David Southerland recognized on Going Green Georgia, WSB-TV, airs this week!

House tour, showing energy-efficient features

House tour, showing energy-efficient features


Congratulations to David Southerland, Executive Director of the Perimeter Transportation Coalition (PTC) for being selected by WSB-TV as a Green Hero. David bikes to work, promotes alternative transportation and built one of the greenest, eco-friendly houses in Atlanta. House website


The special Going Green interview/feature will be aired on WSB-TV, Ch.2 this Saturday morning, Nov. 28 (7-8am) and Sunday night, Nov. 29 (6-7pm). Tune in!





Chinese Chili & Eco-Cookers at Dunwoody Fall Festival

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We went chili crazy in our first Chili Cookoff at the Dunwoody Fall Festival! I was up to my ears in beans, crushed tomatoes, chili powder and Asian spices on Friday night, with 5 gallons of chili on the stove.


While everyone else cooked one kind of chili in one big pot, we went overboard, in typical fashion, and my mom and I offered up 6 different kinds, that is, 6 gallons of chili (she made one gallon, I made 5 gallons)! We had Thai Twist, 5-Spice Beans, Chinese Chili Spaghetti, 5-Bean Vegetarian, Chinese Sausage and Indian/Curry Twist!

Chili-kideating



MK’s Chinese Chili Spaghetti was indeed a kid and crowd favorite. One toddler, barely able to walk, scarfed 4 servings and clamored for more with sauce all over his face!!  We did our own chili survey by asking folks to vote for their favorite flavors.


We had our own mother-daughter competition, too, of course. Needless to say, MK ran out of her chili spaghetti first. (She was accused of questionable marketing tactics. “Which one is least

spicy?” MK: Mine! “Which one is the most spicy?” MK: Mine! :)

Chili-NKandkideating


Thermalpots1We also had a chance to connect cooking to sustainability by pointing out that October was Energy Awareness Month and that all five of our chili pots were innovative low-energy, enviro-friendly “Eco Cookers” from Japan, Taiwan and China. They used various applications of thermal vacuum technology and did most of their cooking “unplugged.” Read more in my article  Eco-Cooking Pot & Gift Idea




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Thanks to all the friends who came by to support us, plus the new CSB Chili fans!





Energy Efficient Eco-Cooking Pot!

We’ve been using it for years already; everyone in my family has their own and before they were available online or in stores, they were stuffed into someone’s luggage or handcarried back here, as a special favor. Our crockpots ended up at the garage sale!


Recently, we used only eco-cooking pots at the Dunwoody Chili Cook-off! Instead of cooking continuously on a gas stove for 3 hours, our vacuum thermal eco-cooking pots (after an initial heating of 15 minutes) cooked our chili without additional electricity or gas, plus kept it piping hot for serving!


It has a regular stainless steel or aluminum  inner pot that lifts out for initial heating on a stovetop and an outer “thermal” insulating pot that seals in the heat (and flavors). Put all the ingredients in the inner pot with a liquid (broth, water) then put it back in the thermal pot, close the lid and let it finish cooking, without additional electricity or gas.  Depending on what you’re cooking, raw beans, veggies or meat, and their size/shape,  the cooking time will vary from an hour to several hours.  The eco-cooking pot (my name for it) doesn’t have a plug.


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Like most Asian appliances, there are now many brands and styles. I like the  Japanese brands, Zojirushi and Tiger, but they don’t always have the handy carrying handle which makes them easily portable. Other brands that are less expensive ($30-70) usually have a weaker thermal capacity so some food, like raw beans, may not cook well or take a few rounds from stove to eco-pot, but work OK for most soups, stews, even noodle and rice dishes.  Supposedly, only these two Japanese brands own the patent or have access to the original thermal vacuum technology, which is the magic element. But they will be more expensive ($100-200)  I have two different brand pots and cook different foods in them.


The only way to tell the difference is actually cooking in them since the high-tech ones maintain the heat (or cold) for cooking/cooling insulation and the cheaper ones, lose the heat/cold capacity more quickly. We use these for soups, stews (lu rou), cooking beans or rice. My friend had a frozen margarita picnic party with hers and I used mine as a small cooler for the ice cream  in mid-summer heat!


Since it uses no gas or electricity while cooking in the thermal pot, I can “cook” while I’m working, commuting, hiking. It’s perfect for potlucks, guest parties, festivals.


Check back for more info and tips on where to buy, good models, recipes!





Lunch & Learn with Chinese Southern Belle and Farmer D Organics

I was the featured “chef” in this seasonal “Lunch & Learn with Chinese Southern Belle” with Farmer D in Atlanta. (I suggested Munch ‘n’ Mulch or Ode to Brassicas…)

Farmer D gave harvesting tips and supplied me with fresh-cut veggies and herbs, washed and prepped outside at the garden center. I turned it into a multi-course gnosh festival that included Thai Basil Lettuce Wraps, Unfried Purple Fried Rice, Daikon Radish Salad and Orange Chicken over Dinosaur Kale. It was a wonderful cook/farmer collaboration and the wraps weren’t the only ones that left stuffed. I think I fed the whole block!

It’s mostly him in the video but I get the last line. (Hey those are my hands doing the lettuce wraps! ) Fun video and nice to be included.

Go Wok the Garden and enjoy!

Natalie