Mother Would Know

Home Cooking Beats Take-Out

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • About
    • About Laura / Mother Would Know
    • Privacy Policy
    • Websites I Love
  • Recipes
    • Browse All Recipes
    • Appetizers & Snacks
    • Beef & Lamb
    • Beverages
    • Bread
    • Breakfast & Brunch
    • Sweets
    • Fish & Seafood
    • Grains
    • Pasta & Noodles
    • Pork
    • Potatoes
    • Poultry
    • Salads
    • Sandwiches
    • Sauces & Condiments
    • Soups & Stews
    • Vegetables
  • Kernels of Wisdom
    • Browse All Kernels
    • Cooking Equipment
    • Definitions
    • Ingredients
    • Techniques
  • Archives
  • In The News
  • Work With Me
    • For Companies, Brands, & Trade Associations
    • For Individuals
  • Contact

Farm to Table for Everyone

January 23, 2012 by Laura Leave a Comment

Sharing is caring!

1 shares
  • Share
  • Tweet

Yesterday I had one of those spontaneous days when unplanned episodes ultimately fit together with surprising harmony.  It was supposed to be a Sunday filled with errands and cleaning.  Yet, by 11:30 am, I had deftly maneuvered off course, heading to the Smithsonian Museum of American Art and the National Portrait Gallery. If procrastination is an art form, then I am a 21st Century Michelangelo. 

If you’re in or near Washington DC – now or in the future – check out these recently renovated museums.  They are truly standouts in the treasure chest of Smithsonian jewels.  With 2 exhibits (Gertrude Stein and The Black List) and a concert (a group called Dance for the Dying – pictured below – in the Luce Center) under our belts, we wandered into the courtyard that connects the 2 museums where Farm to Table Family Day was underway.   

music concert in Smithsonian, Dancing with the Dying band

Without a young kid in tow, we may have looked out-of-place.  But no one seemed to notice or care.  At one activity table, I even got a sprig of lemon verbena to grow in my kitchen until I can move it to the tiny urban herb garden on my back deck.  After I gazed adoringly at the kids enjoying the hands-on exhibits and picked recipes for “apple lollipops,” we headed home.                                                                                                  

lemon verbena plant, herb growing in pot

I thought my Farm to Table day was ending as I played around with maple syrup and walnut covered apple pops.  Just as I put them in the refrigerator, a friend called with a last minute invite to a Sunday Night Suppers party benefitting for Martha’s Table and DC Central Kitchen. 

snack made of apples, walnuts and maple syrup

The meal turned out to be an amazing multi-course dinner cooked by executive chefs David Lawrence of 1330 on Fillmore  and Amy Brandwein of the Casa Nonna restaurants.  The food and wine were sublime, our hosts incredibly welcoming, and the other guests were marvelous dinner companions.  Not exactly hardship duty. 

chef David Lawrence and chef Amy Brandwein

The chefs – and yes, he really is that much taller than she is.

Certainly museum-based events and fundraisers are not going magically improve the world, or even a small corner of it.  They may not even be important in the grand scheme of anything – except as small parts of a much larger picture.  Our consciousness about the role of fresh, local food in health is slowly, but surely expanding and we have begun to see eating as a series of choices. 

Nutrition is no longer a boring subject taught only in classrooms.  Whether tending a school garden or painting vegetables and fruits, kids are being encouraged to connect healthy eating to their lives and to enjoy the process.  Access to fresh, local food is no longer considered just for the wealthy.  Organizations such as DC Central Kitchen and Martha’s Table bring the hope of fresh food and the message of healthy eating to people who would not otherwise have access to the bountiful harvests of local farms.  They also teach their clients how to moderate or change dietary habits that lead to obesity and other health problems. 

Canned food will no doubt remain part of food distribution programs here and elsewhere for the foreseeable future.  And no one should expect school kids of any income level to totally swear off fast food any more than I expect to lead a chocolate-less life.  Still, I see progress when the canned vegetables and fruit that were staples on our plates in the 1960’s have given way to directories of farmers’ markets all over the U.S. and widely supported efforts to give low income residents access to locally grown food.  

pamphlets from FArm to Table event at Smithsonian

Over the past week I was riveted by the Paula Deen story.  I noted that she published a cookbook of butter and sugar-laden recipes in October 2011, knowing that she was diabetic, yet with no suggestion that she couldn’t/shouldn’t eat her own recipes.  Alas, progress is not always uniform or in a straight line.  

As I checked out my new lemon verbena plant this morning, I felt as though the day of Farm to Table events was almost an antidote to last week’s news, or at least a deep cleanse, followed by a double shot of hope.  Not a bad way to start a new week. 

Filed Under: Archives Tagged With: charity, farmers market, herbs

« Wheat Flour Basics – Types & Terms Galore
My Slow Cooker Initiation »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Welcome!

Join me for cooking adventures. You’ll gain confidence in your cooking abilities, find new ways to save time and money when preparing meals, and discover recipes and tips. Plus, we’ll enjoy ourselves.

Get 5 easy tips for home cooking success, checklists & recipes.

We never share your information.

Search

Follow Laura Kumin-MotherWouldKnow's board MotherWouldKnow Recipes & Tips on Pinterest.

Copyright © 2010-2025 Laura Kumin · All Rights Reserved · Privacy Policy · Implemented by WPopt

1 shares
MENU & SEARCH
  • About
    • About Laura / Mother Would Know
    • Privacy Policy
    • Websites I Love
  • Recipes
    • Browse All Recipes
    • Appetizers & Snacks
    • Beef & Lamb
    • Beverages
    • Bread
    • Breakfast & Brunch
    • Sweets
    • Fish & Seafood
    • Grains
    • Pasta & Noodles
    • Pork
    • Potatoes
    • Poultry
    • Salads
    • Sandwiches
    • Sauces & Condiments
    • Soups & Stews
    • Vegetables
  • Kernels of Wisdom
    • Browse All Kernels
    • Cooking Equipment
    • Definitions
    • Ingredients
    • Techniques
  • Archives
  • In The News
  • Work With Me
    • For Companies, Brands, & Trade Associations
    • For Individuals
  • Contact