Guest guest Posted May 10, 2007 Report Share Posted May 10, 2007 This came from a book about a couple who comitted to eating locally grown products for a year (NPR). Review excerpt below. Something I firmly believe in. @@@@@ Maple Walnut Crêpes 1 cup sifted flour 3/4 cup water 3/4 cup milk 3 eggs 2 tbsp melted butter 1/4 tsp salt 2 cups walnuts, shelled and crushed bigleaf maple syrup Warm a plate in the oven at 150°F. In a large glass bowl, whisk the first 6 ingredients into a well-mixed batter. Lightly grease a large frying pan with butter. Heat until a drop of water bounces on contact. Ladle batter into the center of the pan, turning the pan or using a spoon to spread the batter into a thin, large round. When the batter has cooked through and begun to steam, carefully flip the crêpe. Fry a few moments more, then set aside on the plate in the oven. Repeat until the batter is used up, keeping the growing pile of crêpes covered with a cloth. To prepare filling, stir syrup into walnuts until coated. Roll 1/4 cup walnut filling in each crêpe. Serve with butter and syrup on the table. Source: Plenty: One Man, One Woman, and a Robust Year of Eating Locally. 2007 by J. B. MacKinnon and Alisa Smith. Formatted by Chupa Babi in MC: 05.08.07 Caitlin Coe (Reviewer): I've got a question for you: where did those plump, marbled steaks in your refrigerator come from? Not what store, but what actual physical location? How about the lovely bright green asparagus stalks that you're going to cook along with them? And here's a real toughie: can you point out on a map where the salt you'll be using to season the meal was produced? Yeah, me neither. First off, I'm horrible at geography, but, more to the point, I often just have no idea. Canadian authors Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon considered themselves to be well informed eaters, but they realized that even when they had detailed statistics regarding where their " local " food was coming from, it was generally hundreds if not thousands of miles away. How was this distance between tree and table conducive to maintaining the connection between people and sustenance? If we had more information regarding how our food was produced, could even observe it while it was growing or ripening, would we still make the same choices? These questions were the catalyst to Smith and Mackinnon's year-long experiment: they would try to eat only local food for a year. And not just vaguely local—all food had to be produced within a 100-mile radius from their Vancouver home; thus the 100-mile diet was born, and the he-said she-said foodalogue " Plenty " was written. ----- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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