Tuesday, October 13, 2015

PEAK FISH & LOBSTER ROLLS

Any self respecting lobster roll deserves reporting here.  But Greenpoint Fish and Lobster Co. not only has an exceptional lobster roll, they are possibly the best fish market/restaurant I know.  I happened to find them poking around my Monterrey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch app.  In the app's map I found a fish monger approved by them right near by, so I decided to pay them a visit.

First I went just looking for raw fish to buy, but when I got there I saw a great kitchen and bar to sit and eat.  That day I got some very reasonable Boston Mackerel.  Since then I have had the several other sustainable fish from them, the wild catfish, an invasive species in the Chesapeake, and Lion Fish, an invasive species in Florida and other tropical waters.  With a recent study showing that overfishing has depleted the worlds fish stock by HALF since 1970, it seems harder and harder to justify eating any kind of protein other than beans and rice.

But all these invasive species they were selling gave me the idea of an "Invasive Species Dinner Party"...  Why not gorge on meat that you can feel completely guilt free in eating? 


Sunday, May 3, 2015

This Label Could Be Really Bad For You


A great NY Times Retro Report about flame retardants warrants a more personal account of our own interaction with the furniture industry.

We bought new couch from IKEA a few months ago When it arrived it smelled like a chemical factory.  We realized that we were so excited to find an affordable convertible sectional that fit our specific parameters we completely forgot about all of the research we had done years ago about flame retardants and their negative health impacts.  While it is likely some of the smell came from the equally worrisome glues and the formaldehyde in the particle board, it did the trick of alerting us to the perils of flame retardants in furniture.

When our first child was born in 2011 we read the Chicago Tribune series about how the cigarette industry convinced California regulators that it was not cigarettes causing house fires, it was the furniture, and how the chemical industry stood dutifully ready to solve the problem.  Of course it turns out the chemicals lower IQ and cause cancer among other things.  At the time we did what we could to mitigate their presence.  Now, three years later, we realized a lot had changed, and much had not.  In 2013 Governor Jerry Brown changed the California law, no longer requiring the chemicals. But the furniture industry was not required to label what it was making.  We had to rely on their word, and a helpful NRDC guide to some manufacturers. In the end we went to the trouble of taking the couch back to IKEA for a refund (I couldn't imagine selling it on Craig's List).  

Last week we ordered a (much more expensive) couch from Room And Board, which by all accounts is be free of flame retardants.  Room And Board, incidentally says that all of their furniture is free of all flame proofing, except a few convertible couched still made in china.  Note: even R&B's own publication is not clear about which fire retardants are NOT in their couches (PBDE flame retardants were largely phased out in 2006/8  it is the chlorinated Chlorinated Tris: TDCP and TCEP that are the culprits du-jour)

Of course with all of these decisions I am struck by the great effort and expense we went to to mitigate the problem in our home. How would a family, relocating regularly for work, with more limited financial resources and less time be able to keep these chemicals out of their children's blood.

And as our dad's old business partner, Robert Kenner, so clearly discusses in Merchants Of Doubt the chemical industry is just part of the systematic undermining of real science that has more severe implications with climate change. 

One thing to do is to sign this petition from Move On (remember them?) And buy a new couch.  

Sunday, April 12, 2015

The Steadfast House in Seattle

After a long hiatus from posting I'm looking forward to contributing some more.

A piece in the New York Times today informs us Edith Macefield's "Steadfast" house in Seattle looks like it will be torn down soon.
If you are interested in the story 99% Invisible did a fantastic podcast on the house last September.
The podcast has interesting details on Macefield's life, and her relationship with the construction superintendent, Barry Martin, who, while building the building around her, took care of her and eventually inherited the house.

While your at it, subscribe to 99%Invisible.  Its amazing.


ALSO check out China's Nail Houses in the Guardian: