Last-minute gift ideas for the foodie on your list from Andrew Coppolino
From an avocado sock to reusable drinking straws for your non-alcoholic cocktails
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The final shopping days are quickly counting down, so if you're scrambling for a few last-minute gifts for the food lover on your holiday list, here a few suggestions of popular items from area retailers.
An over-arching theme I found this year has been the idea of "care," both of personal health and for the good of the planet: responsible packaging and new philosophies for eating have been a focus.
Specialty store Relish Cooking Studio says sustainable and responsible packaging items have been extremely popular this season.
"When it comes to storage bags and other zero-waste items, we can't keep them on the shelves," says Relish co-owner Maria Burjoski.
She adds that includes vegetable storage bags, drinking straws and re-usable Swedish dishcloths that have a much longer life than sponges and standard cloth dish towels; they're biodegradable and super-absorbent and can shame dozens of paper towels with their inefficiency.
Burjoski also says they have a cute little avocado sock that's flying off the shelves, too. Canadian-made, the woolen mitten-like receptacle keeps expensive avocados safe from bruising while being stored and allows you to buy green fruit and ripen it at home in 24 hours.
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Full Circle Foods in downtown Kitchener has a self-care kit ready to go: a loose leaf tea and infuser spoon and vegan gummies or chocolate covered almonds. Again, it's zero waste.
STOP Restaurant Supply has re-usable drinking straws that ("magically") change colour when used in drinks. The six-pack of straws includes a cleaning brush, and they're BPA-free. A good stocking stuffer for kids — or for adults who like fun kid stuff.
At Vincenzo's, co-owner Carmine Caccioppoli sells an assortment of spice "crayons" — they'd make a smart little stocking stuffer. Made by Ocni, the seasoning sticks are made with real ingredients and you shave them into whatever you're cooking. One trio among a few of the box sets at Vincenzo's includes lime, ginger and black garlic.
"It's a unique item, and they've proven to be very popular," Caccioppoli said.
A toast to the holidays
As part of a new movement toward healthier eating and drinking, more and more people are looking for good non-alcoholic cocktails. Bars and restaurants are offering more options and now home mixologists can create their own professional-style drinks, too — using high-quality (and often local) ingredients.
Gone are the days of the humdrum cranberry-and-soda-water "mocktail," companies like Tost and Seedlip are producing sparkling beverages and zero-alcohol spirits packed with robust botanical and other flavours. Check your nearby LCBO for Seedlip availability.
You can also find the popular zero-proof, zero-calorie botanical Borrago beverage flavoured with spice, citrus and pepper at Vincenzo's.
A similar beverage, Sobrii, is made in Stratford with co-packer partner Junction 56 Distillery. Sobrii is self-proclaimed as Canada's first distilled non-alcoholic "gin" made with local botanicals and Ontario ginseng. It's available at Bradshaws and at Junction 56, both in Stratford.
Check out O&V Tasting Room in Hespeler, Cambridge, for an interesting range of syrups and bitters (remembering that some bitters have alcohol) by Toronto-based Nickle 9 Distillery. Flavours include grapefruit-orange, lavender and chocolate-hazelnut, to name only a few.
O&V owner Natasa DeVilliers says the bitters are delicious, high-quality products.
"They are distilled just like Nickle 9's other spirits," DeVilliers says, "And are made with the actual herbs and spices."
Cookbooks are always a good choice
Books about food and cooking are always excellent gifts for food lovers on your list. Words Worth Books has a curated selection of about a dozen food books in their annual gift guide. They include, of course, a heavy emphasis on plant-based foods, picking up that theme of self and earth-care.
For example, Jamie Oliver has a new Ultimate Veg cook book as does the prodigious and hugely popular food writer, chef and restaurateur Yotam Ottolenghi, who is an culinary industry unto himself. Essential Ottolenghi includes a staggering 280 recipes of his signature Middle Eastern and veg-centric approach to food and cooking.
At this year's CBC Sounds of the Season, Indigenous chef Aicha Smith discussed her culinary philosophy using "pre-contact" ingredients and the techniques of Indigenous cookery. She's part of a new wave of chefs with Indigenous heritage, and that includes a unique book called tawâw: Progressive Indigenous Cuisine by Shane M. Chartrand and Jennifer Cockrall-King. The title means "there is room" and the book is an exploration of First Nations' stories, food knowledge and lore as well as 75 recipes.
Another particularly timely — and perhaps truly last-minute — gift is Karoline Jonsson's Happy Vegan Christmas. It's a smorgasbord of Scandinavian Christmas food and entertaining ideas, either for the favourite vegan on your list, or for you.
Happy holidays!
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