12/18/2009

Champagne Revealed as Major Source of Pollution


The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) pronounced on Dec. 7 that it intends to regulate carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, now that it has labeled greenhouse gases as dangerous pollutants. This means that Champagne has now been declared a major producer of global warming pollution.

Each bottle of Champagne has 20 million tiny bubbles of CO2 pressurized naturally in the bottle at about 6 times atmospheric pressure. Last year roughly 332 million bottles of Champagne were sold globally, meaning that approximately 6,640,000,000,000,000 tiny spheres of the deadly gas were emitted in an alcoholic haze of mass suicide. The EPA released no mortality figures on the carnage.

From my own personal observations this blog editor can report that inhaling the nectar of Champagne CO2 vapors does indeed make the world seem warmer, at least in my immediate vicinity. At times one even has an urge to remove one's clothing.

The technology that is seemingly the most promising for solving this vexing EPA problem is CO2 capture. Test plant facilities are under construction that seek to pump CO2 into the ground and store it for natural dissipation over time. Of course the world's oceans are collectively the largest CO2 sink there is, holding billions of tons of CO2, however some scientists predict that the oceans are nearly saturated.

In the case of Champagne proposed EPA regulations will require each purchaser of a bottle of Champagne to agree to first inhale the CO2 bubbles as they release, thus in effect becoming a CO2-sink for that bottle. This will quite naturally lead to an extreme sensation of light headedness, which is the whole point in the first place. This will also no doubt lead to a new set of laws for DUI/CO2.

I’m just saying…

Richard Wottrich, Blog Editor











So Where Does Omega-3 Fish Oil Come From?

We all have been told that omerga-3 fatty acids are beneficial to our health. Many of us buy supplements as a way of getting our omega-3 fatty acids, which studies show lower triglycerides and the risk of heart attack. But where do these supplements come from?

That question occurred to New York Times writer Paul Greenberg in his article entitled "A Fish Oil Story."

Says Greenberg, "The deal with fish oil, I found out, is that a considerable portion of it comes from a creature upon which the entire Atlantic coastal ecosystem relies, a big-headed, smelly, foot-long member of the herring family called menhaden, which a recent book identifies in its title as “The Most Important Fish in the Sea.”"

The menhaden, also known as mossbunker, bunker and pogy, are (were) plentiful, cheap and an excellent source of omerga-3. Naturally the “fly in the ointment” is that we are overfishing the menhaden to the point of no return. The menhagen is a forager, which means they clean seawater by eating algae. If you remove millions of these fish from the ecosystem the quality of seawater suffers as a result.

Interestingly enough most fish cannot produce omerga-3 oils. "Blue fin tuna, striped bass, redfish and bluefish are just a few of the diners at the menhaden buffet. All of these fish are high in omega-3 fatty acids but are unable themselves to synthesize them. The omega-3s they have come from menhaden." So by removing the menhaden we remove the major source of omerga-3 up the food chain in other fish we consume as well.

So as usual the overpopulation of earth by humans, coupled with demand for a basic product, as implemented through the exploitation of the cheapest source possible, will have a significant impact on our environment.

Is there an alternative to the menhaden as a source of omerga-3? Of course there is - flax oil.

Richard L. Wottrich, Blog Editor

12/12/2009

Lucy Waverman's top foreign cookbooks of 2009

The Globe and Mail

Compendium of new 2009 international cookbooks.

AD HOC AT HOME: Family-Style Recipes
By Thomas Keller, Artisan, $65 - Thomas Keller is a culinary icon. He has more Michelin stars than any other American chef (and maybe the world). His top restaurants (the French Laundry and Per Se) are brilliant, and his reign continues.

Because his French Laundry Cookbook is perfect in style and content, but virtually impossible for the home cook to use, Keller addresses the issue with Ad Hoc At Home, recipes from his casual family-style restaurant in Yountville, CA. Don't think of diving into this book after arriving home to make dinner for your family. With a chef as intense and detail-orientated as Keller, the recipes contain everything you need to know, which means that they may be long and time-consuming but they work like a dream. My husband spent two days painstakingly brining and cooking the fried chicken, a signature recipe and the harbinger of the current fried-chicken craze. It was succulent and crispy.

The “becoming a better cook” section is full of pertinent information, and Keller has included “light bulb” moments: down-to-earth advice on everything from dating preserved products to peeling cooked beets with a paper towel.

12/07/2009

Bouchon L.A.
Rock lobster ( Alex Gallardo, Los Angeles Times / November 24, 2009 ) - The top plate of the chilled seafood platter at the Bouchon.

12/05/2009

DNA 'Barcodes' Surface Fishy Imposters on Menus

Over the years there have been several instances when I thought that the fish I was being served in a fine restaurant was not what the menu stipulated. There really isn’t much you can do about it, except return the entrĂ©e. Now there are validations of my suspicions. Richard Wottrich, Blog Editor

Researchers Use Gene Segments to Settle Restaurant Mysteries, Check Stream Quality and Take Inventory of All Living Things

Researchers using a new DNA test recently discovered that fish ordered from menus in New York and Denver might not always be the species served. Sampling the fare at 31 sushi bars, scientists at the American Museum of Natural History found that customers who ordered tuna were sometimes served a cheaper substitute, an endangered species or a fish banned in several countries as a health hazard.

Scaled, sliced and hand-rolled, the eight most marketable species in the tuna genus Thunnus are prime candidates for honest error -- or bait and switch. On a plate, these wild tuna are almost identical, but sushi lovers especially prize the three species of bluefin tuna, whose annual catch was sharply curtailed last month. To identify the premium filets, the museum researchers singled out a short piece of genetic code naturally found in fish cells that, for the first time, can reliably label each of the eight species like a grocery store's inventory tag. The researchers call it a DNA barcode.

More than a way to monitor menu mistakes, the development of the barcode arises from the need to tighten enforcement of regulations on tuna fishing. Regulators had no way to accurately identify which species of tuna had been sold, as required by an international convention on endangered species.

The museum researchers believe their DNA barcode, reported last month in the journal PLoS One, satisfies that requirement. "We want to be able to monitor the trade," says Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis at the museum's Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, who helped conduct the study. Concerned about overfishing, the government of Monaco recently proposed a global ban on trade in the northern bluefin tuna species, which will be considered at a March meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in Qatar.

More broadly, the tuna DNA barcode is the latest application of genetic markers for biodiversity bookkeeping, which is quickly gaining international acceptance. Centers for DNA barcoding have opened recently in Canada and Mexico, with national facilities under development in China, France, Poland and the Netherlands.

The largest is the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario at the University of Guelph in Canada, where the technique was pioneered in 2003. There, researchers have culled barcode data from 750,000 specimens to create a reference library for about 100,000 species. "By 2015, I am confident we will have registered five million barcode records and at least 500,000 species," says Guelph biologist Paul Hebert.

As new barcode biomarkers become available, they are posted online in the Barcode of Life Data System, which encompasses findings from 300 global barcoding projects. The goal is nothing less than a DNA barcode for every living thing -- 10 million species or more.

Combined with traditional taxonomic techniques, a DNA barcode can make species identification as easy as name, rank and serial number.

Each of these inventory tags relies on a fraction of a single gene located in every cell's mitochondria. Unlike the genes in a cell's nucleus, though, this mitochondrial DNA isn't scrambled when the cell normally divides during reproduction. The gene segment mutates quickly enough so that scientists can distinguish closely related species but slowly enough that individuals of the same species have similar barcodes. With it, researchers can link tissue to its formal scientific identity and to all of the other specimens, field notes, lab studies and species data already on file.

"Used correctly, it is a great tool," says marine biologist Phaedra Doukakis at Stony Brook University in New York, who is using DNA tests to verify the labelling of commercial caviar.

As a practical matter, proponents promise that DNA barcodes will improve the international regulation of public health, agricultural imports and the environment. "We think the regulatory implications of this are really important," says David Schindel, executive secretary of the Consortium for the Barcode of Life at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

"This is something that has a number of applications and potential benefits in fisheries and the seafood market," says Jeremy Brown, vice president of the Commercial Fishermen of America. Techniques like DNA barcoding, he says, could give "the consumer the confidence to value the seafood they buy."

Already, U.S. regulators are trying it out. At the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's national exposure research laboratory, population geneticist Mark Bagley is testing how quickly and accurately DNA barcodes can identify the insects whose presence or absence is used to gauge stream quality. The telltale insect larvae can be hard to distinguish from those of other aquatic bugs.

At the Smithsonian's feather identification laboratory, researchers use DNA barcodes to identify the remains of birds that flew into aircraft, handling 5,000 cases for the Federal Aviation Administration and the U.S. military so far this year. "You can't do anything about the problem until you know what it is," says ornithologist Carla Dove, who manages the laboratory.

In the Fish Barcode of Life Initiative, researchers so far have assembled DNA barcodes for 7,335 species of fish -- out of 30,000 known varieties.

At a minimum, they are hoping to dispel commercial confusion. Under U.S. regulations, for example, 33 species can be sold as grouper. Common market names are at odds with formal taxonomic labels and vary from region to region. One man's red mullet is another man's spotted goatfish.

When Dr. Hebert and his colleagues at Guelph last month tested fish at 18 restaurants in Canada, they found that almost half the orders served were mislabeled. You order Red Snapper and it's Tilapia nearly every time.

Likewise, the researchers from the American Museum of Natural History also found the sushi menu an unreliable guide. In all, they tested 68 servings of tuna sushi, ordering the raw fish at 31 eateries ranging from the Michelin-starred Nobu to a corner convenience store.

Their barcoding tests confirmed that sushi sold by Nobu as bigeye tuna was correctly labeled, but the tuna sold at half the other restaurants frequently was not, the researchers reported. Five of nine sushi servings sold as albacore tuna, for example, were actually a fish called escolar, which is banned in Italy and Japan because it can cause gastrointestinal illness.

Still, it will be a long time before a DNA barcoder shows up as a consumer appliance. For now, the lab test usually costs about $5 and takes 90 minutes or so.

Jacob Lowenstein, who devised the tuna DNA barcode, envisions an iPhone-like device that can produce instantaneous species identifications. "That's still far from reality," he says.

Write to Robert Lee Hotz at sciencejournal@wsj.com
Topolobampo

Topolobampo has the narrow focus and conviviality of a French Bistro on a cold Paris evening. Last night we dined to the myriad tastes and smells that are the essence of the Ric Bayless experience – nuanced Mexican cuisine, perhaps as it has never been or imagined. It is a dining destination of inspired chaos and cacophony of movement.

Tasting menus can often be the refuge of failed imagination, but those designed by Bayless are complex and build upon wines perfectly matched. It is in their sauces that Bayless reaches the pinnacle of his art – complex and always surprising. This is not your childhood memory of a Mexican restaurant.

Chipotle Peanut Salsa for Grilled Vegetables

Makes about 2 cups

Ingredients

1 pound (6 to 8 medium) tomatillos, husked and rinsed
1/3 to 1/2 ounce (3 to 5) dried red chipotle chiles (aka moritas), stemmed
1 small white onion, sliced 1/4-inch thick
4 garlic cloves, peeled
1/4 cup roasted peanuts
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce or soy sauce
Salt
About 1 teaspoon sugar (optional)

Directions

1. Toast and roast. Roast the tomatillos on a rimmed baking sheet about 4 inches below a very hot broiler until soft and blackened in spots, about 5 minutes per side. Cool, then scrape into a blender jar.

Meanwhile, heat a small (6-inch) ungreased skillet over medium, toast the chipotle, stirring until very aromatic, about a minute. Scoop into a small bowl, cover with hot tap water and soak for about 30 minutes, stirring from time to time to ensure even rehydration.

Turn the oven down to 425 degrees. Spread the onion and garlic on another baking sheet, slide into the oven and roast for about 15 minutes, stirring every few minutes until the onions are golden—they’ll look a little wilted with a touch of char on some of the edges. The garlic should feel soft and be browned in spots. Cool.

2. Finish the salsa. Drain the chiles and scrape them into the blender jar along with the tomatillos, peanuts, worcestershire or soy sauce and 3/4 cup water. Pick out the garlic from the onions and add it to the blender. (If all this is too much for your blender, blend in 2 batches.) Blend until nearly smooth. Roughly chop the onion, add it to the blender and pulse a few times until you’ve got as chunky (or smooth) a salsa as you like. Stir in enough additional water to give the salsa an easily spoonable consistency. Taste and season with salt, usually about 1 teaspoon, and the optional sugar. Serve with your favorite grilled vegetables.

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12/03/2009

Understanding Your Food

















In this blogger's Knol entitled "Ten Principals of Healthy Eating" I emphasize that you should know your food's origin and buy local when possible. There are reasons for this, as exemplified by a recent HBO documentary.

The new HBO documentary "Death on a Factory Farm" takes a harrowing look at animal cruelty in an Ohio factory hog farm.

Each year, ten billion animals are raised for consumption in the U.S., mostly on sprawling, industrialized farms, where virtually no federal laws mandate how the animals are treated - though guidelines exist - and state laws are ineffective. As a result, animals are frequently subjected to what many consider cruel treatment and inhumane conditions in the interest of economic efficiency. Death on a Factory Farm chronicles an investigation into alleged abuses that took place at a hog farm in Creston, Ohio. This shocking documentary is produced by Tom Simon (a seven-time Emmy® winner) and Sarah Teale, producer of the 2006 HBO special "Dealing Dogs," which received two Emmy® nominations, including Best Documentary.

This is not pretty to be sure, but it is a wakeup call to pay attention to what you buy to eat, and what you buy your family to eat. You wouldn't drink dirty water out of a ditch, so why would you buy meat from animals horribly abused? You wouldn't and I would not either. Knowledge is everything.

Richard Wottrich