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About peterandreysmith

Peterandreysmith lives in Maine.

In short: Smith has covered food, agriculture and culture for Gastronomica, The Atlantic Online, MAKE, and The Boston Globe. > > peterandreysmith.com

peterandreysmith’s website:
http://twitter.com/foodrumblings


  • Member since: 2008
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On 2009-11-20 peterandreysmith posted
  • 1

Does Innovation Belong in That Recipe?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 20, 2009 at 11:38 am

Does Innovation Belong in That Recipe?

Cookbooks often read better as literature than as technical lab manuals. That shouldn’t stop us from reading them, or from improvising our recipes.

We no longer learn to cook solely from generations-old oral traditions. Our recipes don’t tend to get handed down from village bakers, local brewers, or blood relatives. So, when the holidays hit, chances are we’ll head to the bookshelves for ways to make stuffing or cranberry sauce. This approach is not without its pitfalls.…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Uncategorized
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On 2009-11-05 peterandreysmith posted
  • 2
  • 2

Swine Flu Stew

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 5, 2009 at 8:00 am

Swine Flu Stew

Can your food choices help make you more healthy?

Vietnamese pho is next to godliness. Fresh noodles, steaming amber beef broth, and herbs. The soup’s spices enhance and concentrate the flavor of beef. There’s magic in pho. But is there medicine in it, too?

Pho contains star anise. Star anise contains shikimic acid, the active ingredient in Tamiflu, one of only two antiviral drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating swine flu (H1N1) and…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food , Health
  • Tags: Food , Health , swine flu
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On November 5, 2009 peterandreysmith Discussed

A Grassroots Seduction

  • and said:

Watch the full-length program Botany of Desire on PBS.  

On 2009-11-02 peterandreysmith posted
  • 0

Sharing apples and genetic diversity

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 2, 2009 at 6:35 am

Well over 10,000 named apple varieties once grew on farms across the Northeast, but the need for high-yielding dwarf trees producing durable, unblemished fruits led most growers to focus on the dozen or so standbys that you can now find year-round at any grocery store. Red Delicious. McIntosh. Granny Smith.

Winekist is a medium-sized apple with wine-red flesh. Some say it tastes like cranberries; others say strawberry. I got a chance to taste this rare apple,…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : The Community Board
  • Categories: Uncategorized
  • Tags: Environment , Food
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On 2009-10-29 peterandreysmith posted
  • 5
  • 5

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Compelling Case for (Not) Eating Animals

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 29, 2009 at 11:31 am

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Compelling Case for (Not) Eating Animals

If we don’t eat dogs, should we eat any meat? Should you care about the vegetarian author’s latest provocation? I do.

Almost everything intersects with animal agriculture. Almost everything we talk about and care about: whether it’s the environment; whether it’s what it means to be human; whether it’s how we treat people; how we treat animals; consumption; America’s place in the world.  Basically, animal agriculture is the most important example of each of these things…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Environment , Food , People
  • Tags: Culture , Environment , Food , Jonathan Safran Foer , People , vegetarianism
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On 2009-10-29 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

Michael Pollan’s Vegan-in-a-Hummer Quip Lacks Facts

On 2009-10-22 peterandreysmith posted
  • 7
  • 6

The United States Is a Food Wasteland

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 22, 2009 at 11:00 am

The United States Is a Food Wasteland

We throw away enough food to feed the entire world. A new book tries to find a solution.

When it comes to food, Americans are the undisputed champions of one thing: trash. We waste food in volumes that it defies the imagination. New York City alone has an annual surplus of about 50 million pounds of food. Ten years ago, the United States Department of Agriculture estimated that more than 96 billion pounds of edible food…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food , People
  • Tags: Food , People , Tristram Stuart , waste
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On 2009-10-21 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

The GOOD 100: Cowpooling

On 2009-10-20 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

Transparency: Foods That Might Make You Sick

On 2009-10-16 peterandreysmith posted
  • 0
  • 1

Is Yogurt Really That Good for You?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 16, 2009 at 11:00 am

Is Yogurt Really That Good for You?


Are probiotics a prescription for glorious guts or just a gimmick?

Until his death in 1916 at the unremarkable age of 71, the Nobel Prize-winning Russian scientist Ilya Metchnikoff promoted a theory for prolonging human life. His recipe for longevity was simple: yogurt. Metchnikoff thought that the consumption of the bacterial cultures enabled Bulgarian peasants to live for an average of 87 years and he sought to bring its transformative qualities to the West.

A half decade later,…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food
  • Tags: Dannon , Food , Health , probiotics , yogurt
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1 2 3 ... 5
On 2009-11-20 peterandreysmith posted
  • 1

Does Innovation Belong in That Recipe?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 20, 2009 at 11:38 am

Does Innovation Belong in That Recipe?

Cookbooks often read better as literature than as technical lab manuals. That shouldn’t stop us from reading them, or from improvising our recipes.

We no longer learn to cook solely from generations-old oral traditions. Our recipes don’t tend to get handed down from village bakers, local brewers, or blood relatives. So, when the holidays hit, chances are we’ll head to the bookshelves for ways to make stuffing or cranberry sauce. This approach is not without its pitfalls.…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Uncategorized
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On 2009-11-05 peterandreysmith posted
  • 2
  • 2

Swine Flu Stew

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 5, 2009 at 8:00 am

Swine Flu Stew

Can your food choices help make you more healthy?

Vietnamese pho is next to godliness. Fresh noodles, steaming amber beef broth, and herbs. The soup’s spices enhance and concentrate the flavor of beef. There’s magic in pho. But is there medicine in it, too?

Pho contains star anise. Star anise contains shikimic acid, the active ingredient in Tamiflu, one of only two antiviral drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating swine flu (H1N1) and…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food , Health
  • Tags: Food , Health , swine flu
  • Share
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On 2009-11-02 peterandreysmith posted
  • 0

Sharing apples and genetic diversity

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on November 2, 2009 at 6:35 am

Well over 10,000 named apple varieties once grew on farms across the Northeast, but the need for high-yielding dwarf trees producing durable, unblemished fruits led most growers to focus on the dozen or so standbys that you can now find year-round at any grocery store. Red Delicious. McIntosh. Granny Smith.

Winekist is a medium-sized apple with wine-red flesh. Some say it tastes like cranberries; others say strawberry. I got a chance to taste this rare apple,…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : The Community Board
  • Categories: Uncategorized
  • Tags: Environment , Food
  • Share
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On 2009-10-29 peterandreysmith posted
  • 5
  • 5

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Compelling Case for (Not) Eating Animals

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 29, 2009 at 11:31 am

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Compelling Case for (Not) Eating Animals

If we don’t eat dogs, should we eat any meat? Should you care about the vegetarian author’s latest provocation? I do.

Almost everything intersects with animal agriculture. Almost everything we talk about and care about: whether it’s the environment; whether it’s what it means to be human; whether it’s how we treat people; how we treat animals; consumption; America’s place in the world.  Basically, animal agriculture is the most important example of each of these things…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Environment , Food , People
  • Tags: Culture , Environment , Food , Jonathan Safran Foer , People , vegetarianism
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On 2009-10-22 peterandreysmith posted
  • 7
  • 6

The United States Is a Food Wasteland

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 22, 2009 at 11:00 am

The United States Is a Food Wasteland

We throw away enough food to feed the entire world. A new book tries to find a solution.

When it comes to food, Americans are the undisputed champions of one thing: trash. We waste food in volumes that it defies the imagination. New York City alone has an annual surplus of about 50 million pounds of food. Ten years ago, the United States Department of Agriculture estimated that more than 96 billion pounds of edible food…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food , People
  • Tags: Food , People , Tristram Stuart , waste
  • Share
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On 2009-10-16 peterandreysmith posted
  • 0
  • 1

Is Yogurt Really That Good for You?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 16, 2009 at 11:00 am

Is Yogurt Really That Good for You?


Are probiotics a prescription for glorious guts or just a gimmick?

Until his death in 1916 at the unremarkable age of 71, the Nobel Prize-winning Russian scientist Ilya Metchnikoff promoted a theory for prolonging human life. His recipe for longevity was simple: yogurt. Metchnikoff thought that the consumption of the bacterial cultures enabled Bulgarian peasants to live for an average of 87 years and he sought to bring its transformative qualities to the West.

A half decade later,…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food
  • Tags: Dannon , Food , Health , probiotics , yogurt
  • Share
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On 2009-10-14 peterandreysmith posted
  • 0
  • 1

Have We Made Lobster a Truly Sustainable Seafood?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 14, 2009 at 1:00 pm

Have We Made Lobster a Truly Sustainable Seafood?

Although many reports about Gulf of Maine fish stocks—cod, haddock, cusk, flounder, and grey sole—are not optimistic, Ted Ames, a scientist and 2005 MacArthur “genius,” believes that a management system protecting juvenile fish and spawning grounds can turn around the traditional New England fishery.

In an interview with me in Maine Magazine, Ames says:

If fish can reproduce, then we’re going to have 10 times the fish we have now. It becomes kind of like watching a…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Environment , Food , People
  • Tags: Environment , Food , Lobster , Ted Ames
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On 2009-10-08 peterandreysmith posted
  • 3
  • 1

The Food Ten

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 8, 2009 at 11:23 am

The Food Ten

Ten more great, food-focused items.

In the midst of the GOOD 100, I’ve come up with an additional list of 10 people, projects, and ideas that are making a difference when it comes to food. Let me know what you think.

1: Sustainable sushi

Environmental regulators can’t keep pace with our voracious appetite for wild fish, and consumer changes can only take reforms so far. But a compelling new way to change fishing practices may be coming…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Environment , Food , People
  • Tags: Barry Estabrook , Environment , Food , Nicolette Hahn Niman , Tony Geraci
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On 2009-10-01 peterandreysmith posted
  • 2
  • 3

Are You a Foodiot?

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on October 1, 2009 at 5:00 am

Are You a Foodiot?

A new group of foodies are sharing what they eat—obsessively, and online.

In the post-climactic moments of a foodgasm, some of us, euphoric and unable to concentrate, with blood rushing to the stomach, prefer relaxed conversation with friends, a little after-dinner pillow talk. I sometimes head to the liquor cabinet for a bitter, digestive nip of Fernet Branca. Now, there’s a growing group of the food obsessed that can’t even wait for dinner to end to reach…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food
  • Tags: Food , Media
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On 2009-09-24 peterandreysmith posted
  • 5
  • 5

Yes, You Can

  • Posted by: Peter Smith
  • on September 24, 2009 at 11:15 am

Yes, You Can

The can-volution takes canning out of the factory and puts putting-up food back on the table.

Canned foods were born in the early 1800s when a confectioner named Nicholas Appert invented a method for preserving food in airtight containers for the French army. From there, canned foods went on to become a safe, reliable staple of the workingman’s lunch and a source of pride for frugal homemakers. Canned food also became a symbol of modern industrialized society—as…

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  • Filed under: Blog : Borborygmi
  • Categories: Food
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1 2 3 4
On November 5, 2009 peterandreysmith Discussed

A Grassroots Seduction

  • and said:

Watch the full-length program Botany of Desire on PBS.  

On June 25, 2009 peterandreysmith Discussed

Organic Farms and GMO Seeds: The Keys to Feeding 9 Billion People?

  • and said:

Pamela Ronald makes a similar argument in her book “Tomorrow’s Table,” written with her husband,
organic farmer Raoul Adamchak, describing how a theoretical combination of GMO + organics could achieve higher yields without
resorting to expensive and environmentally hazardous chemicals. But the continued skepticism among environmentalists seems to arise from the shortcoming of Golden Rice and other “socially-responsible” GMOs.

On May 19, 2009 peterandreysmith Discussed

Local Lay’s: When Local Goes Loco

  • and said:

Check out John Harvey Kellogg’s pamphlet “Pork, or the Dangers of Pork Eating Exposed” for a sense of where the corn flake came from.

On May 12, 2009 peterandreysmith Discussed

Mead: It’s Not Just for Vikings

  • and said:

Thanks for catching that. Bees forage for both pollen (for protein) and nectar (for carbs), but ultimately it’s plant nectar that becomes the raw material to make honey. 

On 2009-10-29 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

Michael Pollan’s Vegan-in-a-Hummer Quip Lacks Facts

On 2009-10-21 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

The GOOD 100: Cowpooling

On 2009-10-20 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

Transparency: Foods That Might Make You Sick

On 2009-10-16 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

The GOOD 100: Victory Gardens

On 2009-10-12 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

The GOOD 100: Farming Detroit

On 2009-09-25 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

Yes, You Can

On 2009-05-27 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

In-Formed: Visualizations Get Tactile

On 2009-05-21 peterandreysmith GOODmarked

The Food of a Younger Land

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