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Chicken Marbella

August 31, 2015 by Akiba 3 Comments

Chicken Marbella has become a classic ever since it was first created by the late Sheila Lukins in the Spring of 1976.  Sheila was cooking a dinner party for 8 people when she met Julee Rosso.  Julee’s boyfriend hired Sheila to cook dinner from “found ingredients” out of cupboards that Julee was all too familiar with. Julee pitched in as time was growing short and guests would be arriving any minute. They frantically searched for ingredients and immediately bonded over their shared loves of food and travel. They had both recently visited Marrakech and Andalusia and the boring chicken quarters became inspired by those wonderful cuisines. They began to transform them into treasures dotted with green Spanish olives, capers, prunes and oregano. Chicken Marbella was born that night and they named it after the magnificent Club Marbella, a beach resort they both loved on the shores of the Mediterranean sea. The dish won raves that night and has continued to do so ever since. Sheila and Julee went on to open the very chic, gourmet take out shop, Silver Palate, in New York City and wrote 3 cookbooks together.

As a present for my niece, Cara, I prepared the food for her wedding reception and Chicken Marbella’s combination of slightly sweet and tart made it the star attraction.

For my sister, Debra, who asked me to send her the recipe:

Original Recipe – From the Silver Palate Cookbook

Since Chicken Marbella is such a spectacular party dish, the quantities are to serve 8 to 12 but the recipe can be successfully divided to make a smaller amount.  I used just one chicken and divided by half the ingredients – that gives you more of the good stuff to spoon over it.

4 chickens, 2.5 lbs each, quartered

1 head of garlic

¼ cup dried oregano

Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

½ cup red wine vinegar

½ cup olive oil

1 cup pitted prunes

½ cup pitted olives

½ cup capers

6 bay leaves

1 cup brown sugar (I do not use the brown sugar – I think it makes it too sweet)

1 cup white wine

¼ cup chopped parsley

In a large bowl combine chicken quarters, garlic, oregano, pepper and coarse salt to taste, vinegar, olive oil, prunes, olives, capers and juice, and bay leaves. Cover and let marinate, refrigerated, overnight.

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees
  • Arrange chicken in a single layer in one or two large, shallow baking pans and spoon marinade over it evenly. Sprinkle chicken pieces with brown sugar (again, I don’t use the brown sugar) and pour white wine around them.
  • Bake for 50 minutes to 1 hour, basting frequently with pan juices. Chicken is done when thigh pieces, pricked with a fork at their thickest, yield clear yellow (rather than pink) juice.
  • With a slotted spoon transfer chicken, prunes, olives and capers to a serving platter. Moisten with a few spoonfuls of pan juices and sprinkle generously with parsley or cilantro. Pass remaining pan juices in a sauceboat.
  • To serve Chicken Marbella cold, cool to room temperature in cooking juices before transferring to a serving platter. If chicken has been covered and refrigerated, allow it to return to room temperature before serving. Spoon some of the reserved juices over chicken.

Updated Version of Chicken Marbella Recipe’

This updated version is made with boneless/skinless chicken thighs and much more of the good stuff so that everyone gets their fair share. It is baked covered so that the chicken doesn’t dry out and then flashed under the broiler to brown it just a bit. The leftovers, re-heated with their juices separately reduced, are wonderful over arugula as a lunch or dinner entrée salad. The key to this dish is the overnight marination which is essential to its moistness, especially when you’re using only chicken breasts. And, the chicken keeps and improves further if you marinate it longer..

Updated Version – Recipe’

Serves 10

5 pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs, halved
20 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely pureed
¼ cup dried oregano
Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 cup red wine vinegar
1 cup olive oil, good quality
2 cups pitted prunes
1¾ cup pitted Spanish green olives
1 cup capers with a bit of juice
6 bay leaves
1½ cup light brown sugar (optional)
2 cups white wine
½ cup fresh Italian parsley, finely chopped

Instructions

  • In a large bowl combine chicken pieces, garlic, oregano, pepper , salt, vinegar, olive oil, prunes, olives, capers and juice and bay leaves. Cover and let marinate, refrigerated, overnight.
  • Pre-heat oven to 350°F.
  • Arrange chicken in a single layer in two large shallow baking pans (do not crowd or the chicken will steam), and distribute the marinade over it evenly. Sprinkle chicken pieces with brown sugar (optional) and pour white wine around them. Cover the pans tightly with foil.
  • Bake for 30-35 minutes, basting every ten minutes with the pan juices. Chicken is done when juices yielded are clear, not pink. Pre-heat the broiler well and baste the chicken again. Place the pans of chicken about 2″ under it for 3-4 minutes until the chicken becomes just slightly browned. Do not leave it long, as it will dry the chicken out. Pass the sauces on the side.

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News Flash: New Restaurant in Cabo San Lucas:  El Peregrino

El Peregrino is a charming new restaurant just off the beaten path in downtown Cabo.  The menu is international with traditional Mexican dishes, Cuban sandwiches, fish, chicken, octopus, sashimi, pork sliders, tuna tartare, rib eye, New York strip and BBQ ribs.  It has a nice selection of wines that are reasonably priced and a full bar.  Our group consisted of 12 people and for a new restaurant, El Peregrino was running smoothly and everyone agreed the food was good and the service was “spot on” AND IT IS AIR CONDITIONED!!!!

Location:  Esq. Zaragoza y 20 de Noviembre

Hours:  Mon: 1:00 pm to 11:00 pm     Wed – Sun:  1:00 pm to 11:00 pm     Closed Tuesdays

static_map

More to come about El Peregrino in my October blog.

Posted in: About, Eat, Learn, Recipes Tagged: Chicken Marbella, Club Marbella, Julee Rosso, Sheila Lukins, Silver Palate Cookbook

Gula Sana Restaurant

August 23, 2015 by Akiba 2 Comments

GULA SANA

(Gula – Glutton) (Sana – Healthy)

A Glutton for Health

Food and Friends – Tasty and Healthy

Gula Sana SignGula Sana is a lifestyle concept restaurant designed especially (but not exclusively) for people who do sports/exercise.  It’s a place for people to meet at the restaurant for breakfast, fresh juice, smoothies, coffee and daily lunch specials.  The idea is to get together and exercise at 6:00 am every morning and then start the day with good food.  The exercise could be cycling,  running or yoga/pilates, stretching or breathing.  Breathing you ask?  Yes – breathing can be full on extreme exercise. Just ask Claudio Solano who practices and teaches the Mayan Fitness Secret, one conscious breath at a time.

I am always fascinated by the people I interview whether it be a restaurateur or chef or entrepreneur. The passion, imagination and perseverance are different for each and every person.  When I interviewed Pako Moreno, one of the partners in Gula Sana, it was evident that his passion is exercise and maintaining a healthy lifestyle.  He was a personal trainer at Palmilla and Esperanza before he decided to bring something more to the community.  He is an avid cyclist and is in the process of training for the Iron Man competition to be held in Cabo on October 25, 2015.

As a personal trainer, Pako was always looking for healthy food choices for his clients when he came up with the concept for Gula Sana. It is a restaurant where people can eat properly with excellent quality dishes – breaking the idea that nutritious food is boring.  He and his partner, Diego Sanchez, have created a healthy alternative to eating and they are giving this to their friends and customers at a very fair price. The restaurant was conceived for all those people who don’t have time to cook or they do not like to cook or are simply looking to improve their lifestyle. They are believers in “This is my lifestyle – not – “I’m on a diet” That is how Gula Sana, a complete, nutritious and healthy food concept was born.

Gula Sana has a full breakfast with many gluten free options:

Breakfast Menu

Breakfast Menu

Along with a fresh juice bar with smoothies and green drinks.

Green Juice

Green Juice

Hotcakes Paleo

Hotcakes Paleo

Chilaquiles with Red Sauce

The lunch menu consists of 2 or 3 specials each day – whatever is in season, fresh and creative – fish, poultry, vegan and vegetarian options.

Special of the Day

Special of the Day

Special of the Day

Special of the Day

Pako told me that he is not a chef but he is working on the new dinner menu with a very good friend and chef from Mexico City.  He will bring in fun, interesting and delicious ideas for dinner which they hope to start serving by mid-October.

A celebrated mixologist, also from Mexico City, is devising sophisticated specialty drinks which will take advantage of fresh juice, fruit and spices.  Gula Sana has a full bar with beer and wine and live music is planned for the fall.

Aahhh - Refreshing Sangria

Aahhh – Refreshing Sangria

The final touches for their new coffee bar (café) is underway where people can come and relax and just hang out – of course, after achieving their exercise goals.

I am confident that Gula Sana will be a success and will be a welcome addition to the Los Cabos restaurant scene.

Gula Sano is located at Paseo Finisterra y Blvd. Antonio Mijares, Local 8, San Jose del Cabo (where the old Local 8 Restaurant was located and in the same shopping center with the old favorite, Habaneros Restaurant).

Buen Provecho, Akiba

On A Different Note – Rancho Buen Dia – CSA Program

I am delighted to report that we have a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program in Los Cabos.  I spoke with Lope,  manager of distribution and sales for Rancho Buen Dia located in Todos Santos.  I arranged to meet with him in October when the growing season has more to offer.  The Rancho is a wife/husband and sister/brother partnership.  If you are interested in supporting the CSA or want information, see details below.

Rancho Buen Dios Family

Rancho Buen Dia Family – Carlos, Lope, Caroline and Claudia

Local Organic Veggie Boxes – We are gearing up for the 2015-2016 Community Supported Agriculture season! Receiving weekly organic vegetables/herbs/fruit freshly harvested from your local farm is a great way to promote delicious clean eating in your home. Memberships are rapidly running out, but some spaces are still left in Los Cabos, Todos Santos and La Paz. Find out if our CSA program is right for you – visit our blog and check out the article: Pros and Cons of being a CSA member ☞ Caroline Benzel, ranchobuendia@outlook.com, https://ranchobuendia.wordpress.com, 6121310326, Baja California Sur.

Posted in: About, Eat, Learn Tagged: breakfast, Cabo 2015, Claudio Solano, CSA, Diego Sanchez, exercise, gluten, Gula Sana, Iron Man, lifestyle concept restaurant, live music, Mayan Fitness Secret, mixologist, Paco Moreno, Rancho Buen Dia, San Jose' del Cabo, Todos Santos

Practicing the Agriculture of the Future

August 16, 2015 by Akiba Leave a Comment

I was contemplating what to write this week when  a friend from New Zealand sent me a thought provoking article by Leah Penniman about indigenous farming practices in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. I grew up in a small town in Iowa in the 1950’s.  My parents had family and friends who were independent farmers and I saw how corporate agriculture can compromise the self reliant grassroots farmer.  This article is about ways to sustainably increase food production and reduce food production’s impact on the environment.

Leah Penniman  spent the first half of 2015 in southern Mexico on a Fulbright fellowship working with farmers on how to get long-term high yields out of difficult farmland without destroying natural resources and undermining the independent family farm. Her family’s organic farm, Soul Fire, is located in the mountains of upstate New York.

On August 10, 2015, Leah Penniman wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Leah is a farmer and educator based in the Albany, N.Y., area.

Four Ways Mexico’s Indigenous Farmers Are Practicing the Agriculture of the Future

How can we get the most out of our farmland without harming the planet? Lean Penniman traveled to rural Mexico to learn from indigenous farmers.Corn

Local maize varieties harvested from the farm of Josefino Martinez. Photo by Jonah Vitale-Wolff.

Affectionately called “Professor” by his neighbors, Josefino Martinez is a well-respected indigenous farmer and community organizer from the remote town of Chicahuaxtla, in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. He watched with patient attention as I showed him photographs of Soul Fire Farm, my family’s organic farm in the mountains of upstate New York.

Western agronomists would have us believe that Triqui farming practices are irrelevant today.

I tried to convince Martinez that our farms had a lot in common. “Like you, we have marginal mountain soils and steep slopes, and we’ve worked for years to build up the fertility,” I explained.

Martinez finished his simple breakfast of fresh corn tortillas with black beans. Then he rose, donned his baseball cap and undersized school backpack, and took me out to see the land he cultivates. I quickly came to understand that my idea of “marginal soils” and “steep slopes” were naive, if not laughable. It was the height of the dry season and Martinez’s land was hard, brittle, and gray. The farm was literally etched into the mountainside, with a slope so severe that plowing with tractors or animals was impossible. Yet his storage room was full of maize, beans, dried chili, squash seeds, and fresh fruit that he’d grown right here.

When I asked how this was possible, Martinez explained that he simply farmed in the manner of his ancestors, the indigenous Triqui people.Josefino Martinez explains how the pine trees he planted just three years ago are stabilizing soil on the mountainside.  Photo by Leah Penniman

Josefino Martinez explains how the pine trees he planted just three years ago are stabilizing the soil on the mountainside. Photo by Leah Penniman.

Western agronomists would have us believe that Triqui farming practices are irrelevant today, but I thought they might be part of the solution to the nascent global food crisis. I spent the first half of 2015 in southern Mexico on a Fulbright fellowship to exchange ideas with indigenous farmers like Martinez on how get long-term high yields out of difficult farmland. I was fed up with our society’s obsession with corporate, industrial agriculture, which is flooding vulnerable communities with unhealthy food, destroying natural resources, and undermining the independent family farm.

What I learned gave me hope.

According to a detailed report by my favorite think tank, the World Resources Institute, the first thing to know about the impending food crisis is that the human population is expected to reach 9.6 billion by 2050. That’s a 37 percent increase from 2012, when it reached 7 billion. Even imagining massive redistribution of food resources, the world will need to produce 69 percent more calories by 2050 to feed all those people.

But agriculture already accounts for a nearly a quarter of greenhouse gas emissions and 70 percent of freshwater use globally. So if we simply increased the scale of what we’re doing now, the ecological effects would be catastrophic. The report goes on to describe a “menu of solutions” that farmers can follow in the future to grow more food without using additional land, water, and fuel.

I had a hunch that rural farmers in Mexico were already modeling some of these practices and not being credited. While it was difficult to leave behind the daily responsibilities of tending the land, I knew that only grassroots farmer-to-farmer exchange could solve the world’s food crisis. So, with my husband and children at my side, I left behind our farm in New York and traversed the windy mountain roads of Oaxaca to trade ideas on how to feed our communities with dignity and take care of the earth at the same time.

What I learned gave me hope. Here are three items from WRI’s list of solutions that the farmers I met are already doing—and one that isn’t on their list but probably should be.

1. Farm like a forest

Not accounting for land covered by water, desert, or ice, about half of the planet is dedicated to pasture and croplands, according to WRI’s study. And the continued expansion of agricultural land is driving biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation. According to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, an increase in “cropping intensity” could avert the need to clear an additional 62 million hectares for crops by 2050. That’s an area about the size of France. In other words, farmers need to start growing different plants one after another on the same land, as well as growing them closer together at the same time, a practice known as intercropping.

Planting different crops together minimizes soil erosion.

Oswaldo Flores, a Zapotec indigenous man from the village of Yaviche, explained how his community uses intercropping and agroforestry to grow more food without expanding into new lands.

“The forest pulls clouds from the sky so that they drop rain on the fields below,” Flores said, while showing me his shade-grown coffee farm.

The farm is a cafetal, a shady, multistory system with tall, purple-podded guajinicuiles and fruit trees forming the upper layer, coffee trees at the intermediate layer, and smaller food plants and vines (chiles, chives, chayotes) near the ground. The trees protect the plants below from high winds and cold temperatures, and their fallen leaves provide a natural compost that inhibits weed growth, adds fertility, and retains soil humidity. Guajinicuiles also fix nitrogen, making it available in organic form in the soil. This system of shade-grown coffee is almost equal to the native forest in terms of biodiversity, and maintains habitat for migratory birds.

At the edge of Flores’ cafetal, the vegetation transitioned to another complex and even more ancient intercropping system. The milpa is a Mesoamerican technology that integrates maize, beans, squash and other complementary food crops. While estimates of its age differ, it is at least 3,000 years old. The intercropped milpa system is multilayered, with maize in the upper canopy, beans in the intermediate story, and squash at the bottom. Bean plants fix atmospheric nitrogen and help reduce damage caused by the corn earworm pest (Helicoverpa sea). Squash plants inhibit weed growth with their dense network of thick, broad leaves and retain soil humidity. Natural chemicals (cucurbitacins) washed from the leaf surface act as a mild herbicide and pesticide.Corn, bean and squash

Corn, beans, and squash grow together in this milpa, tended by Oswaldo Flores. Photo by Leah Penniman.

Planting different crops together minimizes soil erosion because their roots form a dense network that holds soil in place. This system also tends to be very efficient, squeezing the maximum value out of every drop of water, ray of sunlight, and bit of nutrients in the soil. According to studies using the Land Equivalency Ratio—a way of measuring the productivity of agricultural land—intercropped fields often yield 40 to 50 percent more than monocropped ones.

  1. Garrison Wilkes, professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, calls “milpa“one of the most successful human inventions ever created.”

2. Eat low on the food chain

Aside from the detrimental health effects of getting our protein from animal products, it’s also highly inefficient. Poultry is the most efficient conventional source of meat, and still only converts 11 percent of its feed energy into human food. Beef cows convert only 1 percent and are major contributors of greenhouse gases. Shifting toward plant and insect-based protein sources is part of the sustainable food solution.

Amaranth is making a comeback in Brisa’s town.

“You have never tried chicatanas?” challenged Brisa Ochoa, as she served our family a salsa made of mashed ants in her hometown of Ayoquezco. During the first spring rains, the chicatana ant leaves its nest, only to be captured by eager residents who prize its sweet and tangy flavor. Mexico has 300 to 550 species of edible insects, more than any other country in the world, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization. Among the most popular in Oaxaca are grasshoppers known as chapulines, served roasted and flavored with lime and chili, and maguey worms, served ground up and incorporated into a spicy salt. Insect protein takes some getting used to, but it’s healthier and more environmentally sustainable than livestock, boasting a feed conversion ratio of more than 50 percent.

While insect protein is important in rural Mexico, it mainly serves as flavoring for plant-based protein sources. Brisa served her salsa with beans on a fresh, warm corn tortilla resulting from an ancient process called nixtamalization. She used limestone and hot water to remove the hull from the maize, then ground up the kernels into the dough for tortillas.

Nixtamalization makes the protein in maize more bioavailable to the human body and increases its niacin content. When combined with beans, the nixtamalized corn offers a complete protein.Gustavo with organic sugar cane

Gustavo, a farmer from Yagavila, Oaxaca, poses with his organic sugar cane. Photo by Leah Penniman.

Brisa’s family also grows amaranth, a native Mesoamerican grain that has been cultivated in Mexico for at least 6,000 years. Nearly eradicated by the conquering Spaniards who feared its role in traditional religion, amaranth is making a comeback in Brisa’s town, thanks to her family’s breeding and sharing its seeds. Up until this trip to Mexico, I had only experienced amaranth as a “weed” invading my neat beds of vegetables and didn’t realize that its seeds are 13 to 15 percent protein, among the highest for any grain. Amaranth is also high in fiber, calcium, iron, potassium, phosphorus, zinc, folate, and vitamins A and C. Like beans, amaranth can be combined with maize to form a complete protein.

Brisa’s family does eat chicken, beef, and pork, but usually only on special occasions. Plant and insect protein are the basis of their healthful, affordable, and sustainable diet.

3. Restore health to damaged land

Cropland can expand at low environmental cost if the encroached lands do not have much natural potential to store carbon or support biodiversity. The arid Mixteca region of Oaxaca meets these criteria and has been termed an “ecological disaster zone” by the World Bank. Soil erosion and depletion has damaged about one million acres of cropland, and corn productivity rates have plummeted to the lowest in Mexico.

León Santos says he has seen yields increase fourfold.

Jesús León Santos, sustainable agriculture coordinator at CEDICAM, an indigenous farming organization in the Mixteca, blames Green Revolution farming technology for the environmental destruction. The Green Revolution of the 1960s was an U.S.-led international effort to push adoption of farm mechanization, hybrid seeds, and chemical fertilizers in order to increase yields.

León Santos is working to revive and enhance indigenous farming wisdom in order to restore the health of the soil and the productivity of the land.Degraded land in Mixteca restored

This degraded land in the Mixteca was restored to lush vegetable gardens under the direction of Jesús León Santos. Photo by Leah Penniman.

The first step for León Santos and his farming community was to build trenches, stone walls, and terraces to stop the erosion of the remaining soils and to slow water runoff so aquifers can recharge. He stabilized these barriers with tenacious local vegetation, such as the sweet-smelling vetiver grass, which withstands drought, flooding, and mudslides.

Once stabilized, the barren hillsides were reforested with native tree species, like nitrogen-fixing alders (Alnus acumilata) and pines (Pinus oaxacana). The CEDICAM community saves its own native crop seed, using an in-the-field selection process that has persisted regionally since the pre-Columbian era. They preserve and exchange the best seeds of maize, beans, squash, chile, tomatillo, chayote, squash, sunflower, and prickly pear, as well as local specialties like cempoalxochitl, quintoniles, and huauzontle.

The farmers further improve the soil by planting and tilling in “cover crops,” which add nutrients and organic matter. Some native varieties are especially good for this, like the “frijol nescafe,” ( Mucuna deeringiana) a nitrogen-fixing bean that thrives in dry soil. Finally, farmers add compost and plant debris so that the land is finally ready to receive these carefully maintained crop seeds.

The use of erosion control barriers, intercropping, and seed saving are part of the knowledge León Santos inherited from his Zapotec ancestors. And it’s working. León Santos says he has seen yields increase fourfold after incorporating these ancient and modern sustainable growing techniques. The newly established vegetation sequesters atmospheric carbon and attracts biodiversity.

The art of transforming lands of low ecological productivity into thriving foodscapes is not unique to the Mixteca. León Santos reminded me that the Aztec Empire sustained itself on chinampas, intricate gardens built of vegetation and river muck, essentially artificial islands constructed in shallow lakes. Chinampas are widely considered the most productive form of agriculture ever invented, and are so fertile that they can yield four to seven harvests per year. Indigenous Mexicans have long-standing successes in positive ecological transformation.

4. Cultivate reverence for the planet

One essential element missing from the World Resource Institute’s otherwise thorough and brilliant “menu of solutions” for the global food crisis was the ethical perspective that co-evolved with best practices in environmental management. This ethic, known as convivencia, or “living together” with both our human and natural communities, is best summarized by Kiado Cruz, a Zapotec farmer from the Oaxacan town of Yagavila:

The ground beneath our feet is our Mother Nature, who has carried us and sustains us. As we work her, we do not profane her, rather we carry out our task as farmers in the context of the sacred. It is corn through which Mother Nature nourishes us. It is flesh of our flesh, because we are people of corn. So we have to collect it in a manner that shows the respect we owe both our soil and our brother corn.

It is with a similar sense of belonging and reverence that I placed corn seeds into our home soil upon return, establishing Soul Fire Farm’s firstmilpa, an ancient and intricate tangle of complementary sister crops bringing us one small step closer to a sustainable food future.

Boy snuggles into his grandmother who wears traditional woven huipil of the Triqui indigenous people.

A boy snuggles into his grandmother, who wears the traditional woven huipil of the Triqui indigenous people. Photo by Jonah Vitale-Wolff.

 

leah-penniman-headshot-100Leah Penniman is a farmer and educator based in the Albany, N.Y., area.

Posted in: About, Learn, Uncategorized Tagged: amaranth, huipil, Leah Penniman, Mexico, Mother Nature, Oaxaca, Soul Fire, Triqui people, World Resources Institute, Yes Magazine, Zapotec
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