitchen? (July 2008)
This idiot-proof device is a constantly-used fixture in our kitchen. Having one could save you a significant amount of labor--and 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 15, 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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Convincing a reluctant spouse or family member to switch to real food. (100 Days of Real Food)

How does eating fit into the so-called good life? Ask the ancients. (Tim Ferriss)

Three tips to help you avoid being a pontificating eco-bore. (Eco-Snobbery Sucks)

Watch how the California Beef Council beats up on a small rancher who wrote a documentary blog post about how her farm harvests beef. (Megreab's Blog)

Recipe Links:
A perfect hot-weather meal: Thai Inspired Salad. (The Oyster Evangelist)

Delicious and healthy appetizers: Rosemary Spiced Almonds. (Dragon's Kitchen)

Makeable in just 15 minutes! Spaghetti alla Carbonara with Peas. (Closet Cooking)

Off-Topic Links:
Ten myths about introverts. (Owl City Blog, via Owlhaven)

31 life lessons in 31 years. Particularly 4, 7, 9, 13, 21 and 22. (Think Simple Now, via The Simple Dollar)

A balanced look at what it means, exactly, to be guilty of "Malthusian thinking." (New York Times)


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!

A Simple Rule To Make Your Life Environmentally Sustainable and Worry Free

There's a lot of stupid crap out there to worry about. And there's literally an infinity of things to worry about when buying food and consumer goods.

You can worry about everything from the quality of life of your chickens to the quantity of mercury in your fish--and the environmental impact of both. And after worrying about that, you can get even more specific: this kind of fish is overharvested, and that kind of fish is terrible for the environment when farmed. And then you can worry that you're a loser for not knowing the latest about which fish are on or off the "do not eat" list.

You can worry about GMO foods, although it still isn't clear if they are bad for the environment or increasingly necessary to feed a planet with 7 billion people and counting.

You can worry about soy. Or not. You can worry about what chickens, cows and pigs ate for dinner before you eat them for dinner.

You can worry about plastic grocery bag use. Or you can learn that cities and countries with plastic grocery bag bans often see a counterintuitive increase in plastic garbage bag consumption that overwhelms any positive impact of the ban.

Jeez, and then you can worry about that too.

Heck, you can be astoundingly specific about the things you can worry about. For example: do you like asparagus? Well now you have the privilege of worrying that the asparagus you buy might cause severe water shortages in Peru.

I could go on, but I think we can all see the pattern here. We can worry about all of these things, and change our behavior and buying patterns to try to counteract those worries--and then change them back when those worries are proven wrong. The thing is, worry and minor behavior changes might assuage our guilt and make us feel better about ourselves, but they do very little to help our health or the environment. Let's be honest: this is often more about trying to get a sense of control over our lives in what seems like an increasingly uncontrollable world.

Why, then, do so many of us invest so much time and energy doing things that just don't accomplish all that much? Because it gives us the comfortable illusion of having a meaningful impact. Nothing beats feeling better about yourself.

We should be thinking bigger.

In fact, there is an easier way each of us can have a far greater environmental, social and societal impact on the world around us: Get your big-ticket and big footprint decisions right.

In short: buy a lot less big stuff.

A few examples: Don't mindlessly lease a new car every two years, wasting both the money and the enormous carbon footprint of the manufacture of another car. Save money by buying a smaller, fuel-efficient car and driving it for several years. This single action will have a more substantial positive impact on the environment than a lifetime of buying "ethically-grown" asparagus.

Don't rip out your kitchen every five years because you're sick of the decor. Instead, work with what you have and defer the cost and waste of materials. Is it really going to kill you to have that matching olive-green oven and fridge for a few extra years? (A trick question for astute readers: where do you think those old appliances, countertops and cabinets go once you toss 'em?)

Here's another idea: Don't buy a huge house. Especially if it has an olive green oven. And please don't follow in Al Gore's carbon footprints and build a 10,000 square foot mansion with 8 bathrooms and a $30,000 annual energy bill. Again, get the big stuff right.

Here's yet another idea that the vast majority of us can do to great effect with little or no effort: cut your meat intake in half. In half. You'll save money, save calories and have an enormous impact on the carbon footprint of your diet. And you won't miss it.

My father, in one of his most enduringly useful sayings about money, used to tell me (uh, repeatedly) that if you get your big-ticket spending decisions right, you won't have to worry at all about the small-ticket stuff. Another way of thinking about this is if you save $40,000 by skipping the Hummer and opting for small car, or if you save 75 grand by buying a smaller house, that single decision has a greater financial impact than 20+ years of "saving money" by brown-bagging your lunch or skipping your daily latte.

Guess what? The exact same logic holds for decisions about our health, our food and our environment. Get the big stuff right. Spend more time worrying about the major things that you can control, and stop worrying pointlessly about the minor things that you can't.

We can't all be experts about overpriced organic food, fisheries, plastic bags and asparagus. But we can reduce the biggest sources of waste in our lives and actually have a meaningfully positive impact on our world.

Readers, what do you think?





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

I created the Retro Sundays series to help newer readers easily navigate the very best of this blog's enormous back catalog of content. Each Retro Sundays column serves up a selection of the best articles from this week in history here at Casual Kitchen.

As always, please feel free to explore CK's Recipe Index, the Best Of Casual Kitchen page and my full Index of Posts. You can also receive my updates at Twitter.

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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:

Death of a Soda Tax (July 2010)
Initially, it seems so easy to make an argument for this tax. Almost too easy. A controversial post with a refreshingly civil debate in the comments.

Countdown: The Top Ten Best No-Alcohol Drinks (July 2009)
This post, along with my Top Ten Alcoholic Drinks of Summer post is consistently in my top four or five searched-for posts here at Casual Kitchen. Stump your bartender!

If It's So Cheap to Cook at Home, Then Why is My Grocery Bill So Huge? (July 2009)
Cheap meals don't exist in a vacuum. And when people see a spike in their grocery bills when they start cooking more, they can easily get discouraged with the entire idea of frugal home cooking. Here are some useful tips to save as much as half off your grocery bill--every time you shop.

All-Time Least Popular Posts of Casual Kitchen (July 2008)
I share this post for no other reason than to show that every blog has at least some pointless and awful writing.

Favorite Food Photography Links (July 2008)
Some of the best articles and sites that have helped me improve my food photographs.


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 8, 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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How $10,000 speaker cables can teach us a valuable lesson on getting the most out of the food we buy. (Eating Rules)

I don't always agree with Marion Nestle, but this week she's put together an incredible list of food advocacy resources for her readers. Vote with your fork! (Food Politics)

Tips to encourage your kids to eat healthy. (Dietriffic)

Has the green movement totally lost its way? (The Guardian)

Recipe Links:
A simple and laughably easy Spiced Cabbage. (Chow & Chatter)

100% authentic and surprisingly easy: Nuoc Cham or Vietnamese Dipping Sauce. (Closet Cooking)

A healthy, "hurry up" meal you can make in minutes: White Bean and Summer Vegetable Pasta. (Choosing Raw)

Off-Topic Links:
Unsolicited book recommendation of the week: John McPhee's Encounters with the Archdruid. This oddly titled book gives a surprisingly balanced and open-minded look at the maturation of the environmental movement in the USA. I just finished reading it (for the second time!) last week, and highly, highly recommend it.

A practical guide to getting started on Twitter. (Stepchase Lifehack)

Is there something you've always wanted to do, but just... haven't? This three-minute video shows you how. (TED Talks, via The Oyster Evangelist) Bonus post: a complete list of all TED talks, broken out by speaker, subject, title content and duration. Worth bookmarking.




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!

Do Cookbooks Go Out of Date?

Have you ever thought about whether a cookbook can go out of date?

I have to confess, this question never even occurred to me until a reader asked it in a comment on one of my Retro Sundays posts.

And so I thought I'd throw this question out to my 2,500 followers on Twitter to see what kinds of thoughts might emerge. And my followers responded with a truly insightful discussion (and at least a small amount of evidence that Twitter isn't as narcissistic as everybody says it is). Read on to see what they said, and as always, share your thoughts in the comments!

1) I would say no...not the good ones at least. Recipes are timeless - aren't they? @nithyadas

For my part, I don't necessarily agree with this: for every timeless recipe, there's a Betty Crocker-esqe cookbook needlessly spiked with much salt and fat (ironically, the affiliate link here is to this book's tenth edition. I rest my case: not every recipe--or cookbook--ages well).

2) Each time I look at Mollie Katzen's Moosewood Cookbook it seems new to me. I'd never want to be without it. @cindyshay123

I couldn't agree more, but even the great Mollie Katzen updated her own cookbook...twice. Do you think she agrees or disagrees?

3) My favorite go to book is from '59. @HeatherHAL

4) I would agree with that. A lot of cookbooks don't expire. I still reach for my Joy of Cooking. @eatthelove

5) I have some cookbooks from the 50's and 60's, the food is heavier but there are still gems I use in them. @HeatherHAL

Bottom line: recipes you love are recipes you love--no matter how old they are. My precious Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen came out in 1984, and yet it's a timeless (and gloriously unhealthy) cookbook if there ever was one. Our copy of The New Vegetarian Epicure dates from 1972 and our excellent Laurel's Kitchen is "new" from 1976. Both books are immortal.

And last year when we were leaving Chile, we received a wonderful gift: a precious piece of Chile's culinary history in the book Cocina Popular, a traditional cookbook first printed in 1964 (warning: don't buy it unless you can read Spanish).

But then again, there are other equally reasonable sides to this issue:

6) When they talk about a newly popular fish called orange roughy which is now on some endangered lists, you know it's outdated. @eatthelove

7) Copy like "One of the hottest restaurant trends..." in any cookbook is going to sound dated in a few years. @eatthelove

8) cookbooks, like recipes, definitely go out of date! Best become culinary heritage! @cachandochile

9) cookbooks can be out of date! best eg. Is joy of cooking.1970 version has recipes for possum and squirrel while 1990 doesn't @CarleneFutureRD

Wait: how could they pull out the recipes for possum and squirrel???

10) Some absolutely do. Like all the miracles of microwave cookery cookbooks from the 80's. @tjotjoc

11) I have an amazing vintage 1960s knox gelatin cookbook. It's stunning. Gelatin tuna fish salad anyone? @eatthelove

...Somehow, I'm thinking that last cookbook was never "in date" in the first place.

Readers, what do you think? Do cookbooks ever go out of date? Why or why not?


Related Posts:
How Have Your Tastes Changed Compared to Your Parents?
Cookbook Review: 5 Ingredients, 10 Minutes by Jules Clancy
Six Cookbooks That Should Be the Foundation of Your Cookbook Collection


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

I created the Retro Sundays series to help newer readers easily navigate the very best of this blog's enormous back catalog of content. Each Retro Sundays column serves up a selection of the best articles from this week in history here at Casual Kitchen.

As always, please feel free to explore CK's Recipe Index, the Best Of Casual Kitchen page and my full Index of Posts. You can also receive my updates at Twitter.

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This Week in History at Casual Kitchen:

When Do You Throw Out Food? (July 2010)
I thought I had an easy and straightforward answer to this question--until I asked readers to share their thoughts too. When do you throw out food?

Glossary of Casual Kitchen Memes (July 2009)
If you want to see, in one place, all of the philosophies, ideologies and downright weird ideas I espouse here at Casual Kitchen, this post for you.

How to Make an Arrabbiata Sauce (July 2008)
You'll wow your family and friends with this preposterously easy sauce recipe that can be made in just a few bare minutes.

Thai Pasta Salad (July 2007)
One of our favorites here at CK, and a perfect dish for a hot summer day. Try this mildly spicy and unforgettable recipe and you'll see exactly what I mean.


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 1, 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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A fascinating post on how cork is made. (Wineanorak)

Seven reasons you should eat eggs for breakfast. (Stepchase Lifehack)

Where all those ginormous Ag subsidies go. (Food Politics)

This minute and a half long video lampoons everything there is to lampoon about modern nutritionists. (Warning: if you're a nutritionist lacking a sense of humor, don't watch--you'll just get mad.) (Youtube, via Skeptic North)

Recipe Links:
OK, listen up: this is how you make a real margarita. (Food & Fire)

Absolutely perfect for July 4th! Red, White and Blue Berry Yogurt Cake. (Baking Bites)

Wow. Papaya-Ginger Beer Baked Beans. And feel free to leave out the SPAM. (Coconut & Lime)

Off-Topic Links:
How to find more time to read. (Buon Viaggio)

The story of the USA's pathetically idiotic ethanol policy in just 600 words. (Mother Jones, via Simple, Good and Tasty)

How to write your congressman--effectively. (The Art of Manliness, via 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!