Food and Politics

POSTED: Monday, January 30, 2012, 11:45 AM
Filed Under: Booze | Food and Politics | Interview

Last Thursday, City Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown heartened herself to Philadelphia barflies, night owls and don't-wanna-go-homers by introducing The Extended Bar Hours for Education Bill, which proposes that last call at local drinkeries be pushed back one hour, from 2 a.m. to 3 a.m., for the budgetary benefit of our struggling School District. The 10 percent taxation of alcohol raised approximately $42 million for schools in the 2010 fiscal year; Brown, Council's newly elected Majority Whip, estimates this idea could generate $5 million more.

The bill is in its infancy — it would still have to earn approval within the State General Assembly for City Hall to gain the authority to tweak bar operating hours, which are lorded over by the PLCB. But like anything in Philly involving the word "liquor," it's already garnered strong reactions. (Mayor Nutter, for one, is not a fan of Brown's proposal, per The Inquirer.) We touched base with Councilwoman Brown late last week to get some background on her bill and her honest take on its chances in Harrisburg.

Posted by Drew Lazor @ 11:45 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, January 4, 2012, 4:00 PM

In late December, Dock Street (701 S. 50th St.) announced a new weekly promotion of sorts that jived with the anti-corporate ethos of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Every Wednesday, from open to close, the West Philly brewpub temporarily adopts a cash-only policy. This keeps them from having to pay the requisite 2 to 2.5 percent fee for every credit-card transaction, a discount they pass along to drinkers in the form of 3 percent off all food and drink. "Operating on a cash-only system allows us to keep the money in the pockets of the 99%," writes Dock Street on its website.

Posted by Drew Lazor @ 4:00 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
POSTED: Thursday, July 28, 2011, 1:21 PM
Filed Under: Food and Politics | Food News

Great piece today by Jen Colletta of the Philadelphia Gay News profiling local same-sex couples who are taking advantage of New York state's recent legalization of same-sex marriage. One of those couples? MaryAnn Brancaccio and Maria Vanni, owners of South Philly's August (1247 S. 13th St.), who have been together for 40 years.

The couple exchanged rings on their 25th anniversary but never had an actual ceremony since Pennsylvania wouldn't recognize the union. When the opportunity in New York arose, however, they decided to take the plunge to coincide with their upcoming anniversary.

Earlier this month they put their names into the lottery that was opened for couples to get married in New York City on July 24, the first day marriage equality was legalized, and received a call Thursday night that they were one of the approximately 800 couples randomly selected.

The Manhattan slate was full, so Brancaccio and Vanni elected to get married in Queens. The couple brought along Vanni's goddaughter and another friend to serve as witnesses and used their bands from their 25th anniversary.

"We didn’t have much time to get ready, but we held it together," Vanni said.

August, in case you were wondering, is named in honor of the month Brancaccio and Vanni first got together. CONGRATULATIONS!

Photo: epgn.com; h/t @wtzgoodPHL

Posted by Drew Lazor @ 1:21 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, January 20, 2011, 7:40 PM
Filed Under: Booze | Food and Politics | Food News
Photo | Isaiah Thompson
It would appear that the answer is yes, they are! After a brief closure around Christmas due to what were characterized as “mechanical and technological issues,” the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board is slowly rolling the incongruous machines back into action. We touched base with Harrisburg spokesperson Stacey Witalec, who was kind enough to offer some insight into the gradual return of the Commonwealth's most idiosyncratic pieces of technology. Meal Ticket has learned that the reason for the initial closure had to do with mechanical errors that caused the machines to either charge customers without dispensing wine, or, thanks to problems with the turnstiles, not dispense wine at all. Things seem to be on the road to recovery, though. This past weekend, the only wine kiosk within Philadelphia city limits (at the Fresh Grocer at 4001 Walnut St.) was fully operational and doling out sweet, sweet wine. Witalec mentioned that approximately four other kiosks had been fixed, and that the remainder of the 29 machines statewide were still undergoing further repairs, their reopenings forthcoming.

Deafmute
Posted 2011-01-20 15:47:40
If you can figure out a better way to sell wine in a supermarket I'd like to see it!

Rock Colors
Posted 2011-01-20 16:37:18
@deafmute Most states treat their citizens like adults and let them buy wine and beer in the stores along with the candy and soup.

Tweets that mention Is the PLCB reopening its wine kiosks? :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2011-01-20 16:47:26
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Elizabeth Miller, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Is the PLCB reopening its wine kiosks? http://ow.ly/3HqtR [...] 

Chris
Posted 2011-01-30 17:31:22
@deafmute - Are you serious? Go to just about any other state and you'll see better ways to sell it. In South Carolina, where I'm from, we sell wine and beer in grocery stores and it works fine. And if you think there must be a lack of control there, then let me set your mind at ease. I went to plenty of parties in high school and no one was getting drunk off of wine or beer they bought themselves. Over age people bought all of it for us and the same thing happens here in PA.
Posted by Adrian Pelliccia @ 7:40 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, May 27, 2010, 4:32 PM
Here's something you can take in during Beer Week 2010 that won't get you buzzed: a quick history session on Philly's beer culture dating back to the Founding Fathers. Ben Franklin's brewing adventures and Benjamin Rush's Moral Thermometer Chart — which basically says control yourself or meet the gallows — are just a few notes in the lesson plan. Brew N History Tours around the Christ Church Burial Ground (Fifth and Arch) take off at 3:30 p.m. each day from June 7 to 11, and tickets run $2 for adults, $1 for students and $10 for groups up to 25 people. Tours are only 20 minutes, people. I'm sure you can tear yourselves away from drinking to replenish those brain cells you're killing off.
Posted by Marie DiFeliciantonio @ 4:32 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, May 19, 2010, 4:06 PM
vegantreats.com
Those vegans are at it again! This time they're after America's favorite pick-me-up spot, Dunkin' DonutsCompassion Over Killing, a D.C.-based animal advocacy organization, has launched a website exposing the horrendous conditions of DD's egg suppliers' facilities. The latest installment of this mini-sagadrama is COK's attempt to get vegan doughnuts on the "Dunkin's Next Donut" ballot. None of the veggie submissions made DD's final cut, so COK gathered the non-dairy entries and started its own contest, which they hope will garner a DD response to their demands for healthier, cruelty-free options. Twelve flavors are in the running, and the winning treat gets its 15-ish minutes of fame on the menu at award-winning Vegan Treats Bakery in Bethlehem (Felicia D chatted with the bakery's Danielle Konya back in March '09). If Bethlehem seems like a hefty distance to travel for snacks, remember that you can look for Vegan Treats at a few closer-to-home locations. The vegan doughnut hole poll closes Friday, May 21 so get your votes in now. The victor will be announced in June.

Megan
Posted 2010-05-19 12:15:09
It would be amazing if Dunkin' Donuts offered vegan options!  Even just offering soy milk would be a huge first step. Seriously -- Why are they so behind the times? Aren't they based on Boston which has a very active vegan community? 

Oh, and I voted. Vegan Velvet Elvis, baby!  Thanks for the tip City Paper

Felicia D'Ambrosio
Posted 2010-05-19 12:38:34
I'd like soy milk at DD, too.  Where's the love for us lactards?  We need coffee, too!

Lucy
Posted 2010-05-19 13:30:27
This is great! I've missed my Dunkin' Donuts since I went vegan. It would be so amazing if they offered stuff for us vegans! I voted for the Strawberry Lemonade Love!

Marie DiFeliciantonio
Posted 2010-05-19 13:38:59
Ladies, thanks for reading the post and voting. The vegan doughnuts are not in the running for DD's menu but for a limited-time production by Vegan Treats Bakery based out of Bethlehem. Your participation in the contest shows support for Compassion Over Killing's quest to get DD to offer healthier, cruelty-free items. Check out their website (dunkincruelty.com) and write DD a letter about more vegan options!
Posted by Marie DiFeliciantonio @ 4:06 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, May 4, 2010, 3:00 PM
Though she holds a masters' degree in holistic nutrition, ran the country's only organic cooking school for seven years and is a regular speaker at The Clinton Foundation in Harlem, New York, Patty James is still learning a thing or two about what kids need to be healthy from her Shine The Light on America's Kids interview project. Traveling the country since January, James is touring one state a week, interviewing children with 25 questions to discover their true health habits. The videotaped interviews will then be analyzed by a university, with the results used to develop a program and a health center (or many health centers) where families will find the resources they need for life-long health -- cooking classes, nutritional and disease-prevention information. Meal Ticket spoke with James as she drove toward Drums, PA for school interviews. She gave us a look at the current state of Shine The Light five months in. Read the Q&A after the jump. Meal Ticket: What kinds of questions are you asking children on your tour? Patty James: We ask them, 'Are you healthy? Is your family healthy?' Some of the questions are very revealing -- When we ask 'What vegetables did you eat yesterday?' They often answer, 'Um, lettuce on my sandwich?" What I've been surprised to learn is what they're NOT eating -- vegetables and dietary fiber. MT: How much dietary fiber does a person need? PJ: You're supposed to be eating 30-35 grams of dietary fiber a day, and the average American is only eating 10-14 grams. These kids, they are just not eating vegetables. It's actually worse than I thought. Vegetables provide not just fiber but phytonutrients, vitamins and minerals. MT: What other answers have really surprised you? PJ: There's one question that every kid has answered 'yes' to, except one single child, and that is 'Do you think P.E. [physical education] should be mandatory? And every child except one said yes. They know they have to exercise to be healthy, and all of them, except this one kid, know they won't do it unless they are forced! Another shocking one is a question the kids answer 'no' to -- 'Do you think there is a connection between the earth's health and your health?' More than half of them say no, no connection. They don't know where their food comes from. It's a real disconnect, and lies at the heart of the obesity problem. You cannot solve it until you get to the source -- where the food comes from, what are you eating. MT: Do you think public policy, like corn subsidies, play a role in the obesity epidemic? PJ: Yes. A definite yes. When you look at childhood obesity, you see it really began in the 1980s and goes right back to sugar. Fructose, which is much cheaper than sugar, is metabolized like fat, and it wasn't common in foods until the 1980s. But the cheap filler stuff is just easier for people to hand to their kids. There is a distinct lack of vegetables, dietary fiber, whole fruits in these kids' diets... they are eating food that is just junk. MT: Many people say, 'My kids won't eat that,' about healthy foods, and vegetables particularly. How do you get kids to eat and enjoy what is good for them? PJ: In my cooking school, I'd be teaching kids to make quinoa pilaf or something like that, and the parents would say, 'Oh they will never eat that.' But if you make them part of the process, and give them ownership of it, they will want to eat it. Kids don't want to be unhealthy or overweight! But we have to get back to home cooking, to eating around the table. Kids who eat at a table get higher grades, are less likely to use drugs and alcohol and are more likely to go to college. We have too much cheap filler food and not enough good information.
Posted by Felicia D'Ambrosio @ 3:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, April 30, 2010, 4:39 PM
Filed Under: Field Trip | Food and Politics
Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer
The spicy tuna maki you eat for lunch today could be nothing more than a curious relic from the past in 20 years. Bluefin tuna, that unctuously marbled behemoth that makes such nice sushi, is on the verge of population collapse due to the tremendous overfishing its stocks have endured since new fishing and freezing techniques made it commercially viable in the 1960s. A recent global summit just rejected a proposal to ban the bluefin's international trade, but environmentalists are pushing to have it added to the endangered species list before it's too late. New York magazine quoted bluefin expert Sergi Tudela as saying, "Right now we still have a catch quota which is still almost twice the level needed to recover the stock." The stigma attached to serving the fish has well-known sushi palaces edging away from it; Nobu in New York took it off their menu two weeks ago, and Morimoto followed suit, says local chef Hiroyuki “Zama” Tanaka. At his eponymous restaurant at 128 S. 19th Street, Tanaka serves the world's only 100 percent sustainable bluefin tuna, the Kindai bluefin. Lab-grown at Kinki University in Japan, the Kindai represents more than 70 years of research — the fish, which can grow to 700 pounds, is only on its second and third generation presently. "The taste is more delicate," says Zama. "And there are no flaws, like parasite holes. I can provide a high standard all the time." At a retail price of $5 per piece for sashimi, Kindai bluefin is almost double the price of wild bluefin, but Zama believes that will change. "It's new stuff, only on the second generation. When it's new, it's expensive, but the next five years will be a different story. When they first farm-raised salmon [and] striped bass, it was the same thing ... they are now standard and the price is steady." Zama received a monster Kindai bluefin from supplier Samuels & Son and butchered it for his restaurant. Check out the slideshow above.

chef@sptr
Posted 2010-04-30 17:53:21
thank you zama

PhD Positions at The Civil Engineering Department at Clemson … | Civil Engineering Addict
Posted 2010-05-01 03:08:29
[...] Zama commits to the world's only sustainable bluefin tuna :: Meal … [...] 

Marie DiFeliciantonio
Posted 2010-05-01 15:48:53
serious knife skills.

Meal Ticket's 2010 in Pictures: April :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-12-31 14:48:55
[...] - Zama commits to the world’s only sustainable tuna [30apr10] [...] 
Posted by Felicia D'Ambrosio @ 4:39 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Tuesday, April 20, 2010, 6:30 PM
Baked good
Disclaimer: City Paper and Meal Ticket do not endorse participation in any sort of extralegal activity, even if said activity is conducted in the privacy of the home. Egads no. If you don't already know, today's date of April 20 is considered in some circles a red-letter day for smokers of marijuana. Whether it first originated as a police code or as the designated time a few friends gathered daily to indulge, 4/20 is now an open code that signifies the consumption of cannabis, an intoxicant that is most often smoked, but can be included in potent potables and foods — pot brownies, space cakes, gooballs, hash cookies and the buttered-tea beverage bhang. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in cannabis that produces that "high" or "stoned" feeling, is highly soluble in fats and alcohol but not water, making it an ideal candidate for inclusion in food items containing butter or oil. Add butter and the illegal herb to the top half of a double boiler, simmer, strain and bhang! Cannabutter ready for use in any recipe, most often of the baked-good variety. For bakers venturing beyond basic preparations, dozens of countercultural cookbooks exist, as well as hundreds of Internet threads, posts and Web pages on the topic bristling with recipes, techniques and tips. After all, who doesn't want a little treat on a solemn high holiday?
Posted by Felicia D'Ambrosio @ 6:30 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Thursday, March 18, 2010, 7:53 PM

Columnist Rick Nichols catalogs the fallout from recent unregistered beer raids - but holds out hope for a happy Beer Week - in today's Inquirer, while restaurant critic Craig LaBan talks beer in his weekly online chat. Via Jack Curtin's Liquid Diet.

Excerpt from Craig LaBan's online chat, posted March 18

Reader: What do you make of this whole beer raid situation? Maybe this will begin the overthrow of our Prohibition-era liquor laws.

CL: I think the situation is complicated: There are good reasons to have basic liquor laws - but the Keystone Kops execution (to quote Don Russell) really irked people, smacking of overreaction and control-state bureaucracy and even a little personal vendetta on the part of one anonymous complainant who apparently launched the whole thing. These confiscated beers were at other unraided bars, too. Overall, it's a black eye for our liquor control apparatus to have so clumsily taken a swipe at our growing beer scene - one of the most vital engines for restaurant growth, not to mention urban renewal, such as what Resurrection Ale House has brought to the neighborhood south of South. In the end, the bad publicity may end up having a positive effect in terms of reform (there's a hearing in April, says colleague Rick Nichols, who has followed this story in today's column). But don't count on the demise of the PLCB any time soon.

Posted by Felicia D'Ambrosio @ 7:53 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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About this blog
Founded in October 2008, Meal Ticket is a City Paper blog about food, drink and assorted other things that make you go mmm. We do recipes, interviews, restaurant news, commentary and much more. We don't do restaurant reviews herethose are handled in print, mostly by our critic (and Meal Ticket contributor) Adam Erace. Got a tip, question, thought or concern? Just want to say hello? Please shoot a note to caroline@citypaper.net.

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