Monday, November 2, 2009

On a Sunday

As we noted before, we took the CSA bull by the horns right out of the gate and that has certainly kept us very busy as we sought and are seeking to create with the goodness we have been granted. We practice FIFO with our produce, which is embarrassing Accounting speak for first in, first out. While in accounting this counts for how you value inventory in your system, for us it is ensuring we are faithful in consuming and creating rather than adding to the waste.


[Wellhausen Farms]

We are improving our edibilities; that is, our ability to create edible(and delicious) food out of vegetables that we normally would have simply walked passed and ignored. Before you consult your dictionary on "edibilities," rest easy in knowing that it is simply the product of this crazy brain. Look for it in the 2020 Webster's, however(Goal #1:check).

The most noteworthy pick-up in my book from this week was our farm fresh eggs from free range chicken. This was something we were excited about picking up for a while, but we had no idea just how good they would be. All eggs are most definitely not created equal. God must have spent a little more time on them(obligatory N'Sync reference:check). Our customary Saturday breakfast is a scramble, which usually consists of onions, peppers, turkey bacon or sausage, country potatoes, and eggs. It is exciting to start traditions in our family of two that we will hopefully continue as we hope to eventually have children, grandchildren and so on. There's nothing like starting out a weekend with breakfast in pajamas. It sets a tone for the time away from work to be more restful and relaxing. We have found that when we start our Saturday doing things(whether they be errands, chores, etc.) it changes the way the weekend flows.

[4 dozen eggs from Wellhausen Farms]

This weekend, however, we were intentionally waiting out for Sunday morning so we would be able to create our usual scramble with our new eggs. When we went to pick them up, actually from the brother of the man that owns the farm, he let us know that we were in for a treat. We quickly scurried back home with scramble on the brain. Even as we were making it, we could tell a difference simply in the way it looked. The white was so much more substantial and the yoke a brighter orange.

[breakfast scramble - Wellhausen eggs]

As we finished up and begin to eat, we both gave each other the unmistakable look of utter enjoyment. It was so much more creamy and fluffy than any egg we'd ever had in our life. Unbelievably hearty and so fulfilling...we were truly shocked by how different they were. I am finding that as we take on this whole experiment and begin a new way of looking at food, that there are areas to wrestle with.

I have found this to be rather analogous to the life of following Christ. N.T. Wright spends much time talking about what the gospel means and doesn't and this regards the present world. The present world is not simply meant to get by and not care for because it doesn't matter. Rather, it matters so much, is God's creation and is the location of the kingdom He will bring. The gospel is a message of hope, that evil does not have the last word. In light of this, there is the challenge of "how then shall you live." How will you live in light of this understanding? How does this actually become a message of good news, and how do we translate that to the world? Certainly this is not something to be answered in a space this small, but is something that I hope to spend my whole life seeking to understand and pursue.

In this same way, as we discover these "new" methods of acquiring food, we are forced to consider what this means. While this is not the most expensive way to eat, it is also not the most inexpensive. It is a choice. A choice to eat more healthily, to support local farmers(and help ensure they do not become extinct on a smaller scale), and to root ourselves more to the land around us with the gifts it provides. Additionally, I could never have imagined I would ever spend so much on eggs(because being cheap is definitely in my nature), but I'm beginning to realize that my money is not simply an exchange simply for the tangible good. I can either use it to support a large aggressive money-making endeavor which simply uses and demeans chickens, or I can be a part of something that enables farms to continue, gives dignity to chickens, and actually produces a higher quality item. While described in this way, it may seem obvious, but its not. There are many subjects in life that deserve unsettling of the soul.

Is there anything you are wrestling with because based on what you know it begs the question, "How then shall I live?"*

-J.D.

P.S. Please enjoy some other pictures from this weekend as well.

*I realize that in asking people, it may assume I'm expecting many people to read and respond. I'm perfectly fine with that not happening, as it is something I need to continually have in front of me

[Apple Tart - Erehwon apples]

[roasted pumpkin seeds - Wellhausen]

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