Three Variations on a Theme: Squash Veloute

 

The problem-child veggie, deserves props for being sustainable, hearty, local, and very affordable. It comes around when more sexy juicy veggies have long gone dormant. Often victimized and typecast by rote preparations, it can substitute as a starch or a vegetable when needed. Squash is one of our more versatile ingredients — it has hidden talent and nuances, via an uncanny ability to create a subdued flavor base and/ or amplify its natural sweet/ savory basic flavor profile via roasting, or it can be a flavor sponge soaking up complimentary tastes.

The recipe below is part 1 in a 3-part series of squash recipes. Stay tuned for parts 2 and 3!

Squash Veloute

This is a rich, yet subtle soup that stands up well to variations and add-ons (kale, caramelized onions, fresh herbs come to mind.)
1 cup diced onion
½ cup diced celery
½ cup diced turnip
2/3 cup roasted red pepper
1 tsp thyme
3 acorn squash
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 cup veggie stock
1 ½ cups heavy cream
1 cup grated asiago
6 sage leaves coarsely chopped
Pepita’s or roast squash seeds for garnish
Method: Preheat oven to 450.  Halve squash lengthwise, scoop out seeds, brush with olive oil, season with salt and pepper.  Set in roasting or sheet pan lined with parchment paper, face down. Roast for 25 minutes.  Sauté’ onion, carrot, turnip in oil until translucent, season gently with salt, pepper and thyme. Add roasted red peppers; continue to sauté on low adding a splash of stock to deglaze as needed. Once squash is roasted, scoop out with a spoon and add to sauté along with stock. Bring to a simmer; let it gently cook for 15-20 minutes. Blend soup with either burr mixer or by whisking rapidly. Once soup has a pleasingly creamy consistency, add cream and asiago while stirring over low heat.  Once heated through, finish with sage. Serve in warm bowls, garnish with seeds.

Coming up next:

February – Squash Cups: Pt. 2

March – Squash and Broccolini Salad: Pt. 3

 

Why Mindfulness-Based (fill in the blank) programs have gone viral

By: Shastri Janet Solyntjes

When people learn that I teach Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction they often respond with an exclamation, “I could use that!” The recognition that one could use a little help navigating through “the full catastrophe” of life was what led me to attend MBSR teacher trainings at the Center for Mindfulness. Although I had meditated for many years before learning about MBSR, I still found myself mired in the ups and downs, the internal and external dramas of daily life. When attending my first training with Jon Kabat-Zinn and Saki Santorelli, I instantly loved the MBSR “package” that Jon created. Integrating mindful yoga and a slow scanning of the body into my repertoire of mindfulness practices made a significant impact.

I doubt that Jon could have imagined back in 1979 that the stress reduction program he developed at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center would spread around the world and inspire hundreds if not thousands of researchers, psychologists, physicians, school teachers, addiction counselors, and even a few members of Congress to integrate mindfulness into daily life. MBSR and all of the Mindfulness-Based (fill in the blank) programs have gone viral!

It’s been my honor to offer MBSR-inspired retreats at Shambhala Mountain Center for nearly 10 years now. People from all around the country have been introduced to the MBSR teachings and practices at SMC, offering them a taste or deep immersion (depending on the length of the program) into what often becomes a life-changing experience. That may sound a bit overboard but it’s not uncommon for participants to speak of the shift in their perspective on life – in particular their physical, emotional, and interpersonal stress – after one of these retreats.

What I love most about teaching at SMC is the powerful setting – a place where people can unplug, have direct contact with sun, wind, and snow fall, and step into the magical world where sky meets mountaintop and in-between life is buzzing.

I hope you’ll join me for an Introduction to MBSR weekend or for one of our 5-7-day MBSR-based retreats.

Warmest regards,

Janet

Click here to see information about Shastri Janet Solyntjes’ upcoming Introduction to MBSR weekend. February 15–17, 2013.

Make Henry Happy

The Shambhala Mountain Center experience can be anything from uncovering space and stillness, to touching sadness and heartbreak, to feeling joy and elation. While the beauty of the environment and the guidance of the teachers and presenters are supportive and inspiring, there are also mundane elements that help create the magic.

Please enjoy this video to see one of the ways your support makes the Shambhala Mountain Center experience complete.

Your contribution will make the magic happen.

As with most non-profit organizations, we depend on the generosity of our friends. Please contribute to our year-end campaign to raise funds for Shambhala Mountain Center’s operations by clicking the link below.

DonateNow

Since My First Weekthün

Written By Kaleigh Isaacs

In a week from today I will be starting a weekthün (a solid week of intensive group meditation). It is my second weekthün ever and I’m both nervous and excited.

As the retreat approaches it has been much easier for me to get to the cushion each day. Maybe I’m kindly preparing myself for the longer days of sitting that are about to come but something else is there as well—a feeling of clarity and confident intention.

My first weekthün happened three years ago. It was my first retreat besides a much shorter Level I that I had taken years prior. I remember what a challenging and heart opening experience it was for me—in fact that was when I first considered the idea of living up at SMC as a way to continue with the greater depth of practice I had come to appreciate during the retreat.

So here I am three years later, having arrived at SMC in May to tend the garden but moved to program coordinating during the evacuation to Boulder due to the High Park Fire. Now I am the busy (and cheerful) marketing associate, barely willing to drag myself away from my computer and precious analytics software to enjoy the richness of a retreat at SMC.

Over the past week I’ve found myself reconnecting with that original intention I had three years ago. The inherent sanity of that decision to come live and practice up here is making me slow down and appreciate. Remembering how I value the opportunity to live, practice and work in community and I see with open eyes, that I’m exactly where I want to be.

So wish me luck! Anyone out there remember their first weekthün or dathün?

Wanna join me? You can register for the whole dathün or just do a week: click here.

 

Stupa Serenade

Painter of Thangkas, Playing Guitar.

Greg Smith studied with Choyam Trungpa Rinpoche and is now a student of his son Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche. Of the past 33 years, Greg has spent 23 at Shambhala Mountain Center, contributing to the community and practice environment, and befriending many of the program participants. He oversaw the painting of the Great Stupa of Dharmakaya during its construction and continues to relate to it on a daily basis. After all, he can see it from his bedside window.

We asked Greg for an offering that we could share with our community to celebrate the richness of our sangha. He was more than happy to oblige and decided to play a song, in every floor of the Stupa!

So here is Greg Smith, practitioner, painter, guitarist, and friend.

We can’t do it without you!

Shambhala Mountain Center is powered by offerings of all kinds; volunteered time, donations, teachings and practice. We ask you to join us now by making an offering that will help bring Shambhala Mountain Center into 2013 on healthy financial footing. Please donate to Shambhala Mountain Center today!

There is tremendous momentum and energy to bring the vision of basic human and societal goodness further into the world through Shambhala Mountain Center’s programs and offerings in the next year, but we cannot do it without you!

DonateNow

My Recent Adventure with the SMC Catalog

By Calryn Aston

After a long and challenging day at work, I arrived home and found the Winter/Spring Shambhala Mountain Center catalog in my mail pile. Without energy to do much else, I sat down to browse – on the cover, resting plants blanketed with ice crystals.

I opened the cover to find a photograph of a grove of Aspen that evoked memories of times I have spent wandering the paths at SMC.

Interestingly, I found myself reading the catalog cover to cover, looking with fresh eyes at the photographs, course descriptions, and teacher bios, and feeling the armor around my heart unwind.

When I finished, about 45 minutes later, I felt refreshed, cheerful, and energized. Thank you so much for all you offer – even the catalog can be a transmission.

New Year Intention

New Year’s Resolutions have earned quite a reputation with their knack for creating lofty, often unreachable, goals. And still, New Year Resolutions can be genuinely helpful in opening space for reflection, creating an opportunity to set clear intentions for the year to come.

In making resolutions we often envision what we would like to change about our lives: what to add, remove, or improve to become “better people.” With this approach, the whole thing can get a bit intense and self-aggressive. “I am never going to eat cake again, and I will meditate 2 hours a day if it kills me.”

So, how does the ritual of New Years Resolutions change, when instead of developing a wish list, we start with our basic human qualities? Acknowledging that we aspire to do good, to be kind, that we wish for happiness and that fundamentally, we have everything we need to realize these virtues?

This is the question Jon Barbieri is inviting us to explore in the upcoming New Year retreat: “Take a Leap Into 2013: Establish Your Intention and Commitment.”

Join us for this special program and allow your aspirations for the New Year to become clear, confident and committed through reflection and renewal. Because really, how to better celebrate New Year’s Eve than with a delicious full-course dinner on the magical starry land of Shambhala Mountain Center?

 

 

Rusung on Retreat

The Rusung plays an essential part in creation of the container of Shambhala Mountain Center’s meditative environment. Recently, Shambhala Mountain Center’s Rusung Zane Edwards did a solitary retreat in one of our lovely, isolated cabins. While he was there, he made this film reflecting on the retreat experience and its importance for all of us.

Do you know someone who wants to see that beautiful time lapse of the sunrise over Shambhala’s Rocky Mountain range? Share it with anyone!

To celebrate the fact that We’re Back!, and as an offering to the Shambhala Mountain Center community, we will be releasing videos sharing the talents of our staff, and explaining new initiative that are being launched.

You can learn more about what we’re up to, how you can help support Shambhala Mountain Center and watch more videos from Shambhala Mountain Center by clicking here.

SMC in Vogue

by Christopher Seelie

Allen Ginsberg – 136 Syllables At Rocky Mountain Dharma Center

Tail turned to red sunset on a juniper crown a lone magpie cawks.

Mad at Oryoki in the shrine-room — Thistles blossomed late afternoon.

Put on my shirt and took it off in the sun walking the path to lunch.

A dandelion seed floats above the marsh grass with the mosquitos.

At 4 A.M. the two middleaged men sleeping together holding hands.

In the half-light of dawn a few birds warble under the Pleiades.

Sky reddens behind fir trees, larks twitter, sparrows cheep cheep cheep
cheep cheep.

July 1983

Looks Like Someone at Vogue is Reading Ginsberg

Allen Ginsberg was no stranger to the sensation of a Rocky Mountain dawn and the unique peace that comes from sleeping in a tent at Shambhala Mountain Center (called, at the time, Rocky Mountain Dharma Center). His grateful bewilderment must have sparked something in a copywriter at Vogue Magazine, tasked with evoking the richness of autumnal colors in a $850 piece of knitwear.

Rocky Mountain Replay

We haven’t been Rocky Mountain Dharma Center since 2001 and in that time there have been many incarnations of Shambhala Mountain Center. However, like the dandelion seed in Ginsberg poem, the qualities of freshness, and what Pema calls “an open state of mind that can relax with paradox and ambiguity” spread as far as the wind will take it. Sometimes it’s in a gesture we extend to others, sometimes to ourselves, and sometimes it’s a poem that ends up on a desk far from Marpa Point. It’s a little strange to have the old name pop up in one of the world’s biggest fashion magazine, but when life gives you dandelions, make dandelion wine.

Make Ian Happy

Through out our We’re Back! campaign we will be sharing more videos like this one to let you know how important your support of SMC is! We will also be posting offerings and talent of the staff, and share with you some of SMC’s new initiatives to be launched in the upcoming year.

Check out the new video!

DonateNow

Please stay tuned for more to come.