Cultured Butter

When I was in my sophomore year of college I spent a semester on a experiential learning term in LA — taking classes, interning, and living with a family from a different cultural background. It’s where I met most of my favorite people. For our urban religious movements class, I chose to do my research project on Judaism mostly because of this book: Traditions in a Rootless World: Women Turn to Orthodox Judaism.

In her book, Lynn Davidman explores the resurgence of Orthodox Judaism among modern American women through the experiences of two distinctly different groups of single Jewish American women as they return to their secular roots at a contemporary Orthodox synagogue (Lincoln Square) in New York City and a Lubovitch Hasidic community (Bais Chana) in St. Paul, Minnesota. The book is comparative throughout and seeks to communicate to a lay audience why traditional religious forms are attractive to contemporary women who have come of age since feminism.

You could, and I will, say that the slow food movement is a parallel battle/journey. From the compost of customs a new plant will rise. Again and again, from structure to unstructured, unstructured into new form. Each phoenix, with it’s own virtues, meets it’s end and is reborn. The post-feminism orthodoxy is new and unable to exist outside of it’s own context; the slow food movement is similarly marked and born from history.

With each ancient practice relearned, we inevitably encounter. The intersection of time and movement is a strange place.

If not for the health benefits, the environment, the farmers, or the pure ecstasy of taste… make things to encounter. You will be better for it.

There is magic in welcoming outsiders and integrating ourselves into the community of The Other, no? Perhaps this is the heart of my attraction to culturing foods. And so, with each opportunity, we welcome microorganisms and are thus transformed by/through our collaboration. Food becomes easier to digest and convert to energy, we become stronger and more resilient — our palates are rewarded by the wonder of tang and earth. We are better for being open.

Looking for water, we sink out roots deeper. We remember that feelings of rootlessness are a vehicle and not a place.

I think it was back in September when we made out first batch and we have never looked back. Store bought butter tastes like nothing and earth balance, while deliciously nutty, just does not compare – where even are all of those ingredients sourced from? when were they harvested? how much energy has gone into producing it? Anyways…

So here’s the drill:

1. Get yourself the best quality cream you can. We usually get 2 bottles/cartons of these little dudes.

cream

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MIY Tooth Powder

I am a firm believer that most things are better for you if you make them yourself. I like knowing every ingredient and it’s function within the product, how it will effect my body… things like that. I am also a sucker for quirks. Unusual tastes or general cringe-factors? NBD. In fact, most of the time I will prefer said product to it’s far less endearing counterpart.

M is not as easily wooed. I have a feeling some of you are the same way.

So, what’s wrong with regular toothpaste?

1. Apparently store bought toothpastes block your enamel from recoating itself while you sleep at night (which might explain my sensitive teeth). What about organic ones? Glycerine is in all tooth pastes and is so sticky that it takes 27 washes to get it off. Teeth brushed with any tooth paste are coated with a film and cannot properly re-enamelize.

2. If you are using a flouride-free toothpaste without SLS and other yucky ingredients, you are likely paying a lot for toothpaste. (If you don’t understand why someone would want toothpaste without flouride, then you may want to check into it. When I found out that Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Austria, France and The Netherlands have banned fluoride, I figured it was something worth looking into. Here are a few articles to get you started: Weston A. Price Foundation articles and Dr. Mercola’s site .)

3. You didn’t make it!

The best part of about Make It Yourself Tooth Powder is customization through experimentation. Here is a basic recipe with a few suggestions for modifications. Got any other ideas or a fun story? Please share.

MIY Tooth Powder
1/4 cup Baking Soda*

1 tsp Salt (we use Himalayan pink salt)

2 – 20 drops essential oil (experiment!)

optional: coconut oil for creamy consistency, myrrh powder for superpowers, ground lemon peel for flava, hydrogen peroxide to kill the bacteria, stevia for sweetness

Now all you have to do is wet your brush and dip it in your concoction, brush, and then feel like you just had a professional cleaning. Easy enough, yeah? If you’re not into dipping, try using a scooping device to brace and smear your creation.

While baking soda cleans teeth and removes stains without damaging tooth enamel, salt helps draw out agents that contribute to decay, lessen the reactions of sensitive teeth from hot or cold, and curb gum bleeding. Baking Soda also acts as an anti fungal agent and neutralizes plaque acids.

Yes! We can now check off number 3 of our ten things.

*Other cool uses for baking soda