July 31, 2008

This Lawn is Your Lawn...



Roger D. of Portland Slow Food and Kitchen Gardeners International is helping launch a campaign to urge our next President to plant a food garden on the White House lawn. You may have read about this in Ellen Goodman’s syndicated column - check it out at the Eat the View website (hint: Scroll down!)

Roger is inviting others to get involved. Here are some things you can do, all of which could be accomplished in 5 minutes or less if you’re a real pro:

1) Sign the online petition, which will be delivered to the President-elect this fall, along with a collection of heirloom seed packets.

2) Vote for the idea on the website On Day One.

3) Grab a banner or widget for your website, blog or social network profile.

4) Identify a high impact, high visibility spot in need of an edible makeover in your town, region, or state and make it over! The more of these we have, the easier it becomes to make our case to the next Eater-in-Chief. Here in Maine, for example, the Baldaccis eat from a kitchen garden planted at the governor’s residence. As Maine goes…

5) And watch the great "This Lawn is Your Lawn" video Roger made!

July 29, 2008

Fossil Fuel-Free Special from McClary Hill Farm!


We recently received not one but two generous offers in the note below from Dave at McClary Hill Farm. Consider signing up for their mailing list - their "Fresh From the Farm" emails give timely updates about what's available, and some entertaining glimpses into farm life, as well. The "Fuel-for-Food" program has gotten some notice in the Concord Monitor.

"Hi. My name is Dave Stewart from McClary Hill Farm, in Epsom. We are a diversified, family farm practicing organic techniques for raising really tasty meats andvegetables.

We have a steady supply of chicken, fresh processed every week, for $ 4.00 a pound. These birds are packaged whole with the giblets and are available on farm in our cooler. The chickens are raised in movable coops and dine on grass and clover and whatever bugs bound in front of them. We use Green Mountain Organic feeds to provide them with the additional nutrition that they require. The chicken will be available in the cooler Thursday night, and at the Deerfield Farmer's Market on Friday. We will keep some in the cooler until Saturday evening, after which the remainder will be plunked into the freezers and be available frozen.

If you would like to be made aware of our products as they come available, please send us your email address (via the website) and we'll keep you updated. I will also consider bringing chicken to the Seacoast area if enough folks are interested. Of course we would prefer that you come to see the farm and the way the animals are raised, but understand that it's not always easy. Lastly, if you can get to our farm in any way that doesn't use fossil fuel, we'll drop the price of the chicken to $ 3.50 per pound. So walk, bike or ride your horse! Best wishes, Dave."

NH Eat Local Week, August 3-9!


August 3-9 has been declared NH Eat Local Week - look, there's even a proclamation from the Governor - and we're all getting ready. Thanks to Sara Zoe of Seacoast Eat Local for leading the charge in our area, and for compiling the following Eat Local roundup.

Here are some of the goings on
that we know about thus far - restaurants, individuals, and businesses are all welcome to sign up to participate at New Hampshire Eat Local Week's website, where you'll find plenty of ideas and inspiration.

Exeter Farmer's Market Raffle - July 31
Visit the Exeter Farmers' Market this week (July 31) to buy a chance to win a basket of local foods for NH Eat Local Week! The Exeter Farmers' Market is celebrating with a raffle of local foods donated by market vendors. Farmers' Market vendors have donated pies, spice blends, garlic, potatoes, maple syrup, gift certificates for locally prepared foods, and two dozen ears of corn for prize baskets to be raffled off. Ticket sales benefit Seacoast Eat Local. Raffle tickets will be sold for $1 apiece or 4 for $5 at the Exeter Farmers' Market in Swasey Parkway from 2:15 – 6 PM on Thursday, July 31. Winners will be able to pick up their prize baskets during NH Eat Local Week on August 7 at the Exeter Farmers' Market.

Slow Food Seacoast Potluck Meeting - Sunday August 3
5:30, Stoodley's Tavern at Strawbery Banke
Kick off NH Eat Local Week with a community supper hosted by Slow Food Seacoast. Bring a dish based on a local ingredient to share, and join in as folks explore ways to participate in NH Eat Local Week. As always, please bring a place setting and a beverage - and for this meeting, please bring some ideas about incorporating local foods into your meals during the week ahead!

Canning & Pickling Workshop - Wednesday August 6, 4 - 6 pm
with Chef Ted McCormack of Flag Hill Winery & Distillery
SPONSORED BY WILLOW POND COMMUNITY FARM
at the Congregational Church, 21 Front Street, downtown Exeter
Workshop Fee: $20 per person. Registration is required.
To register, please email Kate at willowpondfarmer@yahoo.com
Space is limited to 12 participants.

Lee Farm Day - August 9 - 10am - 4pm
Come for a self-guided tour of Lee's diverse farming community. This year, eight farms will be open to the public. There will be demonstrations and activities at each farm all day long. Some activities will include a sheep shearing demonstration, free horse-drawn wagon rides and ice cream at Coppal House Farm provided by the Granite State Dairy Council and sponsored by Ath-Mor Holsteins. Riding and jumping demonstrations at Echo Ridge Farm, local artists show at Blue Bell Greenhouses, bee keeping exhibit and the Lee Farmer's Market at Misty Meadows, and more. Lunch to benefit NH Ag in the Classroom will be available at UNH Burleigh-DeMeritt Farm, and lunch will also be available at Velvet Pastures Elk Ranch featuring Elk burgers. Poster and detailed brochure available here - print a poster and help spread the word!

Restaurants Participating in NH Eat Local Week
Eat local and let someone else do the cooking!
The Dolphin Striker in Portsmouth, NH will be offering a special prix fix menu each night of NH Eat Local Week
Flag Hill Winery Dinner on August 8 (reservations required) will feature, as always, local and regional foods

The Little Milkman is offering a NH Eat Local Week special
Sign up for service between August 3-9 and get your first month's delivery free. In addition to milk, the Little Milkman offers NH cheeses, eggs, meats, and much much more! Phone: 603.373.6659

There's no wrong way to celebrate the week. As NH Agriculture Commissioner Lorraine Merrill states in her comments about the event, "Everyone is welcome to create ways to participate and celebrate our local foods and farms—and to extend the spirit and activities beyond this one week."

Happy local eating!

Pro Poultry: Portsmouth's Chicken Challenges

In case you missed Rachel Forrest's article in the Portsmouth Herald about the Portsmouth Farmer's Market poultry ban, you'll want to check it out. A letter in response, with a response from Seacoast Eat Local, appears at the SEL blog<. And an additional story appeared in Foster's last week.

What a great example of a situation in which public policy is having an effect on consumers and farmers. Sometimes it's easy to overlook the ways laws and regulations create the world in which we live - and eat. In this case, the effect is a negative one for the future of our food, because it penalizes local, small-scale farmers, making it much harder for them to sell and develop markets for their products.

The poultry suppliers who sell at our local markets have been careful to comply with NH state law. They've been selling all along under that law, with no problems or health concerns of any kind. Until this season, a Saturday at the Portsmouth Farmer's market found people lining up to purchase chicken directly from growers like Kellie Brook Farm, located just a short skip down Route 33.

The state of New Hampshire doesn't require small-scale processors with under 1000 birds who sell within state borders to use USDA-inpected processing plants. And that has been a boon to small-scale producers, since they've been in a bind for a long time: even those who might want to use USDA-inspected facilities often don't have the option. New England as a region has a shortage of USDA poultry processing plants. For most of our small farmers, there is simply nowhere besides their own facilities to take their birds for processing.

Fortunately, the state sets clear standards for processing, handling, and cleanliness - standards which local producers readily meet.

Though we understand the city of Portsmouth has adopted FDA poultry guidelines out of a sense of protecting the public, many of us believe the concern is misplaced. Many people I talk to are a lot more concerned about the kinds of large-scale poultry operations that have easy access to their own USDA-inspected processing facilities -- farmers for whom 1,000 birds is an hour's production, as opposed to a year's steady labor.

Slow Food as an organization sees serious concerns with favoring large-scale farming operations over local, small-scale ones. Concentrating animals in large growing and feeding operations, processing them in heavy volume all at once, and then shipping them long distances to sit in grocery cases on styrofoam plates, are unsustainable practices that damage communities, the environment, the enjoyment of food, and people's lives. Though it is easy for such large-scale facilities to maintain an USDA-inspected facility, that is small comfort given the associated costs of producing food this way.

Many Slow Food Seacoast participants choose to support our local poultry farmers because of concerns about the effects of large-scale farming -- effects like these:

Environmental Impact:
Large-scale poultry processing can create serious impacts on the environment, such as unhealthy levels of ammonia (which can cause tissue irritation in humans, water pollution, and crop damage), water pollution from the runoff of waste into rivers, high water usage and fossil fuel usage for heating large quantities of scalding water,and feed ingredients such as arsenic being spread through the use of manure for fertilizer.

Health and Safety: High-volume poultry processing plants must keep production moving at a rapid pace. Long shifts of repetitive work around sharp, hot, and heavy equipment create conditions that can cause frequent workplace injury. Concentrating large numbers of animals from widespread farms poses an increased level of risk for outbreaks of disease and illness such as Listeria and avian flu.

Labor: The poultry industry has undergone explosive growth over the past few decades, but the development of its participants as employers has been less than satisfactory. Large-scale meat processors have been frequent labor law violators, with a history of workers' compensation failures, suppressing the efforts of workers to advocate for better working conditions for themselves, and withholding overtime wages.

Quality, Variety, and Taste:
Slow Food values biodiversity. Over the milennia, hundreds of poultry breeds have been carefully developed by humans. The birds vary greatly in size, appearance, egg-laying qualities, time to maturity and taste. Each has its own character and ideal niche, from the active, free-ranging Buckeye to the flavorful year-round layer Plymouth Rock to the docile Dominique. But this diversity, and the human heritage of stewardship and culture it represents, are not preserved by large commercial producers. For big poultry companies, the value of a bird lies in conformity. Each bird must eat the same foods, mature at the same rapid speed, have meat of the same color and texture, and be about the same size. That means raising chickens of only a few breeds, narrowly selected for consistency and ease of production. That doesn't always mean great taste, though! Meanwhile, small-scale farmers have much greater flexibility to raise a wide variety of breeds (Yellow House Farm alone is like a chicken U.N.!), allow their chickens to range outdoors and eat a more varied diet including grasses, grains, and insects; and let them grow to maturity at an unforced pace. Many people can taste the difference in the finished birds. And those farmers are preserving breeds of animals that would otherwise become extinct.

Not to mention, they're maintaining green space in our towns, paying local taxes, and getting involved in our communities as friends, volunteers, donors, shoppers, and civic leaders.

So it seems to me that this issue is much bigger than consumer protection. The poultry regulations for the Portsmouth Farmers' Market are a statement - a statement about what kind of world we want to help create. To discourage the purchase and enjoyment of local poultry is to say that we want large-scale operations, with all their risks and ills.

But to encourage it is to say: We want to continue a centuries-old heritage of farming on Seacoast land. We want fresh, ethically raised, flavorful and traditional meats. We want to know where our food comes from and get to know the people who grew it. We want to do more shopping at the market (and in town while we're there!) and less shopping at national chains. We want to support our local economy and help maintain the rural nature of the communities surrounding Portsmouth. We want to make sure that right here where we live, there are plenty of people who know how to raise food and bring it to our tables. For all these reasons and more, we want to make a place for small-scale, locally raised chicken at our markets. It's not just about consumer choice; it's about the future of food on the Seacoast.

I hope you'll agree, and I hope that we of Slow Food Seacoast can find ways to support the City of Portsmouth in arriving at a farmer-friendly solution that keeps our local food culture growing strong. In the meantime, don't forget to consult Seacoast Harvest, the Local Foods Guide, to find many great farms where you can still purchase your poultry directly.

--Michelle Moon, co-Leader, Slow Food Seacoast. *The opinions expressed in this entry are personal, not necessarily those of Slow Food Seacoast or Slow Food USA.

July 22, 2008

Tales Out of School...and Other News

Even though it's summer, some food folk are still thinking about school lunch. The latest in the series of Amy W's reports from the Dover [schools] Dining Facilities Committee is up at the Seacoast Eat Local blog, along with many other wonderful, informative, and seasonal posts. Take a look.

The Prescott Park Arts Festival announced its support of the Slow Food movement with an expanded menu offered by the new Fresh Local truck. This bright orange food truck looks like the kind of vehicle we're used to buying tacos and burgers out of - but this one has a twist. As much as possible, owners and operators Josh Lanahan and Michelle Lozuaway are sourcing their meats, cheeses, breads, and produce from local and regional suppliers. Check out their fun menu of burgers, falafel, and other great festival food here, and look for them all over the Seacoast as well as at the Park.

Slow Food Boston announces a goat cheese event in nearby Topsfield, MA: "Meet the enchanting Nubian goats at Valley View Farm. Join us at 10AM on Saturday, August 9, 2008, and see how delicious fresh and soft-ripened goat cheeses are made. Elizabeth and Peter Mulholland's family farm overlooks the lovely Ipswich River in Topsfield, MA. We'll learn how the herd is hand-milked and the cheeses hand-crafted, and how a goat/cow cheese was developed using rich Jersey milk from a neighboring herd.
Next, we'll drive 10 minutes for a picnic at the beautiful Green Meadows Farm in Hamilton, MA. Diana Rodgers will introduce us to the farm, which is a certified organic farm growing fruits, vegetables and heritage breeds. Sandwiches for a picnic will be available for purchase at the farm stand for approximately $6.00, and you may want to bring a cooler to shop for the farm's products. Price is $10, payable via Paypal or check, and attendance will be limited to the first 30 people. See Slow Food Boston website for more details and to reserve your spots today!"

And finally, save the date for an exciting collaboration between Slow Food Seacoast and the Portsmouth Garden Club: The Edible Gardens Tour, 10 AM - 4 PM on Sunday, August 10. This self-guided tour will highlight gardens throughout the area. Participants will receive a map and driving directions. Demonstrations and tastings in the various garden will be presented. Come on out to learn some basic gardening tips and techniques - it might just get you inspired to create an edible landscape of your own!

July 20, 2008

Slow Food-Friendly Farmers in the Herald

It was great to see two good friends of Slow Food Seacoast, Garen Heller of Back River Farm and Kate Donald of Willow Pond Community Farm, profiled in today's Portsmouth Herald/Seacoast Online. Read about some of their concerns and daily routines in the story "Farming is Chic in Slow Food Movement."

July 18, 2008

Twilight Farm Tours July 21 & August 18!



The Southeast Land Trust of NH Announces Twilight Tours at Conserved Farmlands

Monday, July 21 · 6-8 pm · Newmarket & Lee

Monday, August 18 · 5:30-7:30 pm · Brentwood

When you buy produce at the Farmer’s Market, do you wonder about the farmers and lands that grow it? Join us for a tour of local farms protected by conservation easements to learn first-hand about farming practices. What are their challenges? Why did they conserve their lands or what does the conservation easement mean to their operation?

Both tours are free and open to the public. You may attend one or both tours. Registration is required. Please call 603-778-6088 or email kmccormack@seltnh.org. Directions will be provided to registrants.

Held in partnership with Seacoast Eat Local and the Southeast Land Trust of NH. Hosted by New Roots Farm in Newmarket, Coppal House Farm in Lee, and Willow Pond Community Farm and Apple Annie in Brentwood.

Formed by the merger of the Rockingham and Seacoast Land Trusts in Fall 2006, the Southeast Land Trust of NH is a membership-based, private non-profit organization serving 39 communities of greater Rockingham County. Our mission is to conserve the significant land and natural resources of southeastern NH, including water, working farms and forests, wildlife habitat and natural areas, and community landscapes. Since 1980, we have conserved 5,700 acres through conservation easements and full-fee ownerships.

July 15, 2008

Bill McKibben to Speak on "Deep Economy," Sunday July 20th



Slow Food Seacoast joins Seacoast Local in welcoming author, educator, and environmental advocate Bill McKibben to South Church in Portsmouth, NH, on Sunday, July 20, at 4:00 PM.

Slow Food Seacoast will offer a potluck reception after McKibben's talk (volunteers and potluck dishes needed; please see note below!)

McKibben's appearance is part of the "Making the Connections" series, presented by Seacoast Local and RiverRun Bookstore as a catalyst for continuing education, community connections and sustainable change. South Church's Minds Alive! and Green Sanctuary programs will co-host the event, with support from Rye Energy Committee.


McKibben's latest book, "Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future," addresses what the author sees as the shortcomings of the growth economy and envisions a transition to a more local-scale enterprise.

Slow Food supporters will be interested in McKibben's views on local agriculture, one of the most powerful building blocks for community change, environmental health, and happier, more meaningful lives. He believes that many communities are ready to "form the foundations of a newer, more local economy...despite record affluence, Americans report ever-growing feelings of disconnection and loss of community, trends that can only be reversed if we manage to rebuild local institutions that draw people together. To wit, the farmer's market: energy-efficient local food, and the average shopper has ten times as many conversations as a supermarket shopper. No wonder they're the fastest-growing part of our food economy. Now we need to get going on other sectors too."

Please come, listen, talk, and make connections of your own with Seacoast people ready to unite in making change. Slow Food Seacoast, with its emphasis on bringing people together to enjoy local food and celebrate local agriculture, has something to contribute to the community table. Hope to see you there!

~ Food Volunteers Needed ~ Please Bring a Dish! ~


Once again, Slow Food Seacoast will offer a potluck reception for the event. We're seeking volunteers who can prepare 20-40 servings of appetizer-style finger food. Please plan to bring meatless foods that contain no mayo and need no refrigeration. Any offerings are welcome, from homemade snacks to freshly harvested veggies to store-bought chips and dip, cheese, or breads. Please email SlowFoodSeacoast@GMail.com to let us know you can contribute.

South Church has kindly agreed that cash donations from the potluck portion of the event will go to Slow Food Seacoast to fund projects such as the Edible Gardens Tour, school garden collaborations, and more, helping to move toward the goal of community food sustainability and a lively local food culture for all Seacoast residents.

July 6, 2008

Farm Picnic This Sunday!


Isn't it about time to take a break and enjoy the bounties of a Seacoast summer?

Come on down to the Down on the Farm Picnic Potluck on Sunday, July 13, from noon-3 PM. This year we are delighted to be hosted by Tuckaway Farm, a beautiful diversified small-scale farm in Lee. You'll be able to meet the farmer and enjoy the beautiful ponds, barns, chickens, hunting dogs, horses, and shady lanes of an old New Hampshire farm. Bring a blanket to spread on the grass, some picnicware, and a bunch of friends for a beautiful afternoon of relaxation in a historic farm setting - a landscape we hope to continue to protect and preserve here and across the Seacoast. The suggested donation of $3 per person will go to cover costs for the picnic, and any surplus will be returned to Slow Food Seacoast to fund projects and programs.

There'll be plenty to do for all ages. Games for kids, a door prize raffle, a Greens Tasting by Andy Gagnon of Andy's Greens, a Wild Edibles Walk by John Forti, Curator of Historic Landscapes at Strawbery Banke and co-leader of Slow Food Seacoast, a discussion of "Why Support Local Agriculture?" from Seacoast Local, and the introduction of the second annual and beautifully redesigned Seacoast Harvest, the Local Foods Resource Guide published under the auspices of Seacoast Eat Local with support from Slow Food. You'll be able to pick up your own printed version of the guide to keep handy all season long.

White Heron Tea
has graciously offered to provide an assortment of delicious iced teas, too!

Please bring a potluck dish to share (something that can offer at least 10-12 portions); your outdoor gear such as sun-hat, bug repellent, and sunscreen; a picnic blanket; reusable picnicware (though we will have some paper goods available too); and a sense of summer fun and adventure. We look forward to seeing you there!

Directions to Tuckaway Farm:

From the West:
From the Lee traffic circle (intersection of Rtes 125 and 4), go East on Rte 4 towards Portsmouth/Durham. After 1.5 miles, take the Rte 155/Dover exit. Go left at the end of the ramp onto Rte 155. Take a LEFT onto Randall Road opposite DeMerritt Hill Farm. Drive past the Caretaker's Cottage and under the power lines to the farm.

From the East:
From Rte 4 West, take the exit for Rte 155/Durham. Turn right at the end of the ramp onto Main St, and go approx 1 mile to reach a stop sign. Turn right onto Rte 155. Take a LEFT onto Randall Road opposite DeMerritt Hill Farm. Drive past the Caretaker's Cottage and under the power lines to the farm.

July 1, 2008

Join Us & Many Friends in Welcoming Bill McKibben, Author of "Deep Economy," July 20


Seacoast Local's "Making the Connection" speaker series, co-sponsored by RiverRun Bookstore, returns on July 20 with author and activist Bill McKibben.

McKibben is the author of the first popular book on global climate change, "The End of Nature (1989), and his numerous essays, magazine articles and books explore the connections between people, place and planet. His topics range from global warming to local communities to genetic engineering to family. McKibben's latest book, "Deep Economy," addresses what the author sees as the shortcomings of the growth economy, and envisions a transition to a more local-scale enterprise. "Deep Economy" makes the compelling case for moving beyond growth as the paramount economic ideal and pursuing prosperity in a more local direction, with regions like ours producing more of our own food, generating more of our own energy, and creating more of our own culture and entertainment.

Seacoast Local presents this series monthly as a catalyst for continuing education, community connections and sustainable change. South Church's Minds Alive! and Green Sanctuary programs will co-host this event, with support from the Rye Energy Committee.

Slow Food Seacoast will offer an outdoor reception after McKibben's talk. We expect a large turnout, so please let us know if you'd like to volunteer, whether to help usher, set up, or bring your own locally produced potluck finger food! Our reception for Frances Moore Lappe's lecture was very happily received and a great example of sharing and building community. Please contact SlowFoodSeacoast@GMail.com if you're able to bring 1 simple finger-food appetizer of 20 or more pieces. Thank you, and see you at this exciting talk!

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