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Category Archives: Special Information

Boise Farmers Market Expands Program

23 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Adventures, Boise Farmers Market, Buy Idaho, Comfort Food, Food, Food Carts or Trucks, Green Beans, Green Peas, Greens, Healthy Eating, Heirloom Carrots, Heirloom Squash, Heirloom Tomatoes, Herbs and Spices, Idaho Greens, Idaho's Bounty, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Meadowlark Farms, Next Generation produce, Onion, Peaceful Belly Farms, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Purple Sage Farms, Special Events, Special Information, Spinach, Spring Greens, Spring Plants, Spring Vegies, Traditional Food, True Roots Produce, Watercress, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

Boise Farmers Market, Mobile Market, Next Generation produce, Purple Sage Farms, spring vegetables, True Roots produce


20Oct2013_1_Boise-Farmers-Market-Fall-Fundraiser_Bag-LogoThe BFM, Boise Farmers Market, has come up with a novel idea – Take the market to those who can least afford to attend the market at 10th and Grove or any other market in the downtown corridor. In other words, hook up a trailer to a vehicle and take the produce to different neighborhoods. New idea? In the 21st Century, maybe, but I can remember the farmers coming to our neighborhood – in Delaware – and my Mother buying fresh produce that way in season. Look at what they are doing. If you need to enlarge the photos to see them or to print them, Left-Click the photo. From the BFM website, “Spring produce galore! Look for strawberries, asparagus, lettuces, mustard greens, radishes, rhubarb, micro-greens and a whole lot of love. Plus, the debut of the BFM Mobile Market on Saturday, May 23rd!”

The schedule of where the produce trailer will be.

The schedule of where the produce trailer will be.

As this poster says, “The Boise Farmers Market and the Boise Parks and Recreation are bringing fresh local produce to your neighborhood this summer! Shop for Fresh-From-The-Farm fruits and vegetables while your kids play in the park. The Mobile Market accepts SNAP benefits. For more information, please contact Janie Burns at (208) 863-6947 or at info@boisefarmersmarket.com.” You can also check the website at The Boise Farmers Market.
The Mobile Market

The Mobile Market

Map of the service and schedule for the Mobile Market.

Map of the service and schedule for the Mobile Market.

Boise Parks and Recreation are helping with this project. Thank-You Boise Parks and Rec!

Boise Parks and Recreation are helping with this project. Thank-You Boise Parks and Rec!


Hopefully, some of these produce vendors will have some of their produce on the Mobile Market. I know you will be able to purchase fresh, farm eggs from Meadowlark Farms. And maybe bakery items in the future.
True Roots produce.

True Roots produce.

Purple Sage Farms

Purple Sage Farms

Maybe some live plants? If not, fresh tomatoes should be available in season.

Maybe some live plants? If not, fresh tomatoes should be available in season.

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Stained Glass Potatoes

06 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Farmers Market, Buy Idaho, Captain's Shack, Edible Flowers, Herbs, Herbs and Spices, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Party Time, Photos By: Bob Young, Potatoes, Recipe By: Robin Young, Recipes, Special Information, Vegetables, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

edible flowers, potatoes, stained glass potatoes


21sept2013_2_robins-bday-captains-shack_gumbo_getting-happyThere must be 100 recipes for Stained Glass Potatoes or Stained Glass Potato Chips. But basically, most of them just use parsley. We like the addition of other herbs and edible flowers – pansy, viola, violets, etc. These flowers and herbs add some color to the “window”. Much less, flavor to the chips. Fun to do, but somewhat time consuming – it takes a while to place the herbs and flowers just in the right place. We baked ours at 400 ºF for 6 minutes and then turned the baking sheet 180º for another 6 minutes. All of the recipes that we looked at said to line a baking sheet with parchment, place the potato slices on the parchment, add a second sheet of parchment and then a second baking pan. Weigh this all down with bricks. We used a cast iron skillet for weight. One source for the recipe is from Martha Stewart at Parsley Potato Chips. She uses parsley, but we like the flowers and herbs better. The preparation and cooking process is the same. Here is a pictorial journey through the process. Enjoy and remember, if you want to, Left-Click any of these photos to enlarge. Cheers!

Some of the herbs we used. Thyme, violas, chives, taragon and baby sage.

Some of the herbs we used. Thyme, violas, chives, tarragon and baby sage. Use your imagination and use any colorful EDIBLE flower or herb you can fine. Remember – If you put it on a plate, one MUST be able to eat it. In other words, Poison Ivy is not a good selection to put in these chips!

Brush unsalted butter on the parchment paper.

Brush unsalted butter on the parchment paper.

Dust the buttered parchment paper with sea salt. fresh ground black pepper and cayenne pepper.

Dust the buttered parchment paper with sea salt, fresh ground black pepper and cayenne pepper.

Slice a potato thin enough to be transparent. Lay on the buttered parchment and place the herbs and flowers. Butter the herbs/flowers.

Slice a potato thin enough to be transparent. Lay on the buttered parchment and place the herbs and flowers. Butter the herbs/flowers.

Herbs and flowers placed to "paint" a picture.

Herbs and flowers placed to “paint” a picture.

Creating the "picture".

Creating the “picture”.

Thin sliced potatoes and "stained glass" being made.

Thin sliced potatoes and “stained glass” being made.

The finished product.

The finished product.

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Scrapple – What?

29 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Captain's Shack, Classic Cuisines, Comfort Food, Cooking Styles, Ethnic Foods, Hard To Find Foods, Interesting Information, Pennsylvania Dutch, Photos By: Bob Young, Pork, Scrapple, Special Information, What's For Dinner?, Whats For Breakfast?

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Tags

Comfort Food, Rappa Brand Scrapple, scrapple


Tango-Corte-Window-FloridaScrapple is an acquired taste. It has been described as “everything from the pig except the oink!” We have our scrapple shipped in from Ralph and Paul Adams, Rapa Brand Scrapple in Philadelphia. I’m a purist. I like the original scrapple and will probably leave the turkey scrapple alone. Wikipedia says,

Scrapple, also known by the Pennsylvania Dutch name panhaas or “pan rabbit,” is traditionally a mush of pork scraps and trimmings combined with cornmeal and wheat flour, often buckwheat flour, and spices. The mush is formed into a semi-solid congealed loaf, and slices of the scrapple are then pan-fried before serving. Scraps of meat left over from butchering, not used or sold elsewhere, were made into scrapple to avoid waste. Scrapple is best known as a rural American food of the Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia). Scrapple and panhaas are commonly considered an ethnic food of the Pennsylvania Dutch, including the Mennonites and Amish. Scrapple is found in supermarkets throughout the region in both fresh and frozen refrigerated cases.
Preparation
Scrapple is typically cut into quarter-inch to three-quarter-inch slices and pan-fried until brown to form a crust. It is sometimes first coated with flour. It may be fried in butter or oil and is sometimes deep-fried. Scrapple can also be broiled; this is a good cooking method for those who like their scrapple crisp. Scrapple is usually eaten as a breakfast side dish. It can be served plain or with either sweet or savory condiments: apple butter, ketchup, jelly, maple syrup, honey, or mustard. The state of Maryland is particularly in favor of scrapple topped with grape jelly. In some regions, such as New England, scrapple is mixed with scrambled eggs and served with toast. In the Philadelphia area, scrapple is sometimes fried and then mashed with fried eggs, horseradish, and ketchup.
History and regional popularity
The roots of the culinary traditions that led to the development of scrapple in America have been traced back to pre-Roman Europe. The more immediate culinary ancestor of scrapple was the Low German dish called panhas, which was adapted to make use of locally available ingredients, and it is still called “Pannhaas,” “panhoss,” “ponhoss,” or “pannhas” in parts of Pennsylvania. The first recipes were created by German colonists who settled near Philadelphia and Chester County, Pennsylvania in the 17th and 18th centuries. As a result, scrapple is strongly associated with rural areas surrounding Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington D.C., eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, eastern Virginia, and the Delmarva Peninsula. Its popularity on the Delmarva Peninsula is celebrated the second weekend of October during the annual “Apple Scrapple Festival” in Bridgeville, Delaware. In composition, preparation, and taste, scrapple is similar to the white pudding popular in Ireland, Scotland, and parts of England and the spicier Hog’s pudding of the West Country of England.

Why do I like it? Because I come from Delaware, about 15 miles south of Philadelphia, and my Dad was Pennsylvania Dutch. Here is how I make it. Remember – Use a good, non-stick pan to cook the scrapple and over high heat and about 2 Tablespoons of vegetable oil, Crisco. Form a brown crust before trying to turn the scrapple over. If not, it may all fall apart. Here are some photos of scrapple preparation. Cheers!

Slice the scrapple with a very sharp knife about 1/4 to 1/2" thick. Work carefully.

Slice the scrapple with a very sharp knife about 1/4 to 1/2″ thick. Work carefully.

Starting to fry in a hot pan. It is sizzling. Do not disturb until the crust is formed! If you do, it may all fall apart.

Starting to fry in a hot pan. It is sizzling. Do not disturb until the crust is formed! If you do, it may all fall apart.

The brown crust has formed and the scrapple is turned to brown the second side. The one piece on the right, may have been turned a little early. It came out OK though.

The brown crust has formed and the scrapple is turned to brown the second side. The one piece on the right, may have been turned a little early. It came out OK though.

Scrapple with Ketchup Scrambled Idaho Fresh Eggs Fresh Idaho Polenta (Grits) Toast

Scrapple with Ketchup
Scrambled Meadowlark Farms Fresh Eggs
Fresh Idaho Polenta (Grits)
Hawaiian Toast

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Olivin – Olive Oil and Vinegar Bar

20 Friday Mar 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in 5-Stars, Boise Adventures, Food, Healthy Eating, Herbs, Italian foods, Local Markets, Oils, Olivin, Photos By: Bob Young, Special Information, Things To Do, Tuscan Cuisine, What's For Dinner?

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balsamic vinegar, Boise, Napa Valley Olive Oil Company, olive oil, Olive Oil & Vinegar Taproom, Olivin


20Mar2015_1_Olivin_Door-SignI remember the last time I was able to taste good balsamic vinegar. I was in “Little Italy” in San Francisco. And the last time I could try a good olive oil, I was in Sacramento, at Corti Brothers, and in Napa at the Napa Valley Olive Oil Company. Now we have Olivin in Boise, at Olivin – Olive Oil & Vinegar Taproom, 218 N 9th Street, Boise, ID 83702, where you can sample both olive oils and different balsamic vinegars – the best of both worlds. A wide variety of herbal infused olive oils and balsamic vinegars are available to sample. They will offer recipes for enjoying their products. Here is an excerpt from their website.

Olivin, a play on the words Olive Oil and Vinegar, is a unique specialty store located in beautiful downtown Boise. Olivin Olive Oil and Vinegar Taproom allows the customer to taste the high quality extra virgin olive oils and vinegars before purchasing. There are over 30 olive oils and vinegars offered to taste for free!
Owner, Joyce Renoff became passionate about the business when she retired after a 40 year career in real estate. Joyce wanted to try something fun so she started working in an olive oil and vinegar taproom in Annapolis, Maryland. She fell in love immediately with the store and found her passion!
The idea of Olivin came about after visiting her daughter in Boise. Joyce adored the city of Boise and the people of Idaho. Joyce quickly realized that an olive oil and vinegar taproom would be a perfect fit for the people of Boise who are dedicated to their health.

Here are some photos of our visit. Enjoy! Let them know you heard about them on this blog.

This is what they are all about.

This is what they are all about.

Here is how you get to sample some different olive oils. These "tanks" are located throughout the store.

Here is how you get to sample some different olive oils. These “tanks” are located throughout the store.

A closer look at the sample tanks.

A closer look at the sample tanks.

The balsamic can be tasted in a similar fashion.

The balsamic can be tasted in a similar fashion.

We bought a bottle of olive oil and of balsamic.

We bought a bottle of olive oil and of balsamic.

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New Page On The Blog!

20 Tuesday Jan 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in 3-Stars, Appetizers, Asian Food, Basque Food, Bistro, Boise Restaurants, Bombay Grill, Classic Cuisines, Comfort Food, Dinner With Friends, Ethnic Foods, Idaho's Bounty, Local Markets, Main Dish, New Restaurant Trial, Photos By: Bob Young, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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Boise, boise area, Boise Restaurant Guide, boise restaurants, Food Trucks, restaurant listings


BobAndRobin_Nov2009_1_Pizzalchik_PhotoI am starting a new page on this blog called Boise Restaurant Guide – see the header. This page will include restaurants in Boise and the close surrounding area that we have tried. This will not be a rating page, but, out of a 5-Star rating system, these restaurants are at least a 3-Star eatery. There is absolutely nothing wrong with a 3-Star restaurant! Here is a link to the Boise Restaurant Guide. It is meant to inform you of the extremely varied cuisines available in Boise – Food Trucks, Italian, Pizza, Greek, Basque, Baltic, Persian, Asian, Mediterrean, Drive-Ins, Bistros, Brewpubs, Indian, Pakistani and many more.
I love it when people ask us, “Where is a good place to eat in Boise?” My stock answer is, “What do you like?” Boise is that varied for eating. So hopefully, this page will direct people to different restaurants and they will be able to at least find something they like. I might even include Carl’s Jr., McDonald’s, or Jacks. They are all available.
If you have a BNB in Boise, or know of someone that does, this list just might help our Visitors locate a good meal after traveling. Cheers!

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Making Your Own Vinegar

03 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Farmers Market, Captain's Shack, Classics, Fruit, Pickles, Recipes, Special Information, Vinegars, What's For Dinner?

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apple cider vinegar, Braggs vinegar, herbal vinegar, homemade vinegar, vinegar, vinegar mother


Robin-Bob-In-Kitchen_Looking-RightOh yes. It is very possible and easy to do. We make our own wine vinegars, both red and white, from left over lees. Add some herbs, and you have an expensive herbal vinegar. Here is a great link for making the mother for the vinegar. Making a Vinegar Mother. But first – What is a vinegar mother? Wikipedia explains it this way,

[A vinegar mother] is a substance composed of a form of cellulose and acetic acid bacteria that develops on fermenting alcoholic liquids, which turns alcohol into acetic acid with the help of oxygen from the air. It is added to wine, cider, or other alcoholic liquids to produce vinegar.

And from Mossgrownstone, we learn that

The resulting vinegar tastes great- use as you would use store brought apple cider vinegar. It takes less than 5 minutes to make. I make about 2-3 batches a year- making about a half gallon at a time. Other than the initial cost of the bottle of Braggs vinegar with the mother my only cost is the apple juice. I cook and clean with the vinegar but I do not do my canning with it. In order to can with homemade vinegar it is important to get a hydrometer (anywhere with homebrew supplies should carry one) in order to insure the vinegar is acidic enough.

You can learn more about making your own vinegar from Making a Vinegar Mother. Have fun and explore the variations.

You can learn more about making your own vinegar from Making a Vinegar Mother. Have fun and explore the variations.

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Locally Produced Foods Still Available

02 Friday Jan 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Boise Farmers Market, Bone-In Pork Chops, Buy Idaho, Hard To Find Foods, Healthy Eating, Idaho's Bounty, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Locavore, Special Information, Stew, What's For Dinner?

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Boise Farmer Market Newsletter, local foods, Winter Boise Farmers Market Newsletter


Yes! Even at 12 degrees here in Boise, we still have an outlet for those wonderful locally produced foods. Get to know your local farmers, and they will probably be able to get you some of their product that is not available in the stores. For instance, Ed Wilsey, Homestead Natural Foods, is looking into 1 1/2″ bone-in pork chops for me so I can stuff them. Yum! Here is a link to the Winter Boise Farmers Market Newsletter. Great information resource for places that sell local foods. Enjoy!

Boise Farmer Market Newsletter.

Boise Farmer Market Newsletter. Newsletter Link. Check out their Web Page, too. Lots of great information.

Here is a Beef  Stew we made for a New Years Day Party. Mostly local products: beef, carrots, onions, potatoes and herbs. It was yummy!

Here is a Beef Stew we made for a New Years Day Party. Mostly local products: beef, carrots, onions, potatoes and herbs. It was yummy!

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Anyone Want Lamb For the Holiday Feast?

11 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Dinner With Chris, Idaho Lamb, Lava Lake Lamb, Main Dish, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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American lamb, lamb source, Lava Lake Lamb, mutton, sheep meat, Tagine of Lamb


Lava Lake Lamb Logo2I don’t normally post things such as ads, but I know good, grass fed, locally produced lamb is hard to find. And Idaho grass fed lamb is among some of the best! Here is a link to some local lamb that will ship your order to you, another service that is hard to find. Lava Lake Lamb. And while we are on the subject of lamb, just let me say that there are those folks who believe that Idaho lamb is wild and gammy. They really prefer Australian or New Zealand lamb. The “wild and gammy” taste from lamb is a function of age: Wild, gammy, strong flavors in the meat is because the piece of meat is probably over a year old when processed. In other words, it is mutton!

Lamb, hogget, and mutton (UK, India, South Africa, Canada, New Zealand and Australia) are terms for the meat of domestic sheep (species Ovis aries) at different ages. In the Caribbean, and South Asia, the word “mutton” is often used to describe goat and sheep meat. A sheep in its first year is called a lamb; and its meat is also called lamb. The meat of a juvenile sheep older than one year is hogget; outside North America this is also a term for the living animal. The meat of an adult sheep is mutton, a term only used for the meat, not the living animals.

Lamb is the most expensive of the three types, and in recent decades sheep-meat is increasingly only retailed as “lamb”, sometimes stretching the accepted distinctions given above. The stronger tasting mutton is now hard to find in many areas, despite the efforts of the Mutton Renaissance Campaign in the UK. In Australia, the term prime lamb is often used to refer to lambs raised for meat. Other languages, for example French and Italian, make similar, or even more detailed, distinctions between sheep meat by age and sometimes by gender, though they generally lack the particular habit of English in having different terms for the living animal and its meat.

Lamb rib chops
The definitions for lamb, hogget and mutton vary considerably between countries. Younger lambs are smaller and more tender. Mutton is meat from a sheep over two years old, and has less tender flesh. In general, the darker the colour, the older the animal. Baby lamb meat will be pale pink, while regular lamb is pinkish-red.

Commonwealth of Nations
Lamb — a young sheep under 12 months of age which does not have any permanent incisor teeth in wear.(note that the Australian definition requires 0 permanent incisors, whereas the New Zealand definition allows 0 incisors ‘in wear’.)
Hogget — A rare term for a sheep of either sex having no more than two permanent incisors in wear
Mutton — a female (ewe) or castrated male (wether) sheep having more than two permanent incisors in wear. [Wikipedia]

I hope this helps the reader to understand the difference between lamb and mutton – it’s a matter of time! I had mutton in India. Lots of mutton. One does get used to it, but not easily. I very much prefer lamb; domestic lamb; grass fed lamb; locally produced lamb. And I do have a freezer full of locally grown, grass fed, no hormone lamb. It is delicious! Think about lamb done in a tagine. Yum-O!
Another great source for locally produced lamb is Meadow Lark Farms in Nampa, Idaho. However, they do not ship and give this explanation in their FAC section, “Do you ship? We’ve looked into it and the shipping is as expensive as the meat. We encourage folks who love good lamb and chicken to support farmers close to their home.”
And on the subject of hormones and antibiotics, they say “Do we use antibiotics or hormones on the livestock? Our philosophy is that healthy soil grows healthy grass which grows healthy animals. We try our very best to provide an environment that gives the animals optimum health. They have clean water, fresh air, shade & shelter, nutritious food, and exercise. We never use growth hormones. Very rarely do we use antibiotics, like penicillin. Antibiotics can be overused in people and animals. They are tools, ones that we employ after observation and deliberation—never as a first thought. We prefer rely on natural remedies like apple cider vinegar and garlic.”

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Certified Master Chef Exam

26 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Awards, Classic Cuisines, Classic Sauces, Cooking Styles, Ethnic Foods, Food Prep, Photos By: Bob Young, Special Events, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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ACF, American Culinary Federation, Certified Master Chef, CMC


Bonet alla Piemontese chocolate-coffee Amaretti terrine, fresh local strawberries. The best I can say about this is, "Is there any more? I want more!"

Bonet alla Piemontese Chocolate-Coffee Amaretti Terrine

Ever dream of joining the ranks of such notable Certified Master Chefs as Gordon Ramsay, Jamie Oliver, Anthony Bourdain, Paul Boluse, Rocco DiSpirito, Wolfgang Puck, Emeril Lagasse, Todd English or Charlie Trotter? Well, this just might be your chance. An 8 day Chef exam, very similar to the exam for Master Sommelier in the wine industry. The American Culinary Federation is holding the exam this year. In 2012, out of seven starters of the 8 day ordeal, only one succeeded in finishing, Chef Jason Hall, CMC from the Hammock Dunes Club in Florida. It is a grueling 8 day experience and one that is loaded with high stress. But the rewards in the cooking industry are tremendous. Here is some more information that Robin found from the ACF. Enjoy!

The title of Certified Master Chef (CMC), presented solely by the American Culinary Federation (ACF) in the U.S., is the highest level of certification a chef can receive. It represents the pinnacle of professionalism and skill. Today, there are only 67 CMCs and 11 Certified Master Pastry Chefs® (CMPC) in the nation. The last CMC exam was held in 2012 at The Culinary Institute of America, Hyde Park, New York. Jason Hall, CMC®, executive chef at Hammock Dunes Club, Palm Coast, Florida, was the only candidate out of seven to pass the exam.

Eleven chefs from across the nation will soon vie for the chance to join the ranks of Hall and the other 66 CMCs during an eight-day exam held Oct. 26–Nov. 2, at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Los Angeles, Pasadena, California. Candidates for the CMC exam must possess proficiency in a broad range of styles and techniques, and have the ability to perform for eight days under extreme pressure.

To apply for the CMC exam, a candidate must be a Certified Executive Chef® or Certified Culinary Educator®, provide two letters of recommendation from current CMCs or CMPCs, and have completed education courses on sanitation and food safety, cost management, management and wine. The candidate must also secure funding for the cost of the exam process including the exam fee, travel expenses and practice materials.

During the eight-day exam, candidates must maintain an average score of 75 out of 100 points to be eligible to continue. Scores are tallied based on kitchen skills, plate presentation and taste. Candidates are tested on the following subjects by ACF-certified chefs:

Healthy cooking
Buffet catering
Classical cuisine
Freestyle cooking
Global cuisine
Baking and pastry
Continental and Northern Europe cuisines
Market basket

This credential is considered the highest and most demanding achievement level of ACF certification and successful candidates will join an elite group of only 67 chefs in the United States.

Did you notice that they consider wine as part of the testing curricula and therefore a part of the exam and the candidates for the Certification must have “… completed education courses on … wine”. Wine and food – The perfect Match.

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W hat Is A “Turophile”?

22 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cheese, Chevre, Classics, Local Farmers Markets, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Locavore, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

cheese, cheese lover, cheese types, oenophile, turophile


06Nov2013_1d_Angels_Robin_GoodA what? A turophile. Did you know Robin is Certified in Cheese? In other words, she knows her cheese types and flavors and what cheese goes with what food and/or wine. Yup! She is a turophile: One who is knowledgeable in cheese. A cheese lover. And Velveeta just does not enter into the conversation very much. (However we have had some in our refrigerator in the past 30 years – some.) The information printed here came from one of her subscriptions, “Word of the Day”.

Turophile – (TOOR-uh-fyle)
Definition: noun; a connoisseur of cheese : a cheese fancier

Surely the turophiles at our table can recommend some good cheeses to pair with our wine selection.
“For this dish you need a special cheese from Switzerland called Raclette. It’s expensive and hard to find where I live, and it smells terrible—or, to turophiles like me, divine.” — Patty Kirk, Starting From Scratch: Memoirs of a Wandering Cook, 2008

Discussion: Are you stuck on Stilton or gaga for Gouda? Do you crave Camembert? If so, you just might be a turophile, the ultimate cheese lover. From an irregular formation of the Greek word for cheese, tyros, plus the English -phile, meaning “lover” (itself a descendant of the Greek -philos, meaning “loving”), turophile first named cheese aficionados as early as 1938. It was in the 1950s, however, that the term really caught the attention of the American public, when Clifton Fadiman (writer, editor, and radio host) introduced turophile to readers of his eloquent musings on the subject of cheese.

A turophile ranks right up there with an oenophile, “…Oenophilia (/ˌiːnɵˈfɪliə/ ee-no-fil-ee-ə; Greek for the love (philia) of wine (oinos)) is a love of wine. In the strictest sense, oenophilia describes a disciplined devotion to wine, accompanying strict traditions of consumption and appreciation. In a general sense however, oenophilia simply refers to the enjoyment of wine, often by laymen. Oenophiles are also known as wine aficionados or connoisseurs. They are people who appreciate or collect wine, particularly grape wines from certain regions, varietal types, or methods of manufacture. While most oenophiles are hobbyists, some may also be professionals like vintners, sommeliers, wine merchants, or one who tastes and grades wines for a living.”

So, if you have a question about cheese or wine, contact her through this blog and she will be more that happy to answer your question. She just beams with excitement when someone asks her a question on the subjects. Cheers! (Now for a grilled cheese!)

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