Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Food for Thought: Reducing Food Waste

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Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.
George Mertz of Patchwork Gardens CSA, delivering my Thanksgiving dinner yesterday, including a turkey grown by the Filbrun family of Maker's Meadow

Today's post is a tangent from my typical 'how to make the most of the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm share produce' recipe posts, but it is equally important to me: reducing food waste.


Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.



Recently I attended the Montgomery County Food Summit [in Ohio. I grew up in Montgomery County, Maryland and went to school in Montgomery County, Virginia. There are lots of Montgomery Counties. Montgomery sure got around]. This was my 3rd year attending. The theme Hunger and the Local Food System didn't immediately make me say 'Wow! I don't want to miss this!' but I figured I'd learn something. It's always good to learn new things.


Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.
Source


I was delighted by Barb Asberry's talk on The Perspective of Value: Food Waste in the Desert. The last time I'd listened to someone talk about municipal solid waste--part of a series of composting classes--I was NOT taking notes as fast as I could. Barbara hooked me with this:

Let's feed people. Not landfills.


Boy that sounds so simple. It's too easy to forget, when you set out your cans on trash pickup day, that your trash doesn't magically disappear. It has to go somewhere, and that usually means a landfill. My county is pretty average in the U.S., and 31% of the overall food supply is wasted. That's 133 billion pounds that could have gone to feed someone or some thing.

In our county waste stream, a bit more than one third of the solid waste is made up of pure trash, a bit more than that are things that can be recycled, and a bit less are things that can be composted. Most of the compostable material is food--it makes up 15% of the overall disposed municipal solid waste. [How do they determine this? Analyzing truckloads of trash. Fun!] Other compostable items include tissues/paper napkins, yard waste, and wood. As the pounds of food waste increase so do the pounds of trash and compostable food containers.

Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.
Only one of these is really too far gone to eat--the smoothie that languished forgotten in the fridge.

In my kids' lifetime, the amount of food waste in Montgomery County has more than doubled, from 6.25% in 1996 to 15% in 2014. That's crazy! It's not like people aren't going hungry here, either. We're all paying for this waste--paying by needing to buy more food, paying more people to pick up the waste, paying companies to dispose of it using more fuel and more vehicles, paying environmentally by landfills reaching capacity at a faster rate. What can you do, in addition to the obvious (menu plan, buy what you need, compost at home)?

Start at home. Do the things in front of you.


This quote, from Mother Teresa via Ambassador Tony Hall who delivered the keynote, resonated with me. One person can make a huge difference.  While composting is a good idea--what about before you get to that point? Before the arugula has yellowed, before the cilantro becomes slimy? If you have usable food, feed a living thing with it.


Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.
Source

You are probably donating to food drives this time of year. Know this--for every 24 bags of food assistance handed out in food pantries, soup kitchens, churches, shelters, etc across the United States, the federal government provides 23 of those bags [Michelle Riley, The Foodbank]. Vote to keep hungry people fed. Keep donating food. Don't forget to donate in January, April, July! Hungry people need food year round, not just during the holidays. 







I'll close with the following image. These cards were handcrafted by a Susan J of Chicago, IL. She sent them on to From Our Hearts, who sent them forward to where my spouse is deployed. To all the paper crafters who donate blank handmade cards to the troops--thank you.  It means a lot and I appreciate your talents. Happy Thanksgiving!


Food for Thought:  Reducing Food Waste. Let's reduce the amount of food that goes into landfills by feeding hungry people the usable food, feeding animals the vegetative scraps, and composting the organic matter.



Monday, May 18, 2015

Time Out for some Weeding


http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

I've been doing a lot of weeding lately, and sitting and pulling out unwanted growth gives me time to think. Weeding one section of the brick patio gives me a sense of accomplishment, but when I turn around and gaze at the rest . . . . sigh.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

I'm truly grateful that so much is bursting to life in the yard. I'm tickled that I appear to have volunteer cilantro and dill, and about a dozen volunteer pumpkin-ish squash plants. [Those squash starts are like moles popping up all over, but I'm not playing Whack A Mole unless they truly are in in a terrible spot. Like the section of brick patio I just weeded a few days before.] I'm creeped out as I drive past sterile brown fields that recently sprouted orderly rows of corn. Where is the green chaos of my garden?

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

Having a blog is a lot like having a garden in perpetual Spring. There is always some weeding to be done. Updating the Visual Recipe Index by Ingredient, adding notes in earlier posts directing readers to other recipes using similar farm share ingredients, and updating older posts with new search descriptions are all ways I weed the blog.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

Spending time weeding means I'm not editing photos and writing up new posts, nor going around on social media sharing my newest recipes.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

I'm taking a week off of posting new content to weed--both the garden and the blog. I can't promise I'll have everything ship shape, but it will be incrementally more user-friendly when I return, in time for our 10th CSA season to begin.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

I'll be back with Green Garlic Hummus, a fun way to use both green garbanzo beans and fresh green garlic--in a week. In the meantime, if you see my on FB--please tell me to go weed!

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2015/05/time-out-for-some-weeding.html

Friday, September 19, 2014

Patty Pan Squash Crumble (Reflections on Two Years of Blogging)

Patty pan squash, simmered with spices, tucked between a sweet crumble dough then baked. Summer squash for a Fall dessert. Revisited after 2 years of blogging.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2014/09/patty-pan-squash-crumble-reflections-on.html

Since I've been doing this blogging thing for about two years now, I've decided to revisit a recipe post from my first weeks of blogging. A post that has bothered me. Oh, the recipe is a sound one--though I did tweak it a bit--it's the rest of the elements of blogging that bothered me. I'll list them out for you.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2014/09/patty-pan-squash-crumble-reflections-on.html

  • The title. Summer Squash = Fall Dessert? Sure, that's a valid description of the post, but it's not really going to come up on many search engines. I may be ridiculously boring and obvious in my recipe titles these days (see my Visual Pizza Recipe Index for proof) but at least you know what you're getting with a Fig Jam, Goat Cheese, and Fresh Pear Pizza, don't you think?
  • The presentation. When I made this before, I observed that it probably would be good with ice cream but I didn't go get some and try it. After my IceCreamWeek experience, it doesn't make sense not to eat ice cream when you can. I'll admit this time I didn't go out and get some ice cream--I sent my son. We're all glad I did.
  • The photo. This one shouldn't be a surprise, but I will point out that at least the original photo was taken in natural light and is in focus, and also not extremely close up. You can see it here.  Not a horrid photo, right? But it doesn't tell a story. I'm continually working to improve my photos by adding elements that tell a story, like I learned in my 30 Days to Better Food Photography course.
The story of this recipe remake can be told through these three photos. After setting up the shot I asked the kids for help--with the promise of snacking once I was finished. I'd say they liked it.

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2014/09/patty-pan-squash-crumble-reflections-on.html

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2014/09/patty-pan-squash-crumble-reflections-on.html

http://www.farmfreshfeasts.com/2014/09/patty-pan-squash-crumble-reflections-on.html

Happy 2 year anniversary to Farm Fresh Feasts.  Thanks for reading.