Grow it, Cook it, Eat it.The freshest, healthiest, tastiest food is what you grow and eat yourself!

  • Home
  • Welcome!
  • Blog
  • Program 10

Subscribe to Articles

Program 04

Author: admin Category: Program 04

Wednesday
Aug 5, 2009

Program 4 in the 10 part radio series “Grow it, Cook it, Eat it” presented by Michael Lemass is being broadcast on Dublin South FM 93.9 today at 4.30.

This program features a visit to Darragh Flynn’s sprout farm “Happy Pear Living Foods” where he tells us all about the health benefits of eating and juicing sprouted sunflower seeds, pea greens, wheatgrass, alfalfa, puy lentils, aduki and mung beans and chick peas.

If you want to buy sprouts from Darragh for your home or your business you can contact him by email at: darragh (at) thehappypear.ie

You can buy a hand cranked juicer from The Happy Pear for 45euro for juicing all the sprouts you are buying off Darragh or growing yourself at home. Ive just bought one and they are great; easy to use and easy to clean!

Next we go into the Happy Pear kitchen and learn how to make a squash and coconut soup and a tomato and red pepper soup with chef Doreen Palmer and then chef Noel Healy shows us how to make the dressing for the very popular house salad!

Dave and Steve Flynn decided to set up The Happy Pear 4 years ago based on an interest in food and health and a desire to make a positive change in their community through their business activity. They explain how its not just a money making exercise but more a social and educational activity as they have now started running education events as well as community events like the baking competitions which extend their business well beyond the concept of a shop and restaurant. Check out their site thehappypear.ie and check out their food in Greystones, County Wicklow!!

You can download Program 4 of the 10 part series here:

“Grow it, Cook it, Eat it” Program 4

Feel free to add your comments after you have listened to it and let us know if you start sprouting!!

Thanks for visiting!

Michael Lemass

  • 1 Comment
  • Read Entire Post

Program 03

Author: admin Category: Program 03, Uncategorized Tags: Beetroot salads, enzymes, hippocrates, raw food

Wednesday
Jul 22, 2009

Program 3 in the 10 part radio series “Grow it, Cook it, Eat it” presented by Michael Lemass was broadcast today, Wednesday 22nd of July from the top of the Dundrum Shopping centre in Dublin South FM 93.9 studios!

In this program we talk to Deirdre McCafferty from the vegetarian restaurant Cornucopia.ie on Wicklow Street, Dublin. Deirdre tells us how she became interested in food while working at The Hippocrates Institute in Boston (hippocratesinst.org) and how a raw vegetarian diet is beneficial to our health. She set up Cornucopia in 1984 initially as a health food shop and later it became a restaurant. In one of our future programs Deirdre will take us through the award winning “Cornucopia at home” cookbook.

Then we go into the Cornucopia kitchen and make some beetroot salads with James the chef.

Then we are outside in the Tymon Park Allotments with Michael Fox who has been growing his own food for 25 years. Michael is also the Chairman of the South Dublin Allotmens Association and runs an 8 week course from his house in growing your own food(plottopot.ie). Michael talks about some of the veggies he is growing and how he likes to cook them. We also talk about the importance of allotments allowing people to learn about food growing and what the future of allotments might be in Dublin.

SouthDublinAllotmentsAssociation.ie are having their annual open day this saturday from 12 till 4
Friarstown Allotment Site, Bohernabreena, Tallaght

You can now download Program 3 of the 10 part series here:

“Grow it, Cook it, Eat it” Program 3

Please leave a comment once you have listened to it and let us know what you think or share any food related thoughts with us.

Thanks for visiting!

Michael Lemass

  • Comments
  • Read Entire Post

Program 02

Author: admin Category: Program 02

Wednesday
Jul 1, 2009

Program 2 was broadcast today, July 1st at 4.30pm on Dublin South FM, 93.9 FM.

This program features an Organic Fruit & Vegetable Gardening Day organised by the Wicklow branch of SlowFoodIreland.com

The event was hosted by Brenda McKenna and her niece Lauren in the totally edible organic front and back gardens of their house in a housing estate in Saggart on the outskirts of Tallaght!

Brenda and Lauren take us on a tour around their garden and demonstrate how they have turned the small urban garden into an organic/biodynamic fruit and vegetable garden.

We pot up some salad seedlings to make a “cut-and-come-again” salad leaves box and a herb one too. The idea of a “cut-and-come-again” box is that it will provide you with all the salads and herbs you need for the rest of the year!! You simply cut off what you need, and allow the leaves to re-grow so you can cut again!!

We then go inside for a 9 course tasting session made from vegetables, salad leaves, herbs, edible flowers and berries from Brenda’s garden.

If you would like to contact Brenda to find out more about some of the very tasty courses she is running give her a call on 087 679 5494 or you can email her at “brendamck(at)eircom.net” (replace the (at) with @)
Tell her we sent you!!

Big thanks to Michelle Darmody and Hermione Winters of Slow Food Ireland and to all the Slow Foodies who came along on the day and allowed me record them. It was a really great day with a great bunch of people!!

You can download Program 2 of the 10 part series here:

“Grow it, Cook it, Eat it” Program 2

Please leave a comment once you have listened to it and let us know what you think or share any food related thoughts with us.

I will upload some photos at the weekend.

Thanks for visiting!

Michael Lemass

  • Comments
  • Read Entire Post

Music – Musique concrète

Author: admin Category: Our music Tags: music

Thursday
Jun 18, 2009

The theme music for the show was created by Derek Cronin from sounds made in his kitchen using food and kitchen utensils, performed by Derek and Michael Lemass. This musical approach comes out of the “Musique concrète” (French for “concrete music” or “real music”), movement started in the late 1940s which means that real world sounds are used rather than being restricted to those of traditional musical instruments.

We were inspired by a number of modern “Musique concrète” musicians and tunes such as Bjork who made the music for the Lars Von Trier film “Dancer In The Dark”. The original soundtrack CD is called “Selma Songs” and uses real world sounds of machines, basketballs and runners moving around a basketball court. Tom Yorke of Radiohead sang on the album with her though we are not sure which machines, runners or basketballs he operated!

Bjork later expanded on her dribbling techniques with her collaboration with the German duo Matmos on her album Vespertine, Matmos, who have been known to use the sounds of amplified crayfish nerve tissue, the pages of bibles turning, slowed down whistles and kisses, liposuction surgery, rat cages, cards shuffling, frequency response tests for defective hearing aids and rhinestones on a dinner plate which we would have done too but we were making music for a series about food and therefore had a framework but in truth we felt free to use anything after looking at what Matmos had been using!! They’re nuts!!!

Other “Musique concrète” inspired musicians spring to mind too such as Tom Waits using dustbins and lump hammers on metal piping and also stuff by Steve Reich such as Different Trains and Baka Beyond’s rainforest sounds.

But our series was all about food and therefore would be restricted to food dribbling related things performed in a kitchen, sure where else would we go for an authentic taste-bud-triggering-kitchen reverb?!

Anyway, I arrived at Derek’s gaff one morning(not too early now, he is a musician after all) equipped with Schoeps and DPA microphones, a SoundDevices sound mixer, Fostex hard disk recorder, Sainsburys organic carrots(one of the clearest, most transparent sounding carrots in the world if not the universe), celery, cucumber, red and green peppers but no orange ones, apples, pepper grinder, eggs(organic ones give a better crunch sound), a frying pan, my favorite noisiest saucepan and beer(which Derek doesnt drink, so I had to drink any bottles we opened! I had to!! He wouldn’t help me at all!). Actually, now that I think of it, one of the hardest things to get a good recording of was a beer bottle being opened. We had to open so many in the end that I had to get a taxi home, a few days later!

We had a lot of fun trying out different objects to see how they sounded and what would be the most evocative of food and cooking. It reminded me a bit of a percussionist I saw called Trilok Gurtu performing at the New Morning Jazz Festival. I thought “that guy must spend all his time off just going around hitting things just to see how they sound”. He was sitting on the New Morning stage with all sorts of drums and pots and pans but it seemed that day he was especially interested in hitting a cymbal and dipping it into a plastic bucket of water, a blue bucket if I remember correctly. I suppose there is a musical aspect to every object especially a percussive one when you make it ring by hitting it. Perhaps its only percussionists who discover those new sounds, and boxers too I suppose!

So back in the kitchen with Bjork, Tom Yorke and Trilok in the back of our minds we recorded the gas being turned on, the gas lighter, the whoosh as the gas lites(like in “Panic Room”), a saucepan going on, water being boiled, a glass of water being filled, glasses being clinked together, then we filled the glasses for different pitches. We boiled the kettle. we made toast and blended something undrinkable in the blender. We bit into celery and carrots and chopped them up too. We filled up wine glasses to different levels and rubbed the rim to get eerie tones which we didnt use in the end but they were interesting to hear all the same. Eerie tones that are now waiting in Derek’s sampler for the right horror film to be made…..

The bubbling we got was a really nice sound to listen to, a bit like a cat purring and the frying sounds had to be the most evocative of food to the point where I could smell what was being fried even when I was listening to the sound playing back through my speakers!

We made tea for our tea break cus we were tired of all the hard work and forgot to record it! We captured the pressure escaping from a beer bottles and the fizz of the bubbles as it was poured into a glass and then thought perhaps we could get a better take…..

“Eh try opening another bottle there Michael” said Derek

“Oh, ok if you insist” said Michael

We made toast and fried eggs which someone had to eat and then we had ice cream, not cus it makes a good sound but because it just tastes great! Green and Blacks organic of course!

It sure was a fun way to make music and discover new “musical instruments”! We were stuffed by the end of it and so was my recorder! Just as well “Musique concrète” doesnt mean music made out of concrete! We’d have no teeth left and terrible indigestion!!

And I cant hide the truth I suppose………

…… many, many vegetables were grievously harmed and very tasty in the making of this music!!

“Its not cus I love animals that Im a vegetarian,
its just that I really hate vegetables!!”

( thanks for that one Phil! ;-) )

  • 3 Comments
  • Read Entire Post

Rainwater harvesting

Author: admin Category: Growing Tags: rainwater harvesting

Wednesday
Jun 17, 2009

Everyone who lives in Ireland knows how much it rains, even when the sun is out! There is no shortage of water in Ireland but fresh drinking water is becoming more and more scarce.

rainshower

A lot of time and money is spent cleaning our tap water to a degree that it is safe for drinking and then its piped to where you live so it seems a bit mad to use drinking water to water the garden when so much is falling out of the sky and being channeled into the gutters where we live.

At home I am using 2 big bins which I have placed under the gutters. Its quite easy to take apart the modular gutters and redirect the roof runoff from the gutter and drains into any kind of storage you can find.

In this photo below I have just taken a section out of the gutter so the water falls into my collection bin and not down into the drain as if it was useless waste.

rainharvest

Having a bin full of water also saves me time when watering in the evenings. I can just plunge the watering can into the water container and fill it in 2 seconds rather than waiting several minutes for the low pressure trickle out of the tap to fill it up.

rainwater

In this photo above the end of the gutter was missing anyway so I didnt have to take apart anything just simply place the bin under the end of the gutter.

The first time I put these 2 bins out they filled overnight!!

We might be experiencing global warming but Ireland certainly isn’t drying out!!

Did you know that there are 250,000 raindrops in 1 litre of water?

Try counting them if you like!!

  • 2 Comments
  • Read Entire Post
Older Entries
Newer Entries

Pages

  • Blog
  • Welcome!

Categories

  • Cooking & eating
  • Growing
  • Our music
  • Program 01
  • Program 02
  • Program 03
  • Program 04
  • Program 05
  • Program 06
  • Program 07
  • Program 08
  • Program 09
  • Program 10
  • Uncategorized

Copyright 2012 Grow it, Cook it, Eat it. - All Rights reserved.

Wordpress theme by: WPUnlimited