Daily Archives: 12 September 2008

Pantry?

I am torn, as I prefer to blog about current events, but this post about pantry can be both.  My uncle, prior to his death, lived in Galveston, Texas.  Consequently, Hurricane Ike has my attention.  My local county has started a new emergency preparedness site which also has my attention.  I am changing some items of quantity in my pantry due to the change in seasons which has my attention.

As my good friend Cynthia Townley Ewer reminds me when I visit her website OrganizedHome.com, pantry is not a physical location.  Pantry is a state of mind, an attitude.  Some religious groups push pantries as a preparedness aspect for hard times.  Some homemakers think a pantry is a location in their homes.   I think pantry is a little of both and definitely a mind set.

All that being said, do you have a pantry?  If so, what is in it?

Spice racks are pantries.  You have on hand more than the quantity needed to make a meal.  My spice collection – I don’t own a rack – grows constantly.  It includes peppercorns and ground black pepper, sea salt, kosher salt and regular salt (not sure why as I use salt seldom), dried parsley flakes, Italian seasoning, dried basil, whole celery seed, paprika, ground mustard, seasoned salt, crushed red pepper, chicken bouillon cubes, alum, cumin, oregano, vanilla, ground cayenne pepper, fennel seed, pumpkin pie spice, onion powder, garlic powder, tumeric, bay leaves, chili powder, cinnamon, ground ginger, crystallized ginger, cinnamon sticks, food coloring, poultry seasoning, Chinese five spice.  I am sure this is everything I would ever need – no.  I am sure it does for day to day cooking and baking – yes.

Then, there is my actual pantry.  The pantry has items like paper plates and bowls, plastic utensils and cups – items in case the power goes out in a thunderstorm or in a winter storm so I can eat without dirty dishes piling up in my sink since no electricity means no water.  I also keep other paper products on hand – extra toilet paper, extra tissues, extra napkins even though I use cloth napkins normally. 

The pantry also has cereal.  I always keep more than one box of what each family member is eating now that there are only three of us.  I keep cans of beans on hand – black beans, canellini beans, garbanzo beans, kidney beans.  I keep pasta on hand – all whole wheat but different kinds.  Since these tend to come in 12 to 13 ounce boxes, my pantry goal is to have four on hand.  If they came in pound boxes, I would probably only have three on hand.  I keep extra coffee, hot cocoa and canned spaghetti sauce on hand.  I keep cans of crushed tomatoes – blasphemous at this time of year but come January a good idea.  I keep canned pumpkin, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, brown sugar, powdered sugar, flour, whole wheat flour on hand also.

Is this a financial strain?  No, I buy things as the pantry items are used for regular use.  This is why my pantry will look different from your pantry.

Is this difficult to maintain?  Yes and no.  I hate, when money is tight, to replenish the canned goods.  I do it, though, as I know that when it is 20F outside and I have no power I can still stay in  my home and feed my family.

So, do you have a pantry attitude?  What’s in your pantry?


ServiceNation Presidential Forum

When I first heard of this presidential forum, I was confused.  What the heck is ServiceNation and where did it come from?  To be honest, there are things I like about a forum and things I dislike.  It is nice to see a casual question and answer format.  It is, in my opinion, inherently unfair to the first person who gets to sit down as the second person hears what is said and can adjust.  That having been said, I didn’t realize that national service was as big a deal as this forum indicated.

 Should you have missed the live forum last night – which was broadcast on several cable networks, a search on YouTube.com will give you a multi-part upload of several videos for both John McCain and Barack Obama and their respective responses to Judy Woodruff and Rick Stengel.  I am not having as much luck with the ServiceNation site and its archive of the event.

While the candidates took the same questions, it did seem that Obama had a bit more time to prepare as he heard McCain’s answers to the questions.

The event started with a question from Judy Woodruff of PBS.  She phrased it as “after having been at Ground Zero today with Barack Obama, evidence shows the memory of September 11th is receding in regular American.  How do we keep it in the forefront?”

McCain:  We need to commemorate the day.  The best way to honor the memories of those who died and their service to our country is to serve ourselves.  He indicated that other than shopping – a famous quote from George W Bush as a way to get our economy back on track after Sept 11th – he would have issued a call to service and then listed areas that could have benefitted – neighborhood watches, expand AmeriCorps, Peace Corps, military service. 

Obama:  Think of the spirit after September 11th.  We need to figure out how to recreate this and not just during tragedy.  The country yearns for that.  Rather than telling the American people to shop, he would have tapped into that feeling everyone was caught up in – push energy plan as part of service to country, push first responders.

Rick Stengel, managing editor of Time magazine, asked what are the obligations of citizenship in the United States of America.

McCain:  Service to the country is not an obligation and should not be compulsory.  Many current programs that offer volunteer/service opportunities are currently oversubscribed.  McCain cited Teach for America as one example.  He did say that the military needs to do a better job of recruitment and a much better job or retaining military.

Obama:  Obama talked of “active” citizenship.  He discussed individual responsibility and mutual responsibilites.  He also discussed commitments beyond immediate self-interest.

Overall, McCain, in my mind, discussed more specifics.  He talked about the balance between government and the private sector.  He talked about not making a bigger government but allowing the private sector – whether business or faith-based – to fill its role. 

Overall, Obama, who does have a national service plan, wants to involve government in the process more.  He wants to have government basically provide a clearinghouse for opportunities.  His plan has a price tag.


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