Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Signing Off

Fresh pears in late fall from the kitchen orchard


Arugula from the garden


Roasting vegetables -- one of my favorite preparations


I won't address this last blog posting to Steve and Winnie since my thoughts of them and internal dialogue with them will never really end.  When I started writing the blog last year, I said to myself, "Do this for one year or 52 times -- whichever comes first."  Well, here is the 52nd posting.  

When I started with the posts, I was looking for a way to express the many thoughts AND questions I had about the satisfactions of eating fresh organic food, trying to live simply, cooking at home, growing a garden, etc.  These reflections increasingly contributed to a growing lifestyle model that brought a richness of experience, a sense of self reliance and an opportunity for learning.  And perhaps most importantly as it has turned out over the year -- a way of living that strives to keep things simple and real when I can hardly understand the subprime mortgage crisis and why our greatest national satisfaction turned into shopping and buying things that most likely we cannot afford.  Anyway, it all seemed related and connected to me, and I had the desire to understand what brought the greatest satisfaction.

I don't really have new thoughts to add.  Not even sure who has read this beyond a few friends.  I never could figure out the "Comments" logistics, but would be happy to hear from anyone with a comment at dmricheson@mac.com.  

As far as food and health goes, no one puts it better or more simply than Michael Pollan on the cover of In Defense of Food.

Eat food.  Not too much.  Mostly plants.

If you think of the garden as a metaphor for life, no one puts it better than Alan Chadwick.

The garden makes the gardener.  (Not the other way around)

If you think of an overall philosophy about a deeply satisfying life, it is hard to beat William Coperthwaite in A Handmade Life.  He passes on this wonderful advice:

To require little is better capital than to earn much.  The need to earn much enslaves us,     while the ability to do with little makes us free.

Well, that about sums it up from the point of view of one person -- looking to discover.

Take care.  Donna



Tuesday, February 10, 2009

How Puny Is That?

The last remnants of the kale this winter


Tomato-based kale, garbanzo, carrot stew


Gigande bean comfort dish
sauteed onions and fennel
cooked Gigande beans
tomato paste or pasta sauce
add kale and cook a few minutes
olive oil drizzle, salt and pepper



Hi Winnie and Steve,

I thought you would get a kick out of the photo today.  Yes, I do have seeds beginning to germinate right now, and I have much more thoughtful plans laid out for the garden this year compared to last year.  But, I wanted you to also see the reality of how I get through winter and not run to the store all the time.  I told you that I almost always think about "what greens" I am going to toss into the meal.  My spindly little kale patch might actually see me through the winter season as I now have some new kale, spinach and chard germinating.  I cut off these poor things every day, and right now they look like little Dr. Seuss trees.  Yet they sure add a wonderful element to a soup or stew or sautee.

Your fellow Mainer (if that is a word?), Bill Coperthwaite, continues to inspire me with his thoughts about lifestyle and meaning and self-reliance and education.  I turn to his book, A Handmade Life, so many times.  I think especially now with the problems we are facing as a nation and globally, I like the challenge and excitement about learning new ways to design a model of life.  In fact, Coperthwaite makes an interesting comment about design.  He says, "Nothing is too small or insignificant to be well designed...And good design need not stop with tools, dishes, and houses -- it can also include our selection of food, of friends, and of those who teach our children.  We need to consider good design in relation to family, community, and school."  I think this a provocative part of what is happening right now in our nation with the economy and governance -- a chance to re-examine how we might design a realistic model to live by.

We'll enjoy chewing on that thought won't we.  Wish I could talk to you in person.  Love, Donna

Friday, February 6, 2009

The Winter Months

The beautiful color of canned vegetables


Golden turnips


Asian greens



Hi Winnie and Steve,

Winter is always a bit challenging for a gardener and cook because you are down to a much smaller selection of vegetables during this season, and this is doubly true if you are relying on your own garden produce.  I did head to a lovely farmer's market with a friend last weekend, and I thought how beautiful some of vegetables looked.  One stall even had lovely colors due to taking the vegetables of summer and canning them -- I know how much work that takes!

Also thinking about the more limited choices of winter leads me to sharing a very small part of a letter a friend wrote about the importance of eating local and seasonal and organic.  We are so used to having "unlimited" choice without thinking much about how those choices impact our environment and world.
 
This letter is a bit longer than what I usually write,  but I really wanted to include a part of my friend R.'s comments from her farm in France.  She is a passionate activist for the importance of eating locally and organically and sustainably.  This is just a small part of her letter.

"I thought about all the people, many I know, who would never do what I am doing.  They would not want to be bothered with getting up early on Saturday morning ....nor would they want to stand in line in the freezing cold weather...when they could go into a warm store and buy anything they desire.  Not to mention the vegetables I get are not the washed and polished sort you find in the supermarkets, but are all covered with soil and need a good washing thus adding more time to the preparation.  But as I stood there, now looking at Gerard, the man who grows these gorgeous vegetables which I load each week into my granny trolly, his warm and gentle smile when he sees that I have come again, the small talk we have come to make as good and trusted friends, his hard worked hands that tenderly handle the growing, the harvesting, the selling, the understanding we have about how important and wonderful this food is, I know that in that moment I have want for nothing to be different."

Yes, I appreciate the limited vegetables in my garden right now, and those that show up in winter at the farmer's market and what they represent as R. says.

Thinking of you.  Donna




Friday, January 30, 2009

Roasting roots

Shitake mushrooms at farmer's market


Celery root, red onion, carrot


Roasted root vegetables
   roasted celery root, carrot, red onion and mushroom
   fresh parsley and cooked brown rice mixed in after 
   olive oil, salt, pepper



Hi Winnie and Steve,

I'm still in the midst of having the EcoFarm conference sink in I think.  I remember once coming home from watching a master baker bake bread all day -- start to finish.  A friend asked what I had learned, and my immediate response was, "I'm not sure I learned anything new."  G. said, "You might see it differently in a few days."  And you know what -- that was true.  It took several days for the observations and nuances of the experience to penetrate -- almost like steeping tea -- not much color there in the first minute or so.

One of the plenary sessions at the conference was farmers sharing stories about their successful farms.  Often, these successes happened over many years, not right away.  One of the women farmers talked about the stress or tension associated with the many jobs she felt she HAD TO DO in order to get her work done.  This weighed heavily on her.  Then one day a teacher friend told her that the way she inspired enthusiasm in the students was to tell them what they GET TO DO that day.  Have you ever noticed how seldom we say that to ourselves -- I get to weed today; I get to lay the irrigation pipes today;  I get to thin carrots today.  I've been mulling this over and have concluded that thinking in this way would represent a real paradigm shift.  It implies opportunity and appreciation for the health and physical well-being to "get to" do something and add one's usefulness.

Anyway, I knew you would appreciate that story since we often have talked over these kinds of thoughts -- they are like the tiny yet very beautiful stitches that give a quilt, and a life, texture.

Thinking of you, Donna

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Mushrooms Revealed

Shitake mushrooms grown at Far West Fungi


Oyster mushrooms grown at Far West Fungi


Kale sautee
   dinosaur kale
   Shitake mushrooms
   onions
   sauteed in olive oil with salt and pepper


Hi Winnie and Steve,

I was remembering an experience we had together once when you visited us, and we toured together our neighbor's flower growing operation.  We were all so taken with the enormous effort and complexity of growing flowers successfully.  I was remembering this tour we did together years ago because last week I had the chance to tour a mushroom farm -- Far West Fungi.  This company grows organic mushrooms on the edge of Monterey Bay near Moss Landing.  The owners were very generous with their time to describe their operation.

I guess mushrooms are mysterious to most of us since we don't grow them.  Yet, I love mushrooms and use them whenever I can buy them at farmer's market.  I'm especially fond of the Shitake mushroom.  One thing that surprised me on the tour is that it takes 3 months to grow a Shitake!  The Shitake must grow on hard wood sawdust -- they use hard red oak.  The damp saw dust is inoculated with the spores.  One great thing about the Shitake is that even as it ages a bit and dries (keep it in a paper bag), it is still wonderful.

I'm filled with inspiration having just returned from the EcoFarm Conference.  Can you imagine, 1,500 farmers and growers all together listening to presentations, eating meals together, sharing experiences and stories?  While I never knew him since he died long ago, Alan Chadwick is one of the colorful and charismatic figures that brought organic farming and gardening to so many in our area.  He started the gardens at UC Santa Cruz, and students would often go to help Alan in the garden instead of going to their classes.  It's obvious that people were inspired by his teachings.  I think you guys would be interested in one of his quotes which is thought provoking and probably resonates with the Zen philosophy you bring to your life.

"The garden makes the gardener."

Thinking of you.  Donna

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Bakers and Brunches

The fresh bread, butter and jam of Companion Bakers


Jessie Phillips, Erin Justus and Christy Parker of Companion Bakers


A communal table enjoying brunch



Hi Winnie and Steve,

Hard to believe it is 2009 now.  2009 started with a very nice brunch.  But, I should give some context by saying the more I cook and bake, the more I also appreciate eating food that is prepared for me.  I have friends who are good cooks, and I always look forward to their food.  I see the gift in this food more than ever.  We went to a great brunch last weekend in the charming roadside barn at Pie Ranch.  The entire brunch was prepared and served by Companion Bakers -- a small independent bakery headed by Erin Justus.  She takes her fresh baked goods to farmer's markets, and some find her bread in their weekly CSA box.  Erin and her team decided to start the year with this lovely communal meal.

Now, I am just starting to have a bit of confidence in my bread making. So, when I get to be the guest and taste lovely bread, butter,  jam, scones, gallettes and fritattas -- I sink into the pleasure of eating  this freshly prepared food.  I guess Erin inspired me because I came home and roasted a big winter squash and made a pumpkin pie -- with a Sonora wheat crust of course.  Remember, we have 28,000 lbs. of Sonora wheat in our barn!  The day with Companion Bakers was filled with generosity and good spirit.  I continue to be inspired by these young farmers -- Erin came out of the Farming Program at UCSC -- and their lifestyle.  They demonstrate a belief that richness in life can be achieved without having to be rich.  I know you would be touched by this thought and believe it yourselves.

As always, thinking of you.  Love, Donna

Monday, December 29, 2008

Bread and Beans Night

The aromatic base sautee
     onions
     fennel
     raisins
     parsley
     carrots
     olive oil, salt and pepper



Bread and Beans night
     basic aromatic sautee, above
     cooked brown and black beans
     tomato paste or sauce
     additional water
     one small spoon of honey
     African curry spice



     
Hi Winnie and Steve,

It is almost a new year.  I don't recall that we ever literally spent New Years Eve together -- I wish we had.  Now, 2009 is just a few days off.  Most times, we just stay at home for a quiet evening.  Tonight we had a casual gathering in the barn for what is starting to be called "Bread and Beans Night."  We've done this several times now.  It started because of bread baking days when several people were around the ranch.  In the summer, I would bake bread and have enough to deliver a few loaves to neighbors.  But in the winter, it is already dark by the time the bread is out of the oven and a bit cooled.  I never feel like getting in the car after dark to deliver bread.  So, I thought with extra people around and extra bread around, I could make a pot of beans and fill up those of us who wanted to settle in for a casual meal.  It most often is the young organic farmers, family and friends -- some combination thereof.

I tell you, beans sure seem to be on our menu a lot these days -- I'm probably getting in a rut.  I keep delaying trips to go grocery shopping in Santa Cruz -- squeezing every last possibility out of the dried beans from Phipps Ranch.  This is so convenient as Phipps is quite close by.  As I mentioned before, my garden greens are dwindling so quickly I am going to have to start buying greens and vegetables once again at farmer's market.  I need to plant three or four times as much winter greens next August or September in order to stay afloat with the produce from my own garden through a winter.

The winter light was so beautiful today.  Six mallards are now living on the pond.  A Great Blue Heron also is coming around the pond.  The coyotes are coming in quite close.  The bobcats look fat and happy this winter.  With all the economic woes, nature seems like the most abundant and awesome gift imaginable.

Thinking of you.  Donna