Sunday, July 22, 2012

I've Changed My Mind About Canned Tomatoes And Switched To San Marzanos

For quite some time, my standard brand of canned tomatoes has been Dei Fratelli. But I must say that compared to the ones we grow ourselves, they're always a let down. And one thing I haven't mentioned is that the cans have a white lining which some people object to out of fear that the acid in the tomatoes reacts with that and leaches something harmful into the contents of the can. Count me skeptical on that score. No company is going to risk their reputation without having looked into that. Besides, that liner has to cost extra to apply to the can. Why bother if they knew it was also harmful?

That said, what it really comes down to is the taste, and as the price of Dei Fratelli has climbed steeply, with lots of other things on the supermarket shelf, I've decided to get reacquainted with the Italian food lover's tomato of choice, the San Marzano. Since the retail price on Dei Fratelli has climbed to $1.99 in my area, paying the higher price for the San Marzano becomes more justifiable when you realize once again just how much more flavor the San Marzano possesses.

When I lived in Chicago and ran out of my own home grown, I had at least two Italian grocers within five miles of my house where I could always get the genuine article, and the major supermarkets often carried the same just to compete. Living as I do now in "Mudflap Meadows" Michigan, the options have been less numerous and the prices more out of reach. I saw a can of Cento San Marzanos the other day at a more upscale grocer for nearly $6 for the 28oz. can. Outrageous!

It turns out Meijer stores carry Bella Terra Organic San Marzanos for $3.79. After I prepared a batch of those I went back for more only to find Meijer has its own store brand of San Marzanos suddenly, right next to the Bella Terra on the bottom shelf. They are just as good, in my opinion. Even better, they were on sale for $2.99 a can.

Compared to Dei Fratelli, the San Marzano cooks up sweeter and less sharp, with a much more robust tomato flavor. It almost seems the Dei Fratelli has a more metallic quality by comparison, which must be the acidity. It's interesting how mellow the San Marzanos are, coming as they do in old fashioned unlined tin cans.

As always, I fill the bottom of a heavy sauce pan with extra virgin olive oil and heat it on medium heat for a couple of minutes. Then I add the contents of two 28oz. cans of tomatoes and bring them to a boil, and then after a stir I put on the lid and reduce the heat to lowest for one hour, stirring every twenty minutes. At the forty minute mark I add six cloves of crushed, chopped or pressed fresh garlic.

After the hour is up, I use my stainless steel potato masher to crush the tomatoes thoroughly and make a uniform thick consistency. I remove the lid and let the sauce cool for freezing in one cup servings. This also permits a little bit of evaporation to help thicken up the sauce.

Life is just too short to eat bad sauce. So don't!

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Larry Norman: Sittin' in my kitch'n

Maybe the most affecting performance he ever gave. Wouldn't have been nearly the same without the choir, though, imho.

See it here.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

The Sidekicks To The Super Foods Which You Can Incorporate At Will

almonds
AMARANTH
artichokes
ARUGULA
asparagus
BARLEY
bay leaves
BUCKWHEAT
bulgur wheat
BOYSENBERRIES
bok choy
BLACKBERRIES
broccoflower
BRUSSELS SPROUTS
sea bass
CASHEWS
carrots
CANOLA OIL
cauliflower
RED & GREEN CABBAGE
chives
SWISS CHARD
clams
CUMIN
currants
CHERRIES
collards
CRANBERRIES
cloves
COUSCOUS
yellow corn
SKINLESS CHICKEN BREAST
daikon root
EDAMAME
purple grapes
GRAPEFRUIT
guavas
HERRING
hazelnuts
ALASKAN HALIBUT
kale
KUMQUATS
kamut
KEFIR
kohlrabi
LEEKS
lemons
LIMES
romaine lettuce
LIVERWORT
miso
MILLET
mustard greens
MACADAMIA NUTS
oregano
OYSTERS
papayas
ORANGE BELL PEPPERS
pineapple
PEARS
sweet potatoes
PLUMS
pistachios
PUMPKIN SEEDS
peanuts
PECANS
Japanese persimmons
QUINOA
rye
WILD RICE
brown rice
RUTABAGA
raspberries
SCALLIONS
shallots
SARDINES
sesame seeds
SUNFLOWER SEEDS
Butternut squash
SPELT
seaweed
SOY MILK soy yogurt
SOY NUTS
strawberries
THYME
tangerines
TURMERIC
triticale
TEMPEH
turnips (& greens)
TOFU
canned Albacore tuna
TROUT
watercress
WATERMELON
wasabi
WHEAT

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Monday, July 9, 2012

1966 Volvo Nears 3 Millioneth Mile

Tom and Judy had two, one red, one white. That's all over now.

Video here.

Monday, May 28, 2012

"Give Me My Personality!"



I.e. the moustache, which Field Marshall Herring (Curly) has just torn off his upper lip!










I'll Never Heil Again, 1941 (here)

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Grapes, Other Crops, Threatened By 2,4-D Herbicide Used On Engineered Corn

"David Simmons, an Indiana farmer who grows corn and soybeans but also runs a vineyard and winery, says his young grapevines have suffered significant damage from drifting 2,4-D applications at neighboring farms, forcing him to fight to recover damage claims from fellow farmers' insurance carriers."

Read the full story here at CNBC.com.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

The Light of Eternal Mind

"Did he speak as a man?"

"He is not flesh, but spirit, the light of Eternal Mind. And I know that his light is in every man."















(1956)

Friday, April 6, 2012

True Poetry Frees Us From Burdens By Moderating Feelings

"True poetry announces itself thus, that, as a worldly gospel, it can by internal cheerfulness and external comfort free us from the earthly burdens which press upon us. ... The most lively, as well as the most serious works, have the same aim of moderating both pleasure and pain by a felicitous intellectual form."

-- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Autobiography, tr. John Oxenford (1891), Book 13

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Beware! Quackery Lives . . . in the Cult of Chiropractic

The quacks of chiropractic are still out there, with their doctrines of innate intelligence and subluxation. Doubters will not be accepted as patients as communicants. The chiropractors do not claim to cure any disease, but commitment is required up front! 12-18 months! 6 months! OK, 10-12 weeks, but that's the minimum. Because subluxations reassert themselves within 24-48 hours of every adjustment, you are nothing but a human ATM machine for the back-cracker. They operate x-ray machines but have never heard of microsieverts, or millirems. Before you realize who they really are, they already have some of your money.

Beware!

“It is the position of the medical profession that chiropractic is an unscientific cult whose practitioners lack the necessary training and background to diagnose and treat human disease. Chiropractic constitutes a hazard to rational health care in the United States because of its substandard and unscientific education of its practitioners and their rigid adherence to an irrational, unscientific approach to disease causation.”

-- AMA House of Delegates, 1966 (seen here)

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Natural Radiation in Salmon

Bananas have 3.5 pCi/g, or 525 pCi per 150 gram banana, enough to alarm a radiation monitor. One per day would give you 36 microSieverts per year.

In America from all sources we get about 6,200 microSieverts per year.









Salmon has 20.0 pCi/g, nearly 6 times as much. A 150 gram piece of salmon will thus emit 3,000 pCi of radiation, a little over 200 microSieverts per year if you ate that much everyday.

Naturally!

Why I'm Still Not Worried About Radioactive Wild Salmon From Alaska

From an excellent blog post "Radiation Misinformation" by Jack Phillips from 10 February 2012 here:

[S]almon have always been radioactive because they contain radioactive potassium just like we do. Have they become more radioactive as the result of the release of 26 billion Becquerel (Bq) into the Pacific Ocean as reported by Tepco?  Unlikely when you consider that this is less than one Curie (Ci) of radioactivity and the oceans contain over 400 billion Ci of radioactivity, 380 from Potassium, 87 from rubidium and 1 from Uranium 238.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Keep On Sucking Until You Do Succeed

Curley: "If at first you don't succeed, keep on sucking until you do succeed."
















The Three Stooges in Movie Maniacs, 1935 (here)

Saturday, November 12, 2011

You Say It Best When You Say Nothing At All

"A man is in general better pleased when he has a good dinner upon his table, than when his wife talks Greek."

-- Samuel Johnson

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Massive Oyster Die-Off in Upper Chesapeake Thought to be Storm Related

The recent hurricane and tropical storm caused more fresh water than the oysters can tolerate into the upper region of the once oyster-rich waterway.

Read about it here.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Welcome To Electiondome 2012!

Aunty Entity: "You know the law. Two men enter, one man leaves."

Wednesday, October 12, 2011