• 27May

    Memorial Day Weekend is generally a time that is associated with travel. The roads are filled, families and friends get together and we all celebrate the unofficial beginning of summer. If you’re following a gluten free lifestyle though, all of this on-the-go traveling time can be a horrific nightmare.

    Finding meals on the road has always been one of the hardest parts about being gluten free for me. For instance, Sunday morning my husband and I had to get up and out early to attend a family event that was a few hours away. Tight on time, we decided to stop for breakfast on the road. However,  where we found something easily for him, this appeared to be impossible for me. A google search for gluten free fast food offerings for breakfast and a stop at our local bagel place only revealed an overpriced yogurt parfait. I settled for a Larabar, coffee and a grumbling stomach.

    For some reason, fast food restaurants have not gotten the memo that gluten free people need things to eat on the road as well. We live in a society where we have grown accustomed and dependent on being able to pick up a quick meal on the go and eat in the car or on the Metro without needing a knife and fork. Think of all those times where you’re darting to a meeting or getting the kids to soccer practice and you only have those five minutes to grab a bite. However, there seems to be no options for gluten free meals that fit this criteria. You can’t eat a salad or the baked potato option at Wendy’s this way. There is yet to be a single fast food restaurant to offer a gluten free sandwich, burger, muffin or other type of portable option.

    Starbucks, McDonald’s, Panera and all of the rest of you giants, wake up and smell the opportunity! Gluten free people need those portable options too. Why when there are English muffins and burger buns easily available in our local grocery stores have none of these chains chosen to make these options available on their menus?

    Instead most of these chains make themselves as unaccommodating as possible to the gluten free population. Starbucks refuses to release the ingredients in their beverages and changes them regularly so its a continual game of Russian roulette when you order. Panera has a “secret” gluten free menu that most of the restaurants have no knowledge of when you ask. Instead you get handed the huge white book of ingredients and asked to find something for yourself that works.

    If these chains are going to continue to hold their monopoly over providing for the on-the-go lifestyle, the least they can do is offer options for all of their customers. So please big fast food chains, please open your eyes to the needs of your gluten free customers. Please list your ingredients, and offer some gluten free portable options so that we too can get back to living the hectic, crazy on-the-go lives we, East Coast Americans, so love to live.

    JPM (Joyana)

  • 23Apr

    I recently attended Shecky’s Night Out in DC, despite the “No Boys Allowed” rule. I was hoping to see Rachel DeAlto speak (since I’ve written with her for another publication and have never actually met her), but unfortunately, Shecky’s rescheduled and Rachel had an obligation to speak in New Jersey that evening. Shecky’s had various vendors including fashion, bath products, and cosmetics, but also Merlot’s Masterpiece (painting/wine events) and Chouquette. Why am I mentioning Shecky’s night out? I’ll tell you why. I got to try Chouquette‘s chocolates, and they were definitely among the best things I’ve eaten lately.

    I would like to insert a little feedback for Shecky’s. You probably want food at the event, even if it is a vendor (and you make money off it), since shopping and diet cocktails seem to make make girls hungry–I saw some of them tearing into the Orville Redenbacher Brown Sugar Cinnamon Pop Crunch samples that were part of the event’s gift bag like they needed the calories and sugar to keep their shopping pace up.

    Other great things we have eaten lately:

    My new favorite healthy snacks are Saffron Road‘s Bombay Spice Crunchy Chick Peas. I like the Felafel flavor as well (but would like it more if it had a bit less flavoring), and have yet to open the wasabi-flavored bag. I will say that the zippers do not work well because the spices get into them during manufacturing.

    Frontera’s New Mexico Taco Skillet sauce is a quick way to make tasty tacos. We used ground turkey, avocado, lettuce, and tomato in our tacos. The Texas version is good too, but I prefer the New Mexico.

    The spicy wings at Rice & Noodles in Franconia are excellent and are part of a 2 courses for $10 or $11 special from Sunday through Wednesday. The wings take20 minutes, so make sure they know to bring the food out as it is ready or that one dish will slow you down. I have really liked most of the dishes I’ve had at R&N, but there has been an occasional clunker R&N delivers within 3 miles.

    April’s DC Food Blogger Happy Hour was hosted by Daphne of Go Gastronomy at the downtown location of ChixDC. I was surprised at how good the food was at ChixDC, including the Caribbean wings special. (The next DCFBHH is hosted by me on May 1st at Ambar.)

    Last night, I tried Daikaya‘s (Shoyu) Ramen for the first time, and was very impressed. The nitamago (marinated soft-boiled egg) is delicious. The pork dumplings are good as well. The downstairs space s a ramen house, while the upstairs space is a restaurant with a nice long bar and beautiful decor.

    Daikaya‘s printed menus (both at the upstairs and downstairs restaurants) are designed in such a way that they are hard to navigate, and are a bit frustrating; you have to flip back and forth a lot to follow the menus. It was nice that they sat me right at the middle of the bar because I got to see and take pictures of the ramen as it was plated. Once the upstairs restaurant launches a happy hour menu, I’ll probably check it out.

    -JAY

    Daikaya on Urbanspoon

    Rice & Noodles Thai Gourmet on Urbanspoon

    Chix on Urbanspoon

  • 13Apr

    psy-chef“With the release of Psy’s new single ‘Gentleman’ and a World Tour ahead, Psy will also need a Chef to accompany him. Enter now at www.psygobibigo.com for your chance to win $40,000 (not bad for a month) and be pampered like a celebrity!”

    Cooking skills not needed. A video is worth 2000 words, so click below:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=ifU_4QywNcc

    -JAY

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  • 10Apr

    The good news is, some of us are over-employed. (That’s good, right?) Some of us have even moved away from the DC area. (You know who you are). :)

    But the bad news is a dry spell for the FUD at the moment. So, to counteract this terrible state of affairs, we are looking for…..

    A FEW NEW WRITERS!! Were you annoyed by a restaurant? Do you have some random recipes to share? Have you discovered the best wine, restaurant, food truck, or (restaurant) restroom in DC? Do you want to compare 5 different restaurants’ BLTs? Need some hipster cred? Maybe cover an occasional food event? Writing experience for your resume? Articles for your Portfolio? Passionate about food? Then we want you for DCFüd. Send writing samples to jay@dcfud.com, along with few ideas you’d like to write about. It’ll be crazy!

    Also, please welcome our two newest additions, Elina (EHY) and Paige (EPC). Their bios can be found here.

    -JAY

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  • 01Apr

    Redbox Lunch Meat

     

    Permalink Filed under: Etc Tags: 1 Comment
  • 25Feb

    I just found out about this.

    -JAY

    —————————————

    Celebrate Croatia at Central Feb. 26: Ambassador Paro, Food and Music!

    Arlington Public Library welcomes the Croatian ambassador to the United States, Joško Paro, on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 7 p.m. at Central Library. He’ll discuss his nation’s unique role in Europe as a cultural crossroads between East and West. croatia flag

    Plus there will be Croatian food treats for all, cultural displays and live music performances.

    His visit is the latest gesture in a friendship that began with the Library, on behalf of the U.S. Department of State, hosting Croatian information professionals for extended visits. That was followed last year by Library Director Diane Kresh’s speaking tour of several Croatian library and information sites.

    Now the Library is proud to feature a wide-reaching selection of books on Croatian art, literature, business and language.

    Explore Croatia through this fine collection and hear Ambassador Paro at Central on Feb. 26. Let the Library be your passport.

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  • 22Feb

    vector-of-a-cartoon-chicken-thief-coloring-page-outline-by-ron-leishman-20814This story is just too good not to share. Thanks Arlington County! And, here I thought the Chicken Thieves were a band!

    Any theories as to the culprit? My question is, was the chicken fully cooked?

    -Jason

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  • 21Feb

    Oceana Story--SushiCy has been talking about all these stories he has been running across where the consumer is buying food items that are misrepresented. A few examples are fake honey, calamari (we hope this one is not true because it is nasty), and lemon juice. The big story that we keep hearing again and again is how often you are told you are buying one kind of fish (at a fish store or sushi bars) when you are actually purchasing another. A fish (escolar) that is often substituted for white tuna in sushi bars, can even cause “serious digestive issues.”

    From Dr. Oz:

    “As part of our campaign, Oceana conducted DNA testing of seafood meals in multiple cities across the country to get to the bottom of how much bait and switch was occurring. What did we find? Everywhere we tested, we found seafood fraud: 39% of seafood tested in New York, 55% in Los Angeles, 31% in Miami, and 48% in Boston (including testing by The Boston Globe) were mislabeled as entirely different types of fish than listed on the label.  ”

    Oceana sent me their DC-specific story.

    -JAY

    ———————————————————————————

    “Oceana Study Uncovers Widespread Seafood Fraud in Washington, Nationwide

    26% of Seafood Mislabeled in D.C. Grocery Stores, Restaurants & Sushi Venues

    WASHINGTON—Oceana, the largest international advocacy group working solely to protect the world’s oceans, uncovered widespread seafood fraud across the United States, including in the nation’s capital, according to a new report released today. As part of one of the largest seafood fraud investigations in the world to date, DNA testing confirmed that 26 percent of the 105 seafood samples collected by Oceana in Washington, D.C., and one-third, or 33 percent, of the 1,215 fish samples collected nationwide were mislabeled, according to U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines.

    Read the rest of this entry »

  • 10Feb

    THY Coffee Truck 11Free Turkish coffee from a food truck!

    -JAY

    ————————————-

    Turkish Airlines is warming things up this Valentine’s Day. For one week, the airline is jumping on the food truck bandwagon to dole out delicious Turkish coffee all around the D.C. area – and the best part is it’s FREE!

    THY Coffee Truck 4As part of its Valentine’s Day campaign, Turkish Airlines is also offering several promotional airfares from D.C. to a number of romantic getaways. Airfare starts from just $500 per person for travel between February 8th and 28th.

    Turkish Airlines Coffee Truck Schedule:

    Date

    Location

    Time

    2/9/2013

    3285 M Street NW

    10 AM – 3:30 PM

    2/10/2013

    Chinese New Year Parade in Chinatown

    1 PM – 3:30 PM

    2/12/2013

    908 17th Street NW

    11 AM – 3:00 PM

    2/14/2013

    707 7th Street NW

    11 AM – 3:30 PM

    2/16/2013

    507 8th Street SE

    11 AM – 3:30 PM

    2/17/2013

    3285 M Street NW

    10 AM – 3:30 PM

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  • 20Dec

    Thank you Danielle for sharing this.

    -JAY

    —————————————————————

    Danielle Nierenberg and Ellen Gustafson are launching Food Tank: The Food Think Tank on January 10th. You can click HERE to watch the trailer.
    We’ve also been thinking about resolutions for the year ahead—both personal resolutions and ways we can all help change the food system for the better.
    As we start 2013, many people will be thinking about plans and promises to improve their diets and health. We think a broader collection of farmers, policy-makers, and eaters need new, bigger resolutions for fixing the food system–real changes with long-term impacts in fields, boardrooms, and on plates all over the world. These are resolutions that the world can’t afford to break with nearly one billion still hungry and more than one billion suffering from the effects of being overweight and obese. We have the tools—let’s use them in 2013!
    Here are our 13 resolutions to change the food system in 2013:

    1. Growing the Cities:  Food production doesn’t only happen in fields or factories. Nearly one billion people worldwide produce food in cities. In Kibera, the largest slum in Africa, farmers are growing seeds of indigenous vegetables and selling them to rural farmers. At Bell Book & Candle restaurant in New York, customers are served rosemary, cherry tomatoes, romaine, and other produce grown from the restaurant’s rooftop garden.

    2. Creating Better Access:  People’s Grocery in Oakland and Fresh Moves in Chicago bring mobile grocery stores to food deserts giving low-income consumers opportunities to make healthy food choices. Instead of chips and soda, they provide customers with affordable organic produce, not typically available in their communities.

    3. Eaters Demanding Healthier Food: Food writer Michael Pollan advises not to eat anything that your grandparents wouldn’t recognize. Try eating more fruits, vegetables, and whole foods without preservatives and other additives.

    4. Cooking More: Home economics classes have declined in schools in the United Kingdom and the U.S. and young people lack basic cooking skills.  Top Chefs Jamie Oliver, Alice Waters, and Bill Telepan are working with schools to teach kids how to cook healthy, nutritious foods.

    5. Creating Conviviality: According to the Hartman Group, nearly half of all adults in the U.S. eat meals alone. Sharing a meal with family and friends can foster community and conversation. Recent studies suggest that children who eat meals with their families are typically happier and more stable than those who do not.

    6. Focus on Vegetables: Nearly two billion people suffer from micronutrient deficiencies worldwide, leading to poor development. The World Vegetable Center, however, is helping farmers grow high-value, nutrient rich vegetables in Africa and Asia, improving health and increasing incomes.

    7. Preventing Waste:  Roughly one-third of all food is wasted—in fields, during transport, in storage, and in homes. But there are easy, inexpensive ways to prevent waste. Initiatives like Love Food, Hate Waste offer consumers tips about portion control and recipes for leftovers, while farmers in Bolivia are using solar-powered driers to preserve foods.

    8. Engaging Youth: Making farming both intellectually and economically stimulating will help make the food system an attractive career option for youth. Across sub-Saharan Africa, cell phones and the internet are connecting farmers to information about weather and markets; in the U.S., Food Corps is teaching students how to grow and cook food, preparing them for a lifetime of healthy eating.

    9. Protecting Workers: Farm and food workers across the world are fighting for better pay and working conditions. In Zimbabwe, the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ), protects laborers from abuse. In the U.S., the Coalition of Immokalee Workers successfully persuaded Trader Joe’s and Chipotle to pay the premium of a penny-per-pound to Florida tomato pickers.

    10. Acknowledging the Importance of Farmers: Farmers aren’t just farmers, they’re business-women and men, stewards of the land, and educators, sharing knowledge in their communities. Slow Food International works with farmers all over the world, helping recognize their importance to preserve biodiversity and culture.

    11. Recognizing the Role of Governments: Nations must implement policies that give everyone access to safe, affordable, healthy food. In Ghana and Brazil, government action, including national school feeding programs and increased support for sustainable agricultural production, greatly reduced the number of hungry people.

    12. Changing the Metrics: Governments, NGOs, and funders have focused on increasing production and improving yields, rather than improving nutrition and protecting the environment. Changing the metrics, and focusing more on quality, will improve public and environmental health, and livelihoods.

    13. Fixing the Broken Food System: Agriculture can be the solution to some of the world’s most pressing challenges—including unemployment, obesity, and climate change. These innovations simply need more research, more investment, and ultimately more funding.

    We can do it—together!

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