Salad Salad Salad

Spring is here! Or maybe it’s almost here. What a sec. How will I know when spring has arrived?

For some, it’s the morel or the fiddlehead or the elusive ramp. For others, its the beading red-head of the radish, the curls of the first salad greens or the herb garden taking a stand. No matter you stance, for me, when I think of spring … I think of salad.
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Children of the Asphalt

It’s mushroom season in Russia, do you know where your babushka is?
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Success!

In total, today's three hour hunt produced about 5 pounds.

Finally, we found ourselves some chanterelle mushrooms!

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Immersed in the Northwest (weekly menu 8)

The local food movement is about place and the desire to reconnect oneself to foods that are either grown, raised or native to where we live. Learning the locality of our foods is not only a challenge to engage but an education to gain. For all of our technological gadgets and modern amenities, there is something romantic and pragmatic about knowing where you live and what foods are grown there. Some might say this is about redefining ‘home.’ Our sense of place effects our identity, whether urban or rural, rich or poor. The local food movement deepens this shift in self, now we can literally taste and smell and touch those earthly things that make our environment, home.
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Cuisines of the World Potluck – Denmark

This past Sunday my friends and I went to Denmark, Sweden, Norway, FInland and Iceland. Introducing the second evening of the “cuisines of the world potluck.” This week’s hostess took the group to her family’s roots, to the regions of Scandinavia. As you may expect, there were lots of potatoes, cream, meat and pickled vegetables. Included here are some of the dishes prepared and feasted upon by the 10 world travelers.
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