Showing posts with label jen hatmaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jen hatmaker. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Food Experiments--Hers and Mine

So, Stacey and I have finished Chapter 1 of "7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess."  If I had to sum up my feelings toward the book in one sentence, it would be this:
I like it and I'm looking forward to continuing to read it but this author is too cheerleader for me even though I think her writing is entertaining and she's onto something with this whole "less of me and my junk and more of God and His kingdom" thing.  

Apologies to my high school English teacher for the construction of that sentence.  

This first chapter was focused on food, so I thought I'd share both my thoughts about the book and a recent food experiment of my own.  For the month that Jen (the author of the book) focused on excess food, she limited herself to eating only seven foods: chicken, eggs, whole wheat bread, sweet potatoes, spinach, avocados and apples.  She denied herself any beverages other than water and relinquished her use of condiments other than salt and pepper.  

The loss of condiments was apparently the hardest part for her.  "I believe food is simply a vehicle to devour sauces.  I am a flavor junkie," she said.  Frankly, as she got deeper into her month of fasting, her descriptions  disgusted me just a wee bit.

She was watching a woman in front of her at Subway who "had not one, not two, but three sauces ladled on her sandwich: sweet chicken teriyaki sauce, honey mustard, and oil and vinegar.  She even had them spread the sauces with a spatula for even coverage." 

For real?  How can you taste the goodness of any of those single toppings when there is such a deluge?

Whatever floats your boat, I guess.  I am not a foodie.  It's not that I don't enjoy eating, it's just that I'm an underachiever when it comes to food.  I strive to meet the minimum requirements of thinking about food--buying it, preparing it, and eating it.  For me, there's no going above and beyond in this category.

Haitian meals are prepared using sauces and spices, and I've come to enjoy them all.  There's the standard "Creole" sauce which is tomato based, with other onion-y stuff.  And then there are broth-y sauces and the sauces that are really just pureed beans.  They use a lot of garlic and peppers for flavoring here, too. 

My kitchen has some garlic in it. And ground pepper, salt, cinnamon, and onion powder.  That's about it.  There's ketchup and mustard in the fridge.  Limiting myself to seven foods while living here in Haiti wouldn't be much of a stretch.  

The author talked a lot about reducing the variety of food options she had to choose from.  However, she didn't talk much about limiting the conveniences of her food choices.  She still ate at restaurants.  She still used the pre-cooked frozen chicken breasts that she bought at WalMart.  Back at home in Illinois, I absolutely took for granted the ease with which I was able to produce a meal.  

Here in Haiti, I've learned a lot about cooking from scratch.  For instance, there is no bakery nearby where we live.  If we're going to have bread for pbj sandwiches for lunch boxes, it's going to be bread that I bake myself.  And guess what?  I'm a pretty darn good baker.  Every week, I call upon all my old 4-H training and bake up some very delicious stuff.  My cinnamon rolls are good enough to be pinned all over Pinterest.  

People living in places like Haiti have to take advantage of seasonal foods that are available.  Fortunately, in tropical climates, you can get many fruits and veggies throughout the year--like pumpkins!  Many Haitians use pumpkin (joumou, in Creole) for soup, which I blogged about earlier this year.  But, I decided to take a break from our usual banana bread and make pumpkin bread instead.  There's no boxed mix here, folks.  No cans of pumpkin puree.  Just a whole, real pumpkin.

Pumpkins in Haiti look very different from the pumpkins I'm used to in the Midwest.  They're green.


But, when you slice them open, they look very similar.  There's less of all that orange squishy stuff, but the same teardrop-shaped seeds and the same pumpkin smell. 


So, I scooped out the mush and separated the seeds, 'cause I like to roast those and eat them, too. I had a helper who enjoyed all that ooey-gooeyness.



Then, I chopped the pumpkin part into chunks and greased a cookie sheet.  


I heated the oven to about 425, put a little oil and salt on the seeds, and cooked 'em up.  The seeds were crunchy in about 20 minutes, but the pumpkin chunks took longer to be tender.




The pumpkin didn't look much different when it was done cooking, but it was soft and I was able to cut the rind off easily.  I smashed all the pumpkin up (No, I don't have a KitchenAid mixer, ya'll.  But, thank goodness I do have a little electric hand mixer.) and then mixed it in with the bread ingredients (recipe here), and a little cinnamon and Haitian vanilla.  I greased two loaf pans and put them in the oven together at 350.


Then, I was left with my mess.  
Mercy. 
 I am like a tornado in the kitchen.  I leave cabinet doors flung open, spill ingredients haphazardly onto the floors and pile up the carnage all over the countertops.  So, you can guess what I was doing while the bread was baking.  


 I consulted a recipe I found on Allrecipes.com and determined that 60 minutes was how long I needed to bake the loaves.  I should have checked on them at 50.  As you can see, they came out of the pans just a smidge burnt.  
Yup.  After all that work.  Black bottoms.


The insides of the loaves were perfect, though!  So, I sliced the black edges off and voila!  
Pure pumpkin perfection. 


How long would you guess that whole process took? 

6 hours.  Was it worth it?  I'm still undecided.

Maybe the author didn't come at the issue of food excess from as many angles as I think she could have, but the limitations she placed on herself really did make her think every day.  

"Each meal was intentional, each bite calculated," she said.  "I never had longer than five hours between meals to mentally slip away.  The concept of reduction was never further than my next meal."  

I guess we can all benefit from taking time to think about just how blessed we are each time we sit down to eat, no matter what it is that's on our plates...


"If you spend yourselves on behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like the noonday.  The Lord will guide you always; he will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land and will strengthen your frame.  You will be like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never fail," says the Lord."  Isaiah 58:10-11

Saturday, February 16, 2013

I Dare Ya to Linger in the Uncomfortable

I am reading a new book.  Which means I'm currently reading five books.  There are two separate devotional-type books in addition to that.  And, I'm reading another book with my eldest daughter.

I blog a lot about stuff I read, don't I.  Well, hopefully ya'll don't mind that too much.

Reading makes me think.  I like reading and thinking, so I do a lot of it.  I suppose I come by it naturally, because I can't think of anyone in my family of origin that ISN'T a reader.  My only living grandma (miss you, GG) only ever stops reading to sleep and my other grandma passed away with an IMPRESSIVE personal library and I know she read each and every tome cover to cover.  My dream job would be getting paid to read, and I'd accept a very modest salary for doing that job.  I don't know if I have any qualifications that would make me a good professional reader, but if you know of anyone who needs to hire one, send 'em my way, okay?

Just in case you're curious, the four other books I'm reading are:

  1. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
  2. Ms. Understood by Jen Hatmaker
  3. The Big Truck that Went By: How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster by Jonathan M. Katz
  4. The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton
The devotional books are:

  1. The One Year Mother-Daughter Devo by Dannah Gresh
  2. Jesus Calling by Sarah Young
And the book I'm reading with Danielle is Wonder by RJ Palacio.

While I'm on this book-list kick, let me also share what I'm reading with my students, starting with the youngest kiddos first:

  1. The Frog and Toad collection by Arnold Lobel
  2. Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo
  3. Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh
  4. The View from Saturday by EL Konigsburg
  5. Hoot by Carl Hiaasen

Anyway.... The book that's got me thinking today is a book I've decided to read for Lent.  It's called 7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess--another by Jen Hatmaker.

I've only gotten through the introduction so far, but Lent is what--like, 40 days long or something like that, so I've got plenty of time to read and think and share with you.  (Anyone feel like reading along with me?)

So, in the introduction, Jen talks a bit about being comfortable and uncomfortable.  She talks about how God introduced a new direction in her life and at first it was very uncomfortable, but it slowly became very comfortable.  She says:
     "[Our] transformation did not come cheaply or without pain.  We suffered loss--relationships, reputation, position, security, approval, acknowledgment--all the stuff I used to crave. But here is what I gave up the least: comfort.  I might have disagreed two years ago when having a conversation with a homeless man was the most uncomfortable situation I could envision.  When God first sent us to serve the poor, every moment was awkward.  Each confrontation was wrought with anxiety...
     However, God changed me and grafted genuine love for the least into my heart.  I looked forward to every encounter, rejected service that was labor-intensive rather than relationally focused. I became a girl who loved the marginalized.  I couldn't get enough of them in my personal space."

I think that God intentionally nudges us into experiences and roles that are UNcomfortable because He wants to change us.  He wants things that are UNcomfortable to become comfortable.

Think about it.  What's been going on in your life lately that has caused you some discomfort?  Not the yucky, seedy kind of uncomfortable, but the uncomfortable that showers you with new realizations keeps you thinking from new perspectives day and night.

Instead of running from that uncomfortable thing, try leaning into it.  Linger there a while.  I dare you. I'm daring myself!

It's possible that God wants to bless us through it in ways we can't imagine right now.

2 Corinthians 1:3-7 "Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God."