Archive for August 6th, 2008

Indian curry, GracinhaMarco Abundo, Wikipedia

Which types of restaurants serve the most sustainably produced cuisine? Some are a slam-dunk, while others are not so easy to figure.

Indian restaurants, with menus full of enticing vegetarian dishes, offer the most choices for the “ethicurian,” who chooses based on environmental, social, and ethical concerns.

For people unfamiliar with vegetarian cooking, having non-meat meals outside of the home can introduce ideas to incorporate into their repertoires. Spinach and chickpea curries, eggplant and potato masalas, and cauliflower stews with whole wheat flatbreads and fragrant basmati rice are satisfying and memorable choices available in most Indian restaurants.

Chinese menus are peppered with luscious vegetable-bean sauce dishes, such as broccoli with black bean garlic sauce and “wrinkled” string beans with chili sauces.

Chinese cuisine also features carp, a sustainably farm-raised fish that’s seldom found in other cuisines. Clams, a successfully cultivated ingredient that actually benefit coastal waters through their aquaculture, are a delicious choice in Chinese eateries, where they’re often paired with complex fermented bean sauces. Duck, a favorite ingredient of the Chinese, is generally raised in more humane and environmentally sound conditions than chicken.

Though Italian restaurant fare has more than its share of veal, beef, and pork dishes, which are made with factory-farmed meats unless otherwise specified, there are usually a number of pasta dishes made with mostly vegetables, mushrooms, and renewable seafood like mussels, calamari, and clams.

Pizzas, too, can be vegetarian or sustainable meals. Even pastas with meat usually contain a small portion of it, keeping the impact of meat production on the environment down.

Japanese cuisine presents a conundrum. Many of the fish that are most highly prized for sushi are threatened or endangered species. These include bluefin tuna, swordfish, sharks, and snappers. Other fish, such as farmed salmon, are produced using polluting, ecologically damaging methods.

I always carry a seafood wallet card (see this blog entry or get a card from Audubon). I look it over to see that none of the menu items I’m considering is threatened or endangered. That way, I have the ability to enjoy my meal with a clean conscience.

Japanese cuisine features delectable tempura dishes, lightly battered and crispy fried, often with vegetables and sustainable fish. Soups, like miso with tofu and seaweed, or ramen noodles with various vegetable, fish, and meat garnishes, provide protein, including flavorful meats, in a reasonable proportion to other ingredients. That way, you can enjoy the meat, while not making it the end-all of the meal.

Middle Eastern restaurants do delicious things with eggplants, grains, and beans. Bean dishes like hummus, foul madamas (fava beans stewed with parsley, lemon, and garlic), and falafel (fried chickpea patties) make excellent vegetarian main courses, served with pickeld vegetables, salads, and stuffed grape leaves.

Pork, which, in this country, is raised in highly polluting concentrated animal feeding operations, is almost never served. Instead, lamb, which is mostly raised in smaller, more humane, less polluting systems here, is the primary meat available.

Other cuisines, such as Thai, Mexican, regional American, and Greek all feature some vegetarian, seafood, and minimalist meat dishes that represent sustainable choices.

Mainstream American fast food is a minefield of ethical bombs, and much of Western European cooking is so meat- and dairy-heavy that it’s a poor choice unless it’s expressly made from small-farmed, locally-raised ingredients.

But it’s possible to make the right choices at any place you dine. All it takes is an educated palate.

Jay Weinstein’s blog posts are provided by LifeWire, a part of The New York Times Company.

 


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I’ve mentioned in the past that I’m a frequent Slickdeals and Fatwallet user. The two are must-bookmark sites if you want to stay abreast on large savings for consumer electronics. Newcomer BeatThat might be more lucrative to deal submitters though, the voracious group of users that feeds these sites with the ideal deals. BeatThat is trying to woo people like this away from those sites with something a little more useful than community cred–cash.

The site is paying users up to $2 per deal on an item that’s lower in price than any pulled in by its price-grabbing engine. Competitor Pricegrabber has been doing this for years, but has offered no way for users to add their own links to the mix.

To avoid gaming the system, each deal must be verified for users to get paid. There are also some strict stipulations meant to level the playing field, like requiring the item to be in stock for a minimum amount of time, as well as any special coupon codes that go with it. Products must also be new, and the retailers must accept credit card payments–all things that might keep you from getting a massive deal on refurbished and factory-restored products; the typical deals site fare.

To compare BeatThat’s results, I did a product search on five popular products: the Canon Powershot SD1100is, a popular Sony HDTV, an iPod Nano (8GB black), a Garmin nüvi 350, and a popular HP desktop printer, then compared the top result against that of Pricegrabber and Google’s Product search engine.

To my surprise, BeatThat’s engine came out on top almost every time. Included are all the usual things like retailer ratings and a final cost, which factors in things like local taxes and shipping. What makes the system a step up from the others is that you can rank a deal with a vote up or down, similar to Slickdeal’s rep system that promotes items to the front page. BeatThat’s engine works the same way, even though manages to add in an editor’s picks section, too.

Despite the low prices, there are some things missing from BeatThat that I’d like to see added. For instance there are no tie-ins with product reviews–neither professional or amateur. Also, while you can rank a deal, you can’t actually rate the item itself. Missing too are some important categories like software and video game hardware.

Current shortcomings aside, BeatThat is a compelling entrant to the deals market and definitely worth bookmarking if you’re doing an on the internet product search. Combined with something like Retrevo that gives you a metacritical score, and RetailMeNot which maintains its coupon code database, and you’ve got a pretty good state of mind going into a three- of four-digit purchase.

BeatThat gives you the lowest prices by rank. Missing however are things like product reviews from professionals and consumers.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

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On Monday we heard that Facebook was allowing current employees to sell a delineated portion of their common stock, something that the company confirmed on Tuesday.

Now, VentureBeat’s Eric Eldon, who also originally reported the Facebook tidbit, says that LinkedIn employees are going to have the option of doing the same. …

Source [The social]

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Since the new-media press has been gushing about e-newsletter start-ups for the past few hours, here’s another tidbit: UrbanDaddy, a daily missive about luxury culture for the young and hedonistic, is set to announce its Miami regional edition, adding to New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and …

Source [The social]

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Since the new-media press has been gushing about e-newsletter start-ups for the past few hours, here’s another tidbit: UrbanDaddy, a daily missive about luxury culture for the young and hedonistic, is set to announce its Miami regional edition, adding to New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and …

Source [The social]

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DO THE MATH At this point I really don’t give a crap, but if you do the math when this share price was low of 10.27 last August Gold futures was around 675. Do the math at today’s price of 880. 675/10.27=880/x x= 13.38. At today’s gold price. You would have to go back to 04-05 […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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By MarketWatch Last update: 11:04 p.m. EDT Aug. 3, 2008 SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) - Tropical Storm Edouard has formed off the Louisiana coast and is strengthening as it moves on a path toward the heart of U.S. oil and natural-gas production in the Gulf of Mexico, the National Hurricane Center reported Sunday night. At 11 p.m. Eastern, Edouard […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Sony Pictures TV has signed a distribution deal with pioneering Web series Rocketboom, which has been producing a quirky daily newscast since 2004.

Under the terms of the agreement–which reports pin in the seven figures–Sony will handle all distribution and ad sales, as well as use its Crackle.com …

Source [The social]

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On Monday we heard that Facebook was allowing current employees to sell a delineated portion of their common stock, something that the company confirmed on Tuesday.

Now, VentureBeat’s Eric Eldon, who also originally reported the Facebook tidbit, says that LinkedIn employees are going to have the option of doing the same. The business social network, Eldon wrote, is allowing current employees to sell 20 percent of their equity in the company at a $500 million valuation. That’s quite a bit lower than the billion-dollar valuation reportedly bestowed upon the company after its recent $53 million Series D funding round.

LinkedIn declined comment on the report.

For both companies, it’s probably a response to the fact that these Silicon Valley high-flyers are still independently run, with neither willing to cave to a buyout but with the likelihood of an IPO still less than concrete. According to VentureBeat, banks aren’t willing to take the companies public unless they pull in higher profits.

Facebook more or less acknowledged in its confirmation statement Tuesday that the plan is a way for employees to “sit tight” while the company works on the “growth over profits” mantra that COO Sheryl Sandberg encapsulated in a talk at the F8 Conference last month. “To provide employees with a financial cushion while we continue to build the company, Facebook has designed a one-time program to enable employees to realize some liquidity,” the statement read.

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High grain and fuel prices are taking a heavy toll on one of America’s most valuable sources of fish: the domestic catfish industry. For years, I’ve told anybody who asked me what fishes were the best eco-choices were to buy U.S.-farmed catfish and tilapia.

Now, the local papers and TV stations in the deep south, where these fish are raised, are reminding locals what they already know: the thin profits form one of their biggest industries are drying up. Now is the time for American consumers to come to their rescue.

American catfish is one of the cleanest tasting, most versatile fish in the market. Chefs love it because its naturally mild flavor presents a neutral palette onto which they can project their flavor profile of choice, from southern-fried and Mediterranean marinated to spicy Cajun or Chinese stir-fried. Home cooks love it because it’s pretty nearly foolproof — hard to overcook, juicy, and attractively white-fleshed.

I love it for all those reasons, plus the fact that it’s raised on mostly vegetarian feed in closed ponds, so its aquaculture doesn’t rely on big inputs of ocean-caught fish, and this doesn’t release pollutants into open waters.

Several years ago, American catfish farmers faced another challenge — from overseas competition. It seems the Vietnamese, in an attempt to lift the population out of poverty, were emulating American fisheries in cultivating catfish.

Only the Vietnamese selected to raise a local species of river catfish called “basa.” With labor costs much lower in Southeast Asia than the U.S., Vietnamese fisheries were able to undercut U.S. fish farmers in the U.S. market. American growers demanded that the foreign fish be labeled “basa” rather than “catfish.”

Though a rose by any other name might smell as sweet, the American growers knew that there’s a lot in a name. They knew that Patagonian toothfish never sold at market until they were re-branded as “Chilean sea bass.” Now, they’re on the road to species collapse, an extreme example of success in marketing. Even though even power players in Congress, including Senator John McCain, took their side, the fish were never re-branded.

Ask your fish dealers where the catfish come from and encourage them to purchase domestic. U.S. catfish is the best environmental choice.

But if you can’t find American fish, the imports are still superior to many other, less sustainably sourced fish at the market. Basa and closely related swai, cousins of the U.S. catfish, are still pretty good choices, according to the conservationists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

Another responsibly farmed fish on the way up is cobia. One operation in Virginia is raising them in a responsible way and is apt to weather this economic storm and boom when the market discovers them.

We’ll survive this surge in grain prices, and we’ll still have domestic fish farms to meet our growing demand for fish. We can help ensure that by supporting the fish farmers who do the right thing.

Jay Weinstein’s blog posts are provided by LifeWire, a part of The New York Times Company.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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