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Traditional Foodways Revival

Inspired in part by the Weston A. Price foundation and all the work that Dr. Weston Price did researching traditional diets in the 1920s.

Endangered foods and recipes from our grandmothers are disappearing fast and furiously from our world.  Around the globe industrialized highly processed foods have pushed out small scale artesian products...(more)
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  hellaD : Nourisher

Memories from Mimi

hellaD said Dec 9, 2007, 11:35 PM:

 

Wow!  I have been getting the most beautiful stories from Mimi aka Soup Goddess about what her family used to do with making sauerkraut, dill pickles and whatnot and I have asked her permission to share these with the rest of you.  Now this is exactly what I am talking about!

The good ole days!

  hellaD : Nourisher

Re: Memories from Mimi

hellaD said Dec 9, 2007, 11:38 PM:

 

Hi from Mimi

I read your pod piece on raw milk and fermented foods and then I read your profile.
What a good thing to do, to bring  back real food.  Years ago, I heard someone say, “if you want to be healthy, eat what your grandparents ate:, 

I grew up with real food.  My Baba (Ikrainian) made sauerkraut and dill pickles). My parents canned and preserved food of all sorts.  My Dad made the sauerkraut.  The barrel used to sit in the kitchen until it got “ready” all fermented and foamy.  I really didn't like it when I was a teenager and a boyfriend would come to pick me up for a date.  Didn't want him to smell the “Kapusta”.

I get a sauerkraut delivery almost every day from my Yugoslavian neighbour.  She has the barrel out on her balcony in the next apartment.   I like to eat it raw with a splash of olive oil, and lots of pepper. Great as a side salad ,

My Baba and parents made dill pickles with NO VINEGAR.  Lots of people say you can't make dill pickles without vinegar.  My Baba would put a piece of real rye bread in each jar to help them ferment.  No one died!

I would love to join in and learn more about the old food -  I remember when a real  farmer would bring fresh  eggs, sour cream, buttermilk. to your house.  I remember my mother putting milk on the sunny window to make it sour.   Nowadays, milk doesn' get sour.  It just goes baaaad! foul tasting. 

What in heck are we really eating?
cheers,
mimi