B Tuesday, October 6, 2020 The Observer & Baker City Herald NUTRITION: IT’S ALL GOOD Fresh Vegetables Add Color To The Dinner Table ANN BLOOM Chill in the air makes comfort food especially enticing As the days grow shorter and the nights a little chillier, we get a sense the seasons are changing. With the change in seasons, we also tend to change our eating patterns. We start to think of warm, heartier types of food; many people call this comfort food. One may start wishing for meatloaf and mashed potatoes, or macaroni and cheese, or soups and stews for those blustery days when only comfort food will do. Comfort food can be healthy as well as satisfying, without being laden with heavy sauces or using a lot of expensive and hard to fi nd ingredients. Some- times the simplest dishes are the most fl avorful and therefore most satisfying. Take, for example, pasta. On its own it may seem very bland. However, by boil- ing it in salted water until it is not quite done, then adding a fl avorful sauce of warm tomatoes, oil and herbs, and some sautéed garlic and onions, suddenly pasta is elevated to a comfort food. Soups and stews also represent com- fort food during fall or wintry weather. If you have, and use a slow cooker, you are on your way to a freezer full of comfort food. See Comfort/Page 2B Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune/TNS Grilled golden beets center a colorful fall salad with sauteed beet greens, red onions, bell pepper, herbs and crumbled feta. F LAVORS OF F ALL By Jeanmarie Brownson BETWEEN THE ROWS WENDY SCHMIDT Getting excited about grafting It is high time for a vacation escape to different scenery and adventure. Not that the vacation will last long, but they always say that a change is like a vaca- tion. In any case, it will have to do. In view of widening knowledge of gardening and creating an abundance of variety on what you have, I’ve been talking to my friends Anne and Luis. Luis is profi cient in the art of grafting. Most things in the garden can be grafted. The most popular is grafting apples (and other fruits) and roses. I’m hoping to learn the art of grafting from Luis (he seems to have enough patience to be able to teach me that skill). He’s talking of grafting a couple branches of my wild peach tree onto one of their apricot trees. I’m excited about the prospect of grafting. When I took the master gardener program in 1997, one of the horticultural professors gave us a mini-seminar about grafting and I purchased a grafting knife from her. Now I’m not sure where that special knife is, but will be able to learn with or without it I’m sure. A few different varieties of apple trees would be handy to have grafted onto the quince trees. Often a few apples is enough and you don’t need a whole tree of the same kind of apple. I’m sure you are all aware of the fall yard work needing to be done without my listing them to remind you. Take time to enjoy the colored leaves in spite of the fact you’ll be raking them soon. If you have garden questions or com- ments, please write to greengardencol- umn@yahoo.com. Happy gardening! Chicago Tribune My anxieties subside when three things align in my world: a full gas tank, cash in my wallet and plenty of food in the refrigerator. Specifi cally, fresh fruit and vegetables. Luckily, fall farmers markets and produce stands overfl ow with goodness. Think squash, onions, potatoes, sweet peppers and hot chiles. The variety of tubers and root veg- etables can be intimidating, but rest assured most take to simple cooking methods, such as steaming and roasting, beautifully. I’m particularly fond of the mild-mannered, pale green globes of kohlrabi. Especially when they sport bright-green, leaf-topped stems. Not only does that mean they are very fresh, but also those leaves are edible. I treat the greens like lacinato kale — steaming or sauteing them. Kohlrabi is technically not a root vegetable or a tuber; rather it is an enlarged, above- ground stem. I prefer to purchase kohlrabi when it’s the size of a baseball because it can be enjoyed raw in thin slices or fi ne shreds, or quickly steamed in the microwave. Some kohlrabi varieties can be as large as a softball — these are best steamed to tenderness. I always peel the globes to remove any tough, fi brous skin. Kohlrabi, with its mild, broccoli-stem fl avor, absorbs other ingredients, such as herbs, gar- lic, soy sauce, olive oil or butter, beautifully. Beets, on the other hand, sport loads of their own unique, earthy fl avor. Cooks and chefs have embraced the once-maligned burgundy-red root and now feature them prominently on menus and in cookbooks. Farmers markets prove a good source for non-traditional types, such as candy stripe, golden and white beets. I like how well all of them pair with fl avored oils and smoky bacon fat. Sharp additions, such as tangy cheese, vinegar, onions and garlic help mellow their inherent beetiness. So does oven-roasting or grill-steaming them in foil packets. Like kohlrabi, the freshest beets are sold with their green leafy tops intact. Do not discard the greens — instead saute them in a skillet with a little olive oil and enjoy as a side or addition to scrambled eggs or grain bowls. To motivate me to cook the greens be- fore they wilt terribly, I remove them as soon as I get the beets home. Rinse, spin dry and they are good to go. The kohlrabi and sausage skillet supper that follows can be made with other vegeta- bles as well. I often sub in diced parsnip and turnip as well as cubes of golden potatoes. The foil-packet roasted beets taste good hot or chilled. I spoon warm leftovers onto toasted naan for a casual meatless main dish. KOHLRABI AND CARROT RIBBON SALAD Prep: 15 minutes Cook: 10 minutes Makes: 4 to 6 side servings 3 medium-size kohlrabi, about 1 1/2 pounds, trimmed, peeled 2 medium-size carrots, trimmed, peeled 2 1/2 tablespoons tamari soy sauce 2 tablespoons unseasoned rice vinegar 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons honey or sugar, to taste 1/2 to 1 tablespoon piri piri hot sauce (or other hot sauce), optional, to taste 1/2 teaspoon dark Asian sesame oil Salt Chopped fresh green onions or chives Sesame seeds See Flavors/Page 2B A small change welcomes the new season In the corner of my living room there is a little round lamp table on which I change the décor every month. I used to redecorate the whole room every month, but since I reached age 94 I decided to just acknowledge the changing season with a token observance of turning over the calendar page. This may not seem like a big thing to most folks who still hurry/ scurry everywhere and accom- plish great things, but it wouldn’t surprise me to fi nd that there are those reading this Dory’s Diary column who know what I’m talk- ing about — how important it is to keep a hand in things, even from behind one’s window at home that seems to hold one hostage for the time. Never give up, I tell myself — even with something as simple as changing a calendar page or a small tablecloth square, by accepting old age, the continuing birthdays, I also put a bouquet of artifi cial sunfl owers in a vase on DORY’S DIARY the table to tie it all together with the lamp and the embroidery. DOROTHY SWART I was pleased, but it led me on FLESHMAN to place a multicolored crocheted afghan on the daveno; then on to the hutch with pictures of my threat of the COVID-19 virus, or family, heirloom china in fall just a rocking chair rest on a day of colors, all fronted by the remains vacation. of a once fresh yellow rose from a Stay in touch, I say. Don’t give good friend and standing birthday up. cards to be better seen. Doing one Back to the tablecloth, a small thing fi rst when you feel tired or square that fi ts over the top of the depressed leads one to doing some- round table and hangs partway thing else; then another task and down, a plain fl oor-reaching yet another. Amazingly, one feels tablecloth. The one there as I so much better when day is done. wrote had beautiful embroidery It took such a little effort, really, of a handful of yellow sunfl owers to change the room from summer on green stems against a light- greens to gold of early autumn, colored background. It pleasured and now I chose to do it again as me to see it there and so it seemed October came on the scene with that I should share it with others varicolored falling leaves, orange of through words. It had served its pumpkins, and the bringing in of purpose for September. sheaves of wheat. At the beginning of the month It all brings back yearnings for when I had put it there in honor the past as I put away the Septem- of four of my family’s September ber items, but then excites with the appearance of the new colors and the wonder of what the future will bring. Dory’s Diary started out in the newspaper in 2009 and went on over the ensuing years; now, only once and again. On occasion I still feel the urge to share with those who still respond to those days of the past and still face the future’s challenges regardless of whether from behind a window or out there in the danger zone. But, one must question the need for what was, despite desire, and what will help or hinder. We are all in this changing world together and we’ll accept the challenges together. But, once in a while, it may soothe the soul to just enjoy the look of a new tablecloth in changing colors on a little lamp table in the corner of the living room. And, in the evening, turning on the lamp may help spread the beauty of the season in one’s life. Readers can reach Dory by email at fl eshman@eoni.com