Musing: Country Girl in a City Life

What I love about the country life

I think of myself as an urbanite.  My earliest memories include frying an egg on the miraged surface of a Phoenix sidewalk, needing a new Care Bear from the neighborhood Rite Aid, and tapping a soccer ball between orange cones at Kiwanis park.  That was the first six years of my life.  Then came the family move to rural Pennsylvania.  The next twelve years of my life were spent on 40 acres of field and forest.  I treated those twelve years of country living like an extended vacation from my real home of urban jungle.  This past Christmas, over a dinner conversation with my Los Angelite cousin and his wife, Jarrod let drop that he enjoyed his childhood visits to “The Farm.”  I choked on a swallow of wine.  “The Farm?” I croaked, worried about where this could be going.  “Sure,” he admitted, a bit concerned over my reaction.  “We called your house The Farm.”

“Say it ain’t so,” my carefully cultivated cultural side begged.  In my heart of hearts, however, I knew he was right.  I had kind of grown up on a farm.  Most kids can talk about having a dog or a cat as a pet.  As in a singular four-legged member of the family.  At one point, my family had two dogs, two cats, one bird, three fish, one horse, and seven sheep.  Farm?  Gulp.  I fear so.  At the time, I had convinced myself we were playing farm, just like we played Barbies or played house with our imaginary husbands and pregnant pillow-bellies.  My family wasn’t truly like our rural neighbors, those uncouth farmers.  I mean, once upon a time we had owned a house penned in by actual sidewalks instead of electric fences.  My delusion that I was a city girl stuck in a country life clearly lasted until my cousin burst my bubble just this year.

Now I find myself wondering if I’m not a country girl after all.  A country girl who has chosen a city life for herself.  My house is once again bounded by a cement sidewalk belt, but some of my best memories are of my childhood summers: the scrape of bark against the soles of my feet as I scaled trees, the prick of pinecones on my palms as I gathered “grenade” ammunition for “war”, the tang of sheep straw in my nostrils as a velvety nose nuzzled grain in my hand, the sharp snap of sheets drying on the laundry line.  I remember falling asleep to those last golden summer rays of 8:30 pm and in the quiet twilight listening to my dad weed one more row of potatoes in his acre-patch garden, the clang of his hoe bouncing against barn and house as he struck a rock.  (Not really a barn per se.  More of a large detached garage.  It wasn’t really a farm.  Was it?  Really?)

In my current life, I’m surrounded by city.  A mere seven mile drive will take me from my front porch to the front stoop of downtown Pittsburgh.  I can walk to my dentist, coffee shop, and play ground.  I could fry an egg on my sidewalk.  Well, a mushy, mostly-cooked egg at least.  If I wanted to explore my city girl side, I guess I would spend my time shopping at malls (I’m convinced there’s a pair of Jimmy Choos somewhere in my future), getting pedicures (which I don’t do often enough), and sipping Mimosas at Sunday brunch (definitely don’t do that often enough).  As it is, I am most happy these days in the company of farmers.  I love our local farmer’s markets.  I attend one religiously and am planning on expanding my horizons to include at least two more.  I get thrilled on CSA drop-off day when a basket overflowing with fresh, local produce arrives at my door step.  I eschew my local grocery store’s Californian produce in favor of asparagus that popped its scaly head through dirt located within a half-hour’s drive of my house.  Just this morning, I happily traded $12 for three varieties of kale.  I’m a country girl, after all.

And I love my city life.  I love that my urban surroundings make me appreciate with new eyes the ancient rhubarb plant flourishing beside my parent’s barn (garage?).  I love that I know potatoes grow in the ground and that asparagus gone to seed looks like a hazy cloud of weeds.  Watching Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution this winter, I was horrified, while sadly not surprised, to find generations of kids growing up not recognizing vegetables, let alone knowing where they came from.  I want to embrace the city life, but not lose track of my country roots.  When a carrot arrives at my four-star restaurant table, I want to know that sucker thrived in dirt.

Springtime brings out my country side.  I wait patiently through months of winter dormancy until those early spring veggies start to appear at my weekend farmer’s market.  The baby lettuces, asparagus bunches, rhubarb stalks.  Savory promise of the bounty to follow shortly.  I stalk flower and vegetable markets for signs proclaiming “Heirloom” like I was searching for rare family jewels instead of a rare striped tomato.  I line my deck with hopeful shoots of green in terra-cotta planters, imagining sweaty afternoons of August tomato harvest, canning, and drying.  I re-read Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver and ponder again the validity of raising my own heritage turkeys in my urban backyard.  (Not valid, I’m pretty sure.)  Then I run out to get my first pedicure of the season.  (Can’t quell the city girl for long, I’m afraid.)

To be inspired to live and eat locally, follow Barbara Kingsolver’s year-long experiment in her memoir, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.  Learn about seasonal produce via an excellent, interactive site called the Vegetannual.  Plant your own garden with seedlings grown according to organic principles from the Frick Greenhouse Project, located in a gorgeous Victorian greenhouse.  Plunder your local farmers’ markets and farm stands for asparagus, rhubarb, and early greens, all in high season right now.  For my favorite recipes involving asparagus and rhubarb, keep reading…


Lydia's Rhubarb Pie

Lydia’s Rhubarb Pie

My three-year-old niece Lydia helped me pick, clean, and prepare the rhubarb for this delicious pie.  Her resulting handiwork was as lovely as it was tasty.

Ingredients

–       4 cups rhubarb chopped into 1-inch pieces

–       ¾ cup all-purpose flour

–       1 ¼ cups white sugar (or ¼ less, if you prefer tart to sweet)

–       2 tablespoons butter

–       2 (9 inch) unbaked pie crusts

–       1 egg, beaten

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Combine flour and sugar in a large bowl.  Mix in rhubarb and stir well to completely coat rhubarb pieces.  Let stand 10 minutes.
  3. Pour rhubarb mixture into prepared pie crust.  Cover with top crust.  Cut 4 or 5 slots into the top to release steam.  (Lydia prefers 4 slots).
  4. Brush top pie crust with beaten egg.
  5. Bake in 350 degree oven for 30-45 minutes.
  6. Let cool slightly before cutting and serving.

Cogan Station Asparagus

Ingredients

–       1 large bunch freshly cut asparagus.  Larger pieces tend to be sweeter and more tender.

–       3-4 tablespoons olive oil.  If you’re blessed to live near a Wegman’s grocery store, I much prefer using Wegman’s Basting Oil.

–       2 teaspoons spice flavoring of your choice (sea salt, Mrs. Dash, and Krazy Jane’s Mixed-Up Salt are all good options).  I am currently enjoying Penzey’s Northwood spice mix, which has a luscious bite of chipolte to it.

Directions:

* Pre-heat oven to 500 degrees.

1.  In a large bowl or freezer bag, mix oil and spices.

2.  Wash and trim asparagus.

3.  Add asparagus to oil mixture and toss to coat.

4.  Place in a single layer on a baking sheet or roasting pan.

5.  Bake at 500 degrees for 10-12 minutes until tender.

10 Comments

  1. Melissa Taylor-Malloff said:

    Beth,
    Your words always restore so many of my childhood memories. While I don’t remember your days of cooking eggs on sidewalks in our neighborhood, I definitely remember mine. I was always quite fond of Cogan Station summers, particularly for the firefly catching nights. You’ll be happy to know that I always thought of your house as “A red brick house on top of a hill” and I thought more about the toy filled, gymnastic presenting basement than the ‘barn’. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts and recipes and for giving me back so many of my treasured memories.
    Melissa

    May 24, 2010
    Reply
    • otside said:

      I’m glad to hear your memory is not “the farmhouse on top of a hill”! So many good memories in the basement. We certainly put on plenty of “dance shows” for our parents. When we catch fireflies with Isabelle this summer, I’ll think of you.

      May 30, 2010
      Reply
  2. Tammy McLeod said:

    Wow. your pie is amazing. I’m going to have to go to Whole Foods to see if they sell rhubarb. We don’t get it in our CSA.

    May 24, 2010
    Reply
    • otside said:

      I hope Whole Foods supplied you with all the rhubarb you need! It’s such a tangy, delicious summer treat. I wish there were more great rhubarb recipes out there. (Someday I’ll find the energy and courage to tackle rhubarb jam!)

      May 30, 2010
      Reply
  3. Jo said:

    Just picked so much asparagus, it barely fits in that large container you had the macaroni in.
    And I just happen to have two pie crusts left by a thoughtful daughter, with rhubarb begging to be picked.

    Love from “Farmer Mom”

    May 24, 2010
    Reply
  4. Jo said:

    P.S. Thanks for the great recipes! FM

    May 24, 2010
    Reply
  5. Julia said:

    What a sweet little girl… 🙂

    May 24, 2010
    Reply
  6. Such lovely writing! One of my favorite things about eating in season is that it creates such strong memory ties.

    I’m knee deep in both asparagus and rhubarb at the moment (happily). And I just so happen to have a sour cream rhubarb pie in the oven.

    May 27, 2010
    Reply
    • otside said:

      Mmmm. I can just smell the sour cream rhubarb pie! Thank you for your kind words!

      May 30, 2010
      Reply

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