Thursday, June 27, 2013

FOXNews.com: Cap'n Crunch defends himself against 'mutinous rumblings'

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Cap'n Crunch defends himself against 'mutinous rumblings'
Jun 27th 2013, 20:00

Just so we all have full closure in the latest scandal to rock the food world (no, we're not talking about Paula Deen), Cap'n Crunch held a "press conference'' this week to clear up allegations that he was impersonating a captain.

In his weekly edition of "The Cap'n Crunch Show'' cartoon, posted on YouTube late Tuesday, says he is indeed a captain, despite the Navy saying otherwise.  

In the video, which is labeled, "The Cap'n stands tall on the mutinous rumblings regarding his rank," he says: "I stand before you today to answer the ridiculous accusations leveled against me by certain Swift-boating talk-show host rivals that I, Cap'n Crunch, am not a real cap'n!'' 

The Cap'n, whose full name is Horatio Magellan Crunch and has been captaining the S.S. Guppy since 1963, was charged with being a mere commander by the food blog FoodBeast when editors there noticed his uniform had only three stripes, not four. 

In the video statement, the Cap'n went to point out a few other suspect things about himself.

"You may have noticed a few other things about me,'' he says. "I have four fingers. My first mate's a dog. My eyebrows are attached to my hat, for crunch sake!" 

Last week, Navy spokeswoman Lt. Cmdr. Sarah Flaherty told Foreign Policy that while the Cap'n was wearing U.S. Navy commander stripes, they didn't have a record for him.  Later, Lt. Commander Chris Servello, director of the U.S. Navy's news desk at the Pentagon told the Wall Street Journal  they  notified NCIS and "we're looking into whether or not he's impersonating a naval officer – and that's a serious offense." 

A representative for the Cap'n also told Today.com, "We don't feel [the fourth stripe is] necessary—the Cap'n is after all a Cap'n, as he mans the S.S. Guppy." 

This story appears to be getting a little soggy.

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FOXNews.com: Wash. farmer feeds pot to pigs for 'good flavor'

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Wash. farmer feeds pot to pigs for 'good flavor'
Jun 27th 2013, 08:46

SNOHOMISH, Wash. –  The white van with tinted windows pulled up to the driveway with its cargo - cardboard boxes full of marijuana. And the customers eagerly awaited it, grunting and snorting.

The deal was going down for three hungry Berkshire pigs from a Washington state farm, and a German television crew was there to film it.

Part flavor experiment, part green recycling, part promotion and bolstered by the legalization of recreational marijuana in Washington state, pot excess has been fed to the hogs by their owners, pig farmer Jeremy Gross and Seattle butcher William von Schneidau, since earlier this year.

Gross and von Schneidau now sell their "pot pig" cuts at von Schneidau's butcher shop in Seattle's Pike Place Market at a premium price — bacon is $17 a pound while chops go for $16.90 a pound.

"He's like 'let's see what kind of flavor it gives it.' So we ran it and it gave good flavor," Gross said. "It's like anything else, what you feed them is what they're going to taste like. It's almost like a savory alfalfa fed cow or alfalfa fed pig."

The meat, though, won't get people high.

It's just a flavor infusion.

While the passage of recreational marijuana inspired the experiment, Gross and von Schneidau get the marijuana excess — roots, stems, and other part of the plant that are grinded and not used for consumption — from a medical marijuana dispensary. At the butcher shop, cuts from the pot pigs are signed with a little drawing of a marijuana leaf stuck on them with a toothpick.

"It tastes like the best pork chop you've ever had," said Matt McAlman, who runs Top Shelf Organic, the dispensary that is providing the pot plant waste for the pigs to eat.

The idea has brought worldwide attention. On a recent afternoon, Gross hosted a crew from a German science show while von Schneidau has already been interviewed dozens of times.

The men, though, are relishing the spotlight to advertise von Schneidau's idea of locally sourced food. Gross' hogs at his Snohomish, Wash., farm were being fed recycled byproduct before the marijuana idea.

While Gross raises pig on his property, he works full time as a construction foreman. The only way he can stay in the pig business, he said, is the free feed he collects from a local distillery and brewery. He feeds his pigs barrels of the distillery wheat "mash" every day, fortified by a nutrient mix his veterinarian created. Gross gets his free pig feed, while the distillery and brewery get rid of waste.

Gross is applying that model to the medical marijuana excess and von Schneidau hopes it's an example people use as production of marijuana ramps up under the state-approved system.

"Absolutely, it's a good opportunity to help people get rid of their waste," said von Schneidau, who is also attempting to start a privately-owned mobile slaughterhouse.

But currently the state draft rules say pot plant waste must be "rendered unusable" by either grinding it or mixing it with non-consumable, recycled solid waste, such as food waste, compost, soil and paper waste. The state's rules for medical marijuana do not say how to get rid of marijuana byproducts.

John P. McNamara, a professor at Washington State University's Department of Animal Sciences, doesn't find the experiment amusing.

"Of all the crazy things I've seen in my 37-plus years, this is the dumbest things I've ever seen in my life," he said.

McNamara said in order to introduce a drug or medicine to feed that's being given to animals that make part of the food supply, the federal government must sign off on it after extensive review. He adds that research has shown that cannabis ingested can be transferred onto tissues.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is the agency that oversees the nation's food supply. The agency, on its website, says it "approves the additives or drugs that are used in feed products."

Currently, Gross is only feeding three pigs the marijuana mix, which on a recent afternoon the chopped down on with fervor, sticking their snouts into the pile of mash.

Asked if feeding marijuana affects the pigs, such as perhaps giving them munchies, Gross said can see no effect on the pigs.

Already all pigs do is sleep and eat, he said.

But his farm manager mentioned that one of the more salty sows mellows out after a feeding.

___

Manuel Valdes can be reached at https://twitter.com/ByManuelValdes

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FOXNews.com: Brewery makes special 'Breaking Bad' beer for final season

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Brewery makes special 'Breaking Bad' beer for final season
Jun 27th 2013, 13:00

"Breaking Bad" is getting its own beer.

The Albuquerque-based brewery Marble Brewery is coming out with a "Breaking Bad"-inspired beer in tribute to the end of the series.

Called Heisenberg's Dark, an India Black Ale, it's named after Walter White's drug dealing alias in AMC's hit show.

Marble Brewery has occasionally been used as a location on the show, and the announcement was made on Breaking Bad Location's Instagram feed.  There's no word yet on whether the beer will be available nationwide in time for the final eight episodes of the show on August 11. 

"Breaking Bad" isn't the first TV show to have its own beer. "Game of Thrones" has a whole line of Ommegang beers to commemorate the show, and Stone Brewing created a "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" beer. Winemakers are getting into the game too.  This week it was announced that will get a new "vintage" wine, distributed by Wines that Rock. 

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

FOXNews.com: How wine counterfeiting impacts everyone

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How wine counterfeiting impacts everyone
Jun 26th 2013, 20:35

Counterfeit wine is becoming a big, expensive issue in the wine world.

Most recently a federal jury in New York handed a legal victory to U.S. billionaire William Koch, the founder of Oxbow Group energy company.  He was awarded $380,000 to cover the cost of the wine, plus $12 million in punitive damages in his dispute for the misrepresentation of 24 bottles of wine he bought from wine collector Eric Greenberg at a 2005 Zachys auction.

Experts for both sides agreed that the wine in one of the 24 bottles was fake. The authenticity of the other 23 bottles was unclear. While it is unclear who was behind this incident, the proliferation of counterfeit wine is a growing problem, especially in China.

Susan Kostrzewa, executive editor of Wine Enthusiast Magazine, says as more Chinese get into drinking and collecting wine, the more fake bottles that are being produced, particularly the more expensive they get.

There are several wines showing up on the market in China, branded with names close to the infamous Château Lafite, including Chatelet Lafite. Chatelet is actually the name of one of the busiest subway stations in Paris.

The problem is China,  is a huge importer of wine. In 2012, EU wine exports to China reached 67.9 million gallons, that's about $1 billion worth of wine, more than a tenfold increase since 2006. While they are buying mostly French wines right now, the Chinese tastes are expanding.

As a vineyard importing wine into China, you're almost damned if you do, damned if you don't. So the vineyards are taking their own precautions, says Kostrzewa, by making bottles tamper resistant and putting secret marks on the bottles that only the originals would have.

So be skeptical these days.  Like anything else, the more popular it gets, the more people want to clone it.

There's a reason those guys are still out on the streets of Manhattan selling fake Louis Vuitton bags.

Cent' Anni

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FOXNews.com: Cutlerly influences how we taste food, research shows

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Cutlerly influences how we taste food, research shows
Jun 26th 2013, 19:43

Next time you set the table for your next dinner party, consider this: How we taste food is influenced by the cutlery.

The BBC reports that a team of researchers at the University of Oxford found that cheese tastes saltier when eaten from a knife rather than a fork; Spoons made yogurt taste yummier.

But it's just not the choice in cutlery.  Size, weight, shape and color all have an effect on flavor, as the brain makes judgments on food even before it goes in the mouth, says the report.  

For example, the research --released in the appropriately named journal Flavour -- showed that a white spoon, in particular, make yogurt taste better.

Researchers found out that when the weight of the utensil conformed to expectations — for example, small spoon = sweet — that had an impact on how the food tastes, as well.

This isn't the first time research has been done on how the presentation of food is altered by how it's served. Previous research has shown people generally eat less when food is served on smaller plates.

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FOXNews.com: Restaurants offering perks for diners who take pictures of their food

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Restaurants offering perks for diners who take pictures of their food
Jun 26th 2013, 17:36

Amid a growing trend of restaurants banning snap-happy diners from trying to post food pictures to social media sites, some are restaurants are actually embracing it, as long as the photos are decent.

The Wall Street Journal reports that restaurants around the country are giving incentives of free food for people who have at least 500 to 1,000 followers.

For example, one Chicago restaurant, Antique Taco, is offering free chips with pineapple salsa for Instagrammers with more than 1,000 followers. 

A New York Italian restaurant, called 83 1/2, is offering an off-the-menu a hazelnut-and-espresso ice pop free to Instagrammers, as long as the photo is posted from inside the restaurant, says the Journal. 

So why the switch? Some restaurants get that people want to brag to their friends about their meal and where they're eating it, and now they see that beautiful social media images are translating into real added business value.

But just as good snaps help to build hype about a place, the opposite effect happens when blurry or washed out photos are posted.  As a result, owners have to resort to trolling for nasty shots and are asking customers to take them down.

The Journal points to one Boston eatery who has begun specially plating dishes -- adorning them with flowers, for example,  to make it look "pretty." 

So, it looks like we're going to have to get used to those annoying flashes going off during dinner. 

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FOXNews.com: Study finds new cars more likely to be involved in accidents

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Study finds new cars more likely to be involved in accidents
Jun 26th 2013, 17:15

Turns out "stranger danger" may apply to cars as well as people.

A new report found that drivers are nearly twice as likely to get in an accident during the first six months they own a car, The Sunday Times reports.

The study conducted by insurance underwriter Accident Exchange discovered that while the newest cars make up just 2.9 percent of the vehicles on British roads, they account for 5 percent of accidents in the U.K.

"The results suggest that drivers may be unfamiliar with their cars during the first months of ownership as they get used to the responses from the brakes, throttle and steering," said an Accident Exchange spokesman.

Distracting auxiliary controls may also play a role and, somewhat ironically, the spokesman adds that being overly cautious with your new pride and joy may lead you to drive differently than you normally would, and not for the better.

More from The Sunday Times

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