B Monday, January 13, 2020 The Observer & Baker City Herald TRASH TALK Winter Squash Recipes GRETCHEN STADLER Humor can encourage us to look for ways to recycle Trash. Plastic. Climate Change. Death. These are not topics that can easily be addressed with humor. And yet my resolution for this year, my chal- lenge for 2020, is try to do just that. I started writing this column by looking for recycling jokes. I’m sure you can imagine the success I had. The best I could fi nd was this one: I’m trying to start a chewing gum recycling company... I just need a little help getting it off the ground! And that was the best! So how do average folks move forward into this new year and decade, living their values and keeping a positive outlook while dealing with the real challenges of modern life? For me, a couple of people provided the comic relief and enlightenment I needed. One of them is Jeb Berrier, “a regular American man, (who) makes a pledge to stop using plastic bags at the gro- cery store and has his life completely changed.” Jeb is the star of “Bag It,” a humorous and informative documen- tary that you can see this week for free. Baker City Trash Talk and Baker Food Co-op are hosting a showing of “Bag It” on Wednesday, Jan. 15, at 6:30 p.m. at the Baker County Library, 2400 Resort St. Free movie. Free popcorn. Door prizes. See Humor/Page 2B BETWEEN THE ROWS WENDY SCHMIDT As winter bears down, try some Brussels sprouts It is time to hunker down and endure the capricious winter weather. Are we luckier than bears, who sleep all winter and miss out on thawing cars and scraping windows? Bears don’t know the wonder of see- ing icicles, ice skating, snow ice cream or frost fl owers. But I totally get want- ing to sleep. Lots of things are more or less sea- sonal. Roast turkey dinners, cranberry sauce, fruitcake, and pumpkin pie. An- other seasonal item is Brussels sprouts. In many parts of the world they are a vital part of Christmas dinner. I won- dered why. It turns out the sprouts are fresh from harvest at about Christmas time. Brussels sprouts have an extremely long season. They are supposedly sweeter after the fi rst frost. In the U.K., Brussels sprouts are an industry worth more than 650 million pounds. Space devoted to growing only Brus- sels sprouts covers as much as 3,240 football fi elds. Sprouts were fi rst grown in ancient Rome, and elsewhere in Europe since the 13th century. See Sprouts/Page 2B E, Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune-TNS Acorn squash with cheesy rice and poblanos. S QUASH IN S EASON By JeanMarie Brownson Chicago Tribune Winter squash, in all shapes, colors and sizes, fill the market bins at this time of the year. I like to display a variety on my kitchen counter like pieces of art. All too often, I skip cooking these hard beauties because the task feels daunting. However, a beautiful tower of golden roasted, sliced delicata squash at St. Lou’s Assembly in Chicago jolted me out of my kitchen laziness. Fantastic. As we gobbled up the tender, slightly sweet squash, skin and all, I vowed to rethink squash at home. Especially since the squash in my display basket clearly mocked me. Looking for insight, I turned to Deborah Madison’s stunningly beautiful tome “Vegetable Literacy” (Ten Speed Press, $40, 2013). In her chapter on the cucurbit family she says there’s no apparent reason to avoid, shun or fear this plant family. Winter squash sports more nutri- tive value, loads of fiber and vitamins than summer squash. They also prove a great value for the dollar, in part, because, they keep well for weeks. Most squash — winter and summer alike — make fine soups, add texture to stews, bronze beautifully on a grill or in the oven and take to savory seasonings as well as acid and sweet additions. OK, that’s enough of a sales pitch. I say let’s cook ‘em while we can! Acorn squash are everywhere, but these E, Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune-TNS Roasted delicata squash rings days, butternut, spaghetti, delicata, blue Hub- bard and sweet dumpling appear regularly at supermarkets and produce stores. I chose small specimens, free of blemishes and soft spots. Look at the stem end — where it was attached to the vine — it should not be too dried out or bruised. Most winter squash enjoys a steamy environ- ment for cooking. So, cook them whole (pierced to allow steam to escape) in the oven or micro- wave, or speed up the cooking by cutting them into pieces and adding moisture (water, broth, oil) during cooking. See Squash/Page 3B Quaker Oats containers continue to serve This isn’t a pitch truck to go to the Fox Hill for Quaker Oats dump for disposal. I always DORY’S DIARY per se but about thought it a shame for some the box in which unknown reason to destroy DOROTHY SWART they come. such a perfectly nice box and FLESHMAN As a child the the smiling face it wore. Oc- container caught casionally I would rescue an my interest emptied one in which to carry because it was so unlike the others in which my small toys for play or storage. we received fl our and sugar and other eatable When I grew up and married, the Quaker items. Oats regime went with me to feed my own The oats box was shaped round and tall of family the traditional oats breakfast to fi ll thin sturdy cardboard and wore the smiling our tummies and send us all out on a healthy, face of a gentleman in a wide-brimmed hat hearty day at work or school or myself at home that seemed to suggest welcoming me to a to do housework. pleasant day once I had eaten my bowl of hot Then came the days of boxed ready-to-eat oatmeal and milk. cereal and their enticing prizes and clubs. The It was all done in shades of blue and white Quaker boxes were fewer but I still thought the on a red background, perhaps suggesting the empties should have another life, another use. colonial day or to instill patriotism. I can’t When winter hits the calendar and snow recall that the design of it has ever changed, normally covers the ground I most often have which I appreciated as something stable in an felt the need to do sewing, crocheting, knitting, unstable world. or embroidery work of some kind. It follows the When the box fi rst appeared on our pantry days when school starts and I used to search shelf I can’t remember, for it just always for school shirt patterns and fl annel materials seemed to be there and connected with hot to be sewed and readied for my boys on open- cereal and toast most every morning when ing day. served in place of hotcakes, eggs and syrup, Yarn for making afghans, caps and mittens, or when Mom baked and I found her oatmeal or sweaters used to come in skeins that had to cookies tucked in my lunch box for school. be rolled into balls with which to work into use- When the box was emptied, my mother able items for winter. The balls then rolled and would toss it out on the burn pile in the back unrolled in boxes or sacks awaiting use. yard or into the trash boxes loaded in the Finally came the machine-readied skeins of yarn with a strand to pull at one end of the fl at skein lying on the fl oor. That’s when I searched my sewing cupboard for a way to get the yarn off the fl oor and found my perfect answer in an unused Quaker Oats container among those in which I had gathered many small balls of unused yarn neatly carted away. A current skein of yarn, upended, fi t perfect- ly in its identifying wrapper into the opening of the tall round cardboard box with the working end upright and ready for use with the one end of the yarn hanging out for my use beside my chair. Now, as one of the original recyclers, I note a row of Quaker Oats tall boxes, each bearing a skein of upended yarn at my color-selected dispersal, each color in its own box and visible for selection. And, may I say, the container comes with a lid that fi ts on the bottom of the oat box until it is needed again as a lid on top for a dust protec- tor of unused yarn, ready for its next use. Now I have a neat row of smiling faces to brighten my day whenever the urge to do handwork beckons me. And, there are days when I need to see a happy, smiling face to cheer me on. I hope he never changes. Editor’s note: Dory, a longtime columnist for the Home & Living section, offi cially retired at the end of August 2019 but she will contribute an occasional column.