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Sour Pickle Spectrum

July 14, 2016 By Lauren

dill

It’s my belief that most things in life–health, sexuality, political ideology, spiritual inclination–can be found not within binary but somewhere along a spectrum, even things as seemingly simple as, say, pickles.

Go into any old-timey Jewish deli and you’ll see what I mean.  There on the counter near the register you’ll find two, often three great big glass jars of cucumber pickles: half-sours, sours, double-sours all suspended in murky brine. The sour pickle spectrum.

cukes

I, personally, like my pickles sour as can be.  Blame it on adrenal fatigue (and the subsequent craving for salt), blame it on a vata-imbalance and a constant need for grounding, blame it on my Iraqi heritage (my dad has this endearing habit of linking my love for any vaguely middle-eastern food–olives, pistachios, figs–to this), while you’re at it, blame it on my Polish/Ukrainian heritage or my Jewish heritage for that matter (I love how the boundaries between what is traditionally “Jewish” food and what is traditionally “Slavic” are so beautifully blurry), any way you slice it, there’s no denying that I fall on the extreme end of the spectrum.

And not to make other versions of pickles feel less than, but if I’m being completely honest the classic cucumber pickle is my pickle of choice.  It’s one of those foods that has made its way onto the plates of such seemingly disparate cultures: the bowl of sour pickle soup from Poland, the sour pickles served with timman from Iraq, the smoked-meat sandwich w/ a side of sour pickles from Montreal, the triple-cheeseburger with extra pickles from the U.S. of A.

pickledill

It’s a food that transcends borders.  One that feels familiar, conjures up some sense of nostalgia no matter what your cultural heritage (or ayurvedic dosha, for that matter).  It’s a food that, for me, signals the start of deep Summer when days are long and spent submerged in grass, or lake, or hammock beneath stretched hours of sun.  I find this kind of food-nostalgia, “comfort” food in the truest sense, to be deeply nourishing, chicken soup for the soul.

And, when made traditionally through the process of lacto-fermentation (using just salt, water and time), it’s a food that is brimming with probiotics, or the beneficial bacteria that hang out and help out in our intestines strengthening not only our digestive health, but our immune health, our mental health.  As my Ethnobotany professor used to say whenever a medicinal plant also happened to taste delicious, bonus!

salty

Deep Summer means jars of pickles with varying degrees of sourness fermenting in my cupboard for various lengths of time.  Waiting to be crunched into alongside BLT or leg of oven-fried chicken or diced into egg-salad.

The two main factors that affect the sourness of cucumber pickles are:

  1. The amount of salt added (more salt = more sour)
  2. The amount of time (more time = more sour)

This week I’m sharing my method for medium-sour pickles.  I invite you to experiment this Summer and see where you fall on the spectrum!

pickles jar

Sour Pickles

Ingredients

2 and 1/2 heaping tablespoons sun-dried sea-salt (like Celtic sea-salt)

4 or 5 cucumbers

3 cloves garlic, peeled

couple stems flowering dill

Directions

  1. Sterilize a quart canning jar by filling with boiling water.
  2. Slice cucumbers into wedges.  Drain water from jar and let cool.  Pack jar with cukes, garlic and dill, until jar is completely full.
  3. Add salt.  Fill jar to the top with cold, non-chlorinated water.  Seal and shake to distribute salt.
  4. Leave in a cool, dark place for at least 3 days.  (I like to ferment medium sours for 5 days).  (You can ferment these babies for months and months, BTW).
  5. After opening pickles, store in fridge.

 

Filed Under: Ferments, Recipes, Seasons, Sides, Summer Tagged With: cucumbers, ferments, lacto ferments, pickles, sour pickles, summer, wild fermentation

Unmade Hummus Salad + Everyday Beans

May 17, 2016 By Lauren

chickpea salad

My lovely friend Vivian wrote to me recently, wondering how to be sure she’s fulfilling all her nutritional needs during the week.

She’s vegetarian, but regardless of your dietary preference, it’s a darn good question and one that, in all our clamoring toward eating clean, we can often overlook.

And while it’s true that we all have different constitutions and some differing dietary needs, we’re also all just .01% genetically different from each other and there’s definitely (I’d say mostly) some dietary common ground.

So, to rephrase Viv’s question, how can we best nourish ourselves?  Week-to-week, month-to-month, year-to-year-to-year-to-year?

chickpeas

We’ve all heard there’s certain amounts of nutrients we need daily.  The recommended daily intake.   X amount of protein, fat and carbohydrates, x amount of vitamins B12, B9, x amount of minerals magnesium, zinc.

I say x amount because depending on what literature you’re reading, depending on what country you’re living in, depending on who you’re talking to, these amounts can, and often do, change.

Now, there’s a few things you can do with this information.

You can start weighing your food, ensuring that you’re hitting those numbers, however subjective they may be, those 46gs of protein (if you’re a woman), the 2.4mcgs of B12.

Maybe you take some supplements to make reaching those numbers a bit easier.

Or, you can just disregard them altogether.

You can start taking cues, not from numbers, but from ancestors, including those living (and thriving) in the Blue Zones, the places where researchers found a startlingly high number of centenarians, folks living up to and over one-hundred years.

soakedbeans

Blue Zones + Beans

The Nicoya Peninsula in Costa Rica, Sardinia, Italy, Ikiria, Greece.  These places have more in common than sunshine.  They have close-knit communities, active bodies well into “old-age”, well-worn ways to de-stress, ties to ritual, religion, family, tradition, including, coincidentally enough, tradition in food.

The diets of these communities have a few things in common: good fats, some nutrient-dense animal foods, some vegetables and lots and lots of beans.  Yes, beans.  In fact, if there were a Blue Zone food pyramid, beans would be its foundation.

mixedsalad

Beans are nourishing for so many reasons, not least their unique fiber/protein content.  Fiber and protein are the two most valuable nutrients in blood sugar regulation, which is essentially our bodies’ main mechanism for keeping us energized.

Beans stabilize the flow of food into our digestive tracts and stop food from being broken down too quickly (think of the sudden surge of energy and the resulting crash after say, satiating with a candy bar or a juice) or too slowly.

Much of the fiber found in beans is insoluble, meaning that it doesn’t get digested until it reaches your colon, where it then feeds bacteria that produce short chain fatty acids, which give fuel to the cells lining your intestinal wall, making it that much easier to break down and assimilate nutrients from food.

Beans also contain phytonutrients like flavonoids (all things anti-inflammatory) including quercetin (eases seasonal allergies), kaempferol (strong anti-oxidant) and myricetin (lowers cholesterol).  They also contain the mineral manganese, which helps keep the energy-center of our cells, the mitochondria, strong.

In short, beans keep us energized right down to the center of our cells.

Gives new meaning to the old hill of beans idiom, eh? (wearing my “Canada” hat whilst typing this).

tahinimixin

I eat beans nearly every day.  A miso-based salad dressing (fermented soy bean), peanut-butter toast (yes, the peanut is, in fact, a legume), baked beans w/ eggs over-easy, black-bean burrito, pea mint mash.  I soak a batch or two per week (ahem, soaked bean), rotating between black beans, white beans, green lentils, red lentils, flageolet, chickpeas.

I usually add them to rice bowls, or fry an egg on top of ’em, or smash them up on toast, or blitz them w/ some olive oil.

This salad is a result of a fridge full of chickpeas and a craving for something more substantial than hummus (or maybe an aversion to cleaning my blender).  It’s achingly simple to make, and I’d venture to say is even tastier after spending a few days in the fridge.

Getting into the habit of soaking and cooking beans once or twice a week is one way (and there are many others) to ensure all your nutritional needs are being met, and it even comes with the added benefit of connecting you to something much older than us all, to ritual, to tradition.

unmadehummus

Unmade Hummus Salad

For the dressing:

Ingredients:

  • 4 heaping tablespoons tahini
  • juice of 1 large lemon
  • 7 tablespoons water
  • pinch salt

Directions:

  1. Add ingredients to a jar.  Seal and shake.  The consistency should be runny like liquid honey, add more water if necessary to achieve this.

For the salad:

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups chickpeas, soaked overnight in warm water
  • 1/8 teaspoon baking soda
  • Some dried bay leaves and some whole black pepper
  • 1 whole bunch flat-leaf parsley, chopped thin (use the stems!)
  • 2 large carrots, grated
  • 1 shallot, minced
  • Glug extra-virgin olive oil

Directions:

  1. Drain and rinse chickpeas.  Add to large pot and cover with cold water.  Add baking soda, bay leaves and black pepper (these all help make the chickpeas a little easier to digest).  Bring to a boil and skim foam that rises to the top.  Lower heat, cover with lid and let cook until tender (30-45 minutes).
  2. Spoon chickpeas with slotted spoon onto clean tea towel in batches. Rub gently to remove skins.
  3. Add chickpeas, parsley, carrots and shallot to a large bowl.
  4. Pour over dressing and mix.
  5. When serving salad, add olive oil.  (This will help salad keep better in the fridge).  Serve over lettuce, with wheat-berries, wild rice, or just enjoy it on its own.

Filed Under: Bean, Dinner, Lunch, Plant, Recipes, Seasons, Spring Tagged With: beans, blue zones, chickpea salad, chickpeas, hummus salad, lunch, salad

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