Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Wisdom Wednesday the First

"We stand now where two roads diverge. But unlike the roads in Robert Frost's familiar poem, they are not equally fair. The road we have long been traveling is deceptively easy, a smooth superhighway on which we progress with great speed, but at its end lies disaster. The other fork of the road—the one "less traveled by"—offers our last, our only chance to reach a destination that assures the preservation of the earth." — Rachel Carson

"Remember that happiness is a way of travel — not a destination." — Roy M. Goodman

"My address is like my shoes. It travels with me. I abide where there is a fight against wrong." —Mother Jones


"If you have knowledge, let others light their candles in it." — Margaret Fuller

Friday, October 7, 2011

Vegan Road Food, WI HAPPY VEG WEEK!


I've been a little concerned about road food...flying across the country with a bit of food for a day or 2 is one thing, but otherwise, worrying too much about food 4 days from now is a pain and possibly unnecessary stress. OTH if one feels like there is nothing to eat, that is also a stress when following a veg/an lifestyle/diet, so better to worry about it now and make sure something happens, than having issues on the road.

So I googled vegan road food, and here are some suggestions:
  • Subway Veggie Delight sandwiches
  • Bring a cooler -
BUT I wasn't planning on doing this, due to car real estate space, since this is a 'move' for me, and a flight across the country for my friend, and a scary trip for Sam the cat, who might prefer more room
  • Eat mostly fresh fruits and vegetables: Bananas, dates, clementines, celery, and handfulls of undressed greens - hmm...I don't think bananas and greens travel well, and find celery kinda bland...but the idea behind this might work: carrots, and especially apples are available on the road at lots of stops, and apples keep pretty well, and I can get some lovely Michigan apples to bring with, and of course nuts and dried fruits....
  • Pack a container of nut or seed butter, which makes anything palatable and keeps for days unrefrigerated. Also some sort of hummus
She also suggests a snack made of nuts and dates, etc. These ideas seem very reasonable - easy to eat in the car; full of protein, keep without refrig.

Our first couple of stops, in Madison, WI and then WI Dells, should be easy; in the first, there's a co-op there, and several restaurants that will have good vegan options, since it's a Uni town, and the Dells has a fave restaurant...

Some of the ones I wound like to try:
  1. thegreenowlcafe.com/, ALL VEG, 1970 Atwood Avenue, Madison - (608) 285-5290
  2. Himal Chuli, NEPALESE, Large selection of vegan dishes - seitan and tofu stir fries and curries. The veggie momocha's are vegan! 318 State Street, Madison, WI 53703-2021 (608) 251-9225
  3. Chautara, NEPAL/HIMALAYAN, 334 State Street, Madison, WI 53703-2021
    (608) 251-3626
  4. Kabul, AFGHAN, 541 State Street, Madison, Wisconsin 53703 (608) 256-6322
  5. Lao Laan-Xang, THAI, 1146 Williamson Street, Madison, WI 53703-4841 (608) 280-0104
  6. Baduang, INDONESIAN, suppliers of local tempeh, even to Co-op, 600 Williamson St. (608)255-6910
  7. Monty's Blue Plate Diner, AMERICAN, Bfast all day, separate Vegan menu 2089 Atwood Ave (608) 244-8505,
  • www.willystreet.coop/ COOP, 1221 Williamson Street, Madison - (608) 251-6776, 2 locations, and serve breakfast
Wisconsin Dells: always a favorite: the Cheese Factory, asking for vegan menu: http://www.cookingvegetarian.com/index.php

  1. non-perishables* in small packages, so leftovers aren't an issue
  2. standard vegan snacks: nut milks, juices, fruit, instant meals
  3. research - that's what some of these posts are about....
  4. ask the locals - Rachel Ray used to say that on her $30 a Day food travel show
*I have been eating cooked beans, straight outta the can lately, so that is one option NOT often included...no heat and eat :D

Another suggestion, this one from http://veganlunchbox.blogspot.com/2006/07/road-food.html: We don't like to eat out more than once a day when we're on vacation (too many other things to see and do), so I'll be packing a big cooler with...bars, plus tons of fresh fruit, veggie sticks, hummus, sandwiches, crackers, juices, and a jar of almond butter.


http://matadornetwork.com/bnt/the-ultimate-vegans-guide-to-finding-food-on-the-road/ suggests research, online and off, major cities shouldn't be a problem, go ethnic in restaurants for more veggie-based cuisine, shop at the Co-ops, various suggestions for int'l (not this time for us), and tuck a few protein bars in the luggage.

http://ask.metafilter.com/155811/Road-Food-for-vegans lists some books on the subject, though seems like the most up2date entries may be via smart phones....specifically the one I found, http://www.vegguide.org/, and also http://www.happycow.net/ AND I just learned from this that it's VEGETARIAN WEEK (Oct 1-7) so how apropos!

Monday, October 3, 2011

Distracted by Food and Foraging; and pink ribbons!

I cook with wine. Sometimes I even add it to the food. -WC Fields
We have issues with road food: one of us is vegan, another veg, but prefers vegan if possible. But that's in the future...after some research?

Food has been on my mind, as Sunday, after a cool-ish weekend in MI, including frost a couple of nights; Sunday turned sunny, and started to warm back up. Warm enough to wonder: are raspberry u-pick places still open? Mom and I had been talking about going all week, but then the weather was rainy &/or too cool.

So, after consulting the web, and the phone book, and the newspaper, we ascertained that we would have about a half hour of picking when we got there at 3:30, if everything hadn't been frozen out. Which it wasn't! (and the place actually was growing them in about 20 half-mile long hoophouses!)

Yay, Michigan, the foodie's cornucopia...I'll miss ya! Pricey raspberries, though we ate our fill, being you-pick, but then in our ambles we stopped by Vorachek's Farm, run by an old farmer who's ancestors were from Czechoslovakia. He had apples, but we were really interested in his grapes and pears....

Turns out the pears aren't popular! Strange.
The only ones he wanted us to pay for was the brownish Bosc pears still on the trees. There were bunches on the ground, of other varieties, in various states of wholeness and decay, and mom was like oh, such a waste, and Farmer Vorachek stated any we got off the ground were free. The picking was pretty quick, as was the foraging of (riper) pears from the ground. Some were eaten by animals, but there were lots, so I grabbed about a half bushel, and because they were riper, I have spent the last 2 nights cleaning and processing. Pears chopped, with a squirt of lemon juice, and a splash of alcohol like triple sec, or almond liqueur, and large dustings of cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamom. Nuke for a while, and they'll be nice and smushy-cooked, giving off some lovely pear juice. Lovely alone, or with ice cream or cottage cheese. These pears would be excellent for hard pear cider, but that is just too much time to invest, considering I'll be gone soon, and the folks aren't fans, even of the store-bought "fall" hard apple cider I bought at the store recently. I keep wondering if one of the bros.-in-law, how is a home-brewer, might be interested. ?

The other thing we paid for was Concord grapes:
Rather pretty fruits, and very fun, gnarly wood and curlicues on the vines (and the leaves are good for cooking, used in dishes such as middle eastern stuffed grape leaves). Grapes are very quick picking...one just cuts or breaks off the stem of the bunch, cleaning up any little dried or bad grapes, but each picking is a handful and these quickly add up to a bushel or a peck. Unfortunately, one can't make wine from these grapes, nor even cook with them, easily. Today, I was making a clafouti, to use up fruit, but then I didn't want to use the 3 cups of raspberries (since they were so pricey), that the recipe I found called for, so I tried to substitute concord grapes, but they were just too hard to seed. Mom did cook some down tonight, though I didn't taste 'em, as they are one of my less fave fruits, and I was chowin' down on my spiced nuked pears! ;D Anyway, apparently either the economy &/or supply are way off, because Welch's (grape juice and jelly) has recently laid off a 'bunch'* of people in MI. Too bad...mom and I were rather shocked at the waste of food...many of these fields were CHOCK full of fruits! That morning, mom had just gone to Ukrainian Orthodox Church wherein they memorialized the Holodomor, the enforced starvation genocide 'famine' enacted by Stalin. Such contrasts. People in Kzoo, MI, USA, world, going hungry, and food left to rot in the field.

Mom thinks it looks like France (but I remind her that only the fields with wine grapes are truly similar).

Also, while in the fields of grapes, I found, right there, at the foot of a Concord grapevine,
a giant puffball mushroom, which I picked. My folks are mushroom foragers, as are many Slavic families, and they love to go mushrooming, especially for Michigan morels, in the spring, and, in both spring and fall, for boletes, or Boletus species, also known as porcini from Italian, (but my folk call them in Ukrainian 'real' (правдиві, meaning 'real' or 'true', kind of like правда, ('truth', ha!) which was the name of the ol' commie paper in times past)). They never took a shine to the puffballs, even though they are rather easy to ID: cut through and it should be smooth and white, with no axials or growing parts, and I usually only pick the large ones, which are rather unmistakable anyway. I've also read puffballs are "choice", and especially good with eggs. I cooked mine in the pan where we had already sauteed store-bought button mushrooms in the evening, after dinner. The puffball was smallish, about like an extra-large softball. I caramelized 2 small red onions, added some garlic and parsley and olive oil, and sliced the puffball. It was a lovely white, with very little scent, until it started cooking. Then it became a creamy golden, and shrunk significantly, becoming more like a smooth cheese or poultry or shelf-stable/asceptic tofu in texture, and had a more pungent mushroom smell. However, I became paranoid about eating it; mom had the mushroom books out, and I was online reading about it. I finally packaged it up, and refrigerated it.

I decided that I would wait to eat it with eggs in the morning, considering that I would be going for my free "Pink (ribbon) Saturday" appointment, today, and, if I was ill...at least I would be in a building with a bunch of doctors. So this morning: scrambled eggs with carmelized red onions and puffballs; result: very tasty, mushroom-y, but I was a bit nauseous, partly with mushroom foraging concern, which is so not me, plus, my Sam was chewing on the chipmunk the folks had seen this AM, so that wasn't completely appetizing.

Anyway, thanks Gaia, pour les fraises, les poires, les raisins ;O et les champignons Puffball!

And thanks to all the supporters of pink ribbons for the free mammogram! As an uninsured woman, it's one less stress as I leave in 20 +/- days....



All images listed as public domain (no attribution necessary; searched google specifically: 'public domain raspberries/pears/puffball/pink ribbon' on 10-3-11); if this is in error please comment and the image will be correctly attributed.

Vegan Road Food coming!

Friday, September 30, 2011

Polyvalent Logic v3.1: Walk for Farm Animals

Polyvalent Logic v3.1: Walk for Farm Animals: This year, I'm doing something new: I'm participating in Farm Sanctuary 's virtual Walk for Farm Animals . (I'm doing the virtual walk--that...

Friday: September ending... (+labyrinths and links)

Today it's Friday, September 30, 2011; another month now in our past...feeling nostalgic and philosophical, I guess, maybe because today's web surfing is including several other key sites that will be convenient to visit and explore as we go cross-country, labyrinths!:

http://labyrinthlocator.com/  associated with http://www.labyrinthsociety.org/
http://www.labyrinths.org/lablocators.html


Also, registered for an account at, as 2sun:
http://byways.org/

Wondering about making stops with Sam the cat...outdoors is no big deal:  he has his shoulderbag carry(carried)-along BUT indoors...mostly not allowed.

Over and out, Sam and nb

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Hello Gaia!

T minus 30 -ish? and Counting! Definitely a month or less....

Yesterday, I went to M&M (another! M&M, I guess 3's a charm?) to get my car inspected and some screws un-loosened/found; Sam got his better fitting medium-sized harness, and he was pretty depressed about it...wouldn't eat treats until I took it off...it did kinda smell very plastic-y

Here's a moon calendar I made a few days ago, including a Scottish prayer* with the time of planning and voyage included:


A fun link I discovered this afternoon that kept me very amused: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/ Also some Route 66 and Route 40 things....

Hello Gaia! Hello Luna! Hello Hecate, and Happy Rosh Hashanah!** Hello Sam, again breakin' in the harness (and eating a couple of treats, hand-fed) ;)

Some of my things to do:
1) Car checkup - 3/4 done
2) Cat shots
3) Declutter, organize and purge
4) ...so much more....

Over and out, for now:
-Sam & nb

*http://www.llewellyn.com/spell.php?spell_id=4587
**http://www.llewellyn.com/spell.php?spell_id=4591