Archive for August, 2008

Houston Food Blogs

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Food blogging has taken off in many forms and below is but a partial list of Houston related food blogs.  Please add any to the comments and we’ll add them to the list.

Cook’s Tour
Houston Chronicle, by Alison Cook

Eating Our Words
Houston Press

Tasty Bits

Food in Houston

mmm-nachos by Carrie Murphy

Texas Burger Guy

Houston Restaurant Reviews

Houston Food Trade Policy Forum

Emerging Urban Agriculture

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

by Brenna Spurgeon

Urban agriculture has now clearly established a place for itself in the U.S. landscape. Canada and Europe are already experiencing trends in urban agriculture, and concerns about food safety and the environment are pushing the movement in the U.S. An article in TIME highlights emergent and ongoing endeavors in Manhattan, San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Milwaukee.

Manhattan has approximately 600 small-scale farms (mostly vegetable gardens), showing that farming in the Big Apple is becoming less unexpected, partly spurred on by the rising food and fuel prices. Since July, the lawn of San Francisco’s city hall has been transformed into an urban farm, reminiscent of the early forties when citizens were encouraged to grow “victory gardens” to aid the war effort. The city’s other current agriculture project, SF Victory Gardens 2008+, is organizing a backyard-garden program for lower-income families to improve their access to healthier food.

People are proving that results can be successful with only a small plot. Baby vegetables and salad greens grown on less than an acre outside Philadelphia grossed $67,000 in a pilot project. Greenhouses, tilapia tanks and poultry brought in more than $220,000 on a one-acre farm in Milwaukee. In Portland, Ore., City Garden Farms covers only a quarter acre, but is spread out over 12 backyards. Urban agriculture is proving to be an ideal way to promote community organizing.

The trend has grown to the extent that a housing developer in St. Louis, Mo. is including in his subdivisions an organic farm, and Dickson Despommier, a public-health professor at Columbia University, is promoting his Vertical Farm Project: “hydroponic skyscrapers that would be as productive as 588 acres of land.” The first tower to be built will be in Las Vegas, an interesting ecological choice: a hydroponic tower promoting urban food sustainability… in the desert.

A local food reading list

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

by Brenna Spurgeon

The local food movement already includes several classic reads that illuminate the community, environmental, and economic issues involved in food systems. Below is only a partial list of recommended readings for anyone interested in locally grown food or the industrial food supply chain.

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, Barbara Kingsolver
Chronicles her family’s year of eating food only grown by themselves or in their neighborhood.

The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Michael Pollan
Explores the “ecological and ethical dimensions of eating” by detailing the supply chain of four different meals

In Defense of Food, Michael Pollan
Food for personal health - why we should just eat real food, rather than accepting processed alternatives

Everything I Want to Do is Illegal: War Stories from the Local Food Front, Joel Salatin
Michael Pollan’s week-long stay at Joel’s Virginia farm is described in the Omnivore’s Dillemma; this is a good follow-up book to expand on that chapter.

So what produce is in season where I live?

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

By Brenna Spurgeon

Asparagus in December? When seasonality of fruits and veggies is only marginally reflected in price, how is one to know what is truly “in season” at a particular geographic location?

The Natural Resources Defense Council has a section of its website where you can input the state in which you live, as well as the time of year, and find out what produce is in season. The site also lists produce that is available in bordering states.

Since much of the produce in supermarkets is available year round, this website is a great tool for figuring out what items will be at their peak flavor and can help reduce your carbon footprint by choosing food that did not have to be transported a long distance.