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New charity would champion locally grown food

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Ashley Tucker has created her own line of Caribbean-inspired beverages (Photo by Glenn Tucker)

Health food advocate Ashley Tucker has created her own line of Caribbean-inspired beverages to help fund a food awareness charity.Her Sip and Savor line of drinks are on sale at local stores.Ms Tucker will use the proceeds to fund the Bermuda Culinary Creation Centre, a charity she plans to establish to promote the benefits of locally grown food.“A lot of people are interested in learning more about food and culinary arts,” she said. “It’s necessary because you can see the costs of health insurance rising. Bermuda has some of the highest rates of food-related illnesses in the world; diabetes is a big issue. The Diabetes Centre is working on making information available to people but I feel as though there is more that can be done help promote local, fresh food. I want to help people realise how simple it can be to produce fresh food for themselves and incorporate small healthy lifestyle choices that in the end can make a huge difference.”Drinks in the Sip and Savor line have been named cayenne concoction, lemon grass, tamarind limeade and mauby. They contain ingredients such as lemon grass, jiggery (a pure form of sugar), bark, agave, cayenne pepper, spices and stevia.“Heaven on Earth”, is how Miss Tucker describes the taste of her beverages. Lifestyle tried one and found it tasted more like a slightly spiced iced tea. It was a refreshing and pleasant taste.“I am hoping that my products will be marketable worldwide,” she said. “I utilise and fuse flavours that happen to have beneficial healing properties. Premium ingredients and local products are used to create each concoction. The ingredients used in my beverages are not only used in Caribbean cuisine, but also found in the cuisines of Asia.”Miss Tucker studied food and nutrition at the Culinary Institute of America in New York, and at Johnson and Wales University in Rhode Island.“In university I worked on product development, which is something I like doing,” she said. “I worked in a coffee company, formulating spice rubs that used coffee to pop flavours. One of the benefits of this was that by adding coffee as an accent you could reduce the amount of salt needed in the seasoning by about a third. We tried it with non-caffeinated coffee and found it worked just as well.”Her charity will offer workshops in healthy cooking and eating. It will also carry out altruistic activities such as providing vegan cupcakes to the less fortunate in the community. Johnson and Wales sent her a container full of equipment such as stoves, fridges, a combi-oven, stainless steel work benches and a prep sink to help her out.“They are just waiting to be utilised,” she said. “A lot of schools have dropped cooking classes. That is something I would initiate here. I would like to work with schools and organisations to create a culinary arts curriculum. I have actually been doing small pilot cooking classes and I have found the children really gravitate to hands-on learning.”She said our bodies are like an expensive car; they need high quality fuel to make them run at their best.“We should be eating wholesome, whole, raw foods as much as possible,” she said. “We should be eating local foods, because they are higher in energy because they are just picked and ready to eat. Food loses nutritional value when it has to travel over a great distance.”Her parents, Horace and Audrey Tucker, are in the restaurant industry. Her mother runs Island Cuisine in Southampton and her father runs Bermy Cuisine in the City of Hamilton.“My mother worked when we were younger, but cooked every meal we ate, even the bread our sandwiches were on,” Miss Tucker said. “I got to spend a lot of time at home learning from my mother. I enjoyed listening to her stories while she was busy at work in the kitchen. I enjoyed getting involved in meal preparation and food. That is how I started.”Sip and Savor beverages are available at Bermy Cuisine, It’s Only Natural, People’s Pharmacy, J&J Produce, Juice & Beans and Windy Bank Market.For information visit www.ashtucker.com or call 332-1611.

Ashley Tucker has created her own line of Caribbean-inspired beverages (Photo by Glenn Tucker)
Ashley Tucker has created her own line of Caribbean-inspired beverages (Photo by Glenn Tucker)
Ashley Tucker has created her own line of Caribbean-inspired beverages (Photo by Glenn Tucker)
A basic mauby recipe

This is a refreshing drink often taken with Sunday lunch in the Caribbean. It has a unique licorice flavour and is best enjoyed cold.

Ingredients

4 c water

10 pieces of mauby bark (ask at Miles Market)

2 cinnamon sticks (small)

2 4in” pieces of dried orange peel

nutmeg (see note below)

3 to 4 cloves

The cinnamon and nutmeg is optional but will change the taste of the drink.

Method

In a deep saucepan place all the ingredients and on a medium to high heat, bring it to a boil. Allow it to simmer for about 30 minutes. Alternatively, you can let it boil for five minutes then turn off the stove, cover the pot and allow it to steep for about five hours. Allow it to steep overnight to really bring out the flavour. The result is a concentrate. For every cup of concentrate add two cups of water, then sweeten to taste. Strain and store in the fridge.

Let us know how the recipe came out: jmhardy@royalgazette.com