The Intrepid Appetite
“Food is an important part of a balanced diet”: Fran Lebowitz
You have to understand that I am not normally an adventurous eater. As a small child, I was taught to fear garlic. Salt, pepper, and rarely, a sliver of dried bay leaf floating in a watery stew were the seasonings that normally graced our family table. It was not until my early 20s that I truly learned to enjoy food, to appreciate that it came in a variety of surprising tastes and textures.
So the appetite in this blog’s title is not mine. It belongs to my husband, a fearless consumer of nearly all things edible, and some that are not. He is also a consummate tinkerer around the kitchen, and a genuinely accomplished cook. For the seven years I’ve known him, he has been a vegetarian (or, more accurately, a pescatarian, that is, he eats fish and seafood, but nothing with fur or feathers. For him, it’s an ethical choice, and one that I respect but don’t share). A retired pilot, he has never found a technical manual he couldn’t love, or a tool he could resist. From a silky vichyssoise to a down-home mac and cheese, he is on a perpetual quest for the perfect recipe. He is my culinary hero.
With this blog I hope to share some of our adventures and discoveries with food, as well as the occasional recipe. We’ll fuel some lively discussion about the provenance and ethics of what we eat, and live and dine vicariously through the culinary journeys of others. I’m not sure where we’ll go, what we’ll talk about, or who will be joining us. I am sure, however, that there is no end to the conversation. Food is more than the stuff that sates our hunger, or the recipes that clutter up our bookshelves and hard drives. Food is social as well as cultural. What we eat has political and economic implications. Our choices are driven by ethics, aesthetics, and sometimes indifference.
Hi. I am looking for wild food..anyone know where i can find stinging nettles? wild lettuce? pacific mugwort? im new to the city and don’t know where to find my green friends!
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 03/13 at 11:30 AM
Why not start with dandelion greens, starting to come up now, and at their best young, from spots far from roads. Find them… everywhere.
Also in the summer here you can find pigweed/lambs quarters/wild amaranth growing, plantain leaves, and so on.
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 03/16 at 11:05 PM
Thank you, everyone, for your kind words and helpful comments. I apologize for being so lax about maintaining this blog, but now that summer is here and time is a little less pressured, while food is a lot fresher, I will try to change my ways.
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 06/07 at 03:17 PM
Greetings….Great to see such a blog for us locals. Couldn’t agree more with your experience. I discovered SLOW food Agassiz 2 maybe 3 years ago. Raised with very few seasonings I begged my mom to buy more. Now I’m in pursuit of acquiring/growing/improving the flavors we all love with as local a twist as possible. Anyone worked with the licorice fern?
Having just finished university I’m exstatic about our new adventure. We’re a 5 acre developing farm, that hope to offer short stay lodging in exchange for work. My husband and I both have great jobs but have found this new endeavour to be more than a second job…it’s consumuing all the time we want to put into recreation and gleaning from others in conversation.
Carry on the great work. And again, anyone with experience using licorice fern?
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 06/09 at 09:43 AM
Where can I buy Jamón ibérico in the Europe Bay Area?
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 05/20 at 09:03 AM








