Chefs Speak

Chefs Speak: Slow Food for Normal People

{Please join us in welcoming Chef JoAnna Minneci. Chef JoAnna runs a home catering and personal chef business at chefjoanna.com, and has made several appearances on tv including an episode with Bobby Flay on The Food Network.  As if that were not enough, take a bite of this:  she and her husband are currently transforming 10 acres of abandoned forest in Tennessee into an organic farm and “Bed & Bistro”, and have plans to build a gourmet restaurant featuring fresh farm raised produce and meats.  You can follow their progress and growth on the Mockingbird Acres blog.

In this very special guest post for Savory Tv, Chef JoAnna teaches us how to incorporate slow food into our fast and busy lifestyles.  Thank you JoAnna! }

Slow Food for Normal People

You may hear famous foodies and professional chefs talk about “slow food” all the time .  Many of us have grown weary of hearing about it, but if you’d like become more familiar with the term, click here to read the wikipedia article for it.

On a grand scale, Slow Food seeks to reconnect people with the food they eat.  They pay attention to the cultures, community, and production behind it.  Slow Food’s members include culinary professionals, food enthusiasts, farmers, food producers, educators, and students.  Slow Food USA aspires for a world in which all people can eat delicious food that is good for them, good for the people who grow it, and good for the planet.

On a more immediate scale, and to understand how the movement got it’s name, slow food is meant to be a direct contradiction to Fast Food.  Italian journalist Carlo Petrini in 1986 organized a protest in response to the opening of a McDonald’s, and was dubbed the father of the movement.  Since then, the Slow Food moment has developed chapters all over the world, and succeeds in making us feel guilty about whether or not what we’re eating is good enough.

Michael Pollan wants us to “eat food, not too much, mostly plants”.  Julia Child would make these offhand comments on her television show, “The French Chef” of how much better life would be if people would take the extra time and make food like they did in the old days.  Don’t get me started on Alice Waters, who I find to be more of a culinary bully than her adversary Tony Bourdain.  Back in March ’09,  I posted my thoughts about that Leslie Stahl piece on “Saint Alice”. Waters has the right idea, but in my opinion her methodology is flawed.  Her premise is that eating good, nutritious food is a right, not a privilege, but her manner of spreading that philosophy reeks of elitism.   Even Julia Child talked a little smack to Alice Waters:

“You have an unduly doleful point of view about the way that most people shop for food.  Visit any supermarket and you’ll see plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables.  And if you don’t like the looks of what you see displayed at the market, complain to the produce manager.”


Slow food, they way those celebrity chefs do it, is elitist.  They’re suggesting that you’re not doing it right if you can’t achieve the magic trifecta required of a foodie:

  • The Inclination to make food from scratch
  • The Time not only to procure the ingredients but to make the complicated recipes
  • The Skill to turn these edible treasures into something divine to eat.

I don’t see how making more of an effort to eat better food is elitism.  I hope that by the time you’re done reading this you won’t think that’s my intent.  Eating local fresh organic food is historically the staple of most of the world’s population.  It’s called farming, and rarely seen as elite.  I used to live in Los Angeles, where some of the best produce in the United States was available year round at open-air farmers’ markets several times each week.   Now I’ve moved to rural TN, where I have a nice little garden.

When I’ve dug through my rocky garden plot, when I’m on my hands and knees, putting seeds in or pulling weeds out, that’s just a choice.   Moving away from L.A. was also a choice.  You can hardly call my new lifestyle elitist…but I’d bet you’d love a dish of my fat little yellow squash and those shiny peppers roasted up with some onion.   If my chickens ever lay, I’ll serve you a fried egg with it, and you’ll think you died and went to heaven.  I can’t grow it all, so what doesn’t come from my backyard I buy from the mainstream stores as well as from the woman who sells her fruits and veggies from under a tent across from the donut shop.

I’m not trying to start a movement or become famous. I just want to make good food and share it with people, and maybe share a couple of ideas on how people can make good food for themselves. Wherever you are, for better or for worse, there’s a grocery store nearby.  They sell several beans (canned, less than $1/each, or dried, which is even cheaper) and I’ll bet you can find brown rice too.  Add in some fresh -or freshly frozen- veggies and you’ve got a wholesome meal that can taste great.  Add in some herbs and spices, maybe some olive oil or some butter, and you’re going farther than most home cooks.  You like meat?  Add some.

What I’d like to do here is strip down the idea of slow food and make it more accessible.  Let’s set aside the arguments of those in the Slow Food Movement… That we’re not paying the real cost of food at the checkout aisle.  Whether the real costs of your food choices are being paid in environmental costs and healthcare costs.  Just for the moment, let’s forget about “food miles” and “green cuisine” and “sustainability” and all the rest… Let’s just ignore Brillat-Savarin and his snide insinuations when he says, “Tell me what you eat: I will tell you who you are.”  All we’re going to think about for the moment is “can I eat something fast, easy and cheap without going through a drive-thru or buying food frozen inside a cardboard box”.

Truly, I think that it’s your choice to eat whatever you want. It’s too bad that it doesn’t work like the late Mitch Hedberg’s ideal:  “It would be cool if you could eat a good food with a bad food and the good food would cover for the bad food when it got to your stomach.  Like you could eat a carrot with an onion ring and they would travel down to your stomach, then they would get there, and the carrot would say, ‘It’s cool, he’s with me.’ ”

I think the fast-food places that offer healthy options do it for largely political reasons.  Those items won’t help them make a profit or reach an economy of scale because such a small number of people buys that food.  Fat, salt and sugar taste good.  Fast food companies are not in business to help you live longer and stay slim… they’re out to make money. and they make a lot of it because people get addicted to fat, salt & sugar.  They bring you in with the dollar menu and suddenly you’ve ordered a supersized combo meal.  Please, take a minute to read this.

What I’m saying is that, if it’s important to you, take the time to prepare good, healthy food for yourself in advance, and you’ll be giving yourself an option. Here are some ideas for easy, cheap, grab-and-go food:

  • all kinds of fruits & veggies
    these are good for guiltless munching. You can even buy them cut & bagged in advance.
  • whole wheat bread and spread
    YES, even a PB&J but you could go more interesting like having cucumbers & cream cheese sprinkled with black pepper)
  • multigrain bread and cheese
    This actually holds up for a little while, though I wouldn’t go longer than 8 hours
  • dried fruits, veggies, nuts & seeds
    make sure you do portion control in advance, it’s easy to eat these mindlessly

AVOID things like pasta & rice, they have too much water in them to make them stable and safe at room temperatures for too long.

Another thing is to have tools available to you so that you can “make do” without advance preparation. Keep these where you spend a lot of time, or somewhere that you have easy access, like your car.

  • get a minimal set of flatware
    Just a fork & a spoon, maybe a table knife. Go to a Goodwill and pick up a few sets. Then you can just wipe them off, then throw them in your bag, then toss them the sink when you get home.
  • sharp knife
    good for peeling veggies, slicing apples, cutting cheese… Asian markets have plastic-handled knives that come with plastic sheaths so you won’t cut yourself or anything else during travel, but you can also put one in a plastic toothbrush holder. a pocketknife will work, too, but I’d rather suggest something you’ll wash thoroughly.
  • tiny can opener
    One you can find in the housewares area in the grocery store or drugstore, or at your favorite 99¢ store. Practice using it.
  • salt & pepper
    I give you permission to pocket a few extra packets of salt & pepper the next time you see them.
  • multigrain or table-water crackers
    They won’t go bad if you keep them closed up, and they finish up any snack you can think of.

Now you’re prepared to avoid fast food.  You can stash canned food in your car or desk drawer.  Choose things that you can eat cold such as tuna, pork & beans, canned fruit… None of these are perfect foods, but they’ll get you past the “ohmygawdineedacheeseburgerrightnow” temptations.  If you were going to get in your car & drive for food, stop by a grocery store instead.  Get some bread, cheese and some fruit, and you’ve got a great little lunch.

If you want a proper meal, you have some limitations.  Make things that don’t have to be refrigerated, won’t spoil over 5 hours, and can be eaten at room temperature.  There are HUNDREDS of cookbooks out there for these kinds of recipes, and thousands of websites available for research.  One of my favorite go-foods is a salad made with whatever lettuce greens are available, topped with garbanzo beans or black beans, a handful of cherry tomatoes, and some sliced carrots.  If you keep the dressing on the side, this will survive beautifully for several hours without refrigeration. A hard boiled egg is nice, if you can manage to peel the egg just before you eat it, so it stays fresh longer.  Yogurt has an out-of-refrigeration shelf life of 5 hours if you buy the individual containers.

Make yourself two or three grab & go lunch kits. You can use plastic containers with self-sealing lids, waxed cardboard boxes, or wide-mouth glass canning jars (my personal favorite).  You can load them up in advance and keep them in the fridge, or have them clean and ready to pack, so that when you’re running out the door, you can put in stuff you made for yourself.  One of my favorite grab & go meals is:  cooked brown rice, diced chicken (or black beans), frozen (or canned) corn, salsa and grated cheese.  Basically it’s a burrito in a jar.  I prefer the glass jars because you can put them straight in the microwave without worrying about BPE in your plastics, and they hold up a lot better in the dishwasher than those disposable plastic containers.  Also, they’re not as fragile as you think.

If you wanted to go all out, you could make a complete fried chicken dinner at home for less than it cost to buy it at KFC.  Cabbage for coleslaw and potatoes for potato salad are about the cheapest things in the grocery store! While it’s not health food, it stands to reason that cooking at home saves money.  And it could be better for you if you’re using sunflower oil and making sure that the chicken is cooked through properly.   So why would people choose fast food fare? It’s easy. it’s cheap enough.

Don’t make it hard on yourself. If you have screaming kids in the backseat, it’s even more important that you be a responsible parent and not feed them the junk that gets passed through a car window.  Keep a box of dry cereal in the car for munching on, some sugar-free hard candy if the kids are old enough, some low-salt pretzels, dried fruit, and some nuts (raw almonds are good snacking nuts).  If you don’t like my ideas, there are plenty of places to look for other ideas for healthy snacks.  If none of this is very important to you, then as I said, you can make your own choice.  Please pay at the first window.

JoAnna Minneci

http://chefjoanna.com
http://twitter.com/ChefJoAnna

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  • Heidi
    September 9, 2009 at 3:56 pm

    Slow Food for Normal People, A wonderful guest post from @ChefJoAnna! Please RT! http://bit.ly/GZ9kQ

  • Jessie
    September 9, 2009 at 6:57 pm

    great article, I prefer to make meals from scratch most of the time because it’s much healthier! Sometimes I take short cuts and use canned goods only if I am short on time and want to whip up a quick dinner.

    • Savory Tv
      September 9, 2009 at 9:09 pm

      I take shortcuts too at times Jessie, I try not to feel bad about it. I’m glad you enjoyed the post, and your visits are always a pleasure!

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    September 9, 2009 at 8:52 pm

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  • Kimberly
    September 10, 2009 at 6:27 am

    Slow Food makes you feel guilty?
    For many when they learn about Slow Food they learn they have better food options. How wonderful! The movement as I have found in California and now on the East Coast had been about little more than pleasure. The pleasure of finding people who appreciate good food and the lost treasures like paw paw fruits and funny colored eggs the grocery store will never sell us.
    I like what your doing with your blog but you shouldn’t pan people who are doing good things to make your point.

  • Chef JoAnna
    September 10, 2009 at 8:07 am

    Wrote a guest article for @SavoryTv: "Slow Food for Normal People" Please RT! http://bit.ly/GZ9kQ (What else would you like to read about?)

  • Terri Irving Haber
    September 10, 2009 at 10:51 am

    My friend @ChefJoanna wrote a guest article! She’s an awesome chef, so check it out! http://bit.ly/19su7p

  • Average Betty
    September 10, 2009 at 11:47 am

    RT @FoodWishes: Great post on @SavoryTv – “Slow Food for Normal People” http://tinyurl.com/qyxlat Check it out!

  • Cooking Up A Story
    September 10, 2009 at 11:54 am

    RT @averagebetty: @FoodWishes: Great post on @SavoryTv – "Slow Food for Normal People" http://tinyurl.com/qyxlat Check it out!

  • Chef JoAnna
    September 10, 2009 at 11:56 am

    @Jessie – Bravo! That is exactly what I’m talking about! Do the best you can with what you’ve got… and that’s including doing it in the TIME you’ve got available.

    There’s no reason at all to feel guilty about taking a “shortcut” by using prepared/canned products. Understand what a difference you’re making in your life when you chose between brands of canned beans, instead of of choosing between a big mac or a whopper.

  • Carla Fiscina
    September 11, 2009 at 4:43 am

    An awesome writing, a very good message and pieces of advice in it. What we eat is extremely important, but, unfortunately, many people have no time for thinking about this.

  • South Central Farm
    September 11, 2009 at 12:09 pm

    This is a cool article. RT @ZacharycohenSlow Food for Normal People http://su.pr/1RXYxc

  • Slow Food Austin
    September 11, 2009 at 4:55 pm

    RT @SlowFoodSeattle: "Slow Food for Normal People" – incorporating Slow Food into your everyday life http://bit.ly/1YDEF

  • marshall wright
    September 11, 2009 at 4:59 pm

    RT @SlowFoodSeattle: "Slow Food for Normal People" – incorporating Slow Food into your everyday life http://bit.ly/1YDEF

  • Savory Tv
    September 12, 2009 at 12:07 am

    Kimberly, I believe you misunderstood Chef JoAnna with her reference to the word guilty in the 3rd paragraph, but I’ll ask her to step in on this one.

    Carla, very good point, and it is unfortunate. I’m glad you enjoyed Chef JoAnna’s message in the post, and thank you for your visit.

  • Heidi
    September 12, 2009 at 3:33 am

    @cookingupastory @FoodWishes @averagebetty thanks so much for the shoutout re: @ChefJoAnna’s guest post! http://tinyurl.com/qyxlat

  • Chef JoAnna
    September 12, 2009 at 8:49 am

    @Kimberly

    I do, in fact, think that the slow food movement can make people feel guilty about making a “wrong” choice. For example, in another comment, read Jessie’s lament of using canned food, and Heidi’s consoling her.

    Read the wikipedia article I mentioned. The whole thing started with a simple dish of pasta, because pasta is a simple, fast, cheap, local food! Do you think Petrini grew, threshed & milled the wheat, raised the chickens for the eggs, and drew the water from his own spring to make the pasta? That’s how some slow food people insist it must be done — those who’ve taken the slow food thing a little too far for the general public to manage. Either you make it yourself from scratch, or you buy it from someone local who made it by hand. You can get there, but you have to use your own time or your money….sometimes both.

    What I’m saying in this article is that you can make some compromises and still follow the spirit of the Slow Food Movement. If you don’t have the time, take some shortcuts. If you don’t have the money, prepare food at home, in advance, using the best ingredients you can afford, based on your own personal grocery budget. Don’t spend your rent money on heirloom veggies!

    For the health of the planet, we’re supposed to consider food miles, right? Consider the oxymoron of how most gourmet foods play into this equation. Are you roasting a piece of (imported) sustainably caught wild barramundi for your dinner? Drizzling (imported) Italian olive oil over your salad? Are you sprinkling it with (imported) Celtic sea salt? Will you wash it all down with an (imported) Australian chardonnay? Even if those things are all sustainably produced in their local environments, buying that handful of veggies from the farmer’s market doesn’t undo the carbon footprint.

    There is pleasure in excellent, fresh, local food… that’s why I’m growing a garden! If you can’t manage a garden, but you’re able to support a farmer’s market vendor, that’s great, too. Those fancy araucana* or ameraucana eggs are just costly. You’re paying for a colored shell. I you can afford that, more power to you… but they have the same* nutrition as the ones that (OMG FINALLY!) came from my 9 little chickens, provided those fancy birds were also raised on a free-range organic diet.

    I’m hoping to encourage people to follow the original spirit of the slow food movement. Go home and make a simple dish of pasta in 12 minutes, instead of going to the drive thru.

    I didn’t intend that this reply came out to be another whole blog post 🙂 but I hope I clarified my point to @Kimberly and anyone else who might have misunderstood.

    *http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/PS013 scroll down to “The Egg: The Cholesterol Myth”

  • Chef JoAnna
    September 14, 2009 at 10:15 am

    Seeking suggestions: I’ve been asked to write more essays/articles like this one: http://bit.ly/GZ9kQ What should i write about?

  • Randy @ Watson Sterling Flatware
    September 30, 2009 at 5:39 pm

    Hi, I really have enjoyed your site. Thank You.

  • Maroun Chedid
    January 5, 2013 at 8:00 am

    Chefs Speak: Slow Food for Normal People http://t.co/Za3tSm6N #food #cooking