Things to Eat

When asked by prospectives what Houghtonites “do for fun,” students can direct them to the carefully worded “101 Things to Do” on the Houghton website, sporting events, CAB activities, lectures, and concert series. Or students can tell them the truth that, for the most part, they simply make their own fun, and one of the ways they do this is by preparing food. Houghton students make a lot of food.

From Muggins and waffle-ice-cream birthday concoctions in the Dining Hall to cookies, pastas, vegan muffins, banana breads, curries, rice, Mac-n-Cheese, and stir-fry, Houghton students, like so many in the world, find community through food.

Facebook is awash with pictures and comments on the food Houghton students create and share. The location and equipment of Shenawana Hall’s basement kitchen is more of a hall rumor than a source of community, but the other dorms, townhouses, and CLOs are full of students meeting their basic human needs with flare, generosity, and plenty of pure vanilla.

Courtesy of tripadvisor.com
Courtesy of tripadvisor.com

A Christian lifestyle and the Houghton location invites many to an even more thoughtful and gracious relationship to food and food sources. Shopping at the co-op embodies necessity, community, and blessing intertwined and is a lifestyle choice which engages the local economy in a stewardship-minded fashion.

Houghton students were provided with ample opportunities to explore both their relationship to food and food’s relationship to faith during PRAXIS week. The upcoming season of Lent is a time of fasting and contemplation, a chance for all participants to reevaluate their personal idols, dependences, and priorities through food restriction. Yet even during Lent, fasting is meant to be followed by feasting, and the Christian Sabbath becomes a focused time of fellowship and community.

My roommates gave me a taste of this community the other day with a spontaneous snack, made from ingredients as local as possible — our yard. They doled out “snow ice-cream,” Paula Dean-approved and Professor Lipscomb-recommended,  from a large Christmas-red bowl. We topped it with a reheated peanut-butter-and-chocolate mixture — the failed coating for a batch of Puppy Chow — and sat around the table, giggling like children and eagerly devouring the sweet, cold concoction.

So on Sundays, when your Lenten fast is put on hold for Jesus-approved feasting, make your own fun by making your own food — like snow ice cream! — to share with Houghton friends and family. To make snow ice cream: Combine 12 cups snow and one 14 oz. can sweetened condensed milk. Serve with topping of choice.

Things to Do: Vidler’s Five and Dime Store

It may be a bit far, but East Aurora is an inviting little village worth a visit sometime during your tenure at Houghton. Main Street has a certain small-town charm, with its old-fashioned theatre marquee and historic Five and Dime Store called Vidlers.

Courtesy of http://www.tripadvisor.com/
Courtesy of http://www.tripadvisor.com/

Vidlers itself is a unique attraction; it is the largest five and dime store in the world. Other attractions in the area include the Millard Fillmore House, the Roycroft Campus, and the Elbert Hubbard Museum.

Another fun fact: Millard Fillmore, the 13th President of the United States, lived in a simple clapboard house in East Aurora for four years before beginning his political career.

Fillmore’s house has been designated as a National Historic Landmark, and according to the Village of East Aurora’s website, “The 1825 structure is restored to that period and features some original Fillmore furniture of the era, as well as items from Fillmore’s presidential years.”

The Roycroft Campus in East Aurora has also been designated as a National Historic Landmark, and it features guided walking tours, artisan classes and demonstrations, unique handcrafted artworks, and a copper shop gallery, according to its website.

The Campus is described at its website as “the best preserved and most complete complex of buildings remaining in the United States of the ‘guilds’ that evolved as centers of craftsmanship and philosophy during the late 19th century.”

To continue this historical journey through East Aurora, visit the Elbert Hubbard Museum, which “features an extensive collection of Roycroft books and Arts & Crafts pieces,” as stated on the Village of East Aurora’s website.

For those who enjoy the outdoors, the Sinking Ponds Nature Preserve “offers hiking trails and a natural habitat for migrating geese and other animals,” according to the village’s website. In addition, there is an outdoor ice skating rink in East Aurora that is open to the public on the weekends during the winter.

Spend a Saturday away from campus discovering the historic treasures and charm of East Aurora sometime during your stay in Western New York; the opportunity is a riveting one.