Monday, December 31, 2007

Local Stuff We're Eating This Week

Here is a list of some local items on the menu in various guises this week:

Russet Potatoes (duh, of course!)
Spanish Onions
White Wheat Breads (flour ground at home, breads baked at home)
Sunshine Kabocha Squash
Plum Vinegar (made from home grown plums)
Farm Fresh Eggs
Bacon (cured at home from local pork)
Mint Tea (home garden)
Dried Plums (home garden)
Milk
Mozzarella cheese (local dairy milk, cheesed at home)
Sprouts (sprouted at home)
Jams (home grown, home made)

This is a bit thin, but I may add to it later depending on what I dig out of storage or find for sale locally this week!

Also, we're informally joining the Dark Days Eat Local Challenge. This is a challenge to eat at least one local meal a week, in the dead of winter, when there is little local food for sale in most areas. I'll try to remember to post an update and recipes each week. I'll also try not to make our "one meal" always breakfast!

Sunday, December 30, 2007

The Iron Gardener

Our garden this past season was a mess. Every adult in the house was suffering from a serious lack of free time this year, so we didn't do a lot of the gardening things we normally do. One of those gardening things was to plant winter salad and braising greens under a cloche in the back yard in early fall. When we do that, despite our seriously cold and long Idaho winters, we generally have so much produce we are begging the neighbors to take some so it won't go to seed. But we didn't do that this year, and dang, I miss it!

So I'm seeing what can be done this late in the season to remedy the lack of home-grown greens. I'm going to go out the next day it's above freezing and see if I can clear out the cloche area and put up a new plastic cover. I'm starting some salad and cooking greens indoors under fluorescent lights to transplant out when I have the cloche ready. I'm also thinking about doing something new - trying to grow a salad table indoors in our sunroom. We have a bank of fluorescent lights and a plastic table that are currently not being used, plus compost and potting soil and enough garden seeds to supply a half dozen families. Instead of building a very shallow wooden planting box to put soil into, I am going to grab a few shallow unused rubbermaid tubs from the garage and set them on top of the table, with wicking material hanging into a five gallon bucket of water underneath. All the components I need to do this project are here at hand; the task will be seeing if they can be combined into a system that can relieve my craving for local fresh produce in the absolute dead of an Idaho winter! I figure this will be an acid test - an Iron Gardener challenge.

Stay tuned!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Local Sugar

Idaho apparently produces one-sixth of the nation's sugar beet crop. The Snake River Valley is home to Amalgamated Sugar/Snake River Sugar, which takes the many tons of sugar beets grown in this region and refines them into several finished sugar products.

In case anyone besides me has been wondering where all our huge crop of local beet sugar has gone, it turns out it's retailed at Albertson's, Fred Meyer, and at Winco Foods, under the store brand or, in the case of Winco, as "White Satin Sugar." I had to call the company to get that information, because I couldn't find it anywhere online.

Note to Idaho companies - please, please, start making it easier to find your products in the retail market! I would have happily bought White Satin sugar all this past year if I'd only known where (and under what brand name) to find it! "Buy Idaho" is a great idea, but not if it turns into a wild online goose chase ending with a semi desperate long distance phone call to your corporate headquarters. Thanks.

Monday, December 24, 2007

What the heck's a "locavore?"

Well, in case you missed the announcement, "locavore" is the Oxford American Dictionary's 2007 Word of the Year. Here is a blurb on it from their blog:

"The “locavore” movement encourages consumers to buy from farmers’ markets or even to grow or pick their own food, arguing that fresh, local products are more nutritious and taste better. Locavores also shun supermarket offerings as an environmentally friendly measure, since shipping food over long distances often requires more fuel for transportation."

I think that pretty well sums things up, don't you?

Our family began a new adventure in local eating this past year. Oh, we've visited the area farmer's market in season for years, but until this past year local foods only made up a tiny percentage of our overall diet. However, in just this year we've managed to increase that amount to over 25%. My goal for the year 2008 is to bring us up to a consistent 50%.

So, what counts as "local?" I think this is something everyone has to decide for themselves. Some folks only count it as local if it originated within a 100 mile radius of their home. The 100-Mile Diet is one movement that uses this definition of local. Other people choose a different criteria - 150 miles, 200 miles, 300 miles - and some use more of a geographic boundary to define their "local," which makes sense if a major mountain range happens to cover up most of your 100 mile radius! Other than that, it all depends on your reasons for eating locally and how much you are willing to substitute for things that are not produced within your chosen area.

For our family, local means something that is grown in our back yard, or that grows wild nearby, or is commercially grown/produced/processed anywhere within an approximately 200 mile or so radius from our home in Southeastern Idaho. We do make common sense exceptions to this general rule from time to time. For instance, we absolutely love RealSalt, but the place it comes from lies somewhat outside our arbitrary 200 mile radius. On the other hand, it does not travel all the way here from the East Coast, Mexico, France or China. Considering the distance all the other salts available to us would have to travel to get to our pantry shelves, we feel we can happily count our RealSalt as "local" without suffering any guilty pangs.

The biggest challenge I've had this past year was tracking down a wider variety of local foods. The second biggest challenge was figuring out how to store enough of the seasonal items during the growing times to allow them to contribute significantly to our diet during the long winter. The third challenge has been expanding my cooking repertoire to make the best use of these items when they are available without serving the same dishes over and over. The fourth challenge is learning to use local raw materials to produce finished items that are not widely available here as locally produced goods - items like vinegars, wines, simple cheeses, deli meats and whole local grain bakery-type breads.

So, the purpose of this blog is to share our adventures in local eating with others who are curious about locavore-ism or who are also trying to work towards becoming locavores. There will be posts on our progress in tracking down local crops and other local foods, gardening, cooking, food storage, baking, canning and making all those little "extras" we all love. From time to time, I will also review a local non-food business or local event, or a local fun spot. I expect this to be a busy, but fun year for our locavore family, and the adventure starts now... (Okay, I know it's not quite calendar 2008 yet - humor me!)