news

New Year-Round Farmers Market at the Piazza and other Winter Markets

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

piazza

A new YEAR-ROUND Farmers Market featuring locally produced items will launch on 1/16 at the Piazza at Schmidts’ (North 2Nd Street And Germantown Avenue) and continue every Saturday from 10:00am-2:00pm. Grass Fed Beef, Naturally-Raised Pork and Duck, Free Range Chicken, Naturally-Raised Lamb, Cage Free-Pastured Eggs, Artisan Cheese, Breads and Baked Goods, Organic Vegetables/Produce, Honey, Preserves, Fair Trade Coffee and even all natural Dog Treats! Over 20 vendors to choose from and FREE PARKING in the designated lot across from the Piazza.

There are other local farmer’s markets open throughout the Winter at:

Fitler Square Farmers’ Market
23rd St. & Pine St.
Saturdays 9 am - 2 pm; Year round

Rittenhouse Farmers’ Market
Walnut St. at 18th St.
Saturdays 9:30 am to 3 pm; Year round

Clark Park Farmers’ Market (accepts SNAP cards)
43rd St. & Baltimore Ave.
Saturdays 10 am - 2 pm; Year round

Posted by Erin on 01/13 at 05:20 PM


December GRID hits the shelves!

Friday, December 04, 2009

grid

Hey everyone! Our favorite magazine about sustainability in Philadelphia hits the stands today! Check out my recipe for butternut squash and mushroom lasagna (pictured below) in the print addition or online.

GRID Cover December 2009 And join us to celebrate its release:

WHERE: The Abbaye (3rd and Fairmount)
WHEN: 5-8 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 9
$3 drafts and ½ price appetizers!

See you there!

lasagne

Posted by Erin on 12/04 at 08:13 PM


November GRID is out

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

grid

The new GRID magazine is hitting the shelves at local coffee-shops, co-ops and businesses near you. Check out the issue for more bicycling articles, how to cook dried beans, just what is a green roof, local fashion designers, community garden, a green event calendar, and much more. Or, read it online HERE.

Posted by Erin on 11/04 at 05:58 PM


FLOTUS Shops at DC Farmers’ Market!

Friday, September 18, 2009

17caucus.michelle.190
Hooray! Read the story on the New York Times website.
17caucus.michelle.480

Posted by Allison on 09/18 at 01:45 AM


Indian Valley Farmers’ Market Opens in One Week!

Friday, June 26, 2009

Indian Valley Farmers' Market

The Indian Valley Farmers’ Market will open at the Telford Train Station on Penn and Main Streets on Saturday, July 4 at 8:30am for the 2009 season. 

Rumor has it that this year, we can expect the best selection of vendors ever featured at the market!  Locally grown fruits and vegetables, locally produced wine and locally roasted coffee will all be available, making it a great place to start weekend grocery shopping.  Additionally, each week, the volunteers of the market’s Promotions Committee have special events planned, the first of which will be on July 11, the 2009 Field To Table Food Festival:

“The purpose of the Field to Table Festival is to help promote the Indian Valley Farmers’ Market, Pennsylvania agriculture, local businesses and service organizations as well as to have a fun day with our families.  In addition to the Farmers’ Market, we will have exhibits from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, 4-H, the Searching for “Berried” Treasure Contest, music, menu samples from local restaurants and activities for children.”

Keep an eye on their website for all upcoming events:  http://www.ivfm.org/ See you July 4!

Posted by Mikaela on 06/26 at 06:15 PM


Farm to Philly in the June-July GRID magazine!

Friday, June 19, 2009

We were pleased a couple of months ago to have been asked by GRID, a new and really quite excellent magazine about sustainable living in Greater Philadelphia, to contribute a few recipes to the June-July issue. It’s now out and available online (free!) and in independent retailers around the region (also free!). And you can try out more recipes in the August issue available in, well, August. A big hand to our ringleader Nicole for making this all happen!

Posted by Allison on 06/19 at 03:13 AM


Kensington’s Greensgrow in the Inquirer

Saturday, April 18, 2009

VSMYARD17P1Co-founder Mary Seton Corboy at Greensgrow Farm in Kensington. (April Saul / Inquirer)

Friends are used to me going on and on about Greensgrow Farm, in the Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, like I invented the place. I love it that much. You might, too, after you read today’s piece by Ginny Smith in the Inquirer. 

Posted by Allison on 04/18 at 04:18 AM


Pedal Co-op: a model of sustainability

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Michael Dollich of Four Worlds Bakery just sent out a link for the following National Geographic video. The video features West Philly’s own Pedal Co-op and makes reference to various sustainable businesses and organizations in Philly. Check it out!

Posted by Melanie on 04/05 at 03:09 PM


March? Winter Squash Three Ways and a Quiche!

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

How can it possibly be the last day of March? March 31, 2009! Does anyone else have the feeling that March was stolen from under their very eyes? It was a funny month. It began with a snow storm. Temperatures varied from the teens to the 70s. Just this past Sunday I got caught by a flash hailstorm whilst strolling through Washington Square. At my university there were weekly (or multiple in a week) conferences, colloquia and symposia to add to regular graduate student demands. Luckily, for my sanity, I continued to pick up my weekly CSA share from Keystone Farm, shopped at Mariposa, picked up my weekly bread order from Four Worlds Bakery and cooked any number of local and eco meals. Cooking really is meditative and good food provides the best comfort. Let me catch you up a bit on some of the highlights of this month’s eating!

Inspired by Naomi’s delicious post on butternut squash pasta sauce, I thought I’d put up a few things I did with the puree from a kabocha squash I had gotten in my CSA share. The squash sat prettily on my counter for months, before I finally decided what best to do with it. I knew that I would be committing myself to intensive solitary squash eating, so I needed time to consider how exactly I wanted to address the dear kabocha. Finally I chose to halve it, poke holes in the outside and roast it. I then pureed the roasted squash, and that is where the fun began. Kabocha is a sweeter squash with a delicate flavor and firm, brightly orange flesh.

I have a true love of apple butter and cheddar cheese sandwiches (on the spelt levain from Four Worlds). The squash puree, however, beckoned and I found that equally delightful is a sandwich of this sweet kabocha puree and the sharp cheddar cheese I regularly receive in my share.  I have mentioned before too, that I often make variations of Alice Waters’ soup of many vegetables. The addition of pumpkin puree to the vegetable soup not only gave it a beautiful color (which, for some sad reason is not apparent in this photo), but also added the most subtle pumpkin-y flavor to the broth.

Longing for pancakes one weekend morning, I decided to use the last bit of kabocha puree to make, what turned out to be, the best pancakes I have ever made. Really incredible - if I may say so myself! They were light, fluffy and unbelievably tasty. I long for the fall to make these pancakes again!

Soup of Many Vegetables
adapted from Alice Waters The Art of Simple Food

2 tbsp olive oil
1 small onion, diced
3 carrots, sliced evenly
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 tsp thyme
2 tsp salt
1 bay leaf
1 cup white wine
4 cups water
3 potatoes, peeled and cubed
1 cup winter squash puree
Half of small head of cabbage (green), shredded
2 cups prepared cranberry beans (cooked in water—3 inches above beans—with a bay leaf and garlic clove, allowing them to simmer after five minutes of a hard boil for about an hour, reserving the cooking water)

In a soup pot over medium-high heat, sautee the onion and carrot until soft—about 10 minutes. Add garlic, bay leaf, salt and thyme. Cook another 5 minutes. Add 1 cup of wine and allow to boil for 2-3 minutes, add 4 cups water and bring to a boil. Add in potatoes, allowing to simmer/boil gently. Stir in squash puree. After 5 minutes add cabbage (you could cook cabbage ahead of time and add at the end with the beans). Cook another 10 minutes and add beans and reserved water. All the while stirring occasionally. Salt and pepper to taste. Once everything is cooked (potatoes are tender) serve.

Best Pumpkin Pancakes
adapted from many sources

1 cup flour (I used a local PA white pastry flour)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 egg
3/4 cup plain whole milk yogurt (you could use buttermilk or a mixture of milk and yogurt)
1/2 cup squash puree

Mix dry ingredients. In a separate bowl mix together egg, yogurt and puree. Add the wet ingredients to the dry until just mixed (don’t over beat). Then cook them up in a pan with butter and enjoy with a drizzle of maple syrup or just as they are!

On another note. Spring is creeping in and spinach is starting to show up in my CSA share. Keystone Farm has experimented for the first time with greenhouses this winter, and lettuces have been making their way into my box. The spinach, however, is a great treat. In a sea of potatoes and onions, there is nothing quite like some local organic spinach! For the first time ever, I decided to make a quiche. The picture will reveal that I make funny pie crusts. I use (again) a recipe from Alice Waters, and this dough does not shrink at all! I always forget to take this into consideration, which is why my pies and now quiches tend to have wavy crusts hanging over the sides of the pie dish....

Spinach Quiche

Crust:
1 cup flour (again, local white PA pastry flour)
3/4 cup cold butter in 1/4 inch cubes
1/4 cold water

I used my food processor and cut the butter into the flour and slowly added the water until the dough formed a ball. You could also use the more conventional way of cutting the butter into the flour with either knives, a pastry cutter or your fingers and then add the water. Form a loose disc with the dough and refrigerate for at least an hour. Roll out the dough and prebake for in a 375˚ oven for 15 minutes.

(my pie dish is 10")

Filling:
1 small onion, diced
1 large bag spinach (I don’t actually know how many cups this is, but it is the size bag I got from the farmer’s market!)
6 eggs, 3/4 cup plain yogurt
ca 1/2 cup shredded cheese (I used cheddar)
Salt and pepper to taste

Sautee onion in olive oil. Add spinach and sautee until just wilted. In a separate bowl mix together 6 eggs, yogurt and salt. Sprinkle 1/3 of cheese over crust, add layer of spinach/onion mixture. Sprinkle more cheese and add rest of spinach and onion. Sprinkle rest of cheese and then carefully pour over the egg mixture. Bake for 45 minutes in an oven preheated to 375˚. Allow to cool for at least 15 minutes.

On another note: The other posters have been doing an excellent job of keeping Farm to Philly readers up-to-date on all the fantastic coverage that the slow/local/eco food movement has been getting. It is a really exciting time to be a food activist (or a conscientious eater). For further inspiration and information, ”The Garden” will be showed at the Rotunda this coming Thursday (4/2 7pm).

Posted by Melanie on 03/31 at 03:21 PM


“Traceability”: Friend or Foe to Locavores?

Monday, March 30, 2009

There’s an article in today’s NY Times that leaves me with ambiguous feelings. The concept is “Traceability” and it’s meant to, as the name suggests, give consumers the ability to “trace” their food to it’s producer. What leaves me with a sour taste is that when I quickly perused the Find The Farmer site, I saw what I had feared was coming — namely, that Big Business would attempt to co-opt some of the finer points of the Buy Local movement.

The article states that the “Stone-Buhr flour company, a 100-year-old brand based in San Francisco, is giving the buy-local food movement its latest upgrade.” (My emphasis). The internet is a wonderful tool and I push it whole-heartedly on local farmers. But how is this “buy local”? The Find The Farmer website has all the trimmings of a gosh-golly earnest site. But on closer inspection, you see the bread trail of a much larger marketing effort. A look at the footer of the site reveals the copyright is held by JOG Distribution. Google that name and you see that they recently acquired “the venerable Stone-Buhr Flour brand...” (My emphasis). Notice that they say “brand”. Not “company”. Not “product”. “Brand”. That’s telling because that states that for these companies, it’s the name of the product and all that name conjures up in the consumers mind. That’s what they are paying for. But here’s the best part: JOG didn’t purchase it from the original owners of Stone-Buhr. Read the article and you’ll see that they purchased the ”brand” in 2002 from Unilever/Bestfoods!

This is not mom-and-pop farmers organizing to let consumers know where their food comes from. This is marketing departments realizing that there is a.) a Trend ("Buy Local") and b.) problems with the public’s perception of food safety. They aren’t really changing the way they do business, they’re simply changing the appearance by piggy-backing on a genuine movement. This is why marketing is important to small scale farmer’s and local business people. These are the tools that your fearsome competition welds.

Think of it like this: people are trusting. That’s a good thing. So when they see a NY Times article; when they see an earnest-looking website; when they see smiling pictures of commodity farmers and their families; when the sites state explicitly things like “Direct Seeding” to imply that their entire farming methods are more friendly (Direct Seeding seems innocuous enough, but it’s prominently name-dropped as a way to intimate that the farm is environmentally sound); when they see all of this, they think “Oh, in addition to the Farmer’s Market, I’ll shop online. Their prices may be better, maybe I’ll forgo the Market this week...” Or, perhaps, “I really want to connect with how my food is produced, I’ll just go to this website...” It begins to chip away at your business, whether it’s what you currently have or any potential business that’s down the line.

I need to stress that being able to trace your food is a good thing. Not only does it make producers and companies more accountable, but it also appears to pave the way for single-producer products. If there’s traceablilty, then that means you can’t mix several suppliers in a huge grain bin. And that’s good for people. What I don’t think is good is the sneaky way that businesses are hinting that they, too, are “local” (or have any of the ideals of the people who would Buy Local) when it’s still business as usual. They see the desire in the public’s mind and they act in the most cost-effective way. And that is by keeping the mechanism’s in place but using marketing and promotional tools to control the “message”.

People are ready for local, sustainable foods. If they weren’t, there wouldn’t be interest in co-opting the terms and the ideals, by large corporations. If there ever was a time to invest in keeping your message relevant and making the case for the real differences, now is the time. It really is a sound investment because the desire for information is there. 

Posted by Charlotte on 03/30 at 02:26 PM


100 Mile Challenge on Food TV

Thursday, March 26, 2009

The first episode of Food Network Canada’s 100 Mile Challenge starts April 5th. Based on ”The 100-Mile Diet” by Alisa Smith and J.B. Mackinnon and hosted by the authors, the show challenges the citizens of Mission, BC to live for 100 days eating only foods that originate within 100 miles of their home.

Episodes will be available online the day after they air in Canada (which is good for me because 1. we don’t have cable and 2. even if we did, I don’t think Food TV Canada airs in Philadelphia). I’m curious to see how the show plays out and if the network shows that eating locally is not only possible, but pleasurable. Because it is reality television, not reality, the six families that sign on for the challenge are forbidden from eating household staples like beer, coffee, tea, chocolate, olive oil, pepper and most spices. (Notice where my priorities are- no beer!) While that makes for great television, I hope that at some point it’s made clear that eating locally isn’t an all or nothing proposition. Supporting the local economy and local farmers is ideal, but it is not necessary to deprive your family of coffee or bananas simply because they don’t grow in a 100-mile radius of your home.

In addition to bits about the 100 Mile Challenge show, the show’s blog features recipes and tips as well as information about different vegetables.

Posted by Jackie on 03/26 at 05:20 PM


The Presidential Garden!

Friday, March 20, 2009

Although not local to us, still a pretty big deal worth celebrating here at Farm to Philly!
White-House-garden-plan
The Obamas are digging up the White House lawn for a big garden! Here’s a link to an article in the New York Times. More of the great backstory is here at the WHO farm site ("White" “House” “Organic"). As a teaser: “TheWhoFarmMobile is two school buses fused together with an organic edible garden on the roof. It was originally designed by Stefan Sagmeister and Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry’s, built by Tom Kennedy, and named Topsy Turvy.  TheWhoFarm acquired the bus, ripped off the roof and planted an organic edible garden....”

Maybe the next stop for the WhoFarmMobile should be Harrisburg!

Posted by Allison on 03/20 at 11:58 PM


Locavore iPhone application

Thursday, March 19, 2009

I have never really been all that interested in getting an iPhone...until now:

An application that helps people locate local, in season food has just been released for the iPhone. Simply titled Locavore, it determines your location when you open up the app (and depending on where I am in the house it says I’m in Pennsylvania or New Jersey; I live right on the border). It then gives you information in four categories[...]: in-season, markets, food, and states.

Just being able to find out what’s in season could be a really big help, particularly for people just getting started in eating the local foodshed and don’t know where the find that information.  The local markets locator is apparently a joint venture with LocalHarvest.

Posted by Nicole on 03/19 at 12:24 PM


All politics is local

Monday, March 16, 2009

Things have been pretty quiet around here lately about milk and growth hormones.  Just because the issue isn’t in the news very often doesn’t mean there isn’t activism happening.  Food and Water Watch has mounted a nationwide campaign to convince schools to source their milk from farms that do not inject their cows with rBGH.  The Philadelphia School District sources its milk from Wawa (you might remember that Wawa, who I believe gets their milk from local farms for the most part) went rBGH-free just a few days before Pennsylvania banned rBGH labeling) but do not currently have any rules regulating what the school district is able to serve students.

The Food and Water Watch folks are working to pass a School Reform Commission resolution making Philadelphia school officially rBGH-free.  It would make the Philly school district the biggest district in the country to make this step - and that sends a powerful message.  Susan Hildebrand, the local Green Corps organizer for this initiative, got in touch recently about some nationwide initiatives she’s working on that may impact Pennsylvania, like the Children Nutrition Act.  She said,

Senator Casey sits on the Agriculture Committee and we want him to champion the issue and make sure the Child Nutrition Act includes language giving schools to explicit right to preference rBGH-free milk.  On March 12th, as a part of a national “Know Your Milk” Day of Action, we generated over 110 calls into his office letting him know that his constituents care about this issue.  I’ve attached a photo of that event.

casey

Posted by Nicole on 03/16 at 05:25 PM


Alice Waters on 60 Minutes

waters

If you missed the 60 Minutes segment with Chez Panisse owner Alice Waters last night, you can catch it online.  One of my favorite parts:

The centerpiece of the event was a sprawling, urban victory garden - a real vegetable garden in front of City Hall. Waters called it “the ultimate symbolism.”

The garden, Waters’ idea, was planted to encourage people to grow their own.

There are all sorts of things going on in this article of interest to me.  I love the idea that there’s an edible garden at City Hall in San Francisco, and I wish they would do something like that in the gardens at City Hall (or in Love Park!) here in Philly.  Yes, of course the flowers are lovely...but how cool would it be to raise crops that could be given to local food banks?  Tending a vegetable garden doesn’t take any more time and effort to take care of then the flower gardens, really.

[Photo from the SF Gate]

Posted by Nicole on 03/16 at 12:13 PM


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Support a local farmer, crave the freshest produce, worry about what's in or on your food - whatever your reason for eating locally grown and produced food in the Philadelphia area, Farm to Philly is probably writing about it. We're focused on where to find it, how to grow it, and what to do with it!


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