Showing posts with label feast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feast. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

UMass students feast on 15,000-pound fruit salad


(AP) — In what’s become an annual tradition, the University of Massachusetts celebrated the start of the new academic year with a delicious, healthy, record-breaking dish.


About 500 students and staff at the Amherst campus on Monday sliced, diced, pitted and peeled 150 varieties of fruit to create a salad weighing more than 15,000 pounds. The salad was mixed in a 15-foot diameter swimming pool.


It included 20 varieties of apples weighing more than 3,600 pounds; 19 varieties of melon weighing more than 2,500 pounds; peaches, bananas, oranges and berries as well as more exotic fruits including quince, passion fruit and rambutan.


A Guinness World Records representative certified the record.


UMass in recent years has started the semester with record-breaking seafood stews and stir fries.


Associated Press




Offbeat Headlines



UMass students feast on 15,000-pound fruit salad

Friday, June 7, 2013

Hold The Hot Dog: National Park Visitors Can Feast On Bison Burgers



Stefan Larrson serves up bison sloppy Joes and juniper-smoked bison tenderloin, which will be offered at the Yellowstone National Park this summer. Each park will have different menus featuring local foods.



Stefan Larrson serves up bison sloppy Joes and juniper-smoked bison tenderloin, which will be offered at the Yellowstone National Park this summer. Each park will have different menus featuring local foods.



Maggie Starbard/NPR


The director of the National Park Service doesn’t have anything against hot dogs or pizza being served in eateries in national parks.


“But I wanted more options, and more healthy choices,” Jonathon Jarvis told me at a tasting event this week to unveil new standards for the concessionaires who operate more than 250 food and beverage operations in national parks.


“There is no reason that you should have to take a vacation from eating well when you visit a national park,” Jarvis told a group that had gathered on the National Mall to sample some of the most innovative new menu options.


As Jarvis announced details of the initiative, the crowd was distracted by the wafting aromas of sauteing crab cakes, a creation of chef Steven Sterritt of Skyland Resort in Shenandoah National Park.


“These are fresh jumbo lump Maryland crab with a roasted garlic béchamel sauce. … It’s pure crab, no filler at all,” Sterritt told me. Wow. That’s a far cry from fried chicken tenders.





Jonathon Jarvis, the director of the National Park Service, announced a new initiative to offer more healthful food choices at national parks starting this summer.



Maggie Starbard/NPR

Jonathon Jarvis, the director of the National Park Service, announced a new initiative to offer more healthful food choices at national parks starting this summer.



Jonathon Jarvis, the director of the National Park Service, announced a new initiative to offer more healthful food choices at national parks starting this summer.


Maggie Starbard/NPR



And instead of fries or potato chips, there were house chips made from beets and other vegetables.


“We are changing to a healthier fare, of course,” Stefan Larrson of Yellowstone National Park told us as he served up things I’d never seen in national parks before.


“This is bison tenderloin,” served with a dollop of horseradish sauce, Larrson told us. “Bison is flavorful and lean meat.” Also on the menu: regional huckleberries, a rhubarb gazpacho, and a brie-style cheese produced in the Yellowstone region.


“So are park visitors surprised to see these kinds of dishes?” I asked. “Yes, I think so,” Larrson told me. But folks are also usually impressed to find all the regional cuisine and the fresh approach, he says.


Turns out there’s only one flop, so far. Apparently, park visitors are not too keen for his take on ostrich meat. Hmmm. Perhaps the pace of change can come too fast.


The new standards are based, in part, on changes already in place in parks like Yellowstone, where concessions are run by Xanterra. As part of its Healthy and Sustainable Cuisine program, the company has pledged to adhere to naturally raised meats, cheeses from regional farms, no high-fructose corn syrup and baked goods sweetened with 30 percent less sugar than traditional preparations.


To usher in the new Park Service food initiative, the White House sent over Sam Kass of the Let’s Move campaign, who noshed on an almond-crusted baked chicken with a fennel salad.


“You know, baked is the new fried, so that looks delicious,” he told the chef.


Kass told the group that the new initiative is “an important step towards making the healthier choice, the easy choice for parents and kids.”


And after tasting the baked chicken, thumbs up?





Low-fat yogurt parfaits with berries are currently sold in kiosks along the National Mall in D.C. The version served at the tasting event came topped with cinnamon wonton crisps.



Maggie Starbard/NPR

Low-fat yogurt parfaits with berries are currently sold in kiosks along the National Mall in D.C. The version served at the tasting event came topped with cinnamon wonton crisps.



Low-fat yogurt parfaits with berries are currently sold in kiosks along the National Mall in D.C. The version served at the tasting event came topped with cinnamon wonton crisps.


Maggie Starbard/NPR



“Absolutely delicious!” Kass said, congratulating the chefs from Guest Services, Inc and Aramark, two additional companies that operate park concessions. “That’s really innovative.”


Aramark’s vice president for food and beverage, Brian Stapelton, told us that his company has worked with regional wholesalers to procure more local produce and meat.


And how does the new, healthful park food initiative influence the bottom line of the companies serving up the food?


Well, Rick Abramson, president of Delaware North, which has a contract to run eateries at Shenandoah National Park, didn’t hold back in answering me when I asked.


“We’re a commercial company, and we’re in this to make money,” he told me.


Abramson says there’s demand for these new options. “What the market wants is what we deliver.”


So does this new initiative mean park visitors will pay more? Not for basic concession-stand foods like pizza or ice cream, which will be staying on the menu.


But the Park Service says even the newer, fancier offerings will still be affordable.




News



Hold The Hot Dog: National Park Visitors Can Feast On Bison Burgers

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Edible chip a movable feast

Microchip

Freescale claims this is the world’s smallest ARM-based minicomputer. Picture: ARM Source: Supplied

WE’VE seen technology you can wear like Google Glasses or Pebble watches, but what if it was so small you could eat it?

Technology company Freescale has developed a microchip so small that it measures at 1.9 by 2 millimetres.

It claims that it is the world’s smallest ARM powered microcontroller.

The chip includes a 32-bit ARM Cortex-MO processor, 4KB or RAM, 32KB of flash memory and can operate at temperatures between -40C to 85C.

Director of ARM’s Embedded Processor Products, Richard York said that the chip could be ingested and used to monitor people’s health.

“Another topic that is often speculated about is the world of sensors and that we can swallow, either to see what is going on from the inside or to deliver drugs to exactly the part of our digestive system for greatest effect,” he wrote on the company’s blog.

“Tiny micros are going to be essential to make such things a reality.”

This gives a whole new meaning to the term “movable feast”.

So far there has been no mention of how long it would last in the human digestion system before being.. erm.. flushed.

But at 75 cents each you could afford to have your chip and eat it too.

That is if Freescale decides to stop selling them in 100,000 blocks. A batch of chips which will be available to lead customers for sampling next month at a pretty sum of US$ 75,000.

The micro-computer could also be used in wearable and portable electronic devices and remote sensors, the company said.

The chip is part of the company’s vision to make The Internet of Things a reality – a term used to identify internet connected devices with the goal of connecting all objects and people to the web.


NEWS.com.au | Technology News


Edible chip a movable feast