Sunday, September 17, 2006

OH and...

you can see the lawn in the previous pic of the delphinium. If you will remember from this post, it wasn't doing so hot. Now it is green and lush and needs to be mown more oft than we have time for. Woo!

Saturday, September 16, 2006

New member to the Garden


Went to the Saturday Market today and this delphinium just begged me to save it...begged I tell you.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

May the Feild be with you...


If you know me and you know what I am working on at work these days, you will know why I found this. It's compleately worth the time it takes to watch.

"Grocerey Store Wars"

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Buy, Buy, Bye: On Consumerism and the Three Rs




I am part of one of the last generations of individuals in the US to remember life before the ubiquitous reduce, reuse, recycle campaign. This symbol is everywhere now. And I do believe that many people do the last step as course of habit, or out of necessity. (You will find, if you live in a large city, many homeless will recycle out of garbage cans and curbside recycle bins for a few coins in their pocket at the bottle return.) There are still many who do not, out of ignorance or uninterest or inconvenience.

All three of these things can be found in all of us at any given moment. I know I have not always wanted to lug the empty bottle around until I get home or find a recycling bin. I also throw away things that are recyclable because it is a major inconvience to collect them and take them away. (Namely Styrofoam, plastic films and waxed cardboard.)

Our cities make recycling possible to an extent. Its worth nothing some cities have "recycling" collection only to dump it in a landfill anyway. I think this is what we call a "public image" campaign. It is worth educating yourself on what your city can and can not recycle. Or will and will not as there is really little that cannot be recycled and reused.

Here is a list of things that should be a course of habit to recycle, because they can be:
Computers and electronics (all those toxic metals and things in them can be reclaimed instead of dumped into the ground...maybe even refurbished ooo!)
Plastics of all kinds
Plastic films (like grocery bags and the films stuff is packaged in)
Paper products of all kinds
Styrofoam
Wood of all kinds
Building materials
Food waste (all food waste)
Household paint
Metals
Batteries
And if you want to know "How do I recycle these things when the trash people only take "paper, plastic, Cans and Glass"? look here.

Lucky for Portland we have people who do some of this:
Metro
Free geek
Portland Office of Sustainable Development

It's also worth looking into what sorts of plastics your trash hauler will really recycle. Here in Portland, plastics have to have a neck. Huh? So disappointing. I have been throwing all my plastics in there to no use. Usually all the items have to be clean and without lids. I think local trash disposal is sorely lacking. The work it still on us, the consumer, to be responsible.


So we recycle, or in some cases, think we recycle when we place stuff out on the curb. But what about Reduce and Reuse? What do those really mean? How many of us actually try? I think most Americans, if they recycle, feel virtuous enough that they have done that little bit and that will make a difference.
I think recycling is terribly important, but I do think the other two R's are rather overlooked and much more capable of having a serious impact. One of which is to lower the amount we need to recycle to begin with. Reducing. More on that later.

First I want to address reusing. We think that by recycling we are reusing. This is only sort of the case. To actually reuse the products we recycle, we have to buy recycled products.

The other way to reUSE is to buy USED. Old things, ESPECIALY things like furniture and clothes. This usually has a major social stigma attached to it as thrift shop, garage sale and JUNK. And well, that's true. We think poor person, student, and cheep, junky and weird. That's rather too bad. Because unless you are buying a brand new House or Car, a used car and a "new" home are often already used and old.

Old homes actually have value, class, charm, character. Some old cars are classics, vintage. How about furniture, antique, rare, charming. So how come some things have value as they age and others become junk? It all depends on you.

How classiest are you? We all are, to some extent affected by our social standing, our job, our income, our family, our neighborhood, and at large, our race, ethnicity and gender. We are affected by media, peer pressure, the economy and current events. It's a big complicated stew that tells you an old house from the 192o's is an investment, but an old sweater from the Goodwill is beneath your standards.

Unfortunate.

You see by reusing items others have cast aside, you lessen the amount of things that need to be made NEW, fewer resources go into the making and packaging and selling of that product and you also save a few dollars.

Take the above mentioned sweater. If it's acrylic, that’s a plastic. It was made overseas. The fiber came from a chemical plastics plant and was dyed with chemical dyes. Then it was woven on a big machine into a fabric, then it was formed into a sweater by underpaid foreign workers, THEN it, like it's thousands of kin, was wrapped in plastic film, placed with others in a box, thousands of boxes. And shipped on a big freight boat using diesel fuel to the USA, where is was shipped via train (diesel) or Truck( diesel) to the Target, Wal-mart, Kohl’s, Macys’s, insert store name here, where you bought it. EVERYHTING we buy is processed some way,often similar to this.
If we stopped buying new, where we can, and buy used, we limit this process and the amount of things in the market that we also need to reuse and recycle.

So onto reducing.
Just stop buying things you don’t really need. If you do buy something, see if you can get it used first.
Seems so simple.
But it's the hardest part.

I love to shop. I get a high off of shopping. I love new things. I love opening new things that have never been used by any other human. I think many of us do. We are born into a culture that values this newness, this novelty, this individual ownership. It is mine all mine and has never been anyone else’s.

You are a good American if you put your money back into the 'economy" by buying new things. Huh? Our economy is driven my consumer spending.
So spend your dollar where they count. Your dollar does talk. It's has a lot to say.

If we stopped buying things, and started buying services, like charities, schools, admissions to cultural places, zoos, museums, parks, money spent on experiences, other people, programs, if all the money we spent on new cars in a year when into schools imagine the social reform. It's going into the economy. It's just not going into the pocket of the people who lobby really hard to get you to put it in their pocket. Who says you have to spend your money on yourself?

Stop buying new where you can. Save your money where you can. Spend it on things that REALLY make you happy. How can a thing actually make you happy? Did it make the people who made it happy? I have a real hard time with this myself. I was raised an American consumer like everyone else. I know I can go find used curtains or sheets or other fabric at goodwill and make new curtains out of it. I also know I can go to target and be instantly gratified and go home with curtains. I don’t particularly like many of the clothes I find at good will. (Maybe it's because most people don’t give their old clothes to goodwill and the like, but throw them in the trash...) But I try. I feel like if I keep trying, at all these aspects of the three R's they will get easier with time.

It's frustrating and hard, but then, our society doesn’t make it second nature for us to do these things. They go against much of how our commerce is constructed. We have a disposable culture. Things aren’t made to last. If you do buy new things, make sure they are made to last. Your dollar talks. It does. Put enough people's dollars together and you have a chorus.

Our great grandparents, well, for those of us around 30 and up, went through the great depression. Everything that could be was saved, reused and recycled. It was a way of life. It shouldn’t take such a dramatic event to do this. It should be easy. It won’t be until you show the people who make rules that it is and everyone is willing to participate.
We didn’t used to have recycling bins and now we do.
Change can happen.

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Taxonomy of Canning: The art of labeling

Caning stuff is fun, convenient, money saving and makes great gifts.
But like any consumable product, if it's packaged well it will be more appealing right? Of course! That's why we like Method so much. It's that loverly pear shaped soap bottle that we swooned over before realizing how great the actual product was. If only all marketing was so benign...

On to the point, if you are a crafty human, making your own labels is superfun. Not just scrawling on a random label with a ink pen, oh nooooo... we are talking computerized labeling bliss for the Photoshop inclined.

Some advice on making labels:
I don't recommend mod pogde.I did this because I did not have sticky labels.
It works, my jam labels are all done that way but... don't recommend it.

I do recommend buying some ink jet or laser printer labels. I bought full sheet stickers. This is an 8.5"x11" sticker. You, of course, print on it and cut out your labels.

I have the option of printing out images in a "wallet picture" layout of 9 images about 3"x2" as a preset template. But Word layouts are easy too.

I use Photoshop to custom make my labels. Word can work too, you just won't get the shnazzy color option and layout is harder. I recommend Publisher or any paint program other than Microsoft Paint.

You can make easy designs and stuff using FONTS. There are a lot of free font sites out there here are my favorites:
Pia Frauss
Manfred Klien
and Font Freak
There are so many fonts to pick it's crazy! I love fonts.
Look for fonts called dingbats or decorative to find pictures, borders, dividers, and other images. These are great. I love them.
PC instructions only, sorry =(
When you find a font you like, download it to your desktop. They will be compressed files. Once you have down loaded all the fonts you want, select them off your desktop suing ctrl and right mouse click. This will let you individually select the files. Then left click on one of the icons and select "extract to...", the window will open to ask where you want the files to go, pick your C drive, program files, WINDOWS and then find the Font folder. and click OK. All the fonts will be extracted and sent to the font folder this way. Open word and check out your font list to see that it worked.

You can also download a program to do this for you. There is a free trial version.
then you can do stuff like this:



Pearing Pasta


And on another note:
10 lbs of pear-blems mentioned below has been rectified with the aid of one Magic Chef food dehydrator lent by the illustrious lady J9. About 8 lbs of pears are now desiccating in my kitchen for future mastication.

And pasta round 1 is done:
pasta is a skill.
I am learning.
It is veryvery fun.
Plastic hangers are good for drying pasta before storing.
You can't let fresh pasta get too dry, 'cause then it's not "fresh" now is it.

anyway...


Friday, September 08, 2006

Springtime and Blue Genes

Previously, I posted about picking tomatoes and making some lovely sauce and briefly mentioned this article . You see, sadly, this is the sort of fate much of our food succumbs to. Think about it for a second, does ketchup taste like tomatoes? REALLY? Did we really go through the 80's as children where ketchup was classified as a vegetable? How many people have a tomato experience like I did as a kid, or the guy in the above mentioned article?
Not to many, unless you are one of our more seasoned members of society, grew up on a farm,had hippies for parents or just someone you knew who gardened, you prolly have never had a good tomato. Among other fruits and veggies.

I can tell you from experience that south American fruits are much better in Ecuador, then they are here. hmm...So, if you have the opportunity, go to a farmers market or a local foods grocery ( Whole Foods doesn't count!) and buy some in season tomatoes.Try an heirloom if you never have before. If you like tomatoes. I also recommend doing this for any other fruit or veggie you think you love, 'cause you will love it more, or think you hate, 'cause you just might like it, when it tastes like it oughta.

This year I grew tomatoes from Home Depot. They are grocery tomatoes but in my yard. more or less. NEXT year, I get to do something cool with my garden, that I have been wanting to do. Thanks to a thoughtful gift from my sister and brother-in-law, I will be getting heirloom seeds to plant.

What is an heirloom seed? Good question. Heirloom seeds are seeds from variates of garden plants that have been lost to the agri-business takeover of farming. Most of our crops are engineered (genetic or otherwise), single varietals. Genetic variation is to be frowned upon and controlled. The very process that creates diversity and adaptability to things like pestilence and disease is not allowed to self select.You see, we used to have a whole lot more biodiversity amongst our foods. Things were seasonal, local, and regional. Plants were carefully cross bread and cultivated for unique flavors and colors and nutrients. One tomato is not like the other!

So, I will grow heirlooms. If you would like to try this too go to this site or others like it to find seeds.










The whole heirloom variety thing is just one step, Norway is going out on a limb with this. Sad to think it's necessary.

Saucy

A week ago, some friends and I went to Sauvie Island for a carpooling adventure to pick stuff. I picked 10 lbs of pears, which are now all ripening and need to be eaten pronto,baked or preserved. I also picked about 10 lbs of tomatoes and a goodly number of peppers. My own tomatoes have been ripening fairly quickly as well.

So it only made sense to make pasta sauce and can it. Pasta sauce is so easy to make and so much better with fresh ingredients, like tomatoes that are actually ripe and not just red. Granted I didn't have time to make sauce the day I picked the tomatoes, but I guarantee the sauce tastes very tomatoey, because Matt is not a big tomato fan and he says the sauce is VERY tomatoey, but good. Anecdotal proof is always right, just so you know...


I now have 9 jars of pasta sauce and had enough left for dinner last night. It was tasty!
Today I used a gift card I received for my birthday to purchase an accoutrement to go with my pasta sauce. Homemade sauce deserves homemade pasta and so this is my new toy.