Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

A Fresh Turkey from Fresh Fork

Monday, November 7th, 2011

If you have been following my blog, then you might have noticed a long drop off this summer.  There have been many changes with GLDC and myself.  Not to worry, my wit and keen insight will return shortly.  In the meantime, let me tell you about Fresh Fork Market.  I did some freelance work for Trevor at Fresh Fork Market two years running.  I did it as a swap (will work for food!), and was so impressed with the high quality local food and the mission of Fresh Fork to be the biggest distributor of fresh local foods in NE Ohio, that I asked him for a job.

What a great job for me.  I came in as a seasonal employee, loading trucks and delivering CSA shares to local drop off points.  Little did I know the impact a CSA can have on the local food economy.  This CSA pumped $700,000 back into the local farm economy in a single season.  That does not include the winter CSA programs or the holiday packages.  This is built on single buyers, making food choices in single one bag purchases.  Over the next year, you will hear more from me about Fresh Fork, and you can read the Fresh Fork blog, too.

But what I really wanted to talk about was the Thanksgiving packages and turkeys.

I prepared local, fresh turkeys like the ones from Fresh Fork Market on a regular basis when we lived in Portland.  Since moving to Cleveland, we have dinner with family, and they always make the turkey.  This year, I want a nice fresh bird so I looked at the Thanksgiving packages from Fresh Fork.

These turkeys are still out in the field, running around and living their little turkey lives.  But at the end of next week, they will be harvested for the dinner table.  These guys get to live out a real life.  They run around in a pasture, eat grass and bugs, have organic feed to supplement their diet and are sold fresh.

One of the things that I have discussed with people is the quality of fresh turkeys on Thanksgiving.  As Americans, we eat turkey every year.  Yet, what we buy is usually full of hormones, antibiotics, additives to make them retain water, and worse.  They are often not humanely raised or humanely slaughtered.  I was talking with a food buyer that I know and they assured me that those thanksgiving turkeys in stores now are surely months (if not years) old.

Fresh turkeys require a little more attention to prepare.  They are not self basted, and do NOT come with a little pop up timer.  You may need to baste a fresh bird a little more.  You will need to watch it cooking, and test it to make sure it is done.  The results, however, are so much worth the efforts.  I have found every good fresh turkey that I have made to need little in the way of seasoning.  They have more natural flavor and less sodium.  Because the birds are fresh and fed properly, I know that my turkey will be full of nutrition and tasty goodness.  A typical turkey?  Who knows.

In short, I am so stoked to have my fresh local turkey this year.  If you have never had a fresh, locally raised, hormone free, pasture raised, organically fed turkey-order one now!  Yeah, they are a little more.  Quality birds can not be properly raised for pennies a pound.  But if you want a meal that you can be proud of and proud to give your family, then nothing is better than a high quality turkey.  Order one from Fresh Fork Market.  Hurry before they are all gone!

Biodiversity in the Food Supply

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Thanks to Joe.My.God for sharing this great graphic.  The original source is in the image.

One of the things that I am doing this year is working for Fresh Fork Market.  I love working again with food.  In case you didn’t know I LOVE food, love eating, and really support local foods.  Fresh Fork Market is a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), a program in which you prepay for a share and throughout the season you are given a bag of fresh ingredients.  Most CSA shares are all produce, but Fresh Fork Market also has dairy, eggs, meat and grains.  It is a great program and one that I love, both working for and in eating.

One of the great things about a CSA is that it supports local farms and local farmers.  All the produce comes out of the ground and comes right to you.  This means your produce is fresh and ripe.  No green tomatoes with no flavor are shipped from California or Mexico.  This abundance of fresh produce reminded me of how I yearned for good veggies and fruits in the winter and so I started canning for myself.  But that is a story for another time.  What I wanted to talk about is biodiversity in the food chain.  Check out the graphic below:

As you can see, big agriculture has played a real number on our biodiversity.  You can see that we once had a huge variety of seeds to choose from when planting every year.  This applies not to just the home gardener, but to the farmer as well.  Where once there were commonly 285 varieties of cucumber, we now find only 16.  Over 500 types of cabbage are now reduced to under 30.  This does not mean that the other varieties are gone forever.  Some seed houses continue to preserve heirloom varieties of vegetables and fruits for enthusiasts.

So, who cares if there is no biodiversity?  Diversity in plant supplies mean a broader resistance to disease and insects.  In South America there were once a huge variety of bananas grown on a commercial scale.  Now, there are only a handful, and I have not seen more than one in a long time.  The main banana we eat is a single species.  If a disease comes along that has a big effect on that variety, then we could see a huge problem with the world’s bananas supply.  It could even disappear.  Just as citrus prices inflate whenever there is a frost down south, we could see big swings in produce prices of other varieties.  From my own experience with Fresh Fork Market, I know that there have been crop failures this year due to heavy and early rains.  A diverse spectrum of planted beans, for example, might mean that at least some of the beans planted would survive the heavy rains and thus keep prices at least somewhat stable, and supplies available.

I know that there are simple joys in eating heirloom varieties of tomatoes, and as the season goes on, I am seeing big differences in local varieties of other produce.  Strawberries, for example, have different flavor profiles and ripening dates.  So, when you plant your garden, consider planting some unusual varieties… and save the seeds for next year.