Wednesday, December 9, 2009

DAHLIA SOAPS now available at REYNOLDS FLOWERS & GIFT SHOP



We are proud to offer The Dahlia Farm hand-craft soaps this Christmas season at local retailer, Reynolds Flowers.

Once you have experienced the gentle, fragrant emolience of our Dahlia Soaps, you will find it difficult to go back to the same old hard bar.

Made with olive oil, shea butter, and essential oils these quality soaps are an affordable luxury that will bring joy and comfort to anyone on your Christmas list. Stocking stuffer individual bars are only $5, and the stand-alone, cheerfully gift wrapped 3-pak is a wonderful value at $14.

Be sure to visit Reynolds Flower this week and receive a free sample. If you haven't tried our hand-cut soap yet, you'll be merrily pleased.

Friday, August 28, 2009

WEEK 12 CSA

Week 12 includes basil, sage, sunflowers, peppers, corn, tomatoes, potatoes, kale, pakchoi, & kohlrabi - which looks like this:



333

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

WEEK 11 CSA







Welcome back.

This weeks share includes New Potatoes, Garni Bouquet (sage & basil), Bell Peppers, Mei Qing Pak Choi, Zephyr Squash, Eggplant, Washington Cherry Tomatoes, Green Beans, Kohlrabi, Cucumbers, free-range eggs, Sunflowers, Cauliflower,

Here's the new vid accompanied by Old Blue Eyes...

Thursday, August 13, 2009

WEEK 10



Welcome to WEEK 10 here at The Dahlia Farm. This week features "Washington Cherry" Tomatoes, Golden Beets, New Potatoes, fresh cut Genovese Basil, Blueberries, Cucumbers, "Summer Spinach" (Chard), "Zephyr" Summer Squash and Curly Kale.

Be sure to tell your friends to get their own share - but they don't have to wait until next year. CSA shares (and half-shares) are available now through the remaining second half of the season. Full shares are $25 per week and the generous half-share is only $15 a week.

A half-season share is a great way to test-drive the CSA model, especially if you're not sure the weekly market basket idea is for you. We are so sure you'll be satisifed, we are currently developing an off-season plan to deliver a 12-month-long New England CSA in collaboration with several other farms, bakers & pastry chefs, fishermen & meat producers.

As always, please help us out with your feedback. Email, call us or post here. Your suggestions help us serve you better.

Heres the rundown in video format for Week #10:

333

Monday, August 3, 2009

WEEK 9 CSA (Aug 3-8, 2009)



Welcome to WEEK 9 here at The Dahlia Farm. This week introduces New Potatoes, fresh cut Genovese Basil, Blueberries & Green Beans and revisits "Summer Spinach" (Chard), Baby Carrots, Zucchini, our unique green-tipped "Zephyr" Summer Squash and Kohlrabi.

Be sure to tell your friends to get their own share - but they don't have to wait until next year. CSA shares (and half-shares) are available now through the remaining second half of the season. Full shares are $25 per week and the generous half-share is only $15 a week.

A half-season share is a great way to test-drive the CSA model, especially if you're not sure the weekly market basket idea is for you. We are so sure you'll be satisifed, we are currently developing an off-season plan to deliver a 12-month-long New England CSA in collaboration with several other farms, bakers & pastry chefs, fishermen & meat producers.

Looking forward, other new ideas include a year-end harvest festival - a veritable Garden Party complete with wine and live music.

As always, please help us out with your feedback. Email, call us or post here. Your suggestions help us serve you better.

One last thing... The blueberries are wonderful, nutritious, local, picked by us, and high in antioxidants, however we've collaborated with another farm to bring them to this week's CSA so it is advised that they be washed thoroughly before being eaten. If you are on an organic-restrictive diet, you may want to donate them. Otherwise, you will find them the same or superior to any others in the marketplace.

Heres the rundown in video format for Week #9:



BTW, if you'd like to get you kids to eat green beans, try this:




3 3 3

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

WEEK 8 CSA Full-share

Week 8 full-share includes Baby Carrots, Beets, Kohlrabi, Arugula, Swiss Chard, Romaine Lettuce, Cucumbers, Broccoli, Zucchini Squash, Sage (fresh herb), and Calendula & Sweetpea Bouquet.

Friday, July 24, 2009

HEALTH CARE SYSTEM GONE AWRY



Corporate excess. Grotesque executive compensation. Lawmakers making laws for lobbyists. "...the average American has no idea how bad this health-care system really is..."

In this link, my friend Dr. Sean Colsen gives a candid view from a surgeon's persepective on the failing state of managed health-care. Sean appears on the New York satellite radio show STAND UP! with Pete Dominick (Sirius 110 / XM 130) which boasts 18.5 million listeners.

Is patient care and wellness being sacrificed for insurance company profits...?

Absolutely.


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In a related link, our problematic state of national health is examined in the documentary PROCESSED PEOPLE.


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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

WEEK 7



WEEK 7 FULL SHARE INCLUDES:
Calendula, Sugar Beets, Peppery Cress, Radish, Sugar Sanp Peas, Mizuna, Loose-leaf Lettuce, Assorted Squash, Sweet-pickling Cucumbers& Swiss Card.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

FUNKY KOHLRABI




This is kohlrabi:

An early-season "cabbage" native to northern Europe.

The German literal translation is "cabbage-turnip."

It is high in vitamin C, calcium & phosphorus.

While it may be baked, fried or grilled, it is best RAW...

Here's a couple quick recipes:

Monday, July 13, 2009

WEEK 6




"This week's share sees the sunshine's effects draw to fruition,
The leaves of spring, fore-telling in their way, meet the summer's transition..."

--Seamus MacRagnall

Week Six moves us along toward the development of more hearty stock (and roots!)

Included here are Curly Kale, Mizuna, Sugar Beets, Kholrabi, Peppery Cress, Summer Squash, Zucchini, and some mixed cutflowers (again, there may be a slight variation between the first of the week and the end).

Enjoy the video:

Monday, July 6, 2009

WEEK 5




We hope everybody's enjoying the holiday week and -- at last -- the sunshine!

This week, The Dahlia Farm full-share includes; Pak Choi, Kale, Waido, Sugarsnap Peas, Buttercrunch Bib Lettuce, Garlic Scapes, Yarrow & Artemisia Bouquet, and an emollient Dahlia Hand-craft Olive Oil Soap.

If you have not yet signed-up for the 2009 season, CSA shares are still available for the remainder of the harvest season on a pro-rata basis.

If you are looking for a farmers market to stroll this week be sure to see us Wednesday in Duxbury, Saturday at the Plymouth Green, or Sunday at Boston's SOWA open market.

Friday, July 3, 2009

WEEK 4...and Duxbury Farmers Market





Week Four finds us with a possible break in the rain, the 4th of July, the opening of the Duxbury Farmer's Market and the following basket mix: Pak Choi, Swiss Chard, "Elegance" greens mix, Baby Kale, Broccoli Rapa, free-range eggs, hand-craft soap and Garlic Scapes (slight variation may occur between monday CSAs & friday CSAs).

If you have not made it to a local farmer's market yet, you may discover a new American pass time, very family-friendly and reminscint of halcyon days... Here's a peek. Happy 4th!

Sunday, June 28, 2009

SCAPES


From French country cuisine to the brautmasters of Germany to even us Swamp Yankees of Plymouth County, there has been a long standing opinion in cooking, that there is no waste in the hard-earned reward of food.

Just as snails are flavored with garlic and meat scraped to the bone to make sausages, the economy of the traditional harvest continues today. "We shall waste no part of the animal," Peter Straub once observed. ...Or plant!

I cannot recount how many times my grandfather from Madeira practiced this belief, knawing on trotters (pickled pigs feet) or the turkey's gizard and anus - all the while stating as fact their delicacy.

Well we don't have to go to quite that extreme to illustrate this week's true delicacy: garlic scapes.

Pictured here are the wrangled snarls of the "waste" of the garlic plant. Technically, garlic scapes are the flower & seed stem, which twist into a bizarrely beautiful coil prior to blossoming. Garlic farms routinely cut down the stem at this point as it directs the growth energy of the plant into the bulb rather than the foliage and blossom. A 30-35% increase in the bulb yeild can be managed by this method.

Cooking of scapes is very easy and the flavor is not as intense as the bulb itself. If you have never had scapes before, you will truly find them to be a "new" delicacy, but enjoy them while they last, because they are VERY, VERY seasonal.

Bon appetit!





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Thursday, June 25, 2009

WHAT'S ON MY FOOD?


What's on my food...?

Ever wonder how "safe" the FDA & USDA are really keeping us?

Would you be surprized to find the USDA is aware of 16 pesticide residues in APPLE JUICE...? A quarter of them carcinogens, three of them neurotoxins, and half of them either reproductive, hormone, or developmental toxicants.

According to the USDA - the Federal authority which determines who gets to bear their venerable "certified organic" label - more than half the apple juice for US consumption contains thiabendazole, a fungicide, metal-binder, and preservative all wrapped into one. According to Wikipedia TBZ effects on test animals (dosed at high levels) include: "liver and intestine disorder, reproductive disorders and decreasing weanling weight..." Perhaps more alarming are the effects on humans which have not been intentionally dosed at high levels, but only 'normal' consumption rates. These include: "nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, diarrhea, dizziness, drowsiness, headache, ringing in the ears, vision changes, stomach pain, yellowing eyes and skin, dark urine, fever, fatigue, increased thirst and change in the amount of urine." Fortunately, Wiki reports, "no mutagenic effects have been shown."

And that's good news - particularly when one ponders the fledgling age range of apple juice consumers.

Now it would be naive to think that if chemical pesticide use were to end today that the world would instantly be a safer place. Continued ground water contamination alone would last for many years. Nor would the banning of any single pesticide likely make a significant alteration to the general state of affairs. But the re-education of our culture would make a very important change. Public awareness of the links between pesticides and childhood leukemia, autism, Parkinson's, breast cancer, and water contamination is an important first step. A change in perspective on pesticide synergy - prolonged, repeated exposure - is an important first step. An understanding that huge agri-business profits are not as important as cultural well-being, is an important first step.

If you would like to find out what pesticides are on your food, you can visit the Pesticide Action Network's user-friendly pesticide ID tool at: www.whatsonmyfood.org

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

HISTORY ALIVE!




Gazette columnist and blogger Michael Maddigan, visits Middleboro's floral history this week in his "Recollecting Nemasket." Specifically featured: DAHLIAS!

Naturally this is of particular interest to us here The Dahlia Farm CSA in Middleboro, where we take our name from our farm's historic past.

Continually cultivated since the first building of record in 1839, our farm here has produced sweet corn, potatoes, gladioli, seeds, herbs, blueberries, holiday crops such as Easter lilies & poinsettias, hardy mums, dent corn, and perrenial cutflowers. But it was EASTVALE FARMS (1920's-1950's) which made this site historic, when at their zenith they became the largest dahlia farm in New England.

Be sure to read Mr. Maddigan's column (which can be linked to from this blog). His series has been one that is not only historically fascinating, but painstakingly researched and archivally unique in its focus.

Monday, June 22, 2009

WEEK 3


Hello and welcome to WEEK #3!

This wet weather really does have a silver lining and that is a big push in The Dahlia Farm field greens.

Week Three features: "Elegence" salad greens mix, Swiss chard, Spinach, Pac Choi, cress, radish, an herb (lavender), Dahlia Farm hand-craft soap, and cutflowers.

Love those eggs...? Be sure to sign up for an egg share (available seasonally or annually) to guarantee you have them on a weekly, or bi-weekly basis.

Until next week, happy & healthy eating!

Sunday, June 21, 2009

RELISH A RADISH



We all like to add sliced radishes to our salads or crunch them fresh, but if you find yourself wondering what else to do with them you're not alone. But wonder no more, because whole, halved, sliced, chopped, wedged or quartered there are nearly endless possibiltites.

QUICK FIXIN'S:
1. Sliced radishes for stir-frys.
2. Chopped or minced radishes added to egg, tuna, chicken, potato salad or cole slaw.
3. Fried radish crisps (sidedish); sauté quartered radishes in butter for 2 minutes and sprinkle with kosher salt & cracked pepper
4. Baked radish crisps (side or snack); thinly slice radishes, splash with olive oil and bake on sheet (375 degrees for 30 minutes). Stir radishes, and sprinkle with kosher or sea salt, chili powder, and garlic powder, and bake a few more minutes.
5. Stir finely chopped radishes into sour cream for a topping for baked potatoes.
6. Stir finely chopped radishes into mayonnaise (see our aioli recipe) for a condiment for cold cut sandwiches
7. Sliver radishes for rice dishes.
8. Sliced radishes on bread & butter for fresh radish sandwiches.

For some longer recipes, be sure to visit or "GARDEN RECIPES" page at thedahliafarm.com website

Saturday, June 20, 2009

PLYMOUTH FARMERS MARKET


The Plymouth Farmers Market & The Dahlia Farm Plymouth CSA pick-ups begin today at the Courthouse Green in beautiful, historic downtown Plymouth. Market hours today run 9:30 to 1:30 and among the attractions will be live entertainment. Be sure to come early and say hello. For additional information you can visit the markets web site at http://plymouthfarmersmarket.org/

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

FARM TO FORK



The "locavore" movement is now firmly footed and international.

GOURMET Magazine features a regular video series and the rise of popular films and books such as Fast Food Nation, Supersize Me, In Defense of Food, and Food Inc have acted as catalyst to the current paradigm shift.

There is a promising future when one sees the likes of a 12-month New England CSA but also an ominous corporate/regulatory threat in the form of, say, HR 875.

At no point in history has the world's population been at a greater turning point with regard to it's future food, and never has conscious awareness been more important. At its heart, the locavore movement is all about food safety, supporting local community, flavor, nutrition, health and on a larger level, the environment.

One need not join a social-political group to make the world a better place, but simply read the back of the package rather than the front. "Low net carbs" may sound great but not at the expense of consuming mass daily quantities of "isolated soy protein, calcium sulfate, sodium acid pyrophosphate, calcium propionate, fumaric acid, potassium sorbate, monoglycerides, sucralose sodium metabisulfite" (real product). Small, concerted efforts produce great change.

A few days ago Radio Boston featured a story on CSAs and the locavore movement, with a specific focus on Massachusetts CSAs, many south of Boston. The show runs about an hour and was both exciting and interesting in its scope. The podcast can be heard here and is well worth a listen.


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Monday, June 15, 2009

WEEK 2

Only 18 weeks left sounds like Charlie Brown's girl Lucy saying "Merry Christmas, only 364 shopping days left," but here we are into week 2 already.

Our market basket this week features beautiful fresh spinach, Asian mizuna greens, cress, radish, red-leaf lettuce, 'Black-seed Simpson' loose leaf lettuce, eggs and flowering kniphofia.

If you're reading this and wished you had joined us already, fear not!
We are still accepting CSA share-holders
for the remainder of the season - even if there are only 18 weeks left!

Food, Inc.



On Friday a new film was released, "Food, Inc."

This expose' on the US food industry reveals a highly mechanized conspiracy between a handful of corporations and our government's regulatory agencies, USDA and FDA. At risk is American consumer health, the livelihood of the American farmer, the safety of workers and the Earth's environment. In exchange for mega-chicken breasts, boneless meats, insecticide-resistant soybeans, and tomatoes that last forever, we have new strains of E. coli, widespread obesity, and an epidemic of diabetes.

While distribution in this area is thin (the best shot right now is Nickelodeon Cinema 5 in North Falmouth, on July 10),this film should be seen - even if one has to wait for Netflix to pick it up.

For more information you can visit the official site at http://www.foodincmovie.com/

Be sure to keep it in mind, and
post here
if you happen to find it playing anywhere nearby in the immediate future.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Our first testimonial


Mid-stride through our first CSA week we just received the following email from a satisfied share-holder. Of course we're only too pleased to share:

"Good Stuff! I just wanted to let you know that my family really enjoyed all the great food we recieved on the monday CSA. You went above and beyond, and I really appreciate it. I will see you on Monday!"
-- L and Family

Monday, June 8, 2009

Week #1


Hello everyone and thanks for joining The Dahlia Farm CSA!

We begin with short-season/cool-weather crops, and this week our CSA features a LOT of leafy greens - which are great for reducing cholesterol and adding fiber to one's diet.

Week #1 full-share features Spinach, Pea Tendrils, Mizuna, Mixed Baby Field Greens, Cress, Radishes, Rhubarb, Free-range Eggs, Dahlia Farm hand-made soap, and cut peonies. (In lieu of eggs, honey may be substituted if a share has already been purchased). A half-share would feature a generous half version of the above.

Don't forget to bring in your basket next week for rotation, and be sure to check out our growing "Garden Recipes" page on our website.

If you are reading this and have not yet signed-up, you're in luck! There's still time to begin this week, or at any future point on a pro-rata share basis. See our website www.TheDahliaFarm.com for more information.

For those of you who have signed on, thank you & welcome!

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Sunday, June 7, 2009

CSA BEGINS THIS WEEK


Our 2009 CSA shares begin this week. Monday pick-ups will be available after 11am in Middleboro.

If you haven't yet declared a pick-up day please drop us an email. Middleboro can be monday or friday (most are monday), Boston is sunday, Plymouth saturday and Duxbury wednesday.

If you've been thinking about signing up, now's the time. There are still shares available and joining is easy. Just click here and we'll see you this week.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY


Nothing brings out the city hippies like a day of transplanting on an organic farm. Pictured here, our friends from JP -- the inseparable CatDog -- are working for only beers and bragging-rights on how they passed a beautiful saturday... (Obviously these guys misunderstood us when we said we might need them for "weeding.")

Thanks for all your help, Liz and Ian.

Today we made a dent.

Friday, May 29, 2009

BIODIVERSITY and the WORLD



According to the current ORGANIC GARDENING Magazine (June/July 2009), "natural grasslands act as a reservoir for nearly a third of the world's carbon, making them an important resource in the battle against global warming." In line with that statistic, natural grasslands cover just over a third of the land mass of the earth. But that number is rapidly diminishing.

So too are the rainforests. Each year an area the size of Portugal dissapears from the planet.

But research proposes a global, mutually-benefital method to reverse this trend: grass-fed beef and lamb.

This is the heart of biodiversity. Land used for the production of natural food slows the encroachment of development and mass deforestation. In turn, production animals readily and directly improve the quality of the soil with their wastes. Quid-pro-quo, improved soil produces improved plant-feed, inturn producing superior meat, milk, cheese - even fleece.

Recent research at the University of Exeter in the UK profiled 75 farms producing meat and cheese and found that not only was grass-fed lamb and beef more tender and flavorful, but was also higher in linoleic acid, antioxidants and vitamin E than their conventionally-raised counterparts. An added bonus is the animals are actually healhtier, less-stressed, and in need of less medical care.

The French concept, terroir, sites the link between the quality characteristics of food as reflective of the soil and climate they were raised in. Although this may seem inherently sensible, it is not by and large how we produce food in America. But that's not to say it is not feasible.

On a relatively recent trip to my ancestral homeland I found the Irish animals in these photographs happily free-ranging on massive grasslands. The sight of these grasslands in Ireland is as much a part of the landscape in that country as are village pubs, plots of celtic crosses, and rain.

Personally I can state as fact that what passes for "conventionally-raised" meats and cheeses in Ireland equates to "specialty" food in America. The Irish staples have always and continue to be grass-fed, symbiotic systems.

One system in County Waterford in fact, incorporated a haying operation into the mix as well. Sections of a field, separated by ancient stone walls moved cattle from one coral to the next over a production season. When the grasses were high enough they were baled, thereafter cattle grazed the stumble, littering it with manure, and then moved on to repeat the process elsewhere.

Needless to say the temperate, rainy climate of southern Eire aided the process, but I've seen the same general methods employed in France, Costa Rica, Spain, Colombia...countries rich and poor alike. The result is flavorful and nutritionally superior food - meat, milk, icecream, and cheese that is just not largely available in the US. Even in the poorest neighborhood in Costa Rica, the ground beef is a dozen times better than the best grade of burger in the US.

Biodiversity is all about simple systems. Sometimes the more we learn, the more we realize we've gotten away from what really matters.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

CSA shares to begin shortly



This week we began eating our first five-minute-salads... Salads that were in the garden five minutes prior, that is!

And while we know you're awaiting your first week's share, we're doing the rain-dance here at The Dahlia Farm and knitting mantras for a delicate balance of temperate days and evenings. It won't be much longer...

Presently we're seeing pea tendrils, radish, arugula and mizuna ready for harvest, but rather than jumping into a false start, we're holding off just a little bit longer on the weekly shares.

Those of you who have not yet signed up for an egg share, may also want to consider this. Egg shares are available seasonally as well as annually and may be a full-share (one dozen per week) or half-shares (one dozen every other week). Our current egg-shareholders are enjoying wonderful, bright orange, high-doming, exceptionally flavorful eggs daily. In fact, my NEW favorite sandwich is a dropped egg (soft-boiled) on toast. Once-upon-a-time that sounded awfully bland, but these eggs are just so darned tastey. Here's what one MIDDLEBORO GAZETTE columnist had to say, and if you'd like to stop by a local cafe to sample The Dahlia Farm eggs, be sure to visit the Rockin' K Cafe right over in Bridgewater. You can also pick up a dozen or two this coming sunday when we return to the SOWA open market in Boston's South-end.

Until then, we'll keep rain-dancing and in the meantime, there's all this transplanting to do!

Saturday, May 16, 2009

SOWA


"IT'S OPENING NIGHT," To paraphrase Max Bialystock -- or more specifically, OPENING DAY...for the 2009 farmer's market season, that is.

We kick off today -- virtually a month before most of the other Massachusetts markets -- at Boston's South-end SOWA market, and the signs are positve.

Regularly a sunday market, SOWA begins this season with a full weekend event featuring 140 vendors including crafters, artists, artisans, bakers, antique dealers, specialty foods importers and of course, farms.

It's turning out to be a beautiful day today, so if you're looking for something different to do in the city be sure to swing by 540 Harrison Ave in the Southend. You'll be glad you did!

Monday, April 13, 2009

PODCAST


Hot off the MP3!

I did an interview recently with the infamous blogger & Middleboro Gazette columnist Bellicose-Bumpkin on a number of issues related to natural, bio-diverse farming. Today it was posted to the world and can be found on his blog at: http://bellicose-bumpkin.blogspot.com/2009/04/csa-middleboro.html

Saturday, April 11, 2009

CSA pre-season discount - if you ACT FAST!


Now through the end of April 2009 we are offering a pre-season discount of $550 for our CSA share, $280 for a half-share! That's an extra savings to an already great deal, where you can also treat yourself to BETTER food AND help the local community by preserving open spaces in Plymouth County AND help save the Earth by supporting envirnonment-friendly farming. Sign-up NOW!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

ORGANIC CAN'T BE ORGANIC - It's The Law!


For decades, farmers growing without the use of chemicals in a bio-diverse, sustainable manner have referred to their farms and products as "Organic." On October 21, 2002 that ended.

The United States Congress declared that after October 21, 2002, any farmer selling over $5,000 worth of produce may NOT refer to their produce or growing methods as "Organic" unless they have been certified by a USDA accredited certification agency. Furthermore, failure to comply with this order is punishable with fines up to $10,000 per violation per day. [NOP Final Rule: 205.100]

While the certification process may aid gargantuan organic agribusiness farms (scantly practicing bio-diversity) its implementation is grossly counter-productive to thousands of small, diversified family farms using natural methods in growing and for disease and insect control.

Diverse crop production means burgeoning record management and excessive paperwork. Coupled with astonomical certification fees, time and budget makes it improbable if not impossible for many small farms to become "certified organic." Ironically, many of the best organic farmers are no longer allowed by law to call themselves "organic!"

USDA Organic program is designed to serve the large corporate farming operations. In fact, the majority of "Organic" food now filling supermarkets is produced on huge factory farms - required by their charters to place profits over all other interests, including producing safe, sustainably grown food. In recent years corporate consolidation has taken the most successful, forward-thinking farms under the larger corporate umbrellas of Dole, Kraft, General Mills, Unilever and Coca Cola.

Outside the United States, USDA "Organic" label does not carry the weight of law as it does here. In fact, its very legitimacy as a form of certification is challenged by foreign trade partners the EU and Japan - and US farmers must have their food certified by internationally accreditted certification agencies to sell in those markets.

All this is not to say that USDA "Certified Organic" is a bad thing, but rather that it is not the ONLY thing. A new, alternative label and certification system is emerging called "Certified Naturally Grown."

Certified Naturally Grown provides small, local growers with a certification system that consumers can quickly come to trust and understand.

Certified Naturally Grown encourages people to purchase from the small diversified farmers that make up their local landscape. In short, even while there are still many wonderful "Certified Organic" farmers out there, one shouldn't base one's buying decisions on certification status. The best rule of thumb, instead, is to get to know your local farmers and how they produce the food you're eating. Ask questions. Visit their websites. Make an appointment to visit their farm. Most importantly, know your food!

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Locally grown food finds niche in Brockton area - Brockton, MA - The Enterprise

Locally grown food finds niche in Brockton area - Brockton, MA - The Enterprise:




By Kyle Alspach
ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER
Posted Mar 27, 2009 @ 11:28 PM




MIDDLEBORO —
A new organic farm in Middleboro and a farmers market in Bridgewater are set to debut this year, two signs that locally grown food is a growing commodity in the region.
The Dahlia Farm on Plymouth Street in Middleboro will offer organic vegetables and herbs, eggs from free-range chickens and cut flowers, said farmer Jim Reynolds.
People will be able to buy “shares” of the vegetable crop this summer, entitling them to an assortment of veggies each week starting in June.
Meanwhile in Bridgewater, organizers say a new farmers market will kick off in July at a Bridgewater State College parking lot on Spring Street.
Local farm advocates say it’s all a response to rapidly rising demand for locally produced food, for reasons ranging from health to climate change to food security.
“We’re realizing we can’t rely on the big farms in California or New Jersey anymore, that we’re going to have to think a lot more locally,” said Sarah Cogswell, a coordinator for the Southeastern Massachusetts Agricultural Partnership in Wareham.
Cogswell was among the nearly 500 people who crowded into a Bridgewater State College hall on Wednesday to hear a talk from Michael Pollan, local food advocate and author of best-sellers “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” and “In Defense of Food.”
Pollan’s emphasis on eating “real food” — with little or no processing — is something that resonates with farmers such as Jim Reynolds.
“People are becoming more and more aware of what exactly is in the food they’ve been eating — that just because something has an FDA approval, it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s good for you,” he said.
The Dahlia Farm is located on the property of Reynolds Flowers, a business run by Reynolds’ family since the 1950s.
Reynolds, 46, and his wife, Michele, will be farming the land together this year. One acre is being devoted this year to vegetables, he said.
Another two acres are allotted for the farm’s 50 chickens, which are currently producing organic eggs for the Rockin K Cafe in Bridgewater.
Reynolds joins several dozen other farmers in southeastern Massachusetts growing food mainly for local consumption.
“There’s very much a movement of people becoming educated in what we’re eating,” he said.
Elsewhere in Middleboro, the Golden Rule Farm at Soule Homestead Education Center is planning to double its production of organic veggies this year, said farmer Frank Albani.
Growing demand for local food, Albani said, is behind the boost. Albani plans to sell some of the produce at the new Bridgewater farmers market this summer.
The town hasn’t had a farmers market any time in recent memory, said Arthur Lizie, an associate professor in communications studies at Bridgewater State who had the idea for the market.
“I really saw a lack of access to good local food around here,” he said.
Lizie is hoping five to 10 vendors will take part in the market, selling local foods including vegetables, cheeses and maple syrup.
The market will be held one afternoon a week in a college parking lot for commuter students. The day of the week hasn’t been finalized, but the market is expected to run from July through October, Lizie said.
“I just think it’s going to be a great opportunity to really engage the community,” he said. “We hope to let people know about good eating options that help themselves, help the community and the local economy.”
For more on the Bridgewater farmers market, e-mail organizer Amy Braga at amybraga@hotmail.com.




Kyle Alspach can be reached at kalspach@enterprisenews.com.




Friday, February 20, 2009

SPRING FLOWER SHOW


Surprizing (and disappointing) as it may be the BOSTON FLOWER SHOW (a/k/a the NEW ENGLAND FLOWER SHOW) has been cancelled! Funding appears to be the main issue and if you would like to help the Mass Horticultural Society out for 2010, you can visit their site at http://www.masshort.org/New-England-Spring-Flower-Show.
The good news to all this is that The 16th Annual Rhode Island Spring Flower & Garden Show will take place THIS WEEKEND, February 19-22, 2009 at the Rhode Island Convention Center. For all information follow this link. http://www.flowershow.com/. These shows are always welcomed by winter-weary New Englanders and are well worth your support.

Monday, February 9, 2009

MAN CANNOT LIVE BY VEGETABLES ALONE


The next time you're in the mood to kick your salad up to the stratosphere try replacing your same-old-same-old bottled dressing with your own, home-made GARLIC AIOLI. Green, pasta, rice or bean salad - this is well worth a try. Be sure you have a strong stomach, though. Not everyone can tolerate raw egg &/or raw garlic. If you can, you are probably either deeply detoxed or COMPLETLY toxified. Anyway, it goes like this:


GARLIC AIOLI

6-8 large cloves of raw garlic

pinch of salt

2 Tablespoons of dijon mustard

2 Tablesspoons of fresh squeezed lemon juice

3/4 cup of oil (olive preferred, canola ok)

1 raw (farm fresh) egg


In a food processor mince the garlic and add salt, mustard, lemon juice. Slowly (in a thin drizzle) pour olive/canola oil and continue to process on high. When the mixture thickens (to your preferred consistency) add the egg and continue blending. Pour or spoon mixure into a serving bowl or toss with salad or pasta. Enjoy.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

HOW TO BOIL AN EGG





Ever heard someone called 'so dumb they couldn't boil an egg?' Funny as that may sound, there really is - like everything else - a right & a wrong way to do it.

And here's something even stranger than that. If you've ever said to yourself, 'gee sometimes when I peel a hard-boiled egg the shell comes right off, and sometimes it really clings and makes a !#@^*!! mess... I wonder why...' Well, if you're the one who boiled the egg, then YOU are so dumb you can't even boil an egg!

But not to worry, here's the secret: Get the water up to boiling temp before you put your egg(s) in. That's it! Premature egg placement in cold water will not save you time, when you factor in how much time you will waste peeling.

BTW, once your water is boiling the following results will be rendered with these times: Soft-boiled, 5 minutes; Hard-boiled, 12 minutes.

If you didn't know this, you've just learned something for the day! If you did know this, you've just wasted you time...but check back again soon, next time we'll have something for smarter folks like you!

Friday, January 16, 2009

STORE WARS


Not long ago in a supermarket not so far away... Help CUKE SKYWALKER and PRINCESS LETTUCE fight the dark side in this funny but poinant video from Free Range Films. May the farm be with you.


Thursday, January 15, 2009

Food Democracy Now

This grassroots organization is leading the march
for Obama's next pick for Secretary of Agriculture. Intent that while farmers face harsh challenges regarding eneregy costs, inputs, land-use and legislative policies that undermine their ability to compete in the open market, there must be a push for better policies.

When Obama tapped former Iowa Governor & lawyer Tom Vilsack, who has backed genetic engineering (GMO foods) and has a close relationship with corporate agribusiness (i.e. Monsanto), many organic proponents screamed their opposition. The Organic Consumers Association, for instance, is pressuring Congress to reject the Vilsack nomination with mass petitions.

According to FDN, "The current system unnaturally favors economies of scale, consolidation and market concentration and the allocation of massive subsidies for commodities, all of which benefit the interests of corporate agribusiness over the livelihoods of farm families...we believe our next Secretary of Agriculture must have a vision that calls for: recreating regional food systems, supporting the growth of humane, natural and organic farms, and protecting the environment, biodiversity and the health of our children while implementing policies that place conservation, soil health, animal welfare and worker's rights as well as sustainable renewable energy near the top of their agenda."

Visit their sites at: http://www.fooddemocracynow.org/ and http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/642/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=1798

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Fresh herbs are more popular than ever!




From the December 2008 Yearbook of Fresh Digest magazine:




"Now, instead of high sodium supplements like salt and garlic powder, more and more consumers are reaching for healthier, fresh herbs and spices at their local grocery store. So much, in fact, that fresh herbs and spices are one of the fastest growing categories amongst vegetables in the produce department.'




Fresh herbs and spices have experienced tremendous growth at the retail level', said Craig Agnew, Gourmet Garden, president for North America. 'The consumer has become increasingly aware of the importance of healthy eating and, at the same time, has developed a more sophisticated pallet that wants a fresher, better flavor'"

Monday, January 5, 2009

CHICKENS FIRST SNOW

These guys just turned 6-months old around Christmas. They are comprised of Plymouth Rock Whites, Plymouth Rock Barreds (speckled black) and New Hampshire Reds (similar to RI Reds). In thieir entire existence they have never seen snow before this moment.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1DV4jy12AQ