Posts filed under 'unsolicited advice'

a refreshing salad

This is a yummy summer salad with goat cheese balls. This recipe was adapted from one I found in an issue of Vegetarian Times (I can’t recall what issue now). (This magazine has great content, but I have found it to have poor customer service– I recommend skipping the publication and just searching their website for recipes).

Salad

I bunch mixed greens (I used a combination of spinach and red leaf lettuce)

2 peaches or nectarines, sliced into medium sized wedges

1 tomato diced

Goat cheese balls

3/4 log goat cheese

1 cup finely chopped toasted pecans

Roll the goat cheese into balls, and then roll them in the pecans (I like to eat my salad with warm goat cheese balls, but it’s good with them cold too).

and until there is a decent infrastructure there, giving larges sums of money might not make sense, as it would not be put to the best of uses.

Vinegarette

You’re sort of on your own here. I made my own, but didn’t pay attention to measurements. Here’s the ingredient list though– I say experiment with whatever is in the fridge.

A few strawberries, cirtus vinegar, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, 1 very small nectarine, a tiny bit of ginger, 1 clove garlic, about 1/4 of a small red onion, some tangerine marmalade, lots of honey (especially if your fruit is tart).

Add comment June 14, 2008

Cheap, enviro-friendly cleaners and pest control that you have in your cupboard or on your body

Jesse has a theory that in the 50’s people got all excited about anything they thought was modern, and ditched their former, highly effective and non-toxic products. I happen to think he’s right, and since I decided to nix “chemical” cleaners after feeling sick while using up the rest of my lavender scented shall-remain-unnamed-product last year, I have discovered many handy old fashioned alternatives. I don’t even walk down the cleaner isle in the grocery store anymore. They are that good. So, without further adieu, here they are:

Baking soda

It will clean ANYTHING–so, so much better than manufactured cleaners (and much cheaper). I use it to clean the counters, stove, and bathroom. It is also a miracle worker at getting crusty stuff off of pans. Just put some warm water in the pan, sprinkle in a hefty layer of baking soda, and put the pan back on the burner. Voila! The baking soda will literally lift the crusty stuff off– effortless.

Oh, I also use it every once in a while to whiten my teeth, and to remove tea and coffee stains from mugs. The box says you can use it to clean clothes. I haven’t tried this yet, but plan to experiment with some sheets and towels soon.

Vinegar

Another miracle! It works very well as a cleaner mixed with baking soda. It’s also a great substitute for glass cleaner. Honestly, it works just as well if not better. It can help a smelly garbage disposal too.

Lemon, water, and olive oil

Fantastic wood cleaner! Smells nice, and you don’t have to be all careful about touching your eyes, face, and mouth after using it!

Human Hair

We had a gopher problem in our garden, but the little guys is adorable, and we moved into his turf; we weren’t about to harm him. We did some research and found out that gophers will stay away from human scent, so we cleaned out my hair brush and stuffed it down his whole. Guess what! He moved on to greener pastures. We’ve repeated this technique and successfully steered gopher-friend into a part of the yard we don’t care about, and away from a trap planted by an unsympathetic maintenance crew member :)

Plain Non-Fat Yogurt

While not a cleaner or a pest control, it is a wonderful (much more healthful) substitute (identical, if you ask me) for sour cream. It’s also a great substitute for mayonnaise. I recommend giving it a whirl. I like to buy it in giant tubs from Costco. The tubs come in handy for food storage, but we go through a lot of them, so some meet their fate with the recycling bin. I have contemplated making my own yogurt, but this would just result in my using more milk containers, which are not reusable. Shame.

1 comment June 12, 2008

Why you should buy local/join a CSA

Many of you who keep up with the news know that there are some scary things happening with respect to the world’s food. Demand is higher due to economic advancement in countries like India and China, and production is down due to unusual weather patterns and a decrease in the supply of chemical fertilizers (which are made from increasingly scarce and expensive fossil fuels). This is pure speculation on my part, but I imagine it also cannot help that we’ve been paving over the farmland and orchards of the central valley (which produce 80% of the nation’s food) as if they were wastelands. In the past months, some governments have been placing restrictions on exports, which seems to me to be a good trend– farmers should not be able to sell their food to the highest bidder while the people in their country starve. Alarmingly, this is not the trend in the US, where rich folks are now investing directly in farmland so that they can avoid speculation laws (laws that prevent the hoarding of commodities in order to drive up their prices), and in order to ensure the ability to sell farm products to the highest bidder.

Given all of this, I would like to take a moment to encourage all of you to buy locally or even to join a CSA (community supported agriculture) program. Buying locally helps to protect local farmland from development, and will decrease your dependence on the products of other countries, who it seems will be unable to continue to supply them as the have in the past, as their own populations grow and florish. You can often find local organic farms which do not use chemical fertilizers, which helps keeps the soil healthy, vital birds and insects alive, ground water clean, reduces the global demand for fertilizer, and lowers general consumption of fossil fuels. On this last note, if you buy locally, your vegetables will not have to travel miles to reach your table, which also conserves fossil fuels (which are not only monetarily expensive these days, but which are literally costing lives!!).

CSA programs allow you to pay for part of the farm’s seed, and then to receive part of the crop yield in return. You can usually choose the size of your share, and the length (e.g. full season, partial season, winter…etc.) You typically receive 1 basket of food a week (which you pack and pick up at the farm-fun!).

Find a CSA/Local Farm by you.

Check out our local farm/CSA.

1 comment June 8, 2008


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