Newsletter – November 2008

From the Editor:

Giving Thanks

Maybe I’ve been a “foodie” my whole life. While as a child I am sure I would have told you that Christmas and my Birthday were my favorite holidays, I’ve always had a fondness for Thanksgiving. Now, as an adult, I have a deeper appreciation for the holiday. When else does our culture value traditional foods, preparing and eating a meal with loved ones, and giving thanks for the bounty from the Earth?

Even during my years of vegetarianism I made special foods for the occasion. I thought my roast “tofu-beast” tasted OK at the time, but is not something I would recommend anymore. Now I realize that traditional foods are wonderfully tasty and naturally filling. Thanksgiving is the one meal each year when you could serve a meal cooked entirely from Nourishing Traditions to any junk-food-junky and they would not think it was out of place.

Forget about the sugary store-bought cranberry sauce, marshmallows, and commercial pie. Roast a turkey stuffed with whole grain bread crumbs, vegetables, nuts or even fruit, roast squash and other vegetables, make a simple cranberry relish and pumpkin pie using natural sweeteners, share the meal with your loved ones, and cultivate an attitude of appreciation and thanks. Now there is a recipe for a wonderful holiday!

Enjoy!

~ Lisa

Return to top of page


November Events:

Wise Traditions 2008 Conference

The Wise Traditions 2008 conference is this month, and is the first West Coast conference!

Dates:
Friday, November 7 to Sunday, November 9, 2008
(with additional special events on Monday, November 10th)

Location:
Hyatt San Francisco Airport,
1333 Bayshore Highway
Burlingame, California 94010
(650) 347-1234
www.sanfranciscoairport.hyatt.com

Full Conference Registration for WAPF members is $400. Full Conference Registration for Student or Senior WAPF Members is $300. Register online here, or at the door.

We still have space available in my minivan for additional drivers/riders. We are planning to leave from Eugene Wednesday night, and return home Monday after the last of the events.. We may also still have room for one more person in the hotel room. Let me know if you are interested in carpooling or sharing a room.

More details about the conference can be found at: www.westonaprice.org/conference/2008/index.html

Return to top of page


Meeting & Potluck Dinner

Monday, November 17, 2008
6:00 to 8:00 PM

Location:
At the home of Sara Reilly
2455 Emerald Alley, Eugene
(just south of the university)

Directions: From the corner of 24th and Hilyard, go East on 24th about 5 blocks. Pass University Ave, and Onyx Street. Turn right in the first alley after Onyx (it is unmarked). 2445 Emerald Alley is a big house on the left with a stone wall in front of it. It is about half way down the alley.

Please park on 24th or 25th street because there won’t be room for everyone in front of the house.

Phone: Sara’s number is 345-6770

Please bring a Nourishing Traditions style dish and join us for some great food and great conversation! Families and guests are welcome. Please bring enough food to feed the size of your party and your recipe on a 3×5 card or notepaper.

RSVP if you think you will be attending so that we have a rough idea of how many people to expect (but feel free to just show up).

Our potluck meetings are regularly scheduled on the second Monday of each month. We have changed the day of the meeting this month, as the second Monday falls on the same day as the Wise Traditions 2008 Conference.

We also need volunteers to host the next few potlucks. Let us know if you would like to host one.

Return to top of page


“The Popcorn Review”

“Making Food Storage a Life Style”

by Russ Silver

Friday, November 21, 2008
7:30 to 9:00 PM

Location:
Market of Choice
67 West 29th, Eugene
Upstairs in the Community Room

This is a recording of Russ Silver, a Utah WAPF chapter leader, presenting a class on the topic of putting away food for long term storage. He says in this presentation that at one time he and his wife stored enough food to last them 7 years!

“Making Food Storage a Life Style” DVD was given a thumbs up review in the current issue of the Wise Traditions journal. Below is an excerpt. Please see the Fall 2008 issue for the full review.

He starts off with a brief summary of Dr. Price’s work, then discusses the need for soaking grains. Next, he talks about which are the good fats and explains how to render suet into tallow. At the top of his list of food storage recommendations is cod liver oil (good choice), coconut oil, ghee, and lard (not from the store). Other recommendations include dehydrated fruit and vegetables, canned fish, hard cheese coated with paraffin, jerky, pemmican and seaweed or kelp. He points out that seeds and nuts do not last very long in storage. He also goes into how to make no-kneed bread.

The presentation includes basic information about the principals of the Weston A. Price Foundation with an emphasis on storable foods. So, whether you are serious about food storage, as he is, or just putting away some food to always have on hand or in case of a winter power-outage this DVD has some interesting tips.

We are requesting a $5-10 donation to the Eugene Chapter at the door.
Space is limited, so please contact us to reserve your seat.
Return to top of page


 

Featured Recipe

Fermented Cranberry Relish

This is a recipe I came up with last year. It got very good reviews from everyone I served it to. The fermentation is optional, but should make it keep longer (if you can keep from eating it all). Recipe makes about 1 pint.

  • 1 bag (12 oz) fresh cranberries
  • zest of 1 orange
  • juice of 1 orange
  • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 c. honey or other natural sweetener
  • 1/2 tsp fresh grated ginger
  • 1/4 tsp unrefined salt
  • 2 TBS whey (optional)

Directions: Place all ingredients except whey (and honey* if using) in saucepan. Cook until cranberries pop and soften and mixture thickens. Let cool until tepid. Add whey and honey and stir. Place into 1-pint jar. Leave about 1/2” headspace. Screw on lid. Label and date.

Optional Fermentation: Let sit at room temperature for 1-2 days. Then place into refrigerator and enjoy.

Variations: adjust spices or add other spices to taste. Add more sweetening if needed, or leave tart by using about 2 TBS sweetener.

* In order to preserve enzymes, I prefer to keep my raw honey unheated.

Note: In the original recipe I used agave syrup as the sweetener, but after reading an article on the making of agave syrup in the summer issue of Wise Traditions I question the use of it. I am planning to try a cooked down pear or apple sauce as the sweetener this year. I’ll let you know how it turns out!

Newsletter – September 2007

From the editor:

Welcome, to the September newsletter. We have lots of wonderful events planned for this month!

Below you will find descriptions of our fall membership drive, the upcoming potlucks, cooking class and other events in September, plus a letter from our foreign correspondent (bet you didn’t know we had one, did you?) and our featured recipe.

This is our second month of the newsletter. So far the feedback I got on the first newsletter was all positive, so it looks like I will keep with the newsletter format. Please write me a quick note to let me know what you think. And feel free to forward the newsletter to anyone who you think would enjoy it.

~ Lisa


Membership Drive

September is our fall membership drive for The Weston A. Price Foundation.

By joining WAPF you will:

  • Receive the quarterly journal Wise Traditions. An information packed publication.
  • Support a wonderful organization that is one of the few groups speaking the truth about our need to return to traditional diets.
  • If you put my name (Lisa Bianco-Davis) as the person who referred you, you will help me win a free membership to the national conference in DC this November (I only need 8-10 more!).

This membership form has my name already on it. Please download the form, print it out, enclose your payment and give it to us at an event this month, or send it to our mailing address.

We are mailing the forms in together at the end of September to ensure that they are all counted towards the contest.

If anyone has been waiting to become a member,
now is the time!

Memberships are $40 (or $25 for students and seniors).

Membership forms are also available at our local events and on the WAPF website.

 


September Events:

Eugene Celebration

    • Saturday & Sunday, September 8th & 9th
      The Eugene Chapter of the Weston A. Price Foundation will have a booth at the Eugene Celebration in the non-profit area. We will be giving away information and free samples of sauerkraut and kimchi.Bring your friends and come by and say “hi”. We will also have Kraut Pounders and membership forms available.

 


Meeting & Potluck lunch

    • Monday, September 10, 2007
      Meeting & Potluck Lunch
      12:30 to 3:00 PM
      At the home of Victoria Schneider
      3245 West 16th, Eugene

 

    • Our daytime meetings are regularly held on the second Monday of each month. We have a different topic each month, and the potluck usually has wonderful foods. If you need driving instructions call Victoria

 


Meeting & Potluck Dinner

    • Monday, September 17, 2007
      Meeting & Potluck Dinner
      6:00 to 9:00 PM
      At the home of Victoria Schneider
      3245 West 16th, Eugene

 

    • This will be our last evening potluck of the Summer. Come enjoy the patio in the garden before the weather drives us inside. If you need driving instructions call Victoria at 343-3699.

 


HTML Class

An Introduction to HTML for the Absolute Beginner.
Learn How To Make E-Newsletters and Webpages.

I’ve had a number of people ask me to show them how I made this newsletter and the website, so I am offering an introductory class.

      • Tuesday, September 25, 2007
        Time: 7:00 – 8:30 PM
        Place: Oso Eco
        115 W. 8th Ave
        Suite 290
        (The corner building on Pearl and Broadway)Electronic newsletters, webpages and fliers such as this one can be created using simple tags that allow you to add color, backgrounds, columns, hotlinks and more.Use either a Mac or PC computer. No special software required!Use any web browser, such as Netscape, Explorer or FireFox, and a simple text editor such as Notepad, Word or SimpleText. In this class we will cover a basic introduction to HTML, including how to add:

        • background colors
        • headings
        • text
        • images
        • lists
        • tables
        • horizontal rules
        • buttons
        • hotlinks

         

        Suggested to bring:

        • Laptop computer
        • A little text to use for practice
        • A couple of small images
        • Ideas about what you would like to create

        The laptop computer is highly recommended, but these items are optional. If you don’t have a laptop computer you can still come and then do the exercises at home.

        Cost:
        Pre-register = $35
        At the door = $45

        Pre-Register for HTML Class Now


        You may pre-register online at:
        http://krautpounder.com/inv-pages/HTML_Class.html or by sending a check to our mailing address. Must be postmarked by Sept. 22nd to receive pre-registration discount. Please make payable to:

        For more information contact Lisa.

         


        Fermented Foods & Cooking Class

      • Sunday, September 30, 2007
        Cooking Class
        1:30 – 3:00 PM
        Washington Park CenterSample and learn how our ancestors made:

        • Traditionally prepared Sourdough Bread
        • Healthy Sesame Crackers
        • Fruit Kim Chi and traditional Kim Chi
        • Healing Bone Broth Soup Chicken and Beef

        Location: Washington Park Center
        2025 Washington Street.
        (West 20th Ave & Washington Street – On-street parking only)

Pre-register $10

 

    • Day of event $15

Pre-Register for Cooking Class Now


    • You may

pre-register

    • online or by sending a check to our

mailing address.

    • Must be postmarked by Sept. 27th to receive pre-registration discount.

 

News from Our Foreign Correspondent:
Raw Dairy in Paris

I received the following letter from one of our local members. I loved the quote from the owner of the cheese shop!

Hi Lisa,

I am one of your members who has been spending the summer in Paris, and thought you might be interested in hearing what my experience has been shopping for raw, organic dairy products here.

I had been led to believe raw milk was more widely available than seems to be the case. In the large central supermarket there is organic milk, but not raw. In the smaller shops you will not even find organic. I go to the weekly outdoor Organic Market, which is a fantastic resource, but requires a special effort to get to. There you will find every kind of product, including grass-fed meats, poultry & wild fish and raw, organic milk, cheese, yogurt, creme fraiche and butter, made of cow, goat and sheep’s milk. Many Americans shop there.

However, I stopped buying the milk because the sell-by date was usually only 1 or 2 days away and the milk turned sour too quickly. Also, the small cheese shops carry raw cheeses from all over Europe, and sometimes butter. Once I asked the proprietress whether all of her cheeses were “cru” or raw. “Madame,” she replied with surprise, “if you want pasteurized cheese you can go to the supermarket!”

Next week will are heading to the countryside, and then Greece & Italy-

– I will let you know if I find out anything of interest! I hope all is going well in Eugene. The website looks fantastic!

Sara

 


Featured Recipe

Here is a recipe for a beautiful pink kimchi. It is flavorful, but very mild. You can add hot peppers if you prefer it spicy!

Pink Kimchi

Makes 2 quarts

  • 1 medium head green cabbage
  • 2 turnips (Scarlet variety if available or substitute red radishes)
  • 1/2 cup grated dikon radish
  • 1 cup grated beet root
  • 1 TBS grated fresh ginger
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1/4 cup whey (liquid strained from yogurt)
  • 1 TBS unrefined salt

Directions: Coarsely chop cabbage, grate turnips, dikon radish, beet and ginger. Mix all ingredients in a large mixing bowl. Let sit for a few minutes to allow the salt to soften the vegetables. Pound with Kraut Pounder until vegetables have released their juices. Pack into 2 quart (1/2 gallon) jar, and press down with Kraut Pounder until vegetables are below level of juices. Leave at least 1″ headroom. Cap with lid, label and date jar.

Fermentation: Let sit at room temperature for 2-3 days. In cooler weather fermentation may take longer. Taste kimchi after 2-3 days and ferment longer if needed.

Store kimchi in the refrigerator or cool location. It will last for several months and improves with age. Serve with anything you like. It goes well served as a side with a cooked meat dish.

 


That’s all for now

Please join us at one of our upcoming events!

 

Newsletter – August 2007

Welcome to the first Newsletter of
The Weston A. Price Foundation, Eugene Chapter!

This Newsletter is taking the place of this month’s email reminder. It is my hope that the new format and hypertext links will allow you to navigate more easily.

Below you will find descriptions of each of the upcoming events in August, plus some special features on raw and organic milk, and a recipe for lacto-fermented root beer.

We’ve got some great things planned in the next couple months. You will find details below on an expanded, full meal cooking class on August 26th. Plus in September The Weston A. Price Foundation, Eugene Chapter will have a booth at the Eugene Celebration. We could use some help tending the table, so if you can spare an hour or two on September 8th or 9th, please let us know.

And finally, we are gearing up for a big exciting event at the end of September. We plan to have games for kids, educational talks and plenty of good food! Stay tuned for more details.

I hope you like the new look! It is my first attempt at creating an online newsletter or working in html. Please write me a quick note to let me know what you think of it. And feel free to forward the newsletter to anyone who you think would enjoy it.

~ Lisa

August Events:


Planning Session

    • Monday, August 13, 2007
      Planning Meeting
      4:00 PM
      At the home of Victoria Schneider
      3245 West 16th, Eugene
      We have canceled out regular daytime meeting in order to focus on the special events we are organizing for August and September. This meeting will be devoted to planning these events and assigning tasks. It is open to everyone, please come if you are interested in helping the Eugene Chapter plan some great events.Volunteers Needed.We are looking for people interested in helping out in the following areas:

      • Tending a table at the Eugene Celebration – September 8th or 9th
      • Assisting at the cooking class – August 26th
      • Keeping notes at meetings
      • Entering data into QuickBooks
      • Assisting with the big September event

      Also if anyone has experience with website building, especially in creating PayPal shopping carts, I could use help working out some bugs.

 


Meeting & Potluck Dinner

    • Monday, August 20, 2007
      Meeting & Potluck Dinner
      6:00 to 9:00 PM
      At the home of Victoria Schneider
      3245 West 16th, EugeneOur evening meetings are regularly held on the third Monday of each month. We have a different topic each month, and the potluck dinner usually has wonderful foods. If you need driving instructions call Victoria at 343-3699

Return to top of page


Cooking & Fermenting Class

Healthy “Family Picnic” Class

    • Saturday, August 26, 2007
      10:30am to 12:30 PM
      Washington Park CenterJoin us for our cooking class summer finale, and enjoy a full mealusing Weston A Price methods!Learn how to make:

      • Healthy Mayonnaise
      • Fermented Catsup & Mustard
      • Lacto-Fermented Pickles
      • Meatloaf with secret ingredients good for your heart
      • Ice cream with real cream, eggs and natural sugar

      We will also have healthy snacks for children to make and taste.

      Location: Washington Park Center (West 20th Ave & Washington St)
      2025 Washington St. (Washington Park, street parking only)

      Adults = $20.00
      Children over 12 = $5.00
      Children under 12 = free
      Childcare = $5.00 per child

      Pre-register by August 22nd. You may pre-register online or by sending a check to our mailing address.
      In order to ensure there will be enough food we will not be taking pre-registration after August 22nd or at the door. Class will be limited to 25 adults and 10 children.

      For more info contact: Victoria Schneider, CNT at 343-7046 or victoriacare@gmail.com

      Learn more about Lacto-Fermentation on the Weston A. Price website.

Return to top of page

Raw Milk

When Dr. Weston A. Price traveled around the world in the 1930’s studying isolated populations eating their traditional foods he found examples of cultures that had a high degree of what he described as “physical perfection”.

The diets of these healthy cultures were extremely different from each other, yet there were characteristics common to all traditional diets. Milk was consumed by some populations and not others, but in cultures that consumed dairy they used their milk products raw (in cultures that did not consume dairy products they ate some of their other animal foods, such as fish, meat and insects raw).

One of the main purposes for the system of local WAPF chapters is to connect people with local food sources. Raw milk is an important local food, and we receive many inquiries about where to obtain it.

We are fortunate that raw milk is legal and available in Oregon. You won’t find it in stores, but you can purchase it directly from local farms. If you would like to receive our list of local raw milk suppliers you can contact us. We will email you names of farms in the Eugene area that provide raw cow or goat milk.

If you are new to the concept of drinking milk in its natural unprocessed state, we suggest you read some of the articles and books on the subject or talk to those of us who have been drinking real milk for many years. Raw milk is a frequent topic at our meetings.

Below are a few links to articles on the web:
A Campaign for Real Milk
Milk: It Does a Body Good?
Raw Milk by Tom Cowan, MD
Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund
The Safety of Raw Milk
A Simple Change In Mindset: Learning to Maximize the Use of Your Real Milk and Cream
Food Borne Illness
Supplemental Report in Favor of Raw Milk

Books:
The Untold Story of Milk: Green Pastures, Contented Cows and Raw Dairy Foods. by Ron Schmid, ND
Suggested Reading

Return to top of page


The Cornucopia Organic Dairy Report

The Weston A. Price Foundation recommends consumption of raw dairy products from pasture-fed animals, but while in transition to traditional diets, many of us continue to purchase homogenized and pasturized yogurt, butter, sour cream, and such.

Organic standards for dairy cows require organic feed and “access to pasture”, however, the procedures, attitudes and ethics of those producing organic dairy products can vary widely. As organic foods become more popular, factory farm corporations are entering the market by meeting the bare minimum organic standards or by purchasing small organic dairies. As one would expect, these large companies are focused on profit rather than the health of their customers or caring for the land. Because of this consolidation of ownership, several popular widely distributed organic brands are not operating with the ethics you would expect.

If you are buying ANY dairy from the grocery store, please go to the Dairy Report and look up the brands you buy.

The Organic Dairy Report is the creation of The Cornucopia Institute, an organic watchdog group. “Promoting Economic Justice for Family-Scale Farming”.

The Cornucopia Institute’s national survey of organic products in the dairy case showcases ethical family farm producers and exposes factory farm producers and brands that threaten to take over organic dairying. With this Web-based rating tool, you can see which brands and dairy products found in your region are produced using the best organic farming practices and ethics. Based on a year’s research into the organic dairy business, the scorecard rates 68 different organic dairy brands and private-label products.Maintaining the Integrity of Organic Milk will empower consumers and wholesale buyers who want to invest their food dollars to protect hard-working family farmers that are in danger of being washed off the land by a tidal wave of organic milk from the rise of factory mega- farms.

A local Oregon dairy I often recommend, Noris Dairy, is an organic farm that is not yet listed in the Dairy Report. From what I can tell, they are an ethical small farm that produces milk from primarily pasture-fed cows. Their cheese is made from raw milk, aged 60 days. A local raw milk farmer visited the dairy herself, and decided to carry Noris cheese at her store. While their bottled milk and cream is pasturized, it is not homogenized. I also like the fact that their yogurt (while made from pasturized milk) does not contain powdered milk or other thickeners common in commercial yogurts.

Return to top of page


Thoughts About the Potluck

The potluck plays an important role in our local meetings. For many of us, learning about the Weston A. Price Foundation and the book Nourishing Traditions (NT) has meant re-acquainting ourselves with our kitchens, trying new recipes and using unfamiliar ingredients.

The potluck has several goals:

  • To provide an opportunity to make NT-style recipes for people who appreciate them.
  • To allow you to sample NT-style recipes made by other people.
  • To share good food in a like-minded community.

Nourishing Traditions contains a wealth of techniques. You are encouraged to bring a variety of dishes to the different events, and to experiment with different recipes. Come discuss your failures as well as your success.

I believe that food should be created and eaten with love and respect, and if making something for a particular potluck is an overly stressful event, I have always said that bringing something is optional. But please use this option only once in a blue moon. The rest of the time we expect you to bring some home-made NT-friendly food in an amount suitable for the number of people in your party.

Cooking NT food requires some foresight and planning. Our potlucks are a wonderful opportunity to try out some of these new recipes with people who share the goals of healthy, whole, unprocessed, local foods.

Guests and children are welcome at all WAPF Eugene Chapter meetings.

Return to top of page


Root Beer Update

Our July fermentation class was on the topic of lacto-fermented beverages. We had demos and samples of seven drinks and three fruit chutneys.

Those of you who attended know that I tried several attempts at lacto-fermented root beer. The results were interesting, but did not have much resemblance to commercial root beer. I have continued my experimentation. The last version of the root beer that we sampled (version 2 on your hand-outs with the variation listed at the bottom) has the most potential in my opinion, but it tasted too strongly of the roots. At home after the class, I diluted it with some of the honey and water. It now tastes much closer to a commercial root beer, but I still need to work on the carbonation.

Basically, the root beer, spice beer and ginger ale recipes each involve making an infusion of flavorful herbs, roots, spices or fruit, and then sweetening and fermenting the liquid. I found that it is very important to choose flavors you enjoy, and to avoid overpowering flavors (the licorice and molasses both overpowered the other flavors). In my next attempt I will reduce the amount of roots to the amount listed below. For those of you who did not attend the class, here is a quick recipe:

Root Beer

Makes 2 quarts

  • 1/2 cup Sassafras root
  • 1/4 cup Sasparilla
  • 1/2 cup sucanat
  • 1 tsp unrefined salt
  • 1/4 cup whey (liquid strained from yogurt)
  • Filtered water to make 2 quarts

Directions: Bring water to a boil. Add roots, spices, sucanat and salt. Simmer about one hour. Let sit covered until tepid. Strain liquid into a 2 qt (1/2 gallon) jar. When liquid is comfortable to the touch, add whey and mix. Add additional water if needed to make 2 quarts. Cap jar, and label with recipe name and date.

Primary Fermentation: Let sit at room temperature for 2-3 days.

Secondary Fermentation: Taste root beer. Transfer into canning jars or bottles with tight fitting lids or wire tops. Pour carefully and leave sediment in jar if desired. Prime bottles by adding an additional 1/4-1/2 tsp sucanat. Label bottles & let sit at room temperature for about an additional 1-4 days. (This is an optional step that allows for carbonation to create bubbles). Place into refrigerator & enjoy.

Taste root beer. If root beer becomes too tart or is too strong for your taste, dilute with water and add honey or other natural sweetener while serving.

Note: bottles must be able to withstand pressure, so use canning jars or bottles designed to hold carbonated beverages.

I will continue to keep you updated on any future improvements. If you experiment with any of the recipes and come up with something you like, please share your recipes! I will include them in an upcoming newsletter.

Return to top of page


That’s all for now

Please join us at one of our upcoming events!

Return to top of page