Posts Tagged ‘local food

16
Jun
09

Safeway Touts “Buy Local”

Safeway — the huge, California-based supermarket chain — is marketing “buy local” at Safeway as a way to help California’s troubled economy.

Of course it is easier in California than in any other state for supermarkets to find local (within state) suppliers.  And the buying power of Safeway will undoubtedly undercut and stress some California organic farmers and their farmers markets.  Nonetheless, isn’t the greater good done by a marketing campaign that says says local agriculture is the way to go?

There is one thing missing in this story — is the local produce they are selling produced in a sustainable way, a way that maintains or  increases soil fertility and future productivity?

12
May
09

Meet Mr. and Mrs. Dirty Boots

OK, I have to mention one of my favorite blogs, now that it appeared in www.bestgreenblogs.com

“A Self-Sufficient Life” is a blog by a UK couple who moved to a mountain in Spain where they harvest olives and almonds for very little money. They find adventure in self-sufficiency.  Yes, by all accounts they live the hippie dream. I don’t begrudge them any extra money they might make from the ads on their blog.

They call themselves “Mr. and Mrs. Dirty Boots.”

This week, Mrs. Dirty Boots is sharing recipes for cheap nutritious  breakfasts and lunches. Here’s her simple recipe for one of my favorite Indian foods: vegetable chapattis.

10
Apr
09

Sustainable Agriculture: Ideal Versus Best for Most People?

MotherJones.com will have an expert-led reader forum  April 13-17 around the provocative question that headlines this article: Is organic and local so 2008?”

Even if you don’t participate, the article is worth reading.

23
Mar
09

Food Matters, Local and Organic

Columnist Mark Bittman points out in the International Herald Tribune why organic food isn’t always the best choice, especially when considering carbon footprint. And speaking of local food, Doug Hubley wrote a really nice summary of a presentation by  four Maine-based Bates alumni, each an expert in food issues.

20
Mar
09

White House Getting Vegetable Garden

For the first time since WWII, a vegetable garden is being carved out of the White House lawn. The First Lady says it will provide organic food for family meals, but more importantly, will help educate children  about healthful, locally grown fruit and vegetables at a time when obesity and diabetes have become a national concern.  Here’s the New York Times story.

06
Feb
09

Noticing Who Gets the Good Food

For 35 years, Bates alumnus and food activist Mark Winne has been working to close the gap between the kinds of food available to rich and poor. What I really appreciate is his constant awareness that the agribusiness model we take for granted as “normal” is a chemically dependent system that only developed since World War II.

02
Feb
09

Ethical Food Purchases Strong Despite Downturn

I’ve been keeping an eye out for evidence that the global financial crisis is prompting people on tighter budgets  to abandon sustainable agriculture, local food, fair-trade food, organic food.  Finally saw a survey on this out of Britain that suggests a cutback only in organic food purchases.  “Ethical” food sales have not declined. Wonder if this pattern is true in the U.S.?

15
Dec
08

Fun Food Facts from Bates Dining Services

During a recent President’s Council meeting of Bates vice presidents, deans, directors and managers representing the entire College, we heard some interesting factoids from Christine Schwartz, our dynamic director of dining services. Here are a smattering:

(Answers at bottom of this post)

1. Do Bates students eat more potatoes or fruit?

2. How many hand-stretched pizzas are projected to be eaten this academic year?

3. How many meals are donated each year to the local food bank?

4. How much waste goes into the Dining Services dumpster? (Warning: trick question.)

Answers

1. Bates students eat about 6,000 pounds of fruit per month and 2,000 pounds of potatoes. Eighty-five percent of the potatoes were grown in Maine.

2. 35,000 pizzas. The dough balls are produced locally by DaVinci’s Restaurant of Lewiston and by the  Spelt Right Bakery of Yarmouth (owned by Bates alums Beth George ’85 and Tim Kane ’82).

3. More than 33,000 meals are donated each year to the local food bank. It is food that isn’t eaten at each meal, about 40 meals per meal period — which isn’t much, considering that the College averages about  1,700 meals per meal period.

4. None. There is no dumpster! After years of trying new and different ways to recycle (Bates was the first Maine college to divert its food waste to a pig farm), about 90 percent of  Dining Services waste is  diverted from the waste stream. The remaining 10 percent is transported in bags by the same contracted hauler who does Bates’ recycling. It averages about 200 pounds of waste per day, seven bags of waste.

28
Oct
08

Pollan: More Change in Dietary Beliefs in Last 100 Years Than Prior 10,000

Food systems critic Michael Pollan speaks to Bates students about the craft of writing before giving an open lecture in Bates Chapel for campus and community.

Food systems critic Michael Pollan speaks to Bates students about the craft of writing before giving an open lecture in Bates Chapel for campus and community.

Michael Pollan attracted about 200 more people Tuesday night than the 600-seat Bates College Chapel could hold. Students were promised  a repeat lecture at 9 a.m. While we were not allowed to record Pollan’s presentation, you can read both a report from Doug Hubley of the Bates  communications office and an account of Pollan’s speech in the Oct. 28 Lewiston Sun Journal.

12
Sep
08

Local Farmers Providing More to Bates, Thanks to Gift


Assistant chef Thoune Thongsavanh works at the vegetarian-vegan station in the new Commons.

Bates’ purchase of local food is helping Maine farmers and food providers. The investment earnings from a $2.5 million donation earmarked for Dining Services is being used strictly to buy more locally grown natural and organic foods.

To capture that story, a video news team from WCSH-TV6, Portland’s NBC affiliate, went first to Blackie’s Farm Fresh Produce, a greengrocer in Auburn, and then to Bates, to interview Director of Dining Services Christine Schwartz. “They have great product, great services,” said Schwartz of Blackie’s.” They have been very supportive of us, and we of them.”

For the first time, many locals learned Blackie’s real name: He is Norman Labbe. He has owned his all-weather farm stand for 22 years. Before that, his family owned a grocery store in Lewiston for 68 years.

Watch the story (2 minutes, 19 seconds):





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