Saturday, December 12, 2009

When I´m not eating...




I realized that I´ve left out an important part of my life on the farm: working. While it´s true that "work" is sometimes a loosely-defined term, with afternoons spent in the kitchen making homemade veggie burgers or gooseberry-rhubarb jam, we do spend a good portion of our time doing activities that more closely resemble what one thinks of as "farm work."

Each morning, we meet Cynthia down at the house and go to the barn to feed the animals and clean their stalls. The work isn´t hard, especially with four or five of us doing it, and it is really satisfying in its routine and rhythm. When the calf is tied up outside, the bunnies are fed and watered, the stalls are shoveled out, the pig has its bucket of wheat germ slop, and the poultry are busily pecking at their corn and vegetable peel breakfasts, we let the cows in, and my favorite part of the day begins: milking. I´m at the point where I can do this on my own, though there are always at least two of us doing it together. the milking machine is very simple, and the whole process takes only about 15 minutes, but watching the milk move through the clear plastic tube into the milk can (which actually looks like what a milk can has looked like for probably more than a century!), pouring it into a bucket, and then using that same milk later in the day for cooking, or cheese making, is just a magical thing.




For the past couple of weeks, we´ve been working on an expansion of Cynthia´s larger fruit and vegetable garden. I remember when she first mentioned the project and showed us the spot, it seemed like a huge undertaking. We started by clearing a plot next to the current garden (which is about 24 ft by 34 feet, roughly). This was hard work and took a few days of pulling out thorny michay plants, and digging up extensive and stubborn roots. Next, we dug three new holes for fence posts and carried heavy trunk posts from up by the house and planting them in the holes, along with large holes and earth. Then we had to undo the chainlink fence and wires that held it taut, extend it around the new posts, attach it to a new portion of chainlink fence, stretch it, and attach it to the old fence again. After that, we started carting wheelbarrow loads of compost, making new beds, and planting potatoes, broccoli, lettuce, and chard. Finally, the new garden is pretty much complete, and it´s so satisfying to see what we´ve done! I´ve adopted Cynthia´s habit of exclaiming, "Hermoso!" (Beautiful!) every time I pass, often out loud. Unfortunately, I don´t have any pictures of it uploaded yet, but I¨ll put them up when i get them.
Cynthia´s goal in hosting WWOOF volunteers is more to teach all that she knows about self-sufficiency, which is amazing, because it´s much more like an apprenticeship than just a volunteer job, and not a day passes without learning something useful about gardening, animal care, or most fun, cooking and baking. We are just as often leaning over Cynthia´s kitchen counter as out in the garden, and so far we´ve learned how to make: two types of cheese, jam, dulce de leche, bread, veggie burgers, empanadas, canellonis, flower champagne, granola bars, yoghurt, and butter. These sessions are my favorite, and have made me realize how easy it is to make some of the things that I would only ever think to buy in the grocery store.
Below is a picture of the greenhouse at the elementary school that Sol, Cynthia´s 10-year old daughter, attends. Cynthia built this greenhouse with the help of some other parents, all but one of whom have since dropped off the project, unfortunately. The saga of the school garden project has a lot of disappointment and frustrations, but Cynthia´s resolve to provide fresh vegetables for the 200 K-7 students at the school has carried the project forward. We work there every Wednesday morning, and it´s been really amazing to watch it transform from it´s state at the beginning, when it only contained last year´s bolting chard plants, to its current status, filled with robust and happy tomato, corn, lettuce, and squash plants.




And finally, the baby pio-pio´s.




Tuesday, December 1, 2009

On eating, and carving out my own space

It´s the start of my fourth week here at Rincon del Sur. Anna, who was here when I arrived, left on Friday, and today two new girls arrived, and I moved into a tent. The weather has been chilly and rainy lately, but I´ve been looking forward to the move. Our days are full, and there´s a lot of togetherness. With the rain, it´s hard to go for walks, and quiet, solitary moments are scarce. The tent will be a sanctuary, and now, with five of us, I need it more than ever.

Last Monday we decided we wanted to have Thanksgiving, and when we told Cynthia, she was more than happy to help us out. We spent all day Thursday in her kitchen, and ate a huge Thanksgiving feast around 9:00 that night. We stuffed ourselves, and got to eat leftovers the next day for lunch, too, just like home. Here was our menu:

turkey and stuffing
raspberry sauce (it came out really well, and was delicious with the turkey)
grilled eggplant and squash
cornbread
potato and parsnip puree
apple crisp
butternut squash pie
homemade honey vanilla ice cream (everything but the vanilla was from the farm)

It was all amazing, but the feast was also kind of a turning point for us in our food-focused lives here. The next night, once we had finally digested, Aily, Lucy and I decided it was time for a bit of a scale-back. We went on a long, gorgeous hike on Saturday and Sunday, and are trying to take it a bit easier on all the fresh dairy and rich meals (so we used milk in our quiche tonight, instead of cream :).

Beyond just attempting to leave this place fitting into the clothes I brought with me, living with a family that makes the majority of its own food has changed the way I think about the food I eat. I know Cynthia enjoyed our Thanksgiving dinner, and happily donated whatever ingredients we needed from what she had. But as she dug in her freezer to find yet another stick of homemade butter for one of our many dishes, I couldn´t help but wonder what she really thought of our feast. Of course, it-s a holiday, and I´m sure a similar spread is prepared around here for Christmas. But I also know that in general, Cynthia and her family eat what they have--when there´s less milk because one of the cows is pregnant, they don´t drink as much milk, butter becomes a luxury, and cheese is a special treat. They eat fresh fruits and vegetables when they´re ready for harvest in the gardens, and preserved or frozen for the rest of the year, until they run out. Living like that makes you appreciate the work it takes to produce the food you eat, and makes you savor the meals you cook even more. And that´s a good thing.