by Amelia M.L. Montes (ameliamontes.com)
“Our language is
the reflection of ourselves.” –Cesar Chavez
“Though we
tremble before uncertain futures, may we meet illness, death, and adversity
with strength; may we dance in the face of our fears.” –Gloria Anzaldúa
Reporting from
Lincoln, Nebraska where I’m shaping, creating, organizing my Chicana and
Chicano literature class that begins in a couple of weeks. There
are so many great books to teach.
This year, I’m also going to include a section on the Chicana and
Chicano “body”— a look at our dietary history, how modernity has produced foods
that cause illness, and an invitation to return to some of the indigenous
Mexican foods that heal and strengthen the body.
I’ll introduce
the food section when we read Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera because even though her book is not
specifically about food, it is about returning—returning, re-evaluating,
reclaiming our past to merge what is best of both the past and present in order
to create a healthier/stronger present consciousness.
This November,
I’ll be joining Dr. Luz Calvo (California State University, East Bay) and Dr. Catriona Esquibel (San Francisco State University) with the amazing poet,
Ire’ne Lara Silva (author of “Furia”), on a panel regarding food and nutrition.
(Click here for El Mundo Zurdo conference information). Professors Calvo and Esquibel have been
teaching their students how to “decolonize” their diets. They have created a “Decolonize Your
Diet” website (click here!).
In an
interview (click here for full interview) with Michelle Foy, Dr. Luz Calvo
(Ethnic Studies professor, gardener, cook, political activist in Oakland,
California), says:
In Ethnic
Studies, we think a lot about what is knowledge, who holds knowledge, what kind
of knowledge is valued. How can
we, as people of color, look at the knowledge we hold collectively and validate
it? Food is a very easy way into
this conversation, as everybody has stories about food; everybody has foods
that they like. Because we are so
colonized and because my students, especially, are living a lot on fast food
and really cheap food, it provides a way to open up conversations about the
impact of capitalism and consumerism on our bodies and communities. We also talk about how we can recover
some of the ancestral knowledge that people hold in their immediate families. It’s pretty cool to get students to
realize that maybe their great-greandmother has the key to our people’s
survival and health. Maybe this
great-grandmother knows more than some big professor at Harvard.
It’s good
for student’s self-esteem, in a certain kind of way. To validate that their families hold this knowledge. It’s also a good horizontal teaching
method, rather than me being the holder of the knowledge, I facilitate the
sharing of knowledge.
Also,
something I’ve been thinking about a lot—what kind of education and knowledge
is valuable to have? As we go
deeper into this global economic crisis, it’s actually some of these older,
traditional ways of knowing how to survive at a really basic level that are
going to be critical. For me personally,
I’m trying to get up to speed. I
now know how to garden, grow my own food, prepare it, and store it. Those are the skills that are going to
be helpful for us to survive as a people going forward.
So many great books! |
I’m
looking forward to sharing our food knowledge in my Chicana and Chicano
literature class while also reading Anzaldúa, Eden Torres, Manuel Muñoz, Sandra
Cisneros, Américo Paredes, María Amparo Ruiz de Burton, the poetry of Xanath
Caraza, Eduardo Corral, Ire’ne Silva, etc. So many writers!
Reading, discussing, writing, trying new foods and recipes—I can’t wait!
And
speaking of food and gardening, last week I posted a picture of a volunteer
plant that appeared in a corner of my garden and has spread out to various
sections of my backyard. At first I
thought it was zucchini. But it’s
not. I have a pumpkin patch with
one pumpkin growing happily!
Amazing.
As well I have a
very healthy corn plant, lovely basil, a ton of very healthy kale, broccoli,
cherry tomatoes, and poblano chiles.
It’s been a great season due to the cooler weather in Nebraska this
year.
More
gente are learning how to garden and eat the food they grow. Another “La Bloga”
writer, Michael Sedano, is a gardener and foodie. He often showcases some of
his recipes on his Tuesday blogs. We are recognizing that fast food, processed
food is making us ill and the only way to combat this colonizing of our diet is
to feed ourselves. I spent about
$12.00 on little tiny kale shoots that have just burst out into huge lovely
plants. I’m saving a lot of money on greens with this kale and it is so
healthy.
My volunteer pumpkin patch with growing pumpkin! |
My vegetable garden in Lincoln, Nebraska |
There are
also many Mexican grocery stores in town (yes, here in Lincoln, Nebraska—the
Midwest—we have a number of Mexican grocery stores and really delicious and
authentic Mexican restaurants) where I can get cactus and my favorite dessert
fruit: tamarindo.
Tamarindo: For a great sweet and sour treat (and
very low carbohydrate count), consider the tamarindo. Usually people have had tamarind (English) or tamarindo
(Spanish) in drinks processed with a lot of sugar, etc. I invite you to eat it raw. That’s the best way.
Tamarindo pods hanging from tree |
The tamarindo tree produces hundreds of
pods. You peel the pod and find this
delicious sticky fruit with the seeds inside. It’s delicious to chop up and add to salads or even
yogurt.
Best of
all, Tamarind/Tamarindo has so many health benefits (the following is taken
from this website (click here):
Just peel off the outer layer and eat! |
- It’s sticky pulp is a
rich source of non-starch polysaccharides or dietary-fiber . . .
- Dietary fibers in the
pulp bind to bile salts (produced from cholesterol) and decrease their
re-absorption in the colon; thereby helping the excretion of “bad” or LDL
cholesterol levels from the body.
- While lemon is composed of
citric acid, tamarind is rich in tartaric acid. Tartaric acid gives a sour taste to food but is also a
very powerful antioxidant.
- This prized spice is a good source of minerals like copper, potassium, calcium, iron, selenium, zinc, and magnesium.
- Tamarindo is also rich in many vital vitamins, including thiamin, vitamin A, folic acid, riboflavin, niacin, and vitamin-C. Much of these vitamins are antioxidants, and co-factor functions for enzyme metabolism inside the body.
cactus paddles ready to prepare |
I've already discussed cactus in an earlier posting, but I thought I'd remind again-- how important the cactus is in nutrition.
I wear gloves to cut off the spiny thorns |
After you cut off the thorns and cut them up like this, then either stir fry or boil for just about 5-8mins. |
Here's a delicious dish with cactus, chiles, goat cheese, tomatoes |
close-up of tepary beans |
There are so many great ways to include cactus in your breakfast, lunch, or dinner dishes. You can mix it with eggs in the morning (like my grandmother used to do), add it into your salsa recipe, stir fry it with your main dish for dinner. The possibilities are endless and so delicious!
Tepary beans soaking in water. Soak overnight and then cook! |
Out of all the beans we know, this bean has the lowest carbohydrate count. And it is an ancient bean. Read here all about the tepary: click here!
There are so many foods from our antepasado to recover and include in your dishes.
I am wishing all of you a health-filled, delicious week! Enjoy!
5 comments:
Thank you, Amelia, for this excellent article. I love the idea of decolonizing the diet!
Your students are so lucky to have you to teach this class in Chican@ literature.
The Gluten-free Chicano cooks and recommends GF victuals and restaurant service. He'll make an appearance on the 20th again. mvs
Gracias Linda y Michael!
Thanks Amelia for all the wonderful information. Your class sounds great and all those books looks just as delicious as the nopalitos! :)
A beautiful post, Amelia! Thank you for the gentle encouragement--both in the classroom and in the kitchen.
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