Laura Gets It
27 November 2009 by Jean JohnsonHealthy, thrifty, delicious, and green. That’s the whole point behind measure free. The idea that if we quit being slaves to paint-by-numbers recipes we’ll be likely to cook more, eat well, be healthy, and save a bundle on the food bill. So at the end of the day, it’s not really so much about whether you measure or not. It’s about whether your kitchen is your own–and that’s where Laura gets it.
Once we tasted her pumpkin pie and declared it a home run clear up, over and out of the park–every bit as good as the ones mama used to make–she divulged her secret.
“Acorn squash from the garden.” To her husband’s lifted brows, she explained that she was darned if she’d buy official pumpkin when she had perfectly good winter squash in the house.

Laura with some of her Liberty apple harvest a couple years ago
Yes! This is the kind of talk thrifty, innovative cooks understand. Cooks who are primarily concerned with where their ingredients are sourced. Cooks who realize that threads running through flavor and sustainability and health will make whole cloth if we just let them.
Speaking of health. Laura didn’t stop with the filling for her pumpkin pie. She made her butter crust from 100 percent whole wheat pastry flour–flour that I’d bet half a hundred, came from the organic bulk bins.
Yah. My kind of eating. My kind of cook. Laura gets it.
(Camera was nowhere in sight to capture Laura’s acorn squashes or her 2009 pie, but here’s one of my own winter squash harvests. Those spaghetti squashes are such charmers piled up in their basket.)

One Response to “Laura Gets It”
Laura sent this from her iphone:
You bet the flour was from the og bulk bins.
By Jean Johnson on Nov 27, 2009