Date:
Mon, June 23, 2008 01:11:20 PMFrom:
LocalHarvest
Subject:
LocalHarvest News - Changing with the Times
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June 23, 2008
Many of us live lives that are overly determined by convenience. Day to day decisions are made as if expediency and ease were our highest values. So habituated are we to these conveniences, so dependent on our luxuries (chocolate, coffee, bananas), that the idea of going without them actually makes us feel afraid. But fear - of scarcity, of change - is a terrible master. It makes us forget our own creativity and adaptability. We mistake the way it is for the way it has to be. In that mindset, there is no way to discover something that might be better. Last month LocalHarvest was featured on a radio program out of Sacramento. The host started with the usual questions about how to define 'local' and how the website works. Once the conversation turned to actually buying local food, though, it became personal and he was stumped. Northern California offers astounding agricultural abundance, but this fellow could not see his way to buying this extraordinary produce directly from a farmer. He was used to shopping at Safeway, and the idea of deviating from the safe way (ironic, isn't it?) made him tense. Shopping at a farmers market requires too much trust, he said, plus it's an extra trip and the veggies would sit in the frig drawer and rot anyway. Hmmm... That interview stands out as an example of the kind of thinking we as a nation need to leave behind. If we greet every new idea with excuses that aim to defend our old ways, we will be lost. The future belongs to those who can walk lightly, willing to shift as needed, alert for the next ingenuity. If we let ourselves be afraid of this rapidly changing economy, it would be easy to lose site of the great beauty and new opportunities that surround us. If we keep ourselves relaxed and open, we will find ourselves reveling in the great gifts of this life: the beauty of nature, the comforting joy of friendship, the spark of creativity, and the civility of true community. And then we will be fearless. | |
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From the LocalHarvest Store:
Lavender lovers, your time of year is drawing
near! The lavender harvest is
nearly upon us, and our farmers say it is
going to be a bumper crop. Browse
through our
lavender
department
for
lavender
buds
(a popular wedding toss),
dried
bunches,
essential
oil
and more. Ahhh...
Going to a wedding this summer? A LocalHarvest gift certificate makes the perfect gift! Want to make your summer salads even more nutritious? Sprinkle on some freshly ground flax seed, and get your Omega-3s along with your greens!
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Proudly introducing
A new member of the LocalHarvest family was
born this month. With great delight, we
welcome Joaquin Alfredo Payet, firstborn of
LocalHarvest's founder,
Guillermo Payet and wife Amber. The proud
mama and papa are soaking it all in, and
wondering aloud what Baby J's first foods
will one day be...
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Nancy's Nutrition Corner - Ginger, A Remedy from the Kitchen Cupboard
To me, there is something so satisfying about
going into the kitchen and
concocting a simple remedy for myself from
food. It just seems so right to
reach for a plant and make a tea to soothe an
upset tummy. One of my first
experiences with using food as medicine was
with ginger. I was listening to the
radio and heard a well known herbalist
talking about making a ginger and garlic
tea for sore-throats. I tried it and had such
great results that I use this
remedy to this day. Since then, I have come
to realize that ginger has many
more uses, and is a great thing to have
hanging around in the kitchen for both
culinary and medicinal purposes.
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Recipe Corner: Ginger - By Lorna Sass
In its many forms, ginger is a staple in my
kitchen. The fresh, knobby rhizome
sits right next to the garlic and onions in a
painted bowl on my kitchen
counter. Recently, I bought such a large
piece that before I got to use it,
one "finger" began to sprout. I cut it off,
planted it in good, organic soil,
and am happily (and patiently) watching it grow.
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Contact Information
email:
newsletter@localharvest.org
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Back to newsletter list
Welcome back to the LocalHarvest newsletter.
What a month! Things are
different. You feel it too, right? With gas
prices soaring, Iowa flooding,
salmonella striking tomatoes, and a global
food crisis threatening, it seems to
us that America is finally, slowly waking up.
The world is not what it seemed
to be. Change feels inevitable in ways it
didn't even a few months ago. The
question now is not so much whether the
collective we is going to change, but
how - with what frame of mind. As we alter
our consumption patterns, food and
otherwise, we must be aware of how we
approach change. We can be anxious or
relaxed, defensive or curious, fearful or
joyful. The differences are vast and
vital.



