Posts Tagged ‘spring’

16.04.2010

It’s about me

Today is my 27th birthday. I’m not usually one to make a big deal of getting a year older, but for today’s post I wanted to write a Happy List, to share with you some things that have been making me feel good lately.

What is a Happy List, you ask? Well, it’s just as it sounds– a list of things that make me happy. I used to write them all the time when I was younger and needed to cheer myself up for some reason or other. Try writing one sometime. They’re lots of fun, and your list will change as quickly as your mood does, if you’re anything like me. Today’s list will have 27 items, one for each of my years. :)

Happy List: April 16th 2010 edition

1. spring

2. dark chocolate w/ mint

3. herbs (especially thai basil and shiso)

4. Anne Carson’s Autobiography of Red

5. Marisa Monte

6. butterflies


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05.04.2010

The Forbidden Ramp

I hope everyone had a wonderful Easter weekend. The weather around here was unbelievable, really. We had planned to spend the whole weekend hiking, but took Saturday off to relax on a blanket in the park, marveling over the unprecedented April warmth.

Do you know what these are?

On Friday at Oka (a lovely National park, in a village which is known in Canada as the site of the Oka Crisis) I spotted a few little spots of green among the brown leaves on the forest floor. I immediately knew what they were, and went closer for a better look. They were ramps! It was so exciting to find edible (and delicious) plants growing when I hadn’t even been looking for them. There was only one problem. That being that ramps are on the endangered list in Quebec, so we are supposed to leave them alone.

Lots of wild, onion-y goodness.

So, the very anti-climatic end to this story is that despite my joy at finding these lovely wild ramps, I decided to leave them in the forest where they were. Well, except for the few that I picked and tried raw, straight from the soil. They had a good, strong allium taste, so I was lucky enough to go on tasting them for the next hour or two (aka onion/garlic breath, big time).

We considered picking a few more to put on the banh mi’s we had packed for lunch, but decided against it in the end. I consoled myself about leaving the ramps with the thought that we still had a few hours of walking ahead of us, so they likely would have been pretty wilted and heat-weary by the time we got them home anyway.

Here’s a little more information on ramps: at The Forager Press, and The Atlantic.

And if you’d like to read about the Oka Crisis of 1990, the link will take you to the Wiki article.

So, are you much of a forager? Have you tried ramps? If so, did you buy them or pick them yourself?

love,
meg

Update– I watched an excellent documentary on the Oka Crisis, by Alanis Obomsawin. The entire film is available to watch at the NFB site here: Kanehsatake 270 Years of Resistance.

09.06.2009

2009 Farmer’s Shincha

farmer's shincha

farmer's shincha

This spring I ordered shincha (new tea) from Japan for the first time. I have been drinking loads of sencha (at least a pot a day) for the past few years, and was excited to try the first tea of the year this May. I ordered from Hibiki-an, and chose their ‘aracha’ or ‘farmer’s shincha’. I chose this tea mainly because of the amount offered– a lot of the other new tea was sold in very small quantities. Buying 40g of tea at a time really doesn’t do me a lot of good, because I go though it very quickly. (more…)