Monday, February 26, 2024

In the news, Friday, March 1, 2024


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FEB 29      INDEX      MAR 02
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St. David, B.C.
Comm. Feria

________

from Inlander

We are smack dab in the middle of Inlander Restaurant Week,  and I think I'm toeing the line between celebration and gluttony. Ironically, Lent started a couple weeks ago, a season of the Christian church traditionally marked by fasting. But instead of eating in mindfulness and moderation, I've crammed five restaurants into four days, or 15 courses in about seven hours. It's kinda like a marathon, but only for my stomach. Just to keep my calorie intake reasonable, I try to eat less during the day so I can feast at dinner. It's an interesting rhythm, not one that I want to keep forever but one that I can probably learn from. It's nice to be reminded that through days and weeks and years, life switchbacks between seasons of fasting and feasting. And for these 10 days, my life (or my job) is telling me it's time to FEAST. And what could be more perfect than feasting with Feast World Kitchen? The nonprofit kitchen usually hosts a different immigrant, refugee or international chef each day. But for Restaurant Week, they're hosting nine of their regular chefs every day — one for each course on their menu. Talk about a lot of cooks in the kitchen.

In some ways, it was just a chicken. Nick Ivers was cooking at Le Pichet, a little French bistro in Seattle's Pike Place, when someone ordered the poulet. Each chicken was roasted to order, which took at least an hour. Ivers settled into the long process, filling the extra time by prepping turnips and poached grapes on the side. After service ended, he cleaned up his station and headed out for a break. He noticed the woman who had ordered the chicken. It's rare that cooks get to interact with guests, so Ivers took the opportunity to ask her how she liked her meal. He wondered why she'd wait so long when there were plenty of faster options. "She confided in me that she was from Poland, and that this was the first dinner she'd had with her estranged father in over 10 years," Ivers says. "For me, that was just such a neat moment — I was somehow connected in this event. It illustrated the sanctity of food to me, the unifying power of food." Fast forward a few years later, Ivers is back in his hometown Spokane starting Compassion Catering with his life partner and business partner Nazeerah "Nazzy" Pearson-Muhammad. The two self-taught chefs had plenty of other career options — Ivers has a political science degree, and Pearson-Muhammad is trained in world religion and theology — but they've dedicated themselves to food for its unique ability to make the people around them feel loved.

Nasrollah Mohammadi was a young child when he left Afghanistan to flee the Soviet-Afghan War in the 1980s. At the end of last year, Mohammadi and his wife, Samira, opened Emran Restaurant & Market on Division Street, just south of Indiana Avenue. The unassuming spot is now the first Afghan restaurant in Spokane. Just as food helped Mohammadi learn about the people he encountered growing up, he and his family are offering their favorite dishes to Spokane and inviting the city into a deeper understanding and appreciation of Afghan and broader Persian culture.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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In the news, Thursday, February 29, 2024


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FEB 28      INDEX      MAR 01
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LENTEN FERIA

________

from Inlander

If you've been to Zola, you probably have your favorite nook. The Tilt-a-Whirl booth where you had your first date. A front-row seat up close and personal with the band. A bar stool and some hot gossip with Sheldon Moore, your favorite bartender-turned-best-friend. In early December last year, the string lights at Zola were about to go out. Staff whispered to regulars that it was their last shift. Social media posts claimed the bar was permanently closed. After 15 years on West Main Avenue, maybe Zola just wasn't what it used to be. Maybe downtown nightlife in Spokane was fading. When budgets are tight, "going out is not a priority," says Taijah Howard, Zola's general manager. "Rent is." But suddenly, Zola staff took to Facebook to say the bar would stay open through the end of the year and review its options. A glimmer of hope. Was someone going to keep the music playing? That someone was Nick Velis — a dentist, Spokane Valley native and decadelong Zola regular. When he heard his favorite hangout spot might close, he couldn't let it slide. He rallied a group of half a dozen friends and their spouses to buy Zola together, to the delight and relief of staff and guests alike.

By Eliza Billingham
In 2023, over 150 schools in Montana served Montana Marinara, a "picky eater approved" red sauce made with locally grown carrots, squash and onions. It took supply chain funds from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and complex coordination between the state's Office of Public Instruction, farmer-owned food cooperatives, and a nonprofit community development organization just to feed Montana kids some veggies grown in Montana. Call them dreamers, but some people don't think it should be that difficult to eat local food. Earlier this month, on Friday, Feb. 16, the Northwest Food Hub Network hosted its third annual summit at Gonzaga University. The event brought together farmers, ranchers, distributors, processors, marketers, policymakers, university researchers, educators and health care workers to brainstorm and share experiences. They spoke in shorthand jargon, like "value chain coordination" and "resilient food chain infrastructure," but the question at hand was simple: How do farmers sell their food to people who live nearby? The Northwest Food Hub Network is an umbrella organization that tries to strengthen and coordinate individual food distributors. It currently supports LINC Foods in Spokane, the Puget Sound Food Hub Farmers Cooperative and the Western Montana Growers Cooperative. Its goal is to create more opportunities to buy and sell local food so small farmers aren't competing against one another, but working together instead.

By Eliza Billingham
Do you know what's in the back of your fridge? How about the corners of your pantry? How many times do you take advantage of a great BOGO deal, only to forget about the bag of spinach liquefying in the guts of your produce drawer? Unfortunately, Spokane County leads the state for the amount of food thrown away each year — about 170 pounds per person, according to a Washington state Department of Ecology study. About a third of all waste in Spokane could have been composted instead of thrown in the garbage. In 2015, the Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Department of Agriculture created a national goal to cut food loss and waste in half by 2030. Four years later, Washington lawmakers passed the "Use Food Well Washington" plan, with similar goals. The plan also created the Center for Sustainable Food Management within the Department of Ecology. The state "food center" opened in January, with plenty of input from Kris Major, the waste reduction education coordinator for the city of Spokane, and Second Harvest, an Eastern Washington-based food distribution charity.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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In the news, Wednesday, February 28, 2024


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FEB 27      INDEX      FEB 29
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LENTEN FERIA

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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In the news, Tuesday, February 27, 2024


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FEB 26      INDEX      FEB 28
________


LENTEN FERIA

________

from Inlander

My childhood bedroom was yellow, and I've always had a sentimental attachment to the color. My first week in Spokane, yellow bricks on Broadway Avenue caught my attention. I learned that the hundred-year-old building, painted like sunshine, is home to Vieux Carre NOLA Kitchen, an enchanted world of Spanish, French, Cajun and Creole cooking. Now, I've never been to New Orleans. I've never cracked a crayfish or stirred a pot of gumbo. But for just $35 and a quick walk to the edge of West Central, I was game for anything. There are no crawdads on the 10-day Restaurant Week menu, but there is Louisiana garlic soup. I love food that is deceptively simple and surprisingly delicious, which is exactly what this appetizer is. With just a few ingredients, it has probably changed my life forever. Why did no one tell me that I could caramelize garlic, puree it, and slurp it with a spoon?

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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In the news, Monday, February 26, 2024


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FEB 25      INDEX      FEB 27
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LENTEN FERIA

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

________

from Stars and Stripes

Starting March 5, enrollment in VA health care will open to qualifying veterans from the Vietnam War, Gulf War, conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the global war on terrorism, or any other combat zone after 9/11, the VA said. Requirements are waived for veterans to first file a medical claim for disability compensation — and get the claim approved — to access health services at VA clinics, doctor’s offices, and hospitals.
 
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In the news, Sunday, February 25, 2024


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FEB 24      INDEX      FEB 26
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LENT II

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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In the news, Saturday, February 24, 2024


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FEB 23      INDEX      FEB 25
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EMBER SATURDAY IN LENT

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

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Sunday, February 18, 2024

In the news, Friday, February 23, 2024


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FEB 22      INDEX      FEB 24
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EMBER FRIDAY IN LENT

________

from Inlander

This is an imaginary letter to Grandma Marie, the immigrant and inspiration behind Old European, a breakfast and lunch restaurant in north Spokane. Dear Grandma Marie, We never met, nor could we have, since you moved from Denmark to America 90 years before I was born. But today I ate your aebleskivers and thought I should write you this note.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington

By James Hanlon
While major museums across the country are covering or removing some Native American displays, the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture in Spokane won’t be affected by new federal regulations for Native artifacts. That’s because the MAC has a strong relationship with local tribes, and current exhibits have been curated with tribal input, museum executive director Wesley Jessup said.

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In the news, Thursday, February 22, 2024


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FEB 21      INDEX      FEB 23
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St. Joseph of Arimathea, C.
(Comm. Feria)
[CHAIR OF St. PETER, Ap.; Comm. St. Paul, Ap.]

________

from Inlander

If you like food, you've probably heard of Noma. Copenhagen's Michelin three-star darling and top-rated restaurant in the world five times over is an elite campus of celebrity chefs and cutting-edge research. It's name-dropped in Manhattan, Tokyo and Mexico City. Once you've worked there, you can basically take your pick of swanky jobs. In 2019, Jonathan Seaman-Cwik became the first graduate of Spokane Community College's Inland Northwest Culinary Academy to secure an internship at Denmark's culinary mecca. But after he completed the course, he quickly ditched the prestige. Instead, Seaman-Cwik is now running a from-scratch, farm-to-table, hidden-est of gems restaurant in a sleepy 800-person town 30 miles north of downtown Spokane. It's an experiment in local sourcing, efficiency, creativity and skill — values chef René Redzepi, founder of Noma, would surely be proud of.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Wednesday, February 21, 2024


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FEB 20      INDEX      FEB 22
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EMBER WEDNESDAY IN LENT

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Tuesday, February 20, 2024


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FEB 19      INDEX      FEB 21
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Lenten Feria

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Monday, February 19, 2024


________

FEB 18      INDEX      FEB 20
________


Lenten Feria

________

from Inlander

By Eliza Billingham
Date molasses, also called date syrup, date honey, date nectar, debes, or silan, is one of the oldest foods in the book. Sumerians may have started cultivating dates as early as 4000 BCE. Concentrating the fruit into a syrupy preserve probably would've followed soon after. Dates are an important part of breaking the Ramadan fast in the Islamic tradition. They're one of the seven holy fruits in Judaism. When a certain area of land is described to Moses as "flowing with milk and honey," the honey probably actually refers to date syrup. The poetic image is a shorthand way to summarize the land's ability to support agriculture (dates and date honey) and livestock (goat or sheep milk).

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Sunday, February 18, 2024


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FEB 17      INDEX      FEB 19
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LENT I
QUADRAGESIMA

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Saturday, February 17, 2024


________

FEB 16      INDEX      FEB 18
________


Lenten Feria

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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Thursday, February 8, 2024

In the news, Friday, February 16, 2024


________

FEB 15      INDEX      FEB 17
________


Lenten Feria

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Thursday, February 15, 2024


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FEB 14      INDEX      FEB 16
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Lenten Feria
(Comm. The Martyrs of Japan)
(Comm. Ss. Faustina & Jovita, M.M.)

________

from Inlander

In Vietnam, the hot pot might be a big pot over a bonfire or a bowl over a hot plate in the middle of the dining table. At Hot Pot & Pho, there are high-tech hot pot tables, each with inset, heated basins for the broth so the top of the pot is level with the top of the table. Diners get to choose a combo of broth, meat, veggies, noodles or tofu to cook at the table. Big plates of ingredients and pots of broth are brought out by a rolling, singing robot. It's an immersive experience that Spokanites have already been flocking to.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Wednesday, February 14, 2024


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FEB 13      INDEX      FEB 15
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ASH WEDNESDAY
[St. Valentine, Pr.M.]

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Tuesday, February 13, 2024


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FEB 12      INDEX      FEB 14
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St. Kentigern, B.C.
Shrove Tuesday

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Monday, February 12, 2024


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FEB 11      INDEX      FEB 13
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St. Benedict Biscop, Abt.

________

from Inlander

By Eliza Billingham
In Chicago , New York or Spokane, you might grab a hot dog from a friendly vendor in a silly hat. In Guatemala City, you'd grab a mixta, the perfect cross between a hot dog and a taco.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Sunday, February 11, 2024


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FEB 10      INDEX      FEB 12
________


QUINQUAGESIMA
(Comm. New Martyrs of Russia)
(Comm.  Our Lady of Lourdes)

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Saturday, February 10, 2024


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FEB 09      INDEX      FEB 11
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St. Scholastica, V.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Friday, February 9, 2024


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FEB 08      INDEX      FEB 10
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St. Cyril of Alexandria, B.C.D.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Thursday, February 8, 2024


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FEB 07      INDEX      FEB 09
________


St. John of Matha, C.

________

from Inlander

Animals are a constant part of most of our lives. Some are food, others friends, and some become foe. (I'll never go camping again without a bear cannister.) Humans have been forging different connections with animals for as far back as historical records go. Cave drawings depict hunters and hunted. Some researchers link the development of civilization with the domestication of dogs.

By Eliza Billingham
Menus are usually the first interaction a diner has with a restaurant. They used to be posted on windows to draw passers-by in. Today, they're posted on websites to draw hungry diners scrolling Google. At the table, trifolds, fresh sheets, clipboards, cardstock and QR codes all tell you what to expect from your meal — not only from the food, but also from the vibes and even values of the eatery.

By Seth Sommerfeld , Samantha Wohlfeil , Colton Rasanen and Eliza Billingham
After years of virtual-heavy festivals in the wake of the pandemic, SpIFF is trying to return to in-person screenings in a big way. Everything is blown out for this 25th anniversary SpIFF, which runs from Feb. 9-16. Last year there were 12 features — this year there are 19. The number of shorts has increased over 2023 from 44 to 57. In recent years there have been about 10 to 15 visiting filmmakers at the festival. This year? That number is above 40 filmmakers. But most crucially, there are 30 in-person screenings this year, starting with the opening night Best of the Northwest shorts program at the Bing Crosby Theater on Feb. 9, with all subsequent screenings at the Magic Lantern. That’s a huge leap from just 10 in 2023.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Wednesday, February 7, 2024


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FEB 06      INDEX      FEB 08
________


St. Romuald, Abt.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Tuesday, February 6, 2024


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FEB 05      INDEX      FEB 07
________


St. Titus, B.C.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Monday, February 5, 2024


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FEB 04      INDEX      FEB 06
________


St. Agatha, V.M.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Sunday, February 4, 2024


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FEB 03      INDEX      FEB 05
________


SEXAGESIMA
(Comm. St. Gilbert of Sempringham, Abt.)

________

from Inlander

Rendang is a wildly popular dish that has been passed around different Indonesian islands and other Pacific Rim nations like Singapore, the Philippines, and Malaysia, each of which give the stew their own twist. Java's version is sweeter with a teriyaki kick, while Malaysian rendang is often drier than the typical Indonesian stew.


________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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In the news, Saturday, February 3, 2024


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FEB 02      INDEX      FEB 04
________


St. Blase, B.M.

________

from The Spokesman-Review
Newspaper in Spokane, Washington


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