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Lake Shrimp

Island_shrimp_2

I rediscovered this blog post from Lake Shrimp in Erhai Hu, Yunnan in China today after a rather frantic search - Note to readers: bookmark everything that interests you... finding this stuff in obscure caverns of the web years after the fact when all you can remember are the key words fish, island and China is no breeze. It's just one of those posts that stuck in my mind all these years, so I thought I'd post it here. Now... to try and find that post about eating sea urchins at a beach somewhere in Italy, or was it Sardinia? Sicily maybe?....

Vietnamese appetite

Phil, once of Phnomenon in Cambodia, is now of Last Appetite and he's in Vietnam and he's eating, which is good to know :) And this post reminds me an awful lot of this post... Aye well... jealous? no... UPDATE: And through the ether of interconnectedness I discover Slavodelic - just arrived in Saigon and eating.

Blogging foodblogs

Over on Word of Mouth I've started blogging five highlights from the foodblog world once per week. I'm always on the look out for original and interesting posts to link to and bookmark. We're using del.icio.us bookmarks to store these posts and more, way, way more... Here's the Word of Mouth account - add us to your network and we'll reciprocate. Meanwhile, I'll be blogging more about that fat slab above in a day or two. Oh... and it's great to see Fraser of Scotch ostrich egg fame scaring the Observer's vegan readership senseless with his animal alphabet at Word of Mouth too. Cooking with and gas, grubs, gnu, gazelle and gawd knows what else come B to Z.

Mo' food blogging

I've just started blogging for Word of Mouth, the food blog of the non-too shoddy Observer Food Monthly magazine. I think it's gonna be fun. I hope to mix the fun with the serious, but I started with the fun - hence the pic above. And don't you ever, ever, ever buy the stuff on the left. Gack, barf, yuck, yuck. They write "Original and best" on the can for a very good reason.

It had to happen... the kimchi blog

OK, it's all in Korean, which I can kinda read v-e-r-y s-l-o-w-l-y and yet understand next to nothing but... I just had to give a shout out to the Kimchi Blog. Anyone who has the guts and the digestive tract to blog about the world's premier friend loser of a food deserves a link or two. PS. I love kimchi. No, really... I do. See. via Global Voices.

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Observer goes food blogging

Meanwhile, back in food blog world... Susan Smillie, editor of The Observer website tells me about the forthcoming launch of  Word of mouth a food blog from the Observer Food Monthly magazine. I think if any of the UK newspapers - and the US ones for that matter - have a chance of getting a food blog right, it's the Observer. Alors, Susan says,

"Our first and rather unglamorous aim is simply to find our feet in the food blog world - as newcomers, we're being very careful not to set ourselves up as the authority, although we will have various experts contribute and draw on our print product and contributors. I want to make the food blog a place that is properly welcoming and  interested in reaching out to its community. It won't just be about industry people or celebrity chefs, although we will include both, but I'm more interested in creating an unpretentious place for all people to gather and talk about food - from dining out to eating in, exchanging recipes, to food and wine gossip. I envisage a blog where you could drop in to find Jay Rayner and Heston Blumenthal discussing whether old media sensationalised molecular gastronomy, and at the same time, a couple of folk swapping their favourite sandwich fillings. We'll invite readers to blog regularly, have events, run podcasts, and video ... "

The blog is slated to go live this Thursday, 24 May. I hope that the majority of the content is original and not just pulled in from the mag. I suspect Jay Rayner has the makings of a very good blogger, but time will tell. I'm told the blog design isn't finished yet and apart from the sausage, it looks the same as all the other Guardian blogs. I hope that changes. However, what is particularly interesting about Susan's comments above, and what makes the possibilities for this old media food blog that much more dynamic, is in the final sentence.

We'll invite readers to blog regularly, have events, run podcasts, and video ...

How will they invite readers to blog? Off the top of my head, this could open the mag up to a whole lot of niche regional content that the printed version couldn't hope to accomodate once per month. And then there are "events". If OFM can also use the blog to foster an offline life in that weird world without laptops and statcounters then I think they could really be onto something. Tastings, cooking shows, workshops, lectures, films, flashmobs, tastemobs(?), competitions etc. Food bloggers make up a tiny, if obsessive, proportion of a magazine's readership. OFM needs to have far broader appeal than just other food bloggers - even if it's the obsessives that drive much of the traffic to the blog.

I can't think of an old media food blog that is a) much cop or b) gets any interest from bloggers, let alone normal people. Diner's Journal, Grub street and possibly Between meals are notable exceptions. Whatever OFM does I hope they don't do a Food & Wine or a Bon Appetit - one of which accepts comments, while the other is barking in a very lonely shed - no offence Hugh and Andrew from Bon Appetit, both of whom are charming and were an absolute pleasure to spend time with in Toulouse recently - more on that soon...

And, in the way of these things... I should disclaim that I was invited to a meeting at The Observer about this blog in October last year. I'm also talking, talking, talking with other old media outlets about working on other foodcentric blog projects. Nothing signed or sealed anywhere, so I'll keep schtum. Suffice to say, I am still open to offers.

What are the world's best food blogs?

I have my own ideas, but last I heard there are at least 200,000 food blogs in existence. That number's not decreasing and I don't think one person can know 200,000 of anything anyway, no matter who you are. If you have a strong view on this, feel free to voice it in the comment box. If you prefer you can email me. This is a for a feature I am writing this week. The end result will inevitably be subjective, but hopefully informed to a large extent by you. Beyond the knowledge picked up through the three or more years I've been food blogging, there are a few places I've already stopped by to help me with this piece,

  • My (not at all up to date, but will update it...) copy of my food blog RSS feed.

Plenty of other sources garnered over the years - foodpornwatch, kiplog, Elise, grabyourfork and the countless newspaper features, but I hope this post and my Twitter will throw a few pleasantly unexpected spanners into the final 10. I haven't written a word of this feature yet and I won't start it until, at the latest, Friday morning.

Olive branches into blogs

Olive_magBBC's Olive Magazine has a fantastic food feature put together entirely by ScooptWords food bloggers. I mentioned this over there, but I just wanted to say a big thank you to all the bloggers who eagerly jumped on board to have a crack at writing for the mainstream press. In no particular order, here are the eight foodbloggers featured - well worth a peruse I reckon,

Clotilde in Paris - Chocolate & Zucchini
Barbara in Auckland - Winos & Foodies
Robyn in Kuala Lumpur - Eating Asia
Mark in Hanoi - Sticky Rice
Ben in Madrid - Notes from Spain
Anne in Stockholm - Anne's Food
Catherine in San Francisco - Food Musings
Nicky in Munich - delicious days

Cheers one and all :)

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