One of the most
astonishing questions I’ve been asked lately is, “Where do you want us to put
the porta-potty?”
“I don’t want you to put
a porta-potty anywhere,” I answered. And then, “What porta-potty.”
“Well,” Charlie said,
rolling his eyes toward the porta-potty truck that I’d just noticed out on the
street, “There are five men here, and nature calls, or at least it
may. Unless you want them using YOUR bathroom...”
Since my office is
between the kitchen and the bathroom, I told them where to put the porta-potty,
in no uncertain terms, and they put it there, and all the following questions,
from other people, have been “WHAT is going on at your house? You have a...”
“Porta-potty,” I supply.
Dirty grins.
Especially since the
scaffolding is all hidden on the other side of the house now and the
porta-potty stands alone. Just like the Cheese, in the Dairy-O.
Speaking of cheese... or
perhaps I shouldn’t.
Perhaps I should speak
of compost, instead. It’s all part of the same system. I wouldn’t need a
porta-potty if these men didn’t eat, and what do they eat? They eat what comes
from the earth or they eat what eats what comes from the earth, grows in the soil,
and what is soil but a lot of micronutrients that come from the stars and from
the compost; and that compost is composed of all the things that are supposedly
used up – dead leaves, grass clippings, vegetable leavings... and manure.
Which, with a little microbial action come back as a fertilizer to grow things
out of the soil again. Life, used up – death, but not really – then life again.
At least that’s the way it always worked before Monsatan came along (it’s all
very religious, isn’t it?). Which brings us back to the porta-potty. Or not.
The other day I was
listening to the radio and I heard the novelist, Margaret Atwood, talking about
age and she said something to the effect that ‘young people worry a lot more
than we do because they don’t know their own life’s plot yet.” Yep, it could be
anything. And it started me thinking.
All of my life I have
known that there is really nothing, basically, when you get right down to it,
more important than food. At this realm, at this layer of existence... food is
supreme. It’s one thing you can do something about, practically. We need it
three times a day or at least once every few days, we cannot live without it,
and we have been given such bushels of nonsense and ill-truths about it by
government and corporations and even doctors, because none of them knows
anything about food and its relationship to the human body, that somebody has
to try to keep the puzzle pieces straight, and talk about it and give it – food
– the respect it deserves. The most we know is that real food comes from the
soil and the better the soil the better the food. It’s important to remember
what real food is, to keep the consciousness of it through the dark years. So
that’s been my path. Nice to recognize it. Thank you Margaret Atwood.
Food connects
everything. I heard Meighan Kelley belt out White Rabbit, that old, great,
Grace Slick song, at a RAFFL benefit at Mary Ashcroft’s Standing Stones the
other afternoon, and that, of course, put me in mind of Lewis Carroll and
Charles Dodgson and Alice, and how logical everything really is but not in the
way we think it is. Lest you think that Alice in Wonderland has nothing to do
with food remember the pills, and the tea parties, and the little/big drinks.
And of course there were, er, ah, those little girl picnics on the river.
Connectivity. RAFFL is
all about food and farming and feeding. Meighan? I’ve known her since before
she was born with that amazing power of voice. She now works for my old friends
who gave us hippy-types a place to gather in Rutland back in the ‘70s, and who
are now giving community a place to gather in Hinesburg. That would be Will and
Kathleen Patten, the old, original Back Home Café on Center Street in Rutland,
and now the Hinesburg Public House. Grace Slick was loud and original and
had nothing to do with food that I know of – none of us did back then – and the
grin slid off the Cheshire Cat until only it remained. Mary Ashcroft’s husband,
Harold Billings, was fascinated with the stones and collected them and stood
them on a hillock behind their house and studied practical astronomy for
placing them. Mary herself gave Radical Roots a start. And I sit here writing
about porta-pottys and standing stones in a food column.
That’s the thing, Food
is connection. Food is real. There couldn’t be anything more real than the box
of new red potatoes, smaller than tennis balls, at the Rad Roots stand at
Saturday’s Market. I scoffed ‘em right up, and it was only later that I decided
to tenderly boil them in well salted.... well, let me just make up a recipe
here and now. You deserve it for at least trying to follow my train of thought
here.
As I get older I’m
finally learning to let others make decisions without a lot of suggestions and
tweakings from me. I’m finding that really relaxing.
A couple years ago I was
putting the finishing touches on a very simple dinner for just the four of us,
when I noticed dotter Zoe fashioning a table covering out of many seldom-used
lace-edged, embroidered, and/or pulled-thread table scarves and doilies that
I’ve acquired over the years.
“I know you’re thinking
‘what a ramshackle tablecloth,’” Zoe said, “but relax! You might come to think
of it as charming. Because when do we ever get to enjoy this handiwork.” And
it was charming, especially when we used Grandma’s Limoge on
it. We left it there until Ramadan or at least until Zoe got on a plane back to
North Carolina.
Now she lives here
again, and when she said wasn’t it time to go strawberry picking I didn’t say I
thought it was too early, I said Yes. And when she said we’d go down to Danby I
didn’t say Oh I always go to North’s, I only asked which farm and when she said
Yoder’s I nodded, mentioning that I knew that Ryan and Rachel would have grown
their strawberries organically even though they would not have had them
certified organic, because that was expensive.
You do want them
organically grown, because conventionally grown strawberries are liable to have
been sprayed with really ugly pesticides and fungicides. Never trust mid-winter
California strawberries for heaven’s sake.
I confess I began to
fret a bit: What if Yoder’s Farm was too hard to find; what if the strawberries
were too small and far between; what if they were not as tasty as others? What
if it rained?
“Oh, do relax,” I told
myself. “Be in The Moment. What does it matter?”
We had a few minutes of
uncertainty about the exact location of the farm, but I knew where the Smokey
House Farmstand was, just past Danby Four Corners and down Danby Mountain Road
a bit, and we knew Yoder’s had to be somewhere near. It was, and was identified
by a large PARKING sign as well as a very faint signal on Zoe’s iPhone.
We were the second car.
One of the most satisfied people I’ve ever met in my life was just leaving with
her flat heaped with incredible strawberries. We found the field itself was
just steps away on a plateau surrounded by a whole range of rugged green
mountains – the sun shone golden, the sky dark blue and clear, a breeze blew,
the strawberries were so large and tasty and sweet and juicy and plentiful I
almost cried.
When I’d eaten my fill
and filled my flat – adequately but certainly not over-achieving – and my back
and knees were crying enough, Zoe was simultaneously ready to go
with a heaped flat and we paid – $3 a pound! Which I thought very reasonable.
On the way home she wondered what people in olden times would have done about
strawberries. Gorged themselves in season, we decided. Fermented some, we
thought. And dried them, no doubt. If they had sugar, jams would have been
made.
I left them covered with
a newspaper on the porch that night and next day washed my cache lightly, then
sat on the deck and de-stemmed them. It was another lovely day – who cares if
it ever reaches 80°. I ate one every time I walked by the big bowl of
them in the kitchen. I froze 3 or 4 quarts, made strawberry shortcake with
James Beard’s Cream Biscuits that night, and the next day mixed the remaining
ones with heavy cream and sugar and froze them into ice cream. Way to take
advantage of a short strawberry season!
***
When I started out
today, I really wanted to write about avocados but how could I when there were
these strawberries? So I’ve been spending this Father’s Day trying to find a
segue into avocados. I asked Their Father who art Leo about the problem: “How many
gallons of water does it take to grow a strawberry,” was his koan.
So I’m going to do what
writers are always told not to do: Quote myself.
“Oh, do relax,” I told
myself. “Be in the moment. What does it matter?”
I forgot to say that I
made a strawberry salsa, with tomatoes and jalapenos and cilantro. And an
avocado (segue accomplished!).
You don’t need a recipe
for that, or for avocado toast, but a push in that direction might be in order.
Because that, too, is delicious if not particularly seasonal.
Toast or griddle or
grill a piece of grainy, seedy bread. Butter it liberally. Halve an avocado,
cut one half into slices in the shell with a table knife, scrape it out onto
the toast, squash down with the tines of a fork, salt and pepper liberally, and
eat it. That’s what I had for breakfast/brunch before we went strawberry
picking, and when Zoe came out and said she was hungry I knew she wanted me to
make her an omelet with sorrel but I made her the avocado toast instead. And
then I had to make her another. Lucky I had lots of avocados because she was
hungry for another AFTER strawberrying so I made one more and we shared it.
Perhaps this had gotten lodged in my mind after my friend Barbara
brought her version to one of our Fridays@Fives. Her dish that evening
consisted of thin, grilled, oiled slices of baguette piled with mashed grilled
avocado and grilled slices of shiitake, topped with snap peas thinly sliced at
an angle She scattered baby mesclun over the top. It was a beautiful
presentation and delicious as well.
She adapted it from this
(rather fussy) recipe:
Warm Avocado Tartine
with Morel Mushrooms and Pea Salad
Recipe adapted from Ben
Ford, Ford's Filling Station, Los Angeles, CA
Yield: 2 servings
Ingredients:
· ¼
pound morels—cleaned, trimmed and sliced into rounds
· 5
tablespoons, plus 1 teaspoon, olive oil, divided
· 2
garlic cloves, 1 smashed, 1 left whole
· 1
teaspoon fresh thyme, finely chopped
· Kosher
salt and black pepper, to taste
· 1
avocado, halved and seeded
· 1
tablespoon, plus 1 teaspoon, fresh lemon juice, divided
· Two
½-inch slices of whole wheat bread
· 1
cup (about 3 ounces) snap peas, stemmed and thinly sliced at an angle
· ½
teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
· 3
tablespoons hazelnuts, roasted and chopped
· 1
tablespoon honey
· Flaky
sea salt, to top
DIRECTIONS
1. In a mixing bowl, toss the mushrooms with 1
tablespoon of the olive oil, the smashed garlic clove and the thyme. Heat a
grill pan over medium-high heat and add the mushrooms. Season with salt and
pepper and sauté, stirring occasionally, until the mushrooms are tender, 6 to 8
minutes. Remove and discard the garlic.
2. Meanwhile, brush the avocado halves with 1
tablespoon of the olive oil and grill alongside the mushrooms, flesh-side down,
until lightly charred, 2 to 3 minutes.
3. Remove the mushrooms and avocado and set
aside.
4. Scoop the avocado into a bowl and smash with
1 tablespoon of the lemon juice, 1 tablespoon of the olive oil and salt. Set
aside.
5. Using a pastry brush, brush both sides of the
bread with 2 tablespoons of the olive oil. Grill until the bread is lightly
charred, 2 to 3 minutes on each side. Remove and scrape both sides of the bread
with the whole garlic clove. Season with salt.
6. In a small mixing bowl, combine the snap
peas, remaining lemon juice, lemon zest and 1 teaspoon of the olive oil. Season
with salt and toss.
7. Spread the avocado mash on top of the toast.
Top with the morels, pea salad and hazelnuts. Serve the toasts with a drizzle
of honey and a sprinkle of flaky sea salt.
***
FYI: According to Mother
Jones magazine, one strawberry requires 0.4 gallons of water, which would be
about 13 gallons per pound. One pound of avocados takes 74.1 gallons. Just
ramshackling here...
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