You are currently browsing the Seacoast Eat Local weblog archives for May, 2008.
May 7, 2008 by Sara Zoe.
from the press release:
TASTE, SIP AND ENJOY GREAT WRITING AT SLOW FOOD SEACOAST’S 1st ANNUAL FOOD WRITERS NIGHT.
This evening, the words are good enough to eat! On Wednesday, May 21 from 6:30-9:30 p.m. Slow Food Seacoast will stimulate your mind and body in a celebration of local food writers and tasty recipes prepared from their cookbooks and essays.
The Seacoast’s best food writers will whet your appetite when they read from their work in this unique evening program. After each reading, guests will be able to taste food inspired by the writer’s recipes and essays. Tickets are $55 and includes the reading, food and libations. All proceeds will benefit Slow Food Seacoast. Tickets can be purchased through www.seacoastfoodie.com. The event will be held at The Pearl of Portsmouth, 45 Pearl St., Portsmouth. Tickets are limited to only 60 attendees and will go fast.
In an innovative experience of literature and flavors, each writer will present in “courses” followed sips and tastes. Beginning at 6:30 p.m., guests will be able to sample hors d’oeuvres before sitting down at 7:00 pm to enjoy the reading and between each, they’ll sample food and drink paired with the listening experience. After the program, all are invited to mingle and ask questions of the authors and purchase signed copies of the author’s books, provided by RiverRun Bookstore.
Our nationally renowned food writers include Denise Landis, New York Times columnist and author of “Dinner For Eight: 40 Great Dinner Party Menus for Friends and Family”, Jean Kerr author of the “Union Oyster House Cookbook” and “Mystic Seafood”, Kathy Gunst author of “Stonewall Kitchen Favorites” and “Stonewall Kitchen Harvest” and “resident chef” on WBUR’s Here and Now and James Haller, author of “Vie De France” and founder of the famed Blue Strawbery restaurant. The evening will be hosted by Rachel Forrest, food writer and restaurant critic for The Portsmouth Herald and host of Wine Me Dine Me, a food and drink themed radio show on Portsmouth Community Radio. Books will be supplied by RiverRun Bookstore in Portsmouth and will be available for signing and purchase. The event is sponsored by Seacoast Media Group and Taste of the Seacoast Magazine and includes wine, beer and food donated by local caterers, restaurants and purveyors.
The evening’s proceeds go to benefit Slow Food Seacoast, a “convivium” within Slow Food USA, a non-profit, educational organization dedicated to supporting and celebrating the food traditions of North America through programs and activities dedicated to Taste Education, Defending Biodiversity and Building Food Communities.
Tickets can be purchased by going to www.seacoastfoodie.com or by calling (603) 315-3276
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May 6, 2008 by Sara Zoe.
The Future of Food in New EnglandSeacoast Local invites UNH professor John Carroll to talk about increasing local food security beyond peak oil as part of the ‘Making the Connection’ sustainability series, at RiverRun Bookstore on Thursday, May 8 at 7pm.
How can we boost the local economy and re-establish our food security? Dedicating land for grazing taps into New Hampshire’s heritage and is a natural fit for the future. John E. Carroll, author of “The Wisdom of Small Farms and Local Food” and “Sustainability and Spirituality,” comes to Portsmouth on Thursday, May 8 at 7 p.m. to talk about restoring food independence, the subject of his new book “Pastures of Plenty: The Future of Food, Agriculture and Environmental Conservation in New England.”
“This is an important message for our community, especially in light of rising food prices,” says Rich Wood, a board member of Seacoast Local, home to the Seacoast Buy Local program. “Food self-sufficiency represents security and independence. And we know that money spent locally stays in the community, so re-building local food capacity will make everyone’s dollar stretch farther while enhancing our overall economic vitality.”
Carroll explains why we should be thinking about raising our self-sufficiency. “In all of the preparations we must make in order to respond to the demands of greenhouse gas reduction—80 to 90 percent reduction in carbon dioxide by 2050 or sooner—and the end of the era of cheap oil, our greatest challenge will not be transportation nor home heating, but food and the threat to our food supply,” he says.
Princeton petroleum geologist Kenneth Deffeyes, author of “Beyond Hubbert’s Peak: The End of Oil,” has said that agriculture is the first victim of peak oil. James Howard Kunstler, author of “The Long Emergency,” has written that “Agriculture is going to come back to the center of the American way of life in a way that we couldn’t imagine.” Matthew Simmons, Houston oil analyst and investment banker, tells us that local agriculture will be of critical importance to our future.
Carroll offers a response for our locale, New England: grass-based agriculture. The how and why for a return to grazing; for a full range of dairy and meat product (not only cows, dairy and beef, but also sheep, pigs, goats and poultry); for integration with diversified horticulture for vegetables and fruit; and for integration with forestry, is spelled out in detail in the new University of New Hampshire book, “Pastures of Plenty: The Future of Food, Agriculture and Environmental Conservation in New England.”
A sequel to his earlier work on sustainable agriculture at the local level, “The Wisdom of Small Farms and Local Food,” Carroll’s latest book takes a close look at the prospects for our own region. “Take advantage of your local circumstances,” Carroll suggests, “and reconstruct your world around them.”
Carroll will read at RiverRun Bookstore, located at 20 Congress Street in downtown Portsmouth. For more information on his research, visit http://www.unh.edu/natural
-resources/fac-carroll.html. For more details on the event, call 603-431-2100 or visit www.riverrunbookstore.com. For more information on Seacoast Local, including its “Buy Local” program, visit www.seacoastlocal.org.
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May 4, 2008 by Sara Zoe.
from his April 20th article in the New York Times Magazine:
A great many things happen when you plant a vegetable garden, some of them directly related to climate change, others indirect but related nevertheless. Growing food, we forget, comprises the original solar technology: calories produced by means of photosynthesis. Years ago the cheap-energy mind discovered that more food could be produced with less effort by replacing sunlight with fossil-fuel fertilizers and pesticides, with a result that the typical calorie of food energy in your diet now requires about 10 calories of fossil-fuel energy to produce. It’s estimated that the way we feed ourselves (or rather, allow ourselves to be fed) accounts for about a fifth of the greenhouse gas for which each of us is responsible.
Yet the sun still shines down on your yard, and photosynthesis still works so abundantly that in a thoughtfully organized vegetable garden (one planted from seed, nourished by compost from the kitchen and involving not too many drives to the garden center), you can grow the proverbial free lunch — CO2-free and dollar-free. This is the most-local food you can possibly eat (not to mention the freshest, tastiest and most nutritious), with a carbon footprint so faint that even the New Zealand lamb council dares not challenge it. And while we’re counting carbon, consider too your compost pile, which shrinks the heap of garbage your household needs trucked away even as it feeds your vegetables and sequesters carbon in your soil. What else? Well, you will probably notice that you’re getting a pretty good workout there in your garden, burning calories without having to get into the car to drive to the gym. (It is one of the absurdities of the modern division of labor that, having replaced physical labor with fossil fuel, we now have to burn even more fossil fuel to keep our unemployed bodies in shape.) Also, by engaging both body and mind, time spent in the garden is time (and energy) subtracted from electronic forms of entertainment.
You begin to see that growing even a little of your own food is, as Wendell Berry pointed out 30 years ago, one of those solutions that, instead of begetting a new set of problems — the way “solutions” like ethanol or nuclear power inevitably do — actually beget other solutions, and not only of the kind that save carbon. Still more valuable are the habits of mind that growing a little of your own food can yield. You quickly learn that you need not be dependent on specialists to provide for yourself — that your body is still good for something and may actually be enlisted in its own support. If the experts are right, if both oil and time are running out, these are skills and habits of mind we’re all very soon going to need. We may also need the food. Could gardens provide it? Well, during World War II, victory gardens supplied as much as 40 percent of the produce Americans ate.
But there are sweeter reasons to plant that garden, to bother. At least in this one corner of your yard and life, you will have begun to heal the split between what you think and what you do, to commingle your identities as consumer and producer and citizen. Chances are, your garden will re-engage you with your neighbors, for you will have produce to give away and the need to borrow their tools. You will have reduced the power of the cheap-energy mind by personally overcoming its most debilitating weakness: its helplessness and the fact that it can’t do much of anything that doesn’t involve division or subtraction. The garden’s season-long transit from seed to ripe fruit — will you get a load of that zucchini?! — suggests that the operations of addition and multiplication still obtain, that the abundance of nature is not exhausted. The single greatest lesson the garden teaches is that our relationship to the planet need not be zero-sum, and that as long as the sun still shines and people still can plan and plant, think and do, we can, if we bother to try, find ways to provide for ourselves without diminishing the world.
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May 2, 2008 by Sara Zoe.
I was having a conversation the other day, trying to explain why “food miles” are not my main schtick, even though our group is called Seacoast Eat Local and we host an annual Eat Local Challenge that takes geography into account. And then this post from UNH’s Discovering Sustainability blog popped up, articulating all those thoughts about the complexities of carbon and the myriad of other reasons I choose to source the vast majority of my food directly from small, local farms and think others should do the same:
For example, buying local supports community economic development, helping communities sustain their livelihood and character. It provides access to the freshest food available, enhancing taste and reducing food waste. And it strengthens our food community, encouraging social networks and food security in our communities and regions. Not only that, but knowing where your food comes from can help you advocate for lower-carbon production methods in your community, such as reducing fertilizer usage, no-till agriculture methods, and pasture-based livestock systems.
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May 1, 2008 by Sara Zoe.
The Seacoast Growers’ Association, [which runs 6 of the 20 farmers’ markets in York, Strafford, and Rockingham counties, including the upcoming (as in 2 days away) Portsmouth Farmers’ Market] now has a monthly newsletter! Go sign up > (on the right, scroll down a little, see it there in pink?)
And next month, you too will get a newsletter in your email box, full of fun and helpful info like this schedule of live music and special events:
May 3, Random Acts of Harmony
May 10, American Flyer for our official ribbon-cutting with Mayor Ferrini
May 17, Taylor River Band for SGA’s own version of Earth Day
May 24, Penhallow
May 31, The Reef Band
And this tidbit on the Wednesday Dover market:
The Dover market has moved, and is better than ever! SGA is teaming up with the Atlantic Culinary Academy at McIntosh College (181 Silver St.) to bring you more vendors than ever, as well as special demonstrations by faculty and student chefs at the ACA. The new location offers plenty of parking, and easy access from the Spaulding Turnpike, exit 8E. Come check out Seacoast farmers growing new roots in Dover.
I *heart* the farmers’ markets!
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