REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Going local without going loco

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Thursday, April 28, 2011 19:59
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Sunday, April 24, 2011 10:30 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


We've mentioned and discussed occasionally about being "environmentally conscious", if you will, and what things we can do to improve things. I came across this one about buying locally, which I think is worth sharing:
Quote:

You can change your buying and eating habits, one step at a time. The journey of a thousand miles. ... Oh, you know the rest. Here’s how to begin your local food journey without feeling overwhelmed.

Start slowly. Try replacing one item in your diet — say, apples — with a local one. Or earmark a small portion of your food budget for local foods. If you set goals that are too unrealistic (“I’ll eat within 20 miles of my home for an entire year with no exceptions!”), you might not only burn out but be hungry and cranky — or, worse yet, nutritionally deficient.

Start in the summertime, when the livin’ is easy. It’s much easier to find local foods at the height of growing season.

Get social! Form a supper club, start a blog, or join an online community such as The 100 Mile Diet. Join a CSA as part of a group, such as a church group. Look for local food events such as pig roasts and clambakes. Take a buddy to the farmers market, sip fair trade coffee, and shop together.

Find an expert. Take a class on cheesemaking, get a guide for learning about wild edibles, or find a friend who knows how to make fruit leather.

Involve the kids. From growing tomatoes to picking apples and making pies, kids can be a part of finding and enjoying local foods. My daughter loves going to the coffee roaster to see the big Willy Wonka–ish coffeeroasting machine. My infant son gets toted by backpack to farms and farmers markets.

Be gentle with thyself and set realistic goals. For those items I can’t find locally, such as coffee and tea, I opt for fair trade products, which means that the farmers, often disadvantaged ones in developing countries, receive fair prices for their products. If I can’t buy something sustainable and local, I’ll try to go for organic. If I can’t buy something local or organic or fair trade, well, I’ve given things my best shot, and I don’t lose sleep over it. And sometimes I just want a Snickers. For me, local eating is a choice, not a mandate. A monotonous diet is not only a recipe for failure (ask any dieter) but antithetical to our need for nutritional variety to stay healthy. Citrus fruit in winter is a blessed thing that I try not to take for granted.

Make a game of it. Are you the up-for-a-challenge type? Organizations such as the Ecotrust of Portland, Ore., provide guidelines and scorecards. Locavore blogging groups, such as Eat Local Challenge, can offer support. I ate locally (within 50 miles of my house) for two months one summer and had a lot of fun. Don’t be afraid to draft your own rules, ones that work for your family. Eco-author Bill McKibben coined the term “Marco Polo exemption” for the seven-month local eating stint in Vermont that he wrote about for Gourmet magazine. McKibben allowed cooking items a 13th century explorer would have brought along, such as salt, pepper, yeast and so forth. Best-selling author Barbara Kingsolver, who wrote about her year of local eating in "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle," let her family members choose a few items they couldn’t live without, such as chocolate or coffee. (These are sometimes called wild cards.) I never gave up coffee, but I did find a company that roasted its organic coffee locally.

Alter your expectations. As I have mentioned, sometimes produce raised without pesticides isn’t pretty. Don’t be shocked if you occasionally find bugs — yes, bugs — in local produce. Got your first pound of grass-fed beef? It tastes a little different from grain-fed beef, and it needs to be cooked more gently. Farm-fresh eggs may come in different colors (blues, greens and browns) because egg color depends on the breed of chicken. Other thoughts for the uninitiated: Farms smell farm-y. Gardens are dirty. Cooking a meal from scratch takes more time than heating up a Lean Cuisine frozen dinner. An organic carrot is more expensive than a regular one. It’s not always easy or comfortable to pipe up and ask questions about what the bleep is in your food. But take a look at your child’s face, your waistline, or a gorgeous stretch of healthy farmland and tell me it’s not worth it.

Meet other locavores online. Check out blogs or post comments on websites. (I like the posts by farmer/chef Tom Philpott on grist.org.) You can also look for friends on social networking websites, such as MySpace.

http://www.mnn.com/food/healthy-eating/stories/going-local-without-goi
ng-loco?hpt=Sbin

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Sunday, April 24, 2011 1:55 PM

FREMDFIRMA



It's heartening to WATCH customer pressure drive local businesses - you remember not long ago I was all but spitting and cussing that real maple syrup was all but unavailable, and viola, now it is, and as of recently, in several brands!

As is trans-fat free peanut butter, and I've found a blend that doesn't have to be beaten to death with a stick before use, yay....

AND, Cascadian Farms products are available at my local store now as well, although they're selling out too quick and the inventory manager has had to adjust their ordering rates.

Did I mention this is a very large chain store ?
Or that the average price for the PB or Preserves is between $2-$3 USD ?

It's not that hard - maybe individually it's a bit more effort, but collectively we're a tidal wave... if you DO NOT WANT stuff like HFCS, MSG, Trans-fats, Aspartame or whatever, then refuse to buy the products which contain them.
Either they'll get the point, or they will see an untapped market to exploit, and will offer you what you want.

The only places that DOESN'T work, are airlines and the auto industry, since instead of bowing to customer demand they go running to the Gov for a bailout - but grocery providers aren't such dickheads, thankfully.

And big chain store or not, for sheer logistic simplicy and saving transport/storage costs, this place DOES use local egg providers, which is pretty cool.

It really isn't all that hard.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Sunday, April 24, 2011 2:01 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Oh, and speaking of, this from the unholy alliance.

Child labor, orangutans and Thin Mints: Two renegade Girl Scouts raise questions about palm oil used in popular cookies
http://www.annarbor.com/news/slave-labor-and-thin-mints-two-renegade-g
irl-scouts-are-asking-the-question
/

I call it the unholy alliance cause what else CAN you call a troop of Girl Scouts allied with the local Astaru - nobody in their right mind will mess with them, and having a horde of big manly dudes to help with projects is damn handy, right now their working with Habitat for Humanity, since a viking horde can slam together a house QUICK, although there's been some refinement of construction methods and question about materials since a lot of H4H buildings are kind of sub-code.

Sure, there's bigger issues in the world, but watching Rhi and Maddie actually CARE enough to kick some butts over it is very gratifying.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Sunday, April 24, 2011 6:49 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Good ideas and points

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Monday, April 25, 2011 7:32 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


I notice that some of the food stores around here - even the big chains - have started identifying their locally grown produce and the growers. Also seems we're getting more local vendors of their own produce and products at the local farmer's markets, whereas a few years ago it was mostly folks just buying from commercial distributors and reselling.

The issue with always eating local, of course, is - what if I want a BLT right now? Although I try to eat local, if I really want a 'fresh' tomato in March, I'll buy it no matter how far it traveled.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Monday, April 25, 2011 1:47 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


You can learn to eat seasonally. Learn what fruit and veg are harvested at what time of year where you live. Try not to buy things that are out of season. Our great grand parents used to look forward to apples, and blackberries, and rhubarb and asparagus when the season came around.

I don't know that grass fed needs to be treated more gently than grain fed. I only ate grass fed (until I went vegetarian) and hadn't noticed any difference in cooking.

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Monday, April 25, 2011 4:53 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Funny thing about that Geeze, is that it makes sense on a profitability level as well as an ethical one, less transport means less loss/shrinkage, and smaller logistics costs - which around here with fuel hitting four bucks a gallon can make a real difference in pricing.

That's pretty much win-win, that one.

-F

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Tuesday, April 26, 2011 2:30 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:

Funny thing about that Geeze, is that it makes sense on a profitability level as well as an ethical one, less transport means less loss/shrinkage, and smaller logistics costs - which around here with fuel hitting four bucks a gallon can make a real difference in pricing.

That's pretty much win-win, that one.

-F



I agree, and generally try to do so, but every once in a while, you gotta have what you gotta have.

Off on another tangent, I saw an article a while ago positing that it was more eco-friendly for folks on the East Coast to drink European wines instead of Californian, because the trip across the Atlantic in a freighter created less carbon per bottle than a truck trip across the U.S.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Tuesday, April 26, 2011 12:33 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Given the piss-poor fuel economy of most marine engines I rather doubt that assertion myself, as I figure you also do.

But have-to-have now... if there's one thing I miss about the hellhole that is Baltimore, it's Maryland Blue Crabs - but getting them here would be a logistical nightmare, besides which these fools have NO idea how to properly steam, season, or eat them, meh.



THIS, is how it's done (albeit somewhat wimpily) - and you add BEER when you steam the poor bastards, cause yanno, I'd wanna be drunk off my arse if you boiled me, traditionally this is Natty Boh (known to YOU poor fools as National Bohemian) cause it used to be brewed locally and is dirt cheap.

And you might need a translation guide, too.
http://www.baltimorehon.com/

-Frem
I do not serve the Blind God.

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Thursday, April 28, 2011 7:52 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I'm a freak for artichokes...eat one a day when they're in season. I was shocked by someone telling me they don't HAVE them where they live, and others saying they're an expensive "specialty". I guess 'cuz we've always had 'em, and just South of us is Castroville, "Artichoke captal of the world". Right now they're GIGANTIC, and I'm in heaven...

Our local market has been identifying local produce for ages; unfortunately, being California, it's always organic, and I can't always afford organic, or I'd buy only local stuff...


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Thursday, April 28, 2011 8:54 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
I notice that some of the food stores around here - even the big chains - have started identifying their locally grown produce and the growers. Also seems we're getting more local vendors of their own produce and products at the local farmer's markets, whereas a few years ago it was mostly folks just buying from commercial distributors and reselling.

The issue with always eating local, of course, is - what if I want a BLT right now? Although I try to eat local, if I really want a 'fresh' tomato in March, I'll buy it no matter how far it traveled.

"Keep the Shiny side up"




Good point(s). I'm the same way - I'll try to buy local when I can, *IF* it's not substantially more expensive, but where am I going to find an Austin-grown pineapple in January? Or ever? (My own haven't come in yet, and most of the plants didn't make it through the unseasonably hard freeze we had in February)

I hit the farmer's market(s) regularly, but some stuff we just can't get locally.

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Thursday, April 28, 2011 7:59 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Yum, farmers' market.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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