
This year our family joined a local CSA farm about 15 minutes from our home.
One that is child friendly and allows families to bring their children to help plant, care for and eventually harvest the food that they will bring home to their kitchens.!!!!!!
I REALLY am looking forward to this experience.
To showing Lily "Where" her food comes from and getting her excited about PICKING IT ! Right out of the ground.
How much fresher can it get?
For those of you who arent familiar with the concept,, CSA, short for "Community Sponsored Agriculture" is somewhat like a farminig Co - op. You pay a yearly fee for a "share" of the farms crop. You donate a certain amount of hours to help plant and care for the crop and then eventually when its ready to be picked every week during harvesting season you get to go with your kiddos and LITERALLY pick your fruits and veggies for the week !
You can purchase a full share or a half a share. We plan on purchasing a full share and splitting it with another family from our playgroup. We are both excited about teaching our children from a very young age the maening of "local" food and truly appreciating the miracle and joy behind eating "Fresh and ogranic" food.
I look forward to sharing photos of this years CSA crop experience with you. Below is an email I received this month from LocalHarvest.com I enjoyed reading it and most of all I enjoyed the simplicity of it.....Here are some highlights,,, to read the newsletter click here
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Many times each month, people ask us exactly how they can begin to eat locally. The questioner invariably understands the 'whys' of the proposition, but is daunted by the 'how.' So this month we offer a short primer on eating local food, with emphasis on the notion of transition. Let's start there. The first thing to remember is that eating locally is a continuum. If you allow yourself to get drawn into an all-or-nothing mindset, the proposition will seem impossible. You will get derailed by the list of the imported foods you think you can't live without. Bananas. Coffee. Chocolate-covered yum-yums.
Don't start with those things. Don't even put them on the table the first year. Eating locally is about doing what you can. It is about making the most of your region's agricultural strengths. It is about beginning to pay attention. Where should you start? Focus on whole foods first. Highly processed foods are made with many ingredients that are shipped from afar, processed, and shipped again. It is simpler, not to mention healthier, to put your efforts into simpler foods.
For people there, ( California ) just committing to shop at the farmers market or to join a CSA would bring local foods into their diets much of the year. Another regional difference concerns food preservation: neither my colleagues in California nor my friends in the South spend much time canning and freezing. Here in Minnesota, we do, because that is the way to enjoy local produce in the long winter. Getting to know what grows well in your state - and when - is a valuable part of your education as a locavore.
Finally, it pays to remember that for most human beings, change is difficult. Food is so fundamental to our sense of well-being that changes in that arena may be met with a lot of resistance. If that is the case in your house, go slowly and look for small windows of opportunity. For example, enjoy lots of local strawberries when they are in their glory. If you can, go out to the farm and have fun picking some of your own. Really pay attention to how good - and how different - they are. Acclimate your taste buds and over time your family may decide that the local ones are worth waiting for. You may even decide to throw a few bags of berries into the freezer for later. And you're on your way...
In sum: Start with whole foods. Don't make it too hard. Study your region's agricultural strengths, and play up to them. Look for ways to be creative with your budget. Be gentle with your self and your family as you try out new habits. Do these things, and you will set yourself up for a highly satisfying adventure in local eating, and a deeper connection to your food.
Erin Barnett
Director, LocalHarvest

