Rachel Sanders of BuzzFeed
recently published a blogpost entitled 31
Things to Do with Confusing CSA Vegetables.
The article shows pictures of the most prolific and odd-looking
produce. There is a blurb following each
and then a list of recipes - a creative
springboard for those who cringe at kohlrabi and groan at garlic
scapes.
“As a CSA subscriber, sooner
or later you’re bound to end up with strange, inexplicable vegetables you have
no idea what to do with in your share. And you panic, and you freeze up, and
they sit in your fridge, and then they rot, and you waste your money, and then
everyone’s sad.”
She is so right about the
panic and the paralysis! Our family had
never encountered purple peppers, kohlrabi, or bok choi before this year of
local eating. Not only do you get it for
a week, you may get it for a month – or two.
Our dinner no longer starts at Kroger, browsing aisles. It starts on Google, with me researching what
in the world this new thing is – and trying to find something “like” it that
will give us a clue as to how to interpret it, to know it, and to know what to do with it. Kohlrabi is related to cabbage; it looks kind
of like a turnip; it is crunchy and sweet. Sunchokes are roots of sunflowers. You cook them like you would a potato, but
they have a taste similar to artichokes.
In the newness and the strangeness, we grasp for the familiar – it helps
us to cope with the different and the weird.
It struck me that we do the
very same thing with Scripture. Much
like strange-looking vegetables make it to my kitchen in a box, truly bizarre-sounding texts surface in a book. I
sometimes encounter passages that, although they have been around eons and
eons, I have never seen before.
Sometimes what is written is so outlandish sounding, I freeze up and
turn the page to the verses which are familiar, comfortable, old friends. And if the paralysis doesn’t take complete
hold enough for us to let it rot on the counter or turn the page, we start
trying to make it make sense by comparing it to things that are in our minds,
“like it.” We try to create a framework
to understand earth-shattering snippets from Jeremiah or visions of Ezekiel. And then we try to solve it; to put it neatly
into a category we already understand.
In my growing love
for local food and in my journey of faith, I am learning more thoroughly (and
more frequently) to sit and just admire the unknown, to marvel at the
mystery. Each weird vegetable and each
off-the-wall Scripture passage reminds me that God is at work, constantly
astonishing us with the new and the different.
It is all part of the world that has always been (natural or Biblical),
and yet God confronts us with challenges and unique flavors. Some things don’t fit into a paradigm we
understand, at least not at first. It makes life more deeply
rich to cook with brand new flavors and to feast on words that stretch us. Thank God for spicing it up – for the
surprises and the challenges.

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