One of my favorite cocktails that helps me hold on to summer is a Carlo Rossi Red Wine Cooler.
…
One of my favorite cocktails that helps me hold on to summer is a Carlo Rossi Red Wine Cooler.
…
I probably have a lot of food “vices.” Honestly, this is why I work so hard finding ways to recreate things at home in the most natural, healthful way possible. I have moods where probably once or twice per year, I get obsessed with one terrible food or another. High in sodium, fat, and calories; low in nutrients; and, of course, FULL of chemicals. One week out of the year it will be jarred Nacho Cheese, three months later I’ll be super into Raley’s Artichoke Dip; and at least once a year, I crave Chex Mix. Of course, I love Chex Mix in the winter when everyone’s having sports’ parties. But the BBQ season is my second favorite time to eat Chex Mix since I consider it a total party food. Now that the world is starting to open up again, hopefully pot lucks and BBQ’s will start happening again and we’ll all need a fun recipe to show up with. …
Blossom’s BiFF came to me with a suggestion last year: Would I like to share a vegetable share in a Community Supported Agriculture box? Well, anyone who knows me well knows that I don’t really dig the veggies. I’ve never been good at eating them. I don’t hate them like some people do… But let’s be honest, when eating my choice generally ISN’T going to be carrots over strawberries, or salad over cake. But BB is a veggie eater (and so is Blossom, frankly), so it’s easier for everyone if I am too. I committed.
Community Supported Agriculture, or “CSA,” is a program in which local farms deliver organic local produce to consumers directly. It cuts out the middle men so that the farmer’s aren’t losing more money on their produce. This saves money for the consumer because the farmers forward those savings to them. What the consumer ends up getting is a wonderful array of sometimes-weird, organic produce delivered at a reasonable cost.
For me, this is a good thing and a bad thing. The good is I have high-quality produce delivered no matter what, once per week; so I have to eat it. The bad is I have to eat it or it goes bad and I’m wasting. I hate that both for the purposes of money and the environment. This was exactly BB’s argument: you’ll HAVE to eat them, and by the end of the summer, you’ll love them. Well, now it’s been over a year, and while I’m not so sure about LOVE, I am starting to appreciate the bounty we get every week. The forced health coming with planning my week’s meals around the race to consume them is a bonus.
My understanding is CSAs were a way for the consumers to buy into the farm to help support the farmer directly. In exchange for the consumers’ financial assistance, the farmer would send produce, eggs, meat, or milk to the supporter.
These days, CSAs are more geared toward the consumer. We’re not owners in the farm, we simply pay for the shares to be delivered weekly or biweekly. The movement is now less about “owning” a share of a farm. It’s more about acquiring quality, organic produce for our families from a source we can research directly. Most of my friends and acquaintances who participate in CSAs are doing it for a variety of reasons: 1) it’s better for the farmers; 2) you know where your food is coming from and can ask directly about how it’s grown; 3) it’s better for the environment; and 4) the indication that consuming organics improves health.
I suppose to the outsider, the whole experience seems awfully “hippie dippie.” But for me, I like the fact that I feel closer to the creation and growth of my food. There is not one box we get that isn’t covered in dirt and bugs. Call me a hippie, but I find that oddly comforting that our produce isn’t a GMO strain that is “naturally” bug-repellent, and which has also been through huge corporate washing machines with God-knows-what-kind of chemical washing agents.
Most regular readers here at THD know that I’m gluten free, and almost every recipe on here has a GF option. What may not be as well known is, I am very sensitive to several foods in general. Aspartame makes me faint, Wheat makes me break out in boil-like lesions (doctor’s word, not mine)… I’m afraid to remove milk and cheese from my diet, because honestly, I just don’t want to know what else affects me so much that I have to remove it from my diet. But the strange part is, these sensitivities (aside from the aspartame) go completely away when I’m overseas. When I was in Italy, I ate pasta, bread, croissants, and cake multiple times per day, just because I could. No reactions.
I don’t have any direct or scientific knowledge regarding this phenomenon other than what I’ve read. But what I’ve read suggests this is due to the GMOs and the treatments we use on our agricultural bounty. Other countries not only don’t use the same scientific “resources” to over-produce their food, but many countries have actually outlawed a lot of the treatments we use regularly. As far as I’m concerned, THIS is our problem in the United States, health-wise.
So, while I don’t consider myself “hippie-dippie,” I have started becoming more and more prone to supporting these “food movements,” in the name of my own health and all-around well-being. That being said, as much as I don’t love veggies themselves, it wasn’t too super hard for me to say yes to partaking in a CSA simply because I can rest assured I’m skipping a lot of the other additives that are likely affecting my health.
CSA’s range in both flexibility and variety. When I was in SF, I was a member of a CSA that had such a big following (SF, remember) that they had a website where you went every week and picked 6 different things to come in your bag. This meant I got a CHOICE. That was epic. But now we live in Reno, and the choice is a bit more limited. It’s a “you get what you get” sort of situation in the Reno CSA world. There are advantages to this get-what-you-get situation. One of the advantages is I’m sure it’s waaaaay easier for the growers to deliver exactly what’s needed to every. Single. Customer. Another that’s become amazingly blatant while I and BB’s kids are involved is, it forces those of us who don’t always like veggies to consume things we might not otherwise buy at a grocery store. This ensures that, however, resistantly, we are expanding our palates and our individual food experiences.
Now, I’m not suggesting that either me nor BB’s (semi-picky) children will come out of this life broccolini-lovers… But what I am suggesting is the exposure and forced consumption has been fairly good for us–at least, that’s what BB says. Lol.
Though I’m still not a vegetable lover, I’m starting to appreciate the colorful, healthy boxes delivered to me every week. I also love that I’m both supporting a local farmer and a movement I believe in (i.e., organics and whole living). All I can say is, I hope that Reno will continue getting more into it, so maybe someday I’ll have a similar “choice” option that I once had in SF. But for now, I can only appreciate the wonderful bounty that’s been made available to me by Mountain Bounty Farms and the ever-intelligent suggestions by Blossom’s BiFF.
Happy cooking, eating, and health-ing! And HAPPY SUMMER!
Some friends and I used to try and have dinner together once every two weeks. “Once every two weeks” turned into once every one or two months–if we’re diligent and lucky. Nowadays, it seems like it’s closer to once a year. Between big people jobs, significant others, dogs, houses, and babies; it’s just hard to make it happen. But we try. We all three know we’re happier in our lives after one of our dinner-and-a-movie nights where we can share our stories, frustrations, victories, and lessons. And because these dinners often get few and far between, we always like to make them special. That’s where these Pear, Prosciutto, and Blue Cheese Appetizers started….
I know I’ve said I’m a seasonal drinker. But really, I have to say, vodka is my all-seasons alcohol. And this Grapefruit Martini, while beautifully pink and perfect for today’s uber-sweet holiday, is a year-round libation for me.
We’ve been a vodka drinking family for an awfully long time. And my “family,” I mean me and my mom. With the exception of his “first sips” of almost every drink the two of us make or order, my dad an appreciator of all, but a connoisseur of beer.
An advantage of having a mom who enjoys vodka and who has amazing culinary skills, is that I am able to come across the most amazing martinis on any night that I want to go to my parents’ house and convince my mom to make me one of her works of art. And in the winter, that usually means a citrus-y sweet and tart Grapefruit Martini.
…
Fall must be on its way. I’m sure most of you would guess I know that because of a cooling off in the weather and a shortening of the days. NOT. The weather here is so not cool. Hahaha. I know it because of the change in my drink preferences. Right around this time of year I start craving something heavier than my normal summertime choices of white wine, hard seltzer, or, God forbid, Smirnoff Ice. But when the air starts smelling of the pungent sweetness that means fall is on its way, my taste buds start to change too. At that point, nothing quite satisfies me like really good Bourbon.
But hey, summer isn’t even close to over, and I don’t want to live my life wishing away my favorite parts (summer is my second favorite season–fall is first). So I want to make sure I still enjoy every last drop of the beautiful flavors and feelings of summer. So how do I balance this thirst for a change with a longing to hold on? Enter the Bourbon Honey Lemonade….
Holiday food and drink doesn’t always have to be rich, heavy, and overly-sweet to still taste festive and holiday-esque. Today’s cocktail is light while still maintaining the Christmasy flavors we all know and love so much.
I’ve said it several times recently, but my new favorite kitchen gadget is my Soda Stream. One of the things I love is that I can make my own flavored vodka sodas; and with my favorite Tahoe Blue Vodka, I know I’m getting a tasty and natural concoction that’s way better than anything that comes out of a can or bottle.
I do love holiday flavors, though, so this year I decided to doctor up my homemade vodka soda to make it just a little more festive. The addition of wonderful cranberry syrup, Orange DoTerra oil, and a Cinnamon rim, and you’ve got a wonderfully flavorful but perfectly-light Christmas Cocktail.
So here’s to our Day 11! Tomorrow is Christmas Eve and our final day of our first annual 12 Days of Christmas Cocktails. Merry Christmas to all! And make sure to follow both Russ and I during the rest of the year for great recommendations, recipes, dating stories and suggestions, and natural living tips.