Tag: food

  • Using Retro Wax Paper over Plastic Bags Makes a Home More Eco-Friendly

    Here at the homestead we’re always wondering how to cut down on waste. We have a compost pile, and our egg-laying chickens eat a lot of leftovers. But lately my mind has been on plastic waste. Especially with news articles coming out about plastic in the human digestive system, beads of plastic in the ocean food chain, giant rafts of plastic floating on the seas. Plastic may not degrade for hundreds of years. Most plastic isn’t biodegradable, just breaking down into smaller and smaller pieces and potentially mucking up the food-chain from small animals all the way up to humans. I wondered, was there anything at all I could do to reduce its environmental impact?

    My imagination served up an answer: a memory of the “old days,” ordering a lunchtime turkey sandwich at the deli near my office in mid-town Manhattan. How those bountiful sandwiches would be expertly and rapidly packaged in folded, delightfully crisp wax paper! So I “remembered” the solution, and I recommend it to you: biodegradable, eco-friendly wax paper and butcher paper.

    And maybe in the grand scheme of things aesthetics isn’t that important, but still, I find the texture of wax paper more pleasing than glossy, floppy zip lock bags.

    Now, instead of buying various locking sandwich bags, when I make our nine-year old’s lunch in the morning, I pack his sandwich in wax paper. When I buy ground beef or chicken thighs, I repackage smaller meal-portions in butcher paper instead of plastic freezer bags. 

    Turns out it’s economical as well as practical, an important consideration for those of us on a budget. Environmental solutions can be costly, but store-brand wax paper can be purchased for as little as two cents per square foot, comparable in price to bargain-brand sandwich bags. Butcher paper is also comparably priced to freezer bags. Some freezer tape, which is masking tape for low temperatures, makes packages easy to seal and to label. Or you can skip the tape altogether and just fold the seams under.

    No more seals that break or fall open. And especially for childen’s little hands and senior’s fingers that might have gotten arthritic, no more struggling to grip tiny margins or pull open tight seals.

    Here’s how to fold like a pro, according to Tipnut.com (and the 1961 instructions “How To Prepare Foods For Freezing“; from good old Sears, Roebuck & Co.).

    How to fold waxed paper like a pro.
    It’s easy to fold wax paper like a pro of yesteryear.

    Tips: Store wrapped items seam side down to protect seal. You can double wrap meat if the freezer paper you’re using isn’t the best quality. 

    The coated paper has additional benefits. No more seals that break or fall open. And especially for childen’s little hands and senior’s fingers that might have gotten arthritic, no more struggling to grip tiny margins or pull open tight seals. And maybe in the grand scheme of things aesthetics isn’t that important, but still, I find the texture of wax paper more pleasing than glossy, floppy zip lock bags.

    Finally, for the homesteader, there’s an added bonus: wax paper burns. Next time you need help starting a fire because the tinder in your fire pit or burn box is a little damp, light some wadded-up non-toxic, biodegradable, eco-friendly wax paper. 

    Wax paper makes a good eco-friendly fire starter.
    Wax paper makes a good, eco-friendly fire starter.
  • life is poetry with breakfast spaghetti on a cold morning – try it!

    After we all took the dogs up the road to the top of the hill and back the other morning it was time to warm up with some hot coffee for the parents, and hot cocoa and oatmeal for the kid. As we slowly thawed out from freezing temperatures and light snow flurries my thoughts turned to one of my favorite breakfasts when I used to visit my mom and stepdad in their house in the Pennsylvania Poconos: breakfast spaghetti.

    As usual when talking to the kid, my retelling turned into part reminiscence and part teaching.

    Everyone in the family loves this dish, which is wonderful on a cold morning, easy to prepare and easy on your budget. The ingredients for breakfast spaghetti are simple:

    1. Leftover pasta
    2. Minced garlic cloves, one or two depending on your garlic-philia
    3. Plenty of olive oil
    4. 1-2 beaten eggs
    5. Salt and pepper to taste, and other herbs as desired, for example, oregano or basil.

    In a well-oiled skillet heated to low-medium, sauté the garlic until soft but not brown. This will only take a minute or so. Turn up the heat to medium and stir in the leftover pasta to coat with olive oil. Continue stirring frequently as the pasta heats up. Pour in the beaten eggs and mix in gently until the eggs are just firm. Finally, season to taste and serve immediately.

    To me this dish and the dinner variation below are a culinary equivalent to lyric poetry: brief, simple, unadorned, made out of common ingredients, and beautiful.

    For the dinner variation, a classic pasta entrée that only uses olive oil as a sauce, substitute a can of well-drained and washed chickpeas for the eggs. You can also use dried chickpeas that you have prepared first, which taste much better. I have my trustworthy Fagor pressure cooker for this. But using canned chickpeas keeps the virtue of a rapidly prepared and delicious simple meal.

    It never hurts to enhance the dish by also sautéing some fresh, coarsely chopped tomatoes and spinach or the greens of your choice.

    Sprinkle with freshly grated Parmesan cheese and serve with a simple mixed-greens salad dressed with homemade balsamic vinaigrette, another elegant and simple culinary treat. Enjoy with a nice wine. This would be a white-wine dish if you were a wine snob. Since there’s nothing snobby in the origins of this meal, go ahead and drink confidently from any red wine you want. Red wine from a box will make the perfect anti-snobbery statement. Make sure to prominently display the box as the centerpiece.

    My stepfather Joe used to whip this up on a cold morning. A first generation American of Italian descent, Joe and his brothers and sisters lived through the depression by eating pasta their mother prepared. Cheap and plentiful, easy to make from scratch, and able to be prepared with endless variations, pasta was the survival food for an entire generation of poor Italian immigrants and anyone else lucky enough to share their tables before pasta became a thing for the rest of America.

    If you’ve never tasted fresh pasta, and by that I mean home-made with semolina flour and not the upscale fresh pasta imprisoned in plastic in a supermarket refrigerator, you’ve never really tasted food that is the equivalent of a bel canto aria, of a poem. Linguine is easy to make – I urge you to look up a recipe and give it a try. Maybe I’ll make a future post on it.

Mike Jackman, Words & Music

Singer-Songwriter, Multi-instrumentalist, Writer