Monday, January 3, 2011

Not Quite a Recipe, But...

I just got back from a trip to our northern home in Alabama.  We had a White Christmas.  It was the first white Christmas in Mentone, AL in recorded history.  That made it all the more special for us.
Pictured at the right is our house.  We have 66 acres on top of Lookout Mountain.  We love it there!
Anyhow, I know this is a cooking blog, but in the first days of this New Year, I wanted to say a few words about how I eat, rather than what I eat in this post.  I hope it will stir up a discussion about a topic I am rather passionate about.
I grew up as an Air Force brat, and lived in Europe as well as several states in this country.  In Europe, people shop much differently than we do in this country.  Refrigerators were scarce, and people went to the market daily.  Small agriculture was the way of life, and you bought your groceries from the people that grew and raised them.  You bought meat from the guy that raised it....you bought vegetables in open markets from the people that grew them.  It was the standard way of life.  We were enlisted (not officers), so by American standards, our family was poor, but the people that we came in contact with daily were the salt of the earth.  They could not have been nicer, or more welcoming, or treated us more fairly.
So I grew up appreciating food.  Nothing was foreign to omy tastebuds, and I was very adventurous.  At six years old, I would walk through the woods, and at lunchtime, someone would invite me into their home to eat the midday meal with them.  They would kill a chicken from their yard, and prepare it right there, or they would have me accompany them into the woods to look for wild asparagus, or mushrooms, or snails (free escargot!! LOL) Then we would prepare what we caught or gathered together, eat lunch, and they would siesta, and I would be on my way.  I met many wonderful people.
I tell this story to give you an understanding of how I came to understand that there are a lot more edible things than most Americans are aware of, and there is very little in this world that will actually kill you.  However, I always was taught what to gather, and what to leave (for instance, mushrooms come to mind--there are some that WILL kill you, so I never collected mushrooms unless an adult was with me to confirm that they were good 'shrooms).
I also gained respect for using the entire animal.  Almost every part of an animal is edible, and most of the parts that Americans discard (heart, kidneys, liver, feet, sweetbreads, membranes, bones, etc.) are quite delicious when properly prepared!
Which brings me to my point.
Americans are starting (through either education or necessity) to question our current "mega-producers"; I think the recent ecoli and salmonella recalls have pricked the collective nerves of our people.
People are also becoming more willing to spend the time to shop at Farmer's Markets, and local butchers, and are taking a little more interest in how their food is produced.
I am thrilled!  I have always been aware of the difference in how we produce our food in America, and have often commplained about lack of taste, or an off-taste to our meats and vegetables, but never could pinpoint it.  Food, Inc. (the movie) should be required watching for every American.  It is available through Amazon.com.  There are also some other movies which are similar in nature to this one, educating us about how our government and the big corporations "feed America and the world".  It is a balanced documentary, in my opinion, although the big corporations have called it a scare tactic.  Watch it and decide for yourself.  You don't even have to buy the DVD.....you can rent it or check it out of most libraries.
I wish people would buy exclusively from Farmer's Markets (or your next door neighbor, or plant your own garden, or buy into a co-op, or a CSA).  And find a local farmer who practices sustainability, humane raising of meats, hormone and antibiotic-free raising of proteins.  And the local small fisherman who practices sustainable fishing.  There are SO many sources out there.  You never have to want for anything. 
I found my sources online, and through networking.  I buy vegetables, eggs, cheese and some proteins (free-range chicken and turkey, some goat meat) at Farmer's Markets.  And I have found two sources of pasture-raised/finished, antibiotic and hormone-free, humanely treated beef, pork, lamb, goat, buffalo, elk, rabbit, pheasant, quail, chicken, and turkey where I can visit the farm, and make sure with my own eyes that what they promise, they deliver. 
It takes a bit of work to find these growers, and to make sure that they are really practicing what they say they are, and you will pay more (per pound) than at the grocery store.  But the payoff is tremendous.  You are eating healthier food across the board.  That food tastes better.  And it takes less to fill you up.  I know this because I live this way.  I didn't always, but I do now, so I know both ways.  I like this one better.  So does the earth.
I hope people will post their own opinions about this!  Momma T--any thoughts?
Here are some links to the places I buy my food:

http://www.southerncomforteventing.com/wrightfamilyfarms.html
This is Wright Family Farm in Rome, GA, which is about 30 minutes from my home in Mentone--

http://www.laurelcreekmeat.com/
This is Laurel Creek Meats, in Maryville, TN.  I buy from them when I am visiting my friends in Tellico Plains. They have a very established farm which offers a wide variety of animals!

http://www.pickyourown.org/gafpfm.php
This is the biggest Atlanta Farmer's Market, right off I-75 just south of Atlanta (exit 237).  I also shop at a ton of small farmer's market in AL, GA, TN and FL.  I love farmer's markets....the open-air ones, not the glorified grocery stores that are high-priced.  Just do a google search for "farmer's market <insert city>".

Also, if anyone has their own favorite spots, feel free to leave a link in the comment page!!

2 comments:

  1. Mary, I love the picture! I'm glad you were able to get away and enjoy a "White" Christmas.
    You definitely had a much different childhood than I did. My parents were alcoholics and I spent much of my younger childhood in bars. Bar food is ... well, let's just say it is lacking. There are other things that happened during my childhood that has affected the way I eat. I am trying hard to change some of my eating habits. With the economy the way it is right now and with only my husband working right now, we can't be too picky on food choices. I have had to learn to be very creative in my cooking. I really enjoy using spices to change or enhance flavors. I do enjoy growing a garden every year and look forward to picking the ripe fruits and vegetables and having fresh food. We finally got a good grocery store that is about 10 minutes away from us. Before that we had to travel about 25 miles to the first grocery store. The farmers market is farther than that.
    You mentioned the Laurel Creek Meats in Maryville. That is a little over an hour away from us. Some things just don't make it worth having to travel any distance to get. Unless we were taking a trip that way and carried a cooler and extra cash for purchases that is something we just don't do.
    I think a lot of people would much rather buy the fresher more humanely raised food products if it were more readily available. The big corporations have gotten money hungry and pumped our food with so much additives it's a wonder we aren't all walking around with 3 or 4 legs or something! I would almost rather go back to the times when there were no cars, no phones, women stayed at home, and the men went out to hunt for food, or catch one of their own cattle or chickens.
    I can drive the tractor and plow the fields, pull the weeds, run the tiller, toss the fertilizer, shoot the groundhogs, water the plants, and reap what I sow. If the weather stayed nice year round I could keep my garden going and not worry about other food. Just run to the store for milk and bread and pet food.
    Thank you for sharing all this with us Mary. It definitely gives us all some things to think about. Maybe if enough people get tired of the large companies we will get something done about it. So many talk about how our country needs to eat better and get healthier, and yet the foods that are better for us are the foods that cost the most and what people can afford are the items that have high fat/high cholesterol content.
    Thanks again, Mary.

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  2. Momma T, you have given me so much food for thought (no pun intended). You are right about all of it. We definitely need to weave a discussion about these things into our blog, don't you think? I made a post from your comments, but it really doesn't even begin to address all the things you have touched on in your comment above. I look forward to a lively discussion between the two of us, and if we are lucky, more people will follow the blog and post their own comments!!

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