Interview with Lauren of DC Healthy Bites, and Info about “Eating Real in Processed World” DC Event on March 12th

March 5, 2013 in Food Movement, Interview

Today I want to introduce you to an amazing philanthropist and new friend named Lauren Brinkac. Ok, I know you wanna know the back-story – I reached out to Lauren on Facebook when we said she’s working on this nifty restaurant resource for special people like me who are careful about where they eat and who want more info from a restaurant menu than is typically present even in the recipe description (like, do you use soy oil to saute these veggies?) We are both on the DC Meat Up Facebook group (a paleo / real-food focused discussion group) – so I could tell she knew her stuff (nutrition-wise) when she started recruiting volunteers for the DC Healthy Bites restaurant initiative (yeah, there’s a Facebook group for that as well – come join if you’re interested!) I wanted to meet Lauren for coffee to discuss our mutual love for sustainable, REAL food – but instead of meeting one-on-one, I told her to come to this women’s networking thing I had never been to before … I know, it could have been weird – but instead turned out to be awesome! Femworking women meet every Saturday morning to discuss their entrepreneurial and creative projects, and find ways to help each other out. If you’re in the DC area and want to join for that, here’s the link to the Meetup event. You’re welcome! (I mean that nicely, not sarcastically … as in, “you’re welcome to join us!”)

Anyway, so after getting to know Lauren a bit and learning about her awesome new initiatives, I wanted to share some of what she’s working on with you guys, so you can follow along. One of Lauren’s biggest projects for DC Healthy Bites is a fundraiser event she has put together for the American Autoimmune Related Disease Association (AARDA). The health-awareness-inspired party will go down on Tuesday, March 12th, and will feature the inspiring Stacy from Paleo Parents (who lost a lot of weight and got healthier on paleo) and Gina from Simplistic Wholistic who was able to manage her ulcerative colitis condition with a real food lifestyle … AND there will be delicious, healthy food and a good amount of dancing too! Sign up to benefit the AARDA and have a great time by following this Eventbrite link.

And now onto the interview with the fabulous Lauren …

Interview with Lauren Brinkac, Founder of DC Healthy Bites

1. Tell us a little bit about DC Healthy Bites – what inspired you to start this? 

For as long as I remember, I have always been interested in improving my health and fitness. I grew up as an athlete and continue to maintain an active lifestyle today. As a marathon runner and a triathlete I have always been conscious of my diet. Although physical fitness came easy to me, it wasn’t until I started to take an honest look at my health in terms of the quality and type of food I consume that I was able to commit to a REAL and whole foods lifestyle.

Some of my close friends have Chron’s, celiac disease, Grave’s, IBS, hypothyroidism, ulcerative colitis, food allergies and intolerances. All of them are women under 40 years old. Autoimmunity and autoimmune disease is a major unrecognized women’s health issue, and I am a living example of the statistics. Additionally, depression and bipolar disorder run in my family. Although we know that all these disease have a strong genetic component, increasing evidence suggests that diet is a major environmental trigger.

I started DC Healthy Bites because I wanted to make a difference in our community by helping others achieve optimal health. Through DC Healthy Bites I hope to inform others of the positive effects of healthy eating by demonstrating how the quality and type of food consumed directly impacts their health and well-being.

DC Healthy Bites

2. A little birdie told me that DC Healthy Bites is organizing an awesome, REAL-and-local-food-catered event to benefit The American Autoimmune Related Disease Association! Tell us what we can expect at “Eating Real in a Processed Food World”… the birdie said there’s dancing involved! 

Yes! Bring your dancing shoes to celebrate this great cause! Even though we’ll be having a great time on the dance floor, we’ll be doing so knowing that this event, Eating REAL in a Processed World, is showcasing the importance of a REAL food diet on our health and well-being, while supporting those affected by autoimmune disease. My hope is that attendees will be inspired by the life-changing stories of two local women, empowered to make simple food choices that could be transformative, and enlightened to the rising autoimmune epidemic in our community. The evening will include free and delicious, locally-sourced bites and opportunities to win amazing swag supporting healthy lifestyles. All tickets must be purchased in advance (get your tickets here!), and all net proceeds will be donated to the American Autoimmune Related Disease Association in support of their fight against autoimmune disease that affects 1 in 5 Americans.

3. As I mention in one of my recent posts, it’s freakin’ hard to eat out if you’re avoiding certain allergenic / pro-inflammatory foods — like gluten and soy — that seem to be in a lot of dishes. What are some general tips you have for those who are starting out on a special food regimen but still want to eat out from time to time? What should they look out for in restaurant menus?

Heck yes, eating out can be tricky! Particularly in a profit-driven society consumed with processed, quick and easy food. Fortunately in the DC area we have options that support fresh, locally-sourced, homemade ingredients – but those options aren’t the norm. Nonetheless there are still things we can do to improve our dining experience without compromising our dietary lifestyles. Here are my recommendations:

  • Identify restaurants that have alternative or allergy menus, or which label the dishes on their menus

    that contain common allergens e.g., gluten, nuts, etc. Usually places that make this information available are experienced handling special menu requests and modifications, are sensitive to the dietary restrictions of their customers, and are willing to accommodate.

  • Call ahead of time and ask to speak with a manager. Depending on how specific your needs are, asking these questions ahead of time and talking directly with someone who can answer your questions accurately, eliminates the uneasiness and uncertainty of inquiring with wait staff while at the restaurant.

  • Leave no stone unturned, especially if you have food allergies. You can never be too careful, and inquire about everything even if it appears obvious. Some of the worst food offenders are hidden ingredients. I was horrified recently to discover the use of soy butter at a popular, local area restaurant!

4. On that same note, tell us a bit about your goals for the restaurant resource initiative that you started.

My vision for this restaurant resource is to improve the dining experience of those with dietary restrictions or with general health and food concerns. In doing so, restaurants will become aware of the increasing need to provide detailed menu labels and healthy options for the community. By populating this resource with the ingredients used by local area restaurants, the community will be able to make informed decisions about where they can dine, what they can order, and what modifications they can request without worrying about their health safety or compromising their dietary lifestyle. This would empower those who are hesitant to eat out more often and explore new places, ultimately driving revenue to participating restaurants.

5. Say I’m interested in getting involved in this cool initiative – how would you recommend I get started? Do you have a guide I can follow to evaluate restaurants?

It is easy to get involved, and the first step would be to come and meet me at my Eating REAL in a Processed World so I can tell you all about the great things our team is doing! I recognize that this initiative is a huge undertaking and a work in progress, so we need everyone’s help. Any information we can glean from restaurants is better than none, and some of this information you may already know. Our team drafted a recommended set of guidelines to help facilitate consistent and comprehensive evaluations and to make the evaluation process easy to conduct. If you are interested in improving the dining experience for yourself and others, please help us take action by emailing me and joining our DC Healthy Bites working group. All levels of participation and contribution are welcomed.

6. “The gut is the second brain.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement – why or why not? 

WOW, you must be following my tweets lately. Yes, I couldn’t agree more! Our gut is derived from the same embryonic tissue as our brain, so it’s not surprising that second only to our brain our gut contains more neurological associations than any other part of our body. Around 70-80% of our immune system resides in our gut, and our gut contains 100 trillion microbes performing functions essential to our survival. Think about it, that is 10 times more bacterial cells than the total number of human cells in our body! Everything we eat impacts the health of our gut, and a healthy gut supports proper immune, digestive, and nervous system functions. Given the gut’s integral role in virtually all areas of a normal functioning body, it could be argued that not only is our gut our second brain, but in fact our gut IS our brain.

7. Which resources and websites would you recommend for someone with an autoimmune condition? 

The American Autoimmune Related Disease Association (AARDA) is the only national nonprofit organization dedicated to collaboratively fighting autoimmune disease by addressing the education, public awareness, patient services, and research needs of the community. AARDA supports a variety of useful resources both for patients and families. These include educational information, seminars, nationwide referral services, and quarterly informational newsletters. There are also many national and local disease-specific organizations that the community can become connected with to obtain detailed information about their condition and find support for themselves and their family.

8. What have you found to be the best places to shop for ingredients that are safe for anyone avoiding common allergens like wheat, soy, dairy, etc? Do you have any tips for grocery shopping? 

I find that Whole Foods Market provides everything that I need for a routine trip to the grocery store. Whenever possible I visit local area farmers markets to obtain locally-sourced produce and meat. I love perusing MOMs Organic Market for hard-to-find specialty items.

When shopping, I recommend taking the time to read ALL food labels. This may seem overwhelming at first, but before you know it you will quickly become familiar with which food options to choose over others. Leave all doubt at the store. Don’t buy an item if you are not familiar with a listed ingredient. Second, shop ONLY the perimeter of the store, skipping the bakery. The perimeter of the store is where you will find the greatest variety of nutrient-dense, non-processed food. You are most likely guaranteed to know what you are buying here, so you won’t have to worry about falling to temptation for the overly processed items laden with hidden ingredients that are most commonly found in the aisles.

9. What is your favorite restaurant in the DC area? Favorite meal there?

I am a seafood junkie so any restaurant with a fresh catch is appealing to me. If I had to pick a favorite though, I would choose Founding Farmers. I applaud their approach to providing sustainable, locally-sourced and fresh ingredients and I love their eco-friendly décor. My favorite meal is their Seasonal Fish prepared Napa Provençal with Green Beans and Roasted Sweet Potato – YUM!

10. If you had one large billboard in a busy city, and could put up any message or quote there for the world to see – what would it be? 

If we are what we eat, then we should be no less concerned with what our food eats.

Support local, support whole, support REAL.

Healthy_Bites_Billboard

Who is Lauren?

Lauren Brinkac received a dual BS in Biology and Biochemistry from Syracuse University and a MS in Bioinformatics from George Mason University. She is currently a Lead Bioinformatics Analyst conducting bacterial genomics research of infectious disease. Lauren is a resident of Arlington, Virginia. She is passionate about spreading awareness about the impact of diet on human health, well-being, and longevity as well as identifying local area establishments that provide locally-sourced, REAL and whole food. Check her site DC Healthy Bites for more details!

Interview with Local Food Enthusiast & Beekeeper Kate King (Lettuce Eat Together)

February 24, 2012 in Food Movement, Frugal Eating, Interview, Menus

If you guys remember, a long time ago, I promised that I would be sharing some interviews with you here on My Life in a Pyramid. It took a little longer than expected to start these interviews, but the day has arrived when I’m fulfilling that promise! I have been in contact with food bloggers, nutritionists, homemakers and owners of small sustainable businesses who have expressed interest in sharing their unique experiences with the readers of this blog. And really, what is life without others’ valuable experiences to guide us? So, as long as this blog is active, I will be sharing these informal interviews with you. These people will be sharing their experiences and insight for FREE! Don’t turn it down! A famous Chinese proverb says: “A single conversation with a wise man is better than ten years of study.” Truth.

Interview with Kate King, author of the blog Lettuce Eat Together

I came across the blog Lettuce Eat Together a few months ago, and have already learned quite a bit from Kate! If you follow her posts on Facebook, you will be introduced to sustainable agricultural food practices, recipe and meal planning tips, and information about beekeeping for the brave souls who wish to be proactive about our bee population problem! Learn a little more about Kate here, and read this interview for more information about how Kate has dealt with her son’s severe dairy allergy, how she prepares meals for her family every week using fresh, local ingredients, and when and how she decided to take up beekeeping!

1. Share with us a little bit about your ‘real food’ journey. When were you confronted with the idea that real food is the way to go, and that many of the ‘diet’ regimens out there are not based on good science? 

I have always loved food. My parents love to tell the story that my first word was “Hun-gee” quickly followed by “‘Donalds”. (gasp). My mom could not cook; it was frozen pot pies, hard “baked” potatoes, fish sticks, lunchables. Her favorite foods are Pepsi and Doritos. I was a kid of the 80s when all of these “cool” foods were coming out. Later when my mom was no longer in our home my dad tried, but if it couldn’t be grilled it was Annie’s mac and cheese for dinner. He did, however, always buy organic way before organic was trendy. I started working around food when I was 14. It was an ice cream shop, then at 15, a fish market. At 19, I moved to Nantucket where my real food journey began. It was there that I met some of my dearest friends while working at the Yacht Club snack bar. On our days off we would go out and eat from the amazing the restaurants and talented chefs that the island had to offer. One of my favorites will always be American Seasons where we sat down for a multi-course dinner. I ate sweetbreads for the first time and discovered how wine pairings really do matter.

A few years later, and of legal age, I started the WSET program through Boston University taught by Masters of Wine, Bill Nesto and Sandy Block. I was volunteering annually for the Nantucket Wine Festival, meeting, eating, drinking amazing culinary minds from around the World. I later started working at Casablanca Restaurant in Cambridge, Massachusetts — a Harvard Square staple for many decades. Ruth Ann Adams was the chef during the time I was there and her focus was using local, seasonal ingredients. It was a novelty to me. I was eating around Boston, never cooking for myself at home, at the hands of some of the best culinary minds and some who I was lucky enough to call friends. I never really thought about it then as anything more than great food and great friends.

It was several years later, when my son was almost one and diagnosed with a severe dairy allergy, that I really started to look at food more closely. When I started reading labels, it was no longer a box of snacks or cereal; the ingredient list was of “stuff” that I couldn’t even pronounce. At the same time Food, Inc was being released and the local food movement was gaining steam. As I read, researched, and watched the many diet fads come and go, I have learned whole foods is the only way to go. There are many companies out there claiming amazing results, but they are only after the dollar. If they can get you quick enough results, then you are hooked, if you gain weight again, then “you did something wrong.” Fresh, whole food (preferably local) has no additives or preservatives; it is the food in it’s purist form. You are free to control what you do with it. How can you really go wrong with what Mother Nature is supplying for you? Quality over quantity is much more satisfying for your system.

2. You share on your blog, Lettuce Eat Together, that your son has a severe dairy allergy. Identifying the cause of food allergies and learning to live without a beloved food group isn’t easy. Please share some insight as to how you dealt with this, and what steps you’ve taken to ensure that your son is well-nourished. What real foods do you use to substitute dairy in your cooking? 

Dairy is my favorite food group. Cheese, fruit, baguette, and wine: I could live off just that meal. I was very careful during my pregnancy to not eat unpasteurized, soft cheeses, which made for a very long pregnancy. I have always held the belief that if you are hungry and need something to eat, you should grab a cube of a wonderful, hard cheese and you will be satisfied till your next meal. So the day that my son had to be taken to the Emergency Room after sharing a yogurt with me broke my heart. Not only was he not “normal” but dairy, my favorite food group, was the culprit. No pizza, cheese burgers, string cheese, cheesecake, creme brulee, fudge pops, blue cheese and marscapone melted on top of a freshly grilled steak. After the initial panic, tears, and making some oatmeal cake for his first birthday cake, I really started to learn about just how many options there are out there. I also started to learn how to really cook from scratch. The cosmos works in mysterious ways; his food allergy became the biggest blessing that could have ever happened for our family. I found a passion I didn’t know I had. I loved to eat great food and now because of him I learned I loved to create it too. I have learned of the many other foods that have a healthy dose of calcium, like broccoli. All of our food is cooked from scratch. To supplement milk, we use almond milk, for butter I use coconut oil in the majority of baking, for cheese I have made homemade nut cheeses. And for everyone out, there eggs are not dairy!

3. You started blogging on Arubula’s Kitchen, and then shifted your focus a little bit and started another blog, Lettuce Eat Together. What prompted the switch, and what do you hope to accomplish with your new blog? 

I started Arubula’s Kitchen as a business and it ran well within what I could handle being the lone operator. Recipes were picked up by major publications and it opened many doors for me to meet people throughout the growing food movement. Over time, I felt my focus shifting from sharing recipes to becoming an activist, wanting to shift attention beyond just recipes, to the actual happenings in the food world. I didn’t think it was fair to followers of Arubula’s Kitchen who had signed on or followed to get recipe suggestions to be also getting information about my opinions on food politics. Lettuce Eat Together opened up an opportunity to get out of the kitchen and into the world of food. However, for Arubula’s Kitchen fans and loyalists, blogging menus will be back this Spring.

4. Planning meals for the week is kinda your thing. Both close friends and people who find you online approach you asking for a meal plan that they can follow. Please share with us how you approach meal-planning, and what tips you have for others who would like to plan their meals in advance. For those who don’t have time to come up with their own meal plans, do you currently offer a service to supply weekly meal plans to their inbox? 

I started Arubula’s Kitchen in 2009 when friends were calling, texting, and emailing at dinner time asking what they should make for dinner, or they had bought this ingredient and wanted ideas on what to do with it. Eventually, one day a friend offered to pay me if I would write her a weekly dinner menu/recipes, a prep list to speed up weekday meals, and a grocery list. It was catered to the individual’s household, so no two menus would be alike. I sent out questionnaires at the beginning getting to know those who would be seated at the table. Food likes, dislikes, health restrictions, diet restrictions, allergies, time, kitchen comfort, and food budget were all considered while creating a menu. I gave the opportunity to cancel the subscription anytime, and it was very popular with new moms who would want to make a week’s worth of freezer meals one day a week and working parents who loved that I could help with their time constraints. I also had a few clients that used it for their nannies. I kept track of their past grocery lists and an idea of how much of pantry staples they would have used and reduced the waste from fresh ingredients. It would be emailed out on Fridays by 3 for the following week. If someone had an issue with a recipe they could email me and I would switch it out for them. This service is not currently available, but I am planning to bring it back in 2013.

5. Let’s talk about beekeeping! As many people are starting to learn, the world’s bee population is rapidly diminishing and no one knows why — a huge problem for our food supply, which depends on bees to naturally pollinate many of the crops we use for food. When and how did you decide that you’re going to be a beekeeper? How big was the learning curve to start taking care of bees? Please share your favorite resources for anyone who wants to learn the basics about beekeeping. 

Honestly, I was on Facebook one day, and saw a post that a local bee club was offering a beginning beekeepers class and to email for more information. I am always thirsty for extra knowledge about the food world and thought this was the perfect opportunity for me to learn more about bees. It was a whim at 8 am, but that is usually how some of my best decisions start. I don’t know how the rest of my class faired with their bees, but my gals are still going strong (knock on wood after this crazy winter!). I dropped them within the first 10 minutes of having them while they were still in their “package”. That was the one and only time I have been stung — and I deserved that. I never got into my mentor’s apiary to learn first-hand, so everything I know is from books and the class. I did learn after I had completed the class that my own grandmother had been a backyard beekeeper, so perhaps it is in my blood? I use Ashley English’s “Keeping Bees”, and the text books and notes from my class. I talk to other beekeepers and read online a lot. The class was definitely the most helpful though.

The good news is that for the most part, these bees want to be left alone to do their thing. Beekeeping is a very low-maintenance hobby.  I check in to make sure there isn’t any disease or infestation, but other than that, I let them do their thing. I am not one of those keepers who looks for the queen when I am in there or knocks off queen cells so they don’t swarm. I want them to be comfortable and natural. If there are bees in the hive, there is a queen in the hive. If they want to swarm, then I hope they’ll do it close by so I can get a new colony, but I think not allowing them to swarm is also reducing the bee population.

6. Bees are also great for the raw honey they produce, a wonderful natural sweetener that contains health-promoting live enzymes, vitamins and minerals. But not all honey is great: most commercial honey is laced with antibiotics or imported from other countries that deceitfully add ‘fillers’ like corn syrup to thicken the honey and make a higher profit. That’s why it’s best to opt for locally-produced honey that supports local beekeepers and ensures that the product is free from antibiotics and other fillers. As a beekeeper, how to do keep your bees healthy without need for antibiotics? If you don’t currently sell any honey that your bees make, which resources out there can help people find sources for local, raw honey?  

First do not buy grocery store honey. Second, do not buy organic honey (it’s not). Always buy from the farmers market or a local beekeeper; not only is that honey going to be actual honey and you can talk to them about how they treat their hives, but it’s going to have your local pollens in it, which is great for your body, especially as a seasonal allergy sufferer. I have been fortunate enough to not have anything invade my hive. I also have an extremely hygenic queen/colony. Many beekeepers are robbing their hives of so much honey that they have to do feedings throughout the winter. I would rather take a smaller amount and let the bees have their self -made food for the winter; maybe that is why I don’t have the same issues of disease. I do not sell my honey currently, but will be starting in September 2012. Farmers markets are the best option to find local honey, if their isn’t someone there, I promise someone knows of someone.

7. What is the most basic advice you have for someone switching from a SAD (Standard American Diet), full of junk food, to a ‘real’ food diet, made of wholesome ingredients?

A day at a time. Get a routine down and plan your meals. Every Monday, you can plan to make a real food meal, then make it every Monday and Tuesday. Start with days that you don’t usually eat out; it will make it easier not to loose momentum. Planning your meals and scheduling one day a week to prepare a majority of it so it is just a matter of assembly later in the week helps a lot. Don’t cheat! If you are going to change to farmer’s market eggs, but the farmer’s market is out of eggs — be out until the next market day; don’t go to the store. This goes for cuts of meat too. Try to free yourself of convenience; eventually the quick fixes will seem like a chore. Don’t buy the junk: if it’s not in your house, you can’t eat it. I keep carrot sticks in a mason jar of water on the top shelf next to hummus and we always have apples. My kid snacks on these kind of items and doesn’t miss the other stuff at all.

Tamar Adler recently published an amazing book “The Everlasting Meal”. Read it before you even start. She has a way of getting into your head and giving you an “I can do this” attitude, thereby freeing you of modern “convenience”.

8. Please share with MLP readers some of your favorite local food sources in the Northern Virginia area. Where did you find these farmers and sources? Do you shop for groceries at a health food store or obtain most of your fresh food from farmers’ markets and buying clubs? 

Flavor Magazine hands down is the best resource for Northern Virginia and DC foodshed. The Eat Well Guide helped me a lot when I was first trying to find local foods. Word of mouth is best; once you start talking to one farmer, he is going to tell you about someone else doing this or that. Take advantage!

I am very proud to say we are 95% barcode-free in our house. It has been a many-year-journey and it’s about to get even better as we are joining an amazing CSA. We currently buy our meat in bulk from the farm and pick it up at the processor. I taught myself to can a few years ago so we keep many foods on hand and of course take advantage of my freezer. We currently buy only a few pantry items;  the rest is filled in with a winter farmer’s market.

9. Budgeting can be tricky when switching to a real foods diet of local and organic produce and pastured meats. What are some ways you’ve learned to “stretch the dollar” and get the best deal, without compromising on the quality of the ingredients?  

I think that is a old wives’ tale. To give you an idea: in the CSA we have signed up for, weekly meat, weekly produce, bi-weekly bread making supplies, weekly pantry, and weekly eggs may cost $1400, but it actually come out to only $56 a week. A WEEK to feed a family of 4. And they also have a-la-carte items every week if I want something extra. So yes, you have the initial cost to join and some allow you to do payments, but look at that amazing budgeting.

Other ways are to find friends to buy bulk meat with. A 1/4 cow will run you about $800, but you will have most of a deep chest freezer full of meat (depends on size), but now all cuts of meat are created equal in price and you get a wide variety. It’s about quality not quantity. Our portion size has grown immensely in the last 50 years. Go buy smaller plates or find some at your local flea market and you won’t be trying to fill a large plate. We eat with our eyes first. I would rather buy 3 pounds of 99 cents/lb apples than a bag of Doritos.

Buying a bag of flour, yeast, water, salt is cheaper so make your own fresh baked bread instead of the store-bought loaves. I keep a 5 gallon bread bucket in my fridge. I make a bulk batch and tear off and cook for 35 minutes when I need to, done within the same amount of time as a 30 minute meal. I never buy croutons or breadcrumbs, just throw the staling bread in a freezer bag in the freezer and grab it as I need it. All my tails — things I chop off as I am preparing a meal — go into a freezer bag then when it is full or when I have meat/poultry/fish bones, I make my own stocks. I always make double batches of my dinners, and freeze or refrigerate half. Nine times out of ten, whatever it is — can be put over rice, pasta, thick toast, stretched with stock, put in an omelette or frittata or made into a pot pie for another meal.

10. What do you think is the biggest challenge for people to make the switch to eating better — is it the price difference, the inconvenience of finding local and sustainable sources, or the time it takes to learn to cook from scratch? Or do you feel that a lot of people still don’t know what it means to “eat healthy” in the first place? 

Finding the why. This is something with which I have battled over and over since I had my own “aha” moment. How can I reach everyone else to see just how easy and awesome it is! Local, fresh food really does taste better. You really do feel better. It really doesn’t take much more time. And best of all, you get to meet the amazing people growing your food, something I didn’t realize would be my favorite part in the whole thing. Last spring, the market near my house had just reopened for the year and all the farmers I knew from the year before were coming out from their winter dens. I was walking down an aisle and all of a sudden I heard my name being called from the other end. It was our meat farmer calling to me, welcoming me, excited to show me what he had, to talk stories of the winter and plans for this year’s growing season. It was that day that I realized just what an awesome connection we had with our food.

There are plenty of naysayers out there that are going to tell you it’s hard, no way you can do it, and at one point, one of those voices will be your own, but when you start to taste, feel, and have that relationship with your food and away from the flourescent lights of the grocery store labels it becomes a magically cool place. I see it in my kid. He eats amazingly well, never scared to try something for the first time. He knows which items each of our farmers carries, and even knows who will give him samples.

I think we need to step away from saying it’s simply healthier, or it’s not working, and focus instead on the amazing experiences that are found when making relationships with the people who make and grow our food. And there is usually an amazing baker hiding within the stalls with fresh baked goods from that morning waiting to sell you a bear claw or a danish.

If you wish to contact Kate to schedule meal planning services or simply to ask questions, email her or find her on Facebook

**This post has been shared on Butter Believer’s Sunday School Carnival