24 June 2010

Keeping up with it all

On Wednesday, I meet with Mhonpaj Lee, with whom I am interning. I always hesitate before describing her role in the Hmong and farming community because it seems so informal and yet so powerful. Suffice it to say for now that she has a new baby girl, works as an interpreter at HCMC, and manages the business end of her family’s farm, Mhonpaj’s Garden.

This was our second meeting, intended to flesh out the details of my HECUA internship. We agreed that I would maintain the website, write a weekly column on nutrition for the newsletter that goes out with the weekly CSA shares, and put together recipe cards to hand out to customers uncertain what to do with bitter melon or mustard greens.

Beyond these tasks, I have other exciting opportunities. I will help put together the CSA shares on Sunday for Monday delivery. I’ll assist at cooking demonstrations, taking pictures and posting them to the website. I may even make cold calls to organic buyers around the Twin Cities (cold calls! me!).

Even the seemingly duller activities, like weeding, hold the promise of getting to know the family better and plumbing for details about traditional farming techniques, oral tradition, and the challenges of farming in a new country.

Once we got some logistics squared away, Mhonpaj started sharing some of the projects that come across her desk. Last time we met for lunch at HCMC, we sat outside and she pointed out the rooftop herb garden. She told me that they had started growing them so that the female Hmong patients could have their traditional post-partum diet. The mayor came to cut a ribbon and everything. Now MCTC is starting an herb garden and North Memorial wants to know how to get one started.

“It’s not that hard,” she laughed. “You get a box with dirt and put seeds in it.”

Mhonpaj also told me about a magazine interview (Simple Life?) that was to include her cucumber recipe. But when it got the editor, the recipe was deemed too exotic for the magazine’s audience. She was asked to share a more traditionally Asian dish – perhaps she had a spring roll recipe? Mhonpaj declined to comply.*

I wondered aloud if Mhonpaj had heard of crop mobs. She hadn’t, but apparently twenty students from Nebraska are descending on her farm on June 29th and July 1st to trellis tomatoes. Sounds a lot like a crop mob to me.

Fresh from my HECUA experience, I asked her a question about employees. Her answer led to a fascinating discussion of her farming philosophy (if you can call it that) and her landowner's wishes for his land. More on that later!

*It sounds like the magazine finally came around and the article will be printed in all its exotic glory.

flickr photo from h-bomb.

2 comments:

  1. What a great story. I love the failure to comply attitude! Now are you going to post that cucumber recipe for us all to enjoy?
    I'm so glad you are a new member of HEN. It's a rich and rewarding practice group and we are happy and lucky to have you.

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  2. You can find the cucumber salad recipe at the blog, mhonpajgarden.biz/blog. It's got a great picture to go with it.

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