Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Beans 'n Greens

The first winter storm of the season sent me hurrying out to the garden at 6:30 on a Sunday morning to cover fall crops.  The rain began to turn into sleet, and I picked a basket of greens before heading inside.  Stormy weekend days call for something cooking slowly in the oven.  Today, I quick soaked some navy beans hen folded the beans with herbs, tomatoes, onions, stock, kale, mustard greens and beet greens.  I brought the mixture to a boil before tucking it into a 225 degree oven for a few hours.  The recipe is based on Martha Shulman’s Slow-Baked Beans with Kale.  I don’t bother blanching the greens as Shulman specifies in her recipe.  This basic method is flexible and works with a variety of ingredients, so don’t be deterred if you don’t have the exact components.  Slow-Baked Beans with Kale is one of my favorites for nestling inside on chilly winter days, with the oven on low.



Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Hands in the Dirt

I debated the pros and cons of starting to clean up the perennial gardens versus staying inside on a rainy 40 degree day to clean closets and the oven.  Ultimately, I remembered a phrase a dear friend told me yesterday, “It was good because I got my hands in the dirt.”  Her mother is dying and now in hospice care.  My friend is an avid gardener, a true artist.  Gardening is therapy for her.  I thought of her throughout the damp, chilly morning as I trimmed perennial tops, pulled annuals and raked leaves.  
What is it about getting in the dirt that comforts us?  Is it the dirt itself, a physical reaction, primal, like putting toes in sand?  Is it spiritual, “from dust to dust?”  Is it therapeutic, like cleaning and organizing, only outside?  I recently listened to an “On Being” broadcast featuring an interview with Bessel van der Kolk.  He talked about the importance of action when dealing with trauma. He said, “as long as you move, you are going to fight.”  He discussed the importance of action in dealing with trauma, and how humans naturally want to help, move, and act when dealing with a difficult situation, such as hurricane damage.  This action keeps trauma moving through bodies, keeps it from getting stuck.  So maybe digging in the dirt helps us deal with whatever is happening in our lives, helps us keep things moving, keep things from getting stuck.
    It felt good to be outside, even through the day was cold and wet.  When I came inside, my skin was so chilled that the shower water burned as I began to thaw.  Here’s to friends, to mothers, to gardens, to dirt.