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Showing posts with label Anthony Bourdain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Bourdain. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2012

Getting Piggy With It

A sign from the 1970s reading "Danish pigs are healthy; they burst of penicillin"


    
     When I was a little girl, I was obsessed with the “Little House” series by Laura Ingalls Wilder, especially the first volume in the series, Little House in the Big Woods. Contrary to the moralistic cheese dripping form the TV series, the book described man and nature “red in tooth and claw.”[1] Bears were bears. Deer was food (they killed Bambi?!). And for god sakes, don’t ever go out in a Wisconsin blizzard alone!
      To a 6-year old suburban girl, the idea you could live in the middle of nowhere, and you could still eke out a living was very cool. Cheese, maple sugaring, butter churning…you could make that stuff? Yep, you could make that stuff. But the best part? The section about pig slaughtering (This was the age before Babe came out).
“It doesn’t hurt him, Laura,” Pa said. “We do it so quickly.” . . . It was such a busy day, with so much to see and do. Uncle Henry and Pa were jolly, and there would be spare-ribs for dinner, and Pa had promised Laura and Mary the bladder and the pig’s tail.”[2]
Yum. Spare ribs for dinner. The bladder bit was explained later (used to make a balloon…early lesson in anatomy for me). But the pig’s tail? What the hell were you going to do with that?
          “Pa skinned it for them carefully, and into the large end he thrust a sharpened stick. Ma opened the front of the cook stove and raked hot coals into the iron hearth. Then Laura and Mary took turns holding the pig’s tail over the coals.
          It sizzled and fried, and drops of fat dripped off it and blazed on the coals…At last it was done. It was nicely browned all over, and how good it smelled! They carried it into the yard to cool it, and even before it was cool enough they began tasting it and burned their tongues.”[3]
       Oh. That’s what you did with a pig’s tail. In a pathetic attempt to repeat this tasty project, I asked the meat guy at the local grocery store whether they carried pigs’ tails. All I got was a “Where is your mother?!” I also tried to suggest this to my Brownie troop leader. Needless to say, it didn’t happen.
      So much for my adventures in pioneer food-hood. I would have to wait 32 years later before I would get my chance at the pig’s tail. And no, I don’t live on a farm or slaughter pigs. That chance was at St. John Bread and Wine in London.
Smoked Anchovy with Roasted Beet and Hen's Egg
       To those of you living in foodie land, this should not be surprising.  Fergus Henderson and Trevor Guilliver (re)-invigorated “nose-to-tail” eating practices that were basically forgotten, thanks to urbanization, industrialization and commercial food practices. But when St. John first opened in 1994, this was not “hipster” or “haute” food. Fine dining was French – definitely NOT British. Times have definitely changed. With a menu that consisted of hare with lentils and pig trotters (pig’s feet to us Americans), oxtail tongue hash with a runny duck egg, braised lamb with potato and seaweed, roasted beet with anchovy, and a incredible local peach sorbet (with an icy shot of vodka), I didn’t care where those parts came from. They were delicious. 
Hare with Lentils and Pig's Trotter

       The food is not particularly complicated. It’s not foamed-up-the-ass. There are no weird agar particles. And the only suspension that’s going on in these foods is a suspension of disbelief that offal is really NOT awful – it’s really, really good.
When I talked to Lee Tiernan, the head chef of St. John Bread and Wine about the dishes, he said, “My uncle used to eat like this.”
What exactly is “like this”?
I seriously doubt that Tiernan’s uncle had a nice Bordeaux with his meal (or maybe he did, and if he did, he’s a really lucky man!), but this is food of Britain’s pastoral past, not the food of Britain’s post WWI[4] industrial factories. The hares were brought in that morning. The fish are from the British Isles and coasts. The pigs were not from the Tesco meat cooler, but from organic, free-range farms with breeds that most commercial farmers would eschew in a heartbeat.[5] And the pig…it comes WHOLE.
      But the thing I was most impressed was a particular philosophy at the restaurant. Yes, all their sourcing is at the heart of trendy locavore practices. Conservationists love the fact that the food helps support a genealogical past that would be otherwise lost of industrial breeding practices and agriculture. Foodies love it for its “integrity” to British food traditions. And for Anthony Bourdain, it is the last meal he would want to have if he were sent to the executioner’s chair.
       In fact St. John might be called a BoBo[6] wet dream. But for all the hype the restaurant has received (well deserved!), the most poignant statement came from Tiernan: “I’m a chef. I just cook and I try NOT waste anything.”
      And that, for me, is the most impressive part of this restaurant. In an age where the wealth of nations has allowed fish to be flown in from the Mediterranean, foie gras to be served any day of the week, strawberries from Morocco eaten in December, waste is everywhere.
     Not in Lee Tiernan’s kitchen. Pig tails are made into crispy snacks. Ox-tongue that got a little overcooked becomes ox tongue hash.  Pig feet get placed in any soup or stock dish for a little oomph. Bones are roasted for marrow and placed into salad. Veal tails are brined and bones are roasted for soup. Chitterlings[7] (that’s pigs’ intestines)? They’re served with turnips. Not to mentions kidneys, livers, brains and hearts. And when I visited the kitchen, there was a giant pot of assorted pig parts that were probably going into some delicious dish. 
Stewing Pig Parts at St. John Bread  & Wine Kitchen

Maybe this is the true luxury of modern day life: having the time to cook and eat food that does not come from a freezer, has been freeze-dried into pellets or packaged in swaths of plastic. Food that is honest because it has been honestly raised and made. That’s worth its weight in gold.
Crispy Pig's Tails (Pan is for presentation)

Crispy Pig Tails
While pig tails have now become all the rage in restaurants, Southerners (in the United States) have been eating them for years, mainly as part of Carribo-African-American food culture. Pig tails are tough to come by in any grocery store, so go to the most reputable butcher you can find and ask them about it. They can probably get them from you. Also, if you are near a good farmers’ market that sells pork products, you may be able to order them. And one more thing – make sure they are free range and/or organic. You don’t want to waste your time eating antibiotic laced crap.

8-10 pig tails (look for ones that are fairly meaty), rinsed thoroughly
8 cloves of garlic, peeled and halved
1 onion, coarsely chopped
2 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
1 tsp. salt (you can also use a salt blend like Old Bay or any Cajun seasoning-it works nicely)

1.     Place pig tails in a large stock pot and fill to cover. Bring to a boil over medium heat, and cover the pot for 15 minutes.
2.     Drain pig tails and return to a clean stock pot. Cover with enough cold water to cover. Bring to a boil and then add garlic, onion, red pepper flakes and salt. Boil over medium-low heat for about 2 hours or when the tails are almost falling apart.
3.     In the meanwhile, preheat oven to 350F. Line a roasting pan with aluminum foil and grease with vegetable oil.
4.     Drain pig tails (save the cooking liquid for beans, stock or soup – it’s SO good) and place them on the roasting pan. Roast tails for 30-40 minutes or until skin crisps and browns (If the skin is still is a bit flabby at 40 minutes, you can broil them at bit until they do. But this shouldn’t be necessary.)
5.     Take out of the oven and serve immediately with beans, rice or cornbread.


[1] English nerds go gaga. This reference of course is to Alfred Lord Tennyson’s famous poem, In Memoriam A. H. H., from 1850 :
Who trusted God was love indeed
And love Creation's final law
Tho' Nature, red in tooth and claw
With ravine, shriek'd against his creed
(From Canto 56)
[2] Wilder, Laura Ingalls. Little House in the Big Woods.  (New York: Harper Collins, 1971), p. 16.
[3] Wilder, 17.
[4] As much as British food gets knocked on as vegetables-boiled-to-a-blandness, a quick history of British cooking would tell you otherwise. 18th and 19th century England, due to its trade prowess, had spices galore from the West Indies, India and the Caribbean. Cakes and ices (ice cream or sorbets) were molded into decorative tins. Game meat was a regular in the fall. What killed it? WWI and WWII when food rationing and food industrialization came together in a pretty unholy alliance (at least for taste buds). Local cooking and food never quite recovered. Until about now.
[5] An excellent example of this is the pig breed “Middle White.” A pig well regarded for its meat in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the breed has basically gone out of pig production due to industrialization and a preference for bacon and lard producing breeds.  Considered “endangered” by the Rare Breed Survival Trust, a conservation organization to preserve and protect native animal breeds, the Middle White numbers have bounced back.
[6] Just in case you are not familiar with the term, “Bobo” is a mash-up of the words “Bourgeois” and “Bohemian,” coined by the New York Times columnist David Brooks, in his book Bobos in Paradise.
[7] Chitterlings, contrary to what many Southerners (people from the South of the US) might thing, is actually a word from the mid-Middle Ages England, between the 11th and 15th centuries. While originally used to refer to pig’s intestines (and in the South they still do), they can also refer to any type of intestine, such as veal or cow.
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Monday, January 16, 2012

Paula Deen and the American Dream



Today is Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday for those of you living in the US. And as news cycles goes in the States, there will be a full round of stories revolving around Dr. King’s legacy of civil rights, his family, or this year’s hot topic: the misquoting of Dr. King on the spanking new MLK memorial in Washington D.C.[1]
Strangely enough, this holiday weekend has coincided with another monumental announcement. Last Friday, Huffington Post broke the story that Paula Deen[2], the doyenne of butter, sugar and Southern Kitsch, has Type 2 diabetes.[3] The rumor is that she will be a spokesperson for Novartis’ diabetes drugs [4] as well.
I don’t want to trivialize the importance of Martin Luther King, but these events have more to do with each other than you think…
Let me explain.
To those of you that follow the foodietainment scene in the US, the irony is probably killing you. To refresh y’all’s memory, last year August, Anthony Bourdain, ex-chef of Les Halles & culinary pundit, called Ms. Deen, “the worst, most dangerous person in America,” for contributing to America’s obesity epidemic. He continued by saying, "She revels in unholy connections with evil corporations and she's proud of the fact that her food is fucking bad for you. Plus, her food sucks."[5]
Ms. Deen told Bourdain in the New York Post, “to get a life,” and then said “Not everybody can afford to pay $58 for prime rib or $650 for a bottle of wine. My friends and I cook for regular families who worry about feeding their kids and paying the bills.”
Whoa. Ad hominem attacks are never nice, and this one had tongues a-wagging (including a whole New York Times’ op-ed piece by Frank Bruni).[6] 
Both of them had a point. Families are struggling all over the US to pay bills and feed their families.  One in six families are receiving food stamps, a historic high. On the other hand, obesity is killing Americans. Two in three Americans are overweight and of that half are considered “obese” by medical standards.
Is there a correlation with these two facts? Uh-huh. As noted by my earlier post on childhood poverty and nutrition, people living poverty are fighting a Sisyphean battle with poverty, food insecurity and malnutrition. It’s not just the amount of calories that poor families can afford; it’s also the quality of calories that people can afford. It’s cheaper to eat (insert junk food) than to eat (insert nutritious food).
It’s no wonder that there is an inverse relationship between income and obesity: in other words, the poorer you are the more likely you are to be obese. And the more obese you are the more likely you are to have Type 2 diabetes (90% of all suffering from Type 2 diabetes are obese).[7] And of course, people that live in poverty are more likely to develop diabetes.[8]
And here’s the kicker: Those living in across the Bible Belt and the Mississippi Delta, areas that have some the highest poverty rates in the nation, have the highest rates of diabetes of all.[9] I hate to tell you this Paula, but you’re a statistic.
To those who are familiar with the cannon of Southern cuisine, the incidence of obesity is not really too much of a surprise. The land of fried chicken and buttered grits does not exactly scream health food to anyone. Add endemic poverty to the mix and you have a recipe for a ready-made diabetes hotspot costing the nation $116 billion annually.
Towards the end of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s life, he developed the Poor People’s Campaign, to highlight the injustice of poverty. As he put it in 1967:
“In the treatment of poverty nationally, one fact stands out…There are twice as many white poor as [black] poor in the United States. Therefore I will not dwell on the experiences of poverty that derive from racial discrimination, but will discuss the poverty that affects white and [black] alike.”
            And just as poverty affects black and white alike, so does the health consequences stemming from poverty.[10] If we want to conquer diabetes, we also have to conquer poverty, obesity and a food culture that glorifries (yes, that is my bad pun) unhealthy foods. And this means you Paula. If anyone, you should understand poverty.[11] If indeed you make food for families worried about paying their bills, you should have the conscience to make sure they are eating right. And that does not mean a macaroni and cheese recipe that has butter, sour cream, cheddar cheese and a can of condensed cheese soup. Embodying the American Dream is not an excuse to play Russian roulette with people’s health.
            And for God’s sake – stay away from the donuts.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

           


[1] The new monument has the words, " I was a drum major for justice peace and righteousness" inscribed on it. According to scholars, Dr. King never uttered those words in his February 1968 speech. The correct quote is as follows: "Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a drum major for justice. Say that I was a drum major for peace. I was a drum major for righteousness."
After protestors demanded the quote be erased or corrected, US Interior Secretary Ken Salazar finally admitted the error and ordered the quote be corrected on the monument.
[2] To those not living in Paula Deen is a TV food celebrity in the US. She is also known for promoting recipes such as the “The Lady’s Brunch Burger,” a bacon-fried egg-burger sandwiched between two donuts.
[3] Science note: Diabetes is basically a disease that is marked by insulin deficiencies or malfunctions. Type 1 is usually found in childhood and is a small number of cases (around 10%). The rest of cases are Type 2 – diabetes that is marked by the body’s inability use insulin efficiently, thus leading to high blood sugar levels.
[4] A Novartis representative has denied any “multi-million dollar” endorsement deal with Ms. Deen. But knowing the PR world, this could be BS. The truth? We’ll see….
[6] Fact check: Tony Bourdain is no saint either on the health meter. He’s a known chain-smoker and if it weren’t for the fact that he has the fastest metabolism on the planet, he probably wouldn’t be as thin as he is. As for Ms. Deen, Bourdain is right. She has a full line of eponymous foodstuffs, appliances, tools, dinnerware and books as well as a hefty endorsement deal with meat processor Smithfield - she’s living high on the hog.
[7] Obesity reduces the body’s ability to use insulin properly; therefore, those who are obese are highly likely to develop Type 2 diabetes.
[8] I have yet to see hard numbers on this, but a Canadian study has shown that those living below $C15,000 are twice as likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than those with higher incomes. Research done by the Mayo Clinic has shown a strong correlation between poverty and diabetes rates.  Click here for the study.
[9]Click here for the CDC map of diabetes prevalence.
[10] Certain demographic groups, such as African-Americans and Latinos, have a higher incidence of Type 2 diabetes compared to the white population.
[11] To those who don’t know the “Paula Deen Story” it goes something like this. Deen was a dirt poor, near homeless, single mom with a bad case of agoraphobia when she started her cooking career. Through the dint of hard work and good Southern charm, she stared a catering business and restaurant that brought her to American homes everywhere – and $9.13 million a year.
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