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Food

Soubry Macaroni – Liège, BE – Lowlands Correspondent, Gaia Son

© Gaia Son

Soubry pasta ad by Lefor-Openo 1960s

© Gaia Son

Soubry or Etabl. J. Soubry NV / SA is a food company in the Belgian city of Roeselare. The West Flemish company was founded in 1921 by Joseph Soubry (1889-1984) and still refers to itself as a family business. They produce pasta, flour, semolina, biscuits, pasta and all kinds of related products. – Wikipedia NL

Fading Ad Spotting on the Highline by Estelle Saltiel – Starring Noah Pardo & Adina Jick (& Burnham’s Beef Wine Chowder)

© Estelle Saltiel

Look Ma! A fading ad! Quick take our picture with it!

© Estelle Saltiel

Burnham’s Beef Wine Chowder

© Estelle Saltiel

Let’s send it to Uncle Frank!

Burnham’s in New York began as E. S. Burnham Co. Manufacturers Grocers’ Specialties at 120 Gansevoort St. around 1894, and moved to 53-61 Gansevoort in 1897. They were located here until 1929. Their products were groceries, produce, and druggist sundries. Apparently the sundries included medicinal tonics and extracts, as well as clam bouillon. – Walter Grutchfield

Waste Not – Want Not – More Vintage WWI United States Food Administration Propaganda Posters

Vintage WWI poster

Vintage WWI poster

Vintage United States Food Administration Propaganda Posters – WWI

USFA Vintage Poster

USFA

Just Eat It – Food Waste Movie – Vintage Food Waste Propaganda Poster

Vintage Propaganda Poster

We all love food. As a society, we devour countless cooking shows, culinary magazines and foodie blogs. So how could we possibly be throwing nearly 50% of it in the trash? Filmmakers and food lovers Jen and Grant dive into the issue of food waste from farm, through retail, all the way to the back of their own fridge. After catching a glimpse of the billions of dollars of good food that is tossed each year in North America, they pledge to quit grocery shopping and survive only on discarded food. What they find is truly shocking. – foodwastemovie dot com

11x17-Just-EatIt-poster

foodwastemovie [dot] com

Pumpkins Are Freakin’ Amazin’ Fruits

© Frank H. Jump

Over 41 days ago, Vincenzo brought home this beautiful large pumpkin for the porch as our annual fall decoration. I shot it with my iPhone and posted it on Instagram. We don’t carve them or mar them. We took it in before the first major frost and finally yesterday we said, “We have to do something with this freakin’ pumpkin.” What we usually do is hack it up and boil it and put it in freezer bags. This time we cut it in half, removed all the seeds and washed, dried and salted them. We baked the seeds at 350ºF for twenty minutes as we continued to prepare the pumpkin flesh which we cut into large two inch wide wedges without peeling, laid them in rows in a baking sheet and baked them at 350ºF for just a bit over an hour after the seeds were done. We dumped them into a large clear plastic bag and covered it in a towel and let it steam in its own heat. Later after they were still hot but not too hot to handle, I cut off the skin and cut the wedges into inch thick chunks into a glass bowl and let them cool. Most of them we put into freezer bags and froze. The pumpkin is still under-cooked but excellent for throwing into soups and stews.

© Frank H. Jump

Peasant food is one of the cuisines Vincenzo has long savored, bringing back memories when his mother would stretch a meal for five and yet fulfill a dietary and nutritional standard. Polenta is one of those foods that has since become elevated to high cost sides in Italian restaurants. Pumpkin or zucca is another one of those peasant meals Enzo’s mom would make for her hungry brood. This stew is very easy. Just coarsely chop two large red onions, some Yukon potatoes and chopped whole tomatoes, salt pepper to taste and some water. Bring to a boil and throw in the pumpkin that has been cut into inch cubes. You need just enough water to cover and after it has boiled long enough for the potatoes to start to fall apart a bit, shut if off and let it sit. Mmm mmm mmm- so freakin’ good. What’s so freakin’ great is how economical and highly nutritious these meals are. OK, fried anything tastes good but this is just yummy.

© Frank H. Jump

Enzo suggested I cut the inch thick slices in half and flour them with salt and pepper. Then I soaked them in egg and fried them gently on medium flame with crushed red pepper and chopped garlic in olive oil. I turned them on both sides and even stood them up on their sides to get the edges nice and brown. They still seemed a bit hard so I drained them in brown paper towels and put them on a baking sheet and put them in the oven for another twenty minutes at 350ºF and drained them on brown paper again. So freakin’ yummy. I could imagine that you can skip the garlic and red pepper and put some sugar and cinnamon in the flour before frying and then after they were finally done, sprinkle them with more sugar and cinnamon for a sweet fried pumpkin treat.

Armour’s Extract of Beef – Tomato Bouillon – The Cosmopolitan Magazine – May 1904

May 1904 Volume I

Thanos Import Market – Syracuse, NY – August 2010

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Adamba Imports – Founded in 1985 – Lorimer Street – Greenpoint, Brooklyn

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Maggi Billboard – Olympic Electric – Sayyidah Zaynab Square, Cairo – Uptown Correspondent, Iman R. Abdulfattah

© Iman R. Abdulfattah

© Iman R. Abdulfattah

© Iman R. Abdulfattah

IMAN: My final contribution from Cairo: the ads are rather dull (both the typography and companies advertised), but the high concentration of ads in this area is visually interesting and says a lot about cityscape.

FAB: Just got your upload. So, the Maggi ad is self-explanatory. What does the other one say? I see “olympics” or is that a car logo?

IMAN: The ad on the right is for an appliance company called Olympic Electric, but it is also a palimpsest as the black text is an ad for an advertising company called Diana.