• North Star Journey

  • By: MPR News
  • Podcast
North Star Journey  By  cover art

North Star Journey

By: MPR News
  • Summary

  • A journal exploring the history and culture of Minnesota communities. Inform these stories: mprnews.org/nsj
    Copyright 2024 Minnesota Public Radio
    Show more Show less
Episodes
  • Trailblazer Reatha Clark King on her journey from chemistry to philanthropy
    Apr 18 2024

    As a child in Georgia, Reatha Clark King picked cotton for $6 a day to help her family make ends meet. Then, buoyed on the hopes and expectations of her family and church, she blazed a trail from a one-room schoolhouse in the segregated South to college.


    She pushed past gender and racial barriers as a Black woman to become a research chemist in the 1960s, contributing to NASA’s moon landing. She went on to become a college dean, university president and a philanthropist and a vice president of a major corporation.


    Earlier this week, she was honored at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota with a reception and celebration of her recent biography, “Find a Trail or Blaze One.”


    MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Minnesota trailblazer Reatha Clark King about her life.


    Guest:


    Reatha Clark King worked as a research chemist for the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. In the 1960s. She moved to Minnesota to become president of Metropolitan State University from 1977 to 1988. She was a vice president of General Mills Corporation and president and executive director of the General Mills Foundation until she retired in 2002. Her biography “Find a Trail or Blaze One” was published in 2021.

    Show more Show less
    47 mins
  • A modern spin on a Korean tradition: Kimjang in south Minneapolis
    Apr 12 2024

    In Korea, people often get together for kimjang, a gathering to make large batches of kimchi, the traditional spicy fermented cabbage delicacy.


    Recently, I joined about a dozen people gathered for kimjang at a house in south Minneapolis. Unlike traditional kimjang, most of the participants were complete strangers, albeit with a shared interest in kimchi.


    We rolled up our sleeves, pulled on gloves and got to work on the 14 cabbages at our disposal.



    The process is labor-intensive: we tore each cabbage in half and salted them all. Then we set them aside to let the salt draw the water out of the leaves.


    Next, we chopped vegetables and mixed them into the seasonings. And, of course, the fun part is done by hand. I could feel the heat from the thick spicy paste seep through my gloves as I churned the aromatic mixture in the bowl.


    To Koreans, kimjang represents the spirit to survive tough times. You make yourself resilient.


    Neighbors would make kimchi together then store it for the long harsh winter ahead. Without this preserved food, they wouldn’t survive. Nowadays, kimjang is usually a family affair. Of course, Kimchi is available in Minnesota grocery stores. But it can get pricey.



    Our south Minneapolis kimjang host was Douglas Choi. He started making his own kimchi as an experiment during the COVID-19 years. Post-pandemic, he wanted to get to know his community. He decided to ask strangers via social media to come to his house and make kimchi together.


    Choi, 39, said newer generations are putting their own spin on some Korean traditions, including kimjang.


    “You get to form new contexts around that practice, and hold onto some of the things, but it just evolves,” he said. “I’m happy that had happened. And, I’m happy that we were able to kind of get that to work and I’m excited to sort of see where this goes.”



    While I make kimchi, I think of my family: Halmoni, my grandma, and Umma, my mom, made kimchi together in big metal bowls, just like the ones in this south Minneapolis home. They’d feed my brother and me pieces straight from the bowl.


    I find it comforting making this dish with complete strangers new to kimjang.


    Everyone in the room has their own reasons for taking part.


    Vaughn Powell came with her friend, Alicia Jackson. Powell finds the communal act rejuvenating.



    “I was excited to see what it was like because I do a lot of cooking on my own, but I do it by myself as my own meditative process,” Powell, 32, said. “So, I was interested to see what it would be like to do that with other people. That’s not something that I’ve experienced before.”


    Standing by her side, Jackson, 36, said kimchi and other fermented foods sometimes get a bad rap.


    “But, I think that age does something really, really inspiring to food,” she said. “Transforming it from what it was to what it could be. And I’m a big, big fan of what that becomes.”



    Across the room, Tony Muras-Scherber, 32, helps another group make kimchi. He and his brother are Korean adoptees.


    Making kimchi, Muras-Scherber said, is an act of reconnection. Plus, he loves the taste.


    “It kind of brings us a little bit more close to our culture and our heritage,” he said. “Doing these types of things, making Korean food and trying different Korean dishes that we normally would not have here in Minnesota and the Midwest.”



    After a couple of hours the salted cabbage is limp and ready for seasoning. Powell washes every leaf under running water to remove the remaining salt. Then we coat each one with the spicy seasonings.


    Finally we squash the precious, multi-colored mush into the kimchi jars, and seal them.


    Everyone takes a moment to admire the swirling hues of red and orange in the freshly-made kimchi, with Choi comparing it to “the whole galaxy.”



    The next part of the process is to let it ferment in the fridge for a couple of weeks.


    I find out later that there may have been a mishap. We possibly put too much salt in the kimchi. But, I’m hoping that I can still use it for some dishes later this month. So, fingers crossed.


    Meanwhile, Choi is considering another kimjang in the future.

    Show more Show less
    4 mins
  • Power Pair: The mother-daughter duo working to better Golden Valley and beyond
    Apr 9 2024

    As parents, we teach our children how to move through the world. But as our children grow older, we learn from them, too.


    That relationship can grow into a real partnership and friendship — and a positive support system pushing each other to be better and do better.


    Our next Power Pair is a good example of that transition: Mother-daughter duo Rose McGee and Roslyn Harmon.


    It’s part of our new series on the show about prominent Minnesotans you may know about individually, but who also have a close relationship.


    Guests:


    Rose McGee is President and Founder of the Sweet Potato Comfort Pie organization, which brings people together for hope, healing and dialogue around race. She’s also a facilitator, author and recent Bush Fellow.


    Roslyn Harmon is the mayor of Golden Valley — the first Black person to hold that position. She is also an educator, counselor and ordained pastor.

    Show more Show less
    47 mins

What listeners say about North Star Journey

Average customer ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.