Posts Tagged ‘food’

Diet, Energy, and Design

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

A good diet and healthy eating habits are critical to a healthy body and stable moods for everyone but it can be particularly important for those of us working in theaters. When you work inside for 10-12 hours a day for weeks on end you are not giving your body the necessary sun exposure it needs to function at top performance levels. That may be beyond our control, but food and diet are totally within our control and it would behoove us to pay close attention to what we put in our bodies.

I’ve noticed a lot of my friends and colleagues resign themselves to an attitude of “well I’m in tech so I can’t eat healthy, I’ll just get fast food takeout and supplement with lots of coffee.” While this might give you a certain kind of energy it does not give us the energy to operate at an optimal level. These ways of raising energy are often supplemented by heavy sugar intake with the ubiquitous candy bowl on the stage manager’s table.

You can get energy from these methods but it is not sustainable. In order to avoid the high/crash cycle of these “foods” we need a constant intake to stave off the crash until the end of the day. The result is a body so wreaked that the next morning we can hardly functions without a massive intake of caffeine, usually in the form of coffee, to get going and do it all over again. The spiral continues and by the end of a show we are burnt out and ready for that day off, desperately hoping it is not a travel day to another show.

I have traditionally been one of the worst in this regard. While my basic diet was vegetarian, thus minimizing the fast food dilemma, my coffee intake was off the charts. Two mugs, not cups but mugs, of espresso before leaving my apartment then constant coffee intake throughout the day. While I don’t typically eat sugar given the choice, I would find it necessary in tech situations to keep my energy levels up. It was not a pretty sight. Add to that the fact that my vegetarian diet was so high in carbs (rice, pasta, sandwiches) that I was making myself very sluggish dealing with those foods I had no energy. Thus I had to up the caffeine intake to compensate and the spiral continues.

Recently I made a few changes to my diet that have not only led to greater energy levels but higher functionality and more creativity. The switch has two main components. The first was a change from coffee to tea. While it does have caffeine, there is a lot less. Further, it does not hit your system as powerfully as coffee does. Within less than a week I discovered that i could be functional in the morning without caffeine. I still drink the tea, but it is a little bonus rather than a necessity.

The second change was from high carb/low protein to high protein/low carb. The first phase of this was simply a few diet changes with my vegetarian mode of eating. Eggs every morning, lunch went from yoghurt to cottage cheese (which has a much higher protein level) with fruit, and dinner reduced the pasta and other carbs. I then experimented with some fish and found the high protein levels to have a radically positive effect on my energy levels. From that experiment with fish I expanded my consumption of animal flesh into my diet to very positive results.

The effect of this new low caffeine, low carb, low sugar, high protein, high fruit, high vegetable diet is that I have high sustainable energy levels all day long. My need for stimulants like sugar and caffeine during heavy endurance times like tech has been radically reduced. Because I have pulled myself out of the high/crash cycle, my moods are much more stable as well. No more grumpy in the morning and late afternoon.

Of greatest interest to me is the discovery that I am more creative now than before. Eating this way gives me sustained energy all day long and as such my problem solving and creating is not subjected to crashes and their necessary recovery time. Not only has my day become more pleasant, as I am not contending with fighting off low energy levels, but my work has gotten better and more productive.

I’m sure there are plenty of people who work in live performance who would argue that such changes are not possible for them. That may be true. It certainly is if you hold that opinion. But considering the benefits I have found, I would strongly encourage you to give it a try, for the sake of making the best art possible, if nothing else.

An Important Message From The Environment

Friday, November 28th, 2008

My daily life is about as minimal in energy usage as it can be. I turn off all excessive lighting in my home, walk or take public transportation everywhere, eat vegetarian always and locally when possible. A few weeks ago I checked out a CO2 calculator and I was well under the national average, near the bottom in fact and this was looking promising. Then I accounted for my work. At that point the scales tipped dramatically, both in terms of the actual lighting work as well as the travel.

I have been thinking about this a lot recently since I travel so much for work. My air travel amounts to tens of thousands of air miles a year. While this is great for my income and frequent flyer programs, it is not so hot for the atmosphere. What I have decided to do is offset the carbon emissions from my air travel.

This is a simple way to solve an otherwise unsolvable problem. I need to travel for my work. The CO2 emissions are going to happen. There is no realistic way to cut that down, short of giving up my art. But I can do something about the impact that CO2 has.

If you are interested in this as well, here are a few things you can do. First, start off by determining where you are now with a Carbon Calculator. The calculator auto updates when you enter your own numbers over the sample.

Then, look to options like CFL’s, electronics recycling or eliminating junk mail. You could consider shifting to a more vegetarian diet or taking public transportation more often as well.

If, after all this, you find you still emit a large volume of CO2 and would like to do something more about it, consider buying carbon offsets. Best of all, these offsets are tax deductible, so not only will you be helping the environment you will be lightening your tax burden as well.

Solar Sunday

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Solar Sunday is my weekly roundup of renewable energy and energy efficiency news from around the web.

Food, the original solar powered fuel

With the UK’s chief scientist warming of a looming food crisis, and with consumers around the world changing their eating habits in the face of increasing prices, the need to find alternatives to our current food system becomes ever more pressing. TreeHugger is a big fan of urban food production and community gardening, so it’s unsurprising that we were excited to read about ambitious efforts in the UK town of Middlesborough to turn public space into productive land:

Middlesbrough borough council turned over parkland, town-centre planters and other landholdings for fruit and vegetable growing. The eight-month project culminated in a town meal outside the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, where up to 8,000 people shared meals from the food that had been grown.

This year, Middlesbrough plans to supply seeds and containers to anyone interested, and already has 2,000 individuals and groups lined up, including 31 out of 51 schools, with 280 growing sites. “This has caught people’s imagination. But we’ve gone beyond novelty now and people want to make it a mainstream activity,” says Ian Collingwood, a regeneration consultant at the council.

While high-tech food growing solutions like vertical farming, underground agriculture, and aquaponics may have great potential in meeting the challenge of feeding the world, we suspect that projects like this one that simply reconnect people with the skills to feed themselves will be at least as important as we navigate our way out of the era of cheap food.

A new definition of Eco-Tourism

Environmentally conscious visitors to Shanghai who are looking for the luxury experience can stay carbon-free and enjoy green living on the go at URBN Hotels. Designed to attract ‘urban world travelers’, the 28-room full-service hotel fuses Western and Chinese influences and a host of green-minded practices to create an urban eco-oasis for tourist and business travelers. From the building’s design and materials to cleaning products to energy-efficiency, URBN Hotels is an eco-friendly refuge amid the bustle of Shanghai.

The building design used an existing structure and locally sourced materials such as reclaimed hardwoods and old Shanghai bricks. Passive solar shades, rain water retention basins and water-based air conditioning have been used to decrease the hotel’s environmental impact. For the health and wellbeing of each guest, 6 square meters of green is space allocated per person, low-VOC paints used and interiors are cleaned with environmentally sensitive products.

What carbon emissions the hotel does produce – such as staff travel, stock deliveries and the energy consumed by each guest – will be tracked and offset by investing in clean energy development and energy efficiency projects elsewhere in China. Guests can also buy international standard carbon credits from the hotel to offset their flights.

Economic factors influenced the decision to introduce green measures, as the hotel will be cheaper to run in the long term. Over the next three years, 20 URBN hotels and resorts are set to open in Beijing, Hangzhou, Dalian, and Suzhou, containing up to 70 rooms each.

States Rights

Officials of 18 states are taking the EPA back to court to try to force it to comply with a Supreme Court ruling that rebuked the Bush administration for inaction on global warming.

In a petition prepared for filing Wednesday, the plaintiffs said last April’s 5-4 ruling required the Environmental Protection Agency to decide whether to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, including carbon dioxide, from motor vehicles.

The EPA has instead done nothing, they said.

“The EPA’s failure to act in the face of these incontestable dangers is a shameful dereliction of duty,” Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said.

The petition asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to require the EPA to act within 60 days.

In last year’s decision, the Supreme Court ruled the EPA has the authority to regulate emissions from new cars and trucks under the Clean Air Act, and said the reasons the EPA gave for declining to do so were insufficient.

Algae Power

As gas prices continue to soar to record highs, motorists are crying out for an alternative that won’t cramp their pocketbooks.

Scientists at U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory are answering that call by working to chemically manipulate algae for production of the next generation of renewable fuels – hydrogen gas.

“We believe there is a fundamental advantage in looking at the production of hydrogen by photosynthesis as a renewable fuel,” senior chemist David Tiede said. “Right now, ethanol is being produced from corn, but generating ethanol from corn is a thermodynamically much more inefficient process.”

Some varieties of algae, a kind of unicellular plant, contain an enzyme called hydrogenase that can create small amounts of hydrogen gas. Tiede said many believe this is used by Nature as a way to get rid of excess reducing equivalents that are produced under high light conditions, but there is little benefit to the plant.

Tiede and his group are trying to find a way to take the part of the enzyme that creates the gas and introduce it into the photosynthesis process.

The result would be a large amount of hydrogen gas, possibly on par with the amount of oxygen created.

Power Cubed

Portable green power sources are steadily gaining momentum as alternative energy tech gears up to help shoulder the strain of our overloaded energy grids. This recently released generator, dubbed the PowerCube 6000, is showing plenty of potential as an all-inclusive clean energy system. Whether you’re greening your home’s energy sources, preparing for an emergency, or opening up a Black Rock smoothie stand, the PowerCube offers an enticing (if expensive) way to break free from the grid.

Solar Sunday

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

Solar Sunday is my weekly roundup of renewable energy and energy efficient lighting news from around the web.

Celebrate Earth Hour!

About a year ago, Sydney started a trend of turning off your lights for one hour in a show of support for protecting our environment. Soon after, London, San Francisco quickly followed suit. One year later, the organizers of Sydney’s Earth Hour feel that one city at a time doesn’t really cut it anymore. Which is why this year’s event is going global, with cities from every continent, including the US, participating in what promises to be the largest ever show of solidarity in the world on March 29th for Earth Hour.

What goes down, comes up again

What goes down the drain — detergents, personal-care products and discarded and excreted medications — may be out of sight and out of mind, but they are not, unfortunately, out of this world.
Significant amounts of toxic chemicals from households persist in the environment because they end up in sewage sludge. Though pathogens are removed in wastewater treatment plants, no treatment is required to address some of the most abundant chemical contaminants that originate in the home. So sludge and sludge-rich composts, often containing toxic chemicals, are commonly applied to farmland, parks, forests and yards.

E.coli – Its what’s for dinner

For most people, the name “E. coli” is synonymous with food poisoning and product recalls, but a professor in Texas A&M University’s chemical engineering department envisions the bacteria as a future source of energy, helping to power our cars, homes and more.

By genetically modifying the bacteria, Thomas Wood, a professor in the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering, has “tweaked” a strain of E. coli so that it produces substantial amounts of hydrogen. Specifically, Wood’s strain produces 140 times more hydrogen than is created in a naturally occurring process, according to an article in “Microbial Biotechnology,” detailing his research.

Though Wood acknowledges that there is still much work to be done before his research translates into any kind of commercial application, his initial success could prove to be a significant stepping stone on the path to the hydrogen-based economy that many believe is in this country’s future.

Renewable, clean and efficient, hydrogen is the key ingredient in fuel-cell technology, which has the potential to power everything from portable electronics to automobiles and even entire power plants. Today, most of the hydrogen produced globally is created by a process known as “cracking water” through which hydrogen is separated from the oxygen. But the process is expensive and requires vast amounts of energy – one of the chief reasons why the technology has yet to catch on.

Wood’s work with E. coli could change that.

Zenn and the art of Driving

If you are in the market for a small low speed urban vehicle for everyday use, ZENN, a zero-emission, no-noise vehicle might just be your answer. Available in most parts of the United States, it’s a compact car that’s as green as it is useful. According to the EPA, the ZENN is capable of achieving a whopping 245 miles per gallon!

The ZENN is clasified as a Neighborhood Electric Vehicle, meaning it’s really just for local and city driving, and shouldn’t be taken to the highway at all. The top speed of the car is 25mph, definitely not speedy, but more than enough for driving around town. The car uses a 100% electric front wheel drive; plugs into an outlet to recharge; and will take you about 35 miles before it needs to juice up again. And of course, as the name implies, the ZENN is for all intents and purposes a very low emitting vehicle (it does need to recharge from an electrical outlet after all).

Food is Energy

A SEA change in the consumption of a resource that Americans take for granted may be in store — something cheap, plentiful, widely enjoyed and a part of daily life. And it isn’t oil.

It’s meat.

The two commodities share a great deal: Like oil, meat is subsidized by the federal government. Like oil, meat is subject to accelerating demand as nations become wealthier, and this, in turn, sends prices higher. Finally — like oil — meat is something people are encouraged to consume less of, as the toll exacted by industrial production increases, and becomes increasingly visible.

Global demand for meat has multiplied in recent years, encouraged by growing affluence and nourished by the proliferation of huge, confined animal feeding operations. These assembly-line meat factories consume enormous amounts of energy, pollute water supplies, generate significant greenhouse gases and require ever-increasing amounts of corn, soy and other grains, a dependency that has led to the destruction of vast swaths of the world’s tropical rain forests.

Buildings that clean the air

Make Your old flashlight LED

LEDtronics® announces its 3-Watt LED PR-Style Flashlight Bulb with a T3¼ (9mm) Flange Base that fits almost any two- or three-cell flashlight.

With up to 1200 foot-candles of light the new 3-Watt LED PR bulb provides common flashlights with a bright, solid-state, durable, and weather-resistant lamp. No gases to heat, filaments to break, or glass globes to shatter! These lamps integrate one 3-Watt LED into a standard T3¼ (9mm) flange base.

NanoCrystals Make LEDs pretty

Topping LEDs with a coating of carefully tuned nanocrystals makes their light warmer and less clinical, a new study shows. The researchers argue this is a must for energy-efficient LED lights to make headway in the commercial market.

Illuminating buildings accounts for about a quarter of the electricity used in the US, according to the Department of Energy. Because most of that electricity comes from coal-fired power plants, lights account for a significant amount of greenhouse gas emissions.

LEDs have the potential to be far more efficient than other lights, but face two major hurdles. Firstly, they trail behind fluorescent lights for efficiency and, secondly, the colour of typical commercial LEDs isn’t pure white.

Most emit a “cool” light with a bluish tinge, sometimes called “lunar white”, that most people find unattractive in the home. Now researchers have used nanocrystals to create LEDs that give off a warm white light, with efficiency far beyond compact fluorescents.

The Nano-Swarms are coming

A new process for catching gas from the environment and holding it indefinitely in molecular-sized containers has been developed by a team of University of Calgary researchers, who say it represents a novel method of gas storage that could yield benefits for capturing, storing and transporting gases more safely and efficiently.

Yum

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

A List of Regional Pizza Styles

fifteen minutes of coffee

Saturday, December 1st, 2007

My eating habits exposed for all the world to see.

Hott baby hot

Saturday, October 27th, 2007

Link

It’s hot. Scorching hot. Guinness World Records hot.

Researchers at New Mexico State University have discovered the world’s hottest chili pepper. It’s called the Bhut Jolokia, a variety originating in Assam, India.

In tests that yield Scoville heat units (SHUs), the Bhut Jolokia reached 1 million SHUs, almost double the SHUs of former hotshot Red Savina (a type of habanero pepper), which measured a mere 577,000. The result was announced today by the American Society for Horticultural Science.

Chili is spelled “chile” by some, including Paul Bosland, director of the Chile Pepper Institute at New Mexico State’s Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences. Bosland collected seeds of Bhut Jolokia while visiting India in 2001. He grew the plants for three years to produce enough seeds to complete the field tests.

“The name Bhut Jolokia translates as ‘ghost chile,’” Bosland explained. “I think it’s because the chile is so hot, you give up the ghost when you eat it!”

The intense heat concentration of Bhut Jolokia could have a significant impact on the food industry as an economical seasoning in packaged foods, he said.

Things I like about New York

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

Having lunch after a rehearsal and looking up to see Sam Shepard chatting away at the bar a few feet away. I still think my favorite was having dinner two tables away from Jim Jarmusch.

A Very Happy Birthday

Saturday, March 17th, 2007

Eleven hours straight of tech is a lot to handle on a birthday, but I have to say getting to light some dance was a nice present. Yesterday went very well. We loaded in, focused and got the show cued by 3pm for a run through. A long exhausting day but very satisfying.

While I was just in Florida it feels like I have not lit any dance in a while. I am quite pleased with the result. I think there is some very nice stuff going on on stage from a lighting perspective. The pieces are very different from the company look I have grown accustomed to, it is much more in an aesthetic direction that I enjoy working in, so the lighting was a pleasure to do. It felt like a birthday gift, even though it was simply a pleasant coincidence.

After I got out of the theatre I met my girlfriend for dinner. She took me to an amazing vegan restaurant called Blossom. This was seriously one of the best meals I have ever had. Not just one of the best vegan meals, but one of the best meals. Ever. Seriously. Amazing. Anyone with a passion for good food would do themselves a disservice by not eating here.

What truly surprised me was the dessert. I ordered the cheesecake. Now I love cheesecake, and while I am only vegetarian, not vegan, I still try to minimize my dairy intake, so cheesecake is not consumed that often. But, OH MY GOD. This was amazing. It was not just amazing as vegan cheesecake, it was amazing cheesecake.

Between lighting dance all day, a play opening and having such a wonderful meal last night it was sure a good day. I was off line all through the day while at the theatre and dinner, so I was able to come home to a pile of emails and a few MySpace messages saying happy birthday.

A very nice day.

Soul Food

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

The BBC informs us today that the active ingredient in Chilli Peppers that makes them hot can also stave off cancerous tumors. This is very good news for me as I eat one to two Scotch Bonnets a day. I cook them in my meal.

I am very fortunate to have a favorite meal that is also very economical. Due to teh frequency with which I eat it, I have taken to calling it “My Meal.” It is quite simple. Basically it is nothing more than an evolution of my beans and rice days in college and after, a byproduct of my economic state. The more recent development is the salsa that I cook to go with the beans and rice.

For years I would eat black beans and rice, lending a friend of a friend to be convinced I was Cuban in a former life. Due to a string of bad luck with getting rotten cans of black beans I switched to pinto beans. I do not like the flavor as much as I do that of black beans, but after spending over $10 on rotten black beans I gave up hope. at $0.50 a can, that’s a lot of rotten beans!

But the real secret is the salsa. It started out simple. Jalapeños and red onions grilled in olive oil with salt and pepper. Simple enough. After a while I began adding Cilantro and tomatoes to the mixture. That helped to round out the flavors a bit as the tomato helps cut against the peppers. But Jalapeños really are not that spicy and can be eaten almost raw, so I would go back and forth on the tomatoes depending upon how strong I wanted My Meal to taste.

The spices too began to evolve. Cumin was a wonderful addition to the flavor palette, as was a dash of Cinnamon. The pepper became a mixture of finely ground black pepper for the bulk of the flavor with some coarsely ground peppercorns for a little extra kick.

Ginger is an occasional ingredient. Especially when I use multiple peppers as it aids digestion. I go back and forth on cheese. Often it cuts down the intensity of the peppers too much and so I leave it out that I might truly enjoy the spice. When included I use either sharp cheddar or jack cheese.

But the real amazing discovery was the Scotch Bonnet. These are the only peppers I have cooked with that actually have enough of a punch to them that I truly get the satisfaction of eating spicy foods. The spicier peppers allowed me to include tomatoes as a regular ingredient. Plus I have added tomatillos as a regular part of the dish. The red of the tomato, purple of the onion and green of the tomatillo and pepper make for a beautiful arrangement of colors when set against the white rice. Visually I still prefer the black beans combining with this, but some sacrifices must be made.

It seems in New York it is difficult to get really hot foods. It was much easier in California. Here, often, even if you ask at a restaurant to prepare a dish as spicy as possible, it is mild at best. A little more than black pepper perhaps.

Fortunately I live in an immigrant neighborhood that natively cooks spicy foods. The result is that I can get myself very hot dishes, and there is a wide variety of spices and peppers available at the various vegetable markets. I can get food, be it prepared or ingredients I cook at home, that really are spicy enough to be enjoyed.

I eat my meal probably five times a week when I am cooking dinner at home. I have been doing this for years. It is my favorite meal far and away from anything else. I can, and do, eat it day after day for years. Each time I sit down to it, I have the same rush of satisfaction right before I start, that I am about to eat my favorite food.

I can’t wait until dinner!


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