Rather than debate what organic food store should move in, I'd really like us to explore how to continue to provide the culturally appropriate ingredients that have been vital for many JP residents. Will some local entrepreneur step up to fill in this gap? Can we pressure the new store to carry these items at reasonable prices?
The wonderful diversity of JP is at stake here as this change continues to move us towards two JPs - one that can afford to get in a car and go to multiple shops in and beyond JP to get our organic produce, etc. and one that had a great local spot for ingredients that are difficult to find elsewhere.
We don't have to accept this change without an organized response. We have a history of standing together, JP residents stopped a HIGHWAY from destroying our community in 60s and it's now Southwest Corridor Park. As Margaret Mead so eloquently stated, "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
Comment
@ Dana I would like to respond to your question even though I had already said a bit about this in a previous post. Some of the items that I find are difficult to find elsewhere are the following:
- Banana leaves for tamales
- Corn husks for chuchitos
- Queso fresco and the many types of cheeses including queso de pita, queso seco, queso de capas, etc.
- Tostadas
- Tomatillos to make sauce for enchiladas
- Plantains
- Maseca (yellow corn flour) to make tortillas
- Loroco (seasonal fruit/spice to put on pupusas and other foods)
- When one is feeling lazy they sell canned beans from the different countries
- all the necessary spices to make food taste delicious and even the ketchup I grew up eating (yummy), and the chicken soup that I had as a child when I got sick.
- Wide array of chiles for different dishes from sweet to hot to unberably hot.
- Breads such as: Pan dulce, pan de muerto, pan de agua, baguettes, pan frances, etc.
There is possibly a couple of stores in Roxbury that carry some of the items but in order to get all the items it does require quite a bit of travel/time/work.
Robbi:
I can understand the emotional response to changes like this, but the one thing I would recommend is being sensitive to the language that is used. For instance, rather than assuming that you need to "pressure the new store" to take a particular action, perhaps you can approach it in a less combative way. Maybe by asking the new store to work in partnership with the community and to honor the diversity of our community.
It would be really helpful if you could post a short list of the types of items that Hi-Lo carries that would no longer be easy to find. And did you mean that these items can't be easily found in *Boston* or in Jamaica Plain.
Thanks,
Dana
Would love to see a list
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