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Archive for June, 2009

Russ Parsons At The Aquarium

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

images-1La Times Food Editor and Award winning food writer Russ Parsons gave a lecture last night at the Aquarium titled “Bringing Sustainability Home”.  He examined the reality of where our food comes from and the complicated nature of our food systems.  He touched on the agricultural history of food, the increased need for farmer’s markets as well as offered helpful buying tips.  He expressed the vaguity of the term sustainability and how ultimately our society by its very nature is not sustainable, yet we can make powerful decisions with our wallet and fork that will push us in the right direction. Russ Parsons is the author of “How to Read a French Fry” and “How to Pick a Peach”. In 2008 he was inducted into the James Beard Foundation ’s Who’s Who of Food and Beverage, the hall of fame of American cooking. He has won many food journalism awards, including those from the International Association of Culinary Professionals the Association of Food Journalists, and the University of Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Awards. 

While it would be fun to try and transpose his entire lecture here via blog, I will avoid the pain and focus on a couple highlights.  In terms of picking the proverbial peach, or fruit for that matter, Russ introduced the division between farmer’s market fruit and conventional produce.  His point was clear that the issue must be understood through the analysis of the words “Ripeness” and “Maturity”.

Fruit should be harvested when it is ready to pick or mature. Harvesting at the time of optimum maturity will produce the best quality fruit.  While many fruits will continue to ripen after being picked, their maturing process has been halted.  Therefore by purchasing fruit that has been harvested 3-4 weeks prior to hitting the shelves, you are buying a product that lacks the flavor that would traditionally develop during that 3-4 week maturation process(even though it may continue to ripen in transit).  At the farmer’s market, however, this produce is at peak maturity, most of the time having been picked with a day or two of display. This maturity also introduces a nutrient rich product or superfood.

 

Seafood

Russ Parsons has always been a friend of the aquarium and introduced many interesting aspects of seafood sustainability into his lecture last night as well.  Specifically, he made the point that many people are unable to utilize certain sustainable seafood sources because of their seemingly complicated methods of preparation or procurement.  The sardine is an under appreciated species of fish that (normally associated with canned preservation) can be purchased fresh at numerous Japanese markets throughout Southern California. Mitsuwa market http://www.mitsuwa.com/tenpo/torr/eindex.html, sources some of the freshest seafood in Southern California including anchovies, mackerel, sardines, and other sustainable delicacies.  Fortunately for the attentive crowd last night, Russ offered a mouth-watering recipe for this amazing delicacy.

 Fire Roasted Fresh Sardines with Extra Virgin Olive Oil

grilled_sardines

 
8-10 fresh sardines
1 fresh lemon
sea salt
High Quality Olive Oil

 

Preheat the grill

 
Russ suggests the best way to clean the meat from the anchovy is with your thumbs prior to cooking.  While this may seem daunting, in actuality the delicate nature of the anchovy allows for easy removal of the filets.  I have experienced that the best way to do this is while holding the head, pinch through the flesh jest behind the collar and pull the meat towards the tail. Lightly dress the anchovies in a touch of olive oil.  Place the anchovies on the grill for roughly a minute per side making sure to crisp the skin (this is one of the best parts).  Immediately upon removing the anchovies from the grill drizzle with a touch of fresh lemon, sea salt and olive oil.  Serve either straight from the plate, with crostini and a bit of salad.  Nothing goes better with anchovies than a clean crisp glass of Prosecco.  Enjoy!

What not to eat

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Peanut-butter-labelI will rarely take the negative perspective on this blog where food is concerned.  However, this post is written in response to the advice that fish should be avoided entirely in order to circumvent the whole sticky issue of sustainable seafood.  Let me explain why this is not a good idea, and how sustainable seafood issues fit into a much larger conversation about the food we eat and where it comes from.

The eat-no-seafood approach implies that stopping the consumption of fish will lead to the restoration of ocean health, at least where fisheries are concerned.  This ignores the fact that fisheries are affected by more than just overfishing.  Habitat loss, climate change, ocean “acidification,” dead zones, pollutants, and eutrophication all contribute to the decline in marine diversity and ecosystem health.  The underlying cause of declining ocean health is not dietary consumption, but the dramatic increase in human population in conjunction with a per capita increase in use of natural resources.

Not only are there several billion more of us than in our grandparents’ heyday, but we all use much more water, energy, refined metals, and fossil fuels.  This is not just a problem – this is the problem.  To those who propose that we eat fewer fish, may I suggest instead that we all have fewer babies.*  And, of course, simplify our habits of material consumption.

For example, salmon runs in Northern California have been so drastically reduced that the 2009 salmon season will be 10 days of recreational fishing in early September, with no commercial fishing whatsoever.  Although the conservation efforts are couched in terms of saving the fishery for the fishing industry, even the Department of Fish and Game acknowledges that many factors affect the number of returning fish, including the watershed and ocean temperatures.  Cod and Atlantic salmon have not recovered from commercial extinction even with fishing moratoriums in place.  Neither have a number of other fisheries rebounded under strict management and controlled mortality.  Simply removing seafood like this from the menus won’t save declining numbers of fish unless we are protecting the habitat that allows them to reproduce.

Furthermore, reducing seafood consumption will have consequences for already poor dietary health of Americans.  The importance of omega-3 fatty acids has been seriously understated in American health and diet education.  How do we determine the importance of any one dietary item like omega-3 fatty acids?  There are at least three different types of evidence required to make a convincing connection:  1. epidemiological studies in humans that correlate effects with dietary habits, 2. biochemical explanations of the molecular pathways involved, and 3. studies in model organisms such as rats and mice that show the effects of a controlled diet in closely related mammals.  In the case of omega-3 fatty acids, all three types of research demonstrate that omega-3 fatty acids have an important role in mitigating physiological stress.

And if, as we contend, there is a lack of adequate omega-3 fatty acids in the Western diet, do we see a corresponding effect in the health of the population?  Yes.  As noted in the previous jump, omega-3 fatty acids have been shown to mitigate 6 out of the top 7 leading causes of death in the US: coronary heart disease, cancer, stroke, lower respiratory disease, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s.  (Number 5 of 7 is accidental death.)  Certainly, there are many other factors that contribute to poor diet and health in America.  But the danger in recommending the removal of seafood from the already-suffering American diet is that the diseases above that are well correlated with inadequate omega-3 intake will become even more prevalent.  It is not an exaggeration to say that  investment in the wise use of our fisheries is an investment in our own future and our health.

There are a number of papers that support these ideas (e.g., Simopoulos ratio, Essential fatty acids in aquatic ecosystems), tapping into the theory that our current dietary needs reflect the types of foods that were available as humans evolved.  Knowing this, a moderate amount of common sense can be applied to come up with a list of things that truly should not be eaten.  Cheetos and Twizzlers, for example.  I am hardly one of your crunchy activists who can claim to live off of tofu, but there are a number of ingredients that I would advise people to avoid:

Preservatives

Trans fats (partially hydrogenated vegetable oils)

Refined sugars and High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS)

Artificial sweeteners

Genetically modified crops that have not been tested for safety (that would be all of them)

We could go into the scientific literature to explore each one of these, but for our purposes it should be sufficient to say that humans should eat what our bodies were designed to use.  Seafood included.  Our healthcare system will thank you.

If you blanched at the thought of giving up Cheetos and Diet Coke, you can thank the modern advertising industry for changing our ideas about what normal human food is.  That is lesson number two: people who are selling you something should not be the ones to tell you what to eat.  At the top of this post, you can see that the jar of peanut butter that says, “No Trans Fats” must qualify that statement to mean “per serving.”  Companies that use trans fats in their products now reduce the serving size on the label so that they can round down the advertised trans fat content to zero.  Your heart and waistline pay for this deliberate obfuscation.

That’s hardly the most insidious tactic out there.  If you haven’t seen The Future of Food, I highly recommend that you watch it.  I don’t care if you are the most conservative industrialist – if you aren’t absolutely shocked within the first five minutes, I will eat my hat (but still not Cheetos).

*Until the world is ready to have a conversation on human reproductive rights, there is a simple strategy to slow the progress of human population growth: encourage higher education for women worldwide.  To quote Slobodkin, “…in an animal like man, in which the litter size is normally one, the number of births per female lifetime is in general of less significance in determining the reproductive potential of the population than is the age at initial reproduction.” – Slobodkin, L. B.  Growth and Regulation of Animal Populations.  Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1961.

Waste and Bycatch-Let’s talk about it

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

bycatch-north-sea-overfishing-ocean_conservationMark Bittman wrote an article yesterday in the New York Times addressing the challenges sourcing sustainable seafood.  He made many good points about the difficulties making responsible choices, and ultimately the ineffectiveness of wallet cards.  Unfortunately Mark Bittman failed in his attempt to create an original piece on sustainable seafood.  The content of Bittman’s (and many other’s) article has become particularly monotonous, and doesn’t educate consumers on the origins of our existing conundrum. In the midst of all this talk, do people really recognize the issues with our oceans, how ineffective regulations are, and in due course how commercial fishing as a worldwide industry begs to be reformed?  The sustainable seafood rhetoric must evolve to focus on two areas; the vast amount of waste/bycatch (i.e. dead fish) created within capture fisheries as well as the role that aquaculture will play in our near future.

 Waste is the appropriate word to use when describing the act of catching fish only to throw them back into the ocean dead. The FAO estimates that eight percent of the world’s marine fisheries catch is discarded, which means 7.3 million tons of fish or protected species are thrown back every year . The practice of catching fish only to throw away and kill a large portion of that catch is absurd.  On land, any system that breeds such gratuitous waste would shut down in a day. In the ocean there is no price tag associated with the capture of wild fish, or input in this matrix. They are effectively “free” public property to exploit.  Therefore, input waste (as a financial variable) is not an element to analyze when measuring productivity as a capture fishery.  As a result many (not all) wild capture fisheries manage their economies/industries in such as way as to ignore the waste associated with their catch.

This method when applied to land-based production is virtually illegal; it stinks of greed, shortsightedness, and would be universally rejected as a model for success by even the most remedial economies.  Why is it accepted in the ocean?  Most likely the average consumer is not aware of the fact that in order to produce that plate of wild shrimp, swordfish or scallops, there are multiple pounds of fish that are being killed (this doesn’t include habitat damage). The paradox however, resides in the existing campaign to vilify fish farming.  To state that fish farming is unsustainable because it uses wild fish to feed farmed fish is to ignore the fact that most wild capture fisheries do the same thing only in the form of bycatch.

 Fishing methods should be broken down into two categories: Those that produce bycatch and those that don’t.  Pole and troll caught fish for example are targeted with hook and line and do not ensnare any other species aside from those targeted.  Trawling on the other hand literally drags a net across the ocean floor sweeping up every piece of living marine life in its teeth.  Any species that is not part of the targeted catch is thrown overboard.  Many swordfish are caught using a harpoon, targeted and caught as individuals.  On the contrary, scores of  swordfish fisheries use gillnets that catch, not just swordfish, but sharks, turtles, dolphins, marine mammals and various other unintended species.

 It is important that these facts become part of the public rhetoric regarding sustainable seafood.  Banning the use of fishing techniques that produce a large majority of unintended bycatch would add 7.3 million tons of fish to the ocean’s inventory.  I applaud Mr. Bittman for touching on sustainable seafood, but I beg of him to change the course of dialogue; uncover the inherent flaws that exist in commercial fishing and offer suggestions on how to effectively change these inconsistencies while simultaneously addressing the role that responsible aquaculture plays as an effective means by which to give the oceans a break.  

Pacific Islander Festival

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Pacific-IslanderThe Pacific Islander Festival here last weekend was a great success, featuring some really fantastic dancing and music, as well as crafts and artifacts from around the Pacific.  These island nations are all extremely wealthy in both cultural and natural resources, of which there were many examples over the weekend.  However, many of these nations even now have difficulty interacting with Western culture.  Having grown up in Hawaii and spent some time working in the Marshall Islands, I have a particular sympathy with those who have transplanted to the mainland US, as well as those who are struggling to maintain their cultural identity at home.  The Marshallese man I spoke with described the difficulty in getting traditional foods in the islands, which contributes to their dependence on imports.  Many seek employment on the mainland in order to improve their lives, but never save enough money to go home again.

We took the festival as an opportunity to feature some information about a fish that is farmed off of the Big Island of Hawaii, Kona Kampachi by Kona Blue.  Lately, there has been some opposition to Kona Blue from Hawaiian groups backed by Food and Water Watch (FWW), a non-profit organization concerned with the quality and safety of, well, food and water.  Basically, FWW is campaigning to have Kona Kampachi removed from Monterey Bay’s Seafood Watch list of better choices.  It’s interesting that FWW lawyers are citing Kona Kampachi use of poultry protein in feed, because this measure was undertaken specifically under the direction of Rebecca Goldberg, senior scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund.  It’s not really surprising that NGOs can’t agree on the specific metrics of sustainability, but this rift may be indicative of the fact that more groups are diverging from Monterey Bay’s wallet card advice.

DisplayI can’t help but think that FWW is using the Hawaiians to push this particular campaign, since there are a long list of Hawaiian environmental battles that would take precedence if the true aim were to clean up the state.  Hawaii is unquestionably the most progressive state in terms of marine aquaculture, and Kona Blue is a leader in establishing monitoring and management practices for open ocean farming.  The most unfortunate aspect of this is that the Hawaiians are missing the opportunity to shape the aquaculture industry in Hawaii and seize their share of it.  Whereas many terrestrial resources are already allocated, the advantage with aquaculture is that it is still in its infancy.  Shouldn’t some ocean leasing rights be given to Native Hawaiians or Hawaiian conservation groups?  Can’t we create employment, scholarships, and educational opportunities for Hawaiians out of an industry that relies on resources that originally belonged to them?

Greenpeace vs. Nobu

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009
Andrew at Nobu

Andrew at Nobu

Last Friday, Andrew and I were invited by a prominent sushi expert to attend a protest staged by Greenpeace at Nobu in Hollywood.  Nobu, Greenpeace contends, is contributing to the demise of an endangered species in offering bluefin tuna on its menu.  To better bring this issue to light, the first demonstration was orchestrated at Nobu in New York last week.  There, Greenpeace quietly posed as a group of regular diners in order to replace Nobu’s menus and cards with their own featuring entrees made with endangered species: rhinoceros, gorilla, tiger.  When the fake menus were spotted by a server, Greenpeace was politely asked to leave.  That much was expected, and Greenpeace was actually thoughtful enough to leave tips for the servers to compensate for the fact that no food was ordered.

The same plan was enacted in Hollywood on Friday night.  Nobu, being aware of the New York incident, was perhaps a little quicker to show Greenpeace the door.  However, as in NY, the initial group did not have the most important job of the evening.  Throughout the night, Greenpeace groups dining at Nobu asked servers various questions about the fake menus, about bluefin tuna, and about issues having to do with sustainability. The staff was on its heels all night, as they were unable to distinguish – after the initial group – who was a part of Greenpeace and who was not.

Andrew and I watched from the bar, since we are not proper activists and have our own strategy for changing consumer behavior where seafood is concerned.  Personally, I would not have noticed the undercover Greenpeace groups if I had not known what was going on.  Even so, Greenpeace achieved the effect it desired – for better or for worse – as I overheard a server cussing about the “…@#$! menus on every #@!$ table…”  Later in our meal, as we perused the case at the bar and asked about the yellowfin filet, our server volunteered that it was not bluefin, and that in any case we should not worry because all of their bluefin was farm-raised – just in case we had any concerns about that.  That told us two things: that the server had been coached to give a canned answer to all bluefin questions, and that she had little idea of the issues concerning bluefin.

Nobu-uniMore selfishly, it was an opportunity to have some really good sushi.  After all, we do not advocate that people avoid sushi.  We just want people to make the responsible choice whenever possible.  I had never tried uni (sea urchin roe) in spite of the fact that I spent my graduate career measuring and torturing Strongylocentrotus purpuratus.  With a little lemon juice, cilantro, black sea salt, and cucumber: exquisite and rich.  In fact, so rich that four bites were about three too many.  No problem with that, just bring a friend to share with.

Smelt roe and Quail eggs

Smelt roe and Quail eggs

Keeping with the egg theme, we moved on to smelt roe and quail eggs – also extremely rich and buttery.  The chef, who by now knew that I was trying a few things for the first time, would set pieces on the counter and step back to watch my reaction.  He got a big grin for this one.  My favorite by far was the scallop makisushi, shredded and creamy.  I could have eaten many, many of those.  We did try the yellowfin, which perhaps was not the best example we could set as the Seafood Guys.  However, we saw this as an alternative to the bluefin sashimi that was calling to us after a couple of glasses of Asahi.  It was unbelievably tender – absolutely melt-on-the-tongue texture.  They must age it or something, because it was possibly the best sashimi I’ve ever had.

The service at Nobu, by the way, is excellent.  Both the chefs and the servers are attentive and genuinely friendly.  It’s too bad that Nobu, as a company, does not do more to preserve the ocean resources upon which it depends.  These days, companies repond to factors that affect the bottom line, not to an internal sense of environmental stewardship, and we know that few companies can be expected to take the long-term view into consideration when their short-term survival is at stake.  My suggestion is this: pick something else besides bluefin at Nobu or at your own local sushi place.  These fish are listed as overfished by NOAA and are difficult to manage, because international cooperation is required for proper oversight of this highly migratory species.  Furthermore, the fact that populations are low and that quotas recommendations are being rejected is further undermined by under-reporting of catches.  More on this story is told in the new film End of the Line.  If you want some good recommendations for sustainable sushi, check out the blog and book here.

My additional recommendation for activists is to petition to add bluefin to the Fish and Wildlife list of endangered or threatened species.  Although listed internationally as an endangered species, bluefin is not listed under the Endangered Species Act in the US.  If it were, it would be subject to importation restrictions under international CITES oversight.  And it seems like a pretty darn good candidate for nomination.  So, why not petition to have it added?  I personally volunteer to help assemble the supporting biological documentation if other groups will get the signatures.  Let’s get together on this – it doesn’t have to be over sushi.