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Diane Kolack, Full Interview

Collection: Sunnyside Sound Project Records at the Archives at Queens Library: Diane Kolack
Date: Time Period: 2009; 2009; Interview recorded in 2009 Material: digital audio recording made using Edirol R-09 digital recorder and Adobe Soundbooth software. Dimension: Total running time: 0:34:27
Creator: Diane Kolack interviewed by Sabine Heinlein Identifier: aql:18329 kolack_diane_full

Description: "It's liberating to open up your choices to eating what grew on the farm this week."This week Diane Kolack's "box" contained one and a half pounds of string beans. While string beans are not her favorite vegetable, they embody a Weltanschauung that is dear to her heart and stomach. "Definitely it could be a burden," Diane said as we sat in her Celtic Park co-op enveloped by the smell of baked squash and fresh applesauce. "But it could also be exciting and fun. It's liberating to open up your choices to eating what grew on the farm this week."As the founder of Sunnyside Community Supported Agriculture (CSA), Diane knows where her string beans came from. Picked just a couple of days ago at the Golden Earthworm Organic Farm on Long Island, they were packed in individual boxes along with potatoes, squash and other vegetables in season and shuttled less than 80 miles West to Sunnyside Community Services. On Thursday between 5 and 8 PM, they were picked up by 150 "shareholders" ready (or not) for their bounty. The shareholders had signed up with the farm at the beginning of the season and paid $540 for 26 weeks of vegetables, or 26 boxes, each feeding a household of four. Diane thinks that knowing the genesis of her string beans makes it harder to dislike them. "It also makes your cooking better," she said, pointing out the delicious string bean salad she made last night. A student of sustainable food studies at CUNY, Diane went on to criticize the American obsession with choice. "It's like "˜I want to eat this condiment with this food at this time and if I don't get it, I'm very unsatisfied.'"

Collection : aql:20455; aql:18078

Creator : Diane Kolack interviewed by Sabine Heinlein

Date : Time Period: 2009; 2009; Interview recorded in 2009

Summary/Description : "It's liberating to open up your choices to eating what grew on the farm this week."This week Diane Kolack's "box" contained one and a half pounds of string beans. While string beans are not her favorite vegetable, they embody a Weltanschauung that is dear to her heart and stomach. "Definitely it could be a burden," Diane said as we sat in her Celtic Park co-op enveloped by the smell of baked squash and fresh applesauce. "But it could also be exciting and fun. It's liberating to open up your choices to eating what grew on the farm this week."As the founder of Sunnyside Community Supported Agriculture (CSA), Diane knows where her string beans came from. Picked just a couple of days ago at the Golden Earthworm Organic Farm on Long Island, they were packed in individual boxes along with potatoes, squash and other vegetables in season and shuttled less than 80 miles West to Sunnyside Community Services. On Thursday between 5 and 8 PM, they were picked up by 150 "shareholders" ready (or not) for their bounty. The shareholders had signed up with the farm at the beginning of the season and paid $540 for 26 weeks of vegetables, or 26 boxes, each feeding a household of four. Diane thinks that knowing the genesis of her string beans makes it harder to dislike them. "It also makes your cooking better," she said, pointing out the delicious string bean salad she made last night. A student of sustainable food studies at CUNY, Diane went on to criticize the American obsession with choice. "It's like "˜I want to eat this condiment with this food at this time and if I don't get it, I'm very unsatisfied.'"

Subject : Community-supported agriculture; Organic farming; Sustainable agriculture

Rights : These audio recordings, photos and articles are the property of Sabine Heinlein. Uses of edited excerpts from her interviews are protected under a Creative Commons public domain license, but her full, unedited audio is open to researchers by request. Contact digitalarchives@queenslibrary.org for access. For reproductions of the unedited recordings, please contact Sabine Heinlein at (sabineheinlein@gmail.com).

Coverage : Locations discussed: Sunnyside, NY Sunnyside (New York, N.Y.) Queens (New York, N.Y.)

Type : Oral history

Format : digital audio recording made using Edirol R-09 digital recorder and Adobe Soundbooth software.; Total running time: 0:34:27

Identifier : aql:18329 kolack_diane_full

Related Items

Subject:
Community-supported agriculture; Organic farming; Sustainable agriculture

Audio Clip

Rights Notice
These audio recordings, photos and articles are the property of Sabine Heinlein. Uses of edited excerpts from her interviews are protected under a Creative Commons public domain license, but her full, unedited audio is open to researchers by request. Contact digitalarchives@queenslibrary.org for access. For reproductions of the unedited recordings, please contact Sabine Heinlein at (sabineheinlein@gmail.com).


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