Going Organic

It's just picking up steam here in the States.

~String

I've heard about acai becoming popular in the US now, after the researches that were made on acai's properties

over here acai na tijela (in the bowl) it very popular, I like mine with banana and granola, kind of like that:

11_acai.jpg
 
I've begun join the migration from industrial foods to the organic/local variety. Anybody else doing this?

Some thoughts on recent products:
  • Kashi sucks. I'm a huge breakfast eater and I can't stand any of their products. Generally I eat oatmeal for breakfast, but I tried their waffles and cereal and was sorely disappointed

  • It happens with many alternatives. You just gotta keep trying different things until you find the one for you.

    [*]Organic brown eggs are amazing. I would have given you an total scowl if you claimed that eggs were anything more than the vehicle, but I just can't believe that these things actually have flavor
    There's nothing special about brown eggs. Look for organic eggs that have omega-3 and 6 in them.

    [*]Silk Soy milk. I've been consuming this for the better part of a year and it's good stuff
    Some brands taste like plastic... I personally think Vitasoy is the best.

    [*]Organic vegetables are impossibly expensive and if you have any desire to put money away for retirement you really can't subside on these
The vegetables are the most important ones to be organic. What's the point in eating vegetables that are not organic? They are no good for you. Look for local vegetables, they will probably be cheaper...

Any other thoughts on this stuff?

~String
Vegetables are the most imporant ones to be organic. Meats are good too, but no as significant....
 
There's more than twice as much organic produce sold in stores as is grown in fields.

Just a random factoid to keep in mind.

But the modern commercial product is a disappointment, if you're used to eating food.

In reverse order of preference:

My garden (which I don't have this year. Life sux)

Local, know the source and approve (pigs, chickens, turkeys, and eggs, especially, because you can't always see the difference on the shelf. The difference between a well-raised chicken and a store chicken is one of the biggest differences involved here - if you notice the difference in eggs, the difference in chickens will startle you yet. But the label "organic" is not always reliable, and costs a fortune).

Organic, has the label and/or is in the right store.

Interestingly, that's the reverse order of cost. As with tobacco, better quality is had cheaper. I know a guy who raises flowers to eat the buds, as a vegetable. That's luxury. It's cheap.

I put stuff on poles, etc. Beans, cucumbers, whatever. My next garden is raised bed, and there will be poles anyway.

My grandfather: "You can spend it on food, or you can spend it on doctor bills".

Huge differences noted in: beans, sweet corn, tomatoes, poultry and eggs, pigs, carrots, and so forth. We get the water boiling, or preheat the bake oven, before we even pick the sweet corn

Herbs available from one's own garden in large quantities turn into different ingredients entirely - a pound of basil is food, not seasoning. You can leave beets in the ground until they are huge and woody, and then grind them up for thick borscht strongly flavored, slice them for a strikingly pretty baked vegetable (red and white grain). Carrots likewise.
 
I converted to everything organic long time back, except for the clothes i buy and off course leather shoes (which i am thinking of replacing). You can actually make out differences between a Granny Smith apple (Non Organic) Vs a Green Organic apple should you consume it long enough (as in say for about 6 months you only eat Organic apple) ... I dont know, may be it was just me ... but i could feel weirdness in the taste of Non Organic apples ...

For those of you who have access to Whole Foods, good for you, Its a little far from my place, so i use Native Sun ... Kinda ok with limited selection =(

Any good chains you know off (btw, I am talking in U.S.).?

Rick
 
anyone eat turkey or duck eggs?
Turkey eggs are decent - they will develop without fertilization more often and more completely than chicken eggs, though, and turkeys don't jsut keep laying like hens - so you're better off eating turkeys than their eggs.

Duck eggs you can have. Oily, heavy, strange tasting. But I've only eaten wild ones, so maybe diet matters. Ducks won't keep laying either - so most people jsut raise ducks.
 
Additional: I just discovered the best organic, flourless bread on earth and it tastes simply amazing: Food For Life, Ezekiel 4:9.
Sprouted grain breads have a very vibrant favour but they tend to be too fibrous for most people.

I make my own bread three times a week and it speaks to me in my dreams. The secret is to use dark brown sugar to start the yeast, and to dampen the surface of the dough just before it goes into the oven...which is not pre-heated.

I also roll it in hulled sesame seeds. Half and half hard white flour and light rye flour. Costs about thirty-five cents a loaf.

One of my clients btw says she halted the progress of her husband's MS by switching to organics exclusively.
 
Turkey eggs are decent - they will develop without fertilization more often and more completely than chicken eggs, though, and turkeys don't jsut keep laying like hens - so you're better off eating turkeys than their eggs.

Duck eggs you can have. Oily, heavy, strange tasting. But I've only eaten wild ones, so maybe diet matters. Ducks won't keep laying either - so most people jsut raise ducks.

I've eaten duck eggs and to me they were rubbery. Like they had less moisture in them than chicken eggs. Also had guinea hen eggs, but don't remember what they taste like. I guess that means that I found them no different than chicken eggs in taste, but they were considerably smaller.
 
They have this beady texture inside. It took me a spell to get past when I first tasted them, but I have nothing but fond memories of sitting on the rocky beach at La Caleta eating figs and sipping sangria.



~String

That beady texture is the husks of dead wasps and their hatched out larvae.
 
maracuja!

maracuja-12.jpg

carambola

Known as passion fruit in the states. Grows wildly in Hawaii (and many other tropical places). Probably the most delicious fruit ever- better than mangosteen even.

carambola-lg.jpg

36629289.carambola2.jpg


i think carambola might not be native to Brasil

ok, I'm done for now

Also known as starfruit. Very juicy, weakly flavored. It's like gatorade fruit or something.


Durian is weird stuff. I don't like it, but my family is crazy about it.
 
Back
Top