"Hi I am Teresa from Gotts Goats and Gardens, we have a small farm in Iowa where we raise Nigerian Dwarf and Boer goats and use their milk in our soaps. Our soaps are made with essential oil, natural clays and spices, and flowers and veggies from our garden. Our Lavender Lillie soap is scented with lavender and is made with Rainforest Chica’s Intense Purple Brazilian Clay.
I am loving the deep purple this clay gives me vs our previous clay.
Look at this magical circle! It is called a "peconha", it is made from a young açaí palm leaf and is used to help the Açaí harvesters climb açaí palms.
That circle is so culturally important that it names the açaí harvesters - they are the "peconheiros".
Look at Celso's feet, they use the peconha to firm their feet around the açaí palm to climb these thin palms.
It is absolutely incredible seeing them climb those thin palms with a machete and come back carrying a "cacho de Açaí". Each bunch has from 6 to 12 lbs. of the fruit. They can't just drop it from the tree as they will lose a lot of the small dark fruit.
In order to get the fruit off the cluster, we need to carefully slide our hands up and down each string, it will stain your hands for a few hours but it actually feels good.
Celso, the man in the pictures, is the owner of his land and uses part of the açaí for himself and his family and sells the rest. It is important to consume wild harvested Açaí from small land owners as some big pulp exporters are destroying parts of the forest for açaí farms which is bad for the local population, the forest and the Açaí, as monocultures can create plagues which would destroy the wild açaí too. We can't have the Açaí to become the new palm oil - keep the Açaí wild and the forest standing. Rainforest Chica açaí oil is ALWAYS sourced by small land owners co-ops.
Try the best Açaí Oil in the market! Click on the picture below to experience Rainforest Chica certified organic Açaí Oil!
Nina's last chapter.🖤🤍 Don't cry just yet, it doesn't end as bad as it sounds. If you don't know Nina, she is a dog who belongs to a a street dweller in Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro. I have been visiting and sharing her adventures with my customers for 8 years now. Nina has DEFINITELY a special something, so many people love her a lot, every time she got sick there was a line of people to help her. And she brought a lot of attention to her mom (who passed a couple of years ago) and dad, but they never got ready to be helped. They lived on the beach and had a few addictions, so many times I would look for them to find them passed out on the sand or sidewalk and Nina on the watch out. She would come to me, hang for a few minutes and go back to her favorite person: her dad. So this latest trip I had a feeling I would not see her, it wasn't a bad feeling though. I usually go to the beach right away looking for her, but this time I took my sweet time. When I finally made it to the area where the group of homeless hangs out, I asked about her and they gave me an address, I thought it was where they were panhandling now. But turns out her dad died, which was coming - after his partner of 10 years on the street died, he became worse with drugs and violent - and Nina got adopted by a lady who always helped her. Nina now lives in a super nice apartment, overlooking the ocean with the best food and vet care. I know she misses her dad, but she was getting up there in years and she had taken care of him long enough, he rested and she deserves her rest in style. So unless I get luck and run into them we won't be seeing Nina again. I am a bit sad but extremely relieved she has a home. Thank you for following her story with me for all these years. I appreciate you guys!
2019
This is Nina. I met her over 3 years ago on a trip to Rio de Janeiro, I was going through a bad break up back in the US in which I was losing my heart... My dog Mina. So when I met Nina, running free on the white sands of Copacabana, being such a happy beach bum I fell in love, she looked well taken care of, good weight, ears clean, nails cut, nice collar, after asking around I found out she belonged to an alcoholic, drug addicted homeless couple who usually hangs out on the same spot on Copacabana beach. Apparently neighborhood dog lovers and vets helped them take care of her. You may have many questions, why not help the couple? Many people have tried and failed, they aren't ready. Why not take the dog? She absolutely ADORES them, and they like her, she is also their protector and means to get more money and food. On one of my trips the guy got sick and went to a public hospital for a couple of days, the other homeless people were taking care of her but she was restless, crying, trying to cross the streets, looking everywhere. He was dry for a week or two after that, we talked, I told him she dependes on him that he had to be more careful, he told me he depends on her and that he would... But a few days later he was back in the bottle. I always look for her first thing on my trips to Rio. I ask around, I walk to their regular begging spots until I find her. I help them out the little I can. I had never been away for this long, so today when I spotted her sleeping next to them on the sidewalk my heart screamed a million happy songs. I almost got run over crossing the street and I had a huge smile and tears down my cheeks when she came to me tail wagging, lips curled up in a funny smile. We hang out for a bit, I petted her and told her I had missed her so. She never looks for food, she just makes me happy for the little time we spend together. The couple was sleeping nearby and never woke up, I told her to go back to them before I left and she did. I always leave behind a little piece of my heart when I leave her, praying she will be there the next time. There are so many beautiful love stories out there. I am glad I have this one.
June 2019
2021
After the pandemic, she was there, healthy and a bit chunky, it has been 5 years since I fell in love with her. I got to see her a few times, the homeless couple she watches over is doing the same, drinking and begging. If one day I feel she is too old to live on the streets I will talk to them and think of an alternative, for now, they are her life and she acts like their mama, that is her mission and I won't get in her way. For people who haven't seen my posts about Nina: her owners were offered help many times but they are not ready yet to change their lifestyle.
January 2021
December 2021
2022
I went to the beach as soon as I finished breakfast with my dad the morning I got to Rio and she wasn't on the beach. After a few trips, a beach vendor finally told me they had been kicked out that spot because the guy had become violent to others. I spent hours walking up and down the streets of Copacabana looking for them and finally, yesterday, I see her, guarding over the owners who were passed out on a sidewalk as usual. I called she came to me and we sat there for a while, I was crying with relief, she loves being petted but always goes back to her couple. While I was petting her some people walking by gave me puzzled looks, but most smiled and some talked to her, they know her name. She looks older, gray but clean, well fed. The "tribe of Nina" must know her new spot and they are still caring for them.
I do have a couple of places I could take her if they ever gave to me, but I don't know if she would be happy, she is extremely attached to them. One of my customers were right when she pointed out, they are her "kids", her responsibility nd she takes it very seriously. I thought about putting my Brazilian number on her collar, but I risk having the wrong people contact me with scams.
So for now I go on loving her, offering the couple help (many people have tried), tare not ready to take and trying to be grateful to have met such special dog.
The riverside community of Limão do Curuá, located in the Bailique archipelago, state of Amapá, is a village of about 140 residents. It is a local reference in the extraction of pracaxi oil and, over the years, it has developed innovations in the process, such as the no cooking the seeds and using an artisanal press, with two wooden boards, made by the residents themselves. With these innovations, the extractors of this community increased their production scale and, consequently, the sale of this oil.
Since the men usually leave small villages either to work in larger cities, or in fishing or river transport of goods to the main local ports, the women stay behind. The harvesting and production of pracaxi in this community is exclusively done by women.
Meetings and analyses of results.
Local producer peeling seeds.
Different parts of the production process.
Their oil is beautiful and great quality, and I love the idea of bringing money to the women of a small river community.
These past two years because of all the difficulties they are still facing due to the pandemic, the production was small and the cost to bring this oil to the cities to export was very high, therefore I only got a small amount and I am selling it in only two sizes since the price is way higher. If you are interested in larger amount contact me. By next year their production and transport will probably normalize and I will be able to carry both pracaxis at the same price.
This video was from the first time I was working with them, check it out!
I am not going to go on and on about this recipe, the first time I ate this was from a beach vendor, after a great surfing session. So yesterday when my aunt said she makes a great cuscuz I immediately asked for a list and went to the supermarket.
This recipe is basically a sophisticated tapioca pudding, but OH!! so much better!
I am giving you some of the amounts in metrical system, all you need is to converte it online.
TAPIOCA GRANULATED - 500 g
SUGAR - 1/2 cup (more if you like it really sweet).
MILK - 1 to 1.25 liter.
SWEETENED CONDENSED MILK - 1 can (395 g)
COCONUT MILK - 200 ml
COCONUT FLAKES - 100 to 200 g (unsweetened, dehydrated).
FOR TOPPING:
COCONUT FLAKES - sweetened - usually softer - or unsweetened, to taste, if you can find coconut shavings get some!
FOR SERVING:
CONDENSED MILK - to taste
Make sure you have a spot in your fridge.
Mix: Tapioca, milk (if you think you will like it a bit softer use more milk, for a firmer texture use just one litter), coconut milk, half of condensed milk can, unsweetened coconut flakes and sugar. Mix it all very well and put in the fridge for 1.5 to 2 hours depending on how cold your fridge gets.
After it is firm, take it out and mix it again, break the big pieces, make a paste of it again, after mixing well even it out and top it with the rest of the condensed milk and the "toppings" coconut.
After an hour or two take it out, cut into big pieces and serve it with even more condensed milk on top.
You can adjust this recipe in so many ways from the amount of sugar, to the type of coconut flakes. I have had vegan cuscuz and it is just as amazing, just go use a good thick vegan milk and coconut condensed milk!!
Perfect Summer dessert! Try it out and let me know!
This is the map of Brazil, I marked with arrows my hometown of Rio de Janeiro and up north, Belem, the place I usually visit when I go to the Amazon forest. They are about 1500 miles apart - about the distance from Miami to Maine.
Even though I was born in a big city and raised to be a beach girl, my parents would always take me to the beautiful forests of Rio (we have the largest urban forest in the world) where I learned to appreciate every aspect of being in contact with Nature, even the bugs.
In 2010 I decided to stop in Manaus, a Brazilian city in the heart of the Amazon forest, for a couple of days on my way to Rio. It was in this trip a street vendor offered me Pracaxi Oil, I was having a horrible melasma at the time and trying all sorts of chemical treatments. Four weeks after starting with the Pracaxi I decided I had to, somehow, share the many amazing Amazon products with more people. And five years later Rainforest Chica is doing just that! It is extremely exciting and rewarding!
Capoeira - an Afro-Brazilian fight style. The slaves brought to Brazil weren't allowed to train fighting. But since there is a solution for every problem, they incorporated dancing and music to their fight moves, tricking their owners into thinking they were just dancing. As cool and peaceful as it looks, Capoeira can be deadly in a street fight, just imagine one of these kicks hitting someone in the face.
Most capoeira schools do street demonstrations and it always amazes me the moves they can do inside a small circle without hitting anyone watching.
When buying an exotic oil (or butter) our first instinct is choosing by the price. Unfortunately, even if you are on a budget, you definitely should be more careful with this choice. Most of our exotic fats come from parts of the world that have little to no regulation on this market. And the FDA knows very little and is way too busy to be really effective. As long as it says "vegetable oil" and "for external use only" chances are, the product is entering the country. The FDA isn't even regulating the whole "organic" thing for cosmetics. Anyone can slap an "organic" on the description of a product and charge you a couple more bucks.
Things that can go wrong with exotic fats:
they can be mixed with cheaper oils or butters.
they can be produced by other methods than cold pressing, losing a lot of their properties.
they can be contaminated with undesirable stuff - eww!
they can be using slave-like working conditions.
their plantations can be destroying forests and animals.
their plantations may use a BUNCH of chemicals, stuff we sell to other countries because they are illegal here.
When buying a new oil or butter contact the shop, ask questions. Make sure they sound like they know what they are talking about. It doesn't matter if you are buying 1 oz. or 10 kgs. Ask where the product comes from, how it is produced, how it is harvested, if it is cold pressed, unrefined. If not wild harvested, if it is organic. Ask questions, wait for the answers, then make your decision!
It is your body, you only get one. Be very kind to it!
This post is also on my FORUM, please check it out and share your ideas and experiences with us!