Friday, October 15, 2010

HABA BUILDING BLOCKS

Which building block sets produced by the German toy company Haba (or Habermaaß) are the best value? I came up with a list of the most popular basic sets of Haba building blocks, and figured out the per unit price. (This list doesn't include any of the specialty architectural sets, just the sets that the average enthusiastic parent would buy for his or her kid.) The conclusion of the price survey is that the smaller sets with the most unique or complicated elements are the most expensive. The simple block sets are the least expensive. Unusually, buying a set with a larger number of blocks does not decrease the per-unit price.

* Haba First Blocks, $32 for 6 blocks = $5.33/block

* Haba Patience Blocks, $15 for 3 blocks = $5/block


* Haba Discovery Blocks, $28 for 6 blocks = $4.67/block

* Haba Pixie Blocks, $20 for 7 blocks = $2.86/block


* Haba Kaleidescope Blocks, $36 for 13 blocks = $2.77/block


* Haba Clown Blocks Large Set, $44 for 41 blocks = 93c/block


* Haba Building Blocks Extra Large Starter Set, $110 for 102 pieces = 92c/block 

* Haba Clown Blocks, $33 for 28 blocks = 85c/block

Haba Colored Building Blocks, $36 for 30 blocks = 83c/block


Haba Baby's First Blocks, $15 for 12 blocks = 80c/block


* Haba Building Blocks Large Starter Set, $90 for 60 blocks = 66c/block

Haba Building Blocks Starter Set $40 for 26 blocks = 65c/block


Total number of blocks: 334, total number of blocks = 499, average price of block = 66c/block
WHY PLASTIC TOYS ARE BETTER FOR BABIES
"Paper Versus Plastic," or Pre-Motherhood Presumptions Versus Motherhood Reality, Infant Toy Edition

WinkelBefore I had my kid, I was positive that my little darling would only play with wooden toys that had been lovingly whittled by Alpine dwarves.

Then I actually had a kid, and discovered, when they are very young, babies do much better with plastic toys made from petroleum products that club baby seals and contribute to the Great Pacific Trash Patch.

Of course, the paper/wood versus plastic debate is much more complicated than "natural" versus "unnatural," so guilt isn't necessarily required, but in case a rationalization of plastic is necessary, here are my pragmatic reasons for preferring plastic toys in many cases, and why I haven't looked back.

SkwishPlastic toys are both lighter and less dangerous. Very small babies can't really hoist any kind of substantial wood rattle, and it's hard to find ones that are even small enough for baby hands. Plus, as my mother so wisely pointed out, when they're young, babies hit themselves in the face with everything. They just don't know any better.

So as much as I love Manhattan Toy's Skwish in theory--it's a beautiful, entertaining, intelligently designed open-ended toy--it wasn't the right purchase for our baby at three months. For a new baby, Manhattan Toy's Winkle is a much better choice!


Fisher-Price Rock-A-Stack
Melissa & Doug Rainbow StackerAnother example of where organic wooden toys lose out to good ol' American plastic, at least when it comes to entertaining the littlest patriots, is the plastic Fisher-Price Rock-a-Stack versus the wooden Melissa & Doug's Rainbow Stacker. Back before I actually had a kid, when I was insisting on natural materials only, I ordered the Melissa & Doug Rainbow Stacker, even though I'm not a fan of M&D toys as a rule (I find many of them to be cheaply made).

We got the classic Fisher-Price Rock-a-Stack as a gift when Jackson was born, and I remember scoffing a little. "Plastic! Look at this silly thing with the ridiculous foil shiny thing inside the top ring. They couldn't even make it a real rainbow, they ruined it putting those dumb little balls in the top half of the red ring. And why does it rock?! What kind of ridiculous popcorn-button-on-the-microwave unnecessary extra feature is that?" 

Of course, six months later, the Rock-a-Stack is the undefeated champion of playtime, and the Rainbow Stacker sits unused in the closet. Jackson loves the balls in the red ring, he likes to make it rock, he can actually get the rings off and play with them, and I don't worry one bit when he teethes on the fat, squat, yellow ring-holder-thingy in the middle. The rings on the M&D stacker, on the other hand, are heavy and hard for him to lift and manipulate, the red ball rolls away (and reminds me of a scary clown nose), and I'm always worried he's going to gag himself when he tries to chew on the tall, skinny wooden stick in the middle. The Rainbow Stacker might be a great toy for a three-year-old, but it's not a good fit for my baby at this stage. 

Plastic wins again!


Sassy Simple Fascination Station
Once I accepted that plastic is not just OK for the baby, but very possibly better in some cases, I found that I was particularly enamored of a lot of pieces from Sassy Toys. They're seemingly well-made, and if nothing else, they're very well marketed to the high-strung mama who wants her kiddo to have the most highly developmental toys. (Not that mama doesn't know perfectly that her kid, and most kids, would have just as much fun playing with an old toilet paper roll.) 

Our favorites items so far from Sassy are the Ring O' Links (I'm also thinking of getting the Bright Starts links, to see how they compare), the so-called Fascination Station, which keeps Jackson busy in his high chair for long stretches, and their penguin-fugu-whale-Nemo-mysterycreature baby bath toys. (On the other hand, Jackson is largely uninterested in the Sassy Ring Rattle and the Sassy Spin Shine Rattle. He's just never liked holding them or inspecting them.)

Sassy Ring O' Links Rattle Developmental ToyThe links (more on those later, because they are excellent) and the high-chair toy, on the other hand, positively fascinate him.

What are your favorite plastic baby toys? And/or your favorite demolished pre-mother assumptions?

Thursday, October 14, 2010



Unsolicited Advice for New Moms


An acquaintance I know from work is about to have her first baby. I sat down to email her a couple bits of advice and ending up saying quite a bit. I thought I might post it here for anyone else who's about embark on this adventure.


• If you're planning to breastfeed and you have any problems at all, run do not walk to your nearest Pump Station (one on Wilshire in SM and one in Hollywood on Vine). They are superheroes and they will save you if you need saving.

• If you have any real questions about the baby's health, well-being or medical anything, almost every answer you could possibly hope for is in Dr. Sears' Baby Book. It was of great comfort to me in the early weeks, and still is, and I got rid of virtually every other baby guide, just because they got ignored in favor of Sears! I also like his breastfeeding book, but really, if you have any breastfeeding problems at all, go to one of the new mom breastfeeding support groups at the Pump Station. The first one is free and they rock.

• For the first few weeks, write down every pee, poo and feed. If you are like most new moms, you will not be able to remember anything for more than 20 seconds, much less 20 minutes. Having it all written down is a tremendous help.

• If you don't have one already, consider getting a sling, even just one of the really simple New Natives ones, which are great for newborns. Being able to have your hands free and/or go to the bathroom while keeping the baby calm and hopefully asleep is a tremendous relief.

• When the baby is ready to start "playing" in a couple weeks, the Winkel and the O-Ball are great for tiny little hands.

• Watch a swaddling video online now, because it's harder than you'd think, and newborns love it, so you will love it. YouTube has lots of good ones. Experiment with different blankets. The Swaddle Designs flannel blanket was our favorite, but every family and baby is different.

• If you're planning to breastfeed, set up your "nursing station" before the baby comes home. You'd think the nursery would be the priority, but most of your first weeks are consumed with feeding that kid and he won't be on his own in the nursery that often (sadly for your and your sleep schedule), so it's great if you have it all set up with a comfy chair, blanket, nursing pillow, shelf for snacks and water and the remote control or a book.

• If you're bottle feeding (either formula or expressed breastmilk), don't buy 100 of one kind of bottle right away. Buy one at a time, make sure baby likes and isn't choking on too-fast-flowing a nipple, and then if you find one you like, then invest in multiple bottles.


• Take a bunch of different outfits to the hospital. You never know how big or small the kid is going to turn out, and different clothes size in different ways.

• Take a baby nail clipper to the hospital in case he already has long nails when he's born. They scratch themselves and you just feel so bad.

• Regarding labor, I don't know what your birth plan is, but if I ever have a second kid, I'm going to take an electric heating pad with me to the hospital. They brought me disposable heat packs and did this microwaved blanket thing, but the heat always dissipated eventually and I wanted it back, because heat was the best thing (except for running water or a bathtub) for pain relief.

• You will know contractions when you feel them. You'll have little menstrual cramps in the days leading up to your due date, but when you feel your first real contraction, you'll go, "Oh. So that's what they were talking about." I can't quite explain the difference, but they are different. (IMHO.)

• Our birthing class lady said to bring little gifts for the nurses, just to butter them up, and I didn't do it to save money, but after having been through labor, I really wish I had. A good labor and delivery nurse is one of the greatest blessings you will ever have. Flip side: If you don't like your nurse, send your husband to the desk, and ask for her to be switched out for someone else. Do not worry about hurting her feelings or not being nice. You are about to go through the craziest thing a woman will ever go through, and you deserve to feel comfortable and supported.

• When you're at the hospital, don't be afraid to ask people to come back later. There's a constant revolving door of people coming to check on you, and you are entitled to some alone time with your new family, and with the exception of maybe the blood pressure checks or whatever, everything can wait a couple of hours!

• Take a million pictures and videos. It goes by in a flash. As they say, the days are long but the years are short. (I can't believe mine is already six months old and ready to crawl. He was just born!)


But mostly, good luck and HAVE FUN. It's the coolest thing you will ever do.


Now, fellow mamas (and papas!), what's your best piece of advice and/or default baby-shower present for new parents? Would love to hear from you!


RELATED POST: "Paper Versus Plastic," or Pre-Motherhood Presumptions Versus Motherhood Reality, Infant Toy Edition

Friday, March 26, 2010

Recipe 4: Aioli

I think I survived aioli. Andrew enjoyed it with some of our homegrown artichokes. But I am now certain that that cookbook needs illustrations or photos. I never know if I'm remotely in the ballpark. What am I supposed to do...taste the food? Geesh. :)
GARDENS FOR VICTORY
The Complete $2.50 Book
"A very practical book to help your garden, however modest, produce continuous supplies of nutritious food, properly selected, in the smallest space, in the shortest time, for the least cost."
Written by Jean-Marie Putnam & Lloyd C. Cosper

© 1942


Chapter Two: "V" Stands for Vitamins
Before going on with the planning and planting of our garden, let us consider just which vegetables will give the highest nutritional returns. For if we are to raise food, it is wisdom to know and to grown those foods which will do us the most good.

Nutritional experts say that to have a satisfactory diet, all of us in America should consume, besides other foods, twice the amount of vegetables we know eat. Of course a wise forward step toward that double ration is to put the back yard into production--and the kind of production that will provide vegetables rich in vitamins, for vitamins provide the key to basic nourishment.

"V" stands for Victory--also for vitamins and vegetables. The vita in vitamins is the Latin for "life," and the word vegetable comes from vegetus, meaning "lively."

What is a vitamin? What does the familiar word really mean? It is not easy to define. A young nephew's graphic but ungrammatical definition of gasoline could be paraphrased to fit vitamins. "Gas," he says, "is stuff that if you don't pu8t good in your car, your car won't run as well as if." "Vitamins," we might say, "are stuff that if you don't have plenty in your diet, your health won't be as good as if."

Vitamins are minute constituents of our daily food, chemical substances whose compositions and molecular patterns are precisely known to organic chemists. Certain foods may be rich in a particular vitamin; in others it is deficient or altogether lacking. The presence or absence of the different vitamins in our diets has definite psychological effects. The diet deficiency of one or another of these vital substances causes diseases: a diet adequate in vitamins goes far to insure abundant health.

It is evident now tha tht amount of food we eat si not nearly so important as its quality. Notably vitamin and mineral content are what count.

Certain foods such as polished rice, tapioca, tea, coffee, and sugar lack vitamins; or the amount they contain is negligible. Others, notably dandelion green, Swiss chard, and chicory among the garden products, are rich in vitamins, especially the vitamin designated "A."

Actually, Dr. Henry Borsook says, for an adequate diet only one three-hundredths of an ounce of vitamins is needed in a total daily average of a pound, or a pound and a half, of food consumed. Yet this amount, small though it seems, is vital. Without it we may suffer from serious deficiency diseases, or just plain lack of vitality. Nervousness, fatigue, inefficiency, and depression become chronic or acute when there is a lack of vitamins in our daily food. But when sufficient balanced amounts of vitamins are supplied, alertness, vim, and vigor result.

And that is where our gardens can play such an important part, peacetime or wartime. For garden products excel in vitamin values. Among these are the green and yellow vegetables, which lead in vitamins, some of them comparing spectacularly with meat and dairy products.

"A tisket, a tasket
A green and yellow [garden] basket."

could become a theme song for the vitamin-conscious gardener!

Your daily quotas of vitamins are shown in the accompanying table, and their beneficial effects are supposed to be these:*

A: Insurance against infection and glare blindness.
B1: Provides vim and vigor. Whets appetite.
C: Good for teeth and gums. Speeds healing.
B2: Gives health to the eyes.

[BOX]
VITAMIN CHART SHOWING DAILY QUOTA
All figures in international units, the standard measure, except Vitamin B2, which is giveen in Sherman-Bourquin units.

Children under 4:
Vitamin A - 4,500
Vitamin B1 - 200
Vitamin C - 1,000
Vitamin B2 - 450

Children:
Vitamin A: 5,000
Vitamin B1: 400
Vitamin C: 1,200
Vitamin B2: 540

Adolescents and adults:
Vitamin A: 6,000
Vitamin B1: 500
Vitamin C: 1,500
Vitamin B2: 600
[/BOX]

Even our microscopic daily minimum requirements cannot be manufactured within our bodies. They can be obtained only from sources outside ourselves, normally from our food: meat, fish, eggs, cheese, whole-grain cereals and breads, milk, fruit, and vegetables. The vitamins that are present in animal tissues (the meats we eat) and in the products of animal activity (dairy products) have originated for the most part from a vegetative source.

The sunshine travels more than 91,000,000 miles to co-operate with our green growing plants in the manufacture of vitamins for us. Vitamins occur naturally only in plants, are manufactured there, primarily in the leaves and seed embryos. ANd in some way they promote plant growth and are definitely necessary to plant as well as to animal and human life.

Animals eating those plants store the vitamins within their tissues. When we eat the plants (or the animals), we thereby get our supply. And our dooryard defense plots may go far toward meeting our daily vitamin quota, healthfully supplementing what comes to us in our non-vegetable eating.

Plenty of vitamin A in your diet means ability to resist infection, a healthy development of teeth and bones, a longer life-span, and good vision even in dim light. Among the commonest signs in America of vitamin A deficiency are glare blindness and subnormal vision in dim light.

A growing child requires 5,000 units of vitamin A daily; an adult, 6,000 to 8,000 for the best state of health. As an ounce of parsley will supply the day's total quota for adults, call on the herb garden for more than a garnishment! So will dandelion greens, just one ounce of them, give you all you need of A for the day. The next best garden sources of vitamin A in the order of their richness are chard, chicory, turnip greens, spinach, watercress, kale, sweet potatoes, carrots, Brussels sprouts, green peas, string beans, and leafy green vegetables.

Alas, vitamin B1 (thiamine chloride) is one of the most difficult to get enough of just by eating. Plenty of B1 acts as a sort of pepper-upper and tonic. General weakness, chronic fatigue, and neuritis are averted or relieved if there's ample B1 in your daily diet; and we do mean daily, for B1 can't be stored in the body, but must be taken in each day.

Vegetables that you can grown in your own backyard, each containing more than 50 units of B1 per serving, include artichokes, endive, wax beans, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, cucumbers, collards, kale, lima beans, parsnips, peas, green peppers, white potatoes, and tomatoes. But you need about three to five units per day per pound of body weight; thus, if you weigh 130 pounds, you need 650 units or about thirteen servings a day of these vegetables--and who's going to eat that much? So we regretfully concede that you'll have to get your full B1 quota elsewhere than from the garden.

Plenty of vitamin C in your diet helps resist infection. Scurvy, which was common in Europe until potatoes started to figure in the ordinary diet, is a vitamin-C-deficiency disease. Citrus fruits, potatoes, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, and watercress are rich in vitamin C. Adolescents an adults should have 1,500 units daily, and children 1,200.

One serving of Brussels sprouts is worth 2,000 units--one-third more than your daily quota. An average serving of collards (a cabbage-like vegetable easily grown in your garden) has 1,000 units, or two-thirds of your daily C requirement. Kale has 2,800, or more than enough, in just one serving; and one red pepper contains as about as much as the kale. Swiss chard, broccoli, cauliflower, white potatoes, spinach, tomatoes, beet and turnip greens, kohlrabi, and parsnips--all potential home vegetable crops--are rich in vitamin C.

Now for vitamin B2, called by scientists "riboflavin." It is necessary for growth, and for the health of the yes. Although the human requirement and the B2 content of most foods have not been definitely established, about 600 units daily is thought to be necessary. The leafy green vegetables: beet greens, carrots and carrot tops, turnip green, and broccoli, are almost as rich in B2 as cow's milk and eggs--the best sources. Spinach, peas, tomatoes, cabbage, and lettuce are about half as rich as the greens mentioned above.

Although natural foods will undoubtedly continue for some time to be our regular daily source of vitamins, seven of the vitamins--A, B1, C, B2, D, E, and K--are now manufactured synthetically also and available in concentrated form.

Since the chemical formulae of seven vitamins have been definitely determined, and their artificial synthesis has been made possible, their use in medicine has saved many lives, since in acute cases or emergencies it is possible to administer whopping big doses of these synthetic vitamins. Also, they may be added and are being added to certain foods. A and D, for example, may be added to oleomargarine, and white flour may be fortified with crystalline thiamine chloride (B1). Indeed, the later is routine in England today by government ruling, and bakeries all over America are voluntarily fortifying white bread with B1.

While fortification of foods has a place in any national health campaign, here we are concerned with the growing of plant foods of naturally higher nutritional quality. The accompanying lists suggest plantings for small gardens which will most easily provide generous supplies of each vitamin.

Quality, as well as quantity, is important in vegetables. As gardeners realize, there must be a higher content of the life-giving vitamins in vegetables--and any other food plants--grown in fertile soil, rich in mineral and plant nutrients, than in those grown in poor, unfertilized soils. Carrots grown in soils deficient in one mineral will of course be deficient in that mineral, since the minerals are taken into food plants from the soil.

Also the mineral and vitamin content of food plants is somewhat determined by the amount of light present during their growth and development. What is important is perhaps not its intensity so much as its duration; hence the value of giving your defense garden a sunny situation. Comparatively few vegetables, in fact none of the important ones, would mature with only four or five hours' sunlight daily; actually most of them need from 7 to 10 hours.

There is one essential vitamin that no laboratory has analyzed. Though its formula would elude the most cunning chemist, the vitamin itself should be known to every cook; it is the one that Paul V. McNutt described rather grandly as "the vitamin of gastronomic gusto." It is probably most familiar to those who eat their vegetables and fruits freshly picked--and we do mean freshly--from the garden. For freshness connotes tastiness.

Then, too, if you have your own garden you can harvest vegetables while they are tiny. Small vegetables, those that aren't really mature, are likely to be more delicious than those that have come to full maturity on the ground or on the vine. Full-grown radishes, for instance, may be coarse, almost woody, compared with the tiny ones plucked from the soil while still sweet and crisp. New potatoes, of course, are universally recognized as more desirable when small, and so is squash. Baby carrots are almost impossible to buy in markets, yet they have far more zest than full-grown ones, either for eating raw or chilled, whole or sliced, or for steaming to serve with melted butter. When the rows of plants are thinned out, don't throw the little one on the compost heap; use them. Thinnings from salad garden make delicious eating, and chicory, romaine, and endive in their extreme youth are to highly to be recommended.

[BOX]
"VITAMIN A" GARDEN PLOT

dandelion greens
Swiss chard
kale
spinach
chicory
turnip greens
watercress
green peas
green string beans
sweet potatoes
carrots
parsley
[/BOX]

[BOX]
"VITAMIN B" GARDEN PLOT

Brussels sprouts
tomatoes
green lima beans
soy beans
endive
peas
potatoes
cantaloupe

(If you live in the South or Southwest)
grapefruit
bananas
peanuts
[/BOX]

[BOX]
"VITAMIN C" GARDEN PLOT

beets (tops)
broccoli
Brussels sprouts
(raw) cabbage
cauliflower
kale
kohlrabi
parsnips
white potatoes
collards
turnip (greens)
spinach
watercress
currants
peppers, red or green
tomatoes

(If you live in the South or Southwest)
avocados
bananas
grapefruit
lemons
oranges
papayas
raspberries
strawberries
tangerines
[/BOX]

[BOX]
"VITAMIN B2" GARDEN PLOT

beets
carrots
peas
tomatoes
spinach
chicory

(If you live in the South or Southwest)
avocados
peanuts
pears - grown in Midwest and East also
peaches - grown in Midwest and East also
[/BOX]

One feature of freshness in vegetables is that the sugar content in certain varieties, such as sweet corn and peas, begins to turn to starch soon after they mature. By the time they have reached your table after their travels through regular market channels a chemical reaction is likely to have set in which does not make them taste any better.

However, there are certain exceptions. Scientists have observed, for instance, that the vitamin-A content of sweet potatoes is increased, instead of decreased, as much as three to four per cent after a storage period of two months.

If properly handled after the can is opened, canned (and frozen) vegetables and fruits are just as rich in vitamins as the fresh. But for uncanned and unfrozen garden foods the time element is highly important; these are not only more nutritious, they are also more delicious, when they come directly to the garden on to the dining table. On the other hand, foods bought at market have had to be picked, packed, shipped, and displayed before they are finally purchased, the time-lapse here being a matter of days--whereas in a matter of minutes after harvesting them, your garden-fresh foods may be served.

Romaine lettuce is a case in point. As it wilts, its vitamin content disappears into thin air; while just two nine-inch leaves of crisp, succulent, fresh romaine contain 1,300 International Units (the standard measure) of vitamin A (about one-fifth of the day's total requirement), four I.U. of B1, 20 I.U. of C and 9.99 Sherman-Bourquin units of vitamin B2.

To compare the two leaves of fresh romaine with other foods and give those I.U. statistics some meaning: they contain almost as much vitamin A as a quart of whole fresh raw milk, though not so much of the other vitamins as milk contains; twice as much B1 as a tablespoonful of cream (and think, madame, how much lower the calory count is in the romaine than in the cream!); as much vitamin C as a quarter of a pound of lean stewed beefsteak, and slightly more vitamin B2 than a quarter of a pound of light meat of chicken. So you can see romaine packs a terrific vitamin wallop.

Salads and vegetables are not, of course, the only vitamin-givers: Fruits, meat, fish, eggs, milk, cheese, nuts, and berries contain varying amounts. Your home garden can supply you with adequate daily amounts of A, B1, C, an B2 when supplemented by other foods such as dairy products, meat, and fish.

Green and yellow vegetables are valuable in our diet chiefly on account of their mineral salts, their cellulose, which supplies our bodies with bulk or roughage, and their water content (90 to 95 per cent), as well as for their vitamin content. Since roots and tubers are heat- and energy-giving foods, they are especially desirable for winter use.

Garden sources of vitamins include green leafy vegetables, Brussels sprouts, green peas, sweet potatoes, and green string beans, all of which are among the foods rich in vitamin A. (See table on page 16.) A serving of dandelion leaves alone contains one day's requirement.

Tomatoes, lima beans, endive, peas, and potatoes are easy-to-grow home garden crops rich in B1 (thiamine chloride). Vitamin C comes from beet tops, Swiss chard, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, raw cabbage, cauliflower, kale, kohlrabi, parsips, potatoes, spinach, watercress, currants, peppers, raspberries, strawberries, and tomatoes. As sources of B2 (riboflavin), carrots, green leafy vegetables, peas, tomatoes, beets, and broccoli (both the flowers and the leaves) are almost as important as cow's milk and eggs.

Small but unimportant amounts of vitamin D are present in certain foods. E is found in green leafy vegetables, especially the green leaves (not the white heart) of lettuce, and also in spinach and watercress. Vegetable oils such as cottonseed oil, corn oil, and palm oil contain both E and F. The latter, so-called "skin vitamin," is widely distributed in foods, but there are as yet not data regarding our daily requirements of F. Green leaves, cabbage, alfalfa, and spinach are said to contain vitamin K, which in synthetic concentrates is valuable in medicine, but which do not yet need to worry about nutritionally.

Certain nutrient mineral elements are necessary to plant growth and development, and certain minerals are essential in our diets to human well-being. Like vitamins, minerals too come from vegetables, fruis, nuts, and other foods. Calcium, phosphorus, iron, and iodine are the minerals our diets are most likely to lack. Vegetables, fruits, meats, milk, cheese, and cereal are all sources of minerals.

Calcium--for healthy bones, teeth, and nails--is found in cauliflower, celery, carrots, string beans, peas, and potatoes. Indeed, an average serving of cauliflower, for instance, supplies as much calcium as half a glass of milk, one of the richest sources of calcium. And two or three stalks of celery give slightly more calcium than one egg. Half a cup of any of these garden vegetables: cooked carrots, string beans, cabbage, peas, or potatoes, provides almost four times as much calcium as an average serving of most lean meats.

Phosphorus is a mineral element as essential to every cell in the human body as it is to every cell in plant organism; it is also good for our nervous systems and co-operates with calcium in bone-building.

Because calcium, iron, phosphorus, and magnesium--all essential minerals--are water-soluble, the water in which they are cooked will contain minerals; so don't pour the precious minerals down the drain with the water.

Iron, the mineral element which is to the hemoglobin of our red blood what magnesium is to the green chlorophyll in plants is, alas, one of the most commonly deficient minerals in our garden foods. Average servings of leafy green vegetables, or of parsley or cabbage, have about one-third the iron content of an average serving of liver. Iodine, the goiter preventative, is found in cranberries, especially those grown near the sea.

Copper and fluorine are present in most foods. Blueberries are rich in manganese; green leafy vegetables in magnesium; and oysters, fruits, and vegetables, in zinc. Tomatoes and watermelons are generous sources of bromine; sulphur, the diabetes preventative, comes from the proteins of meat, milk, and eggs. These furnish not only sulphur but vitamins as well.

Summed up, you will be sure to get plenty of essential vitamins and minerals if you include lots of vegetables in your menus, summer and winter. And much of this essential food may be home-grown as ornamentally as frivolous flowers.

[BOX]
GARDEN FOODS WITH HIGH MINERAL CONTENT

Sixteen mineral elements, found only in foods, are necessary to build normal, healthy bodies. Here are the sixteen, with some selected vegetables that are specially rich in each.

Potassium
cabbage
carrots
chicory
endive
lettuce
mint
nasturtium leaves
parsley
potatoes (skin)
spinach
Swiss chard

Sodium
asparagus
celery
carrots
cucumbers
dandelion greens
pumpkins
spinach
tomatoes
turnips
all leafy green vegetables

Sulphur
Brussels sprouts
cabbage
carrots
cauliflower
celery
horseradish
lettuce
onions
peas
radishes
spinach

Magnesium
apples
grapes
peas

Silicon
asparagus
cabbage
cucumbers
horseradish
lettuce
spinach

Calcium
lima beans
string beans
cabbage
carrots
cauliflower
celery
endive
green leafy vegetables
kohlrabi
peas
okra
onions
parsnips
rhubarb
spinach
turnips
watercress

Phosphorus
Brussels sprouts
cauliflower
corn
green leafy vegetables
dandelion
kohlrabi
parsnips
peas
potatoes
pumpkins
spinach
turnip tops

Iron
asparagus
lima beans
string beans
beet tops
blackberries
broccoli
dandelion greens
kale
lettuce
mustard greens
spinach
New Zealand spinach
strawberries
Swiss chard
tomatoes
turnip tops
All green leafy vegetables

Iodine
carrots
grapes

Manganese
endive
nasturtium

Chlorine
cabbage
cucumbers
lettuce
spinach

Fluorine
Brussels sprouts
cabbage
spinach
watercress

Nitrogen
Beans
Peas

Carbon is found in all foods; it is the fuel of the body. Hydrogen and oxygen are found in the air and the water. And oxygen is supplied also through foods rich in nitrogen (or protein), iron, potassium, and iodine.
[/BOX]




















* Discussing effects of Vitamin C, Dr. Borsook sums up with justified conservatism: "On the other hand, there is no convincing evidence that resistance to infection can be raised much above normal by taking orally this or any other vitamin." At this stage probably a fair statement is that all vitamins, in food form, are beneficial, although they are not panaceas."



GARDENS FOR VICTORYThe Complete $2.50 Book
"A very practical book to help your garden, however modest, produce continuous supplies of nutritious food, properly selected, in the smallest space, in the shortest time, for the least cost."
Written by Jean-Marie Putnam & Lloyd C. Cosper

Saturday, March 20, 2010

What is a bottomless egg box?

On page 193 of The Complete Tightwad Gazette, in the section on trash-picking/Dumpster diving/treasuring hunting, Amy Dacyczyn writes out a list of all of her family's greatest finds. She mentions "an antique bottomless egg box (sold as-is for $5)." Google yields no results for bottomless egg box. What is this delightful-sounding contraption?

Saturday, March 06, 2010

POSSUM LIVING BY DOLLY FREED


1. READ THE 1970s POSSUM LIVING BOOK

a. Download the electronic text of Possum Living: How To Live Well Without a Job and With Almost No Money aka Possum Living: Living Easy Off the Land Without a Job and Almost No Money by Dolly Freed

b. Buy the first edition, as published by Universe Books in 1978 and then reprinted by Bantam Books in 1980 (beige cover), by visiting Bookfinder.com

c. Buy the Shiny New Reprint of Possum Living: How to Live Well Without a Job and with (Almost) No Money, brought out in 2010 by Tin House Books with foreword by David Gates and afterword by Dolly Freed


"Possum Living"

2. WATCH THE 1970s POSSUM LIVING DOCUMENTARY

a. View a full-length uncut version of the movie by Nancy Schreiber on on Vimeo


b. Or click through and watch the movie broken up into three parts on YouTube: Part I, Part II, Part III


3. FIND OUT ABOUT DOLLY FREED TODAY

a. Possum Living: A Blog by Dolly Freed - Yes, she's online! Check out this blog and other articles and information about Dolly and her Possum Living life in the 1970s...and today.

b. "Finding Dolly Freed," by Paige Williams, photographs by Audra Melon - The New York Times wouldn't publish this freelance article because they have a policy against covering people who are known only pseudonymously, so the author posted it online directly.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Recommended Doulas in West Los Angeles/Southern California

We were considering using a doula for our first birth but ended up deciding it was too expensive. However, since we did go to the trouble of finding some names and recommendations of good local doulas in the metro Los Angeles area, we're just passing this information along to the Internet in case anyone needs it. Note: I haven't actually used any of these women, but they come recommended by doctors and trusted friends.

* Margie Levy - 818.994.6800 - margie at supportivedoula dot com
* Nancy Bedya - 323.646.4362 - nancybedya at earthlink dot net
* Shannon Heydari-Hernandez - 818.304.4777 - prodoulaservices at yahoo dot com
* Marquina Muñoz-Freedman - 310.463.5542 - quinasq7 at ca dot rr dot com

Good luck with your pregnancies and births, dear readers!

Monday, February 08, 2010

15 Minutes of Fame, 15 Years Later

So…back in the day (1995 to be exact), my best friend and I compiled a bunch of "useless facts" that we'd been posting on a white board in our college dorm hallway and posted them on a newfangled thingy called the World Wide Web.

We submitted the site to Yahoo! and they added it to their directory with "cool" sunglasses and "Deb & Jen's Land O' Useless Facts" was eventually named a Cool Site of the Year in 1996. We got submissions of more useless facts from around the world and built the site out and it was all very exciting.

Eventually time passed, we moved the site to its own domain after they kicked us out of college, we moved on with our lives, and we mostly abandoned the site, leaving it to become one of those bits of quaint Internet detritus from ye olden times (like animated "under construction" gifs).

Fastforward to last weekend, when I stumble out of bed on my way in my usual groggy way and the husband goes, "Um, there's something you need to see…" I assumed from his serious tone that the roof had caved in or that crickets that live under our floor finally ate something important. But no, it wasn't a crisis, it was a Ricky Gervais HBO standup special from 2008, and as it turns out, his closing comedy bit is partially inspired by our old website, which he names onscreen as "Deb & Jen's World of Knowledge." I think I double-taked three or four times before I believed it. Anyway, this is mostly awesome because Ricky Gervais is awesome, but he cites two facts direct from the site (re: polar bears and elephants) and that's pretty cool, so we pirated the clip and posted it on Vimeo for your edification and amusement.

http://www.vimeo.com/9303762
1:38 - Mentions "Deb & Jen's World of Knowledge"

Deb & Jen's World of Knowledge - Deb & Jen's Land O' Useless Facts - Ricky Gervais: Out of England from Jennifer Godwin on Vimeo.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Recipe 3: Chard Frittata

Mama made her first frittata! Totally out of order in the book, but the chard has been growing out of control lately, and with the four inches of rain we got this week the problem was going to get worse before it got better, so it was time to implement permaculture principle number 3 and "obtain a yield."

And the frittata turned out to be utterly gorgeous. The side profile of a slice of fritatta is yellow egg marbled with green frittata, and it's a work of art. Didn't have any onions or paprika, but the eggs, salt, pepper, chard and garlic worked just without them. There was a tad too much oil left on top at the end of the process, I think because I baked it instead of flipping it in the pan, but all in all, a happy success.

Proof of victory? Andrew thought it was delicious and had two slices!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Greening the Desert: Further Reading

• The original Greening the Desert video, as published on YouTube, which is based on work done by the amazing Geoff Lawton of the Permaculture Institute of Australia in the early 2000s.



• Here is an elaborate textual report on the original Greening the Desert site by Mohammed Ayesh, who is described as "a Jordanian agricultural engineer who has long been involved in the project."

"Permaculture under salinity and drought conditions," By Mohammed Ayesh, (MSc in Soil & Irrigation), Water & Environment Researcher, 17 December 2007

• And here is the followup project to Greening the Desert, which will be funded and controlled entirely by the permaculture team themselves. This video is called

Greening the Desert II: Greening the Middle East and it's published by permaculturalist Craig Mackintosh on Vimeo.


More Rainwater Harvesting Videos

Brad Lancaster explains rainwater harvesting with help from a muffin tin and sponges. (Inspired!)



Three-part video where Brad Lancaster explains the principles of rainwater harvesting.





Rainwater Harvesting

This is an El Niño year, so we're getting drenched with rain here in Southern California, and I've been thinking a lot about rainwater harvesting. I've seen very clearly that the areas of my yard that have the most mulch or compost absorb water much better than areas without added organic matter. In those patches, the water pools and puddles fast and deep; in the areas that have added organic matter, the water soaks right into the landscape.

I dug a swale to help irrigate one dry patch where I want to place more raspberries this year, and I'll definitely add more organic matter. I have one rain barrel and several 5-gallon buckets collecting water from this week's storms. I'm looking into purchasing some ollas as well, for use in drier parts of the raised beds.

Long-term, I would like to rip out our concrete driveway. The driveway's surface area is a very large part of our home's square footage. It's an eyesore, but it's also preventing us from retaining as much rainwater as possible on the property.

Meanwhile, here is a lovely video from India encouraging rainwater harvesting.

Friday, January 15, 2010

NOVELLA CARPENTER, URBAN FARMER

1. Read Farm City, the wonderful true story of an Oakland hippie's adventures raising turkeys, bee, chickens, rabbits and pigs in the middle of a crappy rundown part of the ghetto.

2. Then watch this video. Read the book first though, because as always, the book is better than the movie and if you have to use your imagination to visualize Ghost Town Farm you'll imagine a much more beautiful place than exists in reality.

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

IN DANGER OF FALLING FOOD



BRITISH PERMACULTURE TRIO



BACKYARD PERMACULTURE



FARMING WITH NATURE

Permaculture Video Series: Global Gardener with Bill Mollison

I thought I'd "bookmarked" these on Bill Mollison's Wikipedia entry, but apparently not. So in the interests of saving the entire sequence for posterity (or at least for my further procrastination), here is the whole Global Gardener series. The section about the use of swales during the Dust Bowl was particularly fascinating to me. Also, banana circles!

Part 1: In the Tropics


Watch Global Gardener (Bill Mollison, Permaculture) 1 - In the tropics.avi in Educational  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

Part 2: Dry Lands


Watch Global Gardener (Bill Mollison, Permaculture) 2 - Dry lands.avi in Educational  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

Part 3: Temperate

Segment 1:


Segment 2:


Segment 3:


Segment 4:



Part 4: Urban


Watch Global Gardener (Bill Mollison, Permaculture) 4 - Urban.avi in Educational  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com
I Want My Brain Back

In as much as I would like to someday get my body back, I'm finding that what I really want after this baby is born is my brain back. Please. Last night I had to ask Andrew to help me use the microwave. "It won't turn on! I think it's broken! Or I'm broken!" It turned out to be me, not the microwave. And this morning, I stood helplessly in the elevator for a while, waiting until someone else boarded with a keycard because I was certain I had lost my keycard and was therefore unable to use the elevator. When I got to my desk, the keycard was revealed to be...on my keychain, same as ever. By the time I deliver this baby I will be fully stupid.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Recipe 2: Salsa verde

I'm giving myself a D- on this assignment and making myself redo the work tomorrow (or whenever), in punishment for poor preparation and research, even though it turned out sort of good in the end.

The first thing about salsa verde is that I've decided to just call it green sauce because where I come from salsa goes with guacamole and tortilla chips and every time I read the word salsa verde I got annoyed and resentful, and being angry at your food is never a good idea. (Why yes I did read Water for Chocolate, thank you for asking.)

Anyway, the first cock-up was spending $9.98 for basil, tarragon and dill at Pavilions in a hail-mary pass attempt to obtain the tender herb on which green sauce is based. Well, it's none of them, although basil and tarragon can be supplements; the main deal is parsley. Not that Pavilions had fresh parsley anyway. And no I had no one of this stuff in my garden; it's all dead of wintery. I did, however, make the cashier happy by buying dill. He got to smell it and it made him smile. It made me smile, too.

Anyway, back at the ranch, I did Alice's thing of laying out all the ingredients ahead of time so I could see them, I propped up the cookbook behind my brand-new butcher-block cutting board (I am on expensive but probably worthwhile anti-plastic rampage), and set about making green sauce.

The good news is that I had the sense to start preparing the non-tender ingredients first. Parsley (or whatever) was listed first on the ingredients list but if I'd chopped it first, it would have turned black in the time in took me to prep everything else. (Lemon zest stresses me out. I fear pith.)

Things were chopped and cleaned and measured and it all looked lovely, but what I failed to taken into account is that coarsely chopping parsley and coarsely chopping basil (the herb I decided to use in lieu of the missing parsley) gets you two very different-sized results. Basil big, parsley small, blah.

Barreling forward, I mixed it all together as ordered by Alice, but there was no chance in heck that the ginormous basil pieces were going to really integrate with the rest of the goodies. I set it aside to let the flavors marry, again as ordered by Alice, but at that stage in the game I declared the overall project a total failure.

So I made potato pancakes out of the Good Housekeeping cookbook instead.

I grew potatoes for the first time this year, and I've been saving them for a special occasion, but I just discovered they've mostly all sprouted, so they're off to the compost heap where they might just grow into potatoes again. I could replant them, to be sure, but growing potatoes is this whole meshuguna and if they don't grow in the compost pile (which they very well might), I'm happy to let them be worm food.

The red ones all were pretty unsprouty, though (apparently the reds were what are known as good "keepers"), so they got assigned to potato-pancake duty. (Is it a duty or is it an honor?) Naturally, of course, I decide to supplement my meager homegrown potato supply with one from the store, and when I get to shredding that one, halfway through the potato-shredding project, I discover that one is green.

Yes, green. As in, never ever eat a green potato as it is evil and poisonous and has been lying in wait to kill you. For an optimistic few minutes I thought I could pick out the green bits but that was a lost cause and it's not worth risking the baby's health, so...compost pile.

I made do with what I had left, plus some homegrown garlic (no onions in the house) and homegrown rosemary-thyme, and by god, these pancakes are pretty good if I do say so myself.

As a happy postscript, I stuck my finger in the green sauce while waiting for the potato pancakes to cook up, and that too was pretty darn good. It would be overselling it to say it was supermegadelicious (™ Top Chef Gail), but I totally get green sauce now, if for no other reason than capers make everything amazing. So...not a total wash.

Still, I have no idea what one does with green sauce once it exists or what it's supposed to look like (mine looks ridiculous, like green-leaf soup in an olive-oil broth), so after I do remedial homework, I will tackle it again soon.

Next up: Green sauce (this time with new, more regionally appropriate branding), and then after that aolii, aoili, aioli, which I'm going to have to learn to spell before I can cook it properly.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Recipe 1: Vinaigrette

Officially I know how to do to this, but lo and behold I've been making it with balsamic vinegar, and Alice says use red wine vinegar. Weirdly enough, the Ralphs near LAX was packed with people at 7 p.m. on New Year's Eve. The most intriguing part of page 44 was that Alice was totally right when she said that salt cuts the acidity of the vinegar. Also, whoa, you can watch salt dissolve. I knew that, but still.

I used the brand-new superfancy extra-virgin olive oil that Bryan gave us for Christmas, and it tastes so green, like grass as much as olives. I needed a little more vinegar and more salt to balance that flavor (I was going to say fight that flavor, but that seems unduly combative), and now I have vinaigrette.

I shall declare this a success because at the very least I am now eating a vinaigrette-laced mixed green salad with walnuts, and greens are something the baby does not get enough of. I'll be enjoying it with a side of the vinegar entry in Food Lover's Companion (baslamic vs. red wine: what's the diff?) and the blessedly just arrived latest issue of Organic Gardening, now in new larger format.

Tomorrow, salsa verde.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Detroit Wildlife

My mother grew up outside Detroit and I have visited the city many times to see relatives. It is the poster city for American urban decay. This short film by a Frenchman explores the re-ruralization of the Detroit area and how the heyday city of the 1870s-1950s is slowly eroding away and returning to prairie. Haunting and beautiful. See also: the Fabulous Ruins of Detroit and Flint Expatriates.

Detroit Wildlife from florent tillon on Vimeo.

Saturday, October 24, 2009


RIVER COTTAGE: Urban Smallholding, from Britain's Channel 4


Part 1: Beginnings



Part 2: Pigs



Part 3: Chickens



Part 4: First Harvest



Part 5: Pig Show

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Does Being a Crazy Jackass Make Mike Voltaggio a Top Chef?

Is Mike Voltaggio a genius because he’s a temperamental diva, or is a temperamental diva because he’s a genius?

During this week’s Restaurant Wars episode of Top Chef, Mike Voltaggio succeeded in intimidating Robin, irritating his brother and organizing the best restaurant in the history of the show. We can’t help but think Tom Colicchio was right when he said the Blue Team failed for lack of leadership, and wonder if Mike V.’s General Patton-style bullying and snarking was what pushed the Red Team, aka “Robin-Eli-Volt = Revolt” over the edge to victory.

What do you think: Is it OK to be arrogant if you have the goods to back it up, or is Mike V. merely an overgrown child operating one notch above the walking personality disorder that is Mike I.?

Food Word of the Week: ''Pithivier'', as in Robin/Michael's pear pithivier, is basically fancy pop-tart, i.e. puff pastry with filling inside. Man, that looked just delicious. I'll be looking for the recipe on Bravo's site tomorrow when I hit Tom Colicchio's recap blog.