Localvores will cringe at this, but I was halfway through chopping up some red, orange, and yellow peppers this evening before I realized that these veggies probably came here on a truck from Mexico.
I wasn't thinking about this earlier, when I wanted to make my latest favorite thing, jambalaya (Zatarain's brand, low-sodium variety) with a lot of chopped ham added (my sister's family has given up meat for Lent, and passed off all their ham on to me), a plate of chopped-up shrimp (Gulf shrimp, at least, not from Thailand), and chopped up peppers, red, orange, and yellow. I had a craving for some food from a region of the rainbow spectrum that I don't normally get here in Chicago in February. A vitamin deficiency? I don't know. At the time, when I was in the store, I had such a craving for some fresh colored vegetables that I didn't even care - as I normally would - that they cost $3.99 a pound.
In hindsight -- and foresight -- I suppose the thing to do is to buy peppers of various colors in the summer, when they're cheap and plentiful, and chop them up and freeze them. I did do this, but went through the last of the frozen red pepper supply a few weeks ago.
So, I'm thinking, this should be a part of being a localvore in the Chicago area: buy and freeze a lot of things in the summer, to get you through the winter. I need to be better at this, this coming summer. I am nowhere near qualified to do canning, but freezing, I think I can handle. I just need to do more planning ahead this coming year.