Thursday, July 5, 2012

Fireflies and Fireworks


Now that fireworks are legal in RI (with tent vendors  exploding everywhere), we don't have to go far to see them.  Last night, we sat on our back lawn and watched the displays west and east as two different neighbors lit up the sky.  In our darker yard surrounded by trees the fireflies raced back and forth.  Was it the warm summer  night, a confusion or curiosity of sparks?  We were captured and even the mosquitoes kept their peace.  

Now I long to spread independence from factory foods and farms and publish my cookbook.  It has over 100 recipes inspired by many ethnic cuisines, all using local New England ingredients.   Even if you're not in the NE area, most regions can grow what we do, so someone in France, Germany, Australia, even Russia can make a lot of this food from their own local ingredients.  This book can only exist with your help!  Plant it forward, and send out this link: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/475787940/sustainable-cookbook Even if you can only donate $10, if 500 people did that we'd have a 1000 books!  As an added incentive, a friend will MATCH everything donated by July 14th (French Independence Day).  Below is a sneak-peak at the lay sermon I will be giving about eating locally.  If you can, join us at at the First Unitarian Church on Benefit Street in Providence August 19th at 10 a.m.  All are welcome! 

Ethical Eating & the Interconnected Web of Life: 
How Eating Locally Helps Us Build Community and Live Sustainably. 
August 19th, 2012

Walking along an urban sidewalk from the bus, I see fast food wrappers, vehicle waste, and weeds.  Through research and training, I see that weed is chicory, that one lamb’s quarters.  Hanging over the bridge atop the stinking stream are fox grapes.  All these are edible were it not for the pollution they’re mired in.  The plants speak to me as I walk past.  The trash does not, except to speak for those who have not made the connection between what they eat, themselves, and the world.

Waiting for my order of hash browns from Dunkin Donuts, I watched them remove a box from the freezer, cut open a plastic bag, remove a smaller portioned bag (apparently because employees cannot count to ten) and open it onto a throw-away tray, place the tray in the oven with gloved hands, remove the tray and place the food in a bag using wax paper, place the bag into a bag with a paper napkin, and hand it to me.  Eleven articles were thrown away for a small order of hash browns.

At work, I started a “Waste-Free Lunch” program.  Food scraps get composted.  We have monthly raffles where students who come in with lunches that create no trash get tickets toward recycled art supplies, bug collection kits, bird feeders, and the like.  An example of a waste-free lunch would be a sandwich in a reusable container, a reusable water bottle, cloth napkins, reusable utensils, and whole fruit.  Not by coincidence, these lunches are usually healthier than the single serving snack bags, the Lunchables and Capri Suns.  There are few or no ingredients that are unknown or hard to pronounce.  It’s hard to break old habits, but small changes occur.  We will continue to do audits and spread the word. 

Food choices affect so much more than generating trash.  A case in point is eating meat.  I rarely eat meat not so much because I am ethically opposed to eating the animals themselves, but I am ethically opposed to supporting industrial farming, where animals are kept in confined areas, fed GMO corn they didn’t evolve to eat, and loaded with antibiotics and other chemicals to off-set illness due to the poor diet and cramped conditions.  I’m opposed to giving chickens arsenic to combat intestinal flora and think vegetarian chickens are ridiculous.  Let them eat bugs!  There’s more protein in a grub than in a food-lot grade ear of corn.  While I wouldn’t eat a grub directly if given the choice, I don’t want the majority of my food chain to be based on Monsanto corn.  Instead, I will enjoy the rich yellow yolk of free-range eggs, soon from my own back yard, and get my chicken meat from the farm down the street.  I will not get a corn-fed burger or salmon or ham while their waste piles up in cesspools rather than composted as organic fertilizer.  I will eat less meat and I will pay more for sustainable meat, because if I don’t pay more now, I will pay later in environmental clean-up fees and my health.

One way I am able to support my family so we can eat organic and local food is by growing it at home.  In the spring, we have Vietamese-style rolls with our herbs, lettuces, and rhubarb, as well as strawberries in our cereal.  Summer is full of harvesting, drying, and canning.  The garden bursts with tomatoes, squash, eggplant, and flowers.  We get some blueberries and blackberries off our young bushes and hope to see fruit on the trees next year.  We pick enough at orchards to have blueberries and peaches year-round and always use up the 60 or more pounds of tomatoes that go into sauce, relish, salsa, and more.  If there is extra, as anyone who’s grown zucchini will tell you, we give it away.  Smith Hill Center, which I found through ampleharvest.org, has accepted our fresh tomatoes.  My students donated their basil plants right here at UU.  Family, friends, and neighbors also benefit.  Now, the RWP Community Garden I volunteer at has expanded and will donate the harvest from their “teaching plots” to the Open Table of Christ Church.  URI has an entire orchard manned by volunteers that donates to RI Food Banks.  Together, we really can affect the world, one meal at a time.

We cannot do it alone, however.  Bumblebees take their impossible flights, filling the satchels on their legs with pollen from my blueberry and squash flowers.  I never noticed the many colors of bees until I started gardening.  Now, this microcosmos occupies my eyes.  Blue wasps buzzing, ants herding black aphids, pleasing fungus beetles found under logs, the once invisible I now capture on film like I’m photographing faeries.  The bees, wasps, and ants pollinate it all.  Without them, a third of our food would not exist.  When colonies collapse, we are next.  Pesticides, genetically modified crops, over-worked hives forced to forage monocultures, weakened immune systems, and lack of habitat across pristine lawns – these are the beds our society has made.  Do we now lie in them, or stand up against them?

Pill bugs abound in the litter of leaves, the great recyclers breaking down the detritus of the garden.  My daughter collects them to feel their crab legs tickle her hand.  We know how helpful worms are with their vermicompost and aeration of the soil.  They are as obvious as rain.  But who gives a thought to worms as they dose roses with Imidacloprid to kill everything they don’t understand, or add herbicides and over-lime their lawns to prevent a single dandelion from growing, killing the microflora and fauna below and polluting the ground water.  (Dandelions and roses are edible as well, both high in vitamin C.)  Now think of acres of crops laden with pesticides, grown as monocultures where they are dependent on fertilizer the excess of which descends into the water supply and eventually the ocean, creating huge and expanding “Dead Zones”.  Imagine eating something that was cut off from all symbiotic relationships, the very ecosystem developed between other plants and animals, and think if that can be considered a “whole” food.  Imagine cutting something off from its own evolution.  Do you want that to become a part of you, both in the food sense and the spiritual sense?  Imagine a butterfly that no longer flaps its wings, and the ripple effect of that.

The supermarket isolates us further.  Each item is arranged by sometimes artificial categories, grown for its shipping qualities over its flavor or nutrition.  We don’t often speak with the employees other to ask where something is or how much it costs, never mind where and how it was grown.  Then we get home and throw away the packaging, the plastic bag.  Changes are made with small but important steps.  Step up your shopping by bringing a reusable bag, or ten, mesh bags for produce, and buying food in bulk, with recyclable packaging, or no packaging at all.  One small step for man and giants like the plastic bag companies and the Koch brothers (who make many products designed to be thrown away) go down.
We live in a world of negative reinforcement.  Anthony Burgess, author of A Clockwork Orange, discusses the reduction of the freedom of the individual in this year’s June 4th & 11th edition of The New Yorker.  He describes B.F. Skinner’s research that man is motivated by positive and negative reinforcements.  Most of us operate under fear: fear of losing a job, disappointing loved ones or authority figures, of looking bad or different or weird.  We avoid change out of fear.  Instead of banning Big Gulp soft drinks, shouldn’t we be promoting all-natural fruit smothies?  Which really benefits you: not drinking soda or eating healthier?  We need to change our way of thinking not to avoid the bad but to seek the good.  Burgess writes, “Given the right positive inducements...we shall all become better citizens, submissive to a state that has the good of the community at heart...We need to be conditioned in order to save the environment and the race.”  Of course, we must also have a government that promotes positive changes in the community.  The amendment to the recent Farm Bill to give subsidies to organic farmers using sustainable practices rather than just King Corn and Queen Soy passed; making it mandatory to label GMO ingredients as such did not.
So much of our choice of food dictates all the choices we make to access it, such as what we buy, where we buy it, what waste we generate from consuming it, what jobs we work to pay for it, and who we vote for to keep everything the same.  In the hunter-gatherer society of the !Kung San bushmen of the Kalahari Desert in Botwana, they spend about 15 hours a week getting food and the rest of the week resting, embroidering, visiting others, or entertaining (Ryan, p.176). Not a bad-sounding life.  Psychologists and Anthropologists Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jethà argue that when foods are available in the natural environment, no one can control people’s access to what they eat (p. 176).  I would also argue that when healthy foods are available in school cafeterias, convience stores, and local Farmer’s Markets, people will eat it.  In “food deserts”, only processed foods are available to the local population, who often have limited access to transportation.  One Providence convenience store had a “make-over”, placing healthy foods front and center so they would sell more produce than bagged chips.  Two small supermarkets have opened in former Providence food deserts to carry local foods: Urban Greens Food Co-op and the Fertile Underground.  Supporting these businesses, either by buying from them or becoming a contributing or sustaining member, helps the community grow as well.  Society becomes more egalitarian and leaders arise not from coercion but respect.  I didn’t force anyone to accompany me to the Farmer’s Market for their first visit, nor did I coerce them to return on their own.  No one is making me teach my friends how to preserve foods.  They just asked.  When your neighbor is growing zucchini, you will not know scarcity.    
How similar are the words “scare” and “scarcity”?  Where there is scarcity of resources, misinformation, and fear, we turn against each other.  We’ve been conditioned to want every new gadget, the right label on our clothes, the quick and easy solutions to dinner.  We let corporations decide things for us, giving them our respect as our leaders without even casting a ballot.  We are constantly told we live in the best society in the world, so why change it?  But we can make our own choices.  When Captain Robert FitzRoy of the HMS Beagle (yes, the one Darwin travelled in) took three natives from the hunter-gatherer community of Tierra del Fuego to England to expose them to “civilization” and western farming practices so they could then act as missionaries to the rest, he returned a year later to find the natives had reverted to their own ways and been happier for it (p. 163-165, 181).  Conversely, farmers in India today, talked into Round-Up Ready GMO seed from Monsanto, have lost everything and even resorted to suicide.  The slash and burn agriculture too-long prevalent in Rainforests to grow cocoa and coffee is slowly being abandoned for organic, shade-grown farming closer to the way these plants actually grow.  We can promote these sustainable practices by buying organic, free-trade coffee and chocolate, now easily available.  I know I certainly prefer the taste of Green & Black’s 70% dark over a Hershey’s bar, which contains soy lecithin (a filler), PGPR (made from castor oil), vanillin (derived from petroleum products), and artificial flavor. 
This is a war on many fronts, but it need not be stressful.  In the garden, I find serenity, a deep connection to the earth.  The sun shines bright as a deity, the orbiting moon reflects his light and she pulls the tides.  Rain is a blessing, bird song a choir.  The earth is my altar, a table set with her bounty.  And look, a neighbor I’ve never spoken to is leaning over the fence, asking about the flowers.  It’s time we talked.

Citations:
Burgess, Anthony.  (2012, June 4 & 11)  Life and letters: The clockwork condition The New Yorker, p 69-76.
Ryan, Christopher and Cacilda Jethà.  (2010)  Sex at dawn: How we mate, why we stray, and what it means for modern relationships. New York: Harper Perennial.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Backyard Chickens: A Twitter Feed


17 Airmailed overnight.  Chicks are 13 hours old.


Getting their first drink.  This waterer will be suspended from floor of 8'X4' coop,
with chicken run beneath it.  We are keeping five, six, no, seven.

Pigpile!!!!!

Awake!!!

Slumber party in the corner!

Temporary home with heat lamp.  3 weeks until coop time.  We may need to expand...

Begin your "awwws" now.  We are finally getting our backyard chickens.  Here is a brief summary:

Twitter Feed: Here are the Tweets
Two days 'til chickens!  Araucana, Buff Orpington, Barred Plymouth Rock
Going postal: Chicks arrive!  SO CUTE!!!!  Born 7 a.m. yesterday morning.  17 Airmailed.


Give first water.  They need no training.  Green poop.
Start of naming process: Buffy, Puffy, T-Bird, Wingtip, Ping, Piccata, Runty...
Runty is so tiny and whiter than the other Aracunas.  She keeps peeping loudly and pecking her sisters.  
Day 2: Birds are already bigger, except Runty.  Cleaned her butt for "pasting up".  Dried umbilical cord.  Stressed.
Chicks are in "pig pile", sleeping.
Chicks are awake!


Poop looks like oatmeal.
Dusk: Chicks having a slumber party.  All asleep except two that keep running around.  Oops!  Chicks all awake again! 
Day 3: Birds developing actual feathers at wing tips.  Eating more.  Possible 50% bigger.  Cleaned Runty again and separated her to 90ºF room.
Friend John comes by with extra cage and light.  He is camping and I will care for his 5 along with the other dozen.  4 going to another friend.
Runty returned to cage under 95º heat lamp.  Not eating or drinking.  Tried hand-feeding.
Runty is dead. Buried under shrub.

Midnight: Talking with friend in Albuqueque.  Power goes out, which includes heat lamps!  Outside, utility pole on fire!  Firemen watch.

Chicks are pig-piled and sleeping.  Don't know what to do.

Day 4: Flashing lights and idling fire truck outside our house.  Four hours sleep.  Chicks survive night.
Chicks are jumping their full height now, trying to perch.  Chicks eat all feed and get more.  Poop gets odor, is thicker.
Work on coop with Dad.  4 hours screwing in 3 supports, finding frame lost its square, then doing several crazy things to make it square to get the flooring in.  Lunch.
Day 5: Chicks love to jump and attempt to fly.  They are evolving!
Day 6: Chicks begin scratching surface of cage floor.  A lot.
Day 7: Cage litter seems less random.  Is that circle within a circle a match for the CERN Hadron Collider meant to find the God particle?
Day 8: Chicks are huddled again, plotting.
Day 9: Men in suits are at my door– 


Sunday, July 1, 2012

Perfect Pairings

Twig Farm Goat Tomme (from West Cornwall, VT) with a 2010 Black Opal Shiraz Cabernet (SE Australia).  No, the wine was not local and it was a gift, but the earthy rind and deep complexity of the cheese balance perfectly with the spicy berries of the blended wine.  Alas, out of Triscuits, the cracker with few ingredients.  (I stopped buying crack, I mean, Cheese-Its, after I read the side of the box and decided I preferred salt and rosemary to MSG.)

Other perfect pairings: Phineas and Ferb.  My family loves the show.  But why watch imagination at work, when you can LIVE it?  My daughter wanted to "go to outer space for REAL" so yesterday we made her space suit.  I had been keeping large Styrofoam packing material in the basement for years, waiting for the right moment.  I even held on to the torn flex hose when I replaced it for the dryer.  Some silver paint, aluminum foil, lots of duct tape, and caps and other junk of various kinds, and two hours later, voila! Cost of project: $0  Value: Priceless.

The materials, along with my daughter's "Perry" hat.  Use heavy-duty clippers
for flex hose and duct tape edges to avoid cuts.

Painting Styrofoam and wrapping in foil.  Do not use spray paint on Styrofoam;
it may melt! (I discovered this at age 12, sculpting foam by melting it with
nail polish.  Maybe it's the alcohol.)

Fitting #4

Fitting #6

"I can't bend my arms!"

Ready for space!

Here's one more bit of technology you can use today: Hot, humid weather is the best time to make bread.  Why?  I throw a damp towel over the dough and leave it outside, the deck bench my personal proofer!  Since I have two more kids this month and they are not used to eating "healthy, whole" foods from scratch, I made my multigrain bread, but replaced the multigrain cereal and wheat flours with just unbleached flower.  I did keep the oatmeal in, and the vital wheat gluten necessary for the texture.  5 minutes to mix, ten minutes to knead, left outside 2 hours, reshaped and pounded into the bread pan, another 1 hour rise outside (where it almost overflowed!), then 40 minutes in the oven.  I did time it to bake in the cool evening.  Really, it's 20 minutes of your time if you're planning on being home for 4-5 hours anyway.  Another great pairing: Warm bread and butter, honey, or preserves.  Try it!

Don't forget our Kickstarter, even if you can only donate $10.  Here.


Vegetarian/Vegan Option
________________________________________________
Multigrain Bread
Taste of Earth 
________________________________________________
Prep: 25 minutes  Rise: 3-5 hours  Bake 40-45 minutes
Cool: 1 hour  Makes one loaf
1 1/2 cups bread flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
4 tsp. vital wheat gluten
1/2 cup oatmeal
1/2 cup multigrain cereal (such as Bob’s Red Mill)
1 tsp. salt
1 1/4 cup warm water (100ºF-115ºF), divided
3 tsp. active dry yeast
1/4 tsp. sugar
2 tbs. olive oil
1/4 cup local honey (or substitute brown sugar)
In a large bowl, whisk together first six ingredients.  Dissolve yeast with sugar into 1/4 cup of warm water in a separate bowl.  Let sit about ten minutes, until foamy.  Incorporate remaining water, oil, and honey, then make a well in the flour mixture and stir wet into dry.  Flour hands and counter and knead bread about 10 minutes, until elastic.  Place rounded 6” X 4” dough back in bowl and cover with hot wet towel.  (I use my turned-off oven as a proofer.)    Let rise 2-6 hours, or until dough has doubled.  Grease bread pan and punch dough down.  Transfer dough to bread pan, reshaping if needed.  Let rise 1-2 more hours.  Preheat oven to 350ºF.  Bake bread 40-45 minutes, until golden brown and hollow-sounding when tapped.  Cool one hour.


Monday, June 25, 2012

Building with Bottles




It takes a plastic bottle 450 years to decompose.  Some have said of the waste we generate why we aren't building houses out of it.  Now some people are!  With 6,000 bottles filled with sand then cemented into place, you can make a small house or community building.  Of all the bottles produced or the U.S., only 27% get recycled.  This PET (polyethylene terephthalate) can be made into carpet, luggage, shoes, fabric, fiberfill, car bumpers, and more.  Yet, the other 73%, or 60 million bottles a DAY,  are thrown away in the US alone. That single day of "trash" could build 10,000 houses.  There are an estimated 640,000 homeless in America. 

Personally, I reuse mine and also have reusable water bottles.  Rhode Island now recycles #5 plastic, so all those ice coffee cups should be going in recycling too.  They do make great pots for seedlings on a budget.  We donated 42 basil plants to a food pantry last January.  There are so many other uses for them as well: bird feeder, light bulb...  I've posted before about other countries using plastic bottles as light bulbs.  Here's another video and the original one I posted.  

The best course of action is to not generate trash in the first place.  But if you've got it, reuse it, recycle it, send it overseas if you want to, but keep them out of the landfills and ocean!  The majority of the air we breathe is not from trees (not even the rain forest), but from phytoplankton in the ocean.  Every curb is a coast-line.  Enjoy your water and keep it clean!  

BTW, our Kickstarter is up to $341.  Just $4859 to go in 40 days.  If you haven't pledged, even $10, please help us get our cookbook out into the world!

I just made this again, this time with stinging nettle and lemon balm.  Oh my!

Vegetarian 
________________________________________________
Pansotti with Walnut Sauce
Taste of Italy
________________________________________________
Prep: 1 hour  Cook: 15 minutes  Serves 10 
Dough:
2 eggs
3/4 cup milk
1 tsp. cider vinegar 
1 tsp. salt
2 3/4 cup unbleached flour
Filling:
1/4 cup blanched, towel-dried, minced borage* 
1 cup ricotta (cow or goat)
1/4 cup dry white wine
1 tbs. chopped fresh basil*
Walnut Sauce:
1 shallot, minced
1 tbs. butter
1 cup chopped, toasted walnuts
1 cup whipping cream
1/4 tsp. liquid smoke
This dish takes time to make, but it well worth it.  Serve it at a dinner party and enjoy the praise for making your own ravioli and rich sauce.  Borage has a light cucumber taste and the hairy texture of the leaves disappears when you blanche them.  For dough, whisk eggs, milk, and vinegar.  Stir in salt and flour, then knead on heavily floured counter into a stretchy dough.  Keep wrapped in plastic in refrigerator until needed later.  For filling, pick 25-30 borage leaves, carefully washing them and removing discolored parts.  Boil leaves about 5 minutes to soften hairs, place in ice water 1 minute, then squeeze out excess water by placing leaves in a towel and pressing.  Mince leaves on a cutting board, to yield a 1/4 cup.  Mix thoroughly with cheese, wine, and basil.  To make ravioli, roll dough out as thin as possible (the last setting on a pasta machine) and cut into 3” squares.  Make sure area is heavily floured, as dough can get sticky.  Place about 2 tsp. of filling on each square and fold over into a triangle.  Separate ravioli on floured wax paper until ready to cook.  For sauce, toast walnuts gently in pan then set aside.  Mince shallot and sauté in butter until just soft.  Run nuts through food processor with some of cream to create a paste, leaving some pieces unprocessed if desired.  Return nut mixture to pan with remaining cream.  Heat gently, stirring in liquid smoke towards end.  Cook ravioli in boiling water 3-5 minutes.  Drain and top with sauce.  Use fresh basil leaves as garnish, if desired.
* Recipe also works with stinging nettles and lemon balm






Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Super HOT!!!


So glad I cooked LAST night (veggie fritters, spring rolls, frittata).  It was 102ºF in the school garden today!  The spring rolls were quite refreshing and cold.  Yet another friend of mine finds he is gluten intolerant.  Try a salad!  Or roll this gluten free salad into a roll, here:


Gluten-Free/Vegan and Wild Option
________________________________________________
Spring Rolls
Taste of Vietnam
________________________________________________
Prep: 15 minutes   Makes 15 rolls
2 oz. rice vermicelli
16 chinese cabbage leaves or mixed salad greens
8 mint leaves, plus garnish (lemon balm also works)
3 tbs. cilantro
3 (wild) chive stems
1 carrot, grated
2 radish, grated
1 stalk of rhubarb, sliced fine
2 tsp. white sugar
2 tbs. white vinegar
1 cup small local cooked shrimp, chopped (optional)
15 rice wrappers
Chop cabbage or greens, herbs, and scallions fine.  Combine with other vegetables, sugar, and vinegar.  Boil rice vermicelli until soft, drain, and cool with cold water.  Drain again and cut into inch-length pieces using kitchen shears.  Mix well with vegetables (and shrimp, if using).   Soak rice wrappers in warm water in a pie dish, one at a time for about 30 seconds.  Place about half a cup of mixture near top of the corner of the wrapper, fold over, and roll tightly.  Tuck in sides half-way through rolling, and roll until end.  Serve chilled, with mint leaves for garnish.  



Saturday, June 9, 2012

Snails and Zombie Pancakes

It's been raining here, a little.  Okay, an inch and a half in one day.  I'm walking home from the bus and there on the sidewalk is a snail.  Then another one.  I put them both in my pocket meaning to drop them into the terrarium at home and see what happens.  I get home, look through the mail, get cleaned up, make dinner, forget about the snails...

The next day I'm at work, reach into my coat pocket, and...they're still there!  I wash them off and put them in a plastic container I recently pupated a female orange sulphur in, adding some worm compst and kale leaves because they were immediately handy.  The snails came to life within minutes and started exploring.  Later, I brought them home and set up a terrarium of dirt, most, a stick, a rock, and buttercrisp lettuce to snack on.  This was on Wednesday.  Today, they laid two clutches of eggs while we were at the FM.  If kept warm and moist, babies in two weeks?



Speaking of clutches of eggs, we're about ready to order our chicks.  The coop is half built.  School is almost out.  The order and supplies are lined up on-line.  I will keep you posted when I click the order button and they arrive.  Don't forget about our cookbook Kickstarter, at this link.

Meanwhile, I'm finding more and more strawberries with slug bites.  The ones we saved went into pancakes yesterday to celebrate my daughter's preschool graduation.  She loves to make faces with them.  Daddy even got a zombie pancake!



Now to make scape goat (with lamb this time, a half-recipe), herb dipping oil, bread, and home fries.  I love planning meals around the FM and my front yard!  So much cilantro...and still mushrooms from what we dried in October.  I think some soup is in order too.


Gluten-Free
________________________________________________
Scape Goat
Taste of Greece
________________________________________________
2 lbs. young goat or lamb shanks, cut up 
1/2 cup garlic scapes, chopped to 1/2” lengths
1/2 cup fresh stemmed and chopped “Hot and Spicy” or 
     Greek oregano
1/4 cup fresh stemmed and chopped lemon thyme
1 tbs. grape seed or olive oil
2 cups of peeled carrots cut diagonally, 1/2” thick
3 potatoes with skin, scrubbed and sliced 1/2” thick
1 cup chopped celery or celeriac
1 large onion, roughly chopped
1/2 tsp. each salt and white pepper
3 tbs. tomato paste
1 cup dry red wine
Preheat oven to 350ºF.  Stem herbs by pulling leaves downward, discarding any discolored or dead leaves.  Trim excess fat from meat.  Heat oil in large stainless steel pan or Dutch oven on medium-high.  Brown meat but do not cook through, about 3 minutes per side.  Set meat aside and sprinkle with salt and pepper.  Add carrots, potatoes, celery/celeriac, onion, and tomato paste and stir well.  Cook about five minutes, or until onions soften.  Add garlic scapes and cook 2-3 minutes more.  Return meat to pan, pour in wine, and spread herbs over all.  Heat to simmering.  Cover pan with tight-fitting lid or foil and finish cooking in oven until meat is tender and falling off bone, about 1 1/2 to 2 hours.  Serves 4.  

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Kickstarter!!!!!




What to do on this cloudy Venus transit (aside from watch it online)?  Pick strawberries!  We're in year three and up to 1-2 pints a day.  Next year, maybe some from the freezer.  Today, we also started on the snap peas: 87 blanched and frozen for winter.  But wait, there's more!

Drumroll...Fund-raising has begun for the Around the World in 100 Miles cookbook: World Cuisine Recipes Using Local Ingredients.  Help us reach our goal, help the community, and eat well!

Just follow this link.

Try these great ways to use rhubarb while you're at it:


Gluten-Free/Vegan and Wild Option
________________________________________________
Spring Rolls
Taste of Vietnam
________________________________________________
Prep: 15 minutes   Makes 15 rolls
2 oz. rice vermicelli
16 chinese cabbage leaves or mixed salad greens
8 mint leaves, plus garnish (lemon balm also works)
3 tbs. cilantro
3 (wild) chive stems
1 carrot, grated
2 radish, grated
1 stalk of rhubarb, sliced fine
2 tsp. white sugar
2 tbs. white vinegar
1 cup small local cooked shrimp, chopped (optional)
15 rice wrappers
Chop cabbage or greens, herbs, and scallions fine.  Combine with other vegetables, sugar, and vinegar.  Boil rice vermicelli until soft, drain, and cool with cold water.  Drain again and cut into inch-length pieces using kitchen shears.  Mix well with vegetables (and shrimp, if using).   Soak rice wrappers in warm water in a pie dish, one at a time for about 30 seconds.  Place about half a cup of mixture near top of the corner of the wrapper, fold over, and roll tightly.  Tuck in sides half-way through rolling, and roll until end.  Serve chilled, with mint leaves for garnish.  

Gluten-Free/Sulfite-Free/Vegan
________________________________________________
Radish Rhubarb Relish
Taste of India
________________________________________________
Prep: 10 minutes  Cook: 20 minutes  Chill: overnight  
1/2 cup radish, grated
1/2 cup rhubarb, sliced 1/4” thick
1/4 cup carrot, peeled and grated
1/2 cup red onion, finely diced
3/4 cup cider vinegar
3/4 cup white sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
Mix all ingredients well.  Bring mixture to boil in small sauce pan.  Boil gently until liquid is reduced by half, about 20 minutes.  Chill overnight to develop full flavors.  Serve as a garnish, in a wrap with lettuce and  grilled vegetables, or on grilled chicken, burgers, hot dogs, or vegan alternatives.  This recipe has not been tested for canning.  Keep refrigerated and use within two weeks.
Gluten-Free/Vegetarian/Vegan Option
________________________________________________
Rhubarb Compote
Taste of France
________________________________________________
Prep: 5 minutes  Cook: 20 minutes  
2 1/2 cups rhubarb, sliced 1/2” thick (about 5 stalks)
1/4 cup plus 2 tbs. water
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tbs. local honey (optional)
2 tsp. corn starch
1/4 cup finely chopped walnuts
1 tsp. lemon zest
Dissolve corn starch with 2 tbs. water.  Mix with all ingredients except nuts.  Heat in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring constantly, about 2 minutes.  Reduce heat and simmer 10 minutes.  Stir in nuts and cook 5 more minutes.  Serve at room temperature or slightly chilled.

Gluten-Free/Vegan
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Rhubarb Pickles
Taste of Earth
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Prep: 5 minutes*  Cook: 10-15 minutes  Makes 2 pints
1 1/2 cups white vinegar
3/4 cups sugar
7 whole cloves
1/4 tsp. crushed red pepper 
10 stalks of rhubarb, cut to 3” lengths
2 pint-size mason jars
In small sauce pan, dissolve sugar into vinegar and bring mixture to boil.  Add cloves and red pepper and simmer 10 minutes.  Keep two sanitized mason jars in a bowl of hot water in preparation.  Fill each jar with half the rhubarb stalks.  Pour vinegar mixture over stalks and secure lids.  (Leave a half-inch of space if canning.  Can in hot water bath ten minutes.)  For immediate use, let cool on towel on counter, then refrigerate overnight.
* Time does not include sterilizing jars.