Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2009

New York Times: Big Food vs. Big Insurance

Michael Pollan writes about how the proposed changes in health care regulations might lead to a shift in food policy. He suggests that once insurance companies can no longer deny or drop coverage for people with diet-induced health problems, the powerful insurance lobby may become invested in reforming our food system. An interesting idea, and a potentially powerful benefit of healthcare reform.

"When health insurers can no longer evade much of the cost of treating the collateral damage of the American diet, the movement to reform the food system - everything from farm policy to food marketing and school lunches - will acquire a powerful and wealthy ally, something it hasn't really ever had before. (...) But what happens when the health insurance industry realizes that our system of farm subsidies makes junk food cheap, and fresh produce dear, and thus contributes to obesity and Type 2 diabetes?"

Click here for the full article in the New York Times.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Eating Our Way Out of the Health Care Crisis

I've re-posted a letter by Chris Beford before, and I always enjoy reading what he has to say. He makes an impassioned (and quite logical) case for how eating wisely can help to solve our oh-so-expensive health care issues.

"As children go back to school and the raucous town hall meetings on health care end, one truth has emerged from both sides: the United States must do something to control health-care costs or we face fiscal disaster. In Michigan, the cost of Medicaid and other state health-care responsibilities threaten funding for education, roads and all the services we depend on..."

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Westword: Urbavore's Dilemma - Final Harvest


Joel Warner from Westword has spent the summer exploring different facets of urban agriculture. If you haven't seen the series (or if you've missed a week or two) it's well worth it to visit the Westword website and check it out.

Joel started his series in May by sitting down with me and 3 other local urban ag folks, so he decided it'd be nice to end with a little potluck and discussion.


Many, many thanks to Joel (and his editors at Westword) for shining a light on urban ag in Denver. We appreciate your work!

[And thanks to Brian for snapping pictures. It's handy to have a professional photographer around!]



The Seattle Times: Number of Women Farmers Growing

Article sent to me by my sister-in-law, who lives in Seattle. It talks about some of the challenges women farmers face, but how the number of women-owned farms is growing rapidly.

The farmer they profile sounds amazing (and it's crazy to me that anyone would call someone who runs a 22-acre farm and produces 180,000 pounds of vegetables just a "gardener").

By Jean Guerrero for The Seattle Times. Click here for the article.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Mother Jones: 4 Hopes for Obama's Farmers' Market


It looks as though President Obama is interested in starting a White House Farmers' Market. He says it could give Washington D.C. "more access to good, fresh food, but also is this enormous potential revenue-maker for local farmers in the area."

Mother Jones has come up with four things they'd like to see if the White House starts a market. Although they mention featuring "local, organic farmers," I would personally put a "producer-only market" (with a reasonable distance maximum, like 150 miles) at the very top of the list.


Tuesday, August 25, 2009

$300 a Night? Yes, but Haying's Free


This is terrific... farm vacations are apparently all the rage. You can even upgrade and add a vegetable picking session for an extra $35!

Click here for the story (by Kim Severson for the NY Times).

Sunday, August 23, 2009

New York Times: Food for the Soul

An editorial by Nicholas Kristof, stating his opinion that one of the major problems with industrial agriculture is that is has "no soul." He also tells a story from his experience of growing up on a farm. I loved reading about the baby chicken who grew up thinking she was a goose!


Thursday, August 20, 2009

The Brooklyn Paper: Your Land is Their Land



A charming story about modern "sharecropping" in Brooklyn. I like it when the author describes yard farming (Neighborhood Supported Agriculture, basically) as "...what could be one of the greatest urban agricultural movements, if not the only urban agricultural movement, since World War II 'Victory Gardens.'"

By Gersh Kuntzman for The Brooklyn Paper. Click here for full article. (Thanks, Amanda)

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Atlantic: Why Small Farms Are Safer

Article from Slow Food USA president Josh Viertel about how the stigma of "Big Ag" foods can be unjustly applied to small farmers.

"In 2006 I was--among other things--a vegetable farmer. In New Haven, Connecticut, using Ivy League labor, we grew and sold over 300 varieties of vegetables. Today I am struck with memories of one in particular: a gorgeous crop of spinach we couldn't sell..."


Friday, August 14, 2009

The Wire: The Corporate Co-Opt of Local

A number of large corporations (including Starbucks and Wal-Mart) are attempting to re-brand themselves or otherwise cash in on the "buy local" movement. Will it work?



Wednesday, August 12, 2009

New York Times: You Say Tomato, I Say Agricultural Disaster

The story of the tomato blight that hit plants in the Northeast - a reminder that our food is vulnerable. The blight started in plants that were sold by big box stores (like Home Depot) and spread all over the region.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Get Local: Beyond Food Miles

One sure sign that a movement is gaining steam is the amount of backlash it generates. I think it's good to give a thoughtful, reasoned critique of any idea or social movement --- unfortunately, it seems that most of the anti-local-food rhetoric is neither thoughtful nor reasoned.

Forbes.com (which, incidentally, posted "It's easy to be generous with other people's money" as their featured quote the day I visited their website) recently posted this article slamming "locavores."

The Appalacian Sustainable Agriculture Project posted a wonderful response, called "Beyond Food Miles," on their blog. You can (and should) read the article in its entirety, but I especially like their points about why buying local food is helpful - above and beyond saving food miles:

1. Eating local food supports farm job retention and creation in your community.
2. Eating local food supports jobs in the farm supply/support sectors.
3. Eating local food preserves and forwards your local rural culture and history.
4. Eating local food sustains unique varieties of fruits, vegetables, and animals, bred to be hearty and productive in your region.
5. Eating local food helps to keep working farmland from being further developed, which gives your region more open space, wildlife habitat, and natural beauty. In some places, this draws tourists and further helps the economy.
6. Eating local food increases your region's food security and choices in the face of global political conflict which can disrupt food supply.
7. When you eat local food, you support a safe supply being in place when food safety events or scares shut off the global supply of a food item.
8. Eating local food keeps farming skills alive so they can be passed down through the generations.
9. Eating local food allows you to talk to the producer (or someone who bought from the producer) about their practices, rather than relying on vague labels and marketing claims.
10. Local food is more distinctive to your region, fresher, and better-tasting.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

40 Farmers Under 40

Meet the new crop of American farmers -- young and energetic idealists who are bringing local, sustainable food back to the table.


(Thanks for sending, Sasha.)

Monday, August 3, 2009

LiveScience: Lack of Vitamin D in Children "Shocking"

It sounds like just 15-20 minutes outside would do the trick...


Daily Camera: GMO Debate Questions Meaning of Sustainability

Interesting article by Laura Snider for the Daily Camera. Six farmers who lease open space land from Boulder County asked for permission to grow GMO (genetically modified) sugarbeets on that land. Boulder County's Food and Agriculture Policy Council, after hearing impassioned testimony from both sides, eventually decided not to allow the GMO crops. However, the decision wasn't as clear-cut as one might think.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

New York Times: Out of the Kitchen, Onto the Couch


I do SO love Michael Pollan. He wrote a wonderful article for the New York Times about the role of cooking in our lives. Includes a cheeky analysis of the boom in cooking shows on TV, while the number of people actually willing to cook for themselves has declined sharply.

"The more time a nation devotes to food preparation at home, the lower its rate of obesity."

Friday, July 31, 2009

Wall Street Journal: It's Salad Days for Weeds

It's Salad Days for Weeds

On a recent Saturday, Washington, D.C., interior designer Morrigan Green stopped at a produce stand and picked up some dandelion greens. $9 a pound? No problem. Says Mr. Green: "These are as good a yuppie green as you can get."

Gardeners have long waged war against weeds but one organic weed expert cultivates them as a new form of delicacy. Anne-Marie Chaker reports.


As suburban homeowners commence their annual battle against weeds, more people are paying top dollar to eat them. The dandelion -- perhaps the most common weed of them all -- is seeing a huge surge in sales at grocery stores. Other long-scorned greens making the leap to the dinner table include purslane, lamb's quarters and stinging nettles, a skin-irritating plant that can be eaten safely after boiling.

U.S. supermarkets sold $2 million of dandelion greens in the year that ended in March, a 9% increase over the year earlier, according to FreshLook Marketing, a Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based company that tracks grocery stores' sales of produce. While sales are still small, they're growing more than twice as fast as sales of vegetables overall. Grocery chain Wegmans Food Markets Inc. has seen a 25% increase in sales of dandelion greens for the year to date from the year-earlier period. Southern grocery chain Earth Fare Inc., based in Asheville, N.C., says it has seen a 40% increase in sales of dandelion greens for the year to date.

Greens "are trendy items," says Beth Eccles, owner of Green Acres Farm, in North Judson, Ind., which began harvesting and selling the wild purslane and lamb's quarters on its property about five years ago. Sales of the edible weeds, which sell for $3 per six-ounce bunch, have been rising by 20% each year.

Led by chefs and gourmets in search of new and interesting flavors, Americans have been eating a greater variety of greens in recent years. Tastes have moved from familiar greens like arugula to progressively wilder, more obscure plants. The interest in weed cuisine also taps into the current movement toward organic and local foods; as lawn owners have long complained, weeds are hardy and require no pesticides and little water to thrive. When picked in the wild, weeds also offer frugal consumers the thrill of foraging.

Bill Coleman, who runs Coleman Family Farms in Carpinteria, Calif., believes that in the recession, people are tightening their belts and savoring simple, old-fashioned cooking, rather than gourmet restaurant meals. "People are getting back to their grandparents' food," he says. This is an "especially good year" for edible weeds, whose sales have gone up by about 25% compared with last year, he says, and he has been raising more weeds such as dandelion, purslane and amaranth.

Until the mid-20th century, greens such as
wild onions, pokeweed and sorrel were eaten in many parts of the U.S. "The wild plants and the weeds were more commonly eaten until World War II, when they were seen more in disdain and processed foods began to move up," says James A. Duke, a former Agriculture Department researcher who has written a book on edible weeds.

Related Reading
The Mini Specialist from the WSJ. Magazine blog on plants that can be found in the wild and used in fine cuisine:
As immigrants and rural Americans moved to cities and left behind both their gardens and their ethnic origins, they turned to grocery stores for food, says Usha Palaniswamy, a professor at Excelsior College, a distance-learning program based in Albany, N.Y. Immigrants began eating more of what was considered upscale -- for instance, iceberg lettuce instead of dark, leafy greens. "Eating a certain kind of food [was] considered affluent," says Ms. Palaniswamy, who has for years studied why plants eaten in many parts of the world are considered weeds in the U.S. One weed commonly eaten abroad is purslane, which is used in French and Middle Eastern cuisines.

Nowadays, of course, it is well-to-do consumers who are leading the way back to weed-eating. Health-food fans in particular have taken notice as dark, leafy greens have gained a reputation as superfoods. Weeds carry a complex "matrix" of plant compounds that are beneficial when consumed, says Dawn Jackson Blatner, a Chicago-based dietician and spokeswoman for the
American Dietetic Association. These plants "learned how to protect themselves from the sun, the wind, the bugs," and those who eat them "are reaping the benefits of that matrix of immune systems," she says. "One man's weed is another man's wonder food."

All this is good news for farmers, who are able to charge more for the former weeds. Farmer Cinda Sebastian, who sells dandelion to customers such as Mr. Green, says "there are a whole lot of cool, indigenous greens" that she doesn't even have to cultivate on her Westminster, Md., farm -- though she spends hours every week picking them -- and she sells them at the same price as her fancier greens, such as tatsoi.

Another way to get weeds: Organic-gardening experts advocate foraging near your home. A tip sheet by the Montgomery County, Md., Department of Environmental Protection recommends that homeowners "make a salad" with such hand-pickable weeds as dandelion and wild garlic and onions.

But before running out to pick weeds, keep in mind that wild plants are not always safe to eat. Some guidelines:

Take care to identify the plants. "Don't go on your first foraging hunt alone," says Dr. Duke. Some edible weeds could easily be confused with toxic or poisonous ones. For instance, wild carrot could be confused with the poisonous hemlock.

Just because one part of a plant is edible doesn't necessarily mean the whole plant is. For instance, the root of the potato can be eaten, but the leaves and the berries are poisonous.

Cook carefully. Some plants need to be cooked thoroughly to prevent toxicity. Pokeweed, for example, can be dangerous. It needs to be cooked well, with the water it's boiled in thrown out and replaced at least twice.

[Weeds]

Friday, July 24, 2009

Denver Post: The High Cost of Cheap Food

Nice opinion piece in last Sunday's Denver Post by Megan Nix. The writer addresses something I've always wondered about... How many people who complain that local/organic food is "too expensive" own iPhones, have satellite or digital cable, and wear $150 tennis shoes?

Not that I'm presuming to tell anyone what they should spend their money on --- it's just that before we cry "too expensive!!!" maybe we should be honest about what we value.