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Flaugher Power

August 15, 2014 By Lauren

sacred foodNever before have so many been able to base their dietary choices on ideological principles.  From the ethical to the spiritual to the corporeal, labels like fruitarian, paleo, raw foodist, macrobiotic, vegan abound.  These labels are composed of specific sets of foods, sets through which good health can be attained.

As we’ve shifted from agriculture toward industry, we’ve shifted from village to city, collective to individual causing a sort of dietary amnesia that’s cut our connections with community and has made the pursuit of good health a blindly individualized one.

Our globalized marketplace has compounded this amnesia by disrupting seasonal food cycles of one’s region and confounding one’s sensibilities of regional foods.  It’s brought us fresh strawberries in January, coconut oil in even the most northern climates and has allowed for superfoods of Andean valleys and Himalayan peaks to be as casually consumed in North America as the potato, the cabbage, the onion once were.

A fruitarian living in northern Minnesota can subside on crates of bananas from Costa Rica, a vegan can obtain protein from Brazilian-grown soy, a raw foodist can make “cheesecake” from Indian cashews and Mexican limes.

Most of the time, good health is a value untethered to factors like regions, seasons, and community.

august's bounty

I spent this past week in Leelanau County introducing Lu to old friends & Michigan’s salt-less ocean.  While there, we visited two of my favorite cooks (and friends)–farmers (and siblings), Grace & David Flaugher.  The Flaughers never cease to amaze me with their sincerity, their humor & the ease with which they live so attentively with their land and their community, collectively, one might say.

In Honey From a Weed, a treasury of Mediterranean dietary traditions, Patience Gray writes,
“Good cooking is the result of balance struck between frugality and liberality…It is born out in communities where the supply of food is conditioned by the seasons…Once we lose touch with the spendthrift aspect of nature’s provisions epitomized in the raising of a crop, we are in danger of losing touch with life itself.  When Providence supplies the means, the preparation and sharing of food takes on a sacred aspect.” (Gray, 10).

sublimsweb

I came to know David at a bonfire on the chicken farm where Grace sometimes processed (slaughtered, de-feathered, de-gutted) chickens and I believe he was wearing a buckskin jacket he’d made from shot to stitch.  Naturally, talk soon turned to animal fats, raw dairy, and his illustrious cured beef (that, by the way, he’d rendered from his cow, and that, by the way, you can procure through the simple exchange of a ride home).  That kind of talk continued through a whole summer’s worth of good cooking as Gray describes–with foods grown or raised, harvested or slaughtered, gathered or milked by the hands of our community.

I believe Gray’s equation rings true for, not only good cooking, but good health, as well.  In 1939, Dr. Weston A. Price published the results of over 10 years of research on traditional diets.  He traveled to hundreds of cities in 14 disparate countries in order to understand how traditional and isolated communities without access to modernized health-care or modern nutritional knowledge were such excellent examples of good health.

He studied the diets of communities ranging from the isolated peoples of the Loetschental Valley in Switzerland to the Maasai of Southeast Africa to the Maori of New Zealand.  The diets he studied were comprised of vastly different foods, some with no specific foods, let alone superfoods, in common.  Thus, Dr. Price concluded that the most crucial component to outstanding health was not the implementation of a dietary label, a specific set of foods, but was, instead, the use of and the reverence for nature’s provisions.

That’s not to say there weren’t any commonalities between the diets he studied:  for example, dairy foods were always raw, grains were freshly milled and fermented, animals were hunted or otherwise raised on pasture, nuts and seeds were sprouted, vegetables and fruits were often fermented.  There was a common emphasis on fats–particularly animal fats–and on whole animal consumption (like organ meats! bone marrow! head cheese! fish eyes!).

We now have the scientific research to prove the nutritional value of these methods and principles, but how is it that so-called “primitive” peoples knew their value?  I believe that by being attentive to the rhythms of their lands, by tending to, not only their individualized good health, but also their collective good health they received, what many Price fans term, “nourishing wisdom.”  When we nourish our Earth, she nourishes us right back.

fire gathering

A pork liver from the pig David had slaughtered earlier that day, two pork steaks, some lamb meat from last season’s slaughter, new onions, new garlic, green onions, kale, peppers, squash, potatoes from Grace’s garden, goat’s feta from David’s goats, wild mushrooms, sourdough bread from the local bakery, more goat’s cheese from two local goat farmers, cider from the local cidery.

These foods, the fullness of our late summer season, sliced and seasoned and cooked in cast iron, spooned and forked onto our plates–plates laden with good cooking, good health–these foods that are super (for how can a potato grown by a friend, grown on the same soil on which our feet rest be anything less than super?), these foods that are sacred, these foods that refuse any outmoded dietary label, these foods that invite communal preparation, these foods that are enjoyed while gathered ’round a fire with dear friends, these are the foods for me.

Just call me a Flaugher-ist.

References:
Gray, Patience, 1986, 2009. Honey From a Weed. Devon, Prospect Books.

Filed Under: Sidenotes Tagged With: michigan, nutrition, realtalk

Milk, For All Its Worth

July 23, 2014 By Lauren

strawberry

Idioms of old illustrate esteem and success through the symbolic use of the fat content of milk: the cream of the crop, the cream always rises to the top, and the ever-shrewd cat who got the cream.  If we were to rewrite these idioms according to our current dietary logic their primary symbol would be, and pardon my pun, skimmed if not completely removed.  The cat who got the 1% milk or non-dairy substitute.

Fat’s dishonorable reputation has strongly shaped the character of one of our most fundamental foods.  So much so that our herder ancestors would be hard-pressed in recognizing our modern “milk” as the same nutritious and transformative food they so highly revered.  Once a whole source of macro-nutrients and a stellar source of micro-nutrients, milk has been dismantled–skimmed, pasteurized, homogenized–and, through this process, rendered nutrient-dead and, I would venture, detrimental to our health.

Milk has long been touted for its high content of fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K.  In our modernized dairying system, cream, or the fat portion of milk, is partially or fully removed lowering the bio-availability, or how active a nutrient is within our bodies, of those fat-soluble vitamins.  When only partially removed, the milk is homogenized, a process that involves the high pressure pumping of pasteurized milk through very small nozzles, so that its fat globules are reduced in size and thus evenly dispersed throughout the milk.  The cream never rises to the top with homogenization.  The benefits of this process are limited–milk “conveniently” no longer requires the quick dispersing shake it once did–while, from my vantage, the hazards are as manifold as in any processed food.  More specifically, I believe homogenization is so detrimental because it requires pasteurization, or the transformation of milk into “milk.”

Milk must be pasteurized either before or during homogenization to to prevent its enzymes from attacking the unprotected fat globules and producing off-flavors (McGee 23).  Pasteurization is a process of heating milk at extremely high temperatures for set intervals of time in order to destroy pathogens, or harmful bacteria.  In our modern dairying system–where milk is pooled from many different farms, where milk is drawn from often disease-ridden cows–this process is necessary.

However, pasteurization destroys, not only all bacteria, but also, as earlier mentioned, all enzymes.  Enzymes are complex forms of protein in our foods that, essentially, help us digest our food, absorb and assimilate nutrients from our food and, indeed, the test for successful pasteurization is the absence of all enzymes.

Pasteurization denatures milk in many other ways, as well: it reduces or destroys many of its vitamins and minerals–thus the fortification, or in more accurate terms inflation, of milk with the synthetic versions of vitamins it once inherently contained; it alters its amino acids lysine and tyrosine making the whole complex of proteins less available; it promotes the rancidity of unsaturated fatty acids; and it destroys the Wulzen or Anti-Stiffness factor. (Fallon 35)  There is even evidence that it may render lactose more readily absorbable, thus rendering milk all the more injurous for those with lactose-intolerance.

While many of us can lose our ability to produce the enzyme that facilitates the digestion of milk sugars–lactase and lactose, respectively–as we age, I believe our enjoyment of other dairy foods–cream, butter, ferments like yogurt and cheese–is not only a sustainable choice for those of us living in more Northern climes, but can also be a health-promoting one.

Choosing dairy foods that have been made from milk that is raw, that has been unaltered in all its nutrient-dense glory, is wise.  Enjoying one of these foods, namely cream, with the bounty of this sweet season, namely the last of summer’s strawberries, is self-love.

References:
Fallon, Sally, 1999, 2001. Nourishing Traditions. Washington, DC. Newstrends Publishing Inc.
McGee, Harold, 1984, 2004. On Food and Cooking. New York, Scribner.

Filed Under: Kitchen Essentials, Nutrition, Sidenotes Tagged With: dairy, nutrition, rawmilk, realtalk, wapf

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