All posts by Sarah Kelly

Persevering at preserving.

Spoils from Lumsden

This is what happens when your parents own a farm.

Last week we visited Hendy’s parents on their farm down in Southland and returned laden with the fruits of their kitchen garden, literally. I also have a roll of muslin cloth and a fat stack of old Good magazines to be used in later projects.

But today, I’m going to try my hand at preserving.

Immediately this feels a little strange. Mothers and grandmothers preserve. Little old ladies with white doilies and knitted tea-cosies preserve. Farmer’s wives and the kind of people who run bake sales’ preserve. Not intelligent young people in their mid-twenties with social lives and twitter and conversation.

And I guess this attitude just contributes to the problem. Way back when, activities like preserving and cooking and gardening aided survival. Kitchen gardens added to rations and grocery budgets, easy take-out was limited to fish and chips, and fancy sauces were expensive – why buy what you could make yourself? But who has time to do all that nowadays, especially when you can just spend money on quick meals and throw-away containers.

So, in an effort to reduce my waste, and eat local and in season, I’m going to take these apples, pears, tomatoes and peaches, freshly handpicked from Lumsden, Southland, and stick some of ’em in a pot so they’ll hopefully last longer.

I have no idea what I’m doing.

Like any mid-twenties woman who has no idea what she’s doing, I turn to Google. Immediately I’m overwhelmed by the pages of information on alternative ways to preserve pears. After flicking through a few suggestions, feeling daunted by how unexpectedly the process seemed to be, I did what any sane person would do.

I called mum.

And here’s what she told me to do:

  1. Preheat Your oven to 150 degrees Celsius.
  2. Wash your jars and lids in hot, soapy water.
  3. Place them in the oven for about 15-20 minutes.
  4. While this is all happening, stew your fruit. I used pears – pealed them, cored them, and cut them into quarters and stuck them in a pot. I poured in some water until they were half covered, and added about two large teaspoons of honey to make a thin syrup to act as the preserving agent. I brought them to the boil for about 5min so the pears were a little softer but not mushy.
  5.  When the fruit is ready, take out your jar and lid and pour the hot fruit into the hot jar. Fill the jars nearly to the brim. Tighten the lids.
  6. When the lids ‘pop’ they should be sealed.
Sustainability test - pears grown organically (these trees are literally left to their own devices down there) from 600km away. Great.
 New Zealand honey bought at a supermarket. Processing unknown and in a plastic container. Average.

I followed her instructions and everything seemed to work out, once the jars cooled the lids caved in slightly, which suggested they were sealed. However, I returned to the internet, wanting to research a little bit more about the water-bath method when I saw that the oven method is now not regarded as the perfect way to sterilise jars. When I tried to research what the oven method was, deeply suspicious that it was exactly what I just did, I struggled to find a right answer. I’d love some advice is anyone has it.

For a moment, my heart sank at the mere possibility that all these pears would be wasted. It’s only day 1 and I’m already making mistakes! But then, that’s what happens when you try something new. Mistakes are made to be learnt from. So if you go into your store cupboard next season and see your sauces and bottled fruit covered in mould, just know that mine are probably just the same. Laugh, figure out what you did wrong, and try again.

But sometimes trial and error pays off. Among the trays of fruit was a tray of garden picked tomatoes. As a child, my mother would bulk buy seconds tomatoes cheap when they were in season, and turned them into soup and her famous tomato sauce. The house would smell of ripe tomato for days. I know some may gag at the mere idea of it, but even now the smell of cooking tomatoes makes my mouth water.

Well, if she can do it, so can I.

I’d read in a cook book, that a good start to any soup is to sweat onion and garlic in a pan with a little oil. Unfortunately, I don’t really like onion, but I followed the instructions anyway.

It’s the texture I can’t stand… it feels like cellophane wrapped in tinfoil. Argh.

Next I added the tray of chopped tomatoes and stood over it for a moment. Surely that couldn’t be it. I mean, it smelled amazing, but was soup really that simple? I’d never actually made soup before, so I didn’t know. Maybe it needed something else. What else goes with tomato?

I grabbed the oregano and added a nice big pinch. Finding an opened tube of tomato paste, I squeezed a little in, and finished it off with salt and pepper.

Somewhere along the line, I created a masterpiece. Whether it was the freshest of fresh tomatoes or that little bit of oregano, the flavour was deep and moreish.

Finish off with some fresh bread and a little cheese and voila!

Homemade Tomato Soup

Sustainability Test - Tomatoes grown about 600km away in a backyard glasshouse, might have been sprayed once but probably not. Great and tasty.
 Garlic and Onion from a NZ owned supermarket, grown in unknown conditions somewhere in NZ. Can do better.
 Tomato paste from Italy. Bad.
 Salt and Pepper bought awhile back so I have no idea of the brand. Not super.

Anyone have any tips for a budding preserver? How about easy recipes to use up the explosion of food this season? Share your experiences!

On Your Marks, Get Set…

We will be starting this project in earnest on the 20th April.

In the meantime, I’ve been doing some general research on changes I need to make to my lifestyle.

There’s already about fifty items on the list, and the list isn’t as easy to write as you may think.

This isn’t a blog about Green Living, but Sustainable Living, so it isn’t just about looking at environmental impacts. I also want to know how changes will impact the economy, communities, businesses, industry, politics, resource management, laws, technologies, progress, and most of all, happiness. Every issue is multi-faceted and complex.

What makes things even harder is that you can’t always trust the research – there is so much bad science on the internet it can be hard to know where to turn. A company slapping ‘eco-friendly’ onto their product isn’t always eco-friendly themselves, both sides have their liars and misconceptions, and when you’re looking through secondary sources can be a bit like playing Chinese whispers, by the time it reaches your ears, it’s gobbledygook. It makes it tough for anyone wishing to go against the grain.

My research background screams at me to do something about this – I’m sure we all get that overwhelming desire to fix the Internet. I can, at least, try.

The first thing I want to tackle this month is reducing my waste. Plastic in particular is something that’s always bugged me. For something that takes forever to biodegrade, we sure do use a lot of it. Take a look around you – look at your clothes, your food packaging, and even your re-usable bags. So much of it is plastic. How bad is it really? What are the worst culprits? And what can I be doing differently? Hopefully these are just some of the questions I’ll be answering in the weeks to come.

Until then, I have a challenge for you:

Don’t buy any single-use plastic bottles this week.

Check in next week and let me know how hard that challenge was. I’m currently typing this, drinking out of a Pump bottle. So I’m not exactly winning.

The Sweet As Life

Hi, my name is Sarah, and I’m a consumer.

For most of my life I’ve bought whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted it. I spend free time in front of a screen, watching media, surfing the Internet and streaming on YouTube. I tweet, I tumble, I browse Facebook and Pinterest. I like to travel. I own a car, I eat at McDonalds and drink coffee. I shop online. I forget to bring my reusable bags to the supermarket, I drive when I could walk, and I leave my computer running when I go to bed.

This means I’m just a member of a modern, commercial society. Practically average in every way. Only, I want this to stop. Because it has recently occurred to me that this way of living doesn’t line up with things that are important to me. Like my family, my friends, living a rich and fulfilling life, being of strong body and sound mind, and caring for my environment.

The Earth is warming faster than at any time in the past 10,000 years; it’s anticipated that more than a million species worldwide will be driven to extinction; by the end of the century, 150 million people will likely be climate change refugees and 30 million others will be starving; 46,000 pieces of plastic debris float on every square mile of ocean around the world; we currently need at least one and a half planets to sustain our current lifestyles; and I could give you hundreds of facts and examples of how we are killing ourselves and this planet. This is not a drill, people, it’s time to wake up and change a few things ’round here.

It’s not just about hugging trees and saving polar bears. The problems facing developing countries are only going to get worse as temperatures rise; pollution from chemicals leeching into our air and water causes numerous illnesses in developed countries, such as respiratory problems and cancers; and the entire world will suffer food shortages in a changing climate. All because we love our stuff.

And really, how valuable is stuff? When you’re on your death bed, are your going to regret not buying that iPhone 6? Or that flat-screen TV and flash new BMW? How much of that convenience is really necessary? After all, the more money we spend, the more we have to work, so in the end we’re just sinking our time back into our jobs. None of that convenience is used to spend more time with friends and family.

Why couldn’t things be different?

The Sweet As Life is a project started by myself and my partner Hendy as we try and make our lives better. We want to know the facts of the matter, down to the scientific evidence; we want to know who we can trust, and what companies we should support; and we want to enjoy the lives we lead, finding sustainable alternatives instead of dropping out of society completely.

Oh, and we’d love for you to join us. I believe sustainable living is rooted in community. Follow us, help us, ask us, and join us. Because there’s no way we can do this alone.