
The concept of sustainability involves community, especially
your local community. This involves friends, family, neighbors
and those who live in your area. Industrialization has not just
brought us bland and less healthful food, it has helped contribute
to the breakdown in social ties that people once had with each
other.
Sustainable Table wants to help change that trend. We want
to bring people back to the dinner table for delicious food,
as well as stimulating conversation and good company. Below
are some suggestions on how we can do that – if you have
any other ideas, please share them with us!
Ways you can build community include:
Host a Sustainable Dinner Party
Be Social
Buy Local
Transform Others
Cook!
Host a sustainable festival
This can be as simple as a neighborhood barbecue in your backyard
to a community event on public land with speakers, music and
outdoor markets. The key is community. Start a tradition and
have one every year.
You can have a sustainable theme for the festival – spring
planting, fall harvest, tomato-fest (or any kind of vegetable-fest).
New York City has Pickle
Day each October – pick a food or vegetable you like
that’s sustainably grown in your area and create a festival
around it!
If you’d like to host your own Sustainab le Festival,
read our handout “How
to Host a Sustainability Festival in Ten Easy Steps.”
Neighborhood Sustainable Club
Start a sustainable club in your neighborhood. Look for ways
to make your home more sustainable. Look for nontoxic cleaners,
sustainable wood products, energy efficient appliances. A great
place to get ideas and tips is in The
Green Guide.
Meet regularly to share good food (and swap recipes!) while
your group works on ways to get involved with local issues.
Adopt a highway, plant trees, save a rainforest, host a sustainable
bake sale, have a sustainable community cookout, start a community
garden – the list of things you can do is endless. The
key is to get involved – and have fun!
Other variations on a neighborhood club are:
- Cooking club – Gather with friends
once a month and together learn how to can, jar, and cook
sustainable recipes. Invite chefs from local restaurants to
come and show you cooking tips. And don't forget – fondues
are fun! A general internet search for cooking clubs will
give you ideas on what to do.
- Book Club - You could also start a sustainable
book club. There are basically two variations on this –
you can take your existing book club and spice it up by bringing
sustainable food with you to gatherings, or you can either
start a club or convince your existing one to focus on sustainable
books – or do a combination of the two.
Some of our recommendations include:
Fast
Food Nation by Eric Schlosser – was on the
bestseller list for many weeks.
My
Year of Meats by Ruth Ozeki
Hope’s
Edge by Frances Moore Lappe and Anna Lappe
Eat Here: Reclaiming Homegrown Pleasures
in a Global Supermarket by Brian Halweil
The
Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan
- Join someone else’s club –
You could become a snail and join Slow
Food. With over 77,000 members in 48 countries, Slow Food
celebrates local food and artisans in an atmosphere of community
and conviviality. The US
Chapter of Slow Food boasts over 12,500 members.
Now that you have all this great food, what are you going to
do? Cook it, of course! Many people today were not brought up
cooking, so it can seem complicated and time consuming. But,
have no fear, cooking is a joy and something most cooks look
forward to – try it for yourself and see how rewarding
making food can be. Below are suggestions on what you can do.
Take
a cooking class. Some chefs offer cooking/tasting courses
at their restaurant so check your local papers or phone a
few independently-owned restaurants in your area. If you can’t
find one, approach a local chef to see if s/he would be interested
in doing a sustainable course. People pay a fee for the food
and chef’s time – the chef then teaches you how
to cook by cooking a meal for you. Everyone enjoys the meal
and discusses what they just learned. It’s an excellent
way to make new friends and to share your joy of food and
sustainability. And it doesn’t have to end with just
one meal! Turn it into a course or a monthly event.
- You can also look to see if there are
any cooking schools in your area or any colleges and universities
that might offer cooking classes. Specifically request sustainable
food. Sustainable Table’s Sustainable
Culinary Schools section has some schools you might want
to check out.
- Sometimes farms and even community centers
offer cooking classes.
- If you can’t find a cooking class,
start one! You could either cook yourself or try to find a
chef (or different chefs each month). Post up fliers around
town to get a group together. And start cooking! A lot of
the joy of cooking is discovering new things, new tastes,
new combinations of flavors – so have fun – and
get cooking!
- You could turn your cooking class into
a sustainable cooking club. Once you get good enough with
your sustainable recipes, offer to go to schools and community
centers to give cooking demonstrations. Start the type of
cooking class you were originally looking for – if you’re
interested in sustainable cooking, there are most likely more
people in your area with the same interest. Help them get
started – it’s a great way for you to continue
learning.
|