Green, Sustainable and Colorful at the International Home & Housewares Show

A foodie friend asked me what’s the hot , can’t live without gadget you found this year at the International Home and Housewares show. I was at a blank to answer. Don’t get me wrong, I found many things I just have to have this year, but these were the things that constantly impressed or occurred frequently as I roamed the endless number of booths and exhibits for 2 of the three days at McCormick Place. The Show was divided into  these sections:

dine +design

wired + well

clean +contain  (including global crossroads)

Trends that appealed to me and reoccurred were

Bold Pop Colors at ZAK designs www.zak.com

Bold Pop Colors

Green

Sustainability

I would be hard for me to include everything I saw in one post. So today I want to show my favorite green and sustainable items.

From the French Delegation ID Cook brings us Solar Barbecues( portable and fold away), Sun Cook Ovens, and even a nifty solar lighter that lights your cigarettes in 3 seconds even with wind. Ingenious inventions powered by the Sun.

I loved these fair trade clay vessels made in Columbia from Ancestral Clay Cookware.Non reactive, green, sustainable this method of cooking has been used since Pre Colombian times. Not only extremely beautiful, they are functional as well with the ability to be used on gas or electric ovens or ranges, grills,microwave, or direct camp fire.

And finally borrowing from the Eastern culture To-Go Wares Bamboo Utensil sets to Reduce your Fork print and stack able versatile Tiffins that are BPA and Phthalate Free.Portable, functional, and green with a focus to serve people on the go while saving our planet.

My next post will feature the impressive small business entrepreneurs  at the International House and Housewares Show who have created some innovative food products.

Chicago Hidden Gems…Old Chinatown

This will be the first in a series of posts I will explore from time to time called  Chicago Hidden Gems. This series will have a  affordable  inspirational, culinary and travel angle .

Today I showed a dear  friend around to my some favorite spots only we could appreciate. We decided to have a weekday Dim Sum lunch (average tab $15-$20 a person)  at Phoenix , and then explore Wentworth Avenue, otherwise known as Old Chinatown. Admittedly, I don’t get to that part  of Chinatown often but love a hidden little cookware store called Woks and Things. Affordable and huge variety. I left  with a Dragon shaped garnish cutter ( suggested uses as cakes, garnish, vegetable cutouts) and  the tea cups featured above  for $1.25 each ( suggested uses for tea, soups, amuse bouche, starters, mini desserts, spice bowls). We then crossed over to the East side of the street and found Ten Ren Tea and Ginseng shop, one of the  oldest and venerated tea havens in Chinatown, let alone Chicago. This is for hard core tea lovers who seek exceptional teas, beautiful ceramics, and a helpful educated staff. Don’t come here for adulterated artificial flavored teas. Amongst the copper tins and boxed teas, I choose a smoky and rich Lapsang souchong (Lap Sang Soo Chong at $17.00  a pound (suggested uses drink,  tea  smoke fish , chicken, or pork) along with boxed sets of Oolong, and Rose teas .The beautiful tin cannister to store my smoky goodness was an additional $5.75.

Finish your promenade with a stop by Hoypoloi, and Uncommon Gallery and revel in great American based art finds like the  prints of Dr. Seuss. And then grab a hot  or bubble tea from the younger hipper St.Alps Teahouse .

And there is a great  Far Eastern interlude in a corner of Chicago some are too timid to explore in depth. There is a lot waiting to be discovered in Chicago.

Meat Tips,Confessions and a $100 Giveaway from U.S Wellness Meats

Meat….. is something I  hear quite often around the house. Certain Someone is a carnivore. When he is around I can’t get away with a meatless dinner, no matter how I try. Don’t get me wrong, I like meat too, but try to vary my diet a bit more. One thing I have control of, is that if we are going to eat meat, I strive to be very careful of the quality of our meats. So when US Wellness Meats contacted me and offered me a range of samples including Grass-fed beef I was impressed.

Because we use the best practices of sustainable farming that allow us to avoid harmful additives like hormones and antibiotics, our grass-raised animals pass the best of their nutrient-rich diet on to you.

Grass-fed beef is rich in omega-3 anti-inflammatory fatty acids (the healthy fat found in salmon), in conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), a proven cancer fighter and lean muscle-building tool, as well as vitamins A and E, essential nutrients that are known for their antioxidant properties. When it comes to nutrition, grass-fed beef truly is a completely different animal.

I confess when it comes to steaks and beef I’m intimidated. Some chefs are great with certain foods, but not so with others. While I consider myself both a cook and a baker, steaks and certain cuts of beef I always  tend to overcook it unintentionally. US Wellness sent me 2 T-Bones, 1 eye of the round, 2 chicken breasts, BBQ sauce, All Purpose Seasoning and a package of Ground Bison. Through out the month we tried all the products and were pleased. I was intimidated by the Eye of the Round as its a cheaper and leaner cut that you want to cook till perfection but not overcook or dry as its more lean.

Eye of The Round Roast Method

I confess this was the method I used and the best one I have ever found for this cut. It cooks it for a short period on a very high temp and then you let meat sit in the oven uncovered for 2 -3 hours. The roast is perfection. I took the leftovers and made the dish on top with the BBQ sauce sample  from US Wellness and fried onions  served atop a corn tortilla.

Ground Bison

Leaner and healthier, Bison is used as you would use ground beef. Its makes a great substitute.Not only is there a nutritional benefit but an ecological one as well . Bison are grass fed and graze without harming the environment, as nature intended. Their waste and movements both nourish and aid the grounds and land.

Meat Facts and  Cooking Temperatures

Meat/ Protein and carbohydrates are considered a TCS food (Temperature Control Safety). Harmful pathogens are controlled by temperature. So cooking and storage of these items should be followed with care. The following are  cooking requirements for TCS foods and any recipe containing a TCS food.

  • Ground Beef is prone to Shiga Toxin -producing E.Coli  found in intestines of cattle and should be cooked to minimum temperature of at least 155 F (68 C). This applies to ground pork as well and other meats ( not ground poultry).
  • Roasts( pork, veal and lamb) should be cooked to minimum internal temperature of 145F (63 C)
  • Poultry ( ground or whole chicken, turkey and duck) should be cooked to a minimum internal temperature of 165 F (74 C)
  • Seafood (fish, shellfish, and crustaceans) should be cooked to a minimum internal temp of 145 F( 63 C)
source ServeSAFE Essentials National Restaurant Association Fifth Edition

I am offering a Giveaway sponsored by US Wellness Meats to all US Residents. Sorry it must be within the US ( AK and HI included). The winner will be to shop for $ 100  worth of sustainable  products from the Midwest farmlands that are raised according to organic principles. Meats, poultry, fish, and even by products such as soap and candles, ice cream , etc are offered. They even have condiments and spices. All you have to enter is  go here and fill out your info. The contest closes Sunday March 13, 2011 at 12 :00 am.

Turning Honey Into Wine…The Art of Making Mead

In life you can have many types of friends that each fit into a type of box. I met The Alchemist ten years ago at a French Wine tasting class.The class was composed of five women, who to this day are still in contact, even though we are scattered geographically and politically. I wouldn’t say any of us are best friends, but we are there for each other  and always bond over a bottle or two of wine and great food , which is what brought us together in the first place. Out of all the women, The Alchemist is the one I’m closer to and encourages my culinary dreams, when I cant see the potential inside myself. I get so so busy that I sometimes just need to accept an offer of something creative and unique.

“Wanna make some Mead?”, the Alchemist said.

My first thought was , that was the stuff she goes on about at the Renaissance Festivals. And then I started to think of the whole hippy dippy culture that converges onto the annual Renaissance Festival at the border of Wisconsin. I remember tasting the honey based fermented wine once on an extremely hot day with her, and don’t remember being wowed by it.Exaggerated images of her drinking Mead in Renaissance garb popped into my head. It’s hard  for me to commit to a lot of things socially , but I blocked off October 31st in my calendar. I really didn’t give a thought to the date having any significance. As the Alchemist has more disposable income than myself, she invested in the wine making equipment. The first Mead was going to be a Pumpkin Pie Mead an I was going to bring the spices of cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg along with some label designs. The Alchemist had piles of noted from conversations with Mead experts.Mead making is an exact science with no room for bacterial contamination or error. All of the ingredients were laid out on her granite counter.On her counter sat fifteen pounds of cloudy Wisconsin honey from her mentors own apiary, waiting to be clarified.Earlier The Alchemist  had filled cases of old wine bottles, which we would recycle to bottle with water from her parents spring fed lake.We proceeded to  boil and sterilize the water,  then filter .While clarifying the honey , and heating, and filtering the water, we plotted out a flavor profile and I suggested a few black peppercorns to blend out the flavor.

“Come here”, she beckoned as she stood over the steaming hot water we were about to filter. “It smells like the lake”, she enthused. “It smells like the earth”, I acknowledged.

Mossy and flinty, I understood at that very moment what Terroir in wine making is all about. The flavors of the land infused in your wine. We pondered if filtering would erase that scent that wafted through our nostrils and the sweet pumpkin, honey, and spicy herbs will all converge.

“I will pitch the yeast at the strike of 11:11 “, she said as she sprinkled bee pollen and golden raisins to our Must, the combination  of heated water and honey.

The pumpkin would be added  later on in the process. She then measured the density of the solution. Still warm from the hot honey, we had to wait for it to reach the proper level. I had noticed she mentioned pitching the yeast at eleven before. But like many things she says I really didn’t gather the significance. The Alchemist then went on to explain the significance of the Samhain or the the date and auspicious Grand Trine timing of the pitching of the yeast. It was  all about the Autumnal equinox and this was to be  her first series based on the  midpoint  season of the year. So it wasn’t  about cutesy pumpkins on Halloween , but more about  paying tribute to our local harvests, resources and respecting the cycle of nature. I took my last appreciative swig  of an Apple Mead we drank while working. At the end of the end of day I had new found appreciation for the  for the process and the beauty of Mead, the drink of the Gods, and glad I could share a unique moment with my brilliant , scientific, if not quirky friend. I could not wait for the fermenting to succeed and for us to rack our beautiful golden liquid , which be ready by the New Year. We ended up doing a total of three rackings  and finally bottled it January 31st to make way for The Alchemist’s new red Mead project. The wine is still young, and a bit dry. By Fall it should be ready to consume befitting it’s theme of Pumpkin Pie. The cycle of nature truly at work. Take a look at the slide show and video for more on the three month process.


Comfort In the Windy City…Chalet Nights at The Peninsula Hotel Chicago

Thank You all for the support and love you have shown since last week. As my dining companions said last night , stop saying you were not terminated or eliminated, you are in transition. And if the offers , outreach, and opportunities I have received this week are anything to go by, my future is going to be high style.

One outreach  extended towards me, was from the The Peninsula Hotel in Chicago. Their PR department invited me along with with several other  influential Chicago bloggers to experience Chalet Nights at their charming European restaurant/cafe/wine bar Pierrot Gourmet. The recently refreshed  ski lodge themed restaurant is offering Chalet Night devised  by their new Chef de Cuisine Tony Schmidt, who had worked at such other fine institutions as Blackbird, Everest, and Trio.

Each Thursday until March 31 a special Swiss themed menu will be offered for $19 per person ( 2 person minimum) featuring a three cheese fondue( Gruyere, Appenzeller, and Fontina), mountain bread,  a Juniper berry smoked Speck ham , house pickled vegetables, and salad with a Dijon vinaigrette. The meal is finished off with Pear flavored Eau de vie.

Having had my share of fondues both at home and in Switzerland, the meal was excellent. and elegantly presented. A comforting buzz ran through the table and I realized  I forgotten how fun and sensational Chicago can be with it’s various offerings.  Did I mention how exquisite the desserts were? Pierrot Gourmet has a French born Pastry Chef that makes the most incredible variety of flavored macarons that are not too sweet . If you don’t have time for a sit down meal or coffee, the takeout option is there.

Afterward we went over the John Hancock Observatory at the invitation of Zach , the Director of Operations there who partners with The Peninsula Chicago. At the Observatory  we were treated to cocktails, and more nibbles at Lavazza’s Expression Cafe before taking to the indoor ice rink. Imagine all of this 1,000 feet above the city! Great fun. The SKYY High Cocktail ( SKYY Raspberry vodka, Blue Curacao, and Lemonade) and The Hawks Cup ( Makers Mark, fresh ginger, muddles blackberries, and lemon sour) must be tried along with numerous other drinks, and hot and cold coffee drinks. After that, I was most definitely too buzzed to skate, but enjoyed watching the others.

Thank You Peninsula Chicago & John Hancock Observatory for reminding me what I love about my city Chicago.

Peninsula Hotel/ Pierrot Gourmet

108 East Superior Street at the corner of Rush and Superior