Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

March 17: National Green Beer Day & National Corned Beef and Cabbage Day

It's National Green Beer Day and National Corned Beef and Cabbage Day, which can only mean one thing: today's St. Patrick's Day!  Wear green, eat foods dyed-green, eat cabbage and corned beef, drink Irish beers, watch or march in parades, participate in races that reward you with beer at the finish line...  those are just some of the ways you can celebrate St. Patrick's Day.  (I've done all those except march in a St. Patty's Day parade.)  The Miami University students at Oxford, Ohio, instead celebrate Green Beer Day.  Green Beer Day has been celebrated since 1952 with copious amounts of, you guessed it, green beer.  Why some sites report today as "National Green Beer Day," I can't tell you why since I can't find any corporation that advocates it or any record of recognition from Congress.  Maybe as the students graduated and moved to different parts of the country they spread their tradition of green beer.

When a lot of Americans think of Irish food that must be had on St. Patrick's Day, we automatically think of corned beef and cabbage.  So, naturally, someone somewhere decided that today is also National Corned Beef and Cabbage Day.  The thing is - it's not really an Irish dish, a fact also stated by the website European Cuisines.  Still corned beef and cabbage somehow became integratec in the American imagination as a thoroughly Irish dish that was perfect for St. Patrick's Day.  Right now in grocery stores, you'll find great deals on cabbage and on various styles of corned beef.  Want it pre-cooked?  Or how about already seasoned and ready for you to cook?  I've always been the type to just throw it all in the crockpot with seasoning and let it simmer all day.  (I picked that trick up from a friend who throws the best St. Patrick's Day parties ever.)  Making tasty corned beef isn't all that hard, as documented last year by Chef Sarah of At Home for Dinner.  Mahalo has a nice round up for National Corned Beef and Cabbage Day, touching on the history and providing a recipe. 

However you celebrate today, please do so safely and designate a driver or call a cab.

St. Patrick's Day 2012 in Wilmington, NC.  Lots of beer and
lots of green.  The nearby Irish pub was the populat
place to be.

Friday, February 17, 2012

February 17: Cafe au Lait Day, Indian Pudding Day & Cabbage Day

Three food celebrations today! Cafe au Lait, Indian Pudding, and Cabbage!  I really don't think all three would go well together in a meal, so I'm not quite sure how they all ended up on the same day.

Cafe au Lait Day

I don't like to drink coffee (but will if I'm craving caffeine and there's no tea) yet I worked in a coffee shop as an undergrad where I never had to make a cafe au lait.  I wasn't even sure what it was and I'm still not.  Apparently, what a cafe au lait is depends on where you go and who's talking.  There's not a whole lot out there on the internet about cafe au lait and Wikipedia ended up pretty much the only site that explained what it is in various countries.  I found it interesting that cafe au lait is served in bowls in some countries.Gumbo Pages has a story illustrating what New Orleans residents consider "real" cafe au lait and how to make it. WikiHow's instructions are a little easier - make coffee and mix with hot milk. The only thing that seemed consistent about cafe au lait is that it has to be made with hot milk.  Otherwise, you're just having coffee with milk.


Indian Pudding Day

Maybe it is a sign of times or a sign of my upbringing, but when I read "Indian Pudding Day," I thought I would be learning about a pudding based on cuisine from India.  Instead, the "Indian" in the name is referring to Native Americans.  I've never had Indian pudding but it is apparently very popular in the Northeast.  (This may explain why I've never heard of it- I haven't been in that region yet.)  Some articles say that Indian pudding originated in the Northeast, but according to this very enthusiastic Indian pudding fan at the Plimoth Plantation it wasn't.

For those like me who have never heard of Indian pudding, it's a type of hasty pudding - which in the US means it's cornbased and cooked in milk or water.  (Hasty pudding in the UK is apparently different and can refer to any sort of grain.)  Indian pudding is cornmeal cooked in a pudding using molasses.  I'll have to ask my Northeast friends about it because it sounds extremely sweet.  I'll have to try it when I go to Boston.


Cabbage Day

Growing up, cabbage was always pale green or the purple/red kind in superstores or Chinese cabbage (aka Napa cabbage, bok choi, sui choi, etc.).  Very compact, dense, round and full of squiggly insides- that was the typical cabbage.   Recently at the Farmer's Market, I've seen what cabbage actually looks like (I didn't realize there were so many leaves that were discarded from the supermarket cabbage!) and a variety that was new to me, pointy cabbage

When I can take a pretty picture of
sauerkraut, then I'll ptobably have
taken a photography class or two.
Cabbage has always been a favorite vegetable of mine.   I'm not a fan of coleslaw, but that's how a lot of Americans eat cabbage.  I never ate sauerkraut as a child because my dad doesn't like it, but I've found I love it.  Sauerkraut is great on sandwiches (use it in place of sour cream or creamy dressings for a healthier alternative) and on pizza.  I also will just scoop some out into a bowl and eat it as a snack.  If you tried sauerkraut and didn't like it, try another brand!  I've found that there are just some brands of sauerkraut that just taste bad.  And if you're ever in San Diego, CA, for the December Nights festival, definitely hit up the Romanian house in the International Houses for Romanian sauerkraut on top of a sausage.  Or you can always make your own sauerkraut, whether it's Romanian or South American.

I'll typically eat Chinese cabbage as kimchee with rice or on top of a bowl of noodles.  I've found that all types of cabbages will work great in a stir-fry.  My number one favorite way to eat cabbage?  Japanese pickled cabbage.  When I'm feeling particularly lazy and I want the cabbage right away, I'll use ichijikan zuke no moto.  Just a quick sprinkle of that, a little lemon juice, and shaking to mix it all up and you have a tasty cabbage side dish.

Not familiar with cabbage?  This CDC site has some great tips for picking fresh cabbage and what to do with it.

Cabbage is good for you.  If you didn't like it as a child, give it a try as an adult.  You may find it pretty tasty.  Just don't boil it - in my opinion, it ruins the cabbage and boiled cabbage is the reason most people don't like it.


National Fiber Focus Month

As a quick nod to National Fiber Focus Month, I thought I'd share this NPR article titled, "Is Adding Fiber to Food Really Good For Your Health?"  I especially love how the article ends - basically with a message to eat apples instead of processed foods.