rutabaga, a root vegetable
Photo by J. Harrington
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Not long ago, Minnesota had a number of folks and organizations involved in crafting a Minnesota Food Charter. Apparently, there was insufficient interest ($$$) to provide for ongoing staffing from any of the state organizations. We wonder if the Walz administration even considered food supply and availability as an issue when they shaped their vision for "One Minnesota." It seems to us that one of the most significant dividing lines in demography and health is the one between those with access to sufficient, healthy foods, and the time and knowledge and place necessary to prepare and eat those foods, and those without. Some states have food system plans. Minnesota doesn't appear to have one. Of course, Minnesota used to have a state planning agency at one time, too. Separate departments of agriculture, commerce, and health do not a food system yield.
onions in a basket
Photo by J. Harrington
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If we were really concerned about a rural-urban divide, we'd give lots of thought to linking producers and consumers and processors and wholesalers and retailers together to talk some more about how we can best feed ourselves. If there's anything we can be sure democrats, republicans, independents, anarchists and others all have in common it's that they (we) all have to eat. Right now we're all depending on someone else to make sure our plate is full.
Onions
How easily happiness begins bydicing onions. A lump of sweet butterslithers and swirls across the floorof the sauté pan, especially if itserrant path crosses a tiny slickof olive oil. Then a tumble of onions.This could mean soup or risottoor chutney (from the Sanskritchatni, to lick). Slowly the onionsgo limp and then nacreousand then what cookbooks call clear,though if they were eyes you could seeclearly the cataracts in them.It’s true it can make you weepto peel them, to unfurl and to teasefrom the taut ball first the brittle,caramel-colored and decrepitpapery outside layer, the leastrecent the reticent onionwrapped around its growing body,for there’s nothing to an onionbut skin, and it’s true you can go onweeping as you go on in, throughthe moist middle skins, the sweetestand thickest, and you can go onin to the core, to the bud-like,acrid, fibrous skins denselyclustered there, stalky and in-complete, and these are the mostpungent, like the nuggets of nightmareand rage and murmury animalcomfort that infant humans secrete.This is the best domestic perfume.You sit down to eat with a rumorof onions still on your twice-washedhands and lift to your mouth a hintof a story about loam and usualendurance. It’s there when you clean upand rinse the wine glasses and makea joke, and you leave the minutestwhiff of it on the light switch,later, when you climb the stairs.
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