Vancouver Sun

Oncoming winter of my food discontent

Living la vida locavore isn’t easy at this time of year, Cynthia R. Greenlee writes.

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I have a peculiar and unrecogniz­ed form of seasonal affective disorder. I can tell it’s coming not by the turn of the calendar page but by the menu updates at my favourite café.

No longer available: that everything bagel smeared with chèvre from happy goats, justsalty-enough pesto and two slabs of blazingly colourful heirloom tomatoes. In its place is a biscuit with pumpkin spread. The fashionabl­e farm egg atop it is a sad substitute for a sublimely sunripened tomato with that creamy spread.

My seasonal grumps come from the disappeara­nce of summer’s cornucopia from groceries, restaurant­s and my table. Socially conscious eater that I strive to be, I know we’re supposed to follow the eat-local mantra and rejoice in the timesensit­ive diversity of all that our soil produces.

I should be revelling in gourds. Instead, I’m sneaking blackberri­es at the grocery store.

Let’s face it: Living la vida locavore ain’t easy, which is something advocates of responsibl­e consumeris­m and diets tend to gloss over. It’s nearly impossible to feed myself solely on foodstuffs grown within an arbitrary radius set by food thinkers and theorists who don’t live where I do and whose confidence advocacy often fails to acknowledg­e that “local and seasonal” doesn’t mean affordable or accessible.

As for locally grown winter produce — are you going to eat kale without the benefit of heat, massage or dressing? Likely not.

Of course, I recognize the value of eating locally and seasonally. Fresher is better.

I want to support my neighbour-producers. And I appreciate that we leave smaller environmen­tal footprints when our grapes don’t have to have a passport or take a cross-country ride to a local market.

“Woke” eating brings me a sense of virtue, but then the community sustainabl­e agricultur­e boxes arrive, with their dully predictabl­e collection­s of cruciferou­s vegetables.

A person cannot live on root vegetables and leafy greens alone, no matter the late crazes for broccoli rabe, kale and rainbow chard. And indeed, there is such a thing as too much roughage.

Unpopular opinion though this might be among virtuous foodies, I cannot summon the same excitement over kohlrabi and curly kale that I feel for squash blossoms and a perfectly ripe plum. The transition to autumn bruises me.

So I cheat. My pantry is stuffed with canned delectable­s that hold the memory of summervegg­ie excitement. My fridge is packed with enough jams to enliven oatmeal and survive nuclear meltdown; my freezer runneth over with icy produce. I break out my stovetop or outdoor grill to render rock-hard peaches softer, or to cook corn in the cob in husk.

To be sure, fall has its gustatory pleasures: pumpkin seeds and pumpkin flesh; crisp nights and crackling bonfires; apple butter and cider.

And there are those seasonal straddling treats that blend the summer’s waning fruits and the ascendance of fall, such as the cherry-pumpkin jam I recently sampled.

Meanwhile, I will be eating organic strawberri­es from California or Mexico, and dreaming of when I can enjoy local ones guilt-free next July.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A person cannot live on leafy greens alone, no matter the latest crazes touting broccoli rabe, kale and rainbow chard.
GETTY IMAGES A person cannot live on leafy greens alone, no matter the latest crazes touting broccoli rabe, kale and rainbow chard.

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