Wednesday, September 22, 2010

A great cleanup day!

A great big thank you to all of the wonderful folks who came out on Sunday to help maintain and beautify our gardens! The Native garden was cut back and weeded, the Friendship garden had a major pulling out of our amazing and invasive mint plant, and the garden shed was cleaned out and organized! Not only that but the folks who came had a wonderful, genuine appreciation for the garden and an understanding of the importance of getting kids out to see where their food comes from. A wonderful morning.  Big thanks to Margaret Chavigny, Jorgen Jensen, Ray Riga, Laurie Halliday, Kat Verani, Nina Senn, & Jill Broderick (for the coffee & scones). Also to the succulent/Koltiska team - thank you. 

The year is off to a great start! 
-Johnna & Lara 


 

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Eat Real!

I wanted to put out a good word about the Eat Real Festival, which is happening in just two weeks over at Jack London Square. Show your love of good food and our fine city of Oakland by eating and listening to  music - all while enjoying the last weekend of our summer break!
What is the Real-Food Festival you ask? It's a three-day celebration of the good and delicious food grown and crafted here in our region, August 27, 28 & 29th. Not only will there be tons of good food, but also food-craft performances including butchery, noodle pulling, and the ins and outs of urban homesteading - what could be more fun?
Come one come all! And for more information, click here: http://eatrealfest.com/

Summer Reading!

I just finished reading one of Michael Pollan's bestselling and information packed books In Defense Of Food. To summarize, Pollan finds nutritionism to be an overly simplistic attempt at taking food apart into elements which may or may not ever add up to give us the same quality and genuine nutrition as the original whole food contained. He focuses on our culture's struggle with obesity and diabetes, seeing it as a bi-product of at least three major trends:
- Companies whose job it is to profit off of our eating habits, with no regards to what would actually be good for us to eat
- Policies started in the 1980's which subsidize corn (including corn syrup) and soy - helping to make processed high-calorie/low nutrition snacks considerably cheaper than their whole food counterparts
- Our desire to survive, which over thousands of years has trained us to seek out high-calorie sweet foods as a source of nourishment in a world where attaining nourishment was once a major challenge

But I wanted to include here an excerpt from the very end of his book, in which he highlights things that we can do to take control of our eating habits, and our overly-elaborate food chain, namely, through growing your own food:
"To take part in the intricate and endlessly interesting process of providing for our sustenance is the surest way to escape the culture of fast food and the values implicit in it: that food should be fast, cheap, and easy: that food is a product of an industry, not nature; that food is fuel, and not a form of communion, with other people as well as with other species -- with nature.
The work of growing food contributes to your health long before you sit down to eat it, of course, but there is something particularly fitting about enlisting your body in its own sustenance. Much of what we call recreation or exercise consists of pointless physical labor, so it is especially satisfying when we can give that labor a point.
To reclaim this much control over one's food, to take it back from industry and science, is not small thing: indeed, in our time cooking from scratch and growing any of your own food qualifies as subversive acts. And what these acts subvert is nutritionism: the belief that food is foremost about nutrition and nutrition is so complex that only experts and industry can possibly supply it. When you're cooking with food as alive as this - these gorgeous and semi-gorgeous fruits and leaves and flesh - you're in no danger of mistaking it for a commodity, or a fuel, or a collection of chemical nutrients. No, in the eye of the cook or the Gardner or the farmer who grew it, this food reveals itself for what it is: no mere thing but a web of relationship among a great many living beings, some human, some not, but each of them dependent on the other, and all of them ultimately rooted in soil and nourished by sunlight."

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Spring Cleanup!

Our Spring Cleanup day was a big success, with many new and old faces showing up to help beautify our communal space. Many (many) weeds were pulled, while veggies were discovered growing within their midst! My favorite part of the day was the spreading of our very very local goat bedding - kindly donated by Montclair's own 4-H goats! The garden is loving this water saving mulch already - and the veggies will only grow sweeter from the nutrients - lets make this a Montclair Tradition! 

Thursday, June 10, 2010

This Saturday - 9am till high noon

Another wonderful Garden Cleanup day is upon us! Come join our volunteer community in weeding, spreading mulch, spreading goat manure (from a local source!), turning our compost and all sorts of other crazy fun too amazing to even mention right now. These garden days are the basis of our community and our garden. We love to see new and old faces and look forward to working together. Both of our gardens were built and are maintained by community volunteers - come on out and show that you care!

Friday, May 21, 2010

Artickokes!

The longer I grow food with kids at Montclair, the more excited I become by the amazing lessons that can be learned through such a beautifully simple program. It is all about seed to table, or, to put it another way, having children reap the rewards and taste the bounty that comes from our earth. This healthy and amazing food tastes so much better when you know that you've grown it yourself! Often the kids will enjoy foods (veggies) that presented most anywhere else they would turn their noses up at.
This being said I will admit that I am very proud of the amazing artichoke plant that has come up so nicely in Ms. McClain's veggie bed! I planted it as I plant most things - not knowing how it would do, weather we would get a crop before the end of the school year, and wondering how an entire classroom could possibly share a few artichokes if they did...
Well here we are. Seed to table. The three artichokes were devoured by our 30 students - four leaves apiece. They planted them, they harvested them, and then they ate them up. How fun this is. And what large lessons lie within.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Wine Barrels

The wine barrels are looking great! Thanks so much to Larry Magid, Lara Jealous, Eric Veldhuizen, & many from the dad's club - this beautification project has been a true team effort. Now that spring is here, the mums are getting ready to bloom and the drip irrigation will ensure their survival! 
Thanks to all of you who showed up to our "cleanup day" to help with this great project. We couldn't do any of this without you. 

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Cheese Making? In Oakland?!?

I used to work on an educational farm in slightly-upstate New York. Goats, Cows, Sheep, Ducks, Chickens, Veggies, and lots of fun. Of the many activities that we taught to children, this Cheese making recipe is surprisingly simple and delicious. I just tried it with my daughter's fourth-grade classroom at and they loved it!

This is a "farmer cheese"; similar to a ricotta or a cottage cheese. The taste is a little plain - most kids love it!
ingredients:
1 gallon of milk
1/4 cup of white vinegar or lemon juice
tools:
pot to heat up the milk (non-aluminum)
colander
cheese cloth or fine cotton (optional)
thermometer
big (slotted) spoon

Simply put, you heat up the milk to 180-190 degrees (just before boiling if you forget your thermometer) stirring as it heats. I have the kids form a line so that they can take turns stirring.
[Things to talk about as this happens: what does a cow eat? (a: grass, hey which is dried grass) How big does a dairy cow get? (a: depends on the breed, between 800-1600 pounds) Why does a cow make milk? (a: for her baby, just like all mammals) How much milk can a cow make per day? (a: depends on the breed, between 4-12 gallons)]
Once hot, remove from heat and slowly add the vinegar while stirring. (again, the kids take turns stirring and pouring little bits of vinegar)
The milk should separate into Curds and Whey (just like little Miss Muffet). At this point all you need to do is separate the curds. It's nice if each kid can scoop some up and put it into the colander which ideally is lined with the cloth.
Put it into small cups for the kids to try (still warm)- I like to give them a taste and let them know that they can come back for seconds. 

For more fun and simple "cow facts" (to discuss with the kids) click here to check out moo-milk.com