Sunday, December 8, 2019

welcome...welcome!

at last!  after sooo many years we  finally said : "that's it! we doing it...now"

                                   NACIRIYAWA FARM STAY - FIJI
                             is welcoming you to our home. 



 Location : we are 12 km from Nadi International Airport in the rural, farming area of Saweni.  It is but a 15 minute drive from the airport and our farm is bordering an inlet with 1,2 km of waterfront, mangroves and marine life.



The farm house has an interesting history.  The original Hall was built in 1879 and most of the timber was Oregon Pine.  We bought the colonial era Hall in 2012 and used most of the timber to build our  cabin home.
We have 2 cabins , ensuite with an enclosed private garden.  The cabins are spacious and private and when you open the wide, barn style roller doors, you are in the garden!



We are off the grid on the farm, but has all the modern conveniences on generator and we even have wifi!

Claude and I offer a bed and breakfast service with an option for lunch and/or dinner if the chefs special of the day entice you! Meals are healthy and hearty, served family style and mostly al fresco!
the huge trees and twittering birds makes for peaceful living.

 
 Meals are prepared using fresh, organic ingredients .





It is a farm...we have animals.  We also have bugs and insects and noises and smells....and tranquility. and fresh air. and you will be surrounded by nature.



Lots to see and do in our area too! Besides relaxing on the farm, reading and just be, you could swim or kayak or take long walks .  There are a lot of touristy attractions in close vicinity and other resorts with pools and bars and people and dancing and restaurants.



                                       Come stay with us...and live life the way it should be.



Contact us by email :  naciriyawa@hotmail.com
or phone : +679 9288724/ +679 9240587
or connect with us on facebook :  Naciriyawa farmstay - Fiji
or book through Airbnb.


                                                                    Claude and Ronelle




Monday, September 30, 2019

tallow


We live quite a sustainable DIY life here on the farm.  There is always a project or two (or three) going...

I am now utterly convinced of the health benefits of Lard (pig fat)and has been using this in place of vegetable cooking oil for more than a year.



I received an order to make tallow (beef fat) for a very talented young woman that sells eco-friendly products and she wanted to experiment with tallow in her soap- and candle making projects. Olivia from Ecoconscious fiji is truely inspirational in her quest to live eco friendly.

Tallow is an alternative animal fat , similar to Lard which is made from pig fat.  It should be from grass fed animals.   It was the fat of choice for our grandparents before industrial seed oils (which is extremely inflammatory and bad for the heart) took over the market.  Basically, you make tallow by rendering beef fat. Rendering just means that the beef fat is heated and melted. Tallow is what the beef fat turns into when it is melted. Once it is cool again, tallow is solid at room temperature.

Tallow is made from rendering suet, which is the hard, white fatty layer that surrounds an animal's organs, specifically the loins and kidneys, also known as leaf fat. It takes hours of boiling over a slow heat but the end product is totally worth it.





It has a high smoke point and adds a lovely flavour to fried foods. Eating healthy animal fats like tallow, duck fat, butter, etc. along with foods helps us to absorb and assimilate the vitamins in those foods. For example, eating vegetables that have been fried in tallow or have melted butter on them allows our bodies to better absorb and use the vitamins in the vegetables and it tastes beyond yummy!

It is rich in CLA (conjugated linoleic acid), a fatty acid that can help burn fat that is high in minerals.

It is high in saturated fat, absorbing fat soluble vitamins A,B12, D, E and K which supports the immune system.

It is Keto friendly and an alternative to butter, lard, coconut oil or olive oil. (healthy fats)

Used in DIY home remedies and products , being the original "body butter" full of fatty acids that are the building blocks of skin cells.  Tallow is good outside and inside!

Used in soapmaking

Used in candlemaking

My tallow is sourced from grass-fed animals and I am proud to be making and selling it. 







 



Friday, February 22, 2019

Being conned to accept factory food...




LARD :

~ high in vit D
~ 60% monounsaturated fat
~ perfect for baking, pies & pastries
~ connects you to a local farm
~ economical
~ has a high smoke point (190deg)
~ odourless, tasteless
~ contains no chemicals, only time & effort 




The story of Crisco begins innocently enough in pre-Civil-War America when candle maker William Proctor and his brother-in-law, soap-maker James Gamble, joined forces to compete with fourteen other soap and candle makers in Cincinnati, Ohio. P&G entered the shortening business out of necessity. In the 1890s, the meat packing monopoly controlled the price of lard and tallow needed to make candles and soap.1 P&G took steps to gain control of the cottonseed oil business from farm to factory. By 1905, they owned eight cottonseed mills in Mississippi. In 1907, with the help of German chemist E. C. Kayser, P&G developed the science of hydrogenation. By adding hydrogen atoms to the fatty acid chain, this revolutionary industrial process transformed liquid cottonseed oil into a solid that resembled lard.1
Not content with using hardened cottonseed oil for soaps, and mindful that electrification was forcing the candle business into decline, P&G looked for other markets for their new product. Since hydrogenated cottonseed oil resembled lard, why not sell it as a food?
The new product was initially named Krispo, but trademark complications forced P&G to look for another name. They next try was Cryst which was abandoned when someone in management noted a religious connotation. Eventually they chose the near-acronym Crisco, which can be derived from CRYStalized Cottonseed Oil.
Crisco was introduced to the public in 1911. It was an era when wives stayed home and cooked with plenty of butter and lard. The challenge for Crisco was to convince the stay-at-home housewife about the merits of this imitation food. P&G’s first ad campaign introduced the all-vegetable shortening as “a healthier alternative to cooking with animal fats. . . and more economical than butter.” With one sentence, P&G had taken on its two closest competitors—lard and butter.
P&G’s next step was a stroke of genius—they published and gave away a cookbook. The Story of Crisco2 looked like most other cookbooks of the era, but there was a difference. All of its 615 recipes, everything from lobster bisque to pound cake, contained—you guessed it—Crisco.
crisco_image.gif
The Story of Crisco is recognized as a classic in the subtle art of persuasion. Its language and contextual variety are “representative of the pre-WWI social milieu and reflect the urbanization, domestication, commercialization, education (or lack thereof) and simple sophistication of the times.”3 Crisco is presented as healthier, more digestible, cleaner, more economical, more enlightened and more modern than lard. Women who use Crisco are portrayed as good wives and mothers, their houses are free of strong cooking odors and their children grow up with good characters (because, according to the tortured logic of P&G’s advertising department, Crisco is easier to digest).
P&G also had the brilliant idea of presenting Crisco to the Jewish housewife as a kosher food, one that behaved like butter but could be used with meats. Because it made kosher cooking easier, Jews adopted Crisco and margarine—imitation lard and imitation butter—more quickly than other groups, with unforeseen consequences.


Www.westonaprice.org

We also didn’t know that the partially hydrogenated oils in Crisco—the trans fatty acids—were bad for us. In fairness to P&G, they didn’t know this either, not at first. But when reports of problems began to appear—problems like increased heart disease, increased cancer, growth problems, learning disorders and infertility—P&G worked behind the scenes to cover them up.4 One scientist who worked for P&G, Dr. Fred Mattson, can be credited with presenting the US government’s inconclusive Lipid Research Clinics Trials to the public as proof that animal fats caused heart disease. He was also one of the baleful influences that persuaded the American Heart Association to preach the phony gospel of the Lipid Hypothesis.
The truth about the dangers of trans fatty acids in foods like Crisco is finally emerging. Perhaps that is why P&G decided to put their flagship product up for sale.


Eliminate two things—hydrogenated fats and high fructose corn syrup—and you will see noticeable health improvements. Not all hydrogenated fats are made with cottonseed oil today; in fact, most are now made with soybean oil. But by eliminating just these two commodities—which is not as easy as it sounds—you will find that you have eliminated the majority of the “displacing foods of modern commerce” that Weston A. Price spoke about.