Product Reviews

Monday, January 28, 2008

Book Review: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle

BookcoverWelcome to my first-ever (and possibly only) book review on this site. After three years of restaurant reviews, I would be happy to never review anything again, but this book is too phenomenal and monumental to not discuss here.

Also, though I'm discussing a book, this isn't REALLY a review. I just want to share some thoughts about it. To order a copy for yourself, click here.

As regular readers no doubt realize by now, I am a big fan of eating locally, eating responsibly and teaching my children to do the same. That said, it's not always easy. As the pretty, pretty Mir pointed out a week ago, this can be an expensive proposition. Organic meat, especially, is a lot more costly than conventional, but after reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, I am more resolved than ever to change the way I shop for my family.

Specifically, I am going to do everything I can to buy more local, seasonally-appropriate and organic produce, dairy and meats. I am doing this for health reasons (organically-grown meat has more Omega 3's, more vitamin D and less cholesterol, not to mention the lack of chemicals) and for environmental reasons (I am tired of buying Washington apples, in the fall, when local ones are just as readily available. It's not worth the carbon footprint. It's for that same reason that I don't eat or buy tomatoes except in late summer). I just placed my grocery orders online. I ordered my staples from Peapod, but I ordered my meats, produce and dairy from Fresh Picks.

Additionally, Michael and I are going to see what we can do about creating additional food storage opportunities in our small-ish house. I'd like to be able to buy tons of tomatoes in August/September and then can them for the off months. Reading about this in Kingsolver's book was just mind-altering for me. I also think it might be nice to buy a large portion of meat (like a share in a pig or cow), and then store it in a freezer. Since I do want to buy only locally-raised, organic meat, this is the more economical option.

In the book, Kingsolver and her family eat only locally-produced food (with some very small exceptions, such as coffee) for a year. They grow and raise much of it themselves, on their farm in Virginia. Obviously, this is not entirely reasonable for me, seeing as I live on a city lot in Chicago, but the lessons taught in the book were meaningful regardless. EVERYONE can learn something from this book, even those of us living in big cities.

I have to say that at times the book is a bit preachy, but I was probably a bit more sensitive to that than others, just because with me, she was kind of preaching to the choir. That said, though much of the information in this book wasn't news to me (it's not that I was under the impression that factory farming was a good thing), it just brought it home in a new, more personal way that truly resonated.

Friday, December 01, 2006

The Foodmomiac Gift Guide - It's Live!

GiftguidePlease check out my new baby. It will be updated frequently, so be sure to subscribe (or check back), and feel free to comment or email if you have any suggestions.


The Foodmomiac Gift Guide




Tuesday, May 09, 2006

The Mozart Magic Cube

Max is completely and utterly obsessed with this toy. It was a baby gift for Dylan, so it is now over four years old, but it still works perfectly. It is also wonderful at promoting interaction between the two kids. Dylan loves entertaining Max by pushing the various buttons and talking to him about the music.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Madly and Desperately in Love

DysonMeet the object of my affection; The Dyson.

Despite my fine taste in cleaning music, I am a horrible, horrible housekeeper. I live in a somewhat permanent state of dust and clutter, and though I wish I could be different, I've been this way forever, so I just do the best I can.

But, BUT!!! Oh man. This Dyson. Sigh.

My mother-in-law got it for Christmas from her boyfriend, and since she is on vacation this week, I snuck into her apartment and borrowed it for a day or two. I have been trying to vacuum my house more frequently now that Max is crawling, and I noticed that no matter how many times I went over my living room rug with my Oreck, there was still a ton of dog hair.

Oh baby. I went over that rug with the Dyson, and it is spotless. And you should have SEEN the dirt in the receptacle. CRAZY. But then, I went up to the bedroom. And I vacuumed the rug in there. Oh. My. God. We filled the ENTIRE receptacle with dirt from this one rug. Michael and I were speechless. I must have one of these machines. 1. I am sure that I will become absolutely addicted to vacuuming, and, 2. Michael and I both agreed that vacuuming (and watching the vacuuming) was an almost erotic experience. This thing is THAT powerful.

Anyone want to buy me one?

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Thursday, April 06, 2006

Reynolds Fun Shapes


  Gatorade Jiggler 
  Originally uploaded by Foodmomiac.

My first blog-related freebies! Reynolds sent me three boxes of their new Fun Shapes and asked me to review them for the blog. This occurrence happened to coincide with Dylan's stomach virus, so I decided to play around a bit with the Jello Jigglers recipe provided on the Fun Shapes box.

I needed to replace her fluids, so watered-down Gatorade was on the menu. I figured that Jello-style Gatorade would be more fun, so the experiment began! While I heated up a cup and a half of Gatorade in a saucepan, I poured two packets of unflavored gelatin over a half cup of cold water. When the Gatorade was hot, I poured it over the cold water / gelatine mixture, combined it all well, and then poured it into the shapes. Three hours later, we had Gatorade Jigglers! Dylan loved 'em.

The Fun Shapes were great. They were a bit flimsier than I expected (they are not much thicker than a piece of foil), but they did the job, and Dylan thought they were SUPER cool. We have a bunch left over, and she wants to make cookies, brownies and some other treats. The Fun Shapes website has some neat recipes.

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