I may be exposing my suburban roots, but it thoroughly impresses me when an entire meal can be harvested from a back yard. Nowadays, there is plenty of talk of local, sustainable food, and happily this concept is growing through local farmers' markets and CSA's, movements such as Slow Food, and committed practice by chefs and home cooks alike. Last week, the BlogHer Food Conference offered panel discussions on urban farming, canning, preserving and foraging. NOMA, the acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant crowned number one in the world this year, creates its menu from ingredients which are locally foraged. Times are changing and hopeful as we return to our land, our communities and our kitchens.
I do my best to buy locally grown food, grateful I live in a part of the country where we have an abundance. I remain mindful of what and how we eat, aware that this is a learning curve - a process to move through in order to change a pattern of living and eating into a way that feels intuitively correct. Yet, as I pat myself on my back, I cannot help but feel like a self-aggrandized neanderthal when I think of my husband's family in Denmark. My state of attempted permanent mindfulness is their norm, naturally and reflexively. While I write about it to convey an epiphany, they feel no need to articulate it, because it's their way of life. Like breathing.
When we lived in Denmark, and now when we return to visit, a frequent outing was to my sister and brother-in-law's farm in the countryside. Each visit culminated in a family dinner based on food harvested from their property. The last meal we shared with them went something like this:
The porcinis were cleaned, sliced, and dressed with olive oil and salt. I made a salad of colorful heirloom tomatoes, red onion and chard; potatoes were roasted in olive oil and garlic; apples and carrots were sliced and put in lemon water for the children; we sautéed the zucchini and crookneck squash; the crayfish were boiled and cooled; homemade bread was warmed and sliced; the table was laid while we gamely tried to find room for all the plates and food. As we tucked into our meal, my brother-in-law told us to save some space for the pigeon and duck he had braising in the oven that he was eager for us to taste, adding that he had saved the largest porcini mushroom for a cream sauce which would accompany the birds.
This was a delicious, abundant meal created from food hunted or grown on the property. The further beauty of it was that there was no need for a written recipe. Each dish reflected the main ingredient, either cooked or raw, enhanced with salt, pepper, some olive oil, perhaps a little vinegar and lemon or a simple sauce. It was delicious and sating - a feast for a king despite our hosts' humble means.
I still have so much to learn.
Best made with vegetables picked from a garden you know. Serves 4-6.
Beautifully articulated, Lynda. Thank you!
Posted by: MrsWheelbarrow | 13 October 2010 at 02:09 PM
Thanks, Cathy!
Posted by: Lynda | 13 October 2010 at 02:13 PM
I'm up for hunting on the properties if you are!!! ;)
Posted by: Kelly | 13 October 2010 at 02:48 PM
OMG!!! that sounds like a mindblowing feast - how lucky you are to know these people! Please go back and tell us more!!
Posted by: hannah | 15 October 2010 at 08:46 AM
Hannah, I always look forward to returning.
Posted by: Lynda | 18 October 2010 at 01:41 PM