Foraging, preservation and vegan cooking with Michelle Ott

Share
©michelle ott https://sociatap.com/michelle_deboraw/

Michelle Ott join Tanja and Anni on the Sustainable Living Show to discuss foraging, vegan cooking and preservation. Michelle is a wild forager and nature enthusiast. She holds a degree in health promotion and nutrition, is a professional chef with her business, Simply Naked- a gluten and dairy free bakery, and has authored 9 recipe books focused on allergen friendly, plant based foods.

Topics discussed:

-When and where to forage

-What and when to forage in Tampa Bay

-How to preserve your harvest

-vegan cooking

-edible and medicinal plants/herbs

-Michelle’s bakery – Simply Naked

and  more!

To find out more about Michelle, visit her Instagram @michelle_deboraw or on her website www.michelledeboraw.com, and if you’d like to receive a copy of her book “Preserving Your Wild Harvests,” you can email her at [email protected]

 

 

“God Moves Furniture”- Denzel Johnson-Green

My friend Taylor calls me from New York
and asks me how Florida’s been lately,

tell me what it’s like again?
checking in on her old Tropicana nanny that raised her,

Well as you know, we have a hot season, which seems to be all the time
and a rainy season that starts when the heat can’t take itself anymore

Right now, it’s the time of year for afternoon thunderstorms
it starts everyday around 5, you hear god rearranging

furniture upstairs, skkkkkrrrrr rooooooooo coooooggghh moving dressers, and beds, scooting couches to see how they look over here and there

thunderclouds rip across the sky like a kid dragging thick socks on a carpet, gathering static and turning the sky a deep cobalt blue grey,

shotgunned through with webs of lightning
and crashing sounds that could only be god

dropping the good china by accident or maybe on purpose.
Ughhhh I miss the afternoon thunderstorms, Taylor says

Haha right? I guess y’all don’t get em up in New York.
That’s crazy to think about. The rains came late this year.

So much so that the trees had less mangoes than usual
and they took longer to ripen

but I saw the clouds gather their strength and herd together,
their migration had come to a surge, and one day coming home from work,

I saw them piled up like a wall in the sky, they stood swinging their tails

mooing or cooing, mosying on the pink pasture of the air, it was June 21st when the grey curtain came, the veil of sweet rain.

Plants grew, mangoes fattened and laughed with nectar, people got a little nicer to one another

and anybody that had some sense would say
“we sure needed that rain”

A hurricane made an appearance at our barbecue but only stayed long enough for a plate of food that nobody offered. Some homes flooded but most folks were okay

Around Christmas comes the cool season.
Winter doesn’t properly exist here, but it gets breezy and crisp enough

to light campfires in backyards. Smoke fills the air,
but also apple cider, peach cider, some people make more

soups and stews, cinnamon brooms make homes smell good for a time, people dust off their light jackets they save for this time of year,

but eventually it warms up again in late April and early May.
Summer seems to come a little earlier every year and stays longer

than is welcomed. Call it whatever makes you happy or don’t,
but we yearn for a few more weeks of cool weather

before everyone goes back inside for the hot season.
Sigh. I miss Florida, Taylor says.

 

If you love what we do on Sustainable Living, don’t forget to tune in every Monday at 11am on WMNF 88.5fm or listen to past episodes in the archives. If you’d like to donate to show your support, head over to the donations page and direct your pledge to the Sustainable Living Show.

 

Leave a Reply

  • (will not be published)

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

You may also like

Hope and blight: inner-city economy

Hope in ruins: a corner gas station near hard-scrabble College...

The science behind why your tire pressure sensor light might turn on this time of year

When temperatures drop, particles contract, triggering the sensor light to...

A Memoir In Essays.  A Broken Informational Landscape.

Steve Wasserman is as charming as his eloquent writing, he’s...

‘Tis the season – for flu and COVID vaccinations

COVID-19 might have left the headlines, but it hasn’t stopped...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

Poetry Is
Player position: