Weekly, maybe even daily journal of a 17 year old raising chickens and bees.
12/22/09
GUEST POST ONE - Jerusah Klemperer from Slow Food USA
Jerusha Klemperer is the Program Manager for Networks and Partnerships at Slow Food USA, where she coordinated the US delegation to Terra Madre 2008 and before that served as the Assistant to the Executive Director. Also a writer of all kinds of things including book reviews, plays and blog posts, she is the editor of the Slow Food USA blog and a contributor to the Huffington Post, Civil Eats and her personal blog eathere2. See Huffington Post article here
Why I love to cook or Why I go slow
I love cooking because I love ingredients: I get such a thrill from visiting farms and seeing how food grows. The first time I saw asparagus growing I was shocked to see the spears popping right up through the dirt. How had I not known that? At the farmers market I love seeing brussels sprouts still attached to the stalk, getting a lesson in how they grow, while I’m shopping. I love eating something when it’s fresh—right off the vine, right off the farm. The taste is unbelievable.
I love cooking because I love transformation: Cooking is science meets magic. Anyone who loves a good science experiment or an art project can appreciate the magic of a sharp raw onion sautéing down into something sweet and sugary. Or the incredible transformation of fresh basil, oil, parmigianno cheese and pine nuts into pesto, a personal favorite of mine.
I love cooking because I love to share, to express my affection for friends and family through home-cooked meals: Cooking for people is a way to get people to hang out with you—it’s true! When you offer people home cooked food, they come in droves and the conversation flows and by the end of the meal everyone knows each other a bit better, and everyone feels taken care of.
It turns out that there are unexpected side benefits, too.
Health: When you cook for yourself, you eat healthier. I don’t do it for that reason, but it’s a nice perk. Home cooking tends to use way less fat (er, butter mostly) and way less sodium than restaurant food or processed food in cans or the like. Also home cooking never uses weird ingredients/chemicals you can’t pronounce. No nutrition labels necessary.
Knowledge: Understanding how things grow and how they get to our plate helps us understand community health, science and nature, and increases our connection to the earth and our awareness of ecological issues.
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