peacecorpscooking.wordpress.
This is my way to keep those who are interested updated on the happenings of my life during my Peace Corps service in Nicaragua.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Peace Corps Cookbook Contribution
A returned volunteer who was making a cookbook from all the Peace Corps countries came upon my blog a few months ago and asked if I would be willing to contribute a Nicaraguan dish. So I did, and here it is (look for Nacatamales):
peacecorpscooking.wordpress. com
peacecorpscooking.wordpress.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Thriller and Cow Butchering
So sad for me that I don’t get to celebrate Halloween here. Nicaraguans are familiar with the American
holiday, and here they refer to it as “Noche de las Brujas”, or Witches’ Night,
but it isn’t celebrated. In fact, some
families condone it and think of it as relating to the witchcraft and the devil
(which many people in the states also believe I guess). I’ve heard stories of volunteers attempting
to explain and share the celebration with their Nica host families or
communities and the community in turn having a prayer meeting to try and “save”
the volunteer from the satanic display.
I don’t bash the culture or religious practices of Nicaraguans, but
thanks to my own American cultural experience, I’m programmed to love
celebrating Halloween and am totally missing out on the autumn feeling of changing leaves, gusty winds, and the
promise of pumpkins, costumes, and Halloween TV specials. In an effort to alleviate the lack of fall
here, I started teaching Michael Jackson’s Thriller in my dance class. I downloaded the video and showed it to the
girls in my class, and then I taught them the first section of the dance
exactly from the video. It’s been really
fun for me, but I don’t feel like I’ve successfully expressed how iconic this
dance is in America to them. They
definitely know the song, as they know most of Michael Jackson’s popular
songs. But they hadn’t ever seen the
video before and can’t truly know the level of popularity and following it has
achieved in the States. So I tried to
share a little of the October-Halloweeny feeling I love so much from back
home. I think it’s also been a nice
break for them from Bellydance (however I do plan to revisit the style in the
future).
Last week I helped out harvesting malanga, which is related to the taro root. I had never tasted malanga until moving to
Nicaragua, and I love it. It grows to
the size of a large egg-shaped grapefruit, is the tuber part of a long-stemmed
plant with large lily pad-like leaves, and when cooked, is the consistency of a
potato, but sweet in taste. It’s white
in color with strips of purple mixed in, and is a popular fried chip snack sold
on buses. I’ve most frequently had it
served to me in a soup, and I’m addicted.
One of my neighbors has acres of malanga planted and when I heard he was
harvesting it I asked if I could tag along to help. I was the only woman in a field of about 15
men who were hired workers/family members to get the harvest started. It involved 3 or 4 men yanking the large
plants out of the ground and piling them in stacks, while the rest of us moved
from pile to pile, cutting off the leaves from the top of the root bulb with a
small machete. The work wasn’t hard, but
after a few hours holding 3 to 4 lb root bulbs in your left hand, cutting off
the leaves with your right, your left hand and wrist starts to get pretty
sore. Plus it was really hot and sunny
that day, and I had (stupidly) only worn my baseball hat, not my dorky bucket
hat that would have shaded the sides of my face as well as the back of my
neck. And the sunscreen I so carefully
applied earlier in the morning was pretty much consistently dripping off my
face with my sweat like a river, even as I reapplied it like a good white
girl. Once my water ran out at noon, I
called it quits and thanked them for letting me help out and learn. I told him that as my payment (since we can’t
accept wages from our community since we get paid from Peace Corps) he could
give me a malanga to take home. He was
still confused as to why I couldn’t accept being paid for my work and probably
thought I was crazy to want to show up and do the work just to learn and get
the experience. Actually, he was
probably perfectly okay with the fact that my half day’s work only cost him one
malanga. I made a vegetable soup with
the malanga that night and it was delicious.
Harvesting malanga |
Another first for me this past week was watching the
butchering of a cow. One of my neighbors
buys and butchers a cow about once to twice a month, depending on money at the
time, and it gets announced on the local Pantasma radio the night before to
alert the neighborhood that they can get beef the next morning. I’ve always wanted to watch the process and
see how it compares to what I was taught in my college butchering classes, but
he always starts at 3am so the meat is ready to start selling at 5am when
community members start to show up at his porch. Honestly, that’s just too early for me to get
up to go watch the bloody butchering of a cow, so I’ve never gone to
watch. However, the other day it just so
happened that in transport in the back of a small pick-up truck, the cow died
(it must have had a heart attack or died of stress) en route, so when it got to
the house they started butchering it right away, and I just happened to be at
their house making pizzas for his wife’s birthday. So I got to watch the whole thing in broad
daylight.
I must say, it’s definitely not the sanitary butchering
process we see in the States, which is no surprise considering the hog and
chicken butchering I’ve witnessed here already.
The cow is placed on its back on a cement slab and they slice back the
hide, laying it outstretched on the cement on either side of the carcass, which
is the only thing between it and the ground during the whole butchering
process. It’s all done with bare hands,
no aprons or any protective clothing to keep the carcass from being
contaminated, and the kids hang out close by hoping to help or wanting to touch
things, and the dogs and chickens stalk around the carcass hoping for a tidbit
to fly off to eat. The process goes by
pretty quickly; within a half hour the full sized cow is cut down to only the
head lying on the hide on the ground.
All the parts are hung on hooks from a wooden beam over the front porch,
and the requested pounds of meat are weighed in a hanging scale that’s
apparently not cleaned beforehand. As
the meat is being sold, the money is exchanged in the same bloody hands that
cut and weigh the meat.
The kids like to help too |
Seeing how unsanitary the butchering process is here is
definitely unsettling and makes me wonder if people might be healthier if the
sanitation and reduction of contamination in the process is improved. Another part of me thinks that this is the
way people have been butchering and selling their meat for generations, and why
would they want to change it if there’s no evidence that proves it’s unsanitary
when no one gets sick from eating it.
I’ve eaten many meals in this community that have meat from animals that
were butchered in the exactly the same way for decades, and I have little
complaints. So in the end, I bought my
first pound of beef ever since living here in Wale to cook for myself at home,
and it made a pretty tasty beef stew that lasted me three meals. I figure if the meat is properly stored in a
cold fridge overnight and cooked for a long time, all the bacteria should be
dead by the time I eat it, right?
If I don’t post again beforehand, I hope everyone has a
great Halloween! This weekend I’ll be
attending a gala that the business sector holds every year to fundraise for
their youth entrepreneur competition.
It’s a fancy dress-up type get together with dinner and silent auctions
and performances, so I hope it’s fun and that I can find a decent pretty dress
to don for the event. Not often do we Ag
volunteers get the chance to dress up and look presentable, so I’ve gotta get
it together!
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Housing addition has begun
Wow, is it October
already?! This year has seemingly flow
by for me. I only have 9 months left in
my service. I’m currently still working
on getting 10 more ovens built in my community.
The funds have been held up for a while and I’m patiently waiting for
the day when my bank account rapidly increases in size. It was hard choosing the 10 families out of
the 25 that were interested to receive the funds for their oven. I went around and interviewed each family
independently to get a better idea of the ones who would maybe benefit more
from an oven than the rest. For example,
a family of 8, in my opinion, is more deserving than a family of just 2,
considering the mouths fed. If two
neighbors who are good friends both want an oven at their house, I’m going to
choose only one of them to receive the funding and they can share the oven with
their neighbor. If a family already has
a little store or already makes food products to sell (bread, tamales dulces,
guirilas) then they have precedent over a family that doesn’t want an oven to
bake and sell food since they will be directly using the oven to improve their
income and their business. There are
only a small handful of families I’ve built or will build ovens for that
actually want to use it for their business, so most of my reasoning for
choosing the recipients was based on family size and their apparent genuine
interest in the project as a whole. It
was hard telling people no, but I finally whittled it down to 10 families. The next problem to deal with (aside from
waiting for the money to come in) is finding bricks. In the winter my community stops making
bricks because it’s harder to bake them in the rain, so I might have to wait
until summer comes along (January) to actually find bricks. Hopefully there’s another way. I’d love to get all of them done before
Christmas.
Unfortunately for me, the construction on the spare room in
the backyard at my house has begun. The
worker who put in my floor and doors when I moved in has finally finished this
other project he was working on so now he’s available to start the extra room
that I’m planned to move into. So now
every morning at about 6:30am a couple of workers show up at my house and start
pounding away on their work, nailing boards, mixing cement and cinder blocks,
and cutting rebar. It’s not the noise so
much that bothers me, it’s the fact that they’re working directly outside my
door each day, so I get no privacy to just sit and read a book or cook food
without their eyes bearing down on my back.
The other day after they finished and left, I went out with my measuring
tape to make sure the dimensions are what the owner told me they would be,
which was 4 meters by 3 meters, plus an attached bathroom. Well it turned out to be a little narrower
than 3 meters, which makes it that much harder to fit my furniture inside the
space that’s about half the size of the room I’m currently in. I figure it’s just another one of those
inconveniences in my Peace Corps experience that I’ll have to accustom myself
to, and it’s of course not the worst it could be. If they in fact get the work done in time and
I end up having to move to this other room, then it will only be for about 6
months of the remainder of my service, and I’m pretty sure I can deal with that
just fine.
The additional room construction progress |
Due to the construction of this new room my Bellydance
classes have come to a halt. The space I
was using to give classes in the front part of my house is now full of bags of
cement, rebar, and 2x4’s. Plus I’ve been
out of site the past few weekends and couldn't give class. So now I’m thinking I’ll start teaching the
classes at the school, since it’s pretty much always available on weekends and
has much more space than my little house.
Plus, that may attract more students since the school’s a more
centralized location. I really don’t
want to let these dance classes die out because the girls are really enjoying
them and it’s something good for me too.
Considering I’m not doing a ton of work these days, I really want to
hang on to something good that’s fun for me and also benefits the
community.
Well it looks like I might finally be involving my community
in HIV/AIDS issues. There’s this
workshop at the end of the month being presented by the Healthy Lifestyles
sector focusing on educating about HIV/AIDS specifically with coffee producers
who hire migrant workers during the coffee picking season. I hadn’t asked around in my community because
everyone who has coffee farms here is mostly a family run business that hires
small groups of friends and neighbors to pick coffee each year. Well, I got a couple of texts from Health
volunteer friends asking me why I hadn’t applied for the workshop, and I told
them that my community was too small of a production for what it seemed like
they were looking for. It turns out that
not many people have applied to go, and almost no aggies, so yesterday I made a
bold move and took advantage of the fact the the local Empresa (co-op) in my
site was having it’s monthly meeting. I
attended the last part of the meeting and then asked to make an announcement to
the group, explaining the workshop and how I’d like to go and bring interested
members of my community with me to attend.
I felt really nervous getting up in front of this group of about 30
people, since usually the topic of HIV/AIDS makes people uncomfortable (because
they don’t know much about it!), but my job as a volunteer is to teach and
facilitate, and I have yet to do anything regarding this health topic in my
community. So I got up and announced the
workshop and told them if they were interested they could see me after the
meeting (I knew if I asked to see a show of hands of who was interested that no
one would make a move in front of the whole group). Well, I waited quite a bit for the meeting
end (turns out they weren’t done yet), but during the waiting I had 3 men get
up and come outside to talk to me about it!
One was a man I know well, and he told me he was really interested in
learning about it, but that he couldn’t read, and if that would be a problem. I
was super happy that he made a point to get up and talk to me because many
people are super shy or embarrassed that they can’t read, so that was a good moment for me. I told him that there may
be other people there as well that couldn’t read, and that I’d be at the
workshop with him to help him if he needed it.
Plus, he’s still going to be able to listen and learn a lot, which is
the most important thing. In total I had
5 people tell me they wanted to go, which was 5 more than I thought. Now the only problem is figuring out if I’m
allowed to bring 5 with me. That’s
actually why I’m at a ciber today, to send in the application for the workshop,
and ask if I can bring that many people.
I sure hope so, cause I don’t like telling people no when they want to
learn!
More updates later. . .
~Sarah~
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