• 11Jan

    It’s January, and once again the masses have begun devising plans to reinvent better versions of themselves. I’m no different with my determination to forever lose those extra 20 pounds – for the purpose of these brunch blogs, I’m praying that Sunday calories don’t count! In church today, I heard a nugget of wisdom that will hopefully help me, and perhaps you, when we’re ready to quit our New Year resolutions in mid-March – “Passion is what you want most, while Impulse is what you want now.”

    Rice Paper QuickstatThere is no greater example of this focus displayed than in those who leave everything they know behind in their motherlands in the hopes of making a better life for themselves and their families in a new country. Often the reward of their toils are only realized by their children decades later. As a second generation Indian American, I am so honored by the obstacles my parents faced so that I could have the opportunities I enjoy today. Too often immigrants find themselves taking on menial jobs that do not reflect the skills they earned in the countries of their childhood, but they push forward because they are here to survive, and keep taking one day at a time with a focus on their “tomorrow” dreams. For a slight reprieve from their daily humdrum, first generation immigrants often take comfort in creating glimpses of the familiar in their new home.

    For those from Vietnam, this phenomenon can be experienced to its fullest at the Eden Center in Arlington, VA – the largest Vietnamese center on the east coast. And so there I headed to have Sunday “brunch” at the famed Rice Paper. I used parentheses here because nothing served at Rice Paper on Sunday afternoon is different from their regular lunch menu…but is definitely still a great place to visit on Sunday afternoon.

    Read the rest of this entry »

  • 04Jan

    Starting in the New Year, I’m going to a church in DC’s historic Lincoln Theatre. This means that, besides feeding my soul every Sunday, I get the next year to take advantage of the food scene that’s blowing up across DC via the quintessential DC Sunday Brunch. But, who doesn’t get a bit tired of 50 different versions of Huevos Rancheros, Eggs Benedict, and French Toast – the average brunch trifecta? What I want to know is: if each weekly Sunday spot offers more than this usual trio, if their signature items from Monday through Saturday are also available for Sunday brunch, and if this place is worth both a brunch and non-brunch visit. So for the next 52 weeks, as I’ll be discovering the DC Sunday scene, I would love to share with you a small nugget on the food that fed my soul and then the food that fed my face!

    The first Sunday:Quickstat

    Did you know that coffee is being threatened by the drug cartel in South America? Per acre, cocaine is more profitable to farm than coffee or other produce, so in many places, farmers choose to grow cocaine instead of coffee for no other reason than a desire to earn a livable wage and support their families. Given this, I was inspired by an organization introduced at church today call Redeeming Grounds, that goes into the jungles of Columbia and buys coffee beans from farmers at prices above the market rate. Redeeming Grounds encourages farmers to consider growing coffee instead of cocaine by enabling them to earn a livable wage doing so. One farm at a time, this project is cutting into the heart of the drug trade and establishing generations of farmers that are willing to stand up to the cartels because they no longer need the drug trade to help feed their families.

    This is interesting to me not only because of their positive influence, but because I was struck at how it swims against the normative ‘Christian’ tide to be ‘good stewards’ of resources by getting the best deal on everything. This thought process often challenges the contrasting Christian principle of “loving your neighbor as yourself,” and propagates the demand for someone somewhere else to bear the burden of bringing this good deal to fruition. I’m so encouraged to see folks in this instance willing to look beyond the ‘best price’ to see the ‘bigger picture.’

    So, taking about the bigger picture but transitioning to food for my face (insert smiling emoji here), I want to encourage you to see the ‘bigger picture’ and know that glorious food can be found all the way to the far edges of the DC border: this Sunday, I ventured to Takoma Park’s Republic for Lunch. Read the rest of this entry »

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