• 28 Dec

    Cake: 8 ingredients or 80? Support your local Bakery!

    In the quest to avoid soy, (which gives me sudden violent diarhea) I’ve had to give up almost all store bought baked goods. Damn that soy lechtitin, soy flour and soy oil. Last week I ate a pastry with all 3, the trifecta of death, and I didn’t make it halfway through the thing before I was rushing to the bathroom. When I saw the half eaten danish sitting on the counter after the hell bowel that ensued, I actually considered finishing it. I love danish that much.  Would the same food bother me without soy? Could I eat a danish and finish it without running to the toilet? Can I find a healthier for ME pastry? That’s when I discovered the answer: my local bakery!

    Pastry is not a health food, lets be clear on that.  Most people agree that donuts are the dietary devil, and while the sugar and fat bomb inherent in a donut is less than ideal dietarily speaking, not all sweets are made equal. In particular I’m talking about the length of the ingredient list. If you ask your local friendly bakery they will tell you what ingredients are in their food (if they won’t, don’t eat there). The one I consulted had no problem opening their books and showing me the things they use in their food, things like flour, sugar, eggs, butter, yeast, baking soda, vanilla, that sort of thing. The kinds of things you’d expect. I toured their whole book and found the average ingredient list to be about 5-15 ingredients. Sadly some things did have soy in one form or another, but you know what they didn’t have: monosodium glutamate, mono and diglycerides, and a multitude of other many long named chemicals that I can’t begin to know.

    I walked across the parking lot to Costco to get a cheap cake for my son’s birthday party. The cult of the inexpensive called me like a siren. I braved costco, went to the cake department to make the big choice: chocolate or vanilla. That’s when I saw the ingredient list and recoiled in horror. It had something like 80 things on it, many of the things were questionable in terms of their edibility. Weird stuff to make it colorful and shelf stable longer. They probably add something to give the buttercream that crisp texture that burns your mouth. No wonder I feel sick after eating that garbage. My jaw dropped and I left in horror. You could not pay me to feed that to my kid anymore. Now that I know. (uhg).

    So I dragged my butt back across the parking lot and paid nearly twice as much for nearly half as much cake,and was never happier to do so. We make cupcakes at home (with short ingredient lists) and fed those to the kids whose pallets are not so discerning, while the adults indulged in the whipped cream iced, raspberry filled gorgeous vanilla cake made of a handful of simple ingredients. The adults all felt indulged, and why shouldn’t we, we were braving an 8 year old’s birthday party.

    So great, I’m ruined for Costco cakes for life. Next time you’re in there, take a gander at the ingredient list. If you have the patience to read the entire thing out loud, go ahead and buy that cake. But if just reading the label exhausts you, imagine how exhausting it is to digest that shit. For me anyway.

    By Barbara Byrge Food Happiness
  • 15 Dec
    Vintage For Christmas – The Case for Buying Used

    Vintage For Christmas – The Case for Buying Used

    Dear Family and Friends,

    I won’t be giving any new gifts this year. Which is weird to some. There is an unspoken taboo that you can’t give a gift that is used. The thought that you grabbed something off your shelf, slapped a bow on it and gave it as  a gift is so offensive, the presents have to be new in package, just to prove you didn’t do that. People even buy Tiffany boxes empty for top dollar, just for the illusion that the jewelry being gifted is new. But you know what is more offensive than getting a used gift? The thought of loved ones going into debt to buy gifts for me, or the expectation that I do the same. Lets give the planet, our wallets, and our expectations and break and just not do the thing where we go out and drop 3-4 figures at the shopping mall.

    I’ve given up completely on giving NEW gifts and here’s my top 5 reasons why:

    1. Eco Friendly! Buying used means you aren’t creating a demand for new goods to be manufactured. Less consumption is a great thing!
    2. Unique! Some things you just can’t buy new. So that vintage aloha shirt or dress from 1960 is certainly used, but you can’t buy one new if you wanted to. No one else at the Tiki bar will have the same shirt as you!
    3. Thoughtful! If you’re buying vintage and used things, you have to try a little harder. You can’t just grab some soap baskets on deep discount and decide later who is the stinkiest of all. You have to think about what that person might like out of the limited stock you will run into. You may even have to stalk their social media for ideas.
    4. Economical! If I buy used gifts, I can average about $10 per gift instead of $50+. If I have ten people to shop for, I’ve already saved $400. Time is money, and I certainly don’t want my loved ones slaving away for hours to buy me a gift. I bet yours don’t either.
    5. High End! That’s right, if you accept gently used gifts, you may find yourself in a sweet pair of lulu lemon leggings or Ralph Lauren (new old stock) sheets! I can’t afford designer brands off the shelf, but sometimes I run into a dazzling deal on my treasure hunts! If you can get over the fact that its gently used, you maybe be getting a Hermes Paris scarf!

    Now, all things considered vintage gifts can suck just as hard as new gifts. My advice is to not expect anything from your Christmas gifts. If you really want something, go buy it. Save up for it. Don’t put pressure on your loved ones to fulfill your Christmas destiny, and don’t feel like you hvae to fulfill theirs. Just keep it simple, inexpensive and thoughtful and your gift, new or used, will be from the heart and that’s what its all about afterall.

    By Barbara Byrge Happiness
  • 15 Dec

    Dear Family and Friends,

    I won’t be giving any new gifts this year. Which is weird to some. There is an unspoken taboo that you can’t give a gift that is used. The thought that you grabbed something off your shelf, slapped a bow on it and gave it as  a gift is so offensive, the presents have to be new in package, just to prove you didn’t do that. People even buy Tiffany boxes empty for top dollar, just for the illusion that the jewelry being gifted is new. But you know what is more offensive than getting a used gift? The thought of loved ones going into debt to buy gifts for me, or the expectation that I do the same. Lets give the planet, our wallets, and our expectations and break and just not do the thing where we go out and drop 3-4 figures at the shopping mall.

    I’ve given up completely on giving NEW gifts and here’s my top 5 reasons why:

    1. Eco Friendly! Buying used means you aren’t creating a demand for new goods to be manufactured. Less consumption is a great thing!
    2. Unique! Some things you just can’t buy new. So that vintage aloha shirt or dress from 1960 is certainly used, but you can’t buy one new if you wanted to. No one else at the Tiki bar will have the same shirt as you!
    3. Thoughtful! If you’re buying vintage and used things, you have to try a little harder. You can’t just grab some soap baskets on deep discount and decide later who is the stinkiest of all. You have to think about what that person might like out of the limited stock you will run into. You may even have to stalk their social media for ideas.
    4. Economical! If I buy used gifts, I can average about $10 per gift instead of $50+. If I have ten people to shop for, I’ve already saved $400. Time is money, and I certainly don’t want my loved ones slaving away for hours to buy me a gift. I bet yours don’t either.
    5. High End! That’s right, if you accept gently used gifts, you may find yourself in a sweet pair of lulu lemon leggings or Ralph Lauren (new old stock) sheets! I can’t afford designer brands off the shelf, but sometimes I run into a dazzling deal on my treasure hunts! If you can get over the fact that its gently used, you maybe be getting a Hermes Paris scarf!

     

    By Barbara Byrge Uncategorized
  • 06 Dec
    Soy Free Junk Food!

    Soy Free Junk Food!

    We are all on different diets. I for example am not on a low fat low calorie diet as many are. I’ve had a bowel resection, and constant diarhea, so I need more calories than the average person of my size, because what I eat is not being absorbed completely. So this post is not about low sugar health food. Its about tasty foods that I love to eat that don’t contain my personal food demon: soy.

    The Diet I AM ON is a soy free diet. I have discovered that soy makes me very ill, and in its many forms (oil, flour, beans, etc) in EVERYTHING, particularly anything processed. Anything that comes in a box or package is likely to have soy. Nearlly ALL chocolate has soy, WHY GOD? It certainly isnt’ because it makes things taste better. Its a cheap filler, an emulsifier and a dough conditioner but it serves no taste purpose in most cases! Just to really light you up, the term ‘natural flavors’ is often soy based something or another. So if you’re like me you need to avoid soy that means avoiding ANY label that says ‘natural flavors’. Ha haha hahaha. I try.  Just take note of what you eat that says ‘natural flavors’ it will blow your mind.

    Damn, that is hard!!! I’m here to help. 

    If you search, hunt, read labels, frequent health food stores, and spend a helluva lot of time, you can find foods that are premade but made with simpler and fewer ingredients. I’ve done that work, and continue to do it, so here’s my post to share some of those packaged foods with shorter ingredient lists, and some that tastiest soy free packaged foods there are out there!

    So here’s what I can’t have. Stroopwafel.

    Why? Because Ingredients:

    IngredientsWheat Flour, Glucose Syrup, Palm Fruit Oil, Sugar, Brown Sugar, Whole Eggs, Soy Flour, Molasses, Butter, Maple Sugar, Sea Salt, Natural Flavor, Oat Fiber, Soy Lecithin, Baking Soda

    A trifecta of SOY!!!! Why!? This is not asian cuisine, soy really doesn’t seem neccesary here. Uhg. Also noticed they snuck the ‘natural flavor’ in there too. Since ingredients are listed in order or quantity, ‘natural flavors’ is usually listed last, so just a dash. But this time it is listed before the fiber filler, the bulk, so there must be a lot of ‘it’ in there. I mean wtf is ‘it’?

    My answer: Strooperior Waffle

    Trader Joes Butter Waffle Cookies = 6 ingredients of delicousness + Fleur De Sel Caramels = 8 ingredients.

    Take the soft caramel and flatten it, then place it between two waffle cookies. Eat it with your eyelids half open moaning ‘mmmmmm’ (or just try not to!).

    It is a REVELATION of delicouness, and resonates stroopwafel for sure! Best of all, after I ate this I didn’t run to the bathroom 🙂

     

    Stay tuned, I’ll add more soy free yummies here soon!

    By Barbara Byrge Food Uncategorized