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You are here: UnionAID / Fundraising

Archive for category: Fundraising

UnionAID quiz night – Wellington

02 May 2012 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

Trivia + UnionAID + Maranui = good times

Register your team today for UnionAID’s soon-to-be-legendary first annual Quiz Night.

Friday 11 May

Maranui Cafe, Lyall Bay

7 pm

$15 per person (includes snacks and fun)

UnionAID are fundraising for our projects run in conjunction with Burmese migrant workers in Mae Sot on the Burma-Thailand border, and with Dalit workers in Tamil Nadu, India.

It’s also your chance to farewell Ross and Helen Wilson before they move to Rangoon for Ross to take up his new job as ILO Liaison.

Space is limited so get in quick to book a table for your team. Please distribute the poster to your networks and put one on your wall at work.

Register your team:  jeffs@nzno.org.nz by 9 May.

An Economist Cooks the Book

20 Feb 2012 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

Bill Rosenberg reviews “neat little Union AID cookbook”  

I caught up with a lot of reading over my Christmas-new year break, but I also improved my cooking repertoire and skills (I hope – ask my patient family) by trying several of the recipes from this neat little UnionAID cookbook. It cleverly blends an interesting range of South-East and South Asian recipes with an introduction to UnionAID’s projects. India, Singapore, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam are all represented – and I have probably missed some.

I’ve always been wary of food from these countries because I have a serious food allergy that turns up frequently in curries and sprinkled on their dishes. It’s easiest for me just to keep away from them despite hearing about how tasty they are. But the great thing about most of these recipes is that you don’t “add 2 tsps of curry powder”, thus laying yourself open to the scary unknowns of what might be in it. You make the curries yourself. You know exactly what you put in, and can miss out ingredients you don’t like or don’t like you. They can be as mild or hot as you want – though it takes a bit of experience to learn how much of the hot ingredients to put in. So I had a great first time making curries and creating other new flavours and textures that I had never experienced before. I was also helped midway by acquiring a decent blender, courtesy of some loyalty points scheme we’re in, and that is a great blessing unless you are good with a mortar and pestle.

I learned that making curries is actually not that much different from making a good Italian sauce, even though they usually have a more complicated set of ingredients and flavours. According to Wikipedia (so it must be true, right?), “curry” is an anglicised version of the Tamil word kari and just means “sauce”. It is important to bring out the flavours in the curry paste you have created before chucking in the rest of the ingredients. But you soon learn that no two curries are the same.

I made the Burmese Cauliflower and Tomato Stir Fry several times. It’s easy once you’ve tried it and is another way to add something to cooked cauliflower’s rather bland taste. Tinned tomatoes would probably do as well as fresh ones for this dish, but it might also be a way to use the ones that have got too ripe for a salad.

We gorged ourselves on the Kerala Egg Curry from Southern India. (A guide as to how many people the recipes serve would be very handy if the book is reprinted.) I was timid with the chillies – next time I might go for a bit more heat.  But subtle flavours, quick to prepare, and I love hard-boiled eggs.

I need to try the Burmese Pork and Lemongrass Curry again. I haven’t conquered cooking with lemongrass (which colleagues say is not to be missed, but I thought was over-rated and over-priced), and the dish ended up rather soupy and the lemongrass rather fibrous so I obviously did something wrong. But it was a simple recipe with attractive flavours so it’s worth trying.

The Spicy Lamb Curry contains potatoes, so you can vary the quantity of them according to numbers eating and the amount of rice you serve it with. With “two cans chopped tomatoes” it has a lot in common with an Italian casserole but of course with more heat and many different flavours.

The Chicken in Spicy Tomato and Yoghurt Sauce had wonderful flavours (needed for a boring meat like chicken!) and yoghurt adds a distinctive freshness to the dish.

My favourite (but perhaps I am biased from one of the endless series of cooking shows) was the Green Thai Fish Curry. It needs some ingredients we didn’t have in the house, like belacan (shrimp paste), fish sauce, lemongrass and coconut milk (you could get away with lemons instead of limes) but the multiple flavours of the curry and the creaminess of the coconut milk moisturise the fish creating a meal you’d want to make a regular part of your routine. Its only drawback is the ingredients, though once you have made the first outlay on belacan and fish sauce you have enough for a year’s supply!

Finally, the Tangy Thai Fish with Mint and Coriander is a simple and refreshing way to cook fish, which could be a lunch as well as evening meal.

I got a lot from this little book, partly because I’m just a starter in cooking recipes from these regions. For someone like me, it would be helpful to have photos of the finished dishes, though I understand that is easier said than done. But I thoroughly recommend the book. It’s good for your palate and good for the cause.

Bill Rosenberg.

February 2012

 

Note from UnionAID cookbook contributor: We commit to ensuring that Bill is better convinced of the subtle delights of lemon grass and also where best to find it and prepare it.

 

Sponsor Stephen to run the Rotorua Marathon

11 Jan 2012 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

Money pledged so far = $1942!

Hi all,

I’m Stephen Day – I work at TEU and I do some design work for the UnionAID team from time to time.  This year I’ve decided to run the Rotorua Marathon. Rotorua Marathon is one complete circle of Lake Rotorua and is New Zealand’s most run, and walked, marathon. It’s also one of the hardest marathons in New Zealand.

I’m going to run for UnionAID, and I’m looking for your sponsorship. The marathon is 26 miles and is on 28 April 2012.

I’ve never run a marathon before, but I have done a bit of competitive running – all distances from 800 metres up to half-marathons.  However, as Kiwi olympic medalist Barry Magee once said, “Anyone can run twenty miles. It’s the next six that count.”

To make it fair, because I’m already a runner, I’ll only take people’s money if I finish in the top ten.  That will require me, first, to finish both the training and the race.

You can sponsor me by leaving a comment below or emailing me at stephenday19@gmail.com You can also follow my training progress online to see how (and where) I am going.

Your Name (required)

Your Email (required)

Your Address

Sponsorship Amount

Your Message

Money pledged so far = $1942!

Order a cookbook

11 Dec 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

FLAVOURS OF SOLIDARITY

UnionAID Cookbook

Recipes from India and South East Asia

Limited edition – get yours NOW!

UnionAID has compiled a set of fabulous Indian and South East Asian recipes and is publishing these in a small but perfectly formed book of easy to make and delicious recipes – a cookbook you will really use and treasure – as well as being the perfect gift for all those friends and rellies who really do already have it all!

Flavours of Solidarity are on sale at the highly affordable price of only $10.00 – plus $2 postage and packing if ordered online.

Order one for yourself and several more for gifts. All profits raised will go to the UnionAID Tamil Nadu project and each dollar raised for UnionAID will be matched by the Morgan Foundation so will be doubled in value!

Flavours of Solidarity is on sale from the Wellington CTU Office for $10.00 per copy, from late October, OR; complete the on-line order form below.

Payment can be made by cheque or by online banking. Details of how to pay are in the order acknowledgment message and book(s) will be sent out once payment has been received.

Order, or pre-order NOW, online for $12.00

Your Name (required)

Your Email (required)

Your Postal address (required)

Number of copies of the cookbook

Solidarity, Summer 2011

08 Dec 2011 / Comments Off / in Front, Fundraising, Mae Sot, Solidarity, Summer 2011, Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu, The Pacific/by UnionAID

The sixth issue of Solidarity, the newsletter of the Unions Aotearoa International Development Trust, is available below. This issue introduces new projects in Sri Lanka and the Pacific, as well as updates on ongoing projects in Tamil Nadu and Mae Sot.

  1. New Projects in Sri Lanka, Mae Sot and the Pacific
  2. Worker co-operatives: Tamil Nadu Labour Union leads the way
  3. Meeting our fundraising target!
  4. Raffle ticket winners
  5. Getting skills for work
  6. Notes from the Field: Update on Mae Sot Project
  7. Online database a first for Tamil Nadu project
  8. Comment
  9. UnionAID cookbook

Open publication – Free publishing – More mae sot

Meeting our fundraising target!

08 Dec 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising, Solidarity, Summer 2011, Tamil Nadu/by UnionAID
  • Women basket weavers are forming a cooperative based business

Gareth Morgan has agreed to match us dollar  for dollar up to $30,000 a year with our fundraising for the new Tamil Nadu project. Thanks to hard work from UnionAID activists, and generous donations from our supporters, we are on track to meet that target for the first six months of the project. Our sincere thanks.

 

Great Gift Choice: Unionaid Cookbook

08 Dec 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising, Solidarity, Summer 2011/by UnionAID

Only $10 Selling Fast

Mouth watering Indian and South Asian recipes: discover the delights of Burmese cookery. All ingredients available locally.

Only $10 from Wellington Moore Wilsons Fresh, Maranui Cafe , Queen Sally’s Diamond Deli or order online at:
unionaid.org.nz/2011/09/order-a-cookbook/

UnionAID raffle results

05 Dec 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

The UnionAID raffle has been drawn under Police supervision and the following were the prize winners:

First prizes - iPad

  • Colin Moore
  • Bev Thomson

Second prize - iPhone

  • Dayna Kosega

Third Prize -  iPod

  • Al Morrison

Congratulations!

Waste Land – UnionAID Film Fundraiser

29 Jul 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising/by UnionAID

“What happens in the world’s largest trash city will transform you”

UnionAID has been successful in obtaining another excellent Oscar nominated film as a UnionAID fundraiser. Winner of nine audience awards at festivals the world over, including the 2010 Sundance film festival,  Waste Land is a truly inspiring and moving film about celebrated New York artist Vik Muniz’s work with Rio garbage pickers on an ambitious art project in his native Brazil.

Monday 5 September

8.00pm

Paramount Cinema

Courtney Place

Tickets $20 available from insidejob5@xtra.co.nz

All proceeds to UnionAID projects

See www.unionaid.org.nz and join us on Facebook

Don’t miss out on our 2011 fundraisers!

28 Jun 2011 / Comments Off / in Fundraising, Solidarity, Winter 2011/by UnionAID

Tickets to our April fundraising dinner at Maranui sold out within five days.

Due to the success of this dinner at which we raised over $3000, UnionAID plans to hold a spring dinner in September.

We will notify local members of the date closer to the time.

Page 1 of 212

2011 Annual Report

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