Why
not emulate the Mayflower’s passengers and go local with your holiday feast?
When I think about Thanksgiving, I think about family, food, and
firsts.
The first person in my family to eat a Thanksgiving
feast was William Brewster,
my 13th great-grandfather. He was also one of the first people
to celebrate this tradition at all.
After coming over on the Mayflower with his wife and children,
Brewster settled into Plymouth Colony. As the senior elder and the religious
leader of the group, he probably blessed this first meal himself.
That first feast was quite different from what I ate at my
first Thanksgiving in 1980. He most likely ate wildfowl, corn (perhaps as porridge), eel, and venison.
In the nearly 400 years since then, our food system has
completely changed. My first supper on this holiday consisted of
pureed sweet potato that came out of a glass baby-food jar.
The original colonists had few options for food. There were no
grocery stores.
There was just a local economy that consisted of what you and
your neighbors could grow and hunt.
You probably associate Thanksgiving with a “traditional meal” of
turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, candied yams, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin
pie. In reality, your spread should look different based on where you
live.
I live in Catonsville, Maryland. If my neighbors and I followed
the tradition of the first feast, we’d go to our local farmers’ market and cook
holiday fare with those ingredients.
Thanksgiving tables around here shouldn’t
mirror my family’s meal in Pelham, New Hampshire.
Better yet, we could apply those same lessons to every meal.
That’s what I’ve been trying to do for the last two years.
After moving to Catonsville, I joined the Catonsville
Cooperative Market, a food cooperative launched in 2008 for the
residents of our Baltimore suburb and other nearby communities.
We purchase
goods from over 25 local farmers and artisans and have a pick up site at a
local church.
We share a common vision of one day opening a storefront market
to sell locally sourced and natural products at affordable prices. We hope that
it will also serve as a community center — not just a grocery store, but a
place to learn skills and share information.
Aside from bringing people together, our co-op is helping build
a new economy. Multiple studies show that locally owned independent
retailers return more than three times as much money per dollar of sales to the
local economy than chain competitors.
This strengthens local communities, creates local jobs, and
builds local wealth. And co-ops can also reconnect people to their regional
food system, ensuring that they’re eating foods that are in season and locally
grown.
It’s been 394 years since my 13th great-grandfather celebrated
his first Thanksgiving.
This year, when I return to my family’s table in New Hampshire,
I’m making sure it’s full of local and seasonal foods. Because that’s one first
worth repeating.
Larissa
Johnson, an environmental educator and dance teacher, is a 2015 New Economy
Maryland fellow. Distributed by OtherWords.org