March 2010 Archives

New shoes

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New shoes It's been a big week in the life of a Little Missy. She's been happy to stand up and cruise around the furniture ever since we were in New Zealand then, two weeks ago, just shy of 11½ months, she took off. Starting with little unsteady forays in the sitting room, she started to walk on her own, chortling with pleasure, arms windmilling by her sides as she tried to balance and master this new means of locomotion.

Last Monday we had to take a trip to Cork to buy her first pair of real shoes and, although she made me look like a pushy Mama, refusing to walk in the shop despite an audience of six (two aunts, one honorary aunt, two shop assistants and myself) watching on, she's been loving the new freedom, especially outside, that the shoes give her. And what's that all got to do with food? This momentous shoe purchase just happened to coincide with the end of breastfeeding, and a corresponding new freedom for me.

After being allowed plenty of feeds while travelling in New Zealand and Vietnam, especially on the 11 flights we took over the six weeks we were away - justification: if we were going to make life easier for ourselves while travelling, there had to be a little give in the (always loose) feeding schedule - it was rapidly down to four a day when we returned to Ireland. Straight off, I took the opportunity to kick the unnecessary middle of the night feed that had crept in while we were away from home and teeth were coming through. Wailing baby in the middle of the night when you're staying in someone else's house? A feed is obviously the easiest way of calming and quieting things, giving her the idea that 3am wake ups were a really good idea. She got a sudden shock when we were back within our own four walls but, luckily enough, adjusted quickly.

Gradually I dropped the other feeds during the day, just sticking to the one first thing in the morning while it was still dark and cold. Although LM does sleep through the night now (dating from just two days after returning home - no jet lag for her!), we're woken by a dadada, gradually increasing in crescendo and fury, any time from 6am onwards. With no central heating at the cottage, in the cold days of February and early March, I fed while the Husband went and lit the fire. Ice on the inside of the window panes will do that to you. Only when it was cosy warm would LM and I deign to grace downstairs with our presence.

Then, one morning last week, I decided to give her breakfast at the table instead of a feed in bed. And that, quite simply, was that. Or should be. Although a hearty grubber in every other way, she refuses to drink milk from a bottle, cup or sippy cup. After being worried for a while and thinking that I was going to be stuck breastfeeding until she reached the age of reason, I saw sense and decided to incorporate milk into her meals. She also eats plenty of cheese and natural yoghurt and gets offered milk regularly - I'm hoping someday she's just going to decide to take it.

So, new shoes firmly on her little feet, Little Missy has her independence from Mama and Mama - after nine months carrying and almost a year feeding her - is finally feeling like a separate person again. A momentous occasion? I think so. Watch out world, here we come!

IBA 2010 winners

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And the winner of the 2010 Irish Blog Award in the Food/Drink category is... Good Mood Food! Congratulations to Donal, and to 9 Bean Row, the foodie winner of the Best Newcomer award. You can see the rest of the winners are here. Wonder how many sore heads there are in Galway this morning?!

The Country Cooking of IrelandIf Failte Ireland want to use just one thing to promote Ireland overseas, The Country Cooking of Ireland is the book that they need to thrust into the hands of potential tourists. 

Writer Colman Andrews has impeccable pedigree - one of the founders of Saveur, the author of books on Catalan, Italian and French cuisine, and freelance contributer to any number of esteemed American food magazines including the last lamented GourmetBon Appétit and Food & Wine - and he ate his way through the high- and byways of this country to put this book together. He credits a meeting with Peter Ward of Nenagh's Country Choice in a Kinsale bar for starting him off on the journey that led to this book - and for pointing him in the direction of the best food available, something that he might not have stumbled on by accident.  

As it happens, Country Cooking of Ireland is like a roll call of the best eating available with Andrews singling out people like butcher Jack McCarthy in Kanturk, Esther Barron of Cappoquin's Barron's Bakery, chef Ian Orr of Rathmullan House in Donegal and the Shinnick's of the Fermoy Natural Cheese Company. He is like a culinary magpie, his eye always cocked for an artisan producer, local speciality, or place featuring good food. 

The usual chapters on soups, fish, poultry, meats and baking are supplemented by sections on savoury pies, salmon ("The Magical Fish"), potatoes ("The Definitive Food") and a soda bread-focused bread chapter. There are little essays scattered throughout the book on a historical and factual topics, from how to serve Irish smoked salmon, the recent Polish influence on Ireland and explanations of Irish ingredients and old cooking techniques.   

He quotes widely from Irish cookbooks, over 100 of which are mentioned in the extensive bibliography, and recipes from all eras are included - Miss Jane Bury's Potato Pancakes, Maura Laverty's Yalla Male Bread, Gerry Galvin's Tipsy Pudding with Mulled Wine, Shepherd's Pie from Regina Sexton and Clodagh McKenna.  

There is enough Irish myth and legend to please the Yanks but, while Andrews gazes at the stars, his wellies are still down in the mud - generations of Irish mammies will nod their heads approvingly as Bisto makes an appearance in a recipe for Savoury Mince, Dublin Coddle is to be served with YR Sauce and there's even a recipe for Broccoli in Butter (Andrews justifies its inclusion by writing that it is a "common offering" with main dishes in many restaurants, "even in the most sophisticated ones"). 

While some of his information is already dated - a couple of the micro breweries that he mentions have disappeared - in the main, this is the kind of book that will have you wondering how on earth you have managed to miss out on such food riches in your own back yard. But, as Andrews pointed out at the Good Food Ireland launch of the book in Dublin's Merrion Hotel, Ireland is not a great food destination - yet. But the potential, much of it enclosed between the covers of this fantastic book, is here. 

Must Try: Bernadette O'Shea's Leek and Black Pudding Pizza, Pot Roasted Pork with Root Vegetables and Apples from Martin Dwyer, Peter Ward's Christmas Pudding (the recipe for which alone is worth the price of the book)

The Country Cooking of Ireland by Colman Andrews is published by Chronicle Books and is available online from Good Food Ireland.

Related Link: Choice in the Country: where are we now?

Flood risk assessment: WRE

Brown Envelope SeedsWhen Madeline McKeever's dairy farm proved uneconomic, she started saving her own seeds out of financial necessity. Now her company, Brown Envelope Seeds, sells a wide variety of organic seeds, all saved on her west Cork farm. She talks to Caroline Hennessy about turning adversity into opportunity. Read the interview on SilverCircle.ie.

Contact details: Brown Envelope Seeds, Ardagh, Church Cross, Skibbereen, Co Cork.
Email: seeds@brownenvelopeseeds.com
Web: www.brownenvelopeseeds.com
Blog: brownenvelopeseeds.blogspot.com

Irish Blog AwardsThe list has been radically slimmed down! Good luck to the five worthy finalists in the Best Food/Drink category for this year's Irish Blog Awards, which are taking place this Saturday in Galway. Good to see some of our regular favourites - Ice Cream Ireland, Daily Spud (both previous winners at the Blog Awards) and Good Mood Food - alongside The Beer Nut's comprehensive notes on the best of beers now available and Paul J Kiernan's take on all things wine. May the best blog win!

Best Food/Drink Blog 2010 - Sponsored by Bord Bia

Paddy's Day Food Parade

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Paddy's Day Food ParadeBefore you run out of St Patrick's Day, scoot over to the Daily Spud to view her parade of food, with floats loaded up with all things Irish, including Beef and Guinness, Soda Bread, potatoes, plenty of whiskey and my own Potato Apple Tart. Lots of happy eating there!

Potato Apple TartWith St Patrick's Day being tomorrow, one's thoughts turn to food. Specifically food of an Irish sort, which includes, naturally enough, all things potato. So when I was reading through my recently acquired copy of Margaret Bates' Talking about Cakes with an Irish and Scottish Accent, her recipe for Potato Apple Cake caught my eye. She said it was a delicacy from the orchard districts of Co Armagh but didn't give an actual recipe, describing it as two rounds of potato cake sandwiching an apple filling and cooked on the griddle.

Sounded like a challenge to me so here is my recipe for what I think is more like a tart than a cake. This is best served hot out of the oven and, surprisingly enough, the flavour of the potatoes and apples go really well together, especially with a jug of custard on the side!

Incidentally, this is a cookbook well worth searching out. According to the notes at the front, Margaret Bates was the Vice-Principal of the City of Belfast College of Domestic Science and she also wrote The Belfast Cookery Book and Talking about Puddings. Talking about Cakes was first published in 1964 and, while I'm not a fan of her over-enthusiastic use of margarine (give me Monica Sheridan and her devotion to butter any day!), there are lots of unusual recipes in this book to (re)discover.

Happy Patrick's Day - hope I'm not too late for the Daily Spud's Paddy's Day Food Parade!

Brewing: Laura Walsh...brewing under the stairs. Homebrewing used to be all about making gallons of strong, cheap beer, with a very limited focus on flavour. Now, in the 21st century, it has taken on a new life with aficionados producing fine beers from homemade breweries. Caroline Hennessy talks to a new generation of craft beer fans for The Irish Mail on Sunday on Sunday 14 March 2010.

Close your eyes and take a sip from the glass. What can you taste? Hoppy, citrus flavours? Or perhaps malty notes of chocolate and caramel? Yes, this is homebrew beer but not as you know it - or might remember it from its 1980s heyday. The latest generation of homebrewers are more interested in flavour than strength, crafting their own ales and porters from home-built backyard breweries. With the current wave of back to basics living, doing it yourself in a sustainable way has never been so popular, from keeping chickens and pigs to growing your own vegetables. It may be a less expensive way of life but, for many people, it is as much about the quality of home produced eggs, vegetables - or beer - as it is about saving money.

When Shane Conroy first set up successful online homebrew shop thehomebrewcompany.ie in Mountmellick, Co Laois two-and-a-half years ago, there was no hint of the economy nosediving. "The recession may be a factor," he notes in relation to the current popularity of homebrewing, "but it's not everything. People are going back looking for flavours." For him, homebrewing is a fascinating pastime; albeit one with the added benefit of producing something that you can drink and enjoy. "We're all about people getting into the hobby," he says. "I'm nuts about it myself, I brew a lot of beer and I love tasting different beer, especially if I'm abroad." Conroy points out that there are only a few small independent breweries in Ireland - he mentions the Carlow Brewing Company, the Hooker Brewery in Roscommon and Dublin's Porterhouse - but their beers are, he considers, "only the tip of the iceberg in terms of what you can brew." And their distribution is limited. Like Conroy, many people who start brewing are those who have travelled widely and are unhappy with the limited selection of beers available in Irish pubs.

Homebrewing, explains Conroy, can be as simple or as complicated as you want it to be. There are three ways of making beer at home: the simplest is kit brewing where practically everything is done for you; extract brewing involves a little more skill and time but gives a better result; and all grain brewing is the purest way of making it, essentially following the same steps as a commercial brewer but in your own back kitchen, and with a nicer end product. Often Conroy has seen his customers trade their way up through all three stages. "People find that it's much simpler than expected. It's all about learning your technique."

With the internet, there is a broader knowledge base available to home brewers. "If you go online you can brew nearly any beer in your own home once you start reading up about it," says Conroy. "Back in the 1980s you didn't have that." The internet, specifically the Irish Craft Brewer website, also makes what used to be a solitary pursuit into something a lot more social. Irishcraftbrewer.com, with its articles on brew- and beer-related topics and an opinionated forum, is an active group of fine beer fans. It's not all about the virtual world, either, as the members organise brewery tours, information events and tasting sessions. "I was at an [ICB] brewing competition a few months ago," Conroy mentions, "where people from round the country brought their beer. It was all about the flavour that night, that's what it was judged on." It also means that there's always someone to call on if you run into difficulties with your own brew. "If people get stuck, I refer them there," says Conroy.

Also active on Irish Craft Brewer is Dublin-based Laura Walsh, who was the only woman present at the first ICB meet up. "It's an online community," she points out, "but people know each other in real life as well." New forum members are actively encouraged to come along and bring their latest brew: "Everyone tastes everyone else's beer and comments on it." Walsh feels that this encourages people to make more of an effort with their own brewing, commenting that homebrewing may have died in the past away because there was no sense of community.

Having started brewing three years ago, Walsh is getting used to people's reactions: "sometimes people are a bit surprised. They go 'Oh, I thought only men would brew beer.' Or else they're taking to my husband and they think he's the one who brews." Like Conroy, she is keen to demystify the brewing process: "if you can make stew or soup, then you can make beer. It's not as hard as people think. You can start off with a beer kit...you'll have beer in three weeks. That's the easiest way to get started."

Interested in all things crafty, Walsh has a vibrant pink blog at aranbrew.blogspot.com where she combines knitting and spinning with stories of her adventures in brewing. She enjoys trying out brews with alternative ingredients, seeing that as one of the most appealing things about the hobby. "I was out hillwalking recently and I got heather so I've brewed up a heather ale, using heather instead of hops for the flavour. We'll see how that turns out. There are a lot of different things that you can do [with homebrewing] that you won't see on a commercial scale. It's part of the fun of it. It's a a bit men in sheds as well," she laughs, "you could spend the day brewing away."

Gordon Lucey from Macroom in Co Cork has a comprehensive home-built brewing set up in his own shed. "Some of the equipment has come from a hospital kitchen that was being renovated," he explains. "I reused one of the large, stainless steel vessels that they would use for serving soup. I also picked up an old keg from a scrapyard which was a bit battered but we opened it up and sorted it out." Between repurposing and recycling, a lot of people's brewing kit might be what Lucey describes as "a bit Heath Robinson - but it doesn't matter what it looks like, it's about the product that comes out at the end."

He sees homebrewing as being part of the current interest in knowing where what you eat, and drink, comes from: "we're all into - or trying to get into - our own home produce, all the way from the veggie patch to the plate and, in the same sense, you can just turn it from food to drink." Lucey also makes the point that you know exactly what goes into your own beer: "there are no anti-foaming agents, there are no short cuts and you just make a quality product. You can use the best of ingredients for your own brewing and it's still only going to cost you 50c or 60c a pint to make top quality beer."

The grain, which is the byproduct from brewing, can be composted or - if you're more in tune with your Good Life self - fed to the chickens or pigs in your back garden. Lucey, like all home brewers, reuses the same bottles time and again. He also points out that a home brewer's carbon footprint is minimal: "the barley, most of it that I use, is grown in Ireland. There's no transport really."

Besieged by memories of past homebrew experiences, you may be wary when offered a glass of homemade beer but you just might be pleasantly surprised. Lucey enjoys other people's reactions: "when you've a few friends over, you know you're doing something right when they go home and haven't touched the beer that they brought. That," he chuckles, "always puts a smile on my face."

Online Resources
Supplies - The Homebrew Company: www.thehomebrewcompany.ie
Advice - Irish Craft Brewer: www.Irishcraftbrewer.com
Blog - Aran Brew blog: www.aranbrew.blogspot.com

The Country Cooking of IrelandIn 2006 I wrote an article in reaction to the announcement that US magazine Saveur was about to publish a piece on Ireland as a foodie destination, wondering just what these "mythical gastrotourists" would find if they ventured off the beaten track. The quotes from that piece used in Saturday's Irish Times Magazine article on Colman Andrews' The Country Cooking of Ireland made me revisit it and wonder about what's changed.

Since then, I've moved out of Dublin. While I no longer have such a selection of food on my doorstep, I've also discovered that Avoca isn't the only decent eating port of call for people travelling around the country! While we're still a long way from getting to where you can confidentially walk into any café or pub and be assured of finding a good meal, there has definitely been a change for the better in the last few years. I still do think that the Georgina Campbell and Bridgestone guides make life a lot easier to find good eating opportunities, now joined by Good Food Ireland's touring maps and website.

When I talked to Country Choice's Peter Ward recently, he had lost none of his passion for encouraging producers to sell directly to consumers. He also pointed out that everyone has their own role to play, supporting "the butcher, the baker and the artisan" today rather than bemoaning their loss tomorrow, and realising - especially at the moment - that cheap does not equal value.

Recession aside, the fact remains that people are still willing to pay for good food and a significant amount of them are actively going looking for it, be it in a local café, restaurant or farmers' market. There are a more markets than ever before and a greater range of foods and products available. My weekly shop gets divided between nearby supermarkets (SuperValu, which I like for its focus on local producers, and Aldi, now stocking a selection of Irish produce) and the markets that I frequent, while - like half the rest of the country - trying to grow my own veggies and keep a few hens.

We still have a long way to go, but at least we're on the road.

Congratulations to all those on the long shortlist for this year's Irish Blog Awards, particularly the 25 competing in the best food/drink category. Sadly Bibliocook didn't make it through this year but the list below will give you a good chance to catch up with what is going on in the Irish blogosphere, particularly if you're interested in food!

Best Food/Drink Blog: Longlist 2010 - Sponsored by Bord Bia

MyKidsTime

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MyKidsTimeWhen you have a child, you suddenly have something in common with a lot of other people and I've discovered that this new world of parenthood can be a lot easier to negotiate with friends in a similar position, whether in the real world or online.

One of the sites that I use is called MyKidsTime.ie, which I've found particularly useful when it comes to places to change Little Missy around the country! At the moment the areas they cover include Wexford, Limerick, Galway, Sligo and Dublin and they've just launched a Cork section.

MyKidsTime also covers food, with cookbook reviews from yours truly and articles/recipes from Judy Kavanagh of The Cook Club, all sent out on the monthly newsletter which you can sign up for here.

Chocolate Sheet Cake CupcakesIt's not that I need an excuse to bake, especially if there's a cake and/or chocolate involved, but the radio was so full of International Women's Day blather today - George Hook was particularly enjoying himself with his list of "top ten females" on Newstalk! - that I just had to make something to distract myself.

That, and the fact that Little Missy was grizzling about the kitchen because she refused to have her afternoon nap. Time to make a mini woman's day cake? At least baking, especially when she can view it from the perspective of my hip, keeps her entertained although we did get lots of screwed up faces after she stuck her fingers into a bowl of cocoa and straight into her mouth. I have to say that my technique for breaking eggs with one hand could do with a little practice but at least I didn't get (much) shell into the batter.

I came across this recipe via Shauna's post the brilliant on Gluten-Free Girl blog and went straight the (gluten-full!) source at The Pioneer Woman Cooks. This is a good cake. And this is an easy cake, even if you decide to cook it in the late afternoon with a grumpy little girl in your arms who just likes to grab butter, taste cocoa and sip vanilla extract. Land the frosting on just as the Husband walks in the door and you've got yourself a guaranteed happy International Wo(Men)'s Day!

You'll find the original recipe with cup measurements plus great step-by-step photos over on The Pioneer Woman Cooks. This is my weighed out interpetation, with half the mixture of frosting. I also had to miss out on the nuts as LM wouldn't cooperate with me chopping them up. Oh, and the photo? Turns out the recipe fills my swiss roll tin and there's still enough to make a half-dozen cupcakes. Plenty for a really great cook's treat.

Volcanic pizza

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Market shopping Blue skies plus a good morning's work under my belt were the perfect excuses for heading off to my favourite farmers' market in Mahon Point today. It seemed that I wasn't the only one with that idea as I got stuck in traffic during the lunchtime rush there and our first choice for lunch - Green Saffron curry - had already sold out.

While filling the bag and Little Missy's pushchair with a few other purchases (cheese and chorizo from Gubbeen, Green Saffron's fragrant mixed spice, dried goods from Len's Cereals, Arbutus wholemeal sourdough), I spotted a new arrival in the corner. With the name Volcano at the front of the stall, three people working with a neat wood-fired oven on wheels were turning out irregularly-shaped pizzas to what looked like an appreciative audience. While I regularly make pizza dough and did a workshop in building my own wood-fired oven a couple of years ago, I still haven't managed to put the two skills together and it's fairly difficult to get your hands on a decent pizza in this angle of North Cork.

This, however, is pizza that you would travel for. Rolled and stretched in front of me, the thin base, not overloaded with toppings, blistered up in the heat of the oven, was sprinkled with cheese, fresh herbs and chilli, served and eaten within minutes. Really good quality dough, a simple tomato sauce and mozzarella made the margherita worth waiting for (a 7" round for €6) but the pizza with Gubbeen salami is definitely going to be on order for my next trip to Mahon market. Talking to stallowner Simon, it seems that himself and his gorgeous oven (is it possible to have oven envy? I've pretty sure I'm afflicted) are going to be heading to the markets in Limerick's Crescent Shopping Centre (Wednesdays), Cobh (Fridays) and Douglas (Saturdays) in the near future.

Volcano is definitely one to watch out for, especially if you have the presence of mind to order your pizza first, scoot around the market while its cooking, and return to pick up a delicious lunch. Oh, and if you can finish up with some coffees from Cork Coffee Roasters and a few of  Pâtisserie Regale's café bars (don't miss the new chocolate one) then you have a lunch made in heaven - or Cork - especially if you get to eat it in the sunshine.

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