Excerpt from Barbara Kingsolver

If you follow Em-i-lis, you'll know that I am an enormous fan of Barbara Kingsolver, as a writer, woman and environmentalist. This excerpt comes from a forward she wrote for an anthology on global warming commissioned by the Union of Concerned Scientists. "We find ourselves in a chapter of history I would entitle "Isolation and Efficiency, and How They Came Around to Bite Us in the Backside." We're ravaged by disagreements, bizarrely globalized, with the extravagant excesses of one culture washing up as famine or flood on the shores of another....Twenty years ago, climate scientists first told Congress that carbon emissions were building towards a disastrous instability. Congress said, We need to think about that. Ten years later, the world's nations wrote the Kyoto Protocol, a set of legally binding controls on our carbon emissions. The United States said, We still need to think about it. Now we watch as glaciers disappear, the lights of biodiversity go out, the oceans reverse their ancient order. A few degrees look so small on the thermometer. We are so good at measuring things and declaring them under control. ...It's an emergency on a scale we've never known, and we've responded by following the rules we know: efficiency, isolation.

We must radically reconsider the power relationship between humans and our habitat. ...In the awful moment when someone demands at gunpoint, "Your money or your life," the answer is not supposed to be difficult. And in fact a lot of people are rethinking the money answer, looking behind the cash price to see what it costs us to mine and manufacture, to transport, to burn, to bury. ...

The arc of history is longer than human vision. It bends. We abolished slavery, we granted universal suffrage. We have done hard things before. Each time it took a terrible fight between people who could not imagine changing the rules and those who said, "We already did. We have made the world new." The hardest part will be to convince ourselves of the possibilities and hang on. If we run out of hope at the end of the day, we'll rise in the morning and put it on again with our shoes..."

Beautifully, powerfully, starkly written food for thought, especially in light of the famine in East Africa (due, in part, to the worst drought in 60 years), the recent storms that have ravaged parts of the U.S, the pathetic, selfish, myopic gridlock in Washington, and the scores of people across the Middle East who have shown incredible determination in their fight for respect, fairness and a voice.

Sage-garlic roasted potatoes, tulip bulbs

The smell wafting from the oven right now is to die for. I made a garlic-sage paste and then tossed that with some cubed baby potatoes, olive oil and salt. I'm about to take these goodies out of the oven, and will enjoy them with some roast chicken and apple-chile chutney for lunch after I pick Oliver up from school. That apple chile chutney cannot be beat. I made three more pints after my initial test round yesterday and feel certain that it will become a staple item here. It is with complete dismay that I tell you I am still feeling pretty darn poorly. What in the sam hill has the Zpack done? Anything? Blarg!!

I did just plant some tulip bulbs though- tulips are such happy flowers and I add some new bulbs to the garden each year. Jack and I went on a date to the nursery this weekend, and he chose a pack of gorgeous ones: they are pink with a sliver of yellow that heads up the bud, and I will eagerly await their growth. Perennials are the way to go, by the way. How great it is to see your garden grow with you, year after year. The bulbs multiply while you're not even looking, squirrels relocate them, plants get heartier and heartier, and each year I meet anew several plants I forgot I'd planted. It's all quite lovely. Outside today, I was thrilled with the number of hearty, wriggling earthworms I encountered- such a sign of a healthy yard that has not been doused in chemicals. And I was equally thrilled to kill three mosquitos and two grubs, pitiful useless creatures that cause headache. I fully respect most bugs as they each play an important role in their respective eco-niches. But I just can't, for the life of me, figure out anything to even tolerate about the aforementioned dregs.

Off to taste the potatoes!

Major accomplishment, asparagus, green tip

Last time we had a storm, we did lose power. After two days, most of the fridge's contents needed to be tossed, but in a way, that was liberating. What was in those jars?Although we were totally fine during this glorified rainstorm (here, inland in DC; I completely understand that the coast got it bad), I took the opportunity to go nuts in the fridge. Have you ever taken everything out and bathed the shelves and drawers? It is both disgusting and deeply satisfying. I'm sure the new order will last all of 24 hours, but it so pretty in there, and nothing skeevy remains! During the purge, I cooked some asparagus and beets that were on their way to wilty sad. Look how pretty!

I also put several months of clipped recipes in my giant binder o' things to make or that have been made and loved. I must make gumbo soon, and saw the recipe for the best-ever Chicken Kiev. It is divine. So many things to cook and eat, so little time.

PS- tip! If you squeezed a generous wedge or half a lemon, don't toss it immediately. Use it as a scrubber to wipe out your sink. Works like a charm and leaves it smelling nice and fresh.