After I said in my last post that I wasn't necessarily going to blog every day, I hadn't meant to be mia the whole weekend! I just didn't make it into town to get online at all - there was so much going on at the farm, both chores-wise and visitors-wise.
Today, I'm at the other branch of Corvallis' co-op, which is special, because Phil's sister's husband painted the murals on it. He depicted Phil's mom and dad -
- and Phil's sister with a friend of hers -
They're pretty good likenesses, and it just adds something to visiting this store.
Yesterday afternoon, we also visited with Phil's friend and his twins that visited us in AK in August -
and went on a very steep hike near their home. Phil and John at the top here - the two of them and I were the only ones who went all the way up. It was so steep!
I really wasn't sure I could do it, so I'm proud of myself :) And last time we hiked something that steep (well, even steeper than that, actually), when we went to harvest blueberries that weren't there,
... I was sore for a week afterwards! I was very sore going back down yesterday, but today I'm actually not that sore, and worked with Phil on his timberland all morning today before coming to town to work!
We're trying to protect the young cedars from the deer - trying to make it harder for them to remove the protective plastic tubes and just eat the cedars all the way down to the bark. C'mon deer, you're going to love a big cedar forest in just a few years time, and there's plenty of tender little baby douglas firs and chinquapins for you to eat!
We've also been working the harvest of the garden at the farm - here's the major action, mucho mucho corn and tomatoes but also tomatillos, basil, eggplants, peppers -
Phil's nephew and his girlfriend mostly planted the garden, and they came over and harvested with us, and we made a big batch of tomatillo salsa (tomatillos, onions, peppers, garlic, spices, lemon juice, cooked down quite a lot)
What a beautiful abundance! And here's a corny picture of Phil's mom -
(yes, that is a corn row in her apron)! Phil and I are happy harvesters...
And I have been feeling better since eating no tomatoes at all. I don't know if it's the acidity or what, since these tomatoes are super sweet. But on Saturday I ate no tomatoes until dinner time and was ok, and then had just a few cherry toms with dinner and was back to feeling sick. Same thing had happened Friday. Yesterday and today, no tomatoes and all is well.
This vexes me with the question of our natural foods. Eating local, homegrown food is so important to me. But the longer I've been involved in growing food, and the more I've learned about cultivation and breeding of edible plants, the more I feel that many edible plants are just as much artifacts of civilization as something more obviously 'packaged.' I was getting sick as a dog eating the abundance of tomatoes from the garden, but I already know not to eat any of the equally-abundant corn - does me no good at all. And making smoothies out of green and protein powders with a bit of raw tahini and stevia saved my guts but all of it came out of bottles and jars!
I do know that when I get finished getting rid of mercury and lead, and yeast, my guts will be less likely to react adversely to all kinds of things and to develop allergies. But in the meantime, what is a 'natural food'? And is it even a relevant question? Humans are 'natural' too, which means that all the things that we produce are also productions of nature. But a modern tomato, even an heirloom, is so very different from the 'pomodori' (golden apples) that the Europeans were so skeptical of when they were first brought over from the New World. Like many cultivated fruiting plants, they have far more sugar in them now, but still contain the solanins, the nightshade compounds that cause joint distress in all kinds of people.
I'm starting to feel that 'natural' isn't the most important operative term, and am finding myself drawn more and more to the medicine of wild foods and weeds. I'm also having to forgive myself for the 'processed food' thing. Everyone knows that 'processed food is bad for you,' right? It's too easy to absorb, so it's fattening, and it's stripped of its nutrients because it's been so processed from its original, natural state.
Well, wait a minute! I was feeling so much better before we came to Oregon because I was having a Vita-Mix-made smoothie for every meal! When I was feeling sick a couple days ago, I made the closest thing I could with the little blender available to me here. Isn't that a processed food also? I guess the difference is that the smoothie is composed of whole foods, but it is definitely processed. My compromised digestion needs all the help it can get, and if I absorb more of my food, I'm actually less likely to put on weight because there will be fewer toxic byproducts from indigestion that need to get sequestered in fat cells.
So, I forgive myself for the natural foods obsession - acknowledge that it's a far more complex picture, not black and white, and also for eating 'processed' foods in the form of smoothies.
What do you think about natural and processed foods?
A beautiful day to everyone.
It really is a complicated issue, as you've highlighted. I'm getting more into raw foods, and it's interesting to me that a green or plant food of some kind can be toxic when raw but healthy when cooked - two sides to every story. Not even the hardcore raw stance can be totally healthful.
ReplyDeleteSometimes I have a day where I eat a bar for breakfast, a bar for lunch, and packaged snacks for dinner, and feel light and great. Another day, I can eat a huge all-veggie stir fry for dinner and feel so full I could get sick. I can think of so many examples, but you're right - even blending a smoothie is a form of "processing"!
Natural vs. processed, oh such a big question. Everything has risk in it. From eating jarred foods to driving a car to getting out of bed. I think that we should just eat what we think is best for us, at the time, and not stress about the labels. We all do our best, and lord knows hon, you are sooo well-researched and well-read on all things food, your allergies, etc that I know you're doing what's best for you given the info you have at the time :)
ReplyDeletelove ya!!
xo
I invite you to look into "forest gardening." It's about growing food as nature intended food to be grown. Instead of planting an acre with one crop, you fill spaces the size of a bed with thirty different things to eat. Also, look into what weeds are edible. Dandilions, for example, are not in the least bit cultivated, and they are extremely good for you (leaf and flower both.) The grocery store produce (sadly) only covers less than 1% of all the edible plants in the world. It's my personal goal to grow as many different things as I can in a small space and eventually grow everything that I eat. When you get companion planting going on (plants that leave behind the right soil composition for the plants beside them, or plants that keep away the bugs that plague another plant, etc), you can grow a lot of edibles in a very small space. It's something I've been struggling with too. I notice that avocados (which I LOVE) give me gas. I suspect this may be because the avocados come a long way before I eat them. If I were eating them fresh-picked then the enzyme content would be more than triple what it is when I eat it from the store. Those enzymes it has fresh picked may be absolutely necessary for an avocado because of the unique oils it contains. But that's just a guess. It is possible that the tomatoes you ate have come from a GMO strand. There are so many GMO tomatoes in the world now that it's easier and easier to end up with them in your own backyard without even being aware of it. Unfortunately tomatoes are going the way of corn.
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