Showing posts with label Kitchen Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kitchen Poetry. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 November 2008

Kitchen Poetry: The End

Sometimes it's good to be a hoarder. I am glad I didn't throw this book away during one of my more fundamental vegetarian moments because this is where I am today: In a desperate quandry.


My parents gave me this book when I left home and it was well used but I have been vegetarian for the last 10 years and I haven't deviated for all that time until recently - well .. except for the odd prawn cracker!

The thing is, I LIKE being a vegetarian but this time last year I had a debate with some vegan friends on whether or not it is possible to be vegan in the UK and only (ever) eat British food. We decided that unless we wanted to die of boredom before we died of malnutrition, then it probably isn't. Immediately we could forget mange touts from Kenya, avocados' from Peru, aubergines from Spain and that's before we've even counted chick peas, lentils, olives, chillies or rice! So in the winter, what from our own land do we eat and where does our protein come from? Turnips, cabbage, parsnips, potatoes, carrots, cauliflour, leeks ...

It wasn't until I visited Italy that I really understood what it is to live off one's land. The place where we go when visiting the Italian Connection, is a slice of rural Italy where everyone has land, livestock and a vineyard. It's normal for individuals living there to expect this way of life but here in the UK, for most of us, it's an impossible dream not least because even if we had the land, our weather couldn't support the diversity we would need to be entirely self sufficient on vegetables alone.

And so in the face of environmental catastrophe, and the world food crisis, I am now pondering the question of whether it is actually ethical to be a vegetarian in Britain. Is it right to ignore a whole source of protein while importing food from abroad which not only costs carbon miles but could also be a product of vast monocultures which are themselves unsustainable.

I became vegetarian because I did not agree with what I deemed to be unnecessary bloodshed. In a world of convenience, sterile packaging and supermarket manipulation, it's easy to forget where our food comes from, and my choice was largely a response to that apathy. But now, when it is easier to find free range, and humanely slaughtered meat, or even 'wild' meat such as rabbit, venison, pheasant, which has been free until the moment it is shot, is it not better to eat in season, from our own resources?

For the last 20 years at least, possibly longer, the most important focus of my life has been connection to this land. Now, I wonder how can I be fully connected to it if I don't eat of it? Food which has been produced here on this island, fed by our soil and watered by rain from our sky has more relevance to me than food produced in some far away country that I have never seen or known. If we connect to our land and our ancestors, the experience must be visceral, we must know where our nourishment comes from both spiritually and physically.

This is what I saw in Italy. How those people are utterly connected to the land on which they live.

And what a good life it is.


With huge and grateful thanks to Simple Sparrow for the inspiration of Kitchen Poetry.

Friday, 7 November 2008

Wednesday, 5 November 2008

Kitchen Poetry: Dinner


I am enjoying Kitchen Poetry alot! Seeing beauty in the most mundane of things and yet one of the most important. It's surprising how much can be missed.


Tuesday, 4 November 2008

Kitchen Poetry: Breakfast

Kitchen Poetry 1

Inspired by Simple Sparrow via DottyCookie who today has a link to her most amazing Bread Recipie

Monday, 3 November 2008

15 Minutes of Fame (or more)..


I thought I had lots of "crafty" pictures on my camera ready to download, upload and display .. but when I plugged in my firewire, it seems that all I had was 11 pictures of ... bread. Which I have become obsessed with making by hand. If I had known how easy and satisfying it is to make bread by hand, I would never have bought a breadmaker. It was only cooking with Jimmy, wanting to teach him how to make the most basic of our staples from scratch and without a machine, in order to understand the process fully, that I myself learned how to do it properly! On previous attempts (before said machines were invented) my results have always been rather disappointing which lead me to give up. I'm not sure what has changed, but my second own loaf was twice as big as the first!


Perhaps, as my facebook friends will have noticed, I have been kneading with purpose. And talking of Facebook .. did you know you can make a Facebook page which everyone can see and become a fan of? It means that your work could be networked very widely which is good for anyone with their own online shop and it doesn't link to your own profile!



If you are on Facebook, and wish to make a page for your work, all you do is this. From your Facebook profile click the little link on the right which says "advertise".


This will take you to this screen.


Click on "create facebook page" and follow instructions. From there, you will be able to make a "profile" for your creativity. You can then invite all your friends to become a "fan". They become fans, it shows up on their feeds, and their friends - who may not be your friends - then can see your page (not your personal profile), and become fans and so on! You can add pictures, messages and your blog feed too by "importing a note". And you can see who's looking at you with the "page manager" which will show a link from your own profile.


You can have a look at my page here to see how it works. If you have a page, put the link in comments, and I will fan you!