Wednesday 1 December 2010

Please sir, can I have some more?

Hello all,
There's a decent reason as to why I have not been able to be very focused on writing up my blog in the last few weeks and it is this: poverty. That's right. I am el broke-o. Like pretty much everyone else in our blessed coalition country. Uni is 3 days a week so I'm only able to work 3 mornings and two full days Monday-Friday. I play hockey on Saturdays, no way I can give that up, so that doesn't exactly make me an employer's dream. I kept shopping out at the Slaithwaite community shop up until about the beginning of November when I existed for a couple of weeks on whatever was left in my cupboard and whatever I could steal from my lovely Sal.

Things have not progressed much in the pennies department but I do now have a little cleaning job on a Friday, just £25 a week but enough to buy food again. I've been shopping at our local tiny Co-op supermarket mainly. It's not felt great, having to go in there. Co-op is by far the best of the supermarkets (excepting Waitrose which we do not have up here), much of their food is fair trade, free-range or organic. Even their tuna is both dolphin friendly and sustainably fished. Obviously I only buy their British vegetables too. So it's not really the products that are the problem in supermarkets like this, it's the amount of waste they produce and the brand name products (Nestle, etc.) whose behaviour they support. It's hard to draw a line between what is OK and what isn't with ventures like this. You have to know so much about where everything comes from.

Still, I am not giving up! When I get more money on Friday I will be going out again to the Slaithwaite shop. I am looking forward to seeing what veg they have in at the moment, the earth is so frozen and snowy, I love to see what resilient veg has persisted with growing. The problem with having very little money is not that this shop is more expensive than the supermarkets, it's that what I would usually buy has changed from plenty of veg and fresh food, cheeses, fish and meats, to simply potatoes,  pasta, rice etc. I live with my good friend Ed now, and splitting bills means we can get a bit more. But still I am looking forward to a time when I can really afford to shop the way I want to. It makes me sad that the supermarkets, even if it's just the local Co-op one, have one up on me at the moment.

I'll do some research into super-cheap winter meals possible without supermarkets and let you know how I get on.

Lots of love to you all on this brilliant white snowy day,
Ash

Thursday 21 October 2010

Winter Recipes

Hello everyone,
Apologies for my recent absence, have been having Internet usage issues but these will hopefully soon be solved! I am popping in to give a little update and tell you a couple of recipes I have enjoyed recently. I still haven't been in any of the big supermarkets, but this doesn't include our local little Co-op which I have been in a few times. The main reason that this has been necessary is... tuna! I can't find it anywhere else apart from corner shops, and they do not stock dolphin-friendly sustainably fished tuna like the Co-op does. Some things this supermarket does well. However the amount of waste they produce rules them out as a permanent solution so if anyone knows where to get tuna please do let me know!

I'm now beginning to enjoy not going in the supermarket. I've found that I've stopped thinking about a lot of foods that I can't get easily out of the supermarket, and I am now trying to phase out foods I know are not available in the winter without getting them from abroad. Tomatoes, for instance. The ones grown in hot houses here produce the same level of Co2 as the ones driven over from Spain. There are a few hot houses in England that pump the gas back in to feed the tomatoes and so are virtually carbon nutral but I am going to have to find out which ones and how to know your tomatoes came from there. Do we need to eat these foods that are not naturally available to us at this time of year? I am thinking not. It's wonderful to eat seasonally, to let your diet change with the weather. Sal took me to the restuarant Mal Maison in Leeds a couple of weeks back and they had a locally-sourced seasonal menu. It was beautiful. Who needs a tomato?

OK and so to a couple of recipes using just such foods. The first includes smoked salmon which I did get from Co-op but there's no reason that you couldn't get some from a proper fishmonger, I just happened to have some in the freezer. It's a variant on a Slimming World recipe, so good for you too! The second recipe I sort of invented so hope you like it!

Season Salmon Pasta

Ingredients

Smoked salmon (as much as you want)
Leeks
Courgette
Brocolli
Onion and garlic
Whatever other seasonal veg you enjoy!
Pasta of choice
Creme fraiche or natural yogurt

Method

Cut off the brocolli heads and set them to one side. Chop up the remaining stalk into small bits. 80% of this veg's nutrients are located in the stalk and it is delicious so fry it up with the onion and garlic, yummy. Next chop up those courgettes and leeks and throw them in with the onion et al. Fry until they're as soft as you like them to be. Boil water and add pasta. Just before the pasta is ready, throw in the brocolli florettes and finish off cooking the pasta. Drain it then add the veg into it, along with your smoked salmon (cut up into strips). Then stir in a big dollop of creme fraiche or natural yogurt while it's over a low heat to warm it through. And that's it! Tasty.

Buttery Butternut

This is bloody lovely comfort food. It's autumnal and flavourful.

Ingredients

One butternut squash
Garlic
Butter
Feta
Cous cous
Veg of choice (I used courgettes, cabbage and leeks)

Method

Slice the butternut squash in half length ways. Scoop out all the seeds and stringy stuff then put a knob of butter where the seeds had been. Squish up some garlic and rub it all over the rest of the squash (not the skin, obv). Stick it in the oven for a good hour at around 200 degrees. When it's getting close to done, fry up the garlic and other veg (or boil, if you prefer) and set them aside. Oh, if you like things spicy, throw a little fresh chilli in with the veg if you like. Boil up the cous cous, it doesn't take long, 5-10 minutes. Dice up some feta and throw it in with the cooked cous cous. Then pull the cooked squash out the oven and fill the buttery hole with cous cous and feta. Serve it with a big helping of the veg. Bloody yummy.

So I hope that you maybe enjoy trying one or both of those meals. I will keep an eye out for more delicious tips!

Thanks for reading my possums,
Ash

Thursday 23 September 2010

Mortal Enemies

It's come to my attention, during this little exercise of mine, that the biggest enemy of nature is convenience. Virtually every conversation I have had with anyone who is not 100% into the idea of this blog, and there are certainly quite a few of these people (I do not mean this in a bad way, the purpose of this challenge is to change my life and help people change theirs if they want to, not to make anyone feel ashamed of their lifestyle choices), has come down to this one complaint: it just isn't convenient to shop ethically.

Humans discovered, many many many decades ago now, how to live with very little effort. We discovered how to produce enough food and collect enough water and heat to keep us alive, and give us the ability to procreate. So we have surpassed the basic goals for any living thing on Earth. Since then, we have been on a mission to fill our lives with things we enjoy, and that we want. Nothing wrong with that. And now that we have so many things we want in our lives, we need everything faster. We need everything NOW. I am as familiar with this feeling of impatience as anyone else on Earth. That's why I am trying to find ways to make ethical consumerism convenient. To make it those three Holy Grails of modern life: easier, cheaper, faster.

Yes, it's true, shopping outside a supermarket does require more planning. It does mean changing your routine. It does mean that the sheer, riduclous, enormous range of products you and I are used to buying may not longer be right at your fingertips. But it doesn't mean deprivation. It doesn't mean difficulty and it doesn't have to mean inconvenience. It means a healthier lifestyle, for you and your community. For the people who live and work around you. It means sutainibility. It means responsibility. And, at it's most simple and wonderful level, it means great food. Food that stays fresh in the fridge for a week longer than you expect because it hasn't flown over from Spain (really, it's a big perk how long veggies last). Food that is versatile, and contains only what it needs to. Food that's the same colour as it was when it was grown.

Here's a disturbing thought. Human beings are the only species on the planet that produce waste that does not go back into a life system. We are the only ones who throw away things that cannot be used again. The only animals who require land fills. We create so much more than we need, and we waste what we don't use. And that waste cannot be re-used. It cannot be put back into the ecosystem. It's a fact that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, it must flow into something else. Well most of our energy doesn't flow anywhere. It remains trapped in the piles of things we throw out. That's the big gripe about the supermarkets really, forgetting all the fair-trade stuff, the local stuff, their really big issue is how much they throw out, and how much it encourages us to throw out. My mum told me yesterday that it said in the paper this week that we throw out 67% of the dairy products we buy UNUSED in the UK. Can you believe that? I know I've done it, I bet you remember a time when you have too. And that's what changing your shopping habits can stop. OK, so I've only been doing this three weeks. But I can honestly say that in that whole time, I have not thrown out anything at all. I've had barely any packaging to throw out and what I have thrown has usually gone into the recycling. And that's not been hard, it's been completely natural because I haven't bought things I don't need. It's the first time in my life I can really say that and it feels good.

I encourage you all to have a go. Just to see that although it may not be as convenient as Tesco, it really isn't any harder. And you make a difference right away. It's the small steps that add up to the giant leaps.

Ash

Tuesday 14 September 2010

Fun and Frolicks in Farm Shops

Friday was officially 'Drive Around In The Rain Looking At Muddy Produce Day'! Hurrah. At last. Sal was up with her little car and therefore we had the means to go out investigating what the local area had to offer in the way of independent food and drink producers.

First stop was Hinchcliffe Farm Shop. They've got a temporary store at the moment due to expansion. The fruit and veg all looked good. I bought a large cabbage for 99p which I later fried up with chilli, garlic and onion and it was very tasty. We also bought two very large free range chicken breasts for £3, the same price as two small non-free range ones in the Co-op supermarket so that was gratifying. However, Sal informed me that the pork wasn't free range (she could see from the housing). This highlights the importance of asking if the meat you're buying is free range. Just because it's sold from a farm, does not mean it definitely is. Don't be afraid to ask.

Next we went in search of booze. Disappointment followed when we discovered Splash Winery had been shut down and even more disappointment came when we visited Holmfirth vineyard but they'd sold out of all their wines! It's fantastic though that they are in such demand. It was a beautiful location for a vineyard (minus the fact that it was pissing it down), good enough to match many I've seen abroad. The good news is that they are expanding and building a new shop and visitor's centre. Here are the vines themselves:


We popped into the village of Holmfirth on our way through and I called in at the local health food shop. They had a fantastic range of spices from Suma. I bought a fajita spice pack and made mexican spiced chicken in the evening and it was the best I've had, far better than Old El Paso or Discovery. For real. It cost 79p for the pack and I had enough to make chicken for three plus chilli for three the next day. Smashing.

Our last stop of the day was to Haigh's Farm Shop, just a couple of miles from Huddersfield. Places like this bemuse me. It had a lot of fresh produce but also a lot of frozen things and brand name products in bulk. Once again, don't assume that at a farm shop everything is fresh and free-range. However, I did manage to buy some just-out-the-earth beetroots. I've never cooked them before but after a couple of hours boiling they were bloody lovely on a salad. Also spotted free range eggs that were just £1 for 6 there so I will be returning for those most definitely.

And so that was the end of our little journey! Quite a productive day. I am very excited for the winter because Sal will be bringing me fresh game and fish from her parents' farm in East Yorkshire. I've never really cooked with either before and am looking forward to learning how to do it. You'll be along with me for every step, don't worry! I'm going to post a couple of recipes that include seasonal produce and are easy and cheap a bit later in the week, perhaps they might get you started.

Lots of love, grassy ones.
Ash

Monday 13 September 2010

Fresh and Funky

Wowzers!

Check out this delicious spread. This lost cost me £13 I do believe. It's all from the community shop in Slathwaite. And it's fantastic. I really urge you to use the link in my first post to find the nearest one to you. The shop itself was very small, but was packed with most of the things you'd need for your store cupboard and fresh products too.

So what did I get for my money?

A large handful of local mushrooms
1 x large head of broccoli
1 x very large local lettuce
2 x large carrots
1 x bunch of spring onions
1 x vine of tomatoes
6 x local free range eggs
1 x garlic bulb
1 x fresh chilli
1 x tub of veg stock
1 x tin of organic beans
1 x tub of apple and pear spread
1 x tub of grilled red pepper hummus
1 x large loaf of fresh baked seeded bread

I consider this to be a decent haul for the money I spent but if you've bought similar things recently and think you could shop this for significantly less at the supermarket then please do let me know. Something that made my soul sad for a moment occurred when I was paying for these delicious goods. The woman working behind the counter showed me a pack full of the new government guidelines that anywhere selling fresh produce has to adhere to. She was having to re-write all the signs on the fruit and veg to include their origin (something they do already) because they are no longer allowed to write simply 'local', they must also state UK. As if local could be anywhere else. What is worse, they are now required to label their goods either Class 1, in perfect condition, or Class 2, not fresh to the day or not quite perfect. Anything not meeting either of these criteria, including items that are perfectly fresh and healthy but have grown in an odd shape, bent carrots for example, are to be thrown out. We both exclaimed together that the whole reason people want to shop in places like this is because they don't want to produce excess waste and they don't mind what shape their carrots are. She assured me they would not be following this guideline and would still sell the sub-class fresh foods until someone came and shut them down. I told her to keep fighting the fight.

I've went to a couple of other stops last week too. I popped into the open-air market in Huddersfield. They had a lot of  very cheap fruit and vegetables but I noticed that a good half of the stuff on offer was neither local nor UK in origin. I suspect that this is not unique to this particular market so do keep an eye out when buying from stalls. However, I did managed to pick up two huuuuuuge potatoes, two large onions and two local courgettes for £1.09 which I felt was pretty reasonable. I also had a look in the health food shop. The shampoos and conditioners there were more expensive than I usually go for, though not as expensive as some of the leading brands. There was an amazing choice though, every kind of toiletry and cosmetics item was on sale in some eco-friendly form. I bought some washing up liquid, a big bag of cous cous, a tin of organic beans and some toothpaste. It came to around £6.

That's the toothpaste. It's on sale for around £2.60 Average price for a big tube of toothpaste. It's flouride free. All the ingredients are listed on the back, along with where they come from and what they do. It's slightly less viscous than you might be used to, and the mint flavour is less intense, but after the first use I have become completely used to it and now think no more on the differences. I am visiting the dentist in two weeks so we'll see what he thinks!

Here's the washing up liquid:

It's a small bottle of around 120ml but the stuff is very concentrated so you only need a tiny amount. It smells of pears, delicious. It bubbles up as much as it should do and is effective when soaking. I'll be using it again.

Last but not least it's my beans:


Beans, beans, the magical fruit... Yummy! The one on the left was 99p, on the right was £1.19. That's too much for a can of beans really but thought I would give it a go. Both are manufatured entirely in the UK. Both tins have a much more aromatic flavour than Heinz etc. and both I and my lady Sal, who also tried them, thought that this was a nice addition. She also noted that she got that feeling where she wanted to go on eating them even after she had finished, the same sensation she gets from Heinz. They are both slightly less orange in colour than the big brands and both the sauces are slightly less thick. Overall, the more expensive ones were a little nicer, a little richer, but the Biona beans would certainly do. Due to the price I'd opt for the cheaper version but I am going to research the leading beans companies and see if any could count as an ethical company because I know that in order for something like this to be successful it must also be affordable.

Going to write in the next couple of days about my day on Friday which I spent driving around with Sal to different farm shops. Will tell you a little of my findings about buying meat, something I haven't tackled so far. Let me know about anything interesting that you've been up to!

Much love little acorns,
Ash

Saturday 4 September 2010

Problems, Problems

The idea of this blog is that I want to make it easier for you guys to be a little more eco if you want to so any issues you are having please let me know...

Tina from Austria has asked me about toiletries and, having talked to my wonderful friends Emily and Jo they inform me that there are lots of cosmetic choices at those healthy living type shops, health food shops and the like. Most towns contain such a shop and the products are actually pretty wide-spread. What people don't know about is the bad effects flushing things like Pantene and Dove down the sink can have. This is an interesting article written by a woman who decided to find out what all the individual ingredients in her shampoo actually do:

http://ezinearticles.com/?Is-Your-Shampoo-Poisoning-You-and-the-Environment?&id=501590

The companies that Emily and Jo recommend are Faith In Nature and Natracare. I will buy some of these products on Friday and write a little review so we can see if they're any good. I am assured that they are. Ladies, they also do comepletely biodegradeable 'feminine hygene products'. This website will give you information on the health problems involved in these products, not to mention the environmental effect they have when they turn up, inevitably, in the sea:

http://www.sanitaryproducts.co.uk/

So it is possible to get naturally made toiletries that do not harm the environment at all. Whether they match up to the products we're all used to is something I will discover over the next couple of weeks and let you know.

Lots of you lovely people have been encouraging me with links of your own to sites that you've found useful and interesting in your own eco missions. I'm going to share these because sharing is caring:

Rachel Fox sent me this link to co-op style tea: http://www.justchangeuk.org/buy-tea
She also sent this campaign for paying living wages for clothes made at George Asda http://www.justchangeuk.org/buy-tea

Kat Darling shared this with me. They're a company that helps rural communities take control of the industry in their area, particularly food, so that everything is community owned. It's cool stuff http://www.plunkett.co.uk/

Meryl from Australia has shared a link to her blog with me. She chats about community gardens, shared spaces where you can grow your own food and share it with everyone else too! Neat http://tigheshillgarden.blogspot.com/

Keep on sending them folks. I will blog tomorrow about places around Huddersfield for shopping. If you've found somewhere fun near you that's eco-friendly then let me know, would love to hear about it.

Lots of love little peas.
Ash

Thursday 2 September 2010

A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step...

Greetings all!

Thank you for taking an interest in this little foody blog. No matter how vague that interest is, it is much appreciated. The blog is going to be all about my journey to shop more ethically, live sustainably, and ultimately reduce my carbon footprint as much as possible. I have no idea how long this will take so I am happy to have you along for the ride.

Today marked the first few tentative steps towards achieving the ultimate goal: Never go in a supermarket again. This is kind of a big stretch at the moment, one has to ease oneself in to such a project. So I began in the only place there is to begin anything: Google. It actually wasn't easy finding the hit words I needed to put in to discover what there was around Huddersfield in the way of ethical consumerism but once I'd found my way in I discovered some gems.

I want people to be able to read this and do the same thing for wherever you live so let's see what we've got in the way of helpful links... Aha. This is an excellent one:

http://www.farmshop.uk.com/

Go to that site, put in your town name in the top right hand search box and it will show you all your closest farm shops, farmers markets, and, randomly, B&Bs. Turns out there's loads going on around Huddersfield. Don't be afraid that if you live in an urban area there won't be anything, it's the cities that are actually best at this stuff. There's more in London than there are calories in a Wetherspoons Deluxe Burger (1,891 yummy cheesey bacony meaty calories FYI).

Next up on the menu are Food Co-ops which I truly couldn't have known less about before this morning. This is what the deal is- "The main principle behind all community run food co-ops is that by pooling their buying power and ordering food in bulk direct from suppliers, a group of people can buy good food at a more affordable price." Good affordable food. It's a win. Here's the site:

http://www.sustainweb.org/foodcoops/

They aren't just for fruit and veg, it's all about groceries so there are pulses and grains too, baking stuff, and as many of your store-cupboard needs as they can get. You can search on the site for your local one, and there are loads. Huddersfield most local one is Slaithwaite, 'The Green Valley Grocer'. It's run by volunteers and open a brilliant 6 days a week. Awesomes. They are in partnership with these geezers:

http://www.thehandmadebakery.coop/

Bloody lovely hand-made bread. The bakery is out the back of the shop but their bread is also avaliable all over the area so have a gander. Assuming there are similar baking initiatives everywhere but will have to do some more research to let you know how to find them. Both the Co-Op and the bakers are signed up to this scheme:

http://www.greenertogether.coop/

It's about getting a community of people together who are interested in reducing their carbon footprint by up to 20%. There are tips on their for instant cut-down on your footprint and there's lots more to come from them, including a set of questions designed to establish what your exact footprint is so that you can start work on reducing it.

Now for a real joy... veg boxes! If you've never heard of these schemes, basically a small independent company liases with local food producers to deliver a box of fresh veg to your door every week. You can have as little or as much as you want. This company delivers in the Huddersfield area on a Thursday:

http://www.theorganicfarm.co.uk/index.aspx?page=home

They're easy to find nationwide too, just hit up Google with the search term 'veg box' plus your town. These particular dudes do a box from as little as £7.50 (for all your veg needs that's actually pretty awesome. Think about how much money you might spend on a pack of three peppers from Tesco, around £1.80). The advantage is that all the food is local, as it comes, not sprayed with anything and best of all it's seasonal. There's research to suggest that eating foods that do not naturally grow in the season you are eating them in can mess up your circadian rhythms, making you feel tired and weighed down. They also deliver fresh milk and free-range eggs, all competetively priced.

Gonna finish up with this cool site:

http://www.lovefoodhatewaste.com/

It gives you millions of tips on how not to waste any food, including meal planners and what to do with leftovers. Nice looking site too. Have a peek.

Will post tomorrow about some cool places I have found for independent shopping around Huddersfield. In Dorset at the moment (king of organic counties) but when I am back I will pop round to them all and get a little review section going. After all, no one wants to eat bad food just because it's ethical. Gonna find them yums and share 'em!

Thanks for reading, little eco warrior.
Ash