Saturday, 25 January 2014

greek

Consumers Getting More of a Taste For Greek Cuisine

Daphne's Rustic Greek Flatbread Pizza 
Chain and independent restaurants alike take advantage of an Old World appetite.
You know what a classic Greek diner looks like. Open 24-7. Gleaming silver siding. Bands of neon lighting run along every seam. Tabletop jukeboxes packed with ’50s hits. Autographed photos of debatably famous patrons. And, of course, a sprawling menu that can deliver pancakes at midnight, lobster tail for breakfast, a handful of Grecian specials, and all the many points in-between.
Erase that image from your mind.
Modern Greek restaurants couldn’t be more different. First, there’s not a miniature jukebox or a sheet of silver siding in sight at any of them. The Mediterranean cuisine isn’t an afterthought, either. No longer is it confined to the back of the multipaged laminated menu–now it’s the focus. Whether it’s casual choices like pita sandwiches, kebabs, and Greek salads, or more adventuresome items like grilled octopus and flaming saganaki cheese, Medi-minded restaurants are showcasing their Hellenic heritage to a growing number of American diners.
According to Technomic’s recent Ethnic Food & Beverage Consumer Trend Report, 49 percent of consumers say they have tried Greek cuisine and liked it. An additional 23 percent say they haven’t tried it yet, but would like to give it a go. Even more impressively is the fact that 32 percent of respondents say that they order Greek foods or flavors occasionally (about every 90 days).
Attributed to several factors
This rising interest can be attributed to several factors. Celebrity chefs like Cat Cora, Michael Symon, and Michael Psilakis are celebrating their Greek roots and teaching diners about the cuisine through their restaurants, cookbooks, and television shows. High-profile Greek restaurants like José Andrés’ Zaytinya in Washington, D.C., New York’sMolyvos, Palo Alto, California’s Evvia, and its sister restaurant, San Francisco’s Kokkari, have all earned national attention.
On top of this, the Mediterranean Diet has earned a growing legion of followers in the States since it was introduced in 1993. “The Mediterranean Diet’s not a trend at this point; it’s mainstream,” says Sara Baer-Sinnott, the president of Oldways, which promotes the concept. “Heritage diets are the future, because they’re simple, clean, healthy food.”
This dietary approach–based on traditional dining patterns in the cradle of Western civilization–promotes eating more fresh fruits and vegetables, beans, nuts, healthy grains, fish, poultry, and olive oil, as well as small amounts of red wine and dairy. At the same time, it advises cutting back on red meat, sugar, and processed foods.
Pano Karatassos, executive chef of Atlanta’s Kyma and a second generation Greek-American, sees interest in the Mediterranean diet as a reaction to the dining excesses of the past. “The ’90’s was about taking your Tums and having a great dinner made up of decadent foods,” he says. “We knew that beef and butter could put on the pounds, but we didn’t know what it could do to our energy levels.”
Kevin Miles, president and COO of Mediterranean-inspired fast-casual chain Zöes Kitchen, believes that consumers are finally coming around. “They’re realizing, ‘Olive oil is better for me than corn oil. And legumes and grains are better than eating potato chips.’”
This isn’t just a company line. In Technomic’s recent Ethnic Food & Beverage Consumer Trend Report, 32 percent of diners said that they thought of Greek food as healthy and rated it the fourth-healthiest cuisine out of 30 different types. The only cuisines that ranked higher were sushi/Japanese, Chinese, and the larger Mediterranean category.
The Greek players
With all of this interest in Grecian cuisine, there has been an uptick in the founding and expansion of fast-casual concepts focusing on it. Zöes Kitchen has 61 restaurants in 12 states with an eye on having 77 outlets up and running by the year’s end. The chain is “Mediterranean-inspired with a Southern twist, since our origins are in Birmingham, Alabama,” Miles says. So alongside the hummus, pita sandwiches, and kebabs, you’ll find options like pimento cheese, chicken salad sandwiches, and chocolate cake.
There’s a different kind of fusion happening at Daphne’s California Greek,which is, as you would expect, West Coast cuisine with a Mediterranean flair. The chain has been around for two decades, though it was known as Daphne’s Greek Café before CEO William Trefethen bought the company and refocused its direction in 2010. “It’s like having a bar,” he says. “You have to remodel it every three or four years.”
Though the restaurant started out offering mostly traditional Grecian cuisine, Trefethen felt the concept was too niche for mass expansion. “The Greek part of it had to be demystified,” he says. “Even though there is a rise in Greek restaurants and elements in the dining scene, there’s still a lot of pushback, especially from young and middle-aged adult males.”
Now you can still find classic dishes like spanakopita, falafel, and steak kebab mixed in with more Californian choices, such as chargrilled salmon, flatbread pizzas, and a burger served on a pita. Right now, the chain has close to 60 locations that mostly spread throughout the Golden State, though there are outlets in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Boulder, Colorado.
The Little Greek Restaurant chain has a menu that president and co-owner Nick Vojnovic says possesses a “hardcore traditional core that has been slightly Americanized.” Diners can choose from classic choices like baked moussaka (a Grecian “lasagna” made with eggplant, potatoes, and ground beef covered in béchamel sauce then baked golden), pastitsio (a Mediterranean spin on mac ’n’ cheese consisting of macaroni and ground beef topped with béchamel and baked), and dolmades (grape leaves stuffed with herbed rice, tomatoes, and ground beef). Or there are options that would be familiar to stateside diners, like a roast turkey wrap, a cheeseburger, and a Caesar salad. With eight restaurants in Florida and a ninth in Dallas currently, Vojnovic plans to open 25 stores in the next five years.
There are other concepts looking to make their mark and expand, including Cava Mezze Grill, Roti Mediterranean Grill, CK Grille, andGarbanzo Mediterranean Grill. All of these chains are looking to educate their customers about the flavors, history, and benefits of Greek food in the hopes of making a widespread and lasting impression on mainstream diners.

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Learning Greek
As with any ethnic cuisine, one of the biggest challenges for Medi-minded restaurateurs is helping diners understand what they’re being offered and why it would appeal to their tastes. Since many traditional dishes possess Greek names with which consumers are unfamiliar, there’s an education process that needs to occur to win over the uninitiated. To help ease first-timers into the experience, Little Greek Restaurant restaurants feature large photographs of each dish, as well as a pronunciation guide.
Daphne’s California Greek has a terminology page in its menu that describes less-common dishes like baklava and falafel. The company has a policy of actively engaging with consumers who they believe are unfamiliar with their offerings. “You can tell who’s a new customer,” Trefethen says. “They come in and stand there with a look that says, ‘Wow. What’s that?’ We’ve trained our managers to come around the counter to talk to them.”
To help diners quickly grasp what they’re about to eat, Trefethen likes to compare Mediterranean to a fast-casual option that is already ubiquitous in the States. “It’s like healthy Mexican food,” he says. “There’s not a lot that’s different. You have a pita instead of tortilla. You have some sort of protein in there with lettuce and tomatoes. And instead of cheddar you have feta cheese.”
Giving diners dishes that are similar to foods that they’ve previously enjoyed creates a point of entry to Greek cuisine that can later be expanded to include more traditional dishes that incorporate completely unfamiliar flavors and preparations. At Zöes Kitchen, this means giving the consumer the choice to enjoy mainstream items like a tuna salad sandwich or a grilled chicken sandwich. “We’ve created a non-intimidating and non-polarizing environment,” Miles says. “Even if you’ve never had Greek food in your life, you can feel comfortable going to Zöes and finding something that makes sense to you.”
Even at the Little Greek Restaurants, which have a more traditionally focused menu, first-time diners tend to try dishes that mimic American favorites. “The normal point of entry for the average consumer is a Greek salad or chicken skewers,” says Vojnovic. “They get that. Then they try the gyro or dolmades.”

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Best in show
After customers have decided that they enjoy Greek food, what then keeps them coming back? At Daphne’s California Greek, pita sandwiches are the top seller, followed by kebabs and salads. Over at Little Greek Restaurant, chicken pita and gyros take top honors, edging out runners-up like the Greek salad with grilled chicken and the chicken souvlaki skewers. And at Zöes Kitchen, the chicken kebabs and chicken roll-up are the winning dishes.
The latter has been so successful that the restaurant has rolled out chain extensions of the sandwich filled with spinach or steak. Hummus has also been “wildly successful,” Miles says.
At the upscale Kyma, Karatassos has an unexpected No. 1 mover. “I sell octopus on every table,” he says. “It’s the new calamari.” Grilled and served with a red onion salad tossed with zingy red wine vinaigrette, it’s not a dish that Karatassos expected to take off. He’s been pleasantly surprised by its success. “It shows that even in a town like Atlanta–with a lot of great straightforward Southern-style cooking–we can still introduce diners to great ingredients that they’ve never had before,” he says.
Competition and crossover
All of the fast-casual Greek and Mediterranean concepts interviewed for this article have one competitor that they agree on: Chipotle. However,Panera, Subway, Five Guys, and Pei Wei were all mentioned as lunchtime challengers by one or more of the subjects. Additionally, Vojnovic ranked Chili’s and Applebee’s as his No. 1 dinner rival.
Even as these Greek and Mediterranean concepts try to cross over into the mainstream and gain out-of-category success, more restaurants are trying to incorporate Grecian touches to woo customers. According to Technomic’s 2011 Mediterranean Market Intelligence Report, more establishments than ever were experimenting with Mediterranean flavors and preparations in the last several years. Boston Market introduced Mediterranean Green Beans into its Gourmet Market Sides line; Cousins Subs had two Mediterranean-themed subs as limited-time offers; Red Robin Gourmet Burgers fired up a Mt. Olympus Burger and a Mediterranean Chicken Salad as limited-time offers; ZPizza offers a Mediterranean Rustica personal-sized pizza; and Romano’s Macaroni Grill has several offerings currently, like a Mediterranean olives tapas plate and a Mediterranean sea bass entrée.
The future of an ancient tradition
“Americans have only been exposed to the tip of the iceberg,” says renowned cookbook author Diane Kochilas, who is set to publish The Country Cooking of Greece this fall. “Outside the two coasts–and maybe Chicago–Greek food is all about souvlaki, gyro, spanakopita, Greek salad, and baklava.” This means there’s potentially room for growth for menus at existing concepts and for restaurants looking to break into the field.
Zöes Kitchen’s Miles believes that there will be across-the-board growth for the cuisine. “You’re going to see an increased amount of Mediterranean-inspired items in restaurants,” he says. “The question is: How many of them will be true Mediterranean and how many of them will be Mediterranean items at other kinds of restaurants like an Italian concept or a sandwich concept?”
Vojnovic has his own vision for the future. “I predict that there will be a thousand Greek-Mediterranean restaurants out there in 10 years,” he says. “American consumers are looking for something different. Well, here’s a classic food that’s been around for thousands of years that’s healthy and flavorful.”

Modern Irish cuisine

http://www.ireland.com/en-us/what-is-available/food-and-drink/articles/modern-irish-food

We might be a small island, but when it comes to food, we’ve got big culinary ambitions
Irish food has been rustic and filling – the kind of stuff that would get you through a cold winter; the kind of stuff that warms the cockles. Irish stew, colcannon, beef and Guinness pie – they’re all great dishes, but dig a little deeper and you’ll find a new strand of creative Irish cuisine fuelled by artisan producers, innovative chefs, and world-class ingredients that are right on our doorstep.
“You’ve got all the right geography, grass, animals, breeding and farming,” superstar chef Jamie Oliver told newspapers on his last visit to Dublin, “no excuses for not having incredible, incredible stuff.”
We would tend to agree: from sea to shore, there’s never been a better range of produce to tuck into: super-fresh oysters, mussels and hand-dived scallops; estate venison; grass-fed free-range beef; extraordinary sea vegetables plucked from salty Atlantic waters; homemade fudge and handmade chocolate; award-winning black pudding; the prized Comber potato; rich, deep yellow country butter. All of these ingredients, and basket-loads more, are being used to their best advantage by dynamic chefs all over the island of Ireland.
“We're starting to cotton on to the fact that we have some of the best raw ingredients in the world,” says food writer Aoife Carrigy of Holymackerel.ie. “There are lots of pristine Irish fish available to us here, and in terms of meat and dairy, it's down to the green, green grass that visitors find so remarkable, but which we take for granted. It's no surprise that it was the farmhouse cheese-makers who were the pioneers of the new wave of artisan food producers: they were working with such fantastic raw material in the form of local milk. Twenty-five years later, there are now over 50 of them producing some world-class cheese of every style.”
In his book The Country Cooking of Ireland, US writer and editor Coleman Andrews notes that, “All over Ireland –from the artisanal ateliers of West Cork to the lush market gardens of County Wicklow, to bustling Galway and burgeoning County Antrim – a new culinary world is taking shape."

The bold mix of Irish produce and international influences has hit its zenith at critically acclaimed restaurants such as the one Michelin Star Cliff House Hotel in County Waterford, where Head Chef Matrijn Kajuiter invents creative dishes like “Bantry Bay organic salmon with bonbon, mi-cuit, iced marinated garden beetroot, pickled cucumber, herb cream, salmon eggs and whiskey oak smoke”. In Dublin, The Greenhouse won Best Newcomer at the Irish Restaurant Awards, while Michelin-starred Chapter One scored the title of Ireland’s Best Restaurant 2012 for the fourth year in a row.
Elsewhere, you’ll find local restaurants, country houses and small hotels becoming bastions of modern Irish, with a focus on local produce mixed with pure imagination. Among those causing a stir are The Long Room at Doonbeg in County Clare, Newforge House in County Armagh, the award-winning Lough Erne Resort in County Fermanagh, James Street South in Belfast, and Dunbrody House in County Wexford.
If it’s fresh innovative cooking you’re after, you've come to the right place.

National Irish Coffee Day: Irish Coffee recipes to tickle your taste buds

If the winter blues have got you down-in-the-dumps, how does a warm and tasty beverage sound right about now? If you're in the mood to tickle your taste buds, go grab your mug. According to a Jan. 24 article published by theVillage VoiceNational Irish Coffee Day is Jan. 25and Americans are ready to celebrate! This annual holiday celebrates Irish Coffee, a popular cocktail typically made with black coffee, sugar, whipped cream and Irish whiskey.
Irish Coffee
Folks have been enjoying Irish Coffee for decades. Legend has it that restaurant owner/bartender Joe Sheridan invented the concoction in Ireland back in 1942 for a group of cold and weary travelers. He described his drink as "cream as rich as an Irish brogue, coffee as strong as a friendly hand, sugar sweet as the tongue of a rouge and whiskey smooth as the wit of the land" and the rest, as they say, is history.
Celebrate National Irish Coffee Day 2014
  • In honor of National Irish Coffee Day, McCormick & Schmick's will be servin' up their "World Famous Irish Coffee" for $5 all day long on Jan. 25, 2014.
  • Fast Eddies will also be celebrating the delicious holiday all day long with $4 Irish Coffees on Jan. 25, 2014.
Irish Coffee Day Recipes
  • Original Irish Coffee - This recipe, from The Food Network, calls for freshly brewed hot coffee, brown sugar, Irish whiskey and heavy cream.
  • Irish Coffee with Homemade Irish Cream - This decadent recipe, from Foodista, calls for Irish whiskey, Irish Cream liqueur, hot coffee, milk, instant coffee, chocolate syrup, sweetened condensed milk, chocolate shavings and almond and vanilla extracts.
  • Irish Coffee Martini - You'll need Irish whiskey, sugar, espresso, heavy cream and green whipped cream for this delish drink.
  • Coffee Cream Martinis - This recipe calls for sugar, chocolate syrup, vodka, Bailey's Irish Cream and Kahlua.
  • Irish Coffee Cupcakes - Irish Coffee in a sweet treat? Now we're talking!
http://www.examiner.com/article/national-irish-coffee-day-irish-coffee-recipes-to-tickle-your-taste-buds

Friday, 17 January 2014

Farmers markets

Farmers' Markets

George's Market, Belfast
George's Market, Belfast
Colorful stalls, recipe swapping and a cheeky haggle over fresh fruit – the Irish farmers' market isn't just a place to pick up artisan cheese, it's a cultural event in itself
Rich steaming hot apple juice made from local organic apples from Fermanagh, glistening oysters caught fresh off the coast of Galway served with crisp white wine, and an abundance of farmhouse cheese and local salamis – the Irish farmers’ market is a bedrock of local life. This is where you can try real authenticIrish food with an artisan twist.
“Farmers’ markets make an incredibly important contribution to the Irish food scene; local people growing and selling their produce is a completely different shopping experience that reconnects people with food,” reveals renowned celebrity chef and cookery school owner Darina Allen.
The bottom line is that when you buy something at a farmers' market in Ireland, chances are that the person who's grown it is nearby, if not right in front of you. “Hours can be spent wandering from stall to stall meeting proud local producers who can tell where and when your vegetables were picked, and how to cook them to perfection,” says Grace Cox fromLoveIrishFood.ie. “You might start out with a small bag, but you'll find you can leave with it filled to the brim.”
Craft stalls often sit alongside food, and natural soaps, handmade jewelry and art have also been spotted as the original concept of a farmers' market has grown and broadened to become a term that also includes “food markets”. The good news is that all around the island, on any given day, there’s a market going on, whether in a big city Victorian space, or a small village gathering. Either way, you can expect a heady buzz of scents, sounds and tastes.

Traditional Irish food




Traditional Irish food





Italy has pasta, Spain paella, America has burgers and France has escargot. So what about Ireland?

Rediscovered traditions

Aside from Irish stew (which has always been a hit), our island’s food hasn't exactly been famous throughout the world. Now, though, the island’s smartest eateries and best chefs are rediscovering Ireland’s culinary heritage, with respected artisan producers are turning out everything from award-winning black (blood) pudding (Kanturks) to acclaimed raw milk cheese (Durrus).
The result? Our produce is hitting the shelves in some of the world’s most salubrious delis and department stores (Fortnum & Mason in London; Dean & Delucca in United States), and a wave of Irish chefs are reawakening traditional recipes.
“In recent years there has been a renaissance on the Irish food scene,” famous Irish chef Darina Allen told the Irish Independent newspaper. “Irish chefs have become more adventurous and many have a greater appreciation of quality Irish produce, giving them the confidence to serve Irish food proudly.”
Foods that have been ignored for years are being revived and served up in hip cafés and restaurants all over the island, with regional specialities. 
You can try a "blaa" (a soft white roll) in Waterford; tuck into an Ulster fry for breakfast in Belfast; snack on dulse (salty seaweed) in coastal areas; or discover your adventurous side with some fried Lough Neagh eel. Then there’s soda bread, potato farls, Irish stew, crab claws and seafood chowder. And that’s not forgetting the potato…
“People sometimes make fun of the fact that we are still so obsessed with the potato,” says chef Liz Moore, formerly of Belle Isle Cookery School in Fermanagh. “But look at the amount of amazing dishes that are derived from it: champ (oniony, buttery, pure comfort food), fadge (potato cakes), boxty, colcannon and more. There are so many versions of soda and wheaten breads that cooks have written volumes of cookery books about it."

Pop into any café, restaurant or pub and you’ll still see traditional Irish dishes on the menu, from a side of rich, treacly (molasses) soda bread to indulgently buttery crab claws, to fashionable bacon and cabbage. Tradition is alive and well throughout the island, and in a world where food trends are becoming homogenous, it’s good to know that you can kick back and taste Ireland’s authenticity without any effort at all.

Japan lifts ban on Irish beef

Japan lifts ban on Irish beef

Ireland's two billion euro beef business has been given a massive boost after Japan lifted a ban on imports from Ireland 


The announcement was made on day two of an official trip to Japan by Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Minister for Agriculture and FoodSimon Coveney after they met Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe.
President of the Irish Farmers' Association John Bryan said the re-opening of the Japanese market is a very significant and positive development.
"This sends a strong signal to other markets that our beef adheres to the highest standards in the world," he said.
The IFA said the main Japanese demand from Ireland will be for mountain chain and tongue, with the potential to export up to 15 million euro a year.
"It is clear that the agri food sector is a significant driver of economic growth and employment in the Irish economy," Mr Kenny said.
"Today's announcement is another key milestone for the Irish agri food sector, and the beef sector in particular. It is a sign of international confidence in the quality of Irish food and is a further vindication of Ireland's focus on quality and sustainability."
The re-opening of the significant Japanese market followed detailed technical negotiations between the Department of Agriculture and Food and authorities in Tokyo over the last two years.
Mr Coveney said: "Japan is a sophisticated market with sophisticated consumers, who are seeking beef product which Ireland can provide.
"Japan also sets a benchmark for food safety standards, and for that reason access for Irish beef is very significant from a reputational point of view."
Cormac Healy of Meat Industry Ireland, part of the Ibec lobby group, was in Tokyo for the announcement.
"The positive decision by the Japanese authorities to reopen their market for Irish beef is important in its own right for this market and will hopefully be a significant step towards access for Irish beef and lamb to markets in this region of the world," he said.
Press Association