The rambling soapbox of a discontented suburbia











{April 27, 2007}   books and articles

Thank God for sisters, no?

My sister put me onto this article.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/25/dining/25loca.html?ex=1335153600&en=a7fce62f62a607bd&ei=5124&partner=facebook&exprod=facebook

Barbra Kingsolver has a new book coming out.  it’s all about eating locally and things of that nature.  In my humble opinion if you can combine eating locally with eating organic a) you have lots of money and b) you’re really helping out a lot.  you’re helping your diet, you’re helping the earth, you’re helping the local economy and much more.

Check out the book.  Joan Dye Gussow’s -This Organic Life is also really similar to this topic.  a great read indeed.



{January 16, 2007}   books, updates woot.

So much to talk about, so little memory.

So, as i mentioned previously - i got really cool books for christmas.
I’ve currently cooked 2 recipies from the more-with-less cook book. I started reading the related book -Living More with Less, and then picked up the This Organic Life book. I’m almost done with that.

What made me think of anything is that i just made granola for the first time! but i burned portions of it, I think it was too close to the bottom of the oven. And last monday i cooked the Tomato Quiche with the scattered help of Far with the crusts. It was good. (heather, you should try it. I’m really excited we both have the same cook book!!) It was really cool. The one thing i don’t understand, when making granola, is that the store bought stuff (even the organic stuff from the Abundance Co-op) is really really clumpy and stuff. Mine was really fine “grained” if you will. Adam said maybe it’s because i used honey instead of brown sugar (which we’ve seemed to loose) or the manor in which i was “stirring often” broke up the chunks. I dunno. I made the crunchy granola… didn’t bind together like i’d like, but i’m going to try the “chunky” granola and see if i’m anywhere near successful.

Reading Living more with less was really good. I started it - then i got distracted. But it’s really really compelling about how we’re living in the world and how we could learn from the world community. It’s quite a social-type book. It focuses on a very gentle interaction with the world around us, a conscious, slow and steady awareness and almost “critical” eye to the world around you to make the best and least impacting decisions…. i haven’t actually read it in a week, but it’s really good.

The book that Has been rocking my world is This Organic Life. amazing book, extremely well written. I recommend this to EVERYONE. if i had to pick people to hang out with, it would be Joan Dye Gussow and Barbara Kingsolver. They seem to be amazing grounded women that want to do something for the world around them. Reading about Joan’s garden, and the experiences and people she’s met with it is inspiring (horrible word - actually almost vague in a sense) but it’s compelling and makes me want to take up gardening. and by gardening i mean farming on a small scale. I’ve become much more conscious over the past week about what vegetables I’m eating, what people are requesting for meals, or bringing home and the fact that some of these fruits and vegetables are super out of season, and have been shipped half way across the country, if not the world. We used avocados tonight for dinner - I made guacamole for the first time, and since we were tripling the moosewood recipe, i just threw spices into it - Cayenne pepper, chili pepper, and cumin. tee hee - But avocados? I don’t know their availability. I actually just googled it - the seasonal availability of vegetables are very incomplete tables that leave out a bunch of vegetables. But i googled just avocado and came up with some florida growing chart that says they only don’t grow like april and may, and they only grow in the south eastern county right near the Keys. Frankly, i don’t like that i’m getting avocados from Florida anyways, and secondly 3 of them were rotted, so i’m wary on the seasonal availability they list. But either way… as I was saying - the other thing was the boys picked up some strawberries at the Public Market. But you’ve got to have a lot of discretion about what you’re seeing as “local and in season” at the P. Market. Because some people are just selling extra stock from the local grocery stores which sell out of season strawberries from Florida.

The thing that this book has really gotten me interested in and craving almost (oddly enough) is growing a lot of veggies in our own garden this summer (terrified and baulking at the amount of work) and then Storing a lot of this stuff for the winter. That’s the one thing that doesn’t really happen here is the storing. So we can freeze and can tomatoes and use them until we run out, and then ce la vie. Ya know? Like use vegetables when their seasons are, and if you don’t think far enough into the future you’ll be sol. We could have used some version of tomatoes tonight for our little taco/burrito/tostado dinner. And even if we don’t grow everything in our own garden, if we’re just conscious at the public market to buy only local stuff, and get the in season veggies, then we can can and store that stuff. And it’ll be helping out our local farmers instead of the other people. just seems like something really beneficial to all involved.

i’ll make that it for now.



{September 28, 2006}   apparently organic.

Apparently sucky college cafeteria food is a thing of the past. I remember getting sick of the mass produced low quality food served at my school that half way through my second year i started having a ham and swiss cheese wrap for lunch and dinner (i know, i get easily stuck in a food pattern… like for the last 5-7 months i’ve almost been consistently eating swiss cheese sandwiches with either apples or grapes… seriously)

but it’s an interesting thing. According to this article

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/food/2006-09-26-college-food-usat_x.htm
colleges are starting to care what their students think and want to eat. students are asking for organic and caring about where their food is coming from. I think it’s an important issue. being healthy, supporting local farmers and business… it’s really important stuff. we’re growing up in an age of the multi-national box store and life being at our fingertips electronically. there’s something to the tangible knowledge of knowing your food came from your region and what was done to it. I get skeptical of the tomatoes coming from california or God knows where that have an orangy gross red color to them and no taste at all.

I must be honest and say that i’m a dabbler. i am fully a vegetarian but do not know hugely about it. i’m loyal, just not fully informed. and this organic thing, i’m all in support of it, just haven’t done my homework. the buddy that shared the article asked about organic stuff. with a quick google search i came up with these two sites… haven’t read them… if they suck, I apoligize. but be informed. learn from me, or maybe my mistakes.

http://www.positivehealth.com/PERMIT/Articles/Organic%20and%20Vegetarian/keon47.htm

http://www.heall.com/body/askthedoctor/nutrition/organicfoods.html



et cetera