• 03Jul

    I just read this great article by Joan Ryan on sfgate.com  

    It’s about a documentary filmmaker, Mickey Freeman, who relates the decline of the family meal as one of the causes of childhood obesity. The article also cites excerpts from Barbara Carlson, who co-authored “Putting Family First: Successful Strategies for Reclaiming Family Life in a Hurry-Up World.’’  

    The article brought back fond memories of our family table. We always had dinner together. My mom and sometimes my grandmother would help to make sure dinner was on the table the moment my dad got home. My job would be to set the table – setting out the rice bowls, soup bowls, Chinese soup spoons and making sure the chopsticks were placed just so to make sure they would not fall off the table – I was warned so many times a fallen chopstick was a calamity that would bringing on bad luck that I’m careful to this day. We (my parents, grandmother, two brothers and sister) would all sit around the table talking about our day – school, work, relatives, stories of my parents childhoods, local and world events and later as we neared the end of high school – debates on if, and then quickly, where we would go to college. And of course, under the watchful eye of the adults it was a surety that we ate a bit of everything thus ensuring we had a good nutritious meal.  

    The family table was one of the reason’s I started Tao de Kitchen – a personal chef service I firmly believe that the family table is deeply missed in our society today and it is such a great feeling to know I can help a few families build some fond memories of their own.

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  • 30Jun

    When we were kids, most of our mom’s would tell us not to play with our food…I wonder if the members of the The First Vienna Vegetable Orchestra got this lecture!
    So, immediately prior to a performance, members of the orchestra would take 90 pounds of vegetables and fashion them into musical instruments. Apparently freshness counts in not just food for your table but for the stage as well. I guess you can say this isn’t canned music…
    The veggies of course are only good for the one performance – afterwards, the muscians pass their instruments on to a band of chefs who make a huge pot of soup for the audience to enjoy post performance. Honestly, I’m not sure I’d want to dine on soup made from vegetables someone has been blowing in.
    And speaking of playing with your food…scientist at Cornell have hybridized a new variety of cauliflower that is orange. The first orange cauliflower was discovered in a marsh outside of Toronto. It didn’t taste very good so the scientist got to work on crossing it with plain old white cauliflower to increase the flavor. According to lab analysis – the orange cauliflower has 25 times more Vitamin A than it’s white cousin. I suppose this means the orange variety is good for you but I want to know what was in the water in that marsh! Anyway, look for this new variety in specialty grocers or maybe at your local farmer’s market. 


    Signing off now…remember, you can play with your vegetables but don’t forget to eat your veggies too!

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