The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 13, 2012 - 3B Fresh ideas at this year's MFarmer's market Escaping reality with Bollywood CSG to promote sustainability at second annual event By ALICIA ADAMCZYK Daily Arts Writer University students already sick of cafeteria food and burnt TV dinners, rejoice - Central Student Govern- ment will CSG MFarmer's host its sec- Market ond annual Farmer's Today at11 a.m. Market Michigan Union today to Courtyard Patio Sunday in an Free effort to pro- vide healthy, sustainable produce options on campus. CSG, in collaboration with University Unions, University Health Systems, U Catering, U Housing and Residential Ser- vices and a host of other campus departments, will set up shop today in the Union courtyard - located next to Amer's - from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to sell a variety of fresh and locally grown flowers, plants, produce and other delec- table fare. "Our focus is on healthy and sustainable living," said LSA sophomore Parisa Soraya, a mem- ber of the CSG Health Issues Commission and the organizer of the market. "We're doing that by having demonstrations from Uni- versity chefs." CSG and its collaborators will utilize the market not only as a produce sale, but as a way to edu- cate students about the impor- tance of going green. "They'll have free samples for students and also provide them with recipes," said Soraya. The recipes the chefs prepare will include produce from the market to encourage students to try new foods. Soraya said due to the over- whelmingly positive response after 2011's market, farmers this year will offer a greater quantity and variety of produce. Another notable difference from 2011; stu- dents can now purchase produce using cash, credit cards or Blue SUSTAINABILITY From Page 1B "We organized workshops and fieldtrips for people who just wanted to learn more about how to garden, how to eat local- ly, what to do with food from the garden," Green said. Cultivating Community hosts open workdays where Ann Arbor residents can cultivate garden- ing skills, such as composting, on a micro level. And, if tradi- tional gardening doesn't suit your fancy, Green said everyone is encouraged to try some fresh raspberries straight from the vine. In addition to their work in Ann Arbor, Cultivating Commu- nity has partnerships with the Detroit non-profit Focus Hope and the Summer in the City's community service program, which brings children from the metro Detroit suburbs to volun- teer in the city. Last summer, Cultivat- ing Community helped run a community garden in Detroit that allowed local kids to tend their own garden plots. Green explained that for many of these kids, fresh produce isn't read- ily affordable. Cultivating their own gardens and growing pro- duce helped teach participants the benefits of fresh food. "By having this garden ... the kids can learn where this food comes from and why (they) Buzz Cummings explains to Nikita Mehta and Raksha Mehta how to make salsa at last year's Farmers Market. Bucks. Soraya stressed the impor- tance of the entire campus com- munity making strides toward sustainable eating. "We're a really big University," she said. "It makes more of a dif- ference when the whole Univer- sity participates in these things because there's a lot of people going towards the same goal." Keith Soster, food service director for University Unions, noted the importance of buying locally grown produce and said all produce at the sale will have been grown within a 250-mile radius of Ann Arbor. "When you can get it locally and support the local vendors I think that means a whole lot to the community," Soster said. In addition to today's market, CSG will host a second sale on Sept. 27 in the gallery of the Dud- erstadt Center on North Cam- pus and a third on Oct. 11, in the courtyard of the Union. Soster said more markets will provide an opportunity to sell different produce as growingsea- sons change. He said the October sale will feature pumpkin and squash, whereas "(in) the first one you'll see more things like should eat it, why (they) should want to grow it," Green said. Though Green said she wasn't sure if the plants are still being cared for since the summer ended, she recalled one boy who carefully monitored his creation. "There are a few who were keen on having their own plant," Green said. "One kid had some, I think it was okra, that he was watching grow, and maybe some pumpkins. So every week he'd come back and just look at his plants and take care of them." Growing Hope in Ypsilanti LSA sophomore Shaina Shetty says gardening can change lives. As a researcher at Growing Hope in Ypsilanti last summer - a non-profit devoted to spreading awareness about gardening and healthy food - she documented how gardens can elevate a neigh- borhood's aesthetic and help generate an interest in nutrition. "It starts spreading through observation, when you see someone in your neighborhood gardening," Shetty said. "We'd plant a garden in one house and the house next door would see it and say, 'Hey, this is interesting, let's do this.'" If families qualify for the pro- gram, Growing Hope volunteers help them set up a personal gar- den. For the first year families are required to produce certain food, but after a year, what they grow is up to them. Gardens that began as one raised-produce bed flowers." Not only will University chefs educate students on sustainable eating and provide recipes, but farmers will attend to discuss their crops and the challenges involved in the growing process. One of the farmers will instead bring honey to the market, since his usual apples were decimated this year by inclement weather. "That'll be an important edu- cational piece for our commu- nity," Soster said. "It's important for everybody to understand how availability affects price, and sea- sonality affects price, and how devastations can affect every- thing." Soster mentioned that in addi- tion to the market, the U-Go's in the Union, will continue to fea- ture Farm Fresh Wednesdays, during which students can buy fresh produce every week until the end of the growing season. Soster said Farm Fresh Wednes- days, which began in the first part of July, are "a beautiful thing." "I think it was really great for our community to see that num- ber one, we partner with local vendors, that we have produce available for them to pick up, and would soon turn into full-blown gardens that families could tend to until their entire lawn was covered in food and flowers. "Some of these gardens are gorgeous ... they are definitely pieces of art in some cases," Shetty said. Not only could families that wouldn't ordinarily have access to fresh food now grow their own, but according to Shetty, the artistic beauty of the gardens makes neighbors more likely to invest in their neighborhoods. "Community gardening works as a whole, everyone in the neighborhood is working on it. If you're not working on it your mom is working on it, or your friend and so there's a lot of potential," Shetty said. "It's been a community building effort ... people are less likely to destroy something that's already so beautiful." Growing Hope pulls many volunteers and interns from the community in which they work. Shetty saw how children who began by helping out in their family gardens would soon com- mit to helping their neighbors start their own sustainable gar- dens with the aid of Growing Hope. She discussed one woman she knew who, before starting her garden, said she had a low iron count. By the end of the summer she attributed her normal iron count to the food she'd been eat- ing from her garden. "I've always just seen eating then thirdly, that they can take those items and taste it," he said. Erica Wald, manager of MHealthy Nutrition and Weight Management, which promotes a culture of health at the Univer- sity, said the program acts as a "support arm" for the markets and reaches out to the Univer- sity's faculty and staff to attend the sale. In addition to chefs from the University Unions, Wald said MHealthy chefs will create vari- ous "MHealthy approved" reci- pes that will be featured at the sale. MHealthy recipes promote the use of whole grains, fruits, vegetables and healthy fats, and all meet the MHealthy Nutrition Guidelines. Wald said she was encour- aged to continue to support the sale after experiencing the great enthusiasm pervading last year's sale. "People are there and they are thankful that you're there, they're excited to see food dem- onstrations and taste the food and talk to the farmers, there was a great energy," she said. Students are encouraged to bring reusable bags to carry their purchases. food as a thing you do, I've never really given thought to it," she said. "Like eating fruits and veg- etables, I took it for granted in my household, and for some people that's not normal," Shetty said. An ever-changing landscape Though students like Syed may denounce the craft of gar- dening, those who are in groups such as Growing Hope and Cultivating Community work throughout the year to educate people on how practical and fruitful the practice can be. "Yes, we have a lot of peo- nies because they look cool, but there's also just a lot of research that goes into that and there's a heritage behind it too," Green said of the peonies that annually blanket the Arb in a sea of purple and pink. "It's more than just looking at flowers. It's educa- tion, and community outreach, and just giving people a place to rest and re-collect themselves and find peace." From using deconstructed milk cartons to grow plants in Ann Arbor, to watching children become invested in their health in Detroit, to creating beautiful landscapes and neighborhoods in Ypsilanti through gardening, it appears that gardening has multiple functions. "Landscapes change over- time," Green said. "Humans change them, they change on their own. Here's a chance to see it happening." T realize object ity isft cloude irrevo' love of wood For living; massiv culture "Blly' refers; di-lang named city of Like m I grew which my tas Indi are oft quality of genr most d dish. I tion of Bollyw imposs emulat adhere ern bo every comed most d Indian musica of that Qu ti in My of Boll nifican lead a; incapa song o rical li every c (if my; it's bec so-exc me on Eve seems for dan where bers? dancer my eve endeav Sin look at tion in golden classic times shake; hough I consider myself that influence us at the most a competent movie impressionable time of life. We reviewer, I recently cannot be critical of what was rd my inextricably linked to our fond- iv- est childhood memories, and has orever been with us as long as we can d by an remember. cable Yet there's something about fBolly- Bollywood asa whole that movies. always keeps me coming back those for more. I want to believe in it. under a More often than not, my main e pop- PROMA criticism of cerebral cinema is e rock, KHOSLA that it's too real. Movies should wood" be an escape from reality, into to Hin- worlds where people sing about uage Indian cinema, so love and dance on trains. I like for being based out of the my media content to cross genres Bombay (now Mumbai). and impart hopeful themes. That any of my Indian friends, I'm so enamored of the films up a child of two worlds, I've grown up with speaks to the is unignorably reflected in immense amount of care with te in films. which these stories are crafted a's movies, like its food, and brought to life. A Bollywood en described as having the film is, above all, a labor of love. 'of masala - a spicy blend It is notan industry ploy for re elements - to elicit the money and awards, but a tribute elicious and entertaining to the most beautiful aspects of 's that skillful integra- this life. story facets that makes Indian cinema makes an art rood so compelling and of masochism, fillingyoung ible for Hollywood to people's heads with ambitious e. Bollywood films don't dreams of romance and resolu- to the constricting West- tion that may never come - but undaries of genre; almost is that so bad? Thanks to Bolly- production features action, wood fantasy, the world may be y, drama, romance and the a more optimistic place, waiting istinct component: music. to be filled with color and song. movies are almost always I'm old enough to face the fact Is, and with a liberal use that no singing, dancing hero is label. dreaming of me from afar, but that tiny glimmer of hope has made me a better person. alt t r ugh It's not uncommon to feel ality throuw s*"e"""*" Y D like there simply aren'tenough he quantity hours in the day to watch all the TV and movies that interest Bollywood me. Mainstream and indie films come and go from theaters with films, flagrant disregard for cluttered schedules. Bollywood is even less considerate, with few films even comingto local theaters inordinate consumption and the rest going straight to ywood content has sig- abysmal DVDs. They are the itly impeded my ability to long-distance boyfriend who I normal life. I'm physically will never trulybe with, who ble of listening to a Hindi strings me along, whom I just n my iPod without theat- can't quit. p-syncing and including After two decades of these oquettish look or gesture movies, life-changing stories mugshot looks familiar, are few and far between. Even ause you've had the not- the most shocking twists don't lusive privilege of judging surprise me. I find most com- the Diag). mercial Bollywood films to be ry form of precipitation almost insufferable, but I suf- like a missed opportunity fer nonetheless for the same ice and romance. And reason that we all put ourselves are the vibrant item num- through dreadful media con- Nhere are the background tent: quality, not quantity. I 's necessaryto support could subject myself to a hun- ry dramatic and amorous dred asinine movies made with 'or? all the care of a drunk person e I sound certifiable, let's making Ramen noodles, but it's it otherwise. Our genera- worth it to get even one that I the U.S. grew up in the will adore for years to come. age of animated Disney s. No matter how many we watch them, we cannot the pearly sheen of films Khosla is going through her Bollywood collection. To watch with her, e-mail pkhosla@umich.edu. THE DAILY IS THE BEST THING THAT COULD EVER HAPPEN TO YOU. DON'T BELIEVE US? COME TO A MASS MEETING. THURSDAY, SEPT.13 WEDNESDAY, SEPT.19 SUNDAY, SEPT.23 ALL MEETINGS AT 7:30 P.M. LOCATED AT 420 MAYNARD TWEET US BABY, ONE MORE TIME FOLLOW US @MICHDAILYARTS