Food, food culture, food as culture and the cultures that grow our food

Ladies who drink bubbles on a Friday afternoon

May 7, 2005

Good friends and exemplary ladies Quirine and Helena celebrate the opening of their new offices in the Amsterdam Post CS with some bubbles. Their film Celebration, a documentary about the Florida town of the self-same name and the desires of its quirky inhabitants premiered in January at the Rotterdam Int’l Film Festival. Ladies Jans P., Quirine & Helena and I celebrate until the happy hour develops into a pale liquid dinner. We speak about all manner of things unspeakable, (food) taboos, anorexia in terms of objects, and we’re glad we got that off our chests! We devise plans to optimise an upcoming Belgian shopping trip but there’s really no reason to name names unless they want to start sponsoring us. Life is fine when one’s own life is grist for the mill.

Monday evening 09.05.05 at 09.05 at Club 11, Mediamatic will host the Mobtagging Salon which will feature past works by our Ladies, including excerpts from one of my favourite of their films, The Tower, a spooky documentary about a castle inhabiting aristorcratic hippy family. That’s my kind of people.
(Please read more… )

debra at 10:26 | Comments (0) | post to del.icio.us

Fallen Fruit

red apples, yellow apples going to waste in a California front yard
Red apples on the left, yellow apples on the right. All of the apples were going to waste.

As a fan of food foraging and fruit stealing, and as a woman who had never bought fruit except for bananas, mangos and the occasional avocado until she moved up North to the Polar Circle, I applaud the Fallen Fruit Collective for cultivating the culture of gleaning. Dave Burns, Matias Viegener and Austin Young started out by mapping the ripening fruit in their own Silverlake California neighbourhood (in LA). Think globally, act neighbourly.

For those of us not fully familiar with Leviticus chapter 19 verses 9-10, it calls upon us farmer-gardener types not to pick our fields clean, but to be a tiny bit sloppy and leave some food at the edges for the poor and the strangers. If you’ve ever taken a walk in a California suburb, you will be amazed at the sheer volume of fresh fruit growing at those edges and dripping down into the street. Fruit trees burgeoning with apples, figs, apricots, peaches, bananas, oranges, lemons, limes, loquats, cumquats, plus raspberry, ollalaberry and blackberry bushes are ubiquitous and seem never to get harvested, as if everyone was trying to get off easy on all that sinning by leaving the edges of their yards to the poor and the strange.

For those of us not fully familiar with the laws of the City of Los Angeles, one of them dictates that the fruit of trees leaning over public property is free for anyone to pick.

Aware that an abundant crop of delicious fresh fruit goes unharvested every year, artist collective Fallen Fruit distributed maps of areas of Los Angeles with the locations of the fruit trees ripe for picking. Imagine that the city is a huge supermarket, and the streets are the isles. There are avocados on Tularosa Dr. and there’s a ‘HUGE FIG TREE’ on Larissa near Sunset Blvd. Peaches and loquats are on Marcia Dr. and if you ring the doorbell, the peach lady on the corner will invite you into her back yard to take as many zucchini as you like.

Fruit foraging image by Fallen Fruit dot org - used with a degree of permission
Under the cover of darkness, the Fallen Fruit collective on a gleaning foray

Fallen Fruit set about mapping all the free fruit it could find and encouraged others to do the same. On their website are a number of maps that tell you where there’s free fruit for the taking. In addition they call upon everyone to petition their city councils to exclusively plant fruit trees, to create an abundant supply of free fruit in the city. Private homeowners are asked to grown fruit and vegetables at the perimeter of their property, that everyone can experience the unbeatable taste of freshly picked – and almost stolen – what seems like forbidden fruit.

debra at 1:58 | Comments (0) | post to del.icio.us

Scared of a little granola perfume

May 6, 2005

In Dutch we have a term, ‘doorheenbijten’ that means literally ‘to bite through something’. We use this term to describe the painful process of exploring unchartered territory. Think for just a moment about what could have motivated someone to invent such an idiom. Now, think about the circumstances that would have caused an entire culture to embrace this idiom enough to use it regularly!

The images above show the author about to take her first bite of paan without any idea what paan could possibly smell, taste or feel like. It is quite strange to try something with very little previous reference, and having never tried chewing tobacco, paan was unchartered territory for me.

In a neat little kiosk by the side of the road the paan wallah prepared the leaf for me with all manner of goos, crystals, flakes, shavings and sprinkles - none of which seemed familiar. Although I would like to say that I bravely put the roll into my mouth and enthusiastically started chomping away, the photograph above reveals the utter lack of trust and relax I had in approaching this new foodstuff. You can also see how such an utter lack of trust and relax results in a particularly unaesthetic portrait. That fact alone should be motivation enough to drop some food taboos.

Good news is that as I reported earlier, paan is delicious, something like eating granola perfume. And like the photograph that I keep of myself in the freezer to remind me of what I looked like in a bikini in 1998 (to avoid an over-consumption of ice-cream), I have decided to keep this picture at hand to remind myself to be more trusting of new foods.
(Please read more… )

debra at 12:36 | Comments (1) | post to del.icio.us

« Previous Page | Next Page »

culiblog is a registered trademark of Debra Solomon since 1995. Bla bla bla, sue yer ass. The content in this weblog is the intellectual property of the author and is licensed under a Creative Commons Deed (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5).