Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Food

This week I began offering raw food at the Green School warung.  Suddenly I am busy.  This is an understatement.  Food prep began on Tuesday for a Wednesday inaugural launch; soaking, sprouting, chopping, grating, blending, dehydrating.  I thought I had made enough to last a couple of days or maybe through the week.  Then I sold out of nearly everything the first day.  On the list of potential problems, this one is pretty high up in the favorable category, yet it is something to contend with, if I would like to include sleeping in my daily activities.  In order to create more delicacies for the next day I was now working around the clock.  Truly.  I am preparing all the food, hand crafting and selling all the food in the warung, explaining about raw food, how I create it and why, then preparing again.  This is completely unsustainable... and at the Green School, model of sustainability!  



When we first arrived in Bali we hired a pembantu (helper) who is lovely in many ways but turned out to be unreliable.  She is still fetching our drinking water from the school well and doing our laundry.  I had just found a new pembantu and she started working this very week.  Komang is smart, trustworthy and eager to please, but speaks no English at all.  I have been training her, in my limited Indonesian, to assist me in the food prep while doing all the food prep.  Today I said something in Indonesian that I swear was close to correct (close, of course, doesn't count): Komang started giggling and then we were both cracking up laughing.

Spending the day in the Green School warung is enjoyable.  The warung staff members are lovable and Sri, the woman in charge, is a bright light.  The kids flow in during snack time and at lunch.  Parents of the students and various visitors eat raw macaroons, raw tropical cookies with star fruit or raw brownies (with a raw creme anglais piped on top or a mint fudge drizzle) with their cappuccinos.  (Asher has now brought his locally grown, fresh roasted coffee into the warung, upgrading the espresso to the delight of the international coffee drinkers.  We have infiltrated the warung!)  I started with one lunch item, mango/coconut wraps (I order dozens of young coconuts delivered to my house by wheelbarrow from the Green School gardens) with ginger cashew pate, shredded vegetables and a sesame dipping sauce, thinking sweets would be more accessible to raw food newcomers, but the wraps are a hit.  I need to make more and more of them.  They are the first item I teach Komang to prepare, showing her how to smooth them just so and sprinkle each one with chopped mint.

The table I have been using in the warung (bamboo, of course) is not dedicated to me; I share the table with the lunch staff.  Before lunchtime two men come and carry my table away, back to the Heart of School where it used to live before I came along with my raw food, then return it (usually) after lunch is finished.  That is rather inconvenient, for all of us.  Fortunately John Hardy, who has been sampling all of my wares each day, recommended that I choose whichever table I like from the kitchen where, as I have already written, many interesting experiments in bamboo furniture design reside, but do not get much use.  The kitchen, located across the river from the school, is a rather inconvenient place from which to move my chosen table.  I'm wondering if the staff will carry it by hand across the rustic bamboo bridge (closest to the kitchen), or the newer, safer Green School bamboo bridge, or if they will find a truck, load it on the back and drive it all the way around (driving across the river by car requires going a distance out of your way either north or south)... Or will I be the one to carry it?

Friday was International Day at the Green School.  Each classroom chose a country to represent, studied their chosen country, decorated their room and created a presentation, including costumes, music, song or dance, for the weekly Friday assembly.  Loads of parents attended and made loads of food platters from the various countries.  With all that (free) food around the possibility existed that they would ignore my raw food in the warung.  Nope, not at all.  It was a busy day.  By the end of Friday I was beyond exhausted, ridiculously sleep deprived and not in a particularly clear state of mind.  Fortunately I found a second person to soon begin helping me in the warung so I will have freedom to come and go.

Friday night our friends and neighbors, Mona and Ajay, originally from India, invited us to join their family celebration of Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights commemorating of the victory of good over evil.  We sang sacred Sanskrit chants while waving a tray of lit candles, then placed the candles in different parts of the house and along the path to the doorway, assisting Lakshmi, Goddess of Abundance, in finding her way to their home.  It was sweet and intimate, and an honor to be included in the ritual as well as the meal of delicious Indian food.  I had been having a hankering for Indian spices and yes, I tasted the cooked food.  And yes, I felt the difference the next day.  I think my next creation for the warung will be Indian samosas raw style.

I needed a weekend in a big way.  We had previously planned a big weekend away, not exactly the weekend I was needeing at this point on the exhaustion timeline.  I came close to sending my family off on the journey and staying home alone, but I love an adventure and ended up packing clothes and... ugh... food, again.  (An overdose of food preparation could become a diet trend.  I find the more I am around it, the less I want to eat it, although I adore creating new recipes, blessing the food and sharing it with others.  To me food is an art form.)  We started off at Tree Tops, a series of zip line courses in the immaculately kept Bali Botanical Gardens, with most of the Green School first grade families and some others who wanted to join in.   We used to have a zip line on our property in Oregon and Sofia was afraid to ride it.  Now she is clipping and unclipping her carabiners from one line to the next with her buddies.  A big group of people and death defying zips through the trees into rope nets did not really constitute a restful day for me.  We ended the afternoon, along with 4 other families, in a well appointed lodge way up in the Bali highlands with a view of a lake.   We brought our own food and many cooks took over the kitchen.  I thought I had escaped food preparation when the request came for me to make salads.  No rest for the weary.  On the counter were whole enormous fishes, eyes bulging, headed toward the grill, and beside it I prepared my raw, vegan salad mandalas.  First the children ate at the large table and once the adults sat down I was, finally, asleep on the couch.

The next day I  felt like a human being again.  (Should I tell you about my husband waking up the lodge playing his flugelhorn at 4 a.m.?  I guess not....) After a rousing session of pillow fighting and tickle attacks with the 8 children, I took myself for a walk up the mountain through fertile fields.  Following behind an elderly woman carrying a load of greens on her head, I came upon a large solitary boulder seemingly out of place in the green landscape.  In true Bali style it had become an alter and someone had already placed the morning offerings in its cleft.  Further along the trail someone called to me; a woman, her husband and their shy 6 year old daughter were tilling the soil.  She invited me to use her hoe and I was honored to do so.  While the husband and I hoed, we all spoke about growing food, soil quality, our families, even American politics, all in my (very) limited Indonesian.


In the afternoon we caravanned down steep and nearly unpassably broken roads to remote hot springs.  A loud and close thunderclap, sounding like a bomb, announced yet another torrential downpour.  We walked down the hill to the hot springs in the rain, under the bamboo, the path lined with bamboo leaves.  Soaked, we arrived at the tubs to... soak.  The human made pool with lovely, fresh and nicely hot water (the weather is refreshingly cool in the upper elevations) merging with the cool rain, all beside a waterfall rushing with muddy rain runoff.  We frolicked in the water beside many Balinese locals come for a soak on their day off.

Then back to the Bambu Village.  Before more food sourcing and more food prep, we hopped on our motorbike and drove into Ubud where Dave Stringer (visiting from LA) led an ecstatic kirtan.  What joy!

The second week with raw food in the warung is more comfortable.  I have someone helping me prepare the food and someone working in the warung making wraps.  John Hardy brought his wife Cynthia over to sample my food for the first time and she raved about it.  A little later Cynthia brought her friend Donna Karan (the Empress of Fashion) over for a taste.  Donna and I naturally fell into a conversation about spirituality, Kabbalah, blending Judaism and Buddhism and Hinduism.  Donna has been eating raw food for years.  After finishing up, Donna told me mine was the best raw food she has ever eaten.  Now that is another great compliment to bask in, from someone who has access to the best of the best all the time.  Perhaps I am earning the title my friend Georgia has given me, Goddess of Yum.  

3 comments:

  1. what a delight to read your blog this day Avara. My oldest son aka Justin and his girlfriend just spent over two months traveling thru southeast asia. their trip began in Bali!!
    they want to return there and would love nothing better than to be paid to travel the globe some more!
    I fondly recall Shabbot dinners at your home in LA and you were the "goddess of Yum" even then!!
    I have aspired in those directions as well.
    Still in north cali but ready for my "next" assignment. teaching yoga/ catering/ leading kirtans. Saw Dave Stringer at Bhakti fest where me n my friend April ran backstage hospitality. with a vita mix and a few other amenities we could've really rocked it out!
    I am not all raw but in the warmer time of year I lean that way heavily.
    Would love to visit you all sometime in Bali, I would be honored to offer my chef skills to you for a day or two :)May your dreams flourish beautifully. much love to you all!
    Shemaia

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  2. Dona Karan???! My goodness, you moved halfway around the globe and look at the company you are surrounding yourself with! I'm so inspired by your entries and seeing how you both are truly going for it in your lives. It's a wonderful, wonderful thing! Love you!

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  3. Wow, it sounds like you need some help! I am impressed that one of my favorite designers, Donna Karan, calls your raw creations the best she has ever tasted. That is some very "in the vortex" news. I think you need to do some work in expanding deep, restful sleep into very small time spaces. I think you are capable of that and anything else you chose to accomplish! LOVE LOVE LOVE you!

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