Wednesday, September 23, 2009

My bizarro best

Last week I signed up for a produce box, delivered to my home for free, from Fresh Abundance. This is something I did a couple of times about a year and a half ago, and loved and thought I would continue to do forever and ever, with one "variety" box of produce (a.k.a. seasonal grab bag, selected by Fresh Abundance, not me) arriving on my doorstep every Friday. Well, I did it exactly twice and then forsook Fresh Abundance altogether, probably because it's not exactly cheap. A variety box costs $35. To me, this was too big a chunk of our ideal grocery budget.

But recently I've been doing some thinking, and here's what that thinking has revealed: I think most of my diet should come from things that grow in from the ground: fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, whole grains, beans, etc. Not EVERYTHING. Oh no, let's not get crazy. I'm going to eat cheese and eggs and ice cream. But if, as most health/diet experts would advise, I made the majority of my diet fruits and vegetables (really good, local, in-season ones), those fruits and vegetables should probably merit a big chunk of my food budget.

So, back to my variety box. I got a lot for my $35, all of it organic, most of it local. I'll list everything just so that you can take in the vast majesty of it.
  • 3 apples
  • 2 oranges
  • a whole bunch of the best nectarines I've ever had
  • a few peaches
  • a few bunches of grapes
  • several pluots
  • two pears
  • one head of red cabbage
  • one giant head of romaine
  • one HUGE onion
  • 2 potatoes
  • 3 or 4 carrots (THE BEST CARROTS OF MY LIFE)
  • a bag of green beans
  • a red pepper
  • a jalepeno
  • another unidentified pepper; it is tiny, which makes me think it might burn my mouth off
  • a gigantic bunch of cilantro
  • a ginormous bag of tomatoes
This is a lot of produce, way more than I would normally eat in a week. But I am trying, and it's been fun for me, and so I keep looking for recipes that will use some combination of the menagerie of abundance I have here. Last night I made Indian food with potatoes and onion and carrots and peppers and coconut milk and spices, and served it with quinoa and a lot of cilantro (which I thought I HATED, I must add, but it is so good with Indian food, apparently), and it was fantastico.

Other times, I just get panicky at the thought of all the produce in my refrigerator and start flinging things together into bowls and eating them. Which brings me to the weirdest ever BEST FOOD EVER.

Sarah's Bizarro Cabbage and Bean Salad
Now, the reason why this is so freaking bizarro to me is because I thought I didn't really like cabbage, especially not purple (or red) cabbage, especially not as the star ingredient in anything. In fact, yesterday, I was so unconfident in what I made that when I was eating at work I hid it from view whenever anyone passed by, to avoid scorn and ridicule. But, omg, it is delicious, with the best texture and flavor. I am in love with my bizarro salad. I'm in love, I'm in love, and I don't care who knows it!

Ingredients:
3/4 cup chickpeas or kidney beans
1 cup chopped red cabbage
some chopped olives
lemon juice
olive oil
sriracha
sunflower seeds
feta

So, you simply and wonderfully combine everything through olives, put in some lemon juice, olive oil, and sriracha to taste, top it all with a little bit of feta and a handful of sunflower seeds, and then indulge in the surprise treat of your life.

2 comments:

Ross Carper said...

This blog is so full of whimsy! I love it! Keep up the dwork!

What if other words, like "good work," were fused in the same manner that "web logging" has become "blogging?" It is this question, and this question alone, that made me just type the word 'dwork' into this comment box.

Sarah said...

I will do my best!

"Blogging" is a weird word, there's no way around it. Is there anything else like that? Besides dwork, of course, which looks a lot like dork.

I was listening to a This American Life podcast the other day and they were talking about the word "frenemy" and other similar types of words, that mash two words with a common sound together. They mentioned the word "anecdotage," which I think is awesome, and I think you might think it is awesome too. It is when a person gets to a certain age and starts re-telling the same anecdotes again and again and again. I'm going to try to work that into my everyday life sometime.