Monday, July 13, 2009

White Slavery

What ... Slavery ... in the 21st century? YES!! Let's talk about a 14 hour shift with two 5 minute breaks that I just completed ??? ... most commercial kitchens operate outside of all labour laws ... outside of ethical laws ... outside of all laws that pertain to civilized society.

When you patronize your local eatery do you know that behind the scenes there are probably slaves in the kitchen? People who are in physical and mental pain that HAVE to be there. People that are being abused ... people that are making minimum wage and putting up with verbal tirades from narcissistic chefs, cooks and managers ... people who are behind the scenes scrubbing pots ... chopping onions ... and basically doing whatever their bosses tell them to do and do it fast!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

51 Dogs


I'm sitting in my room waiting for rain or a thunderstorm and decided that I will describe what the 51 Dogs means in the title of my blog. During the winter of 2007 I learned how to dogsled with 51 beautiful siberian huskies. At the time I was Chef/Owner of a restaurant called "The Spot" @ the Arlington Hotel. One night I decided that someday I would write a memoir of my journey called "51 Dogs and a Kitchen" ... hence the title of the blog.

Monday, June 29, 2009

After Bites

I was sitting around the campfire last night with some people and a teenager mentioned that she didn't bring her After Bite lotion .... Huh ... Apparently you apply this after you have been biten. Just like this generation and the last few they think that there is a solution for everything. Avoid pain at all costs. What's wrong with letting the little buggers bite you a few times and having your amazing body build up immunity so that you don't even notice further bites.

Isn't the pain experience part of living ... part of learning ... part of being human? People will stay in abusive relationships, work at mind numbing jobs, keep their children prisoners because the big bad world might hurt them ... all to keep pain away.

Sunday, January 16, 2005

Rosemary Had A Little Lamb

My Christmas Eve recipe for Crown Roast of Lamb with stuffing. I found that the secret to an amazing dinner is to put too much fresh rosemary in everything.

As I stated in my first entry, one of the reasons for producing this blog is keep a record of recipes that are important to me. Every Christmas Eve we have Louise's brother Maurice, his wife Jan and their kids Dylan and Sammi over for dinner. We ALWAYS have lamb. It's a tradition and it is always a lot of fun.

Rosemary Crown Roast of Lamb with Wild Rice Stuffing


Makes 6-8 servings

1 triple-crown lamb roast, bones frenched
2 tablespoons olive oil
8 sprigs fresh rosemary, plus more for garnish
8 cups chicken stock
3 cups mixture of wild rice and other brown rices rinsed
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter
2 medium onions, chopped
3 large stalks celery, chopped
3 cups seedless green grapes, halved, plus more for garnish
1-1/2 cups pecans, coarsely chopped
2 sprigs fresh thyme, leaves picked and chopped
1 cup white wine
Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper
Papillotes, for garnish (little white,paper crowns for the bones)

Pick leaves of 3 sprigs rosemary and chop. Rub roast with olive oil and chopped rosemary, inside and out. Weave remaining rosemary sprigs between rib bones. Set aside, and allow roast to come to room temperature.

Using a medium saucepan over medium high heat, bring 8 cups chicken stock to a boil. Add rice, return to a boil, cover, reduce heat to medium low and cook until tender, about 18 minutes. Drain rice, return to pan, and cook over low heat until dry.

Heat oven to 350°. Using a large saute pan over medium heat, add the butter. Saute onions and celery until translucent, about 5 minutes. Add grapes, pecans and thyme, cook until heated through. Add wine and simmer 2 minutes. Add rice, season with salt and pepper.

Place rack in roasting pan and cover with foil. Transfer roast to rack and fill with rice stuffing, mounding high but not tightly packed. Extra stuffing can be cooked in a buttered baking dish, covered with buttered parchment paper, just until heated through, about 20 minutes.

Roast lamb until internal temperature reaches 145° to 150° for medium-rare meat, about 45 to 55 minutes. Turn off oven and allow roast to rest in oven with door ajar for 10 minutes.

Decorate tips of rib bones with papillotes (little paper crowns) and garnish platter with grapes and rosemary sprigs. To carve, remove papillotes, and transfer stuffing to a serving platter. Using a sharp knife, slice in between bones and place on platter.

Other Notes:

I bought the 3 racks and leg of lamb from Costco. I held the racks together with string.

There is not a lot of meat on lamb racks so I also served a medium sized leg of lamb.

Vegetables were sliced root vegetables including Carrots, sweet poptatoes, butternut squash, rutabaga, onions etc covered in olive oil, oregano, fresh rosemary, salt and pepper and baked for approximately 1 and half hours along with the lamb, stirred frequently.

What a wonderful, succulent aroma.

Thursday, January 13, 2005

Tsunami Disaster - The Hollywood Factor



"Pity the poor disaster that doesn't meet our Hollywood expectations."

Like every person on this earth I've been watching the Asian Tsunami Disaster unfold with a combination of horror, fascination, sorrow and anger.

"This same world also spends over $ 3 Billion dollars a year on ring tones for their cell phones."

Anger ... what could I be angry about? At God? At governments and NGOs? No. I'm angry at our first world culture that has numbed us to human suffering by the constant bombardment of images by the media and hollywood.

Consider these facts:

  • It is estimated that 29,000 children die each DAY worldwide by wars, disease, hunger, landmines, ignorance, AIDS etc
  • 2,000,000 people die each year in Africa from AIDS.
  • 800,000 Rowandan people were slaughtered in 100 days in 1994 - the same genocide is happening in the Sudan at this very moment.

So what makes this latest Asian disaster so important that it grabs the world's attention, resources and money for so long and with so much focus? The number of dead which has surpassed 150,000?

  • That's 5 days worth of dead children.
  • 1 months worth of dead Africans with AIDS
  • 20 days worth of slaughtered Rowandans

No. It is a disaster right off the big screen! Sunbathers on the beach. Sunny beautiful day. Huge wave. CNN first person accounts. Home video of the wave. Remember the movie 'The Day After Tomorrow'.

The latest estimate puts the worlds financial contribution to this disaster at over $ 6 Billion dollars. Wow. Let's put this in perspective. This same world also spends over $ 3 Billion dollars a year on ring tones for their cell phones. Go figure.

What happens after this well designed disaster? The world opens their hearts and wallets for all those poor people. Governments suspend debt from affected countries. They send troops, supplies, clean water, food, tents, doctors and who knows what else. Next month we relax, feel good about ourselves and our government and continue worrying whether we have the latest ring tones for our cell phones, are following the proper diet or have the proper sweater for our dog.

Pity the poor disaster that doesn't meet our Hollywood expectations.

Saturday, January 1, 2005

W E L C O M E

Well ... This is first entry in my blog ... it is probably a good way to keep a public journal that won't get lost like my last electronic journals that I have had over the years.



This blog is one of my New Year's resolutions. I am forever losing and forgetting things so I plan on documenting important things like recipes, pictures, running notes and a myriad of other things that completely escape me when I most need them.



This is a picture that I don't want to lose. It was taken in Algonquin Provincial Park last spring from my campsite.

My wife, Louise, and I host a New Year's day party every year. I always have a huge amount of chili available and I am told every year that it is the best they have ever tasted. The only problem is that I keep losing my recipe from the last year and I have to make it from scratch every year. I will be posting this recipe shortly.

I am now going to play with some of the formatting tools available for the rest of this entry.

I am planning on running a marathon this spring so I will be documenting my progress here also.

I'll be updating this blog frequently (I hope) so check back soon.