To New Ideas

Flourescent "OPEN" sign

Open – I am. Are you? New ideas, new cultural information, new sights, sounds, tastes, and smells are filtering into our society – if you choose to seek them out and participate. Truth is, most people are closed. The Pavlovian herd is hardened by a media in the U.S. that appears reluctant to offer America’s diverse population a healthy view of the world.

What we know of Africa: people in Darfur are having problems, um, starving, or maybe they are at war – not sure, but there was something on the news. Elephants are endangered. There are gorillas in Africa. Most Africans have AIDS. Brad and Angelina went to Namibia for a baby. That’s about it.

China: They are stealing our jobs, they make everything that is sold at Walmart, they are evil communists.

India: They are stealing our jobs through outsourcing; there are too many stealing our jobs right here in America; they worship cows, and they have dots on their heads.

Europe: The old country, we came from there. The French suck. What is a Norway? My uncle-sister-brother-cousin-other-extended-family-member was in the Army in Germany. I’d like to visit Europe someday.

South America: The source of all of our big problems, this is where Mexicans come from.

Middle East: War, Terror, Oil, Burkas, Camels, Suicide Bombers, Freedom Haters.

Australia: Ga’day mate, put the shrimps on the barbie.

Japan: Toyota, Sony, PS3, Wii, Anime, raw fish.

That is the extent of the view of the world for many of us Americans. We are not open; we are closed.

Nothing

A black photo of absolutely nothing

I live in America, where we have everything and nothing. I could buy many a thing today, move to 49 other states, eat Chinese, Indian, or Ethiopian cuisine, and visit any one of the greatest National Parks on the planet – right here in America. However, what is happening off our shores cannot be easily seen or experienced.

I want to know and share cultural experiences with the people of the world. People from all corners of the planet live in the United States – largely unseen outside of five or six major cities. Ethnic restaurants are plentiful in large urban areas; ethnic groceries are proliferating. What is not coming through is the depth of other cultures.

To an extent, the information is here, albeit difficult or expensive to obtain. For example, the television stations of the world are available, but at a cost of more than $300 a month – 85% of the world’s population makes less money per month, and even for many Americans, this is too high a price for television. Amitabh Bachchan is a world-famous actor; it is likely more people will see him on the big screen this weekend than will see Ashton Kutcher, and yet few, if any, Americans know that Big B from India is Bollywood’s most famous actor and SRK isn’t far behind.

Nollywood is the world’s third-largest film industry. Did you know that Nollywood is Nigeria’s Hollywood? Ever seen or heard of the incredibly beautiful Rita Dominic? Korean cinema and TV are more popular in Japan and China right now than American cinema but we won’t hear about Chan-wook Park or Choi Min-Sik on Entertainment Tonight. In Japan, Koda Kumi is on top of the pop charts, and so is Aerosmith – how can the Japanese can enjoy music from both the East and West, and we dwell only on the familiar? And if Japan is too far away, right here in America, we have an excellent source of Asian American cultural reporting in the Los Angeles magazine Giant Robot, but I do not know one other person who is reading GR.

Right here in the States, we have culturally rich indigenous peoples who have been able to maintain a modicum of their traditions. The Navajo, Hopi, Nez Perce, Apache, Sioux, Cherokee, and various other Plains and Pueblo peoples are celebrating customs through festivals, various events, and pow-wows where rarely will my wife and I find fellow Americans – besides the indigenous ones. And, no, Casinos are not culturally important or historic traditions.

Occasionally, something gets in and brightens the picture. Richard Gere brought attention to Tibet; Anime became ever more popular; Infernal Affairs with the wildly popular Chinese actors Andy Lau and Tony Leung inspired Martin Scorsese to use white faces that might be more popular to mainstream America with his recent adaptation re-titled The Departed. Rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy has a sense of the global picture that is emerging with some great rants via his Terrordome blogging. Even Brad Pitt and his wife Angelina Jolie are showing us Americans that the world extends beyond our borders with their recent visits to India, Haiti, and Namibia.

For the most part, though, we don’t want to know, see, or hear what the world is up to. We are making sure Al Jazeera stays off the U.S. airways. Dubai is raising the new Venice while we muck about building the occasional sports arena. China has magnetic levitation trains and cheap cell phone service everywhere – we don’t. Korea is leading the world with broadband internet connections, Europe embraced text messaging years before us, while America stared at its information bellybutton.

This post will fall on deaf ears in America. We have an attitude that if you do not find this place perfect, you must be a communist, a socialist, or worse. You should leave America if you don’t love it. But I do love America; I love our opportunities and am inspired by the small percentage of the population that innovates on a level that the world at various times regards us in the highest esteem. Our vision and creativity soar in many respects; our outward reach, though crippled, we see little to nothing of the world.

Practice

A halloween costume featuring a Mexican kid wearing a prison uniform, is this meant as subliminal or overt stereotyping in its presentation?

Caroline and I visited a local Halloween gift store looking for a couple of cute Halloween decorations to send to her niece in Germany. Cute is not in season this year, frightening, menacing, and mangled is. Torn-off limbs, hands reaching from the grave, and spiders dropping from above are about all we find. The masks range from ax-in-the-head victims to sexy nurse’s uniforms for that once-a-year have your teen look like a cheap pole-dancing slut; oh yeah, that is already popular year-round.

My favorite costume (tongue in cheek) is this practice uniform for our Mexican population. Of course, the Tinkerbell / Angel / Princess costumes all feature a blonde smiling cutey in the get-up, and the policeman/fireman/cowboy are All-American, red-headed, freckled whippersnappers, but if you are going for more than candy this special Halloween, have your future offender get ready with some pre-teen practice of donning his prison garb early – JUST WHY DOES THIS ONE COSTUME HAVE A HISPANIC CHILD AS ITS MODEL? Next year’s popular racially insensitive costume will have your child dressing up as an Indian Call Center operator!!!

Found My Site – Don’t Just Leave

During the past few weeks, my site has seen visitors from Singapore, Bangkok, New Delhi, Bombay, Hyderabad, Cape Town, and Hanoi, Vietnam. Lesser-known places where visitors have come from include Esfahan, Iran, and Arusha in Tanzania, along with Boliden, Sweden, Kapasigan in the Philippines, and Rabat, Morocco. Other visitors came in from Perth, Adelaide, and Sunshine, Australia, along with someone from Haifa, Isreal, and Santiago, Chile.

I love looking at the logs and seeing people stumbling upon my Photo of the Day blog, where they might get a look at some of the details of a couple of people living in Phoenix, Arizona. I only wish there were many other people out on the globe doing the same type of Photo of the Day blog for the communities they come from. What is daily life like in Sunshine, Australia, or Esfahan, Iran? Where do people go for dinner in Arusha, Tanzania? Have any good movies been shown recently in Hanoi? How was the drive to work for people in Johor Bahru, Malaysia – another one of my visitors came from there.

Do me a favor; if you have stopped by my site, maybe you were looking for something else, but here you are; tell me something about yourself and the place you are from. Take a second to look at some of my photos, or click on travels on the right and take a look at where my wife and I travel to before telling me of somewhere near where you live that would be a great place to visit or give me a recipe of one of your favorite dishes popular in your town.

If you’d like to start a website like this one, maybe we can help you out.

Miso Happy

In our continuing effort to eat healthier, and because our CSA supplies us with a lot of salad requiring ever more ingenious salad dressings, we have added miso to our diet. Looking for new salad dressing recipes, I had come upon a number that included miso. We know miso from eating at Japanese restaurants where we have often had a small bowl of miso soup with a few pieces of tofu and some thin slices of green onion, and our first encounter with a miso salad dressing was at Eddie McStiff’s in Moab, Utah. Their house dressing with miso has made us detour through Moab on more than one trip to allow us to pick up more bottles. But, until now, we had never made an attempt to make our own miso-based dressing or soup.

Our local major grocers do not only not carry miso, but also are quite ignorant about it. Even our healthy organic farmer’s market-type stores are short on knowledge or available products. One store has miso, but it sits on the regular, un-refrigerated shelf, which suggests to me this is a pasteurized product and hence lacks the real nutritional benefit of miso. I found miso at another store from the organic category, but it is quite expensive and does not come with information about genetically modified ingredients. The Asian grocery stocks four or five brands featuring different types of miso, including red, white, yellow, and brown. All of them were short on (English) data regarding ingredients, manufacturing, or pasteurization.

Thus, I started looking for healthy organic miso on the Internet. Miso is a living fermented food. To a base of soybeans or, as hinted at just above, chickpea, rice, adzuki bean, barley, or wheat, the maker of miso adds a yeast mold known as koji along with a few other ingredients, starting a fermentation process which for some misos can take upwards of three years before its ready for consumption. Koji is created by inoculating rice with the synthesizing bacteria Aspergillus oryzae. Because this bacteria is high in vitamin B-12, it has often been recommended as a good source of this vitamin for vegetarians, who often do not get enough of it. B-12 is typically found in meat, dairy, and egg products.

If that alone wasn’t enough, though, researchers have shown miso to be a truly potent medicinal food. During the 1960s, after many years of treating atomic bomb victims in Nagasaki, Dr. Shinichiro Akizuki came to believe that neither he nor his staff suffered from the effects of radiation due to their consumption of miso. In 1972, Dr. Akizuki’s theory was validated by the discovery of dipicolinic acid in miso, which is an alkaloid believed to chelate or dissipate heavy metals such as radioactive strontium.

In the late 1980s, medical researchers discovered ethyl ester in miso. This fatty acid is produced during miso’s fermentation and acts like an anti-mutagen. It is known to counter the effects of nicotine and burnt meat mutagens. Then, in the 1990s, the plant isoflavone called genistein was found in miso. Compared to other soy-based foods also containing genistein, miso contains about 25 times more genistein. Genistein is now believed to be an active anti-cancer substance. Studies have shown that genistein reduces cancer cells’ ability to form new blood vessels and attacks the cells’ reproduction mechanism. There is much more writing concerning miso and the effectiveness of genistein in fighting cancer readily available on the internet.

Finally, miso acting to alkalize the body helps neutralize the acid to bring the body to a healthy ph. Miso is a tremendous source of linoleic acid and lecithin, and if you are eating unpasteurized miso, you are also benefiting from miso’s lactobacilli. Miso is believed to be an essential part of a long, healthy life, promoting stamina and an all-around feeling of well-being.

All of this made me more and more excited about finally trying out Living Miso. Fortunately, I soon found South River Miso, which appeared to be the miso maker for us and so an initial order of four different flavors was made. On first taste straight out of the bottle, I knew I had to order the other flavors. South River offers Dandelion and Leek, Red Pepper Garlic, Chickpea, Brown Rice, Adzuki Bean, Barley, and a number of other flavors of miso that are all extraordinary.

Buying a healthy living miso today is not that easy since commercial food producers are more interested in cost savings and bulk to satisfy demand than in providing quality. While foods such as miso, which undergo a Lacto-fermentation process, have been consumed for centuries, their method of production is less than convenient. A good strong miso, as stated above, can take upwards of three years before it is ready for consumption.

Using chlorinated water, table salt, or substandard ingredients, all have an impact on fermented foods. Some techniques are meant to standardize consistent yields, not deliver consistent health benefits. Olives, for example, should be fermented using the natural lactic-acid fermenting method of sea salt alone, but nowadays, for the sake of expediency, mass-produced olives are treated with lye to remove bitterness before getting packed in salt and sold to the consumer.

Finding healthy and conscientiously produced products is becoming more and more difficult, especially as the majority of consumers care more about convenience than flavor and health. Fortunately for those willing to make an effort to find such products, they do exist. Miso from South River Miso in Conway, Massachusetts, is an example.

South River is a small operation, taking the time and patiently using skills learned from Naburo Muramoto and his School of Oriental Medicine and Traditional Fermented Foods in California to make high-quality living miso. In a massive masonry stove in the farm’s purpose-built post-and-beam shop, a wood fire gets the process underway. Founders Christian and Gaella Elwell work hard to fill over 20 wooden vats with over 150,000 pounds of fermenting miso for those fortunate enough to learn of their precious product.

Our favorite use for any of the flavors of miso from South River so far is this salad dressing:

Miso Happy Salad Dressing

¼ cup Braggs raw cider vinegar or rice vinegar – I prefer seasoned rice vinegar
2 tbsp Sweet White Miso or other light variety
2 tsp honey or rice syrup – we enjoy honey most of all
2 cloves garlic
¼ cup olive oil
½ cup fresh basil

Mix all ingredients in a blender on high except oil.
With blender on medium speed, slowly add oil.

This is a slight variation of their recipe. Regarding vinegar, we tried Sherry and balsamic vinegar but would not recommend it since both tend to overwhelm the subtlety of the flavors in the finished dressing. We have tried other flavors of miso, both light and dark, and all have produced great results. Instead of olive oil, the original recipe calls for sesame or vegetable oil, but we have found that an early harvest olive oil is the most complimentary due to its much fruitier taste! However, walnut oil does NOT work; the flavor is too strong. In the original recipe, the basil is optional, but in my opinion, it shouldn’t be, as it perfectly rounds out the dressing.

So, if I got you interested, get to it and order yourself some of the best miso, you are likely to find in the United States. Do it soon, before it gets hot, because South River only ships during cool months. I would recommend starting with several different flavors to sample the varieties and different aged products. Consider the Barley or Chickpea Barley misos from their three-year dark miso selection, and from the one-year light miso selection, try the Sweet White or Adzuki Bean misos. If you’d like a real treat and it’s still available, try their unique Dandelion Leek miso!!!

To learn more about South River and order their fabulous products, contact them at www.southrivermiso.com or call 413-369-4057

References
• www.clearspring.co.uk Miso Medicine – Health Giving Properties of Miso
• www.whfoods.org The Worlds Healthiest Foods – Miso
• www.mercola.com The Incredible Health Benefits to You of Traditionally Fermented Foods

My New Blog

Later today, I will post my first entry to my new blog HappyBumbleBee. This new site will focus on vegetarian, vegan, raw, organic, healthy foods and meal preparation from the perspective of a dyed-in-the-wool meatatarian. Because my wife Caroline is a vegetarian, I only prepare veg meals at home – for the carnivorous experience I go on the hunt at restaurants.

At first, I was averse to the idea of eating carrots and sprouts, therefore, it has taken quite a while of cooking organic, veggie, healthy meals at home to arrange my perspective to allow me to enjoy good vegetarian cooking. I have had to branch into many an ethnic cookbook and be open-minded enough to try different veggie meals and restaurants in order to experience the breadth and scope of what vegetarian and vegan cooking can be and, recently how great RAW foods can be.

While remaining omnivorous, I have come to hold with a certain disdain the need for people to cling to the idea that the labels of vegetarian, vegan, raw, Ovo-Lacto vegetarian, etc., are lifestyles to be held in near-religious esteem, instead of being more inclusive and recognizing that it is better that society adopt more healthy life choices that include a variety of these things. Thus, it is with this idea of helping us meatatarians better understand and enjoy the world of those leaf-eaters that I am launching HappyBumbleBee.