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 issue 187 ~ week of September 18th, 2020
Happy week three of GNI’s Fall Reset, which is all about your kitchen. With so much time spent at home this year, we've never been more aware of our pantries — the foods we turn to for comfort, the items we keep on hand just in case, and the ingredients that remind us of home (wherever that might be!). This week, we're exploring all three in pursuit of building a kitchen you love.

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Hi <<First Name>>,

This week, we're taking stock of the kitchens around us in an effort to create a space that can provide some real comfort through everything going on in the world right now. To get to the root of the many questions we had around pantry-building and ingredient-sourcing, we turned to Sana Javeri Kadri, founder of Diaspora Co. and a champion for farmers, food systems, and BIPOC- and queer-owned small businesses like her own.

Diaspora Co. is working directly with farmers to build a more direct, delicious, and equitable spice trade (just look at these spices!) — a mission that challenges each of us to take a look at our own food values to determine where we can make room for some good. It's no surprise that Sana had plenty of answers when we came knocking to ask for her advice on building a pantry that's deeply intertwined with our lifestyles, needs, finances, values, cultures, comforts, and beyond.

GNI: Do you have any pantry-building tips that can get us away from the prescriptive “here’s your checklist of everything you should have in your pantry?” That type of approach can take individuality, traditions, and peoples’ food stories out of the equation. What do you recommend for somebody hoping to build a pantry that’s truly their own space of comfort?

Sana Javeri Kadri: Right now, I’ve built my pantry around three cuisines: Korean, Japanese, and Indian. I think establishing what your favorite cuisines are from the start is important. Then you can prioritize what's important to you, like a nice kombu or gochujang instead of lgood lavender, thyme, or oregano.

To make space and budget for the foods I want, I buy most things wholesale, directly from the vendor. If you were to buy the one-pound bag of Koda Farms rice at the grocery store, it would be like $4, but I buy the 25-pound bag. It's one-fourth of the price. Until recently, it was living under my bed, and that's okay... I’ve learned that on most food brands’ websites there’s a wholesale section and if you can prove you’re buying it for you and maybe some neighbors, they will allow you to buy it wholesale. I do the same with olive oil. I’d rather store my olive oil in my closet and pay less, but, it’s a reflection of outlining your priorities when it comes to food.

How does someone who is building out their pantry and their kitchen balance equitable and affordable foods in that pursuit? 

Something I strongly believe is that if you can’t afford something, you shouldn’t buy it. I don’t think we should ever go into debt for olive oil or spices.

My perspective as somebody who until recently made very little money is to prioritize. Personally, I don’t always buy organic, for instance. I usually cannot afford free-range meat. It’s expensive so either we don’t eat it or we eat it only sometimes. In the past, that meant I'd buy nice things that were pantry-uplifters. My splurges were slightly better rice, olive oil, or nice chocolate. But things like broccoli or butter, I didn’t care as much about. It’s very personal — and it’s an exercise in finding what items are worth the money for you. My rationale, and this is an example of my politics personally, was always: If I can support a BIPOC community by buying this directly, I’ll pay more money for it. But I really encourage people to develop nuanced, researched, and yet personal practices around how you source your food. 

What does your list of favorite pantry items look like? 


1. The Diaspora Co. Essential Trio
2. Tiipoi's Longpi Karipot
3. Brooklyn Delhi Garlic Achaar 
4. Shaquanda Will Feed You Hot Sauce
5. One Stripe Chai Co. Unsweetened Concentrate
6. Sonoko Sakai's Curry Bricks
7. Miss Good Herbs Smoked Chilli Flakes and Fennel
8. Seka Hills Olive Oil
9. Koda Farms Kokuho Rose Rice


How do you see food as a source of change? 

Food allows you to have conversations around it — especially when you begin to talk about origins. I’ve found that what I’ve consumed has connected me to so many systems bigger than myself — like the bean-to-bar-chocolate movement, which introduced me not just to really delicious chocolate but to an understanding of the history of cacao and the cacao supply chain. What I love most about food as an agent of change is you can learn global, geopolitical histories through something that you eat. With spices, it unlocks a whole new flavor but also a whole new level of connection. People often tell us that Diaspora is a global brand but feels like a local brand. You know the farmer, you know when he grew it, what he grew it with, and so on. I love this idea that food allows you to bring the world closer together in an intimate and honest way instead of in an icky globalized way. 

What have you learned about food in 2020?

I don't think I realized just how volatile our food system was. Earlier this year, our farm partner got coronavirus. I had it earlier in March. We’ve all gone through the ringer. He was so sick and he lost half of his crops for next year.

The crops that were supposed to get to us in March are finally just now arriving in September. This really made me realize we need to work very hard to secure some of these food systems and support them from very young stages. Same with good coffee, chocolate, and more — all farms need our support more than ever before. Anything that was already unstable became more unstable in the pandemic.

Maintaining volatile supply chains and an ethical food system has been a big learning. For me, that meant rerouting my paycheck to support farms and the food system. That’s where I want my money to go because I want to see them exist next year. If we don’t give them our monetary support, they’re not going to exist. We wouldn’t have existed if our readers didn’t support us this spring. 

How can GNI readers or someone reading this, then, turn around and play their part in supporting these systems?

Number one: Pre-order spices. And we need to learn to manage our expectations to not expect Amazon-like service and speed when we do. Having empathy and being willing to — if you can — do some work to support these systems is a big part of it. An example of that could be picking up fish from the docks if you have access to them. It’s work on our part but it means the fisherman is selling direct to us. Now is also a really good time to sign up for a CSA. So many farms are hurting without restaurants buying from them anymore. Those are the easiest ways: find ways to go direct to the source. Seek out your faves and support them hardcore. 


Happy Pantry-Building!

* This interview has been condensed for space, but never sentiment! 

weekly picks


our favorite recommendations of the week
😍😍😍 (via @diaspora.co)
  1. To transform your relationship with your kitchen for fall... 👩‍🍳 "We built this guide to loving your kitchen (you guessed it — it's a spreadsheet!) as a central location to house the cookbooks we're loving, the recipes we're trying, the small food businesses we love, and the under-$25 kitchen gadgets that changed us." - Carey, Content Team
     
  2. If you're trying to use your cookbooks more... 📚 "There’s an app that I'm obsessed with called Eat Your Books, which creates a digital archive of your very own cookbooks. You can search one ingredient and get all the recipes from your collection that include it. I don't even use Google for recipes anymore — I go straight to this." - Sana, Diaspora Co. 
     
  3. How to transform your kitchen into your new fave café... ☕️ Jot is helping you level up your at-home coffee game with 20x concentrated Ultra Coffee. It's kind on your budget (each bottle contains enough organic, fair trade coffee for 14 cups), and you can make consistently delicious hot or iced drinks — perfect for the summer-to-fall transition. Get $10 in savings, plus free shipping, if you try a bottle of Jot today using this link#SPONSORSTHING
  4. The kitchen hack that's really a kitchen lifestyle... "The best thing I ever did for myself in the kitchen was learning how to use my freezer correctly. I think we often have a limited view of what that means, but I use mine for leftovers that keep on giving, bread that lasts (seemingly!) forever, and I even pre-cut fruit like bananas that I can't buy frozen at my local grocery store." - Jenny, Partnerships Team

  5. If you really love hoagies but also decorating... 🥪 "I've been funneling a lot of my energy into my apartment lately to give myself a distraction. I recently realized I wasn't operating with a color palette in mind so I created what I call ~the sandwich palette:~ beige (bread!), dusty pink (meat!), mustard (cheese!), and green (lettuce!) and now I use that as my guiding light as I decorate. Highly recommend defining your colors and giving them a funny name that'll help you stick to them." - Tyler, Content Team
     
  6. A small way to show some kindness to yourself and your environment... 🌿 Myro’s better-for-you deodorant is made with a long-lasting, plant-powered formula that actually works. Bonus: it comes in an eco-conscious, refillable case that looks so good, you'll want to leave it out on the bathroom counter. Subscribe to Myro today and get a free full-size Myro deodorant (with $5 shipping) when you use code GIRLSNIGHTIN#SPONSORSTHING
  7. The kind-of random $6 kitchen tool I use most days... ✨ "I'm obsessed this little scraper that helps keep my food prep situation a little more under control. When I use it, I know my chopped veggies will land on the pan and not all over my counter, which — as a Virgo — makes me very happy. File this one under unexpected delights of 2020." - Katrina, Partnerships Team 

    For more recs, follow GNI on Instagram: @girlsnightinclub

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read/watch/listen


how we're spending time this weekend...
if you haven't tried omsom, this week is a great time to start (via @omsom)
 
What We’re Reading Online: 
How to vote by mail in all 50 states. | VICE
What makes an anti-gentrification restaurant. | Eater
The pandemic's effect on the group chat. | Washington Post 
Read this if 2020 turned you into a lawn dad. | New York Times
How to have a meaningful Rosh Hashanah if you're celebrating solo. | Hey Alma


What We're Cooking: 
"I recently made this chicken and pilaf dish and it literally calls for apple cider. It doesn't get more autumnal than that. A word of warning: it takes well over an hour to make, so I would not recommend making this on a night you are hangry." - Alisha, GNI CEO & Founder

What We're Watching: 
"I've been loving J. Kenji López-Alt's YouTube channel for unscripted, minimally edited cooking videos. He films them POV-style so you actually see everything he’s doing (including how he cleans as he goes, which I appreciate!). The recipes are all actually things I’d actually make at home — lots of stir fry dishes and reenvisioning leftovers — while sprinkling in the science behind the cooking." - Mary Anne, GNI Team

Where We're Turning for Cooking Inspiration: 
We've got a hot take: the best mac and cheese recipe on the Internet belongs to The Kitchenista. Keep this in your back pocket for Thanksgiving and probably a few meals before then too. Actually, while you're at it: follow her on Instagram, bookmark her blog, and go ahead and buy her digital cookbooks too. The mac is just the surface! 

What's making us smile: 
This. 😊

celebrating Latinx Heritage Month like...

 
what will you cook to celebrate? (via @eatgordaeat)
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