Sushi Popper - aka other things that I really don't need

No, but really. No. Thanks.

Am I the only one that finds this disturbing?

The best way to clean wine glasses

I am a big fan of fine glassware.  My cupboards are filled with Spiegelau and Riedel glasses and stemware.  Needless to say, that despite these being great glasses, they are also delicate like a baby's bum and need to be handwashed.  I have on more than a few occasions broken a glass simply by washing it too hard.  The other issue is trying to dry them without spots.  You don't really want to rest them on the rim for fear of tipping and breaking.

I have finally come up with a great system that gets me clean, spot free glasses with minimal effort.

     

 
First off I found a great stemware cleaning brush that fits perfectly into the glasses.  The best part about it is the rim cleaner that actually fits on the rim and gets off those lip stains.
 
Second step is to dry it on my wine air dryer.  This thing is a God send.  Seriously gets your glasses dry and no worry that they are going to fall and break.
 
Finally I shine them up with a Riedel microfiber crystal cloth.
 
Done.  Perfectly clean glasses with no breakage.
 
(Yes, I am anal retentive about my wine glasses)

 

And in other disturbing news. Two-year-old who smokes 40 cigs a day?

The pics would be kind of funny. If they weren't true!

Downtown San Francisco before the earthquake

This film was originally thought to be from 1905 until David Kiehn, with the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum, figured out exactly when it was shot. He got his clues from New York trade papers announcing the film showing, the wet streets from recent heavy rainfall and shadows indicating time of year, and the actual weather and conditions on historical record. He even determined when the cars were registered, who owned them, and when the plates were issued. It was filmed only four days before the quake and shipped by train to NY for processing.

The film from 1906 in downtown San Francisco was made 4 days before the great earthquake destroyed the city at 5:12 AM on April 18th, 1906. It is filmed from the front of a cable car, heading east toward the ferry terminal building, which is the tower in the background (which survived the quake and still stands today). Look at the enormous old cars--this was and is a center of great wealth, and notice that they had a couple of idiot drivers back then, just as we have today.

Towards the end of the film one reckless driver nearly gets run over by the cable car. You will see streetcars, cable cars, horse-drawn wagons, and some huge, expensive, early motorcars. You will see jay-walkers, U-turns, few women and lots of convertibles. Most of the buildings in the film would be destroyed or burned four days later. Knowing what we know about history, it is an eerie sight. So here it is--just a mere 104 years ago.

The streets of San Francisco look to be in better condition than the current roads.  Hmmm...

Sushipedia™ Irashaimase - Need this iPhone app!

I wish they had one for Android. Sweet!

Meatless Monday & The Protein Principle

Wow, the numbers are startling. Americans consume an astonishing amount of protein. USDA statistics reveal that U.S. men eat as much as 190% of their recommended daily protein allowance, while women eat as much as 160%, the great majority of which comes from saturated-fat heavy meat and meat products.

Protein is essential to life; it builds and maintains muscles, bones and skin, and regulates metabolism and digestion. But the question remains, whether you look at it from the perspective of personal health, or environmental degradation, or cost savings, or animal rights, or veggie activism, or whatever else floats your boat: do we really need to eat all that meat?

I went to the top, to the nation's most influential nutritionist, Dr. Marion Nestle, professor in the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, to get her take. "All proteins are made up of the same amino acids. ALL. No exceptions," she reasons. "The difference between animal and vegetable proteins is in the content of certain amino acids. If vegetable proteins are mixed, the differences get made up. Even if they aren't mixed, all you need to do to get the right amount of low amino acids is to eat more of that food. There is no 'need' for animal proteins at all."

So, when it comes to protein...if we don't need animal protein all the time, what other options do we have? It turns out that beans, legumes, whole grains, greens, nuts and seeds are excellent sources of protein -- plus they offer the added benefit of fiber (not found in meat), vitamins and minerals. Here's some examples of protein found in readily available foods:

Broccoli -- 4 grams in 1 cup
Brown Rice -- 5 grams in 1 cup
Refried beans -- 7 grams in ½ cup
Soymilk -- 7 grams in 1 cup
Peas -- 8 grams in 1 cup
Tofu -- 11 grams in 5 oz
Oat Bran -- 16 grams in 1 cup
Lentils -- 18 grams in 1 cup
Chickpeas -- 18 grams in 1 cup

The key factor, though, is what comes along with the protein. According to the Harvard School of Public Health, a 6-ounce broiled porterhouse steak is an excellent source of protein -- 38 grams worth. But along for the ride are 44 grams of fat, 16 of them saturated! That's almost three-fourths of the recommended daily intake for saturated fat. The same amount of salmon gives you 34 grams of protein and 18 grams of fat, 4 of them saturated. A cup of cooked lentils has 18 grams of protein, but under 1 gram of fat!

That pretty much tells the story right there. It's what comes along for the ride that we need to play closer attention to. Indeed, if Americans are consuming nearly double their protein need, primarily from meat and meat products with their concomitant high saturated fat levels (not to even get into the hormone-administered meat topic, saved for another post), you can see why the nation is staring down the barrel of an obesity epidemic.

Let me leave you with a few low-fat food combos, followed by some interesting recipes from the Meatless Monday movement, where the idea is to cut back on meat consumption by 15% to limit saturated fat intake and to start the week off right -- and light!

• Hummus and pita
• Rice and beans
• Almost any legume-whole grain pair
• Trail mix
• Low-fat yogurt with granola
• Peanut butter on whole wheat bread or rice cakes
• Lentil soup and a roll
• Vegetarian chili with corn bread
• Tofu-vegetable stir fry over rice or pasta

 

 

Orange Marmalade Baked Oatmeal

This breakfast gets its springtime sweetness from orange marmalade and vanilla straight from the bean. You’ll never think of oatmeal the same way again!

View recipe, courtesy of The Pink Apron.