Tag-Archive for » local food «

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009 | Author: admin

Short update on the last post! I just read a great article from the Washington Post about the role that Tom Vilsack will be playing in a new era of American politics. They always do such a great job talking about food and agriculture issues in a journalistic way. Here is most of the interview:

Some in the sustainable-food community have worried that you are too closely identified with ethanol and agribusiness. Is that fair?

First, I would ask for the opportunity for people to get to know me and judge me by the actions I take in this office. I’m not sure the full nature of the record was understood.

What don’t people know about you that might change their minds?

Food during my early years was a very difficult issue for me. I grew up in an addictive family. My mother had serious problems with alcohol and prescription drugs. I was an overweight kid. I can remember back in those days there weren’t the strategies that there are today to deal with those issues. So my parents put this very nasty cartoon of a very overweight young kid with a beanie cap and pasted it on the front of the refrigerator. So every time I opened the refrigerator I had to look at that picture.

Food is a fairly significant aspect of my life. I have struggled mightily with food. With my weight. And I’m conscious of it. So I have a sensitivity to people who struggle with their weight. That’s one aspect people don’t fully appreciate. I don’t want youngsters to go through what I went through.

There are ways we can go do a better job of educating young moms and dads about the vital role they have as the child’s first teacher. I think there are ways in which we can partner with local school districts and states to do a better job to provide nutrition options at school. It’s our responsibility to get this health-care crisis under control. I think if people understand that history and how serious I am about this and look at the record in Iowa — the real record in Iowa — they would be less concerned than they were.

What specific ideas do you have about how to move forward to improve nutrition in school lunches?

Part of my responsibility is to find people who share my concern and have more expertise than I do. People we nominate will be people who understand this issue and have the desire to effect change. The specifics of how we can do this will come from the experts. My job is to listen to the president, who is the ultimate vision maker, articulate his vision to the people who work in this department and add my two cents’ worth. The vision is, he wants more nutritious food in schools.

Will local foods play a part?

In a perfect world, everything that was sold, everything that was purchased and consumed would be local, so the economy would receive the benefit of that. But sometimes that stresses the capacity: the production capacity or the distribution capacity. Especially since we don’t have yet a very sophisticated distribution system for locally grown food. One thing we can do is work on strategies to make that happen. It can be grant programs, loan programs, it can be technical assistance.

Is it true that you are thinking of changing the name of the department to include a reference to food?

We haven’t got to that point. Rather than renaming it, as important as some people may feel that would be, I think [we need] a recognition that this was America’s first energy department. If you think of what food is, it’s the energy we use to do our daily work. I want people to know about the USDA. This is a very important department. It’s not fully appreciated as such.

It’s hard to convince people of that sometimes.

You tell them there’s a new day here. You tell them every time they pick up a fork, every time they pick up a spoon, every time they slice a piece of bread, remember America’s first energy department.

Monday, October 20th, 2008 | Author: admin

A note on the other side of what you consume: the liquids. Check out this article I just read about Midwestern wines. It referred me to the Drink Local Wine idea, which I’ve heard about (and participated in) more in the last years.

As a Michigander, I consider myself lucky in the realms of local adult drinks. At Michigan State University, a number of my friends and I got into beer brewing and wine making. Most of it turned out awesome, and some of it was pretty questionable. My friend Jay referred me to the Alaskan Bootleggers Bible for inspiration and technique. It doesn’t get much more local than your own kitchen, right?

Luke knows how to brew up a storm

Every year when I was young we would make a trip to Uncle John’s Cider Mill, especially in October to get a pumpkin from their patch and visit the haunted barn! A few years before I turned 21 they opened their own Fruit House Winery, adding tasty wines, hard ciders, and sparkling drinks to their more kid-friendly ciders. My favorite is the Fruit House Red, as I’m not too wild about sweeter wines.

While in France a few years ago, my friends would laugh every time I mentioned Michigan’s wine industry. But there are plenty of delicious and affordable wines around these parts. Last summer a few friends and I went up to the “pinky” of Michigan’s mitten, and I was impressed and surprised at the wealth of vineyards and wineries. We had a great time with friends who were all growing food or making wine, among other things. I’ll keep this limited to the drink-related places on that trip:

  • Brian works at Chateau Chantal, a B&B/winery/vineyard with incredible views of the Grand Traverse Bays. We got a tour and a private tasting, yum
  • Christin works at 2 Lads, an uber-modern winery that utilizes gravity-flow processing to save energy and to handle the delicate wines with greater care. Another tour and tasting (and yes, we visited one winery after another)
  • Andy (former SOFer) works at Peninsula Cellars, a landmark winery with a fabulous Cab Franc…and I’m told they have a good Pinot Noir, but I’m not really into that Earthy flavor thang…

Jay and Brian, and the wine thief!

The region was, at the time in early June 2008, bouncing back from a late and devastating frost. It hit the vineyards pretty hard, particularly the ones on flatter (rather than hilly) plots of land. We’ll see how the wines from 2008 fare after this early trauma.

While I’m still new to Chicago, I recently tried August Hill’s Hieland Red, and it was a deep rich (nearly figgy, but dry) blend that inspires me to try more of their wines. This winery is about 90 miles Southwest of Chicago, and I’m keeping my eyes peeled for other local drinks. And of course, my friends, this isn’t limited to wine.

My favorite local adult beverage of late has been the delectably hoppy Harvest Ale from Goose Island. While the Goosey beers are plentiful and quite local, I’m surprised at the lack of other local breweries. Am I missing something? I checked out the Illinois Beer page, but I haven’t heard of any of the listed beers from Illinois. Further investigation at my local liquor store is on the way!

Perhaps I have been spoiled in Michigan, surrounded with so many delicious local microbrews that I have been blind to the virtual tastybeer famine going on even in the great state of Illinois. Michigan has its own Brewers Guild, and you can check out the locations on their interactive map. Close to my heart is the Michigan Brewing Company, who (rumor has it) will be opening a new brewpub in Lansing, my hometown and the capital city. Hoorah! Bell’s is also famous far and wide, for the beer and the great brewery venue.

But enough about Michigan! I want to drink local Chicagoland beverages as much as possible. Suggestions?