Friday, August 9, 2013

SNAP week in review

I haven't been blogging lately...life happens. 

Last Saturday, I went to the food pantry again.  The line was as long, but it went more quickly; I was in line only a half hour.  It was the first weekend of the month, so not as many people came because they had a different source for food.  I can understand wanting to give yourself a break from the line at least one week out of the month

I'm a gregarious person by nature, so my time in line is spent talking and laughing with the people around me.  I've learned about some great places to get free second-hand furniture and clothing and some places to look for jobs and great places to find bargains.  I've learned more about the Native American belief system and about the four times the earth was flooded.  I've learned that people are just people no matter where they are and each of us can fit into any social situation as long as we are not judgmental and are just willing to put ourselves out there.

There is a yard in front of the food pantry where the children always seem to migrate to play.  Moms and Dads are in tune to where their children are and what they are doing while slowly moving forward in the line.  Once they move past the edge of the building and they can't see their kids playing, they call them to come and stand with them.  The protective parent doesn't go away just because the income does.  There are good and bad parents in all ranges of the income scale.

I got some really great stuff this visit.  I am set for yogurt for awhile because of a donation of expired products that came in.   You can freeze yogurt, but it changes the consistency.  I use it just for smoothies, so that was fine.  I also got some coffee, canned carrots, canned tomatoes, cauliflower, peppers, bread, pork patties and canned pumpkin.

I'm trying my best to augment my resources with healthy choices.  It would have been easy to load up on bread and cereal, but that wouldn't have been the healthiest choice for me.  With the visits to the pantry, I'm able to get some healthier choices from other sources.  I still have a few dollars left to spend on fresh vegetables and fruit.  My next "month" starts on the 19th, so I have to make wise choices from here out.

I do want to add that it isn't easy to talk yourself into going to the food pantry even though you may not have anything left to eat.  The volunteers and workers at St Francis do a great job, though, of making the experience normal and not shameful.  We as a society load too much shame and condescension on those who need social services instead of finding out why they are there in the first place and trying to correct the situation.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

I'm getting fat on the SNAP challenge

I'm putting on weight with the SNAP challenge.  When you do the challenge for any great length of time, healthy foods go right out the window and filling foods become the focus.  I eat a healthy meal during the day, but by the time I get home from work, I'm really hungry and tend to binge on what is convenient and filling.  The problem with that is that what is quick to make is usually high in carbohydrates.  My banana muffins are making me have muffin top!

I don't have the money to just go out and purchase more fresh vegetables or some apples as fillers.  I blew through the budget early in the month and am left with canned and frozen fruits and vegetables.  They are completely unappetizing to me.

My garden isn't producing anything but lettuce and onions at this point.  There are some small cucumbers, peppers and tomatoes on the plants, but they haven't developed yet.  My beans are starting to bloom, but it won't be until next week that I start to see some production.

I'm tired of soups and stews and casseroles!  I want steamed fresh vegetables with a side of meat!

Gawd!  I sound whiny, don't I?

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

SNAP Challenge reflections

So, I've come to the conclusion that eating healthy on SNAP involves using some of the other assistance available.  The food pantry and soup kitchen are great sources for healthy ingredients and meals, but there still is a way to personally coordinate all of these sources for the best impact.

One common tendency for people on SNAP is to use their foodshare benefits right away and then seek out the pantries and soup kitchens.  I've done this myself and I can completely understand why people make this mistake.  The SNAP money doesn't go that far, and leads to limited menu options.  When the beginning of the month rolls around again, it is an opportunity for different menu choices, so we blow through the SNAP money because everything in the store looks good.  For me, budgeting and planning go right out the window at the sight of fresh fruit and vegetables and a meat option that I haven't spent the entire last week eating.

The best way to get the maximum health benefits from SNAP is to look at the other sources you seek out and combine these resources throughout the month instead of always at the end.  Most food pantries will let you visit once a week, so plan that into your month.  Visit there before shopping at the grocery store so you don't buy duplicates and have more to spend on healthy options.  I recommend that even at the food pantry you have your shopping list.  That way, you are an active participant in your own healthy choices.  Don't just grab food and plan to use it later.  The worst thing you can do to other food insecure families is take something you won't really use and end up throwing it away when someone farther back in the line would put it to good use. 

If you tend to run out of food by the end of the month and spend the entire last week eating at The Community Table, plan those visits throughout your month.  If you normally eat there five times at the end of the month, plan at least once a week to eat there.  This allows you to work these visits more into your schedule instead of being at the mercy of the serving schedule they offer.  Also, The Community Table of Eau Claire posts their day's menu on the answering machine, so if they are serving something you don't like, you can go another day that works with your schedule. 

Whether you are on SNAP or not, just making a few changes to the way you use your food resources throughout the month can give you more control over your schedule and your food dollars and can take some of the stress out of food insecurity.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Shopping at St Francis Food Pantry

Saturday, I went to the food pantry for the first time as a guest.  The amount I would get on SNAP is not enough to eat healthy, so I decided to augment that with visits to the food pantry.  The director at the pantry knows about my challenge and has encouraged me to visit as a guest to be able to see how a food pantry can help food insecure families.

St Francis is open from 11:00 'til 1:00 on Saturday, and I thought if I got there about halfway through I wouldn't have to stand in line long.  Boy was I wrong!  The line was out to the street and a lot of people were standing in the chilly wind waiting for their chance to get into the building.  They allow only six people in at a time to avoid the pushing and crowding and to make the shopping more efficient.  The line was so long that an hour went by before I was let into the building for my turn.

The first thing you do when you get into the pantry is sign in.  If you already have a card, you present it.  Otherwise, they have you fill out a registration form so they can log you into the computer and issue you a card.  It was my first time and there was still a substantial line outside, so she asked for a photo ID and told me what to bring the next time I came so I can register then.  I was given a slip of paper with my name and the number of adults and children in my household and what number of guest I was for the day.  I was the 74th family served, and there were many more families waiting outside in the cold.

Then the "shopping" begins.  Having volunteered the day before, I had an idea of some of the produce that had come through, but by the time I got there it was pretty slim pickings.  There were a lot of tomatoes and they were unlimited, but I took only five.  I didn't want them to spoil.  I got a couple of ratty looking green peppers that I can put into a curry; two green chili peppers and two habaneros for my chili; a bag of lettuce that was a day past its expiration, some overgrown cucumbers and a head of radicchio that would be fine once I peeled off the outer leaves for a salad and a lot of blueberries for my fresh fruit.

For the rest, I got some canned carrots to add to soups and stews, a loaf of bakery bread, some baking powder biscuits, a can of water chestnuts and bamboo shoots, a pound of rice, a pound of dry kidney beans, some canned spaghetti sauce, and a can of pumpkin.  I also got two small bottles of milk, a dozen eggs, a bottle of grapefruit juice and a two-pound package of ham. 

The food will surely supplement my SNAP allotment, but I'm thinking that a person would be better off going to the pantry before doing their actual grocery shopping for the week.  You don't know what you are going to find at the pantry on any given visit, and that way you could spend your foodshare dollars on healthier options instead of just cheap, filling food and would be able to take advantage of the weekly store ads.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

St Francis food pantry volunteer experience

So, this week, I got a feel for the St Francis Food Pantry both as a volunteer and as a guest.  Friday I showed up just after nine o'clock in the morning and found Jerry (that day's volunteer coordinator.)  He immediately put me to work helping the guys unload the trucks of donated reclaimed food from local grocery stores.  We separated it between baked goods, produce, and grocery.  The donation is weighed and documented and the dry goods are sent to the aisles for the shelf stocking crew to sort it onto the shelves.

The produce is gone through to separate it to different types and is cleaned and prepped.  It is stored in the refrigerator and right before the public area is opened to that day's guests, the produce is brought back out and the produce area is stocked.  The scraps of bits that were really bruised up or really wilted is set outside in an area where local animal farmers will pick it up and feed it to pigs and chickens.

The group of people I worked with on Friday is absolutely priceless.  They were all retirees who had worked together so long that they were like family.  They razzed each other as if they were siblings, (in fact, several were); and as soon as they found out that I could take some ribbing and dish it right back, they included me in the teasing. 

There is a frantic time when all the pickup trucks of donations are being unloaded and sorted to their different areas; then we cleaned up this large empty area that had just a few pallets of food in it.  A couple of the guys who were filling me in on how the pantry works told me that that area would be filled up again before we left and this food would be distributed in the next couple of days.  Sure enough, the truck showed up from Feed My People food bank and the flurry of activity began again.  The meat was stored in the freezer right away and the buns in the refrigerator.  The non-perishables were left on the pallets in the back storage area for the shelf-stocking crew who would go through them and put them on the shelves.

The Friday crew has worked together so long that they have their own areas they work in. Each area has a system developed to make it more efficient, and they don't usually mess with each other's space.  I don't have a usual spot yet, so I just did what they told me and floated from area to area as they needed me and tried not to step on any toes.  Each area of volunteers was so willing to train a new person and give pointers on how to do things efficiently and safely that it was easy to pick up the process.

When there is a lull in the action they take a break together and have coffee and snacks.  They welcomed me right into the system of volunteering and invited me to come back again.  Whenever possible, I will join that same group--they showed that volunteering is not only fun, it keeps you young.  Having a purpose to your life is rewarding and will help you live a happier existence..

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Human Dynamo Creates Meals for Community Table

I have met the human dynamo and I am awed!  Her name is Tami, and she is the kitchen manager at The Community Table in Eau Claire.  She can easily be underestimated because she is a little thing with a pixie haircut and some colorful tattoos; but she is, in reality, a small bundle of energy who is usually working on three or four tasks at one time and thinking about six or seven more for the near future.

Tuesday,  I went with her for her run to Target to pick up the produce, bread and grocery items that were removed from the shelves because they were no longer saleable. Target has high standards for what they want their customer's experience to be, so if an apple has a bruise, they remove it.  If one strawberry in a package is moldy or one orange in the package is bad, the whole package gets removed.

Through a partnership that Target has with Second Harvest Heartland, the food removed doesn't go directly into a landfill--it goes to those organizations who work with food insecurity.  Feed My People food bank is under the umbrella of Second Harvest Heartland and The Community Table is a partner hunger relief agency with Feed My People; so through those channels, they created a direct partnership between Target and The Community Table of Eau Claire to reclaim the non-saleable food.

While Tami was going through the reclaimed food to choose what she needed for upcoming menus she was answering all of my questions, but I could see that the whole time she had menu possibilities running through her mind.  The bruised pineapples could have the bad parts cut off and be added to the good parts of the apples and strawberries...squeeze the juice of some of the limes and oranges on top, and it will be a tasty, nutritious fruit serving that is easy for the volunteers to make.

There are so many elements to planning a menu for The Community Table.  Tami has to know what meat she is going to have available from Feed My People or has in the freezer.  Then, she will do a recipe search to find a way to use that meat and multiply it out so it serves about 125 people.  She may have to modify some of the spices a bit if she doesn't have one or two that are included in the recipe.  She usually doubles the amount of vegetables in the recipe so the guests are getting the healthiest meal possible and adds grated carrots to a lot of the tomato dishes to increase nutrition and flavor.

She watches the store ads to see what produce is in season, because in about a week, that is what she will be getting a lot of, so she will be able to incorporate that into the meal planning.  If the stores are running ads on broccoli and cauliflower, she can usually bet on getting some soon and can maybe make a soup or side dish to include them.  Seasonal fruits like blueberries and strawberries will be added to the fruit salad to give the guests a summer treat.

Tami also makes sure the meal is healthy and the guests are getting the maximum nutrition.  She is very strict about making sure that meal provided always offers at least 1/2 cup fruit, 1 cup of raw veggies, 1/2 cup cooked veggies, 3-4 ounces of protein and one or more grains.

When meal planning, Tami has to take into consideration if there is a serving team signed up to help and what the experience level is for that team.  If there is a team that is new or is all individual volunteers, she will do a menu that can mostly be prepped ahead so they aren't intimidated by the recipes and the experience.  If it happens that the team works well together and ends up with extra time, they clean salad and fruit or wash potatoes and tomatoes for upcoming menus.  The whole process reminds me of working in a restaurant kitchen and doing the prep work and light cleaning in between the orders; it is very efficient.

I do want to add, though that she does not do it alone.  She plans the meals and regulates the inventory, but without great on-site coordinators and staff members, the plans would all fall apart.  The on-site coordinators work with the volunteer teams, watching over them and guiding them in the process of making and serving the menu that Tami has planned.

Tami works really hard to make sure that the guests and the servers all have a great experience and will want to come back; and as someone who has now been on both sides of the serving counter there, I can say she has succeeded.




Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Starting kids early on vegetables

My grandfather was a goofy man.  If he was laughing hard, he would make a noise that sounded like a donkey with asthma.  Almost a snort, almost a wheeze.  He was a teller of tall tales, and could say the most amazing lies with a straight face and keep grand kids believing him until one of us would recognize that little gleam in his eyes and realize that he was spoofing us.  He was great!  In his way, he encouraged us to always find the funny side of life.  When I was a child, it felt like he was encouraging us to be almost wicked and irreverent; but in retrospect, I know that laughing in the face of adversity can really help one get through the struggles.

As well as his wicked humor, my grandfather taught me a love of gardening and nature.  In the winter, we would go through his gardening catalogs to find all of the strange new varieties of vegetables and flowers.  He would show me apple trees that had three different varieties of fruit and explain grafting to me.  He showed me the different kinds of asparagus and told me that if you want it to stay white, you just cover the plant so it gets no sun.  He taught me that some plants like acid soil and that you should add leaves or pine needles to make them happy.  He taught me that the second year cane on blackberries bears fruit; and if you step on the first year cane, it won't kill the plant.  He gave me the gift of gardening and encouraged my curiosity on that topic.

The other day, I saw a gardening program for kids that will encourage them to garden and to look at trying different kinds of vegetables.  I joined the WNEP (Wisconsin Nutrition Education Program) nutritionists and the Boys and Girls Club at one of the community gardens.  The Boys and Girls Club brought a van load of 3rd-grade kids (usually 14--but only 5 the day I was there) to the garden and, did a scavenger hunt to teach the kids how to identify the different vegetables. They weeded, watered, and harvested and brought the veggies they found to the pavilion where the WNEP educators were waiting to take over.

There, they learned how to prep the vegetables they had harvested and helped make a simple cooked vegetable dish in an electric skillet.  The featured vegetable in this Italian vegetable skillet was zucchini, but while they were working on it, they all got to sample some raw sugar snap peas. All five of them tried the peas and only a couple of noses crinkled up in distaste.  When it came time to try the vegetable skillet, all of the kids and adults gave it a try.  Out of the five kids, only one picked out the zucchini after he tasted it, but the rest took at least a couple of bites of this foreign veggies. Three kids actually ate all that was on their plates, and two went back for seconds.

Out of those five kids, there was one who had never tried zucchini but said he would ask his mom to buy it and make it.  He was very involved in the process of making the recipe; and during the question and answer time, he was able to recite the different ingredients.  I had no doubt that he really would like to have it again and I hoped his mom would get it and try it with him.

My grandfather planted the seed of gardening in me, and each time I saw him there was a conversation about gardening, and different varieties we saw in our gardening catalogs.  That conversation helped that seed to grow and flourish and my love of gardening has been my gift from him and my gift to others.  The seed of trying different vegetables got planted in these kids with this kind of garden experience; but like any seed it needs to be fostered in order to make it grow.  If this young boy tells his mom that he wants a zucchini to make this dish at home and she tells him, "No, you don't like that," that seed will dry up and die.

So, parents and non-parents...I challenge you!  Try a different vegetable that you have never had. If you don't know how to cook it, find one of the millions of recipes online or in a cookbook in the library and let your family be part of the cooking process.  You don't have to buy a lot of it to get a taste--just a bit will do, but try it both raw and cooked.  Talk about this vegetable with your kids or family and ask some questions.  Did you like it?  Are there other ways to prepare this?  Did you like it raw but not cooked or cooked but not raw?  Would you like me to buy this again?  Did you like it enough to put this in your garden?

If we plant the seed early and nurture those seeds, nutritious habits are bound to grow; and what parent does not want to raise healthy kids?

Monday, July 22, 2013

Helping people do better--SNAP educators

“Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.”~Maya Angelou


One of the common arguments I hear about SNAP is that people use the allotment to buy junk food and eat unhealthy.  "They are wasting our money on crap," I often hear.  But what if you weren't raised knowing how to cook?  What if your parents weren't big vegetable eaters and your only experience with vegetables was something from a can smothered in cheese?  What if your family never had a garden and you don't know the first thing about growing your own food or preserving it?  We do what we know until we know better.  But how do we get recipients of SNAP to know better?  To make healthier choices?  To try fresh vegetables that they have never tried before?

Part of the SNAP funding is spent on just that--educating the recipients to make better food choices that will increase the health of their families.  There are SNAP nutrition educators throughout the state who deal with low income families to teach them about nutrition, cooking, gardening, budgeting, meal planning, etc.  These educators teach the basic information people need to survive on a SNAP allotment.

You can find these educators through the University Extension system of your state.  Just look under the "nutrition" or "community resources" tab and you will probably find them.  In Wisconsin, they are called WNEP (Wisconsin Nutrition Education Program) educators, but it is just a different name for the same thing.  If you go on the link for the nutrition education, you will find recipes, handouts and publications that help teach healthy habits. http://eauclaire.uwex.edu/nutrition-education/

WNEP educators work in tandem with other organizations to teach healthy living to as many low income families as possible.  In my area, they work with the schools to teach kids how to cook and eat healthy; they work with halfway houses to teach inmates in transition how to budget and live a healthy life; they work with the local horticulture agency and the Boys and Girls Club to teach lower income kids about gardening and cooking with vegetables; and so much more.

WNEP educators in conjunction with the Eau Claire Community Foundation and the Downtown Farmers Market worked to install the token program that allows SNAP recipients to use their Quest card (foodshare card) to get tokens to be used at the Downtown Farmers Market. (see the link for the farmers market=>) This program gives SNAP recipients access to locally grown fruits and vegetables.  They get the healthiest produce and the money goes to local farmers.

I consider the WNEP educators to be a critical part of the SNAP funding, but while Congress is playing around with the farm bill, their funding could be cut.  How can we expect SNAP recipients to do better with their allotment if they don't know better?  Education is critical to moving ahead toward a better life!

Today, I'm going to see a SNAP educator in action.  I'm going to pop in on Pamela in one of the community gardens where she will be working with kids to educate them on gardening and healthy eating.  More on that later...


Sunday, July 21, 2013

Berries, berries, berries!

The woods are lovely, dark, and deep as Robert Frost said, but they are also filled with berries.  Black raspberries (black caps) and raspberries edge the woods in abundance and thanks to the rainy spring, they are fantastic!  They are big and juicy and sweet--just the way berries should be.

My neighbor and his friends love their monster trucks, so there are trails running through his woods.  At the edge of these trails are the biggest berries I've seen in years.  They get the moisture from the woods, but there is just enough dappled sun to allow them to grow and flourish.  I was able to pick enough to put some away in the freezer for future use. Several pounds of berries are in the freezer now and I could probably go pick that many more in the next few days.

Smoothies will definitely be on the menu this month!  A cup of berries, a cup of spinach, 1/2 cup of yogurt, and a tablespoon of flax seed meal.  It's a great start to a summer day, and I can freeze any that I don't drink as freezer pops.  Nothing wasted that can't be used.

A couple of weeks ago, I asked my mother how she raised us without having to go on assistance.  We were a family of nine...seven young growing children.  Mom's advice is to have a big garden and preserve as much as you can for winter, bake your own bread, and eat a lot of hotdish (casseroles to many of you) and soup to stretch the meat.  We also raised our own meat, but SNAP doesn't allow for purchase of live animals, so let's not even consider that part of her advice.

So, what am I doing right so far?  Garden...check!  Stretching the meat in hotdish and soups...check!  Baking my own bread...as of yesterday...check!  I have a bread machine, so for me it is just a matter of measuring in the right ingredients, turning on the machine, and ignoring it until the timer goes off.  I made an oatmeal bread and a 50% whole wheat bread with Italian herbs.  The oatmeal bread makes fantastic toast, and the Italian herb bread will make great croutons for salad if I don't eat the whole thing.  The bread machine recipes call for bread flour, but all-purpose flour works just fine.  It just doesn't have as much protein in it.

I've made almost everything from scratch so far.  The food tastes better and is more nutritious, but the time spent on prepping and cooking is amazing.  My Saturdays have become a day where I make the week's meals so they are ready during the week.  Instead of buying frozen meals at 2-3 dollars apiece, I'm making my own for half that and freezing them for weekly meals.  It's a lot of work, but it is the only way to make the meals stretch far enough to last.

I'm glad I've done this for more than the initial week.  A week is easier to do than a whole month or two or more.  When this is an actual lifestyle someone is forced into because of poverty, it isn't fun--it is work.


Saturday, July 20, 2013

Month two, day one on the SNAP Challenge

Well, I'm on the road to hell.  I had such good intentions to shop several times throughout the month so I could take advantage of the sales but I pretty much shot the whole budget in one day.  I was hungry for healthy foods and the fruits looked so good.  Also, I needed some yeast, whole wheat flour and powdered milk (whey protein powder was too expensive) if I'm going to start baking bread.  I'm bound and determined to add healthier foods this month and one of the cheapest ways to do it is in the bread I bake.  I use old fashioned rolled oats and some oat flour in my oatmeal bread and whole wheat flour and flax meal in the other breads.  This makes for some really flavorful and nutritious breads with some texture to them, but it isn't cheap.

I did go for some packaged side dishes this month because I was able to get free meat with them.  I'll add some frozen broccoli or spinach to them to pump up the nutritional value.  I also got a package of burritos for quick meals.  I can do some Spanish rice and some refried beans to go with them.  It's a lot of starch, but it is a good amount of protein as well.  I hate to do the prepackaged food because of the amount of sodium and all the preservatives, but sometimes it is necessary.

I was surprised at the emotional connection to food as I shopped.  I was drawn to the produce aisle and was almost overwhelmed by the beautiful shapes and colors of the fresh fruits and vegetables.  They really know what they are doing with those displays, don't they?  I wanted to throw a pepper of every color into my cart; but when I looked at the prices and looked at my list, I got the heck out of the aisle.  I could easily spend the $116.50 all on fruits and vegetables but I wanted to stretch this money for a month.  Besides, if I bought all those vegees at one time, they would rot in my refrigerator because I didn't get around to eating them or they just looked better on the display.

I stuck to my list and purchased only two things that were not on the list, but I'm spending a lot of money on the pantry staples.  I wonder when I will I eventually get a supply of the basics built up so that I can spend less on the starchy fillers and more in the produce aisle?  I wonder at what point I will be ahead of the 8-ball and be able to shop without stressing over the cost?   Does it ever happen?




Thursday, July 18, 2013

Making the list for the second month on the SNAP challenge

Tomorrow, I can go shopping again for some of my groceries for my next month on the SNAP challenge, and I find myself getting almost giddy over the opportunity to have different food in the house.  I've already been looking over the ads to find the right place for me to shop for this week.  I want to find some of the best bargains I can to help me make healthy meals all month.  Some of my meals by the end of this month were sadly lacking in the nutrition department and I leaned too heavily on starchy, filling foods to make it through.

I lost weight on the first week because I was eating healthy but was eating less.  The last three weeks, I ate a lot of carbohydrates and actually started to gain weight.  I can see why people can be on SNAP and be overweight.  It isn't necessarily because we are feeding people too well--it is often a result of eating fillers to stretch the dollars.  Rice is cheap and is easy to add to dishes to stretch them, but it doesn't have a lot of fiber and will stick on your butt and belly more than fruits and vegetables will.

 I'm getting over my food snobbery.  Now, I know that most things can be off brand or store brand and still be great.   In fact, I'm discovering some store brands taste fantastic.  The stores insist on a quality product because their name is on it.  Aldi's has become a normal place for me to shop so I can stretch my food dollars to include the produce aisle.

I'm following the suggestion of Pamela from the UW Extension...I will be shopping every week and not buying the whole month's food all at once.  That way, I will be able to take advantage of  the weekly sales and will have more variety.  I will plan at least three of my meals each week so I can make a list and stick with it.  That will increase the chance that I have some healthy meals throughout the month.

I started a grocery list a couple of weeks ago, and it has two parts:  one side is for essentials, and the other is a grocery wish list.  If I have enough money, I'll get a couple of things from that side of the list to make some special meals.   For instance, I might get a can of coconut milk to make a pork curry.  The milk is a luxury, but it will make a big batch and I can load it up with carrots and spinach and onions and potatoes.  I might not even notice that there isn't a green pepper in it.

 I won't need any sugar or flour this time around, but rice and oatmeal have become staples in my diet.  So has popcorn that is made on the stove top.  Instead of spending lots of dollars on chips and unhealthy snacks, I've been eating popcorn instead.  I love it, and the smell in the house seems to add to the TV watching experience.

Dried beans have really been my friend this month.  I can't afford meat, so I've been adding beans to some of the dishes to get my protein.  Also, I've discovered that homemade refried beans taste so much better than those in a can.  Okay, so I discovered that because I forgot some pinto beans on the stove and cooked them too long, but some accidental lessons are delicious.  Smush them up and add in some salsa and some fresh green onions from the garden...yum!

I've decided to get some whey protein as part of my second month.  I need to get some dried milk for some of my bread recipes and I figure I'll just substitute the protein powder instead.  That way, I have it around for making smoothies, too.  Yeast is on the list, too.  I've caved and will be making bread so the food goes farther.  I'm actually looking forward to a green onion or radish sandwich on oatmeal bread.

My coffee this month will be a can of Folgers.  I love the Archer Farms whole bean coffee at Target, but it just isn't in the budget.  I can't seem to give up coffee, so I will just go for the cheaper alternative.  For another beverage, I'm looking at getting a packet or two of kool-aid.  I can probably make my own popcicles with some of it.

I'm not a milk drinker, so my husband suggested last month that instead of buying fresh milk for cooking I might want to just get evaporated milk.  It was a great suggestion!  That stuff keeps for years, so I don't have to worry about milk going sour in the fridge.  That will be the way I buy milk from here out.

I anticipate that I will be shopping at three different stores and the farmers market this week to get everything I need.  I have that luxury.  A lot of people who are on SNAP don't even have a car, so they have to plan what they can carry on public transportation or shop at the nearest Quick Trip or bodega.  I cannot imagine trying to handle groceries and a child or two on the bus.  What a pain that must be!

Monday, July 15, 2013

What's the 411 on 211 (your 911 for health and human services)?

Ever heard of 2-1-1?  If not, you aren't alone.  More than 80% of the United States is covered by 211 and does not know it.  So, what is it?  2-1-1 is a number that nationally is a link for you to get local information on any community and human services you may need.

Going through a divorce and want to talk to someone?  Call 2-1-1 and they can hook you up.

Are you in an abusive home and need to get out?  Call 2-1-1 and they will let you know what shelter(s) are in your area.

Need some counseling for an addiction?  Call 2-1-1 and they can let you know what is available to your area and what payment options might be available to you.

If you need job training and don't know where to go...call 2-1-1.

If you have run out of food for your family and don't know if you qualify for foodshare or where there is a food pantry or soup kitchen...call 2-1-1.

If you need to find a free or low cost clinic...call 2-1-1.

What happens when you call?  You will be hooked up with a referral specialist who will ask you a few questions; and based upon your location they will let you know what is available in your area to meet your needs.  You are never alone with your problems.  Just call 2-1-1 and you will get help.

Check out their website and you can see some of the services that 2-1-1 will suggest to you.  And spread the word about 2-1-1.  Many people can use it, but just don't know it exists.

http://www.211.org/

Sunday, July 14, 2013

SNAP Challenge--final week of the first month

Yesterday, I planned to go to the St Francis Food Pantry as an actual shopper, but my plans didn't work out.  I spent the morning picking wild berries and the time just got away from me.  That was my only opportunity to work the food pantry in with my schedule, so I will have to make the food I have on hand last one more week.

I still have plenty of oatmeal and pinto beans and enough rice for another week.  I will have enough berries to get some vitamins and the green onions and arugula are coming nicely in the garden and there is a nice-sized Chicken of the Woods mushroom growing out of a stump in my yard.  I have about six radishes left and most of the leaf lettuce that I bought at the farmers market.  Celery, carrots and cabbage round this all out.

The only thing I'm really missing at this point is the meat.  I have three eggs left and two and a half chicken breasts.  I'm thinking chicken fried rice will be one of the main menu items.  With the carrots and celery, it will look good and taste good.  I also have the pasta left, so that can make a nice hotdish or pasta salad.  Menu planning is critical, I'm finding, to stretching food dollars.  I haven't connected in person yet with the nutrition educators at the Extension office, but when I do, that is one of the things I want to ask them about--how do they teach meal planning and budgeting and healthy eating?

One thing that has helped me stretch my food this month is the free meals at The Community Table of Eau Claire.  After today, I will have eaten there four times this month.  I also had a great meal yesterday at my niece's bridal shower.  It's fun when the women in couple's families get together.  In my family, the girls share a lot of laughter and wisdom (or wise remarks?) to start the couple along on their journey.  All of the successful marriages I know have a liberal amount of laughter in them.  Humor can go a long way to soothing the minor slights and the unintentional emotional bruises.

As for the meal, there was ham and beans and pickles and taco salad and pasta salad and a lot of desserts. I must have eaten a half jar of my sister's homemade pickles all on my own.  And the pasta salad had vegies in it!  Real vegies, like broccoli and cauliflower and carrots--ones that crunch!  I was in heaven!  The dessert section didn't appeal to me at all.  I'm not really a sweets person, but after all of the starchy foods this month, I just have no desire for sweets.

That is one of the biggest things I've learned on this challenge--fresh fruits and vegetables are so costly that it is actually cheaper to eat unhealthy.  I've heard that part of the reason is that we subsidise the corn growers and wheat farmers, so things with corn, corn syrup and wheat have some of the cost offset so they cost us little.  I don't know if it is true, but maybe a visit to the local Ag office could shed some light on this.  I wonder if there are any farm subsidies for perishable goods?  What does the government do for those farmers?  There must me some system in place for using all of the crops so they don't go to waste, right?

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Free weed salad...yum!

We've all seen the summer lettuce selection:  leaf lettuce, mescalin mix, arugula, etc.  But what did our ancestors eat before there were such lovely cultivars available?  Look around you the next time you go for a walk and you may find yourself in a living salad bar.

In the dappled shade of the weeping willow where the mosquito and gnat thrive, I found some lovely greens that often get overlooked.  I picked small delicate dandelion leaves that have the slightest bite.  Grown in the shade, they are tender leaves with a milder flavor.  If you gather the ones in the sunny spots, they can be like leather and taste bitter.

Chickweed was next with its flavor similar to watercress.  Today, this will be salad, but I can almost taste it on top of an egg salad sandwich.  I gave a bit of it to my husband to taste and he said, "Yep, tastes like pasture."  Okay, so it isn't for everyone.

Near the garden plot, growing among the weeds was a patch of lambs quarters.  To some, this wonderful plant is known by the name pigweed.  Such a rude name for such a nutritious plant.  This relative of spinach can be used as a replacement in many Florentine recipes.  It is excellent in egg and cheese dishes or in a salad to add a crisp, strong leaf.  I'll be harvesting more later to add to my pasta sauce to add vitamins and flavor.

Add in a couple of leaves of catmint for a little something different.  I'll go back for more leaves later to make a nice summer mint tea.  If I don't like the leaves in the salad, I can always feed them to the cats or chew them after the meal to freshen my breath.

Finally, a bit of sheep sorrel to add a lemony zip.  This little distinctive plant with its Fleur De Lis shaped leaves contains oxalic acid, like rhubarb; and stimulates the same taste buds.  Wood sorrel does the same; it looks like a clover with yellow blossoms and has a wonderful flavor and color.

Tossed together with a mustard vinaigrette and you have a gourmet salad that comes from the yard.  If you are going to try this, DO NOT harvest these plants from a yard that is treated with chemical fertilizers or weed controls.  The whole point of it is to eat something nutritious and delicious on a budget.  I have several foragers guides and I've always loved gardening, so I am familiar with the plants that I eat.  DO NOT eat any plants that you aren't familiar with because some plants actually are poisonous and look similar to edibles.

Wildman Steve Brill has been foraging for years and has great information on his website.  I highly recommend it if you are curious about some of the free edibles that surround you.  It's worth a read even if you aren't planning to forage--his humor is evident in his writing.  Step outside the box and into the yard and add a few new nutritious, delicious plants to your salad and cooking that don't cost a thing.

http://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/


Monday, July 8, 2013

What did I buy for the $116.50?

Okay, this blog might be a bit nerdy.  I'm just going to list what I bought for the money I had.

$19.04...plants and seeds for the garden
1.79...lemon drops
5.28...pork loin
.99...carrots
1.91 cabbage
3.33...oatmeal
1.29...pasta
2.49...sugar
1.00...Luna bar
5.69...salsa
2.49...popcorn
2.65...raisins
.74...orange
1.15...eggs
2.29...corn oil
1.29...pasta sauce
4.45 Bear Creek cheesy potato soup
2.00...salad dressing
2.04...rice
2.58...pineapple
5.00...vegees in steamer bags
3.42...coffee
1.55...dry beans
1.59...blueberry muffin flavored oatmeal
5.98...chicken
5.87...beef
1.98...romaine
1.36...flour
1.29...brown sugar
1.58...evaporated milk
.59...diced tomatoes
2.49...butter
1.79...pinto beans
.39...tomato paste
.40...bananas
.71...onions
1.15...potatoes
.99...carrots
.35...gelatin
1.99...more rice
2.19...ramen
1.29..cabbage
1.49...applesauce
1.47...apples (3)
1.19...celery
1.00...radishes
2.00...lettuce

My grand total with tax is $115.69.  That leaves me with .81 left for the next 12 days.  I did make some observations after the fact.  I wouldn't buy the big jug of salsa again.  I just didn't use it.  Canned tomatoes would have been much more versatile.

The steamer bags of vegees were great and were handy, but I should have bought frozen vegetables and would have gotten twice as much at least.

The seeds and plants were over 16% of my budget, but I would do that again because that is an investment in the months to follow.

This isn't easy and I find myself thinking about food all the time.  It is similar to being on a diet and being told that a food is off limits because of calories.  Now, the foods that I could eat on a healthy diet are off limits because of cost.


Sunday, July 7, 2013

Shopping With SNAP at the Eau Claire Downtown Farmers Market

Yesterday, I went to the Eau Claire Downtown Farmers Market.  I haven't been there in years, but I wanted to check out the new token program.  The token program allows those who have SNAP to actually use their benefits at the farmers market by having their Wisconsin Quest card (foodshare card) run through a mobile card reader and receiving tokens valued at $1 each.  Bank debit cards can also be run through if you have forgotten to bring cash for your purchases.

I love this program!  This is an opportunity for SNAP recipients to purchase the freshest fruits and vegetables they can find and the money goes to local farmers and businessmen.  Add to that the fact that people who are not on SNAP are getting tokens with their debit cards, so there is no stigma to using tokens at the different vendor tables.

The tokens can be purchased only from 9:00 to 12:30 on Saturday but can be used throughout the week at the farmers market.  Some vendors have signs up that say they take the tokens and some don't.  I spent mine at a vendor who did not have a sign; but when I asked if he took tokens he was quick to assure me he did.  The farmers trade in the tokens for cash value, so a lot of them are on board with this program.  If they don't display a sign, ask before you pick out your produce.

If you haven't been to the Eau Claire Downtown Farmers Market, please go.  It is a wonderful experience!  There are vendors who sell plants and flowers, meat producers, cheese makers, coffee companies, bakeries, and of course produce growers galore!  A band plays every Saturday adding extra joy to the occasion.  Shopping should be fun, and shopping for healthy foods is fun thanks to the farmers market!

http://www.ecdowntownfarmersmarket.com/

Saturday, July 6, 2013

SNAP discovery: Protein powder...food or supplement?

I've been toying with the idea of doing this SNAP Challenge longer than a month.  The garden will be in next month and it will be so much easier.  I could make fruit smoothies for breakfast instead of oatmeal and just add in a scoop of protein powder to make it more nutritious and make it stick with me longer.  Or can I?  Is protein powder allowed on SNAP?

Here's a quote from the USDA website:

"Energy Drinks

When considering the eligibility of energy drinks and other branded products, the primary determinant is the type of product label chosen by the manufacturer to conform to Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines:

  • Energy drinks that have a nutrition facts label are eligible foods
  • Energy drinks that have a supplements facts label are classified by the FDA as supplements, and are therefore not eligible."
So what does this mean to SNAP recipients?  It means that you really have to know your labels and what is allowed and what isn't.  For instance, I have three different protein shakes in my cupboard.  The Chocolate Fudge SMART Smoothie from Complete Nutrition has a label that lists supplement facts, the Vega One vegetarian protein powder I got at Mother Nature's Foods has a supplement facts label, and the Pure Protein Whey Protein I got from Target has a nutrition facts label.  Of the three in my cupboard, the only one I could conceivably use on SNAP is the whey protein from Target.  What it boils down to is if the product has a nutrition label instead of a supplement label, it is considered food and foodshare money can be spent on it.

If I can spend some of my SNAP money on protein powder, that gives me more versatility in buying fruits and vegetables.  I can mix a bit of it with some fresh spinach from my snap garden and some wild berries and make a healthy smoothie to get my brain going in the morning.  I can mix a bit with my oatmeal and raisins to give it a creamy vanilla flavor and add the extra nutrition I need.

Now the flip side to this labeling story that drives me buggy!  Energy drinks that consist of mostly caffeine and sugar are also considered food products.  To me, there is little or no nutritional value in these items and I would much rather see the SNAP money spent on more healthful options.  If you are on SNAP, please don't fall for the marketing of these energy products.  It is a temporary energy that does not last nearly as well as the energy from a well-balanced meal.  It is not easy to live on SNAP, but find the healthiest options for yourself and your family.  You deserve it.









Friday, July 5, 2013

SNAP Challenge Personal Blog: Too much soup

In order to make the meat stretch, I've been eating a lot of soups and stews.  Chili, stew, beef soup.  This would be great, but I wasn't wise enough to purchase enough vegetables.  So, my soups and stews are sadly lacking the nutrition they should have.  And that's the thing--it isn't whether or not a person can survive on only 116.50 a month (the average Wisconsin SNAP amount in 2012), it is whether or not a person can eat healthy meals for only 116.50 a month.

I've already had two meals at The Community Table and am signed up to volunteer again this weekend.  There, I've been getting a balanced meal with nutrients and fresh fruits and vegetables. They still have their full flavor and nutrition.  Really, the meals there are incredible!

As I said yesterday, I have less than eight dollars left to spend for the next two weeks.  I've got enough oatmeal and rice to make it and I'm good with the baking supplies like sugar and flour.  If I'm not wasteful, the bottle of oil and the remainder of butter will last out the two weeks.  Sometime this weekend, I'll post what I've purchased and what I have left.

In another week, I should be able to start to harvest baby lettuce leaves from my garden and a couple of hot peppers that were on the plants when I bought them.  The onions are coming in nicely, and I should be able to add some green onions to the mix.  The berries surrounding me are starting to  turn a bit pink.  They will ripen within the next few weeks.  I've already asked my neighbor if I can pick berries on his land, so I'll have something for the freezer.

I'm lucky...in a couple of weeks, I will be surrounded by good food in nature.  The normal SNAP recipient, though, can't just go to the country to pick berries.   Transportation is a huge concern as well as childcare.  There aren't any bus routes that run out here and someone needs to watch the kids to keep them out of the poison ivy.    

Thursday, July 4, 2013

SNAP Challenge...two weeks in

Well, I'm two weeks into my SNAP Challenge and I've got $7.96 left for the rest of the month and I don't want to spend it.  I'm afraid that I'm going to need some last minute ingredient and not have the money to get it.

Fear must be a big part of the life of someone who really is living a life of food insecurity.  I can always call it quits and I still find it stressful as hell!  Real sleep is a thing of the past and that is making concentration a chore.  If I can't concentrate, I get frustrated and snappish.  I'm tired all the time and feel as though I'm living life underwater.  Moving my limbs takes more effort than before--like there is a force working against them.

I don't want to go to St Francis Food pantry as a shopper.  I just sort of feel like that is the final admission that I can't do it on my own and I'm a damned independent person!  Yes, I realize that I've already accepted free meals and coffee from The Community Table, but that seems different somehow.  Food pantries are for poor people, after all.  With all of my recent work learning about food insecurity, I'm learning that I have stigma that I need to examine.  Why am I afraid to go to the food pantry?  Am I afraid about what I may feel?  What I may learn about myself?

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

SNAP Real Life experience

Last night I ate at The Community Table as a guest rather than as a server.  It was a strange experience for me.  I was nervous and almost talked myself out of it several times.  I even almost drove past when I saw how busy it was.  I knew that if I did, though, that meager bit of groceries that I have left for the month just wasn't going to cut it.

I was a late straggler, so I was the only person in line.  There was a table there with a woman and a notebook.  I thought she was going to ask my name just like at the food pantry, but she was just making tic marks counting how many people had been served.  So, there was a slight pause for me and I got a little embarrassed not knowing the routine.

I stepped to the counter and the first group I encountered asked what I wanted as far as hot food.  It was very similar to a school cafeteria.  I got the Italian meatballs and carrots Au gratin.  I moved down the counter and got my tossed salad and fruit salad and declined the bread and butter.  Utensils and napkin next...grabbed a banana...and looked for a place to sit.

That's when I felt really weird for the first time.  There was a roomful of people who were laughing and talking; I felt like the new kid in school.  So, I did like the new kids do and found a table that was almost empty.  The gentleman who I was sitting with and I did not talk.  I hid myself behind eating my meal.

I looked around and saw some familiar faces.   I've done retail work and have waited on some of these people.  I started to relax. I wasn't really alone; like the new kid in school, I was just lonely in a crowd.

I settled into one of my favorite activities--people watching.  I was getting some odd looks from the regulars.  "Who's the new kid?" their faces were saying.  I did the Midwestern slight upturn of the mouth and nodded to the ones who made eye contact.  There wasn't any hostility in their eyes as if I didn't belong--just curiosity.

There wasn't any piano music this time, but the conversations made a music of their own.  Each voice lent a bit to the melody and the background music was of laughter.  That was the thing that threw me--there was so much laughter!  Didn't these people realize how hard their lives were?  What's with all the laughter?  Kids were playing with each other as if they didn't have a care in the world.  Parents were joking with their friends about sports and relationships and other life stuff.  Old men were making googly eyes at babies to make them laugh.  Older couples were lingering over a cup of coffee and fondly watching the chaos.  It was normal.  It was just such a normal event.

I wanted to be a part of the pulse of this community.  I wanted to be part of the love and friendship that they shared with each other over a meal.  I wanted to know the little family squabbles that kept some apart from others.  I wanted to know the inside jokes that caused some to say one or two words and laugh.  I wanted to be one of them.

I finished my meal and brought my empty tray to the dishwasher's area.  I took my banana with me for the road.  I left still feeling weird--but smiling.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

SNAP Fieldtrip: St Francis Food Pantry

As I was saying this morning, I went to the St Francis Food Pantry last night to how things work there and ask where they get the food from that they need and Minette was kind enough to show me around.  The process there is pretty simple.  First timers get taken into the office to register and get a card that authorizes you to "shop" there once a week.  Those who already have a card stand in line and wait for their turn.  The first step is to sign-in for your shopping.  You present your card and let them know how many you have in the household:  adults and children.

Next, you take a cart and start shopping.  First is the produce room.  Right now, there are a lot of potatoes and fresh tomatoes in there.  There are also bags of produce that have been removed from the shelves at the local grocery stores.  Volunteers go to the stores daily and get the day old bakery and deli products and the produce that is set aside to be destroyed (aka. reclaimed food.)  Some of the produce comes from Feed My People Foodbank.  They get food in huge quantities and supply a 14-county area.  The food shelters and other organizations under the FMP umbrella fill out an order online and it gets delivered to them. http://www.fmpfoodbank.org/order_form.phtml  St Francis Food Pantry usually receives trucks from FMP Foodbank four times a week.

In the next room, you will find the rest of the groceries.  There is a cooler with reclaimed dairy, the day-old bakery stuff as well as other bread, and a lot of different groceries--canned fruits and vegees, crackers, cereal, etc.  Some is limited to only one per family because of cost or quantity, but if there is a lot of something, there isn't a limit.  The limits are marked on the shelves.

The groceries are a mix of new and reclaimed.  There are single donations, government commodities, and some canned goods and boxes of food that are purchased from Feed My People.  And there is the reclaimed food from the stores.  This is food that the store would have thrown away because the can is dented, the label is bad, or the item is expired.  Before you freak out about expired food, have I got a website for you to check out! http://stilltasty.com/  Seriously...before you throw something away because you think it is too old to be healthy, check the item against the website.  You could save a ton in groceries!

The final stop is the scale in front of the freezers.  In these freezers is the frozen meat--often commodity.  The choice this week is ham slices or pork patties.  They also have farm fresh eggs available thanks to some fantastic area chicken farmers!  They weigh the food to keep track of how much goes out and that's it.  You are on your way.  They recommend that you bring your own box or bags to pack up the food--I noticed a lot of clients using laundry hampers and hard plastic crates when I was there.

The St Francis Food Pantry has a staff of only three with two senior aides.  Other than that, the rest of the help sorting groceries, stocking shelves and helping people with their week's groceries is all done by volunteers.  They are a great group of people; and if you ever need them, they will treat you well.

Field Trip: St Francis Food Pantry

Just a short blog this morning.  I'm working the day shift, so my writing and interviewing schedule is off.  After I got done with work yesterday, I went to the St Francis Food Pantry in Eau Claire to check out how things work. They were kind enough to show me around and answer all of my questions.  I'll write more about the process later.

I also spoke with Pamela from the UW Extension office.  She is a nutritionist that works with people on foodshare to help them budget and plan meals to help them stretch their foodshare allotment.  The nutritionists also teach foodshare recipients how to eat healthy with minimum cost.

They have a community garden where the labor is shared for a share in the produce.  Every Monday-Wednesday morning, they work with the kids in that area to teach them gardening and healthy eating.  I think that is so cool!

I'm hoping to catch a meal at The Community Table tonight.  I should be able to catch serving time after work.  I'm hungry for healthy food and that is a great place to find it.  The thing about this challenge is that it is teaching me how limiting it would be to live on this without places like The Community Table, St Francis Food Pantry, and Feed My People Foodbank.  I have few choices about what to eat because I bought stuff to last a month.

Pork was on sale, so I'm using a lot of that.  Things that can be made with flour, oatmeal and sugar are becoming my regular diet.  I've got 1 1/2 cans of pineapple left and that is what will take me another 18 days.  I'll use the juice in muffins to flavor them and get more vitamins in them.  I still have a can and a half of evaporated milk left.  That will be put to good use.  Everything is rationed.  This is insane!

Sunday, June 30, 2013

I am longing for...

I am longing for fruit.

Oranges and peaches that are so ripe the juice drips off my hands and face as I eat them.  Berries that are bursting with flavor...each one an explosion of pleasure.  Limes and lemons and grapefruit that in their perfect tartness make my lips automatically pucker.  Watermelons that I can eat in the yard and spit seeds like a kid.  Pears that in their gritty sweetness make me grin in pleasure.

It is a longing...a yearning...a hunger...for fruit!

Saturday, June 29, 2013

SNAP Volunteer Day...and a free meal, too!

I'm stuffed!  I ate way too much, and I ate every bit of what was on my plate.  It was the best meal I had all week, and it was free!  Did I mooch off family or drop in on friends?  No.  I just did a volunteer day over at The Community Table in Eau Claire.  If you've read my earlier posts, you know that the volunteers and staff at The Community Table cook and serve the meal, eat with the community members who come for the meal, and then clean up the mess after.  It's pretty much like working a potluck in the basement of the Lutheran Church; but the menu is planned, it is on the first floor, and there are members of all religions and traditions working and being served.

By the time I got there, stations were set up in the kitchen and different projects were happening in different areas.  One station was working on chopping vegetables for the Ramen noodle salad, a station was working on cleaning and drying lettuce for tossed salad, and one station was busily dicing eggs for the egg salad.  I was quickly dispatched to make the dressing for the ramen noodle salad and was given a young helper named Zach to be the ramen noodle master.  His job was to open the packets of ramen and bust up the noodles.  We called it "rage against the ramen."

There is no time wasted and no food wasted in that kitchen.  Kim guided us through the recipes, the serving and the cleanup with minimum fuss.  We even had some time to prep some fruit for the Sunday meal and clean some potatoes for the Monday meal.  Between sharing the labor, we shared a lot of laughter.  The mouths were moving as fast as the hands--it was like preparing a meal with an extended family of strangers.

There was a man who played the piano in the corner.  He came with binders of music and went from one song to another without taking much of a break between them. At first, I thought there was a radio in the dining area, then I realized it was just one man.  He was fantastic!  He must have played for about an hour.  Then he just packed up his music, got a tray of food, and sat down to eat.  Another man took his place at the piano and started plunking out a blues melody.  It was wonderful!

After the line dwindled down to stragglers, a few stayed to serve and the rest of us caught our meal.  That is when the reality of The Community Table sets in--you get to see where we as a nation are failing people.  I discovered that poverty has no race.  It has no age.  It has no gender.  Poverty can strike any one of us.  I sat there thinking that if I didn't have insurance, I would be one health crisis away from being on the other side of the counter.  What if I had a condition that manifested itself behaviorally and I couldn't afford my medication?  I could be the woman saying, "Don't talk to me!  Just trouble!  Just trouble!"  I could be the parent there with my cognitively disabled child getting her a healthy meal.

Without a decent job with decent insurance, I could be the person who had just finished my meal, brought my plate back to the counter, packed up all my worldly belongings, pulled my hood back over my head, and went back out in the rain.

Friday, June 28, 2013

SNAP Challenge Observation: Healthy, Quick, and INEXPENSIVE Food is Hard to Find. Need to find a SNAP Nutritionist

One of the challenges I'm running into with the challenge is finding healthy, quick and inexpensive foods.  I need something portable for the days that I'm on the run.  A lot of the time, I'm resorting to oatmeal with cinnamon and a few raisins thrown in for flavor.  Normally, my oatmeal would have pecans in as well, but I just can't afford the luxury.  Today, for instance, I was going to get up and make oatmeal pancakes, but the yard is like a hay field and I need to be to work by 11:30 this morning.  Instead, as I write this, I'm eating oatmeal.

I was going to make banana bread out of the bananas that I have on the counter, but maybe muffins will be a better choice.  I could also make some rhubarb muffins.  Muffins aren't always a nutrition powerhouse; but at least when I make my own, I'm sure that they won't all be sugar and no nutrition.  

If I was a bread eater, this would be much easier, but a lot of things made with yeast make my allergies go catawampus.  Sandwiches are such a great idea, aren't they.  Every culture seems to have their version; some are wrapped in bread, some in a tortilla, some in a pita, some in a dough.  Portable food for the working class is a very old idea--additives are the new idea.

If you look at the basic ingredients of fast food, it isn't bad.  Then examine the amount of sodium, preservatives, corn syrup, flavor enhancers, fat and mystery chemicals that are in it and it becomes something else entirely.  So many people end up resorting to the drive-through, though, because they do not know how to cook or don't think they have the time and this food is turning us into an unhealthy nation.  It is, however, cheap and easy and filling.

Today's mission for me is to find a SNAP Nutritionist for the County and find out how a person on food stamps can make a healthy, inexpensive meal on the go.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

SNAP Challenge field trip: Learning about the Community Table

Today, I sat down with Rachel from the Community Table and what I learned is too much to write about on one blog post, so I will give you an overview of the organization and go more in depth with some other aspects in later blogs.

The Community Table in a nonprofit organization whose main mission is twofold:
1)      They serve meals to those who need food or community.  (I want to interject here that there is no income requirement to eat at The Community Table.  If you are lonely and just want human interaction and a really good meal, they are there.  It is so much more than a soup kitchen!)
2)      They educate the public on nutritional needs of the community.  (Another personal aside…This education extends toward the client as well as the volunteers as well.  When one is taught to cook and eat nutritional meals for themselves and for others, one learns to make better food choices.)

The Community Table has a small staff, but they rely on volunteer teams of (hopefully) at least six people from the community to cook the meals and do the serving and clean up after.  There is a cost for each team to prepare a meal at The Community Table.  The minimum suggested donation is $100 and eight gallons of milk.  There was a time, when the church and civic organizations that would send teams to The Community Table would have to plan their own meal and do their own shopping; but over time, having Tami, the kitchen manager, plan the meals and provide everything but the milk was found to work better. 

You see, the Community Table is able to get fresh produce and other food donations from local business and get food at reduced cost from Feed My People Food Bank.  No hassle for the volunteer team to try to think up a menu and an incredibly nutritious, incredibly delicious meal prepared on site.  The money the team donates then goes to pay for the costs of rent, utilities, etc.  For those of us who work a full-time job but still want to volunteer, this works out so much better!

In the summer months, it is hard for The Community Table to find volunteer teams.   People get busy with vacations and the kids are off from school.  Hunger doesn’t take a vacation, though.  What better learning experience for your kids than to go together with a couple of other families and form a volunteer serving team.  After the serving is done, the volunteer team is encouraged to sit down with the community members and staff.

This interaction with each other is one of the really great things about The Community Table.  There is a magic that happens when people get together over a meal.  Barriers come down and the social stigmas go away.  We are just people coming together and showing some loving kindness.  And like we all know from any church dinner in any church basement in the world, food is an incredible way to nurture.

 

Survived a week on the SNAP Challeng...lost ten pounds

Well, I did a week!  I survived, but I've purchased food for 4 weeks; so I have another three weeks to go.  Can I make it to the end of the month without spending any more money?  I will do it the same way someone who is on the system does it and I'll take you with me on the journey.

The other side to this is that I lost ten pounds in the first week.  You see, my goal on the SNAP challenge is to eat healthy food and see how far I can go with it.  Since I need to ration my food, it doesn't go far.  As of today, I am heeding the advice of the people at Human Services, Rachel at the Community Table, and Emily at the food bank--I will be taking a multivitamin for the duration of my time eating within the challenge.

I visited with Rachel at the Community Table this morning.  I'll blog more about it later--my head is spinning with the amount of  information that I received.  There is no one post that could do any one of these organizations justice.  I got my first assistance beyond SNAP today.  Rachel sent me home with some coffee.  Food may equal love in many cultures, but coffee equals camaraderie.

x

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

My SNAP Challenge garden is in. What is available for SNAP recipients who don't have land but want a garden?

I thought I was done planting my garden, but my husband let me know that if he was a SNAP recipeint that his garden would have radishes in it.  So, yesterday, I went to the Amish greenhouse down the road to get some radish seeds and found a 50% off sale in progress.  I got radish, beet, squash and popcorn seeds and plants for tomatoes and peppers.  The whole lot cost me $3.14.  Total Score!

It wasn't raining this morning, so I covered myself with deet and planted the rest of my garden.  It was a foggy, muggy morning and the woodpeckers were in the trees just beyond the chicken coop calling to each other and drumming on the poplars.  It was my own personal jungle and I was hoping the tropical plants like the tomatoes and peppers would appreciate the humid weather more than I did.

Later, I called the University of Wisconsin Extension office in Eau Claire to ask them about community gardens.  They actually have garden plots for rent for anyone who wants one--no income requirement to qualify.  It is just a first-come-first-served system.  The county tills the land in the spring and mows the surrounding grass. There is a porta-potty (do not just drop trou in the garden, please!) and a hydrant to provide water for the gardens.

The plot renter needs to provide the seeds, labor, tools (including hose), and fee.  This year, the fee is $35 dollars and it is for a plot that is 20 x 45.  Usually, the ones closest to the water are the first ones to be spoken for.  There are still plots available, so if you are on SNAP and want to plant a garden and your landlord isn't cool with you tilling up the yard you can find more information here: http://eauclaire.uwex.edu/community-gardens/  Remember, though, that there is no income requirement to rent the plots; so if you are flush with cash but are land poor, you can still rent a plot and start a garden.

There are other community gardens around the area that rent out spaces and some that share the food among the volunteers and with the Community Table.  I hope to contact some of the people in charge of them to find out more and share the information.

So, about the Community Table...One of the things I've been hearing by many in the hunger aid field is that I need to go there.  It is a hub of activity and there is no income requirement to eat there.  If you are lonely and just need to connect with humans, it is there for you.  I'm meeting with Rachel from the Community Table tomorrow morning to find out more.  She said she would make coffee.  I'm so there!

Signing up for SNAP benefits

Yesterday, I spoke with someone at Human Services about SNAP.  If someone has just lost their job, they don't always qualify for SNAP because they may still have income coming in that after the final calculations puts them over the income threshold.  There will be final paychecks and perhaps a severance package.  If they DO qualify, they don't always qualify for the total amount of benefits because the formula to determine qualification takes into account the amount of people in the home, childcare costs, energy costs, disabled or elderly family members, etc.  It isn't just a matter of a person going in because they just can't budget well and having to get food stamps.

If there is no income coming in, the person/family can get an express application where they will be issued a card that day with enough benefits on it to get them started.  Otherwise the application takes 30 days to go through the system.  Meanwhile, many of them go to organizations that deal with hunger insecurity:  food shelters, community meal programs, churches, etc.  SNAP is supposed to be supplemental, but it turns out that the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program often needs to be supplemented.

Through my time on this challenge, however long I last, I will go into the different parts of the hunger network and see how they work together to help keep people fed.  I will be focusing on my area of western Wisconsin and will try to get stories from cities and small towns.

As for my own time on the challenge...I've had popcorn on the stove for dinner two times this week.  I'm afraid to eat too much because I can see everything that is left for the month.  I have my own shelf of groceries in the house.  That's right--shelf!  I also have my own shelf in the freezer downstairs because I figure a lot of families don't have a freezer to store extra food in, so they usually have only what is attached to their refrigerator.

As for the feeling of frustration and anger that comes with being hungry, my Human Services friend said that they refer to it as being hangry.  I wonder how much bad behavior nationwide is due to hangry people?

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Is coffee a luxury on SNAP?

My coffee isn't going to last the month.  For many, that wouldn't matter, but I'm of Nordic descent, and there is always a pot of coffee brewing.  Over the years, the coffee has gotten more and more expensive.  I still buy it at the store, but it isn't the cheap stuff one gets in a can.  That may change very rapidly.  I have a bit of money left for the month's supplies and may get a small can of cheap-o coffee.

 SNAP benefits include food AND beverages, so a person's morning coffee counts toward that.  You could make the argument that someone on assistance doesn't need a luxury like coffee.  I disagree.  The English have their tea, and the Scandinavians have their coffee.  It is the start of the day and breakfast for some.

Where we have gone awry, is to have turned a simple beverage into a luxury by adding stuff to it.  When it comes in a special cup with its own little cardboard wrap...when it contains flavored syrups...if it is topped with whipped cream or frothed milk...if it has a cutesy little name...

If your cup of  coffee costs as much as a meal on the SNAP benefits, then it is a luxury.  If someone on SNAP can find a can of coffee that costs less than what we spend for a designer coffee drink and they consider that stuff to be a luxury to them...I say let them have it and don't give them grief about it!


Monday, June 24, 2013

Hungry = Cranky

Fair warning folks, hungry makes me cranky.  My brain does not function well without nutrients and that makes me frustrated and edgy.  It's only day four and I've committed myself to at least 30 days.  I wonder if it becomes a way of life after awhile.  I wonder how long it takes for the human body to get used to a decrease in the amount of food ingested?  Hmm...

I envied someone sitting in the lunchroom at work eating a big ol' takeout burger and some fries.  I don't like fast food, but it smelled SO good to me.  I wanted to sit at his feet and beg a french fry.  At that point, I would have probably held it on the tip of my nose if that's what it took.  I left the room before I embarrassed myself.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Ahhh...rhubarb. Cheap and versatile!

Pardon me if I wax poetic about rhubarb.  I am of Scandinavian descent, so it has been a part of my life since I was yay high.  One of the first plants I learned about was rhubarb.  Mom gently steered me away from the burdock toward Nordic nirvana.   "Shiny leaves, Cissy, shiny leaves.  Don't eat the leaves, just the stem."

In the summertime, when we visited cousins or they visited us, the adults could entertain us by just giving us a glass with some sugar in the bottom.  The oldest child would have a knife to cut the leaves off the rhubarb and we would rub the dirt off and dip it in the sugar and eat it.  One sugar glass was usually good for three or four kids.  If we got scrappy or hoggish on the sugar, any random adult would just holler, "Share!"  If things didn't settle down, the sugar went back in the house and we got no more of the tart treat.

This morning, I spent a few hours making rhubarb lemonade.  It is really easy to make and I am going to can my bounty.   Here's how to make it:  Take 8-9 nice sized stalks of rhubarb and cut it in chunks into a large pot.  Cover with 8 cups of boiling water.  Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to low and simmer for 45 minutes to get all the flavor out of the rhubarb.  Strain it into another large container and add 1/3 cup sugar and 5 drops of red food coloring while it is still hot.  Cool, pour over ice and enjoy!

Fair warning....rhubarb has laxative properties for some people, so you might not want to make this a steady part of the diet.  Here's more about rhubarb...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhubarb

While the rhubarb was simmering, I tilled my garden plot from last year.  I wasn't going to plant a big garden, but this adventure is teaching me that even if I can't use it all, someone else can.

Feeling real hunger

I couldn't get to sleep last night.  I was hungry.  Real hunger.  I can't remember the last time I felt real hunger.  It is an empty feeling.  A restlessness.  Almost a pain.  At about midnight I got up and made myself some oatmeal with some raisins.  I'm doing my best to stay healthy on this challenge, but there isn't enough protein for me.

I remember being poor as a child, but we lived on a dairy farm.  I don't remember being hungry, though.  We raised our own beef and had unlimited milk.  We had a huge garden and my mom canned everything we didn't eat fresh.  Nothing went to waste.

As I got further and further away from poverty, I wasted more.  I'm ashamed at the amount of food that I've thrown away over the years--lettuce and other vegetables that just never became a salad...meats that soured in the refrigerator...leftovers that never made it to the lunchbox or freezer.  I wonder how many people could be fed on just what the United States throws away in food a year?  Here's a link to some fantastic information about food waste in America.

http://www.facethefactsusa.org/facts/supersized-hunger-pangs-supersized-waste-infographic/

Saturday, June 22, 2013

SNAP Stew

Today, I made beef stew out of some of the groceries and it tasted fantastic.  Here's how to make it...

Take 8 ounces of mock tender or some other really cheap-o cut and cut it into chunks.  Brown it in a couple of tablespoons of oil (I used corn oil because it is cheap).  Add in two peeled and diced potatoes and two peeled and diced carrots and a half an onion peeled and cut into chunks.  Add two cups of water and some beef bullion and whatever other spices or herbs take your fancy.  (I added in some Herbs Provence because the jar came with the spice set and I just never use them.  Smash them up to release the most flavor.)  Add a can of diced tomatoes and simmer on low until everything is tender.  Thicken.  (I used oat flour because I forgot to buy flour and have a lot of oatmeal.  Just run the oatmeal through the food processor until it becomes flour.)  Ta Da!  SNAP Stew!

I even let my husband have a bowl. <grin>  He's not doing the challenge with me, but he is totally supportive of my adventure.  He did tell me that even people on SNAP probably end up with visitors on occasion.  Hint..hint...could he have a bowl?  Of course, I would never deny him food; I'll add more water to the stew if things get to tough at the end of the 30 days.

The situation did bring up a good point, though--social interaction is pretty much inevitable.  If a family is on SNAP and their child brings someone home with them, doesn't that just make that whole end of the month thing even more difficult?  Is there just more water added to the stew to make it go further?   What do you do when there is nothing left to water down?

So...maybe for a month? Maybe more?

So, as I mentioned yesterday, I had originally planned to be on the SNAP challenge for only a week.  Then I went over the amount of groceries by $6.50.  When I got home and piled the groceries on the counter, I went through what I could and couldn't live without and the cost of each item.  I fianlly decided that if I did away with the chicken breasts and one pound of rice, I would come in just under the financial limitations.  That would be easy enough.  I could actually do that--anyone can live this way for a week. Hmm...but what if I tried it for a month and wrote about my experience?  Hence, the blog.

Yesterday, I got the bright idea to talk to someone in Human Services and find out what the average time is that someone is on SNAP.  Maybe I could try this for that long.  It would be interesting to me to find out how much I can learn about who is really receiving SNAP benefits and how they make it month to month.  I want to learn from those who work in the field of Human Services and in hunger relief to find out how much of a problem exists out there.  We are such an agriculturally rich country.  How are people going hungry?

I've also learned that the $4.50 a day is a national average.  I want to be as true to my area as possible, so I researched what the average SNAP benefits in Wisconsin and got a really cool national chart. http://www.fns.usda.gov/pd/18SNAPavg$PP.htm  Last year, the average monthly SNAP benefits in Wisconsin were $116.50.  That is just under $1.39 a meal.  My challenge to myself just got harder.  If a person has lost their job and needs to go on assistance for awhile to survive, how do they survive?

I will tell you that I am allowing myself to forage for food and pick wild berries and fruits.  Also, I consider rhubarb an edible backyard weed.  It is found in yards across Wisconsin and I've never met anyone who actually had to pay for it.  Rhubarb is definitely on the table for supplemental foods for me.  I'll be getting out my foraging guides and finding out what is edible in my yard.  I've always wondered what dandelions taste like...maybe I'll give them a shot.  I do know that a plain lettuce salad is not what I'm used to and I'm already willing to put weeds and grass on it to make it taste better.

I'm already feeling an emotional loss to food.  It's strange.  I miss mushrooms and red peppers and don't know if I will be able to afford them by the end of the month.

I am a fresh vegees person, so I've taken some of my SNAP money and put toward seeds and plants to feed me later; but the trade-off is that I will probably be hungry by the end of the month because I am planning for the future.  That is one of the cool things about the SNAP program that actually does make sense from a health standpoint--the recipients can use the SNAP benefits to buy seeds and plants that will produce food.  Problem is, where the devil do they plant them?  I guess that's a topic for another post...

Friday, June 21, 2013

Shopping is a SNAP...maybe

At the risk of this sounding cheesy and cliche', my decision to do the SNAP challenge really was a snap decision.  I am an impulsive person by nature who doesn't put a lot of deep forethought into life decisions.  I go a lot on instinct and it seems to work for me.  Granted, I've had some hair-raising experiences; but I've had some fun along the way and have learned about different ways of life and different philosophies.

I digress.  Back to SNAP...after I googled the SNAP challenge rules, I thought it would be an easy little adventure.  How hard could it possibly be to live on $4.50 a day?  I am the youngest of seven kids from a poor farming family, so it isn't like this is something I've never been through.  I condescendingly convinced myself this would be a cakewalk.  Then I went shopping for my food...

Initially, I was only going to do SNAP for a week.  I just needed to buy $31.50 in healthy groceries and live on them.  Total breeze.  I stopped at the grocery store on my way to work to pick up an ad to make a list.  I would be in and out of the store in the usual half hour it takes me to shop.

The ad itself is a lesson in how we eat in the United States.  As I read it over, I was struck by the sheer volume of prefabricated food that we have available.  We have so much that is convenient and easy to make, but it is filled with preservatives and flavor enhancers.  But, boy is it cheap!   I got a sense that the reason some people on SNAP don't always buy the healthiest options is because if they did, they would run out of food by the end of the month.

So, I got to the store and picked up the stuff on my list and added a couple of things that I totally forgot to put on there.  I scored big on rice...it was .68 a pound!  Chicken breasts...mock tenderloin...beans...dry cheese soup...vegees...coffee (yes, dammit! I'm human!) Thing is, my normal 20 minute shopping expedition took 90 minutes.  It takes a lot of brain power to actually think of healthy and inexpensive.  I kept backtracking...doing recipes in my mind.  One cut of meat could be four different meals, but I would need this...and this...and this....and that.  Still, I thought I did pretty darn well and was proud of myself.

Until the checkout clerk told me that the total was $37.75.  Epic failure!  I was sure I had done it!  Then it dawned on me that if I was an actual SNAP recipient and had reached the end of my benefits for the month, I would have had to decide in line at the checkout what needed to be put back.  I could not imagine how embarrassing that would be!

I've been behind that person before.  I've been the one to give that unkind, dehumanizing sigh.  I hope I never do that again.  It's hard enough to do the math on returns and redo the meal planning without a jerk behind you making noise.

What is SNAP and What is the SNAP Challenge?

I'm still new to the world of Twitter, so I'm often looking up what some of the acronyms are that people use.  RT is a retweet, MT is a modified tweet, etc.  Add to that, each party affiliation has their loving little acronyms for each other that save space on a tweet.  I ran across one recently that I just couldn't figure out and had to google to find the meaning--it was #SNAP.

SNAP is the acronym for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program which is  known to many as Food Stamps.  SNAP has gotten a lot of press lately because a large cut to it was attached to the Farm Bill that was submitted to the House.  I started  to see more tweets about the SNAP challenge, but what is  the SNAP challenge?

Again, I relied on my friend google to give me the answer.   The SNAP challenge rules are simple:
*Exist nutritionally on what a person receives on the SNAP program--$4.50 per day
*Do not eat any food purchased before the start of the challenge
*Eat as healthy as possible

I decided to do it.  Spur of the moment...seat of my pants...I can do this!

So, folks (if anyone ever reads this), this is my life on the SNAP program...

http://mazon.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/SNAP-Challenge.pdf