Divemistress of the Dark wrote:Middle Eastern and Mediterranean (all around the regions) also wonderful, wonderful sources for veg*n recipes/styles as well.
True. Unfortunately I can't eat a lot of Middle Eastern/Mediterranean (except for real* Italian) because of the heavy use of raw/undercooked garlic, for which I have a major intolerance...
Divemistress of the Dark wrote:I went veg partly for political reasons (animals are disposable to many in this culture, and that's something I do Not Want...not accusing anyone here of anything, I just have issues with the conditions under which a lot of animals are raised for the fast food industry etc.) Mostly that but it also makes me sick to think about the hormones and yuck that goes into a lot of meat. Clearly this isn't the case with everything (and I'm trying pretty hard not to be a preachy vegetarian, this is a decision I've made for myself only and Mr. Dive still eats meat. He took it pretty well when I woke up one day and announced this decision...) To each his/her own.
I totally get all that as a lot of these issues bother me too, and why I'm increasingly fussy with the sources for the meat I eat. And I'm glad there's a growing support/understanding for why it's better to support small farms and heritage breed** animal husbandry, even if it's more expensive, versus buying the factory-farmed stuff in the supermarkets. I haven't bought pork in a supermarket in about a year - no need to, and I know exactly how the pork I'm eating was raised, that it only received the necessary antibiotics and deworming treatments for its own health, and these animals led at least a 2-year long life before they actually got so large they were a danger to the farmhands - and to the other pigs. Every time I visit my mom I come back loaded with turkey & chicken eggs from the birds that are happily free ranging all over the backyard (yep, it's a bit of a circus!) - you won't get me near factory farmed eggs.
Unfortunately it's so financially difficult for these types of farms to survive today, and that's sad, and why they're dying out without support from conscious consumers. But I want to look into getting beef and other meats from similar independent farms around here where you can visit their operations and buy, say, a half a whole steer when it's grown and finished. It's also a good practice because less is wasted - I'm learning to cook all sorts of odd cuts now and render fat so that I feel I've given an animal proper respect. There are some fishing cooperatives I'm looking into as well.
Ha, anyway you can tell this is a subject I can really go off on, having personal family interest in farming
I think we can all have a good debate/discussion on the ethics of food without preaching from either side of the (barnyard) fence.
* Real as in not Italian-American Italian food. Garlic is actually used very judiciously in Italy, well-cooked and often removed from a dish before serving. A stark contrast to the way its handled in our "Red Gravy" joints in these parts...
** Heritage breeds are great because they haven't had all of their natural instincts - and physicalities - bred out of them. Most "egg-layer" chickens these days, bred solely for that purpose, are pretty dumb birds with no instinct for sitting on eggs/mothering chicks. We've got some Golden Lace Cochin Bantams (
http://www.feathersite.com/Poultry/CGA/ ... inBty.html) in contrast that, while small and producing small eggs, are fierce, smart and possessive little fuckers. Ditto the White Holland turkeys (
http://www.albc-usa.org/cpl/wholland.html) we've got - your typical American large-breasted "butterball" is so genetically malformed at this point, they cannot breed naturally (breasts are too big) and will generally die from the physical strain on their system after only about a year-two years tops. Meanwhile mom started with one White Holland tom and hen and now she's up to 13 - all naturally bred, and the toms are hilariously protective of the young. They even will sit on the eggs and try to hatch them.