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  • happy harvest and bon voyage

    Carolyn Crane 11:17 am on August 31, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    The last week or two have offered me a predictable yet delicious routine.  I continue to enjoy so much local fruit.  It seems that someone is coming through the door every day with gifts of melons, apples, tomatoes, eggplant, lettuce.  I continue to have goat milk and eggs in abundance.

    Although I usually eat a high percentage of local food, I have ratcheted it up this month, and I’ve noticed something:  I have less of a desire to eat meat.  I think it’s because the food is so fresh and the weather warm.  I have been enjoying curried vegetables (no, not local curry spices) and tonight am making an eggplant parmesan recipe with fresh tomato sauce.  I did sizzle up some of Jim Gates’s beef for tacos the other night, and that was yummy.  My family ended up participating more than expected, and that was very fun.

    I will be faithfully frequenting the Heaven and Earth Farm Stand until it closes this fall.  Having such a variety of local fruits and vegetables just around the corner made this project so manageable!

    This month has also made me realize that getting a winter veggie box from a regional farmer is a high priority.  I’m grateful to Briar Patch for asking me to participate.  I am more energized about food, local food, and food justice after this month.

    I dedicated this experiment to the students who spent all year with me: Anthony, Ally, and Randall. If you’re reading this, any of you, I thought about Kingsolver a lot this month. I also appreciated the work of Michael Pollan, which I recommend to anyone concerned with food justice.

    Happy Eating!  See you all around the Patch.

    CC

     
  • settled in

    Carolyn Crane 10:01 am on August 20, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    I’ve been back from Arizona a week now, and much of that time I was separated from my computer. It was good for both of us.  Since I’ve been back, I have felt such gratitude for the cornucopia of local food available to me.  Yesterday I visited the farm stand on the Ridge and for less than $30 bought 80% of my food for the week.  My local eggs and goat milk  together with the veggies from my garden and the farm stand will meet my needs with more ease than going to a grocery store!

    I appreciate this especially after watching the burgeoning local foods movement in the desert of Arizona. Not only are we a bit ahead of them movement-wise, we have a climate that smiles on our ambitions.  Realizing this makes me want to roll in the grass like a kid. (Too many stickers, though.)

    I don’t think this month would be half as do-able if it weren’t for the bumper crop of fruit our community is enjoying.  Local peaches, blueberries, and blackberries as well as cherry tomatoes are my grazing foods these days.  I’ve been making vegetable pies with polenta crust and carmelized vegetables.  I use pesto to line the baked polenta crust, and top the carmelized vegetables with mozzarella and sliced tomato–making a mock lattice crust with the tomato.  I top that with a little parmesan.  (Polenta and cheeses not local, but I’ll get there in time.)  (And this recipe is drawn from Mollie Katzen’s “Polenta Pizza” in Moosewood Cookbook.)

    We were eating that pie last night along with a salad. Lettuce from our garden, radishes from a friend’s garden, tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers from the farm stand. What struck me about the dinner, besides the fact that it was delicious, was that it tasted fresh.  That dinner is what fresh tastes like.  Do you know what I mean?  I can still taste the garden in the food, if you will.  I guess that’s the feeling Greg Brown was getting at in “Canned Goods”.

    I’m continuing my policy of not purchasing non local food for my own consumption (and as little as possible for the boys). I am using this opportunity to clean out my cupboards and make more room for local or sustainably purchased food.  In an interview that aired on KQED about his book Deep Economy, Bill McKibben reminds us that of all our potential efforts, conservation is by far the most important and effective. Minimizing waste is key in conservation, of course, and good for our bank accounts, too. Remember the way our grandmothers could make “a meal out of nothing”?  I am trying to channel my grandmas, I guess, and am doing things like making my own veggie and meat broths from kitchen scraps. I try to continually ask myself: Do I need this in the first place?  Can I reuse it in the second place?  Do I need to buy it again?  How can I create it at home?  This is more or less my practice with food right now. The Eat Local challenge has helped clarify this for me.

    Now it’s time for breakfast: peaches and blueberries with goat milk.  Yum!

     
  • on the way home

    Carolyn Crane 7:54 am on August 12, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    I wrote this yesterday, but no wi-fi at the Vegas Airport…I’m home safe and glad to be back.

    On the Way Home….

    As I write this I’m airborne from Phoenix to Sacramento via Las Vegas.  Today is definitely a day off from eating local, at least once I left my mom’s.  I did well on this trip though, all things considered.  Last night we had left over chicken enchiladas.  The chicken, peppers, and tortillas were local, the Campbell’s chicken soup and Kraft cheddar cheese, not so much.

    My main goal for the last week was actually not to eat local, but to make sure my mom had a good time with her grandsons, whom she sees only when I bring them on the journey to her.  (She’s almost 90 and doesn’t like to take the long trip to see me anymore.)  When I told her over the phone I was participating in the Eat Local Challenge, I could hear the worry in her voice.  It was hostess-worry.  She already worries if she’ll have food the boys and I like, if we’ll sleep well, etc.  Now she also had to worry if the food was local, too.  I told her right away not to worry, that I’d just do the best I could, but I still had to be careful to be flexible rather than strident, and to choose my battles. She’s remarkably health conscious and, at 88, still goes regularly to aerobics and walks and swims. When she hears me harp on eating local she also worries about herself and what she’s eating, even though she eats a fairly healthy, although nonlocal, nearly vegetarian diet.  I remind her of her age, and of how she is still living autonomously. “Just keep doing whatever you’re doing, Mom. It’s working.”  As for me, I’m just grateful to have 50% of her genes. Most of her food comes from the commissary at Fort Huachuca, and is shipped there from all over the world.

    My second goal for the week was to explore the local food terrain in SE Arizona, and I met that goal with fascination and pleasure.  From Tucson to Sierra Vista, from Benson to Bisbee, a local food culture exists where a year ago it was, at best, invisible.  At the beginning of Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, Barbara and her family give up on Arizona and head for Appalachia so that they can truly be self-sufficient.  They are probably right; it’s not possible to grow everything you need in a desert.  But it’s amazing what is being grown there now, and how much of it is grown sustainably.  What’s more, the people growing it are having a blast and forming community at the same time they increase their awareness of local food and their ability to grow everything from grass fed lamb to pinto beans to chili peppers.

    One of the central themes unfolding for me in the last 11 days is the Convenience Factor.  I was raised in a food climate where virtually everything was available to me. Seasonality was not a primary factor so much as expense, and on a special occasion I could afford to buy anything I wanted to eat.  Limiting the scope of my decisions rankles me at times.  I was talking to my mom about the her food choices as a young mother in the late 40s and early 50s.  In those days, buying fresh vegetables was considered less optimal than buying frozen or cans.  Marketing companies told housewives that they no longer needed be “slaves” to their kitchens when convenience lined the grocery store shelves. With memories of the depression fresh in their minds, they skipped the produce department whenever possible, heading for frozen and canned convenient alternatives that were billed as equally nutritious. I was raised on those foods, and didn’t know that garlic originated in a clove until I went to college.  “What’s this?” I asked my roommates, holding up a clove.  Silence and amazement filled the kitchen.  “I thought it came in a bottle, with or without salt added,” I shrugged defensively. In those days, I hated all vegetables. They were a soggy penance of childhood I’d finally left behind. It took me thirty years to get from there to here.

    I planned my trip to Mom’s this time of year so I’d be back before our tomatoes and beans were ready for harvest.  I can’t wait to get out into the garden and assess how soon until I’m freezing and canning. (I’ll also be scouting around to different farms for other fruits and vegetables to put up. If you have a surplus, please be sure to let me know.) I can’t wait to get home, to see Jack, to weed the garden, to see the animals, to settle in to my routine.

    ##

     
  • Bisbee Farmers Market

    Carolyn Crane 3:24 pm on August 8, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    Today Mom, the boys and I drove about a half hour SE (1o mi. or so N of the Mexican border) to the town of Bisbee, reminiscent of Nevada City in its architecture and style. Bisbee was a copper mining town, and the damage to the surrounding hills makes Malokoff Diggins look like Golden Gate Park. The market was lovely. At over 5,000 feet, a sweet pleasant breeze replaced the oppressive August heat of the lower elevations.  We treated ourselves to delicious homemade tamales, bought local mesquite honey and blueberry/lemon marmalade.  The vendor knew exactly where the blueberries and lemons came from!    Again two or three ranchers selling grass fed mammals and poultry.  One guy had a good friend from Grass Valley, but we hadn’t heard of him. I had a good talk with some women from the Zuni tribe about fry bread, but that is going to wait until a future entry.  A woman was selling local pistachios, pinto beans, and nine bean mix for soups. I wonder where the pinto beans I buy at the patch come from…

    Also so many veggies: heirloom eggplant, gorgeous peaches, seedless English cucumbers, garlic, tomatoes

    At this market, there were many non food items. Jess bought a wooden turtle with a shell that opened. I bought a home made purse with an earth tone peace sign. A Navajo man was there selling exquisite jewelry, but out of my price range.

    Live music rounded out the beautiful morning. A folk-rocky band played John Prine covers so realistically I wondered if it were he. We headed home at noon with full tummies and happy hearts.

    Loco? Loca? Local?

    I saw an article in the Tucson paper this morning about local food there, and they spelled it locavore.  So now I’ve seen locovore and locavore here in Arizona, and localvore in California.  Isn’t it exciting to be a part of something so new and dynamic that we haven’t entirely agreed on what to call it yet! ?!

    More from the airports on Tuesday.   I’ll be back in Nevada County in time to hit the Heaven and Earth Farm stand on Wednesday afternoon.

     
  • Loco-splosion in Sierra Vista, AZ

    Carolyn Crane 12:16 pm on August 7, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    When last I wrote, the boys and I were waiting for our plane to be fixed in Phoenix.  Fixed it was, and three hours late we arrived in Tucson.  I was too tired and sight-challenged to drive to my mom’s house (about 90 minutes SE) so we found a room. We also found a Circle K nearby, and got orange juice and donuts for the morning.  The boys were especially hungry (we hadn’t had dinner) and also got some nacho cheese Doritos and a sub sandwich.  When we got back to the room, they tried to eat the sandwich. It looked good through the package: turkey, cheese, tomato (actually red), lettuce (actually green), all on a sourdough roll. They tried a bite cold, then tried warming it in the microwave. That made it worse.  I went down to the lobby for a moment, and when I returned they’d thrown the sandwich in the trash and were somberly nibbling on Doritos.  “It was just horrible, Mom,” they said, worried I’d be angry that they’d wasted food. “Do you mean that Circle K said it was food, but your bodies disagreed?”  “YES!! Exactly!!!” they said.

    In the morning, after we’d checked out, I noticed a breakfast buffet bar in an adjacent room.  My body had already declined a donut after one bite, and at this point I hadn’t eaten since Sacramento, the day before!  When I saw the breakfast bar, music played inside my head.  The boys were already in the car, but I quickly grabbed two bananas, two Yoplait yogurts, and two milks.  I didn’t check for HFCS or rBST—I was just glad to see the closest thing to food I’d seen since leaving the Ridge.  I savored one of the bananas on the drive to Mom’s.

    We arrived at her home in Sierra Vista late morning, about an hour before the weekly farmer’s market began.  So off we went back down Buffalo Soldier Trail. For the boys and me, it was as if we walked into an oasis. When I told Jack about it on the phone last night he said, “Ah the comfort of seeing like-minded people,” and I think he did touch on the essence of our comfort.  The market was five times larger than Mom and I thought it would be. For me, it was Christmas on a scorching hot Arizona August day. Here are some of the things I hungrily snatched up and for which I so happily plunked down cash:

    Jenny’s Blackberries homegrown in Hereford, AZ (not far from here, Mom says). The blackberries on my land are smaller and hairier, so these were a treat.  I thought of my friend Catherine back home, picking blackberries for this year’s jam and, like me, picking seeds out of her teeth.  I paid $5 for a pint container.

    Durazo’s Poco Loco Salsa from Tucson. The same vendor was selling home made tortilla chips, fried in olive oil.  Get this:  they grow and grind the corn themselves!  I also bought some flour tortillas handmade by Durazo’s.  I spent about $15 at this booth.

    At the end of a row of vegetables I saw a white trailer with a white board advertising meat. Again I heard the music. I also felt like Dan Macon and Jim Gates were on either side of me as I waited my turn.  Dan and Jim, meet Nathan Watkins, owner of the San Ysidro Farm in McNeal, Arizona.  “Our pastured, grass-fed, lamb and beef are raised the ‘old-fashioned’ way. We harvest the animals when nature says its time and not before.”   In addition to his lamb and beef, Nathan had chicken.  Whole chicken came from a friend of his nearby, and the chicken parts came from Texas. Mom and Levi are virtually vegetarians, but they will eat chicken, so I bought a smaller roaster for $16.

    Fresh corn on the cob, tomatoes, peaches, and lemon and pickling cucumbers rounded out my purchases.  One vendor called to me to be sure to check out the folks roasting peppers right there at the market.  So I grabbed a sack of mild roasted chiles to go with the left over chicken and the home made flour tortillas. Sounds like enchiladas!

    I didn’t buy but saw:  local honey, olive oil, spices, goat cheese, eggs, and more.

    Near the exit I saw a booth with no food, only paper and books.  Guess what the books were?   Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver!  (The stacks of paper: petitions for local food activism.)  Here, ninety minutes from Kingsolver’s former home, her legacy bloomed.  “Have you read it?” they asked me, and I explained all about how I had read it, and about Ally, Anthony, and Randall, and about the eat local challenge.  They hadn’t heard of it.  “Will you be here in October?” they asked, “We’re having a community symposium on the book.”   I told them that even a year ago, when I visited, I’d seen no evidence of any local food movement.  They nodded. Near the end of our conversation, one of the women asked: “How do you spell localvore in California?”  I spelled it as I wrote it here.  “Oh! You actually spell out ‘local’.”  I looked at her sign.  In southern Arizona, it’s locovore.  They aren’t saying they’re crazy; they are taking it from the Spanish.

    We went home and munched on chips and salsa, later had veggie tostadas featuring the local tomatoes and salsa.  The boys and I thought back to how the day began in Tucson, how glad we were to see even quasi-real food that morning.

    Tomorrow morning we’ll go to the farmer’s market in nearby Bisbee—which my mom’s friends tell me I’ll like because “it’s just like Nevada City.”  Hopefully the weather will be a little cooler.  It’s supposed to me monsoon season here, but Jack tells me the rain and wind are in the Sierra instead.

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  • greetings from Sky Harbor Airport

    Carolyn Crane 5:01 pm on August 5, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    I didn’t think I’d have time to write until tomorrow.  But our plane broke–in the air!–and we turned around and came back to Phoenix. It’s a little comforting in this plastic, faux world of the airport that we can actually see them fixing it out the window.

    Since I last wrote I’ve had my head buried in my computer grading finals, research papers, revisions, redos, study questions, you name it.  I am usually unadventurous in the food department when I’m working a lot, and I’ve been pretty much living on peaches and goat milk for breakfast and home made pesto with rice noodles later.

    Today we are eating air port food.  We paid $8.47 for three waters here.  (You can only bring less than four ounces of liquid past security, so they’ve got ya.)  We had some pepperoni pizza, Levi had a sub sandwich, and now we’re snacking on some frozen “yogurt”.  I don’t even want to think about the HFCS we’ve eaten today.  Eventually we’ll get to Tucson and the grower’s market there tomorrow.

    Something that has struck me in the first few days of this experiment:  I’m so much more aware of everything I eat or consider eating.  My goal during my paper grading binge was to clean out the fridge as much as possible before we left for a week. Even if it wasn’t local I’d eat it if it was left over and needed to be used up. I actually took pleasure in cleaning out the fridge and making sure nothing went to waste. And with every thing I used up, I considered where it had come from, and if I would buy it again, if I could buy it locally instead, etc.  Then I’d go grade more papers.

    I still have another day or so of grading to do in Arizona, but mostly I’ll be relaxing with my mom and sons and investigating what local food means in the high desert.  Ironic that this local food journey started for me almost a year ago when I began reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.  In the beginning of that book, Kingsolver and her clan are high-tailing it out of Tucson because they can’t grow food. Now I’m heading south east of there in search of some.

     
  • August already?

    Carolyn Crane 12:20 pm on August 1, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment

    I started out with coffee this morning too, just like Mellisa–my favorite lately is Delicious Peace Coffee from Kenya. The beans are roasted by Thanksgiving Coffee Company in Fort Bragg, a long time leader in fair trade coffees. I then drove my usual couple miles on Saturday to pick up my goat milk for the week. I have some local peaches (Beirwagon’s) and some local blackberries (my yard) so I had those for breakfast with some goat milk and some organic brown rice crisps from—oh no–Massachussetts. Oops. I’ll have to up my ratio of local to get up to 80%.

    For dinner tonight, I have squash from the garden, onions and garlic from the Heaven and Earth farm stand on the Ridge, and risotto from Lundberg. I can also make pesto (basil in garden) and have with Lundberg rice pasta for dinner. Right now I’m leaning toward the risotto.  I also have some of Jim Gates’ beef in my freezer and some eggs from Camptonville in the fridge, so options abound.

    As I am writing this I’m taking a break from grading my finals for my class at Sierra College. Three students in that class completed an entire year with me, and my efforts here at the eat local challenge are dedicated to them: Ally, Anthony, and Randall.   In my English 1A (essay) class, we read Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver and watched The Future of Food by Deborah Koons Garcia.  Together we discussed and wrote about the social and political tendrils of issues surrounding food, issues such as labeling, safe access, the precautionary principle.  In my  English 1B (literature) class, we read Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues and learned  about the food American Indians receive on reservations. I’ll remember our work together for a long time.

    I’m leaving in a few days to visit my mom in Arizona.  If I weren’t going, I would have driven the dozen or so miles to Camptonville to attend the farmer’s market at Rebel Ridge.  Can’t wait to take that in when I return in mid August!  But I have plenty of food here to feed us until we leave.

     
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