Pages

Monday, January 7, 2019

The Foods and Wines of Spain - A Review Focused on Food Self-Sufficiency - Part 2 - by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



The Foods and Wines of Spain – A Review Focused on Food Self-Sufficiency – Part 2 – by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


Ruth Paget’s Mediterranean Diet – Spanish Style


I am not selling this diet, but this is what I have developed for myself as a nexus of budget and personal preference over 3 decades.

I look for recipes that fit the following pattern when I look through Spanish cookbooks:

-Monday through Thursday:

I eat protein combinations from 3 to 4 appetizer dishes and at least one pantry meal made from rice, beans, or pasta.  I snack on homemade popcorn with sea salt.

-Friday:

Baked fish plus baked, potato wedges with Italian seasoning are my favorite.

-Saturday

A chicken or pork dish

-Sunday

A seafood dish three times a month and beef once a month.

Sometimes the order is reversed on the weekends.

In Monterey (California) where I live now, I tend to eat chicken and seafood at Vietnamese, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean restaurants.

I like Spanish food, because the basic ingredients can grow in almost all 50 states during summer and in greenhouses during winter.  Hydroponic irrigation/agriculture systems in greenhouses might make this possible.

Reading Casas’ cookbook at a young age made me think that many American states could be self-sufficient in food and have a surplus to sell or store in the form of gazpacho.

Gazpacho is like V8 with the addition of garlic toast all blended and chilled.  You can store some brands at room temperature and refrigerate them after opening.

Purdue University or Cal Poly need to test if gazpacho is a complete protein.  Bread is made from wheat grains, but do seeds in tomatoes, cucumbers, and pepper constitute the “grain plus seed” formula to make a full protein?  Fact check needed for a delicious and nutritious cold soup drink or salad in a bottle.

Using my region as an example, South Monterey County is also ranching country for beef, the coasts can provide fish and seafood, Idaho is close for chickens, and lamb for Easter can be shipped in from New Mexico or New Zealand.

Monterey County might even be able to make a surplus for storage or sales to other places of some items.

We already have crops growing in our county like lettuce that is the size of Vermont and New Hampshire put together.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books