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We've a mention on Apartment 613!

Posted 03/17/10 by don | Filed under: foodieCulture | No comments

Imagine my surprise when I came across a tweet by fellow Ottawa food blogger Jodi (@simplyfresh) of the Simply Fresh blog that read something like this:
@SimplyFresh (Mar 17, 03:19 PM)
@FoodiePrints @RonEade - great article on @apartment613 about you!

Honestly, my response was to retype the Twitter url. I thought the web UI had somehow corrupted itself, adding foodiePrints' handle to the tweet.

@apartment613 is the twitter handle for Apartment 613, a popular multi-faceted community blog that aims to showcase the more creative side of Canada's capital, Ottawa. It gives some much needed attention to our thriving music, art, theater, and food scenes. I follow the blog via their RSS-feed and Google reader, enjoying their coverage of local events, especially their photos of live indie bands. Many photos are taken by in-house photographer Ming Wu (@ming_wu).

Sometime this afternoon, Apartment 613 blogger/editor Ryan Saxby Hill (@saxby) posted an entry, listing a handful of local food bloggers. After all, somewhat restaurant-rich and with multiple culinary schools nearby, Ottawa should be a food obsessed city.
foodiePrints on the Apartment613 blog
foodiePrints on the Apartment613 blog

Source: Apartment 613 Blog

Besides us, Saxby's piece includes Ron Eade (@roneade and Ottawa Citizen Food Editor), Shari Goodman (@whisk_food_blog) (one of my favourite food bloggers), and Dominic Maggiolo (a freelancer who writes for Apartment 613). Also mentioned is the Ottawa Foodies forum, which is operated by Mark Warburton (@warby).

Suffice it to say, the post made my St. Patrick's Day. We are honoured to be listed with the likes of Eade's Omnivore's Ottawa and Goodman's Whisk: A Food Blog.

And yes, my team (Jenn) and I are pho obsessed. Another pho piece will be forthcoming shortly. This one is a recipe.

foodiePrints on Ottawa Tonite

Posted 11/01/09 by don | Filed under: foodieCulture | No comments

Earlier this week, the blogging team behind foodiePrints contacted the people behind the community website, Ottawa Tonite, to answer its call for volunteer bloggers. Having very little insight into local theater (usually turn to Evan Thornton's Wellington Oracle), visual art, film, or even comedy, we offered blogs on food in Canada's capital. The powers that be accepted and we saw our first discussion piece on the recent controversy surrounding Top 10 lists of Ottawa's restaurants appear last Thursday.

Here is a screen capture for posterity:
What's In a List
What's In a List


Recently launched, Ottawa Tonite answers the growing need in Ottawa for an online source of information on local art and entertainment. It was conceptualized at the bar of Chez Lucien, a locals' burger joint, one evening by Sue Murphy and Cheryl Gain. According to Murphy's recent blog entry, "How to build a community website", after they finished their dinner, they scoured the web for that evening's live performances, Murphy on an Iphone and Gain on her web-enabled cellphone. Finding no online source for information, they decided to make one. Gain's vision: "Create a community space where local artists can talk about what?s really going on behind the scenes of their craft and bring a glimpse of their lives to their audiences."

Shortly after Ottawa Tonite's launched, I pitched the idea of contributing material to Ottawa Tonite to foodiePrint's editor, my better half Jenn. When we got the go ahead from Ottawa Tonite's staff, we sifted through our collection of "to post" material for foodiePrints. We settled on something that would allow just about all of the fine dining restaurants in Ottawa to be listed. Jenn and I are very proud of how much Ottawa's restaurant industry has developed in recent years, offering a variety of choices to diners, and we hope it continues to grow.

That said, check back to Ottawa Tonite every so often, you may find a foodiePrint or two.

Cheers to Cheryl Gain, Sue Murphy, Rob Dupuis, Dave Samojlenko, Patrick Denny, and Mike Thompson for putting Ottawa Tonite together. Thank-you for letting us contribute!
It has been a wet summer, but autumn is upon us and we have had 2 glorious weeks of cool, but sunny weather in Ottawa. Labour Day has come and past. Newly minted students from the local universities have flooded city streets with music, dance, and Shinerama stickers to raise money to fund cystic fibrosis research. The sun is setting earlier. The commute to work has become more hectic. And, it is time to start thinking about what to do with the oncoming fall harvest bounty.

To help out, Amrita Singh from CBC Radio 1 (91.5 FM) is kicking off a new season of Town and Out with an Autumn Produce Primer. Can you guess which local blogger she chose to provide some sound bites?

In preparation, my better half and I visited the bustling ByWard Market on Labour Day Monday, armed with the newest member of foodiePrints' blog arsenal, a Nikon D60 SLR camera with an 18-55 mm lens.
Crowded ByWard Market
Crowded ByWard Market

Lots of Families Out and About
Lots of Families Out and About


Before we begin, the unusually wet summer has shifted the growing season somewhat, causing some characteristically autumn produce to come to market late.

Such was apparent when I asked the lovely tweeps I follow about their favourites. Suggestions included: sweet corn, turnips, parsnips, carrots, butternut squash, and apples. Not only were they available, but so too were raspberries, strawberries and peaches, typically late summer fare in the Eastern Ontario region.
Strawberries
Strawberries

Strawberries AND Raspberries
Strawberries AND Raspberries

Peaches
Peaches


Only now has quality sweet corn started appearing.
Sweet Corn
Sweet Corn

Jumbo Cobs
Jumbo Cobs

Look for ears with bright green and tight-fitting husks and golden brown silks. Kernels should be plump and should come all the way to the tip of the ear. Fresh yellow corn is sweetest when it is eaten as soon as it is harvested. The longer an ear of corn spends away from the plant, the more likely its sugars will be converted to starch.

Regarding root vegetables like turnips, parsnips, or carrots...
Turnips
Turnips

The turnips we most often see are rutabagas, relatives of the British white turnip. Choose heavy for their size turnips. Smaller, hence younger, ones tend to have a more delicate flavour and texture. They should be firm to the touch. If greens are attached, they should be bright green and not withered. To store, wrap turnips, unwashed, in plastic and place in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks, discarding the leaves. However, like other root vegetables, they can last longer in a cool ventilated area. This is why our grandparents had subterranean root cellars.

Carrots
Carrots

Carrots, including increasingly common heirloom varieties (purple, blue, gold), should be firm and smooth. Avoid those that are cracked or have begun to soften. If greens are attached, they should be bright and crisp. To store, bag in plastic and refrigerate for up to 7 days, again discarding the leaves.

Parsnips should be chosen in a similar manner as carrots and turnips. Look for firm roots that are neither shriveled nor spotted. They can be stored, bagged in plastic, in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.

Regarding winter squash (we actually found none) and pumpkins...
Pumpkins
Pumpkins

and more Pumpkins
and more Pumpkins

Winter squashes like butternut, acorn and spaghetti, should be heavy for their size and have hard rinds mostly free of blemishes, cracks, or moldy spots. If any are present, they should be dry and well healed. Whole, winter squashes can be stored in a cool dark place for a month or longer, depending on the specific variety. Cut, they can be stored in the refrigerator, wrapped in plastic, but should be eaten within several days.

Smaller pumpkins, like the ones pictured, tend to be sweeter and more tender. Like winter squashes, they should be picked blemish and crack free. They should also be heavy for their size.

One of my favourites of the fall harvest has to be apples, such as those from Hall's Apple Orchard and Market
Apples
Apples

Glorious Apples
Glorious Apples

No matter the variety, be it for baking or eating raw, buy firm apples with a fresh fragrance. Their skins should be smooth and bruise and gouge free. Paula red, Lobo, Fuji, gala, golden delicious, granny smith, and McIntosh apples are versatile varieties that are equally good raw or for cooking. Store in a plastic bag in the refrigerator.

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foodiePrints was born December 3, 2009