With AmeriCorps Week behind us, I’ve had a lot of time to
consider how “AmeriCorps works,” and the impact I witness firsthand each day as
a FoodCorps Service Member. It’s easy to look at the benefit of my service as
simply the community that I serve in, the pounds of produce we harvest and
donate, the new dishes kids have tasted and the minutes we spend together in
the classroom or the garden. Those are hard facts, raw data. We compile all of
those figures specifically because they do paint a pretty fascinating
picture—assigning some sort of number value to my service. Lately, I’ve been more
inclined to look at the benefits of service that I receive.
Just a few weeks ago, I got a package in the mail from Seed
Savers Exchange. I was really excited to open it and find a beautiful French
Breakfast radish t-shirt, some awesome heirloom seeds, and a book on saving
seed. There was information on how to sell seeds as a spring fundraiser, which
I hope to do next year because it was unfortunately a little too late for this
spring. I have admired Seed Savers Exchange ever since I read about the
organization a few years back. To be receiving a package full of goodies from
them because of my affiliation with FoodCorps was unreal.
Lettuce and spinach thrive in Sara's greenhouse. |
A few weeks later, I received an email from the folks at
FoodCorps double-checking my mailing address where I could receive a package.
This request was just enough detail to get me excited, but I had no idea what I
was in for. For Christmas this year, I got a fancy food dehydrator. After
experimenting with all sorts of raw recipes and kale chips and
dried-every-kind-of-fruit, I made the decision that the next big-ticket kitchen
gadget I would need to invest in was a Vitamix blender. I’m not sure where I
learned about Vitamixes, because it almost seems to me that the legendary
blenders have always had a spot in my food/cooking obsessed brain. Imagine my
surprise about a week after the mailing address email, when I got a new email
announcing the shipment of a Vitamix blender for each FoodCorps Service Member.
I immediately started fantasizing about all the kale smoothies and nut butters
I would soon be whipping up.
I waited anxiously for my new culinary toy to arrive. And
waited. And waited. I was starting to worry that it was lost in the mail. My
fellow Service Members around Arkansas had received theirs. Service Members in
very remote, rural places had received theirs. I was stressed. Finally one
Tuesday evening, (probably only a little more than a week after the
announcement was made) my blender was here.
I unpacked the box. There was an instructional DVD. I wasn’t
sure why a blender would need a DVD accompaniment, and I skipped ahead to the
beautiful hardcover cookbook. Again, never realized that a blender would need a
cookbook. But then I saw the recipe for milk substitutes (soy milk, almond
milk, coconut milk, cashew milk, rice milk, on and on). I was hooked.
Look at that crowd! |
That week in the garden, we harvested 6 pounds of sweet
winter kale. In each class the following week, we made kale smoothies. Each
group started off a bit skeptical—kale, strawberries, peaches, and other
assorted fruits and veggies make for a bizarrely colored drink. However, after the
first sip, most of the students were converted. After school, a group of
students approached me to ask for some more kale so they could go home and
recreate their own smoothies. I am so excited about all the creative ways we
can use the Vitamix to expose kids to new ways to incorporate veggies into
their day.
- by Sara Fulton-Koerbling
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