Eating ethically is not a purity pissing contest, and the more vegans or vegetarians pretend that it is, the more their diets start to resemble mere fashion—and thus risk being dismissed as such. Emerson wrote, “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.
From “Consider the Oyster,” by Christopher Cox, who says vegans should be allowed to eat oysters, as well as any other “animal that thrived in a factory-farm cage, one that subsisted on nutrients plucked from the air and that was insensate to the slaughterhouse blade.”

July 8, 2010  

If you want to find the meaning, stop chasing after so many things.
Ryokan

July 30, 2009  

Recipes and further experimentation to come. Spectacular tartness came through for the lemon curd, but not so much for the tart shells, which were a little overbaked.

July 21, 2009  

I was in a turkey-burger mood last week, which led to this (and two others like it, one for my brother Mike and a tinier one for my mom). I mixed an excessive amount of minced garlic and black pepper with the ground turkey and let the patties rest while I cooked the crimini mushrooms and caramelized the onions.

Given the shape of the patties — I should have made them much flatter and less like “giant turkey bricks,” in Mike’s words — adding avocado and a fried egg to each burger was perhaps a tactical error, since the whole experience got pretty messy. Mike only let me take one picture of him, and he had already managed to wipe some egg yolk off of his face.

Our dinner probably wasn’t pretty, but it was pretty tasty (especially with the shaved grana padano, which I have since been tempted to put on everything I eat).

July 18, 2009  

And so it begins …

Prepare for cheesy puns and cheesier sandwiches. [While you may have groaned at the last sentence, you should know that I toyed with much worse while trying to come up with a blog title, e.g. “A Pinch of Galt: A Free-Market Food Blog” and “A Pun In the Oven: What to convect when you’re expecting.”]

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