Food Fun in Washington State – Better Living Through Coffee

While I was reading up on my raw milk purchasing opportunities (via the Real Milk site) in Washington, I came across a listing for a cafe in Port Townsend that offered raw milk as an option.  I had never considered that there could be such a thing – needless to say, I was pretty excited!

That place is Better Living Through Coffee.

It’s  very warm and cozy place, with great coffee, located downtown.  I saw a number of people there relaxing and hanging out with their friends, which was a welcome sight (the local Starbucks by my house recently remodeled their interior with unfriendly seating, so I noticed the comfort level here right off the bat).

According to their website, they serve “traditionally prepared, nutrient-dense food and baked items”, and that is absolutely true.  They are sympathetic to Nourishing Traditions and the work of Weston A. Price (not to mention Sally Fallon). A lot of their food is locally sourced, too – meat, fish, dairy, flour – it’s all from around Washington.  Their coffee comes from their sister company, the Port Townsend Coffee Roasting Company.

Up on the wall just outside the inner entrance, they’ve posted statements about why they do not serve soy, and their preference for whole and cultured dairy, both of which I support.

The drink I had was delicious – I think it was called a breve. It was basically a cappucino with extra cream in it! The milk itself was raw, from Dungeness Valley Creamery, but the cream was not – however it was non-homogenized, organic, and it was grass-fed.   Total yum.

So nice to know there are places like this around.  I sure wish there was something like this in New York City, but our current laws I am sure would not allow it.

Next time I’m in the area, I will go back for sure!  And if you’re in the area and love coffee (or tea, not to mention sweet and savory treats), definitely give them a visit.

Better Living Through Coffee (BLT Coffee House)
100 Tyler Street
Port Townsend, WA 98368
360.385.3388
7am-6pm, Closed Tuesdays

Food Fun in Washington State – Retail Raw Milk

I am back from Washington!  I had a most excellent time, in part because I was simply able to take a break from the east coast rat race, and in part because I got to spend quality time with family.  My boyfriend’s family is in WA, too, so it was lovely to spend time with them as well.  I am originally from the West coast, so it felt great to be back on my  home coast.  I just love the West.

I had plans in mind to visit the Dungeness Valley Creamery to see the farm and meet farmers Jeff and Debbie Brown.  But on Monday 11/22 a snowstorm descended upon the area and we got probably 4-6 inches of snow.  It shut down pretty much everything in the area (snow like that is rare there), and icy roads remained for 3-4 days, so a visit to the farm was a bust.  My hope is to visit next summer.

However, WA is progressive, and one can buy raw milk in stores. What a concept!  I was able to purchase some of their milk at the Port Townsend Food Co-op, where my mom has a membership.  Here’s a (cell phone) shot of the refrigerator shelves:

raw milk for retail purchase!

What a treat! It was so delicious – slightly grassier tasting than what I get in New York, but that was really a non-issue.  I loved it.  And I will miss the freedom of being able to just drop by and pick up a half gallon whenever I like.  Maybe New York will get to that point one day.  I hope so.

The other place I know where this milk is available is at the Chimacum Corner farm stand, south of Port Townsend.  There’s a cafe in PT that offers raw milk as well!  When I discovered that via the Real Milk site I was really excited to check them out. Look for more about them in a future post.

Upcoming Talk About Food Preservation

I love to teach, am fascinated by different food preservation techniques, so I’m really happy to be giving at talk this weekend for the Kensington/Windsor Terrace CSA about food preservation!  This is a closed event, but I’m thrilled to let it out and off to the universe, as I’d love to lead more educational opportunities in my lifetime.

As a fellow CSA member, I know how overwhelming shares can be at times, and depending on how busy you are in any particular week, it’s easy to let the food go and eventually dissolve into a puddle of goo (believe me, I’ve seen enough of it over the years in the bottom of my crisper drawer).  As time has gone by, I’ve found various ways of preserving my food, and each technique has its own benefits.  I’m particularly enamored with the preservation method that actually boosts the nutrition in the food – lacto-fermentation.

I’ll be talking about the most accessible ways to preserve food: freezing, pickling, lacto-fermentation, dehydrating, water bath canning… and one special preservation process that I think its pretty cool and that I only learned about a year or so ago.  I’ll reveal that next week.

Anyway, yes – really excited to be doing this talk!  Special thanks for my friend Serita for helping set this up and to Charlene for overall encouragement.

Lacto-Fermented Salsa

lf salsa

This week I expanded my fermentation repertoire into lacto-fermented salsa.  I’d not fermented anything involving fruit (tomatoes are really a fruit) before, so this was a new experience.  I learned that fruit-based ferments progress quicker than vegetable-based ones, so I expected to see some results early on.  Additionally, it’s pretty warm right now, and that ambient heat also encourages a quicker fermentation.  I love salsa, and thought I’d enjoy a lacto-fermented one, but had no idea just how delicious it would be!

This is a timely dish because tomatoes are in season.  Summer tomatoes are one of the true joys of the season.  They taste so amazing right now. Canned tomatoes can be used, but they are nothing like fresh tomatoes.

peeled tomatoes

So why make fermented salsa?  Well, the lactobacilli helps to increase the digestibility of the salsa, plus the increased levels of vitamins and enzymes go way up.  The lactic acid helps it to not spoil, and helps promote a healthy gut with the natural probiotics that develop.

chopped tomatoes

This is a pretty easy recipe to prepare without a food processor, but if you have one (or a stick blender even), preparing this salsa will come together in a jiffy.  I like chopping things by hand, so I was fine with doing it manually, but if I ever get myself a food processor, I’ll try it that way, too.

ingredients pre mixing

This salsa tastes like summer and has a delicious tang to it from the fermentation.  I actually took it with me as an example item for my talk on traditional foods for Queens Holistic Moms, and it was very well received!  People loved it, and went back for second and third tastes.  I was really happy about that!

The whey works really well with it, too.

salsa in a jar

This post is participating in Fight Back Friday, hosted by Food Renegade.

Lacto-Fermented Beets

One of the things I’m going to talk about on Wednesday is lacto-fermentation, that traditional method of preserving food with salt and/or whey, that results in a more nutrient dense food that is high in vitamin C, and full of probiotics.  I want to have an example to show everyone at the talk, and I had some beets in my refrigerator, so I chose to ferment them.

whole raw beets

I love beets prepared many ways, and fermenting them is just one way to make them delicious.  I first learned about lacto-fermentation from Andrew Faust, a permaculture specialist based in Brooklyn NY, but formerly lived 8 years off the grid in rural West Virginia.   He taught a fermentation workshop in Sunnyside (sponsored by Food Not Lawns) that was really great and I learned so much!  It got me really excited about fermentation.

To make these beets, I used my experience from this workshop with a little guidance from Sandor Katz’s Wild Fermentation, a wonderful book about, well, fermented foods.  These foods range from vegetables to dairy, to beverages, and more.  It’s an awesome book.

The first thing to do is find yourself a non-reactive bowl.  I use a large pyrex bowl when I’m doing any kind of fermentation, be it LF veggies, working with sourdough, or soaking grains/flours.  Another material to use would be ceramic – just don’t use metal.

Prepare your beets – rinse them off to get rid of dirt but don’t scrub the outside or peel the beets.  There are microorganisms living on the outside of the beets (and other vegetables, too), that you want to retain to help with the whole fermentation process.

I used about a pound and a half of beets for this batch.  It might seem like a lot, but it compresses quite a bit.

The next thing to do is to grate the beets.  Those of you with food processors, you can just put them through that, but a hand grater works great.  I use a box grater.  Be careful of those knuckles!

grated beets

After you grate the beets, add 1/2 to 1 tablespoon of sea salt; iodized salt is not recommended for this.  If you want your ferment to be saltier, use more salt.  I used a whole tablespoon because I’m going to use these beets as a flavoring for beans and grains, which I won’t salt.  Pound the beets with a wooden spoon, smashing them and mixing them together as you go.  Soon, the beets will start to break down and exude some liquid.

juicy beets

These beets got kind of foamy, probably because of the saponins within.

really juicy beets

Find yourself a very clean (sterilized is great, but thoroughly washed with soap and water works, too) glass jar with a lid – I like using canning jars with metal lids.  I also like to use a wide mouth funnel, which helps immensely when putting the beets in the jar.

the vessel

Put the beets in the jar!  As you put them in there, press down to exude even more liquid.

beets in the jar

This liquid is a kind of brine that will help protect the beets from exposure to outside air.

from the top

As you can see in this picture, there was space between my beets and the top of the jar.  So, I made a separate brine – 1 tablespoon sea salt to 1 cup of water. I poured it into the jar until there was about 1/4-1/2 inch left at the top.

pouring in the brine

After you’ve poured enough brine in, screw on the lid until it’s finger tight, but not too tight.  It’s good to turn the jar upside down a few times to let any air bubbles come up and release into the area just below the lid.

beets ready to ferment

Set your jar of beets in a dark, warmish cupboard.  After a couple of days, check the beets and see how you like them.  If you want them a little tangier, let them ferment for another day and check it, and so on.  If you like what you taste, store the beets in the fridge in the door.  The fridge is the best “refrigerator microclimate” for such things.

These beets – or any lacto-fermented food – are a living food.  Mine were so alive this weekend that they wanted to escape some!  Our warm summer no doubt has accelerated certain processes in the fermentation process; I doubt this would be the same situation in the heart of winter.

Apparently I tightened the lid just a tad too tight, so that the beets didn’t have any space to release their gas, so they pressed up against the lid as hard as they could!  The lid was slightly domed when I saw it on Sunday morning.  I had to release the tension so that I could check on them, and they exclaimed all sorts of fizzy sounds in the process!  I did spoon out a couple tablespoons of beets and added more brine to relax things.  They’ve been fine since then.

Of course, there are systems that are truly designed for fermentation.  The Harsch crock is one, regular crocks with a plate is another system, and there are fancy lids for mason jars.  My system has worked for me, and I’ve made some great LF foods this way.  Plus, it utilizes tools I have at home, at my fingertips.  One day I’ll buy a Harsch, I expect, but it’s not on my list for the moment.

I tasted the beets this morning and they are already tangy!  And a little salty, but they will be fantastic with black beans or millet.

Hooray for lacto fermented beets!  Yum.

holding beets

Traditional Food for Urban Families

Trad Urban Lecture

Later this month I’ll be giving a talk at the August meeting of the Queens Holistic Moms about eating and preparing real, traditional food, entitled Traditional Food for Urban Families.  Specifics include how to:

  • Soak beans and lentils for increased nutrient assimilation
  • Sprout and soak grains for easier digestion
  • Lacto-ferment produce to boost the immune system

I’ll also bring up the subject of raw milk, traditional sugar alternatives, pastured meats, and encourage people to eat a more unrefined diet in general.

And although I do not have children, I have a very busy life schedule, from my day job, to my work with my CSA; from  running to writing; to spending time with family and friends, and more (including getting back to playing music)!  So, I know what it’s like to be pressed for time.   My goal is to help people understand that eating whole, real, traditional food is totally possible even with time constraints and demands, with a little planning.

If any of you reading this are local, please join us!  Women and men are welcome, as are those of you that don’t have kids. You can RSVP here.  Here are the logistical details:

Traditional Food for Urban Families
Talk by Meg Cotner for the Queens Holistic Moms
ARROW Community Center
35-30 35th Street (between 35th & 36th Aves) in Astoria
Wednesday, August 11th, 2010, 6:30pm – 8pm

Hope to see you there!

Photo credit:  image by Queens Holistic Moms

My First Coconut Flour Experience

For a while, I’ve been wanting to try coconut flour.

coconut flour

Coconut flour is made from dried, finely ground coconut meat.  It is high in fiber (one serving provides about 1/4 of the recommended amount of fiber each day), gluten and grain free, and low in soluble carbohydrates.  It smells faintly of coconut (not a bad thing in my opinion).

From what I’ve read, recipes using coconut flour require a lot of eggs.  This is because all that fiber absorbs a lot of liquid.  After further research, I learned that it is recommended that each half cup of coconut flour be paired with 6 eggs.  Eggs are so good for you – especially pastured eggs – that this is truly a bonus.

I discovered this ratio after I made my first foray into coconut flour use.  The recipe I used – one for pancakes – only used 4 eggs to a half cup of coconut flour, though it also used a cup of milk.  Still, I found that these pancakes were a little dry, and I could tell they were not made with grain.  They had great flavor, though, and didn’t taste much like coconut at all.  T even thought they were tasty.

coconut pancake batter

I found that I had to add butter to them post-frying to moisten them up; this never happens when I make pancakes with wheat or sprouted wheat flour.  I expect that if I upped the egg amount this would take care of that.  However, the batter would be much looser.  Perhaps then I’d have coconut flour crepes?  Intriguing… I of course added maple syrup because that’s the perfect pairing with pancakes.  That also helped with moisture levels.

cooked coconut flour pancakes

I also think incorporating bananas or berries would be a welcome addition and add to the feeling of moistness in the pancakes.

Since coconut flour is so fiber-rich, these pancakes were crazy filling.  I could only – actually, barely – eat two small pancakes. I think next time I’d make a half batch – I had a bunch left over after Sunday’s brunch.

So, although the resulting pancakes did not meet my expectations, I do plan to experiment with this recipe again, and consider other recipes that ask for coconut flour.  Cilantro chicken filled savory coconut flour crepes come to mind right away.  I also might try using coconut flour in brownies, too.  Looking forward to playing more with this new ingredient!