Showing posts with label Baltimore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltimore. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

In My Kitchen, October 2023

Obviously in my kitchen in October is Halloween candy!

For more than half the month of October, we were out of town and eating mainly in restaurants, so not much has happened in my kitchen lately. Therefore this wrap-up will be short. I'm sharing my kitchen thoughts with the many other bloggers who summarize new foods and gadgets each month and link up at Sherry's Blog.

New from Trader Joe's: a nice French snack.
I had it waiting in the freezer for when we arrived home after a day in the car.

Brought back from our visit to Fairfax where there's a Wegman's.

On every trip, I get some new magnets and retire the previous batch from my refrigerator door.
These are from Monticello, Cape May, the National Zoo in Washington, and the Baltimore museum.
Also, Alice brought me a Daruma magnet from her trip to Japan. (I wish I had been there too!)

We've been eating simple meals, often made from pantry staples. For example, for this lunch, we had
sardines (from a can), sliced cheese, lettuce, olives, and stuffed grape leaves (another Trader Joe item).

Simple classic: roast chicken, bread dressing, cranberry sauce.

Len’s latest bread, with raisins and dried cherries.

Food Waste


In my kitchen is a new trash can. The old one was broken, so we had to get another one for household trash that can't be recycled or composted. Very unexciting, but it reminds me of an issue that’s getting a lot of attention these days: FOOD WASTE.

Potential mulch.
From start to finish, we are told, there is unnecessary waste at every step of the food chain. The wasted food represents an unproductive expenditure of energy. Piles of rotting garbage then produce methane and other by-products, and thus accelerate global warming. One household doesn’t make much garbage, but there are millions of us!
"According to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), approximately 31% of the available food supply is wasted, with 21% occurring in households and 10% in consumer-facing businesses....About 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions are linked to food loss and waste." (source)

Here in Ann Arbor, compostable household garbage is collected with the garden waste (like raked-up leaves) and is turned into usable compost. Nationally, around 27% of the US population has access to a program for composting food waste. (source)


A few big actions lead people to waste food in their own kitchens. Homes with children have many challenges with wasted food for a lot of reasons. In particular, if parents follow general advice on having children try new foods several times, waste is inevitable. Adult families create waste when we over-supply our refrigerators and pantries with food we don’t need or don’t manage to use. Whether the unused food goes to landfill or to composting facilities, it's still wasted.

What are people doing that results in so much waste?
  • Buying too much at the grocery store, especially produce, and then not using it in a timely way. You get a good deal: 20 pounds of potatoes and 10 pounds of onions at Costco. What happens to them?
  • Cooking a big quantity and not using the leftovers. Trying a new food and not liking it. Or just overfilling your plate: especially an issue at restaurants. Abundance is our enemy in fighting waste.
  • Purchasing unusual ingredients when planning to cook a complicated recipe and it doesn't happen — so you never need the materials. Or buying a big package/bottle/box of an exotic Asian sauce or special condiment that you only use once and throwing it away a year later.
  • Over-reacting to “sell by” and “best by” dates on packaged and processed foods. These labels encourage people to throw away still-usable food. We are now told that other than deli meats and a few other things, most foods are still fit to eat (if they don’t smell bad) for quite a while after the date on the package. I partly believe this, and try to make responsible trade-offs between eating something that might be too old, and tossing something that might be fine.
  • And just a seasonal note: in my experience, any leftover Halloween candy should be thrown out just before Valentine's Day. (For a more nuanced view on candy shelf-life see eater.com.)
Maybe you grew up hearing that you should clean your plate because there were starving children elsewhere in the world. (The exact spot where these children lived varied throughout the 20th century.) Maybe your mother or teacher said these hypothetical children would be thrilled if they were offered what you were rejecting. I have no idea if this ever made any difference in any child’s behavior.

Starving children are unfortunately still with us now, but I think we adults in the 21st century can find more useful motives for trying to be more responsible. If we want to combat global or local food insecurity, there are better ways than cleaning our plates!

Maybe it’s too late to undo global warming, or too depressing to think about it very much. No doubt though: global warming is clearly leading to crop failures and to starvation in Africa and other parts of the world. Overwhelming, isn’t it?



Neighborhood Update: Decorations at Night





Happy Halloween, Everyone!

Blog post © 2023 mae sander


Friday, October 20, 2023

Baltimore Follow-Up

At the Conservatory in Druid Hill Park.

Earlier this month, we spent a day in Baltimore. Miriam now lives there, and the rest of the family joined us for the day. The following day, we were heading for our birding trip in Cape May, NJ, so I didn’t post everything — here’s a catch-up post.

Miriam and Alice at the Conservatory.
Later in the trip we visited Alice in Charlottesville, which I’ve already written about.

A Farmers’ Market

Baltimore has several local farmers’ markets, which take place on various days of the week. Fresh produce, grown locally, is the centerpiece: we heard one shopper ask for bananas, and the produce-seller explained that bananas do not grow in Baltimore, so no bananas. Besides produce, there are also craft-vendors, bakeries, dairies, prepared food for immediate consumption or to take home, and a few street musicians. This one is an easy walk from Miriam's apartment, and luckily its day is Saturday, when we were visiting.











A Mexican Dinner

After a day of intense touring in Baltimore, we ate dinner at Bar Clavel.





Interior of Clavel (from the restaurant website, https://barclavel.com/)
We ate in this room, which was completely full as soon as they opened at 5 PM.

Alice and Miriam had Tres Leches cake for dessert.

On From Baltimore

After our day in Baltimore, we drove to Cape May for our week-long guided bird trip. I wrote several posts about our birding, but here are a few more photos about our activities.

We took lots of bird photos.

We had a fantastic trip in the Cape May harbor on the flat-bottom “Osprey.”



Blog post © 2023 mae sander.
Photos © by  mae and other family members.


Monday, October 02, 2023

At the Baltimore Museum of Art

The living room of Claribel and Etta Cone whose art collections now belong to the  Baltimore Museum of Art. The room has been reconstructed to accompany the display of their art collections. It seems that when the sisters needed more space for their possessions, they would rent another apartment in the building where they lived in Baltimore.

This painting of bathers by Cezanne was purchased by Leo and Gertrude Stein in 1904. At about this time,
the Cone sisters visited the Steins, who were family friends from Baltimore (where they all lived).
The Cone sisters, under the influence of the Steins, learned to love the modern art that was emerging then.
They bought the painting from Gertrude Stein in 1926.

Pierre Bonnard, “Luncheon Table,” 1908.

Henri Matisse: “Interior, Flowers and Parakeets”
This painting was one of Etta Cone’s favorites, acquired in 1925.

Detail of the Matisse painting, showing the drinking cup.
Detail of Matisse’s “Still Life, Bouquet of Dahlias and White Book”
Another drink image to share with Elizabeth’s blog party!

 From the Cone collection: Picasso, “Woman with Bangs,” 1902.
The Cone sisters visited Picasso’s studio with Gertrude Stein 
in 1903.

In the room with the Cone collection: a sculpture by Rodin.

At the Baltimore Museum of Art last Saturday, we enjoyed seeing the collections of the Cone sisters, Claribel (1864-1929) and Etta (1870-1949). Paintings and sculpture by Matisse, Picasso, Cezanne, and many others make up this remarkable trove of early 20th century art, which now belongs to the museum along with their enormous collections of furniture, jewelry, bric-a-brac, textiles, and more. I enjoyed this description of the two sisters from one of the many placards on the walls of the exhibit:

A PASSION FOR COLLECTING

The Cone sisters were ardent collectors. When drawn to a compelling painting, drawing, or sculpture, they found it difficult to resist its pull. The same was true of small items of lesser consequence that filled their drawers to overflowing. If the sisters found one piece of jewelry or lace delightful, three pieces delighted them even more. So they "bought passionately and by the dozens" and never threw anything away. The sisters stored their purchases in heavy chests and hundreds of beautiful boxes made of carved wood, leather, silver, lacquer, and brocade.

Dr. Claribel clearly understood her compulsion to collect. When tempted to purchase Indian silks she wrote, "I am beginning the buying all over again…how the Saris wind themselves about my very heart. Throat would be better, for they strangle out all other impulses.... Now that I stop to reason about it, it is silly foolishness, this collecting of things. But it must have some solid foundation — some foundation deep in the hearts of people.... It is the craving for beauty that is such a vital function of the human soul...."

A small part of Claribel Cone’s jewelry collection, as displayed in the museum.

 

Blog post © 2023 mae sander




Sunday, October 01, 2023

Street Art in Baltimore


We spent just one day in Baltimore to visit with Miriam, who is now living here. She guided us around town, and we managed to see quite a few really enjoyable neighborhoods and interesting places, including her local farmers’ market, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Rawlings Conservatory in Druid Hill Park, and a couple of very nice restaurants. As we walked and drove around the city, I saw an amazing number of really wonderful murals, street paintings, and other forms of street art. I got a few quick photos, which I’m sharing today. 












Quite a few food trucks around the farmers’ market are painted in fantastic styles.


In Miriam’s neighborhood, many row houses are painted in very vivid colors.
,,,


 Blog post and all photos © 2023.
Shared with Sami’s Monday Murals.