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Entries in Green Living (6)

Thursday
Apr222010

Celebrate Earth Day!

Today was Earth Day. A few weeks ago, having been reminded that this day was on the horizon, I did a little online research and was astounded to find out that Earth Day is actually 40 years old. For some reason I have always thought of most "green initiative" activiites as being relatively new, and I suppose that in the scheme of things 40 years old is relatively new (and if that's true, then 33 years old is down right infantile). Maybe the reason that this surprised me so much is that I've never really paid all that much attention to Earth Day. The concept of Earth Day always brings to mind a conversation I remember having with my mother about Grandparents Day: I asked her, umpteen years ago, why, if there such events as Mother's Day, Father's Day, and Grandparent's Day, wasn't there a Kid's Day? Here answer was that every day is kid's day. Just the same, shouldn't every day be treated as Earth Day?

Maybe the best way to celebrate Earth Day is to make a pledge, on this day, to celebrate and protect our planet every day for the next year, and every year thereafter, by making just small changes one at a time. Making just one change at a time keeps me from feeling overwhelmed, and focusing on that change for an extended period of time helps me to really internalize the change, to make it a long term lifestyle change instead of a temporary one that will come and go as quickly as any fad. We have been working on making little changes for quite some time now, but the following is a list I found in an article on the Care2 website and it seems like a good place to start. I have highlighted the changes we have already made in our household, and clearly it has taken us more than a single year to complete even those changes, but whether the transformation is quick or drawn out, any improvement is better than none at all.

Months 1-3: Your Kitchen

  • Replace food in kitchen with organic, whole foods.
  • Replace plastic cooking utensils with wood or bamboo.
  • Replace Teflon and aluminum cookware.
  • Switch to nontoxic cleansers.
  • Safely dispose of toxic cleansers.
  • Install a water filter. (on our list for this month)


Months 4-6: Your Body

  • Replace formaldehyde-treated linens with organic.
  • Replace dry cleaning with laundering.
  • Replace commercial wash detergents with eco-products.
  • Replace skin care products with natural, organic products.
  • Avoid using “disposable” products of all kinds.


Months 7-9: Your Home

  • Replace toxic carpets with renewable wood or bamboo.
  • Dispose of toxic pesticides for natural repellents.
  • Purchase an air purifier. (on our list for this summer)
  • Replace pressboard furniture with renewable wood pieces.
  • Use alternative building materials for renovation projects.
  • Use low VOC paints in place of toxic brands.


Months 10-12: Your Energy Use

  • Drive your car less and walk, ride a bike, or share rides.
  • Keep your car tuned and/or buy a hybrid.
  • Wash your laundry with cold water.
  • Insulate your home to cut down on energy use.
  • Replace incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs.
  • Replace commercial batteries with rechargeable batteries.

Wednesday
Feb172010

A word about Freecycle

It's exactly what is sounds like—a hybridization of recycle and free—and it's a bit like garage saling any time of the year from the comforts of your home. More importantly it is a community based network of people who care about getting stuff moved in to homes where it will be used, and keeping it out of the landfill. These are things we care about, too, so we joined our local Freecycle group in January. Since then we've found new homes for three boxes worth of stuff from our basement that was slated for who knows where (it failed to sell at a garage sale two years ago, and wasn't the Salvation Army's style), and have given a new home to two phones, a book shelf, a large set of holiday window clings, and, my favorite so far, a huge box of fabric, all for the grand total of zero, zilch, nada.

Being a community based network, Freecycle is different in every location and the value of your local group depends entirely on the people who make it happen. Ours is a very active place. It is run as a Yahoo group and works through group messages—each message posted is a new item either being offered or sought. One of the things I like best about Freecycle is that as a poster of an item I am completely free to choose its recipient; my stuff doesn't have to go the first responder, but can go to the person who is the most polite, seems to have the greatest need, or strikes me as the one who will enjoy the item most.

Garage sales, thrift shops, and Craig's List are a big part of the living green lifestyle—the more stuff that we can repurpose, reuse, or recycle instead of buying new, the more we will save not just in terms of our bank accounts (although that's true, too), but also in terms of materials and energy. And let's not forget how fantastic it would be to decrease our nation's dependency on material objects, too many of which come from other countries. There is a whole world of people out there who care about these principles, and you can find some of them on Freecycle.

Monday
Sep142009

Quick, easy, healthy breakfast every day

While most of our culture places the greatest weight on the final meal of the day, dinner, we think breakfast needs far more attention than it gets.  Weekday mornings can be hectic, but that doesn't make breakfast any less important.  For a while we were buying frozen breakfast foods, but not only is this expensive, it also exposes the family to those dreaded pre-prepared meals we try so hard to avoid, meals that tend to be higher in salts and/or sugars than their homemade equivalents, and run through a variety hands and machines before landing in our homes, making them more susceptible to contaminents, such as BPA.  You've heard me rant about it before, but this isn't just a rant, it's a simple solution for at least one problem area.  Taking time to make a fresh breakfast every morning is out of the question in our house, so one day every weekend we make a big breakfast of either pancakes or waffles and foil up the extras (foil, remember, can be recycled and is devoid of the concerns associated with plastic wrap) to be dropped in the toaster throughout the coming week.  Make those pancakes or waffles whole wheat for an added health benefit, and add pecans for additional protein.  We top them with fresh fruit for added nutrition!

Whole Wheat Pancakes

Ingredients:
  ● 2 c. whole wheat flour
  ● 3 tbsp. sugar
  ● 1 tsp. salt
  ● 3-4 tsp. baking powder
  ● 1 1/2 - 2 c. milk (depending on how thick you like your pancakes)
  ● 2 eggs
  ● 5 tbsp. oil

Directions:
Mix dry ingredients together. Beat eggs well. Add milk, oil and eggs to dry ingredients. Mix well.  Pour 1/4 cup onto a preheated griddle and flip when bubbles start to pop and surface begins to appear dry around the edges.  Add chopped pecans, blueberries, or other fillers by sprinkling onto wet surface a few seconds after pouring pancake onto griddle.  You can spoon a little extra batter over top of the fillers if desired.  Undercook slightly any pancakes that you wish to keep for plopping in the toaster later in the week.  This recipe makes enough for us to eat on the weekend and have letovers for Calvin during the week, so double it if you need more extras than that.

Thursday
Feb192009

Stuff

This is by no means new, so you may have already seen it. I saw it for the first time last spring and I stumbled upon it again today as I was wading through old bookmarks on my computer. It's really an interesting view and can be very eye-opening.  Check it out when you have a few minutes!

http://www.storyofstuff.com/

Wednesday
Jan072009

Minimalism in the Pantry

I wanted to share an excerpt from a great article that was in the New York Times Dining & Wine section about cleaning out the cupboards for a healthier and tastier new year. This is from "Fresh Start for a New Year? Let's Begin in the Kitchen," written by Mark Bittman on January 6, 2009. Read the excerpt below or click here to go to the original article.

OUT Packaged bread crumbs or croutons.

IN Take crumbs, cubes or slices of bread, and either toast evenly in a low oven until dry and lightly browned, tossing occasionally; or cook in olive oil until brown and crisp, stirring frequently. The first keep a long time, and are multipurpose; the second are best used quickly, and are incomparably delicious.

OUT Bouillon cubes or powder, or canned stock.

IN Simmer a carrot, a celery stalk and half an onion in a couple of cups of water for 10 minutes and you’re better off; if you have any chicken scraps, even a half-hour of cooking with those same vegetables will give you something 10 times better than any canned stock.

OUT Aerosol oil. At about $12 a pint, twice as expensive as halfway decent extra virgin olive oil, which spray oil most decidedly is not; and it contains additives.

IN Get some good olive oil and a hand-pumped sprayer or even simpler, a brush. Simplest: your fingers.

OUT Bottled salad dressing and marinades. The biggest rip-offs imaginable.

IN Take good oil and vinegar or lemon juice, and combine them with salt, pepper, maybe a little Dijon, in a proportion of about three parts oil to one of vinegar. Customize from there, because you may like more vinegar or less, and you undoubtedly will want a little shallot, or balsamic vinegar, or honey, or garlic, or tarragon, or soy sauce. ...

OUT Bottled lemon juice.

IN Lemons. Try buying six at a time, then experiment; I never put lemon on something and regret it. (Scramble a couple of eggs in chicken stock, then finish with a lot of lemon, black pepper and dill; call this egg-lemon soup, or avgolemono.) Don’t forget the zest: you can grate it and add it to many pan sauces, or hummus and other purées. And don’t worry about reamers, squeezers or any of that junk; squeeze from one hand into the other and let your fingers filter out the pips.

OUT Spices older than a year: smell before using; if you get a whiff of dust or must before you smell the spice, toss it. I find it easier to clean house once a year and buy new ones.

IN Fresh spices. Almost all spices are worth having. But some that you might think about using more frequently include cardamom (try a tiny bit in your next coffee cake, apple cake, spice cake or rice pilaf); ground cumin (a better starting place in chili — in fact, in many bean dishes — than chili powder); fennel seeds (these will give a Provençal flavor to any tomato sauce or soup; grind them first, or not); an assortment of dried chilies (I store them all together, because dried chipotles make the rest of them slightly smoky); fresh — or at least dried — ginger, which is lovely grated over most vegetables; pimentón, the smoked Spanish red pepper that is insanely popular in restaurants but still barely making inroads among home cooks; and good curry powder.

OUT Dried parsley and basil. They’re worthless.

IN Fresh parsley, which keeps at least a week in the refrigerator. (Try your favorite summer pesto recipe with parsley in place of basil, or simply purée some parsley with a little oil, water, salt and a whisper of garlic. Or add a chopped handful to any salad or almost anything else.) And dried tarragon, rosemary and dill, all of which I use all winter; mix a teaspoon or so of tarragon or rosemary — not more, they’re strong — with olive oil or melted butter and brush on roasted or broiled chicken while it cooks, or add a pinch to vinaigrette. Dill is also good with chicken; on plain broiled fish, with lemon; or in many simple soups.

OUT Canned beans (except in emergencies).

IN Dried beans. More economical, better tasting, space saving and available in far more varieties. Cook a pound once a week and you’ll always have them around (you can freeze small amounts in their cooking liquid, or water, indefinitely). If you’re not sold, try this: soak and cook a pound of white beans. Take some and finish with fresh chopped sage, garlic and good olive oil. Purée another cup or so with a boiled potato and lots of garlic. Mix some with a bit of cooking liquid, and add a can of tomatoes; some chopped celery, carrots and onions; cooked pasta; and cheese and call it pasta fagiole or minestrone. If there are any left, mix them with a can of olive-oil-packed tuna or sardines. And that’s just white beans.

OUT Imitation vanilla.

IN Vanilla beans. They’re expensive, but they keep. (If you look online you can find bargains in bulk, which is why I have 25 in my refrigerator.) If you slice a pod in half and simmer it with some leftover rice and any kind of milk (dairy, coconut, almond...), you’ll never go back to extract.

OUT Grated imitation “Parmesan” (beware the green cylinder, or any other pre-grated cheese for that matter).

IN Real Parmigiano-Reggiano. Wrapped well, it keeps for a year (scrape mold off if necessary). Grated over anything, there is no more magical ingredient. Think about pasta with butter and Parmesan (does your mouth water?). But also think about any egg dish, with Parmesan; anything sautéed with a coating of bread crumbs and Parmesan; or asparagus, broccoli, spinach or any other cooked vegetable, topped with Parmesan (and maybe some bread crumbs) and run under the broiler; how great. Save the rinds to throw in pots of sauce, soup, tomato-y stew or risotto.

OUT Canned peas (and most other canned vegetables, come to think of it).

IN Frozen peas. Especially if you have little kids and make pasta or rice with peas (and Parmesan!); not bad. Or purée with a little lemon juice and salt for a nice spread or dip. In fact, many frozen vegetables are better than you might think.

OUT Tomato paste in a can.

IN Tomato paste in a tube. You rarely need more than two tablespoons so you feel guilty opening a can; this solves that problem. Stir some into vegetables sautéed in olive oil, for example, then add water for fast soup. Or add a bit to almost any vegetable as it cooks in olive oil and garlic — especially cabbage, dark greens, carrots or cauliflower.

OUT Premade pie crusts. O.K., these are a real convenience, but almost all use inferior fats. I’d rather make a “pie” or quiche with no crust than use these.

IN Crumble graham crackers with melted butter and press into a pan. But really — if you put a pinch of salt, a cup of flour, a stick of very cold, cut-up butter in a food processor, then blend with a touch of water until it almost comes together — you have a dough you can refrigerate or freeze and roll out whenever you want, in five minutes.

OUT Cheap balsamic or flavored vinegars.

IN Sherry vinegar. More acidic and more genuine than all but the most expensive balsamic. Try a salad of salted cabbage (shred, then toss with a couple of tablespoons of salt in a colander for an hour or two, then rinse and drain), tossed with plenty of black pepper, a little olive oil and enough sherry vinegar to make the whole thing sharp.

OUT Minute Rice or boil-in-a-bag grains.

IN Genuine grains. Critical; as many different types as you have space for. Short grain rice — for risotto, paella, just good cooked rice — of course. Barley, pearled or not; a super rice alternative, with any kind of gravy, reduction sauce, pan drippings, what have you. Ground corn for polenta, grits, cornbread or thickener (whisk some — not much — into a soup and see what happens). Quinoa — people can’t believe how flavorful this is until they try it. Bulgur, which is ready in maybe 10 minutes (it requires only steeping), and everyone likes. If you’re in doubt about how to cook any of these, combine them with abundant salted water and cook as you would pasta, then drain when tender; you can’t go far wrong.