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Marcus Samuelsson

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Eat Globally, Eat Better!

Posted: 09/12/2012 12:41 pm

I was honored to spend a few hours at the Huffington Post Oasis at the RNC and DNC these past two weeks, talking about how to eat globally to eat better. I couldn't have asked for a better response from both those who came up to me at the conventions and those who commented on my recent blog on this topic, but the one thing almost everyone asked me for is for some more ideas for incorporating this idea into their daily lives! So with some help of my friends at FoodRepublic.com and MarcusSamuelsson.com, here are 10 of my favorite recipes that highlight dishes that are so full of flavor you don't have to eat a lot. Some are quick and easy and some take a bit more time, but I guarantee all of them will make you feel better from the inside-out.

Miso Ramen with Shrimp
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I love ramen and have been experimenting with ways to make the meal lighter. Here I use white wine with the miso broth and add a good amount of spice and fresh corn to brighten the dish.

Recipe: Miso Ramen with Shrimp

Photo: roboppy on Flickr
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I was honored to spend a few hours at the Huffington Post Oasis at the RNC and DNC these past two weeks, talking about how to eat globally to eat better. I couldn't have asked for a better response fr...
I was honored to spend a few hours at the Huffington Post Oasis at the RNC and DNC these past two weeks, talking about how to eat globally to eat better. I couldn't have asked for a better response fr...
 
 
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
03:24 PM on 09/23/2012
I can't wait to try these. Many of these ingredients can be acquired locally, or you can make substitutions with local foods.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mirabai305
Are you Jeff Vader?
01:38 PM on 09/17/2012
The roasted cauliflower head is not roasted at all.
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
11:32 AM on 09/15/2012
Not all these recipes require ingredients from the other side of the world. Eating globally can be about techniques, flavor profiles, and so on without requiring shipment of exotic ingredients from 3,000 miles away. Of course, one can also buy a non-local food product once in a while and type on your Made-in-a-Very-Far-Away-Place-from-You computer a little less.
03:59 PM on 09/15/2012
Good point. In almost every case, at the least the *idea* of a foreign dish can be recreated from ingredients grown here at home. For example, Chinese broccoli is a rather different plant from the broccoli grown here, but an Asian style stir-fry using domestic broccoli is certainly close enough, I would think. And it's not like other cultures have any hesitation about adapting American food to the ingredients that are available to them. Two of the most popular toppings at Pizza Hut in Japan, for example, are calamari and tuna - the Japanese certainly don't mind adapting!

As a side note, have you ever noticed that American "foodie" types, while often deeply subversive of their own food culture, can be respectful, to the point of downright conservatism, when it comes to anyone else's? It's almost like some kind of national inferiority complex. Americans are suppposedly so "insular" that they can't imagine eating anything but American food; but believe me, I've been to Italy and France, and the Italians don't seem to have much interest in eating anything other than Italian food, and the French don't seem to care much for anything but French food. Of course, with them, it's "quaint"; but with us, it's "ignorant" and "provincial".
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
03:31 PM on 09/16/2012
And a lot of those ingredients can be grown here as well. Asian greens grow really well in temperate regions. But you're right about substituting similar ingredients. In fact, one of our favorite Thai restaurants has a Chinese broccoli stir-fry, and when they're out of Chinese broccoli, they just use the broccoli most people are familiar with here.

For all of our other, very bad food traditions--fast food, highly processed food, etc.--American food is diverse and interesting, in my opinion. The regional variations, the traditional foods and ingredients of native peoples, the flourishing of cuisines from immigrants, and so on all reflect a vast culinary heritage. It's a shame, for instance, that Thanksgiving has become so focused on the turkey, dressing, and mashed potatoes. The history of the meal shows a much more creative take on harvest foods.
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carolecray
goddess-woman
08:10 AM on 09/13/2012
eat locally grown food when I can get it and when I can afford it. I must say that I love some foods that are "global" but most of the ingrediants are too expensive for my budget.
10:06 PM on 09/12/2012
I'd prefer to eat locally thanks very much. I can draw my recipes from anywhere but the food should primarily local and in season. And since when does being "full of flavour" become an influence of how many nutrients you need to survive? People don't need fewer nutrients to survive when they eat flavourful food. They need the same nutrients.
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LisaCACO
someone ate my micro-bio!
09:44 PM on 09/12/2012
someone make the avocado pasta and come back and tell us about it :)
09:04 PM on 09/12/2012
Eat locally, not globally.
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
04:12 PM on 09/12/2012
Some of these looks fantastic. You better believe I'll be making the avocado pasta and whole roasted cauliflower.
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Contact1972
BigGayInc
04:22 PM on 09/12/2012
Try the akoori. DELISH!
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12:38 AM on 09/13/2012
I can't make avocado or shrimp dishes. They aren't grown locally.
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Yonnas
accept yourself first !!
03:32 PM on 09/12/2012
Samuel, if you have added some more Ethiopian Flavors that would have been even better. Over all it sounds delicious.
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howeverfaraway
What a long strange trip it's been....
02:54 PM on 09/12/2012
Does previously frozen mean a "not dry" scallop?
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iamjones
02:45 PM on 09/12/2012
Yum---mie!!! I'll being making the Avocado Sauce and the Whole Roasted Califlower, definitely.
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invisbl
same as it ever was
02:17 PM on 09/12/2012
why why why did I look at this article 15 mins before lunchtime, when all I have to look forward to are nuts, yogurt and an apple :/ want the avocado cream sauce NOW!
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Contact1972
BigGayInc
01:18 PM on 09/12/2012
Akoori is a Parsi dish. Awesome for a Sunday morning. Spread on toast. YUMMY!