Morsel - Neighborhood Coop
Transcription
Morsel - Neighborhood Coop
FREE Spring Edition 2016 Healthy & Tasty . Neighborhood Co-op Grocery . We Know Good Food www.Neighborhood.Coop Free Knife Sharpening Your Health, Your Money, and the Earth Crazy Local: Making Wild Illinois Yeast Plus... Local Producer: Little Egypt Brewing Co. Eggs are in Season! Morsel is a magazine by Neighborhood Co-op Grocery 1815 West Main Street . Murdale Shopping Center . Carbondale . 618.529.3533 Inside In Season page 3 Free Knife Sharpening Letter From the GM What's Happening at the Co-op Of Hawks and Home Crazy Local: Baking with Wild Illinois Yeast Local Feature: Little Egypt Brewing Co. Co-op Basics Questions, Concerns & Comments Customer & Staff Favorites page 4 page 5 page 6 page 7 page 8-13 page14-16 page 17 page 18 page 19 published by Neighborhood Co-op Grocery 1815 West Main Street . Carbondale . IL www.neighborhood.coop Open Daily 7 am - 10 pm DIRECTOR & DESIGN Lisa Smith DESIGNER Holly Mathis COPY EDITOR Siri R. K. LeBaron ADVERTISING Siri R. K. LeBaron Siri@Neighborhood.coop editorial policy about our store Neighborhood Co-op Grocery is owned by thousands of friends and neighbors throughout the Southern Illinois region. Everyone can shop in our store, but owners receive special perks like 10% off case orders, special owner-only sales, discounts on classes and events, and an invitation to our annual meeting & party. Ownership is only $10 a month for 10 months and is fully refundable. See a cashier for details or go to our website. mission statement Neighborhood Co-op Grocery aims to serve the needs of its owners and patrons by providing wholesome foods, economically, in the cooperative tradition and in ways that best promote the health of the individual, the community and the earth. info @ neighborhood . coop www . neighborhood . coop board of directors Kristy Bender Jordan Smith Edmonds Simeon Grater, M.D. Heather Lapham ations! Ryan Pankau Congratul Richard Thomas Jak Tichenor Gary Williams Secretary- Kristin Pass all owners are invited to our board meetings. With few exceptions, board meetings are the fourth Tuesday of every month and begin at 6 pm. The location is subject to change, so please call the store for more information. Interested in serving on the board? Contact them at... boarddevelopment @ neighborhood . coop Morsel is the quarterly food and living magazine of Neighborhood Co-op Grocery. It is intended as a vehicle for communication among Co-op owners and patrons. Letters, articles, artwork and ideas are welcome. Neighborhood Co-op Grocery reserves the right to edit content for brevity and clarity. The views expressed in Morsel are the author’s. They do not necessarily represent those of the store’s directors, staff, or ownership. Articles about health and nutrition are presented for informational purposes only. Neighborhood Co-op Grocery recommends consulting a healthcare professional for medical problems and advice. PRINTING This magazine was printed by Modern Postcard on FSC certified paper that was manufactured using renewable energy (wind, hydro and biogas). 100% made in the USA. Scan to read more about Modern Postcard and their environmental policy. Eggs Available Year Round (though hens are affected by seasonality) bake . boil . fry Try eggs + mushrooms + red wine (Bordelaise sauce) . poach eggs + potatoes + sausage eggs + chanterelle mushrooms + butter + garlic + thyme eggs + cream + chicken broth + chives (as in soup) eggs (poached) + crispy polenta + tomatoes + Hollandaise eggs + asparagus + black pepper eggs + spinach + Gruyère cheese . scramble. Did You Know? The Phoenicians believed that the primeval egg split open to create the heaven and the earth. The Egyptians thought that their god Ptah created the egg from the sun and moon. In the earliest recorded legends the chicken is never mentioned, so it appears that the egg came first. Spring 2016 | 3 Free Knife Sharpening ED DATE CHANG Saturday, May 21 10AM - 2PM Same day service, get your knives professionally sharpened while you shop. Professional Knife Sharpening done by Deon Carson of Carson's Custom Cutlery in Murphysboro 4 | SPRING 2016 Letter from the GM: Holding Steady In The Face of Strong Headwinds T he Co-op experienced its first sales decline in our 30-year history in 2015 with sales of $4.73 million, down 2.8% from $4.86 million in 2014. Given that the Co-op has a 13% compound annual growth for the years 1991 - 2015, this sales erosion represents quite a departure from what we have heretofore considered the norm. Unfortunately, there are abundant signs of a “new normal” with co-ops nationwide experiencing flat or decreasing sales due to changing industry trends. Beginning in 2014, conventional supermarkets began outstripping natural food retailers in the sale of natural and organic foods. Locally we have seen both Kroger and Aldi’s increasingly promote their natural and organic products. In addition to the increased competition for sales of organic and natural foods there are fears about the local economy. Uncertainty over funding for higher education in the State of Illinois has many people concerned about the fate of SIU, the economic superpower of the region. As I write this, the SIU president has just asked staff to identify another $25 million in cuts to the Carbondale campus saying SIU is now in “full-on fiscal triage mode.” Due in part to lack of funding, SIU has also experienced massive enrollment declines over the past few years, reaching lows not seen in 50 years. These are strong headwinds for any local business to face, particularly one that relies on highly educated customers for the bulk of its business. In some ways it is amazing that the Co-op’s sales were not more negatively impacted than they were last year. Despite the pressure on sales, the Co-op had a good year financially in 2015, achieving our second best net income to date. Net income was roughly $64,000, or 1.35% of sales. This was accomplished by Neighborhood Co-‐op Sales and Net Income 2004 -‐ 2015 $5,000,000 $100,000 $4,500,000 $50,000 $4,000,000 $0 $3,500,000 $3,000,000 -‐$50,000 $2,500,000 -‐$100,000 $2,000,000 $1,500,000 -‐$150,000 $1,000,000 -‐$200,000 $500,000 $0 -‐$250,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Sales 2010 2011 Net Income 2012 2013 2014 2015 largely meeting our gross margin goal for the year and doing a good job of controlling expenses. This higher-than-budgeted net income means that we are closer to using up net operating loss carryfowards from 2006-2008. When that occurs, the Co-op will be in a better position to issue patronage dividends again. Patronage dividends are a topic better left for another article, but suffice it to say that they represent a major benefit of being an owner in a co-op. The Co-op’s cash position improved dramatically in 2015, giving us the ability to better withstand the fallout from any bad news coming from the university. Key ratios of balance sheet strength also improved including the current ratio, which is a measure of liquidity, and the debt to equity ratio, which measures the relationship between what the Co-op owes and the owners’ collective equity in the business. Loans from Co-op owners continue to be the single largest component of the Co-op’s debt structure. I thank those owners who have renewed their loans as they have come due; this “patient capital” has been an important source of financial stability for the Co-op. In summary, your Co-op is financially healthy. I am anticipating another good year in 2016 assuming that the worst potential scenarios do not occur with regard to the university. Thank you for your continued support of the Co-op. Francis Murphy received his MBA from SIUC in 1994. With over 20 years experience leading co-ops, Francis has been the general manager of Neighborhood Co-op for more than 17 years. SPRING 2016 | 5 What's Happening Upcoming Co-op Events APRIL 22 Earth Day All Species Puppet Parade Friday - 4:30 pm Gathering at Life Community Center . Parade starts at 5:00 pm Life Community Center is located on Sunset Drive, Carbondale. Parade ends at Turley Park. Celebrate Earth Day with an amazing parade of handcrafted puppets representing creatures from all over the world. For information: (618) 521-3804. 30 - May 1 Owner Appreciation Weekend! 10% OFF purchases for owners in good standing. No rain-checks, sorry. MAY 21 Free Professional Knife Sharpening 10 am – 2 pm . Under the Co-op Awning Get your knives sharpened compliments of Neighborhood Co-op. Just bring your knives to the Co-op, and they will be professionally sharpened while you shop. JUNE 26 Dawg Daze of Summer: Super Shelter Spectacular 12 pm – 7pm . Alto Vineyards Winery (8515 Highway 127 . Alto Pass, IL 62905 . 618.893.4898) Admission: $15 – Adults . FREE – Children under 12 Join the Co-op, Alto Vineyards Winery, and Shawnee Shuttle in raising money for Southern Illinois animal rescue organizations. Live music, games, food, and vendors make if fun for the whole family. Well-behaved pets are welcome. Current rabies tags are required. Proceeds directly benefit 8 participating Southern Illinois animal rescue organizations. Monthly Sales Events Double Sales Days Bimonthly Sales Overlap - Woo! Wellness Wednesdays 10% Off Wellness Products Saluki Sundays April 11 & 12 . May 16 & 17 . June 13 & 14 . July 18 & 19 . August 1 & 2 April 6 . May 4 . June 1 . July 6 . August 3 . September 7 . October 5 April 3 . May 1 . June 5 . July 3 . August 7 . September 4 . October 2 10% Off for SIUC & JALC Students 6 | SPRING 2016 Of Hawks and Home: Your Health, Your Money and the Earth by Siri R. K. LeBaron I remember being amazed by the hawks. They were twice the size of the red tails in California, robust and stately, as if royalty moving about in posh, feathered robes, tending to the business of a thriving kingdom. It’s remarkable how one species’ prosperity refracts and reflects another’s, how an abundance of clean water, good land, and blue skies creates, remarkably, more abundance. When you come here after living in a desert valley, as I did, the sheer lifeforce of Southern Illinois is startling. Years later, I’m still amazed by the hawks, but I now see their flight connected, as if by delicate threads, to the cheerful song of the frogs, the mysteries of turtle hibernation, the possum prints around my compost pile, the farmer’s fields, the telephone poles, the man-made lakes . . . and me. If you believe Hollywood, nobody moves to the Midwest to find themselves. It’s always New York or L.A., or maybe a trek into the wilderness. I, for one, have spent a great deal of time in the wilderness. I’ve been to New York, and I’ve lived in L.A., and I would recommend them all to anyone. For me, however, Southern Illinois is where I have finally understood oikos (pronounced oy-kohs), a Greek word referring to the family unit and their homeplace. In English, oikos is translated as eco, and it is the foundation of our words for both ecology and economy. It is easy to forget, when looking at “ If you believe Hollywood, nobody moves to the Midwest to find themselves. ” the circles of hawks or the rectangles of spreadsheets, that these things are connected, that the health and prosperity of one species refracts and reflects the health and prosperity of another. But they are connected. This is the basis of the Green Triangle, a concept proposed by Ernest Callenbach, who felt that “living a sane and ecologically responsible life doesn’t mean self-sacrifice and austerity; on the contrary, it should mean a richer, more interesting, fuller, longer, and healthier life.” The three points of the Green Triangle are your health, your money, and the earth. Doing something good for one means that you also strengthen the other two, and this happens in the most everyday ways. Every time you walk instead of drive, turn off lights not being used, go kayaking instead of surfing the web, sit down with friends over a home cooked meal – all these contribute to the wellbeing of your pocket book, your health, and the earth. The sweetness of this, the real nectar, is the sense of self that arises from these interconnections, it is an understanding that you are not just a single person, a sole member of a particular species, but rather a participant in the oikos of many people, many species. This means seeing economy as a relationship between a farmer and her field, her field and a rabbit, a rabbit and a hawk. Seeing ecology and stewardship in a Farmer’s Market, new bike paths, or outdoor education. It means feeling that where you live is, irrefutably, a part of who you are. To me, that is what it means to find yourself, to experience a world that “calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting – over and over announcing your place in the family of things” (Oliver). SPRING 2016 | 7 Crazy Local: Baking With Wild Illinois Yeast photos and article by Isaac Smith I learned to love cooking before I learned to love baking. Cooking was easier to understand. There is a language, a deeply personal one, to putting a meal together for my family. Measurements are really suggestions; there is a fluidity to cooking that made sense to me. Baking, on the other hand, seemed like it was all science and precision and, frankly, really intimidating, even unappealing. This started to change three years ago. I began baking using the common method of leavening my loaves with active dry yeast and building the dough with unbleached, white, all-purpose flour. The bread was good enough, but I never achieved the texture I wanted, that blistered, crackling crust surrounding the open, irregular, pearlescent crumb. Instead the crust was matte, the flavor a bit flat and bland and the texture a bit on the tight side. Again, the bread I was making was not bad, but it was not the bread of my dreams. For the bread I wanted, you need a lot of steam in your oven, something most home ovens can’t accomplish. Mine certainly couldn’t. I had resigned myself the fact that my loaves would be serviceable, but never 8 | SPRING 2016 SPRING 2016 | 9 Wild yeast is everywhere! It is in the air on our hands on the plants we grow and eat. You can capture wild yeast by making a bait of water and flour. The types of flour you use, the ratio of water to flour, and the temperature it is stored at all affect the flavor of the final product. The more liquid the starter is, for instance, the more sour the final product. You know it is working when the mixture bubbles, like above. The leaven (levain) is made from a small amount of the wild yeast mixture by taking just a table spoon or so (200 g) and adding to that 200 grams respectively of both flour and water. You allow this to mature and develop for about twelve to eighteen hours, until it is bubbling and active. You know it is active enough when you can gently place a tablespoon size blob or so in a bowl of water and it floats. match the beauty of artisanal bread. This changed when I was introduced to Chad Robertson’s Tartine Bread series of books. Through his detailed, but digestible, writing, Chad helped me understand how bread works. His method is the foundation of the process I use today. fed regularly fosters enough yeast to leaven bread. It is that easy! Really. Once established (that is, after feeding once a day for a week or two), this starter can be fed every other day when kept out or WILD YEAST STARTER When I said baking was intimidating, I wasn’t even talking about naturally leavened breads. These existed on another, even more out of reach, plane. They were something that required a level of understanding I couldn’t begin to tackle (Perhaps a degree in biochemistry? I wasn’t sure.). Tartine Bread helped me realize just how wrong I was. After all, you can't get much more local than wild yeast. The yeast in the air in each region is uniquely its own thing, which is what makes San Francisco sourdough so awesome. Really, flour and water when mixed in equal portions and left loosely covered on the counter will begin to ferment in about four days and this, when Proofing times are more about how the dough looks or feels and less about what the clock says. 10 | SPRING 2016 even once a week if kept in the fridge. It should smell a bit creamy and sweet, not terribly sour. How you feed it will help develop the flavor profile you are looking for. I prefer a mildly sour loaf so, when I feed my starter, I discard between 70-80% of it and then feed it with a 50/50 mixture of white and whole-wheat flour and an equal portion of water. Should you want a stronger, more acidic flavor (think more of that assertive San Francisco sourdough flavor), discard less. You can also achieve a more complex flavor by feeding it with other flours, such as rye or buckwheat. (The Co-op has a number of options in the bulk department with which you can experiment.) Amounts here don’t matter so much, but remember flour is food for yeast so if you plan to not feed it everyday, go ahead and add a bit more flour to make sure your culture doesn’t starve. (You can also put it in the refrigerator to slow things down more.) When feeding the starter you want the consistency to resemble a slightly thick pancake batter. You know the starter is healthy when it’s bubbling nicely. This can take several hours or even an entire night depending on temperature (yeast likes warmer temperatures.) It is here I should say this really should be mixed One of the most exciting innovations is how to get good steam when baking these European-style loaves. There are numerous methods for doing this, but none achieve a crust like the Tartine method that uses a cast iron Dutch oven. The end result is a crust that almost looks like it was baked in a wood fired oven with a deep, rich color on the outside and owing to the heat and staggered baking (with the lid at full heat, with the lid at lower heat, and then lid off) the crumb, interior of the bread, has beautiful aeration. with your bare hand. It’s a sticky matter, but worth it for several reasons, the primary reason being that the wild yeast on your hands will fortify your culture (clean hands are good, sterile hands like for surgery aren’t necessary here). The second reason is that you'll begin to understand how the starter should feel. You’ll know you have the right consistency not because a recipe says so but because your hand does. This is what starts to transform you into a baker. If you are like I was, you are probably asking, “But how do I get that bubbling mass to turn into bread?” This also isn’t complicated, but I should stop to say that, when baking with natural leaven, your mind-set about baking has to become loose. This process makes baking a lot like cooking. Instructions in recipes are, to some degree, guidelines. For instance, sometimes to get meat nicely browned it takes longer than 3 minutes per side, and that is ok. Bread is the same. Proofing times are more When all these steps come together at their best you'll have a crumb that's well aerated with nice holes. The crust will be enhanced by gorgeous "ears" - a flap of dough created by scoring that lifts as it bakes creating more crust. The flavor will be creamy an improve the next day!. Basic Country Loaf This recipe is rooted in the Tartine method. You will need a scale to make this recipe. As you become more skilled at handling the dough you can increase the percentage of water, which will change the crumb and flavor quite a lot. Working with percentages will allow you to scale the recipe up or down. The general schedule for making and baking are below. For details, please read the article. 750 grams (75%) room temperature water 200 grams (20%) leaven 1,000 grams (100%) composed of one flour or a mixture, such as 965 grams of white flour (96.5%) and 35 grams whole wheat flour (3.5%) 20 grams (2%) salt • • • • • • • • • • • • • Make your wild yeast starter Prepare your leaven from the starter the night before you want to bake Next day, mix your bread dough Rest the dough for proper hydration - 20-30 minutes Stretch and fold every 30 minutes for a period of 4 hours Cut it, shape it and let rest for about 30-40 minutes Shape the dough, then turn seam-side up in a bowl lined with a floured towel Allow to rise for 3 hours or overnight in the refrigerator (preferred method) Preheat oven and Dutch Oven to 500˚F for at least 45 minutes before baking Turn loves out into Dutch oven that's been dusted with more rice flour Score bread loaves and place lid on the Dutch oven Bake for 20 minutes; reduce heat to 450˚F and bake another 10 minutes; remove lid and bake an additional 20+ minutes until the desired carmelization Allow to rest on cooling rack for 30-40 minutes before slicing SPRING 2016 | 11 about how the dough looks or feels and less about what the clock says. LEAVEN The night before you want to bake, take your mature starter and discard all but one tablespoon and feed it with 200 grams (roughly 1 cup) of flour and the same amount of water and mix. This ratio will provide a nice, mild loaf, but if you want something stronger in flavor, by all means increase the amount of starter you use. By the next morning this should be nicely aerated with lots of bubbles on the surface. To be sure it’s ready to bake with, drop a small spoonful in a bowl of water. If it floats you are ready, if not you should give it more time. Not all Dental Practices are alike. Do you realize how important a HOLISTICALLY-INCLINED, HEALTH-CENTERED, RELATIONSHIP-BASED dentist is for your well-being? Thomas L. Waltemate, D.D.S., AIAOMT 618-965-9213 Steeleville, Illinois Learn more at www.TomWaltemateDDS.com Advertise in Morsel reasonable rates tailored readership email for details to info@Neighborhood.Coop or call 618.529.3533 x 207 12 | SPRING 2016 MIX THE BREAD From here you are ready to mix the bread dough. It is at this point where I had my biggest revelation. Baking is all about ratios! Like cooking where you balance acidity with sweetness or spice level with starch, you don’t always need a recipe to make great bread so long as you know what percentages you want to use. For bread that is based on 1000g of flour, i.e. 100% (I like 965g of white flour to 35g whole wheat which gives a good depth of flavor and the crust good caramelization but doesn’t weigh the bread’s flavor down), a good starting point for water is to use 75% hydration or 750g, 20% (200g) leaven and 20% (200g) salt. You first will mix the water and leaven together and then add your flour and mix until there are no more dry clumps. I urge you to do this by hand so you can start to understand how the dough should feel. This is a key part of really understanding bread. The dough should be sticky and a bit “shaggy” as bakers say. Not completely wet, but also without any visible pockets of flour. Remember to scrape as much of the mixture off of your hands as possible, so your percentages are true. REST THE DOUGH At this point you will want to give the flour time to become fully hydrated by allowing the mixture to rest. This develops gluten while shortening the time it takes to develop your dough. A typical rest period is anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. You know it has rested enough because the dough will look relaxed and spread out a bit. I recommend moving the dough to a glass container at this point. (Remember that this dough will rise by about 20-30%, so choose your container accordingly.) With a glass container you can look at how the fermentation is going, judging your progress by how many bubbles are on the sides of your dough. This is when you will add your salt and mix it in, again by hand, and begin to develop the dough, which should feel a bit more plump and hydrated. STRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT Now is when we begin to develop structure in the bread. This is when you begin to stretch and fold your bread. Stretching and folding is the process of reaching underneath one side of the dough, pulling it up and folding it over itself. This should be done working clockwise around the bowl, essentially making four turns of the bowl. Do this once every thirty minutes for about four hours or until there are many bubbles on the sides of your dough’s container and it is billowy. This process builds up the structure of the bread and is how you trap the gas that creates those wonderful holes and complex flavor. SHAPING Once the dough has finished this first stage of fermentation, it’s best to turn it out onto a lightly floured work surface, cut it in half, loosely shape each half into rounds, and let it rest again for about 20-40 minutes covered. After this, fold the loaves like an envelop, bottom third over the middle, left third over the middle, right, and then top. Flip the dough over and tuck the sides under to create tension. Then rotate your dough ball to create more tension (it is easiest to do this with lightly floured hands and a bench knife). Once your dough is in a nice, tight ball, flour the top with rice flour and put in a bowl lined with a linen towel that has been coated liberally with rice flour - rubbing the rice flour into the towel to ensure the dough does not stick. You can now let it rise for another 3 hours or put it in the fridge to rise slowly overnight. I prefer the later option as the slow rise helps develop flavor and the dough seems to score better when cold. Also, this cold fermentation is how you get blisters on the crust of your bread. SCORING & BAKING When it’s time to bake, preheat your oven to 500˚ F with a cast-iron dutch oven inside for about 45 minutes. You will use the Dutch oven as an oven in your oven, so-to-speak. The lid will help trap the steam of your baking loaf, give it tremendous oven spring and help you develop that great, crackling crust. This method makes all the difference and is much more effective than spraying the inside of your oven with water, dropping in ice cubes or any of the other steam injection workarounds that I have tried to mimic commercial or wood fired ovens. After the oven is hot, take the pan out, remove the lid and then carefully turn the loaf out into it. Next you want to score the loaf, but be careful. This is the point you are most likely to burn yourself. Cutting the loaf in this way, with a pattern or just a slash, creates a clean cut weak point for the steam to escape. If you don't score, your bread will expand and then burst at it's weakest point in the dough creating an unsightly blow out. You can use a lame (pronounced LAHM, rhymes with mom), a sharp knife, a razor blade, or even kitchen shears. The key to a good score is being decisive, firm, fast and knowing the dough you are working with - the stickier the dough the more shallow the score. For instance, a more firm dough can be scored up to a half inch deep. While a sticky dough might be a challenge to score just a quarter of an inch deep. Then place the lid back on and into the oven it goes. Let it bake at 500˚F for 20 minutes, reduce to 450˚F for 10 and then take the lid off. This is my favorite part of baking. It’s like Christmas to me to see how big the loaf has become when that lid comes off. If it’s really done well, your scores will have crispy “ears” where the loaf has expanded. This is good stuff. At this point, your kitchen will smell incredible. Continue to bake for another 20-30 minutes, depending on how caramelized you like your crust. Remove it from the Dutch oven and let it cool on a baking rack for about 30-40 minutes before cutting (this allows the bread to set). It is now ready to eat. This process may still seem a bit complicated, but most things are when they are new. As you start to bake, the techniques will become second nature, and you will know by feel, smell, and sight how the bread is doing. You won’t need a recipe to tell you. The numbers in this recipe really should be a jumping off point. Dial it in to your tastes; play with it. Experiment with new flours or try grinding your own from the whole grain. The Co-op carries a number of flours and whole grains in the bulk department and packaged grocery. Play with adding more water, less water, longer rest times. Add seeds or decorative grains to the outside of the load before baking. You can also play with your scoring. Some bakeries are known by this moniker. If you are interested in alternative flours like the Co-op sells, I recommend Tartine Booke No. 3. It is an incredible resource for baking with things like kamut, rye, polenta, sprouted barley and even porridges. Just like cooking dinner, baking is an extension of who we are as cooks and bakers. Each one is a bit different, but no less satisfying. There is nothing like setting the table with a basket of bread that was in your hands hours ago and in your oven minutes before. Feeding your family or friends with something so personal is an incredible thing. I hope you experience this kind of satisfaction. Tartine Bread and Tartine Book No. 3 are available at local book retailers and online. The Co-op does not have access to these books through our current distributors. Bulk & Packaged Grains & Flours Some grains must be ground into a flour using a grain mill or made into a porridge before use. Kamut A hard duram wheat grown in Montana, and abroad in places like Italy and the Middle East. Contains more protein than other wheats. Has a nutty flavor and chewy texture. Rye Naturally low in gluten, rye has a distinctive tangy flavor and is an excellent choice for developing the flavor of sourdough. In addition to breads, rye can also add nice flavor complexity to pastries, cookies and pie crusts. Barley High in fiber and low in gluten, barley can be cooked as a porridge and used in bread doughs. Barley has a subtle, earthy flavor and kind of sweetness. Cracked Corn/Polenta Adds a sweet flavor and beautiful color to breads. Cook into a porridge before adding to bread doughs for best results. Can be a nice addition to baguettes used in moderation. Millet Presoak before adding to bread, millet adds texture to breads. Isaac Smith is a multiplatform journalist living and working in Southern Illinois. With a strong belief in documenting one's own backyard, he is dedicated to telling the story of community through photographs, audio, and video. SPRING 2016 | 13 Little Egypt Beer It’s all about the beer! Little Egypt Brewing Company Craft Beer - Ava, IL K en Rhude had just traveled across most of Canada and he was thirsty. The air was clear that summer day in 1989, and he was seated outside at a Boston restaurant. The next few moments would be defining ones for his life. The server brought his order to the table, a longneck bottle of Sam Adams Boston Lager and a glass. Ken took a drink and thinks, “Holy [cow] that’s bitter!” It was a shock to his palate that was used to fizzy, yellow lagers poured from pitchers. It was new and intense, and he knew his relationship to beer would not be the same after. 14 | SPRING 2016 photos and article by Isaac Smith “I didn’t realize you could have that much flavor in a beer,” Ken, owner and brewmaster at Little Egypt Beer in Ava, recalls. Two years later, after enjoying drinking quality beer, Ken learned how to make it. In 1991 after getting back from the Gulf War, he was taught how to homebrew beer in Carbondale where he was studying at SIU. He did not do much with this knowledge for a few years though, until he moved to Los Angeles, California in 1999. It was there that he joined up with the Maltose Falcons Homebrew Society (the oldest homebrewing club in the world), which boasts many of beer’s most celebrated brewers, notably Ken Groseman of Sierra Nevada fame. After diving deep into the world of home brewing, Ken realized it may be time to take things up a level. He needed more training. “There was a time where I was brewing two to three times on the weekend and then I was going to work as an insurance adjuster and I just got to the point where I thought it was time for me to go to brewing school as part of my hobby,” he remembers. He asked to take 2 weeks unpaid leave to go to Siebel Institute Little Egypt Beers: A Brew for Everyone Spot Market American Pale Ale Lovely American hops balanced with a foundation of malt flavor. Hefeweizen A Bavarian style hefeweizen that's unfiltered. It has clove and banana aromas and is wheat forward. It's complex, a little spicy, and well balanced. Hopyard Expedition Indian Pale Ale Strong, bold, and balanced with an explosive hoppy backbone and nice citrus notes Great with spicy food! Abbot 6 (limited availability) A little sweet and a little spicy from the hops, this beer noses a bit fruity. A little strong in a way that will sneak up on you! Orange Blossom Honey Wheat Ale Beautiful floral and citrus notes from the honey in a gorgeous American wheat ale. Wee Heavy Ale In the Scottish brewing tradition, this one has a lot of malt, a bit of hops, and a pinch of peat smoked malt. Imperial Stout A dark beer that tastes of coffee, chocolate, and cream with a balanced finish of hops and roast. brewing school in Chicago. His boss said no, and Ken put in his notice. Dicey as that may have been it did not take Ken long to find work. “When I came back, I networked through the Maltose Falcons and got a job at BJ’s Chicago Pizza and Brewery,” he says. Because of corporate restructuring, Ken was eventually laid off from BJ’s and pursued opening his own establishment there in L.A. This was no easy task. “I was trying to open a brewery in L.A. for 8 years,” Ken explains. He says in order for him to get something off the ground it would have taken a minimum of $1.5 million, and that was just for proof of concept. This was not practical. When the opportunity came for him and his wife to move back to Southern Illinois, Ken saw his chance to open his brewery. “We thought if we moved back here that it wouldn’t be too difficult to get a brewery going based on what Chuck [Stuhrenberg] did at Big Muddy” Chuck lobbied the Illinois Congress to allow independent breweries to selfdistribute to local businesses, which saves small breweries lots when they're considering starting up or selling outside of their facility. A big deal for the small guys. Ken Rhude’s Little Egypt Beer opened its doors in Ava in 2012 and since has brewed 31 different styles. “We take a few risks here and there but most of it is up the middle craft beer,” Ken says adding that he also enjoys making traditional European styles as well. Ken says that often the traditional European styles he brews are better than those often found on import shelves simply because they are fresher. The availability of these beers freshly brewed is facilitated, Ken says, by the world becoming a smaller place. He says years ago it was incredibly difficult for a small brewer to find specialty yeast strains and malts to brew them, but this is no longer the case. Nick cleaning one of the brew tanks before brewing. “What we have available to us nowadays in comparison to 20 years ago, there are just a ridiculously number of resources for small brewers now,” Ken says. SPRING 2016 | 15 10% From Top CW: (1) Nick Galindo stirring wort. The sugars in wort will be fermented by the brewing yeast and will produce alcohol. (2) Adding pellets to a boiling pot of unfermented beer called wort. Wort is the liquid extracted from the mashing process during the brewing of beer. (3) Cracked grains waiting to be soaked for the brewing process. OFF SATURDAY, APRIL 30 & SUNDAY, MAY 1 OWNER APPRECIATION WEEKEND www.neighborhood.coop Owners in good standing receive 10% off their purchases. Sorry, no rain checks. 16 | SPRING 2016 After brewing for four years at the Bluffs in Ava, Ken says it’s time for a change. By relocating to Carbondale by the end of 2016, he hopes to move his business closer to the lion’s share of his customers. Little Egypt Beer will be moving off of Reed Station Road into an 11,500 square foot building and feature a bar and restaurant as well as a big beer garden. His brewing facility will grow as well, which Ken hopes will enable him to serve not just Southern Illinois, but the Chicago and St. Louis markets. Little Egypt is just one of many breweries that opened as a result of the recent beer boom. Nestled among local favorites like Scratch, Big Muddy and Crown Valley, Little Egypt helps make the world a bigger place locally. Ken says he even sees room for growth in his market. “It doesn’t seem like if you keep adding good beer makers into the equation that there is a problem,” he says. “I think it’s great for the consumer to be able to have choices.” But, of course, he adds that, at the end of the day, he hopes people choose Little Egypt. Isaac Smith is a multiplatform journalist living and working in Southern Illinois. With a strong belief in documenting one's own backyard, he is dedicated to telling the story of community through photographs, audio, and video. A New Way to Save Introducing Co+op Basics, with everyday low prices on the things you buy most frequently. We've cut prices on HUNDREDS of items across the Co-op to provide better access to our high-quality organic and natural grocery, freezer, dairy, deli, and paper products. Look for these Products like these & lots more! Questions, Concerns & Comments THANK YOU!! Your letter made many of us misty-eyed. To be appreciated is always wonderful, and it is even more wonderful to know that someone has been comforted and uplifted by the way we do things. We take pride in doing things differently than other stores! Unlike corporate-style grocery stores, Neighborhood Co-op Grocery truly exists to serve our customers – because our customers are the shareholders. That’s the beauty of being an owner at the Co-op; it closes the loop and keeps more of the money, focus, and human resources local. Think of that loop as loving arms that wrap around our whole co-op community, embracing customers (whether or not they’re owners), staff, local farmers and vendors, as well as a host of fair-trade, B-corp, and natural food companies. Your kind and vulnerable words are as much a part of that loop as any one of us wearing a nametag at the store. It’s not just a slogan – we really are stronger together. Much love, All the Co-op Staff 18 | SPRING 2016 Customer Staff favorites Customers and Staff Share their Favorite Products at the Co-op! What products do you love? Tell us at www.neighborhood.coop or in store! THAYER’S: Rose Petal Witch Hazel Brittany, Cashier 1. This product is perfectly exfoliating without irritating my sensitive skin. 2. It smells wonderful!! BOOMCHICKAPOP: Sweet & Salty Kettle Corn BEET PERFORMER: Beet Juice w/ Passion Fruit Juice Sally, Customer Nina, Wellness It’s the perfect blend of salty & sweet, and it’s a lower calorie snack that you don’t have to feel too terrible about eating! Assistant This drink tastes great and makes me feel amazing! Try it and perform your best too! SKIN TRIP: Coconut Lotion GOODFLOSS: Biodegradable Flossers Pale, Customer Service Manager I love clean teeth after lunch. So easy too. Tara, Cashier I keep this at my register and whenever someone asks, “what smells so good?” I say, “if it smells like summer and the beach, it’s me! Try some!” This lotion is light, yet moisturizing! SPRING 2016 | 19 COOPERATING Over 30 YEARS Neighborhood Co-op Grocery 1815 West Main Street Carbondale, IL 62901 Changing with the the Seasons Changing with Season by Lisa Smith Spring Berry Clafoutis by Lisa Smith Classic clafoutis is made with cherries, but you can make it with early spring berries, as well as with apples, pears or even summery elderberries. Serve it cold or at room temperature. It's a moderately sweet and very delicious treat! cups whole milk tablespoon plus ½ cup sugar large eggs, room temperature teaspoon vanilla extract Pinch of salt ¼ cup all purpose flour 1 pint fresh or frozen berries, washed and lightly dried Powdered sugar Butter or spray oil 1¼ 3 1 1 FENNEL PIC Preheat oven to 375°F. Butter 10-inch-diameter cast iron skillet or a glass pie dish; sprinkle the buttered dish with 1 tablespoon sugar. Arrange fruit evenly over bottom of dish. Face up or face down is a matter of preference, but changes the end result very little. Using electric mixer beat eggs, vanilla extract, salt, and remaining ½ cup sugar in medium bowl until well blended. Sift flour into egg mixture and beat until smooth. Pour mixture over cherries. Bake until set, but still jiggly in the center; a knife inserted into center should come out clean, about 30 minutes. Cool completely. Can be made 6 hours ahead. Let stand at room temperature. Lightly dust clafoutis with powdered sugar and serve. Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Tip: Once seasoned, your cast iron pans should last long enough to become a family heirloom if cared for properly. Never soak your cast iron in water. If something is stubbornly baked on try filling with enough water to cover the offending substance. Bring to a boil on the stove. While the water is still warm, try gently (and carefully) scraping the remaining spots with a wooden spoon or a plastic scraper. Never use metal or you could scratch through your "seasoning" and cause the pan to stick. The Co-op accepts checks, cash and these other forms of payment: