MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Middletown Area Town Hall this week will get updates on area projects and welcome nominations for seats on its governing board.
MATH will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 14, at the Middletown Community Center, 21256 Washington St.
Meetings are open to the community, and offer the opportunity for additional public input on items not included on the agenda.
The group on Thursday will hear presentations and updates on Caltrans’ Highway 175 shoulder widening project, the Hardester’s Market rebuild and the homeless in the community park.
MATH also will accept nominations for two board positions for the coming year.
Also on the agenda is an update from District 1 Board Supervisor Moke Simon.
The MATH Board includes Chair Sally Peterson, Vice Chair Claude Brown, Secretary Paul Baker, and at-large members Tom Darms and Marlene Elder.
MATH – established by resolution of the Lake County Board of Supervisors on Dec. 12, 2006 – is a municipal advisory council serving the residents of Anderson Springs, Cobb, Coyote Valley (including Hidden Valley Lake), Long Valley and Middletown.
Meetings are subject to videotaping.
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Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – A Kelseyville man died in a Saturday night collision on Highway 29.
The name of the 78-year-old man who died had not been released as of Monday pending notification of his next of kin, according to the California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office.
The crash occurred at approximately 5:44 p.m. Saturday on Highway 29 north of Main Street, the CHP said.
The CHP said 48-year-old April Flores of Lakeport was driving her white 2005 Infiniti G37 southbound on Highway 29, north of Main Street, at 55 miles per hour.
The male driver was driving his black 1998 Toyota Tacoma pickup and was stopped at the stop sign on Main Street, preparing to turn southbound onto Highway, the CHP said.
For reasons still under investigation, the CHP said the man turned left onto Highway 29, directly into Flores’ path.
The CHP said the left front corner of the Infiniti hit the right rear corner of the Toyota, causing the Toyota to spin in a clockwise manner.
The Toyota travelled off of the west shoulder where it overturned, partially ejecting the male driver, the CHP said.
The CHP report said the male driver was not wearing his seat belt, while Flores was wearing hers.
After the collision, Flores remained on scene for emergency personnel, the CHP said. She was not injured.
The CHP said the male driver was pronounced deceased at the collision scene by medical personnel.
Neither drugs nor alcohol are suspected of being factors in this collision, the CHP said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport City Council will hold a special meeting this week to discuss the award of a contract to construct a new seawall for Library Park.
The council will meet beginning at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 12, in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
The Library Park seawall sustained major damage from waves during the heavy flooding in February 2017, as Lake County News has reported.
Since then, the city has had to keep parts of Library Park fenced off and has been working through a complicated Federal Emergency Management Agency process in order to receive funding for a new seawall.
On Tuesday, the council will consider awarding the seawall construction contract to the lowest bidder, West Coast Contractors Inc. DBA Oregon West Coast Contractors, according to the staff report for the meeting.
The company bid $799,773; the city’s engineer estimate for the project was $1 million.
City staff said the project will be funded by FEMA, with a 6.38-percent match from the city, which will be funded by the proceeds from the city’s insurance policy.
The construction contract will cover the placement of approximately 534 feet of sheet pile wall work and includes modifications to the existing center pier; construction of concrete wall cap, terminus ends, and openings for stairs, dock access ramp and center pier; concrete stairs; and other miscellaneous work necessary to complete the work in place, the staff report explained.
Staff said construction is estimated to start Dec. 23.
The council also will consider approving an amendment to the event application, with staff recommendations, for the Dickens’ Faire street closures.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The Lake County Sheriff’s Office has identified the man who was killed in a Saturday night crash on Highway 29 in Kelseyville.
John Charles Gilliam, 78, of Kelseyville died in the wreck, according to Lt. Corey Paulich.
Shortly before 5:45 p.m. Saturday, Gilliam – driving a 1998 Toyota Tacoma, turned left from the stop sign at Main Street and onto Highway 29, directly in the path of a 2005 Infiniti G37 driven by 48-year-old April Flores of Lakeport.
The crash caused Gilliam’s pickup to spin off the roadway and overturn, the CHP said.
Gilliam, who was not wearing a seat belt, was partially ejected from the pickup. He was declared dead at the scene by firefighters, according to the CHP.
The CHP does not suspect drugs or alcohol as being factors in the wreck.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Fair Board of Directors is launching the search for a new chief executive officer for the fair.
Former CEO Courtny Conkle left in September following the annual Lake County Fair in order to accept the position of manager for the Wyoming State Fair, as Lake County News has reported.
Now, the Lake County Fair Board is launching the search for Conkle’s successor.
“We look forward to this opportunity for change and to finding the best person to take our strengths forward and lead us into the future,” said Board President Tom Turner.
“We need a sharp and exceptional administrator who will implement the board’s policies and manage the day-to-day operations of the fair with business acumen, vision and commitment to the community purpose of this organization,” Turner said.
The job pay range for the exempt position is $6,673 to $8,170 monthly.
To receive an application or for more information on the position, send inquiries to CEO Selection Process, 49th District Agricultural Association, P.O. Box 70, Lakeport, CA 95453, or call 707-263-6181.
Details also are available at the fair’s Web site.
All applications must be submitted according to form, with a resume and a list of five references.
CEO applications should be received by Dec. 6, 2019.
The board of directors intends to start the interview process in mid-December.
The Lake County Fair – also known as the 49th District Agricultural Association – is one of 54 fair organizations that operate as state agencies under the authority of the California Department of Food and Agriculture’s Division of Fairs & Expositions.
NORTH COAST, Calif. – November is Native American Heritage Month across the country, marked as a way to honor and preserve Native American cultures.
In recognition of this, Mendocino College will host its annual Native American Heritage Celebration in the Lowery Student Center at the Ukiah campus on Thursday, Nov. 14, from 4 to 7 p.m.
This free event is open to the public, so bring your family and friends to an entertaining evening of traditional Native dancing by Shokawah Ke, crafts, games and cultural activities, which will include a display of historical artifacts and photos that provide a history of the culture of Mendocino and Lake County tribes.
Free Indian tacos will also be served.
The event will begin with a traditional Native American blessing and welcome, followed by a keynote address from Sonny J. Elliott Sr., chairman of the Hopland Band of Pomo Indians, who will speak to the importance of education in the tribal community.
Cultural activities, games, and information tables hosted by local native community members, elders and leaders will include a coloring Pomo language table, traditional stick games, traditional Pomo basket weaving, traditional tule duck and doll making, traditional clacker making, and lessons about the history of Native American tribes of Mendocino County and how to gather and prepare traditional food of the California natives.
The Ukiah campus of Mendocino College is located at 1000 Hensley Creek Road.
For more information about the event, contact the Native American Student Resource Center at 707-468-3000, Extension 4603.
The future remains uncertain for a group of young people who were brought from other countries to the U.S. as children without legal authorization.
Currently, these young people are protected by the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. This Obama-era program shields around 700,000 to 800,000 people from deportation. On Nov. 12, the Supreme Court heard arguments on the Trump administration’s decision to end the program.
President Donald Trump first announced he would rescind DACA in 2017. However, lower courtrulings have blocked the administration from ending the program.
Here is a roundup of archival stories to help you follow along.
1. DACA’s terms and conditions
DACA came with a long list of terms and conditions. For example, to apply you had to be a certain age and meet certain educational requirements.
Immigration scholar Kevin Johnson of the University of California, Davis, points out DACA offered protection for only about 1.8 million of the estimated 3.6 million people who were brought to the U.S. as children.
It’s important to point out that DACA also does not apply to “unaccompanied minors.” You may have heard the term used especially in 2014, when unprecedented numbers of children traveling alone were arriving at the U.S. border with Mexico. Generally, these case are handled under a different set of laws and policies.
Canizales writes, “Undocumented working youth migrate to Los Angeles in hopes of working to support their families who remain in their home countries. … Much like with their adult coworkers, economic necessity and fear of removal from the workplace and the country keep undocumented migrant youth workers quiet in cases of exploitation, and docile and efficient on the job.”
Scholars Elizabeth Aranda of the University of South Florida and Elizabeth Vaquera of George Washington University explain that being an undocumented immigrant in the U.S. carries severe mental health consequences. These include problems such as chronic worry, sadness, isolation and even suicidal thoughts.
Although DACA may offer only temporary protection, the relief recipients felt was significant. Aranda and Vaquera write, “These youth shared with us that they were more motivated and happy after Obama’s executive order. As Kate, one of our participants, told us, DACA ‘has gone a long way to give me some sense of security and stability that I haven’t had in a very long time.’”
4. Dreamers would boost US economy
DACA critics have suggested that undocumented immigrants negatively impact the U.S. economy because they steal jobs from native-born people. In fact, there is growing evidence that shows how incorporating undocumented immigrants into the workforce actually boosts economic growth.
She found that it would have had no significant effect on the wages of U.S.-born workers. It would have created more economic opportunities by encouraging legalized immigrants to make education gains. Hsin wrote, “Overall, we estimate that the increases in productivity under the DREAM Act would raise the United States GDP by US$15.2 billion and significantly increase tax revenue.”
Arguably, at the core of the effort to protect Dreamers is a belief that the U.S. has a tradition of embracing those who arrive at its shores seeking a better life.
However, a quick scan of history would reveal that the U.S. has not in fact always been so welcoming. As Carrie Tirado Bramen of the University at Buffalo explains, many writers have described U.S. history as an “ongoing duel between generosity and greed.”
Bramen writes that DACA gets at the core of American identity: “At stake is not only the fate of the Dreamers, but also how the country and the rest of the world understands the idea of America.”
He finds that somewhere between 62% and 81% of Americans consistently support offering undocumented immigrants legalization with a path to citizenship.
Around the world, animals and plants are disappearing at alarming rates. In May 2019, a major U.N. report warned that around one million species were at risk of extinction – more than at any other time in human history.
Conservation scientists like me focus on predicting and preventing extinctions. But we see that as an essential first step, not a final goal. Ultimately, we want species to recover.
The challenge is that while extinction is easy to define, recovery is not. Until recently, there was no general definition of a “recovered” species. As a result, some species recovery plans are much less ambitious than others, and scientists don’t have a common yardstick for recognizing conservation successes.
To address this challenge, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Species Survival Commission – the world’s largest network of conservationists – is developing a Green List of Species to highlight species recovery. This tool will complement the well-known Red List, which highlights endangered species.
While the Red List focuses on extinction risk, the Green List will measure recovery and conservation success. As a member of the team charged with making the Green List a practical conservation tool, I see it as a way of measuring the impact of conservation and communicating conservation success stories, as well as learning from failures.
Defining recovery
To know how much conservation has accomplished, and to encourage ambitious conservation goals, we need an objective way to measure progress toward a species’ recovery. Studies of recovery plans developed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act show that some plans consider a species recovered even if its population remains the same or shrinks during the recovery effort. A standard definition of recovery would prevent such inconsistencies and encourage wildlife managers to aim higher.
Conservation scientists have long attempted to identify different facets of species recovery. Reviewing these efforts, our team came up with several requirements for considering a species fully recovered.
As I explain with an international group of colleagues in a new study, one key idea is that populations of the species should be “functional.” By this we mean that they are able to perform all the roles that the species is known to play in ecosystems where it exists. This may seem like an obvious measurement, but in fact, some species that are considered to be “recovered” in the U.S. fail this test.
What’s your function?
Each species has many kinds of ecological functions. For example, bees help plants reproduce by pollinating them. When birds and bats eat fruits and later excrete the seeds, they help forests regenerate.
Similarly, when salmon swim upstream to spawn and then are consumed by bears and other predators, that process moves essential nutrients from the oceans up into rivers and forests. And when flammable grasses burn in the U.S. Southeast, they fuel fires that maintain longleaf pine forests.
All these critical functions are possible only when enough members of the key species are present. Put another way, keeping a species alive is not enough – it also is essential to keep its functions from going extinct.
Functional extinction
Scientists have known for decades that species may persist at such low numbers that they do not fulfill the ecological roles they used to perform. This can be true even if significant numbers of animals or plants are present.
One example is the American Bison, which is a great conservation success story in terms of preventing its extinction. Hunting reduced bison to just a few hundred individuals in western states at the end of the 19th century, but conservation initiatives have restored them to public, private and Native American lands across the West.
Before they were reduced to near-extinction, bison shaped prairie habitats and landscapes through wallowing, pounding and grazing. They influenced ecosystems by converting vegetation into protein biomass for predators, including people, and by redistributing nutrients in these ecosystems.
Even though bison are not at risk of extinction, for the purposes of their contributions to the ecosystems and landscapes they once inhabited, I believe the species should be considered to be functionally extinct and not a fully recovered species.
This does not mean its conservation is a failure. To the contrary, according to new conservation metrics that I and other scientists have proposed for the Green List, the bison would receive high scores on several counts, including Conservation Legacy – meaning it has benefited significantly from past protective efforts – and Conservation Gain, or potential to respond positively to further initiatives.
A full recovery
For contrast, consider another species widely viewed as a conservation success story: The osprey. Populations of this fish-eating bird of prey crashed across North America in the 1950s to 1970s, primarily due to poisoning from the insecticide DDT and its derivatives.
Conservation efforts since then, including a federal ban on DDT and provision of nesting structures, have resulted in a dramatic recovery, back to population levels before the declines. Actually, many U.S. and Canadian populations of Osprey now exceed historical numbers. Under the Green List criteria we are proposing, this species would now be considered ecologically functional in most if not all parts of its range.
Ambitious goals
Conservation scientists have long considered a species’ influence on others and on the ecosystems it inhabits to be a fundamental aspect of its essence and its intrinsic value. The Green List of Species initiative seeks to go beyond simply preventing extinctions to defining recovered species as those that are ecologically functional across their natural ranges. This new focus aims to encourage conservation optimism by highlighting success stories and showing that with help, species once at risk can reclaim their places in the web of life.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – With a year-long statewide campaign, the California Highway Patrol is working with the California Office of Traffic Safety to combat distracted driving by changing the habits of adult drivers through educational and enforcement efforts.
For the Adult Distracted Drivers campaign, which started Oct. 1, the CHP will conduct at least 100 distracted driving enforcement operations and at least 600 traffic safety presentations statewide.
Simply changing driving habits can help stop distracted driving.
“Our goal with this grant is to educate the public about the hazards associated with distracted driving,” CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said. “The CHP will continue to encourage drivers to discontinue the deadly habit so everyone can reach their destination safely.”
Each year, distracted drivers kill or injure thousands of people. Distracted driving is a habit that can be broken.
The campaign will remind drivers that the likelihood of being involved in an automobile accident increases dramatically if they drive distracted.
Cell phones are the top distraction for drivers because they have become central to daily life. Steering, braking, and focusing on the roadway are priorities while driving.
A person trying to drive and use a cell phone at the same time cannot do either very well.
“Texting while driving results in longer reaction times than drunk driving. When driving, your attention must be on safety,” Commissioner Stanley added. “Nothing on that phone is worth endangering your life or anyone else’s.”
Funding for this program was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County’s new main courthouse project tops an updated priority list that the Judicial Council of California will consider this week.
The meeting will take place at 1 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 14, in San Francisco.
It will be livestreamed on the Judicial Council’s Web site.
The staff report for the discussion is on the first page of the agenda packet published below; the updated priority list can be found on page 45 of the packet.
As a result of Government Code section 70371. – enacted by the governor and State Legislature in June 2018 – no funding for new courthouse construction projects will be provided until the Judicial Council reassesses all courthouse projects identified in its Update to Trial Court Capital-Outlay Plan and Prioritization Methodology, adopted in October of 2008.
The Judicial Council’s Court Facilities Advisory Committee was given the task of working on that new priority list.
That process began in August 2018, and from February to September a working group evaluated more than 213 buildings across the state.
The result was an updated priority list of 80 projects that had Lakeport’s long-awaited new four-courtroom courthouse in the No. 1 spot, at an estimated $51.2 million to build. A $15 million new one-room courthouse in Clearlake is listed in the No. 6 spot. Both are in the “immediate need” category.
No. 2 on the list is the new Ukiah courthouse in Mendocino County, at an estimated cost of $89.6 million.
The committee revised the initial scoring criteria and priority list based largely on public comment and on Oct. 1 approved sending it on to the Judicial Committee for consideration.
At this week’s meeting, the Judicial Council will consider the Court Facilities Advisory Committee’s recommendations to adopt the revised prioritization methodology for trial court capital-outlay projects, discuss the adoption of the revised statewide list of trial court capital projects, and delegate to the administrative director the authority to make technical changes to the reports for submission to the Legislature, subject to the review and approval of the Court Facilities Advisory Committee chair and vice chair.
Other items on the council’s Thursday meeting agenda include:
– Legal services for low-income litigants: The council will consider distributing $2.5 million in this year’s state budget for the Sargent Shriver Civil Counsel pilot projects, which provide legal representation and improved court services to eligible low-income litigants.
– Legislative priorities: The council will consider its legislative priorities for the upcoming year. Proposed priorities include improving court efficiency, investments in the judicial branch, and securing critically needed judgeships.
– “Court Adoption and Permanency Month”: The council will consider a recommendation to proclaim November “Court Adoption and Permanency Month.” This year marks the 20th year the council has recognized the efforts of California courts and justice partners to provide children and families with fair and understandable judicial proceedings and just permanency outcomes.
– Presentation of Distinguished Service and Aranda Awards: The council will present Justice Dennis Perluss and Judge Hilary Chittick with its Distinguished Service Award, which recognizes extraordinary contributions to California's judicial branch. In addition, the California Lawyers Association – in partnership with the Judicial Council and the California Judges Association – will present Judge Carol Brosnahan with the Aranda Access to Justice Award, which honors a judge for improving fairness and access to the courts, especially for low-and moderate-income Californians.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – A Northshore man has been sentenced to state prison for spousal abuse and arson in a case that was the result of several incidents earlier this year.
On Monday, Nov. 4, Michael Frederick Ward, 28, of Nice, was convicted and sentenced for felony charges of spousal abuse and arson of an inhabited structure, according to Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.
According to investigation reports by the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, on April 7 deputies Ben Moore and Collin Coddington responded to the 7200 block of East Butte St. in Nice and contacted Ward’s wife.
She reported that Ward had pushed her down, causing an abrasion to her arm, flushed her deceased mother’s ashes down the toilet and stated that he would blow up the residence if law enforcement came inside.
At the time the victim did not want Ward prosecuted because of fear of retaliation, and deputies were unable to locate Ward, who had fled the residence before deputies arrived, Hinchcliff said.
A Lake County Sheriff’s office investigative report said that on July 4 Ward was still living with his wife and her two children at the East Butte Street residence in Nice. A neighbor reported that the children had come to her residence claiming Ward had a blow torch and was trying to catch the house on fire.
Deputies Justin Newton and Walter White responded, and Ward’s wife advised officers that she had been in an argument with Ward and went into the bedroom to get away from Ward. Ward subsequently nailed the windows and the door to the bedroom shut, and began threatening to burn the house down, the report said.
The victim knocked a hole through the wall to escape, and saw Ward with a propane torch attempting to start a fire. The report said deputies located a propane torch inside the residence and a charred piece of wood on the bedroom door. Deputies were again unable to locate Ward who had fled the residence before deputies arrived.
On July 26, Ward’s wife reported Ward was again inside the residence on Butte Street and was breaking and throwing things inside the residence, and had again threatened to set the residence on fire, another sheriff’s office report stated.
Deputies John Wander, John Drewrey, and other sheriff’s off staff responded to the residence. Upon the deputies’ arrival, Ward was still inside the residence and smoke was coming out of windows in the residence, the report explained.
Deputies Drewrey and Collin Coddington entered the residence to look for Ward or other persons and attempt to put the fire out. They noticed fire burning in more than one location and exited because of heavy smoke, according to the report.
The report said Drewrey and Capt. Chris Chwialkowski then entered the residence again, and once inside believed there may be a gas leak inside the residence, so they exited and advised nearby residents to evacuate the area. About that time Ward was seen attempting to flee out of a window and was detained by deputies Coddington and Jeffrey Mora.
Northshore Fire Protection District Chief Mike Ciancio contacted Keith Warner, a private arson investigator out of Rohnert Park, to conduct the origin and cause investigation. Hinchcliff said Warner has provided assistance numerous times in the past to fire agencies in Lake County and was previously a member of the Lake County Arson Task Force.
Warner’s investigation determined that the fire started in multiple separate locations and was intentionally set. Hinchcliff said the fire caused major damage to the residence, with Northshore Fire estimating the damage totaled $74,401.
Hinchcliff, who handles most of the fire-related prosecutions for Lake County, said he charged Ward with arson of a residence, attempted arson, criminal threats, false imprisonment, and child endangerment and prosecuted the case.
Kevin Davenport was appointed as a public defender to represent Ward. On Aug. 20, a preliminary hearing was held and a trial date was set, Hinchcliff said.
On Oct. 16, pursuant to a negotiated disposition, Ward pleaded no contest to felony arson of an inhabited structure and felony spousal abuse to a stipulated 10 years state prison, according to Hinchcliff.
On Nov. 4, Judge Andrew Blum sentenced Ward to 10 years state prison and ordered restitution in the amount of $74,401, Hinchcliff said.
Hinchcliff said Ward also was ordered to have no contact with the victim or her children, additional restitution was reserved for the victim and Ward was ordered to register as an arson offender for the rest of his life.
It’s hard to believe, but we’re on the cusp of the holiday season.
In less than three weeks, most of us will be celebrating the quintessential American holiday, Thanksgiving.
Roasted turkey with stuffing, bowls of sweet and white potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pies will fill our tables.
While we consider this delicious fare traditional for the Thanksgiving feast, the truth is that what we serve on this day has evolved over time. What the Pilgrims and Indians ate in 1621 New England bears little resemblance to what we serve today.
In 1841, more than 200 years after what we now refer to as “the first Thanksgiving,” New England historian Alexander Young discovered a letter from Edward Winslow, one of the original colonists, mentioning the 1621 feast. It was Young that gave that feast the moniker mentioned above.
Winslow describes four hunters killing enough fowl to feed the camp for a week. While turkey was plentiful in North America – and eaten by the colonists and Wampanoag Indians – it’s speculated that the “fowl” mentioned in the letter consisted of seasonal waterfowl such as ducks and geese.
Turkey eventually became the fowl of choice on Thanksgiving menus, but not right away. A menu for a New England Thanksgiving dinner circa 1779 mentions roast turkey, but only as one of the meats offered at the meal, not as the star. Also listed are venison, pork, pigeon and goose.
In contrast, this year more than 240 million turkeys will have been raised as the mainstay of our Thanksgiving dinners.
What about the stuffing? Historians tell us that the practice of stuffing the cavities of fowl and other animals with mixtures of breads, spices and other items is ancient. Romans and Arabs employed this cooking technique. The terms “stuffing” and “dressing” as they relate to cookery derive from Medieval European culinary practices.
The English settlers and Wampanoag did occasionally stuff birds and fish, but if stuffing was used, it likely consisted of herbs and onions, rather than bread.
Any cranberries served at the harvest celebration were likely only in Wampanoag dishes. They enjoyed them raw or sweetened with maple sugar.
It would be 50 years before an Englishman mentioned boiling this New England berry with sugar for a “sauce to be eaten with … meat.” Since sugar was expensive in England in 1621, it’s quite possible that there was not any of this imported sweet in New Plymouth at that time.
Today turkey and cranberries are a much-loved food marriage.
The tradition of serving fruit with meat, particularly citrus fruit with fatty meat, goes back thousands of years, likely originating in the Middle East. Examples are found in many cultures and cuisines.
The acid in the fruit cuts the fat in the meat. In the case of lean meats such as turkey and chicken, cranberries add flavor to what is generally considered a bland food.
Other classic meat and fruit combos include pork and applesauce, goose and cherry sauce, fish and lemon, and duck l’orange.
It’s hard to imagine Thanksgiving without mashed potatoes, but the original feast didn’t include them.
Potatoes, which originated in South America, had made their way across the Atlantic to Europe, but had not been generally adopted into the English diet. The potato was virtually unknown there in the 17th century. At that point they were not included in the diet of the Wampanoag Indians, either (though they did eat other varieties of local tubers).
Today’s Thanksgiving meals typically include a version of a sweet potato (or yam) dish, but that wouldn’t have been included in the original harvest meal.
The sweet potato, which originated in the Caribbean, had also made its way to Europe, but was rare and available only to the wealthy.
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain liked them and had them planted in their court gardens. King Henry VII of England liked them as well, and considered them to be an aphrodisiac.
Yams are native to Africa and are often confused with sweet potatoes. Most sweet potato dishes – pies included – are just as successfully made with yams.
Like the white potato, neither yams nor sweet potatoes were part of the diet of the Wampanoag Indians or, for the most part, the English at the time of the first feast.
Have you ever wondered why marshmallows are so often paired with sweet potatoes on the Thanksgiving table?
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, marshmallows were very trendy. They were mass produced, plentiful, and very inexpensive, and were aggressively marketed by the companies that manufactured them.
The earliest recipes found pairing marshmallows and sweet potatoes date to the 1920s. There were typically casseroles where marshmallows were layered with the potatoes. To a lesser extent, they were also paired with candied yams.
Often signature dishes from the 1920s were very sweet, and some historians speculate that this is a reaction to Prohibition.
Pumpkin, native to the New World, was likely available as part of the harvest feast, but not in the form of pie. It may have been baked, possibly by placing it in the ashes of a dying fire, then mixed with animal fat, maple syrup, or honey, and made into a soup, a common way of using it by American Indians.
As for our beloved Thanksgiving pumpkin pie, recipes for stewed pumpkin tempered with sugar, spices and cream wrapped in pastry have roots in Medieval times, when similar pies were made with squash and gourds.
Corn was part of the earliest Thanksgiving feast, though it was hard Indian corn, unlike the corn we know today. American Indians were cooking with corn long before European settlers arrived, and the English colonists learned to grind it for use in breads, pancakes, porridge and puddings as a substitute for the grains they were used to.
While we don’t know exactly what was served at the first Thanksgiving, historians can be pretty certain that it included at least some of the bounty available to them, such as cultivated parsnips, carrots, collards, turnips, parsley, spinach, cabbage, sage, thyme, onions and marjoram, as well as native cranberries, pumpkin, nuts, grapes, lobster, oysters, other seafood and, of course, local fowl.
The recipe I offer today is my mother’s orange-cranberry relish which has been offered at our holiday table for as long as I can remember. She served it in hollowed out orange-skin halves, which make for a pleasant and colorful presentation.
A former chef and restaurateur, my mom did organic, locally grown food in our family restaurant before it was cool. She was a true pioneer.
Like me, she cooks in a rather free-form fashion, so my apologies if the recipe seems a bit vague. Please feel free to contact me through Lake County News if you have questions.
The cooking of the oranges three times is to ensure they’re not bitter, since the skins are left on.
Danni’s Orange-Cranberry Relish
2 to 3 oranges, finely chopped with skins on 1 and ¼ cup sugar, divided 12-ounce package of fresh cranberries
Cover oranges with water in saucepan. Bring to a boil and allow oranges to simmer for a few minutes.
Drain oranges in colander and repeat process with fresh water.
Drain oranges again and put in saucepan with fresh water to generously cover them, along with ½ cup sugar.
Bring to a boil and simmer until liquid reduces somewhat and oranges get candied a bit in the sweet water.
Drain them, reserving the cooking liquid, and set aside.
Using the cooking liquid and fresh water, measure 1 cup of liquid into a saucepan.
Add ¾ cup sugar and bring water and sugar to a boil.
Add cranberries, return to a boil, and cook until their skins pop.
Remove from heat and stir in oranges.
Allow mixture to cool and refrigerate until served.
If serving in orange skins, they may be refrigerated after filling.
Recipe by Danielle Loomis Post.
Esther Oertel is a writer and passionate home cook from a family of chefs. She grew up in a restaurant, where she began creating recipes from a young age. She’s taught culinary classes in a variety of venues in Lake County and previously wrote “The Veggie Girl” column for Lake County News. Most recently she’s taught culinary classes at Sur La Table in Santa Rosa, Calif. She lives in Middletown, Calif.