Food Gardening is on the Rise

More and more publications are reporting on the changing tide towards growing our own food, most especially in urban areas. This is something I can sense with my own eyes and ears as more and more community gardens crop up in every city I visit, and as more and more emails flood my inbox with questions about growing tomatoes, or starting a food garden for the first time.

A few years back I was invited to be on a TV program discussing recent stats proclaiming that gardening with plants is dead and it’s all about hardscaping (patios, bricks, etc) from here on out. The show invited two additional “experts”, a suburban landscaper and a suburban garden center manager, both of whom insisted that their clients wanted to pave over the garden and put in expensive sculptures. They assured the audience that NOBODY wants to garden with actual living plants anymore. But I insisted that they were wrong and that there was a grassroots movement going on that would surprise them all, one that centered around local events, plant trading, buying from farmer’s markets and other sources that could not be tracked by garden industry sales figures. I suggested that perhaps their numbers were skewed because they were based on a specific demographic — one with a certain income, and of a certain age, living in certain areas, and meeting all of their gardening needs via giant suburban garden stores.

And sure enough we are seeing proof positive that gardening with plants wasn’t dead in the least, it was just quietly shifting gears and growing in places where no one would have expected it. And what’s really encouraging is that we are now starting to see shifting stats from the seed sellers themselves. Last year a Toronto Star article reported that vegetable seed sales had outstripped, “…those of flowers for the first time since the 1950s.” And this article claims that seed sellers are seeing a dramatic rise in food gardening, with seed orders so overwhelming some are having a hard time keeping up.

The following quote from a West Coast Seeds sales representative gave me goosebumps:

    “We typically sell to people who own their own home, but this is different. These are young people who are very interested in food gardening. I think they get it.”

Something new is happening in cities in the “rich and modern” western world, something that I am sure no one could have predicted: people aren’t just growing their own food, they are selling it back to their communities too. I live right down the street from a small urban farm where residents of a local mental health facility are growing food organically on the property and selling the fruit of their labor out on the street once weekly during the summer months. An article was published in yesterday’s New York Times about urban farmers in Brooklyn who are growing crops in empty lots and waste spaces and selling them at local markets. The article goes on to mention the growing rise in food gardens in cities across the U.S.

What’s amazing is that everything is coming together right now in a way that is making all of this possible. People are excited about growing their own food, our cultural climate has shifted placing emphasis on food quality and ethical growing practices which means there is a growing market of consumers who want to buy locally grown food, and cities are starting to support these endeavors, seeing the benefits that gardens, especially food-growing gardens can bring. All of this is very encouraging and exciting making me feel just a little bit more optimistic that we aren’t all racing towards the apocalypse. I’m squee-ing on the inside just a little bit right now.

Leave a comment

Assorted and Sundry for 08/02/28

Leave a comment

Experiencing Fresh Cacao

Photo by Gayla Trail

On our third day in Cuba we took a trip organized by our hotel up into the Sierra Maestra mountains. There were a few different legs to the excursion, the first of which was a stop at around the halfway mark to get our bearings and snap a few photos of the view. It also served as a welcome break from the insane drive which involved our driver racing our van against another van, narrowly passing in some very extreme conditions and taking roller coaster turns on a road with almost nothing between our vehicle and a very long drop down the side of the mountain. Most of us hung onto our seats with our hearts in our mouths. Others felt sick but no one threw up. Did I mention there were no seat belts?

Photo by Gayla Trail
The view from halfway up looking towards the ocean.

We stopped at a schoolhouse where a group of farmers were setup along a short wall selling fruit and handicrafts. I bought a red necklace made from seeds, 2 shell rings, and a fresh cacao pod. Cacao is the fruit that chocolate is made from. It grows on a tree but looks like a squash on the outside and is filled with beans on the inside that are transformed into delicious chocolate. I can’t tell you how thrilled I was to see the cacao pod sitting among little bananas and green-skinned oranges. It was quite an unexpected surprise! Tasting fresh cacao directly from the pod is on a list of life experiences that I hope to have before I die. I have seen and held a dried, whole cacao on a few occasions and I have tasted whole, roasted cacao beans but I have never seen a fresh, recently picked cacao pod. And it only cost 25 cents!

I took it back into the van with me pleased that I was finally going to get the chance to scratch that item off my list. My fellow passengers were all curious about the strange squash-like fruit I had purchased. I was so distracted by the thrill of it all that I forget to take pictures. The photos you see here were taken later in the day only minutes before the sun went down.

Later that afternoon I took the pod with me to the hotel restaurant and cut it open with a bread knife. This is what I found inside.

Photo by Gayla Trail

I’m not sure why — perhaps it is due to my love of chocolate — but I had always imagined the insides soft, luscious, and fragrant. I imagined that opening a cacao pod would be sort of like opening up a passionfruit; dry on the outside but with a fragrant and unusually sensual inside. Perhaps other cacao pods are like that, but mine was quite dry, the pulp stringy and alien-like. It did not look appetizing. It did not smell like much at all.

cuba_cacao3.jpg

I pulled out a bean and we all had a taste. Raw cacao tastes incredibly acrid, bitter and entirely unpleasant, akin to chewing on a pink eraser For Big Mistakes. Having eaten roasted beans I can see how that acrid, bitter taste would be transformed by the proper processing; this process involves fermenting, drying and roasting the beans. Unfortunately I would never get a chance to see my pod through those stages because I was not allowed to bring any natural materials (plant matter, shells, rocks, sand, fauna, etc) back from our trip. In the end, raw cacao was not what I expected but I could care less about the outcome. It was an exciting experience and something I can scratch off The List!

Leave a comment

Edible Fall Container Planting

falledibles_20072.jpg

During the spring and summer months I grow indeterminant tomatoes (large, vine plants) in large garbage bins like this one purchased for $10 each a number of years ago at the local Ikea. The flat grey colour has faded significantly over the years but the containers are still holding up under the wear and tear of hot summers and winter heaving caused by fluctuating temperatures.

I typically fill each container with a single tomato plant and surround it with 4 basil plants. With the weather being warmer this fall I decided to try and keep the rooftop deck productive AND aesthetically pleasing by replacing the spent tomatoes with attractive, cold-hardy edibles previously growing in smaller, individual containers. This also allowed me to get a head start on clean-up bringing in some of the smaller, terra cotta containers that will eventually come indoors for the winter.

falledible_2007.jpg

In This Container:

  • Tri-color sage
  • Pansy (will keep flowering. Flowers are edible.
  • ‘Lacinato Blue’ Kale aka ‘Dinosaur’ Kale
  • ‘Red Bor’ Kale
  • Cinnamon Basil (not cold hardy but surprisingly still going strong.)

Everything in this container is edible. Unfortunately, while we were away a squirrel made a hearty lunch of the dinosaur kale but everything else is still thriving and ready for picking whenever we need a bit of sage for our eggs, some flowers for a salad, or kale to flavour a soup.

Leave a comment

Okay, NOW It’s Fall

asters.jpg

Break out the apple cider and make some treats, Fall is officially here.

And while the weather is happily still very late-summer-like the signs of autumn are everywhere, especially in the harvest. One of the farmers had pie pumpkins at the market this week. I’m realizing now that I should have bought one. An unidentified mammal ate every single developing ‘Long Island Cheese Squash’ off the vine growing in my community garden plot this year. Boo. Hiss. I had one fertilized pumpkin developing that I thought might have a slim chance but it was gone when I went to check up on it yesterday. Next year I will have to construct some kind of mammal-proof barrier around the little pumpkins. I am saddened that there will be no delightfully flat and scalloped homegrown pumpkin to set on the counter before turning it into a pie.

Next on the agenda is a batch or two of apple and mint jelly and I’ve been toying with the idea of trying my hand at pickled watermelon rind. I already have the apples, mint, and watermelon, now I just have to work up the energy to make it all happen.

Leave a comment