This is a great recipe to make with children. Except for cutting the lemons in half, no dangerous equipment is used and the result is instant (especially if you use chilled water). If reaming is too hard for the kids you can use a regular juicer or handheld squeezer (and add an extra step of pouring the liquid through a strainer). My son wanted to use a "slice" squeezer and I cut slices of the rangpur lime for him to squeeze in it.
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Blogs and Forums /
Food Blogs
Love Apple Farm's Cynthia Sandberg, the source of Manresa's wonderful biodynamic vegetables, tells you the secrets to growing vegetables, etc.
When not driving very fast, Chuck eats well. Simply, our favorite restaurant reviews blog. Travels afar for the great meals of the world.
SF Chronicle's restaurant critic Michael Bauer blogs on restaurant issues, pizza restaurant of the week, and more. Some excellent posts with uncensored comments from readers.
Kate Hopkins brings to light the many problems of the US food system - we don't think the folks at the USDA, etc., like this. Writing a book on Whisky.
Derrick Schneider freelances for the AoE and the SF Chronicle's wine section, amongst others. He teaches a wine class, makes his own vinegar, and you'll want to eat his duck confit. Collects puzzles.
Rowan Jacobsen, book author and contributor to AoE, has a blog, maps, oyster sources and oyster tasting notes.
NY Times restaurant critic Frank Bruni tells us the ins and outs of the NY restaurant scene, including chef interviews. Other Times writers contribute.
Txacoli's (Michael Jones) stories of life as a chef and caterer and more are, at times, some of the best reads in the food blog world.
David, a pastry chef and author, lives in Paris, and teaches us about food. We enjoy his tales and photos of his culinary adventures.
An artist, Jordana, writes about Chef Mauro and their adventures in NYC - with a focus on food, wine and cheese. Very long, interesting but infrequent posts.
Barbara Fisher has great commentary and very detailed recipes. Also really excellent cookbook reviews.
Regina Scrambling sends out frequent observations, mostly on food, that are hilarious and biting. Note: Names have been changed to protect the guilty.
Harold McGee (On Food and Cooking) continues his explorations on the science of food and its transformations. (Irregular postings.)
Chris Cosentino's blog focuses on the less popular parts of animals and how to cook them. Or you can sample some at Incanto in San Francisco, where he is the chef.
Author and Chef Michael Ruhlman blogs on food issues and cooking. Anthony Bourdain is a frequent guest writer.
Cookie Crumb does the fun, not-so-serious food blog thang to the hilt.
The experiments in the kitchen of Steve Sando, owner of Rancho Gordo, the heirloom, exotic bean company.
Lara Ferroni's food blog has beautiful photos and covers a lot of topics. Luscious looking desserts, too! Formerly known as Cookbook 411.)
A fairly new food blog that it hard to describe but has spunk, humor and pleasing graphics.
Mikael and Vedat focus on reviewing top European restaurants and these reviews are a pleasure to read. (Infrequent postings.)
The posts from Hillel and crew always seem quite interesting. Be sure to check out the electronic cookbooks, too, as the word Wow comes to mind!
Farmgirl Fare and
Susan runs a farm (posts a daily pic), she teaches cooking classes and is building a small artisan bread bakery.
Tana Butler celebrates small farms and their produce in her chronicles (mainly in the Santa Cruz area).
Joanne is loving this blog, which seems devoted to High-End cupcakes. It's written by Chockylit and has recipes and beautiful photos of cupcakes.
Bored with food? Check out the inventive dishes and drop-dead gorgeous photography from Chefs Aki Kamozawa and H. Alexander Talbot.
Lori Baltazar's dessert-focused blog has some of the most beautiful photos of all food blogs.
Brett Emerson gives us “a stomach's-eye view of the world.” He's in the process of building his own restaurant from scratch, in San Francisco, to be called contigo.
Rev. Jennifer in Syracuse grows her own vegetables, cooks a lot(!) and advocates sustainable farming.
Robert Peyton’s commentary on food, restaurant reviews, recipes, and more.
A community of Food Bloggers ask and answer each others questions.
Food, Wine and Cheese Blogs that Score
Updated November, 2009 - Jack
Food Issues
Bonnie Powell leads this blog that has become the source for news about organics, sustainable ag, food politics, Big Food acting badly, etc.
NY Times health columnist Tara Parker-Pope posts frequently on health issues; the food, obesity and diabetes posts are quite good.
Marion Nestle's comments on the food issues of the day.
Ali writes about the difficulty in feeding kids properly. Some great posts!
Tom Philpott does sustainable farming while critiquing industrial agriculture. Also check out the rest of Grist.
Read food economist Parke Wilde's blog if you care about food, nutrition and the US government's involvement.
Chef Ann Cooper is transforming school cafeterias into culinary classrooms for students. Posts/links to articles on kids, food, obesity, more.
"Free yourself from the fossil food chain." - Various writers contribute on all sorts of food subjects.
Heath Putnam of Wooly Pigs gives you a crash course in pig raising and slaughtering, including the delicious Mangalitsa.
Samuel Fromartz's blog aims to "shine a light on the food system so we can make better food choices." He wrote Organic, Inc., too.
A web-magazine focused on food issues along with cooking, food sources, etc.
A blog focused on eating locally grown food. Lots of news links to eating locally. Led by Jen Maiser of Life Begins at 30. We occasionally contribute.
New, and the title says it all.
Vic Keegan advocates the ending of all government food subsidies. (Infrequent posts.)
Canadian physician Yoni Freedhoff sounds off about food policy, obesity and nutrition.
Chef Jay Porter's restaurant blog (The Linkery, San Diego) discusses food sources and other topics of interest.
This site focuses on organic food, sustainable farming, recipes, etc., with gorgeous photos.
Cheese Blogs
Michael Claypool and Sasha Davies traveled from Maine to Alaska, visiting small cheese makers and reported their finds and stories. Our favorite cheese blog. (Irregular postings.)
Pacific Northwest Cheese Project
Tami Parr reports and profiles the cheeses and cheesemakers of Washington, Oregon and British Columbia. She also writes for the Portland Food & Drink site.
Jamie Forrest's cheese blog, who "really, really, REALLY likes cheese." Although more oriented toward the Northeast, it has the best all-around cheese news of any blog.
The Cheese Mistress is based in Austin, TX. The title is derived from "maître fromager" - one who selects and cures cheeses. The site has a wonderful reference section.
This new cheese blog by the Underground Cheese Lady intends to be "the place where the world finds out about great Wisconsin artisan cheese." It's off to a great start!
The blog of Anne Saxelby's cheese store, which is located at the Essex St. Market (New York City). She definitely has a passion for small cheese producers and has visited quite a few of them.
Nadia Muna Gil's excellent cheese blog focuses on answering people's everyday cheese questions. She'd also be happy to do a cheese event for you in New York City.
Not quite a cheese blog. This journal is written by Mary Quicke in Devon, who makes Quicke's Cheddar. Updated monthly it chronicles the news of the farm and dairy.
Food & Wine Blog Aggregators
They list 72 Food and Wine blogs. You can rate threads there, too.
They organize restuarant reviews by bloggers and others by restaurant.
Wine Blogs
W. Blake Gray's wine blog is my favorite new wine blog of 2009. A must read.
Alder Yarrow has a great writing style and palate. Great commentary, reviews of SF wine bars, wine event reports and scores.
NY Times wine critic Eric Asimov is having fun sharing more of his insights and stories on wine, beer and spirits.
Brooklynguy's Wine and Food Blog
Neil's enthusiam for food and wine is contagious. His visits to Burgundy and the Loire Valley are detailed.
This is a relatively new (and under publicized) blog from SF Chronicle's wine section editor, and main wine writer, Jon Bonné. Diverse in scope and a fun read.
Bertrand Celce's photography shines as he visits interesting vineyards in France and beyond. He always seems to create one of the five best wine blog posts each year.
Ryan and Gabriella Opaz are frequently posting about the wines of Spain and Portugal, educating their readers along the way.
Thomas Pellechia, wine veteran and wine book writer, tackles a wine subject or wine myth in detail about twice a-week.
Lyle Fass gets down and dirty on a plethora of wine subjects. Excellent wine tasting notes. Worships German wine.
Wine writer Fredric Koeppel shares his knowledge on this blog and his website.
Keith Levenberg serves up some serious wisdom on the world of wine and food. So refreshing!
Probably the best wine industry blog. Diverse and intelligent.
Gary Vaynerchuk, about four times per week, tastes 3-6 wines and tells you what he thinks. He is demystifying wine and teaching viewers to trust their own tastes.
Adrian Murcia, fromager and sommelier, explores wine and food, often from Rioja.
Chris Kissack's website has a tremendous number of wine reviews, descriptions of visits to wineries and is frequently updated.
Jamie Goode, wine journalist, has a huge, comprehensive and great wine website. His blog fills in some details.
Lenn Thompson's blog focuses on New York wine, especially Long Island. The Long Island Wine Tourist Board needs to name (and pay) him as their spokesperson!
Les carnets de François Audouze
François has a tremendous passion for old wines - and has tasted more of them than practically anyone. His eBob posts accelerated my interest in old wines. His blog is worth visiting for the photos alone.
Alfonso Cevola's quirky wine-ish blog that focuses on food, wine and wine professionals.
Joe Dressner imparts his irreverent wine wisdom. Leads the Real Wine Revival. Also posts as Captain Tumor Man.
Nilay Gandhi reviews a bottle about once-a-week, exactly one very long paragraph in length.
Kyle Phillip's extensive and frequent reviews of Italian wine. Check out the Lagrein post, for example. Also, writes Cosa Bolle in Pentola.
Winery PR-man Tom Wark is quite opinionated and prolific. Terrific wine industry news. Also writes this.
Food & Wine Forums
Updated September, 2008
There are quite a few US-based Food and Wine forums on the net. For Food forums, there are just too many at this time for me to guess where to read or post about a particular subject. As for Wine forums, I find the Mark Squires BB to be the one I visit regularly and post to. What I don't like about all of these forums is that it's too hard to find particular topics you're interested in. I think there needs to be a big merger of these forums and a reorganization; we really need the equivalent of the brilliant AVSForum for food and wine. - Jack
Food Forums
Lots of fine dining restaurant discussions, comments about NY Times critics, listings of food articles in the major newspapers, etc., etc. Posters include Anthony Bourdain and Mimi Sheraton.
It’s a huge food forum, but more focused on casual dining restaurants, etc. To find the best burger joint, po’ boy, etc., whilst traveling, this site is the one to go to.
You have to register before you can even read anything. This does not encourage visitors, but also makes it a private forum; it's postings are not found by search engines. This is where you can read about secret restaurants, for example, or criticism of big name chefs.
I think the more serious food bloggers post here...at least that's my impression.
Chocolate & Zucchini's Food Forum
The new place to talk about sustainability issues with regards to food, agriculture and more.
A quite active forum for professional chefs.
Mark Squire’s BB - Food & Wine Sub-Forum
This is, generally, more focused on food & wine pairings.
This forum for consumers, moderated by the Organic Consumers Association, has discussions for organics, GMOs, food saftey, etc.
Coffee Forums
This is a very popular and active coffee forum. Worth a visit.
Wine Forums
This is the top wine forum on the net (at least, in the English language). Posters include François Audouze, Mauss Francois, Roberto Rogness, Robert Parker, Antonio Galloni, David Schildknecht, Victor de la Serna, importers Dan Kravitz and Terry Theise (occasionally), and quite a few winemakers and winery owners, including those from Pégaü, Pax, Carlisle, Siduri, Two Hands, Holdredge, Kosta Browne, A.P. Vin and Loring. A horde of CellarTracker users live here, too. Update: The bad part is that there's a lot of censorship too; too many interesting threads are suddenly "closed" - a shame. And some long time frequent posters have been banned; some went to UK Wine Forum.
With the rest of their site requiring pay for access, you'd almost never know you can still access their forum without paying a fee. I can't find anything of interest to me here, but that doesn't mean you won't.
The third most popular wine forum, it is definitely worth a good look. Posters include Steve Edmunds and Robin Garr.
An eclectic, intelligent group who don't worship California wines. Joe Dressner is a regular poster.
This seems to be the most popular UK wine forum. They also have a Beer Forum.
West Coast Wine Net has more postings...
...but VinoCellar Wine Forum has the best divisions of topics, making it easier to find what you’re looking for.
An Australian Wine Forum. Very focused on Australian wines.
A new forum and a bit more casual. It's gaining some popularity.
Steve Tanzer's forum for (paying) members of his website. As of summer 2005, it's the forum I visit the second most often. What is great is that people ask Steve questions and he answers most of them.
Roy Hersh's forum focuses on Port and Madiera, plus travel to Portugal.
Lots of posts on wines being tasted by its members.
The Vayniacs hold court here.
A forum for Home Winemakers. Not just wine made from grapes, but all sorts of wine made from all kinds of fruit and vegetables.