Organic Natural Foods Soup Kitchen - Healthy Cooking for Community & Charity | Perfect for Food Banks, Homeless Shelters & Volunteer Events
$10.52
$14.03
Safe 25%
Organic Natural Foods Soup Kitchen - Healthy Cooking for Community & Charity | Perfect for Food Banks, Homeless Shelters & Volunteer Events
Organic Natural Foods Soup Kitchen - Healthy Cooking for Community & Charity | Perfect for Food Banks, Homeless Shelters & Volunteer Events
Organic Natural Foods Soup Kitchen - Healthy Cooking for Community & Charity | Perfect for Food Banks, Homeless Shelters & Volunteer Events
$10.52
$14.03
25% Off
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Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
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SKU: 75689534
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Description
On Mount Desert Island, Maine, winter can mean six months of isolation and tough times, as year-round residents hunker down through the cold season. Larry Stettner and Bill Morrison vowed to change that. In November 2009, the Common Good Soup Kitchen opened its doors to the public, offering free soup as well as live music and a place for locals to gather, interact, and help each other. In its first winter of operation, the Common Good served over 10,000 bowls of soup to the community. Run entirely by donations, grants, and volunteer labor, the café also runs a distribution program to deliver soup to senior residences and others who cannot make it out to the café.In Cooking for the Common Good, Stettner and Morrison argue that we need to radically rethink the concept of the soup kitchen, emphasizing true community building along with incorporating healthy and locally sourced food. The book includes a lively third-person narrative telling the story of how the Common Good Soup Kitchen was created; the authors' unique cooking philosophy; some of their most popular soup and salad recipes; and a full appendix with resources and a sample grant application for others interested in starting their own soup kitchen."Today access to whole foods, local organic foods, and sustainable fisheries is more important than ever for our well-being. But, because of economic inequities, good whole food is once again hard to get. Organic foods are largely available to the wealthiest and most privileged among us. Let us break down the bastions and make natural, whole food—including organically based soups—for everyone."—from chapter 2, "The Soup Manifesto"
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
An inspiring, engaging book. I hope they do remarkably well in collaborating with the community that lives there, and the incredible resources and beauty they have to work with.I give this to people who need to feel some hope for their future - which we all can chose to control. The focus on biodiversity, sea vegetables and starting a project is inspiring. Although I have at least 50 great ideas for what I believe they could do, unless they ask me for them they are completely irrelevant. That's pretty much the point. We live and die, hopefully to become a grass in a duck pond or a deep sea root of a Kombu plant but where we are now. Because there is no here there and we want to be here now. These people, however, neither answer their e-mails nor phones. I hope because they are busy.

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