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Added on: Feb 23, 2008 in Category: From the Garden

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Cancer & Health, How To Make Restaurant Quality Sauces. The Sauces You Love In Your Favorite Restaurants Can Now Be Made At Home In As Little As 20 Minutes.

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 Other News in the From the Garden category
1. The Real Science of Organic Farming
  Traditional Farming’s reliance on
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2. July 2007 Newsletter
   
 
Dear Kitchen Gardener,

Walking through the well-known farmers' market in Uzès,
France, as I recently had a chance to do, is a religious experience for
food lovers.  The

olive stands alone are worth the trip.  Add to that heaping
tables of sun-drenched produce, artisan breads and cheeses, a
mind-boggling choice of honeys, meats and seafood fished from the nearby
Mediterranean Sea and you have all the
makings of a memorable meal, if not several.
 
In fact, the quality and
variety of the produce is so dazzling that you might be tempted to ask
yourself why any area resident would bother growing some of his or her
own.  Yet, despite the fresh bounty on offer twice a week at the Uzès
market, the kitchen garden, or "potager" as the French call it,
seemed much alive and well where I was staying. 
 
I had a chance to meet and
speak with a few gardeners while I was there.  If they grow some of
their own food, it's for the same reasons that you and I do: taste,
variety, freshness, economics, concerns about the environment, and, most
importantly, because they enjoy the process.   My trip
reinforced what I already knew: kitchen gardening is a universal
language with many different dialects.  What's different is that
some of us have a better garden view out our back door than others!
 


 
I learned a lot while I was
there.  Rather than try to share it all in one gush, I'll let the
stories, pictures, and recipes trickle out over the course of the next
several months.  In fact, if there's sufficient interest, we may at
some stage even consider organizing a KGI trip for those of you
interested in seeing and tasting the pleasures of Provence firsthand. 
 
I'll look forward to updating
next month in the week leading up to

Kitchen Garden Day.  I hope you'll find a way of recognizing
the day in some small way.  We've got a lot to celebrate and share
with others. 
 
Warm regards,
 

 
PS: Interested in starting a
local kitchen garden group in your area? 
Check out
our new info page on gPods
Category:   From the Garden


3. Food fight (of the red and juicy sort)
  You won't catch kitchen gardeners doing this with their hard-won tomatoes! The footage comes from "La Tomatina", an annual tomato-throwing festival in the town of Bunoi, Spain where residents and visitors turn five truckloads of tomatoes into puree in the span of one juicy hour.

For more info on the festival,see http://www.latomatina.es/
Category:   From the Garden


4. September 2007 Newsletter
  To read the full newsletter, please see: http://www.kitchengardeners.org/newsletterseptember07.html



 
 
Dear Kitchen Gardener,

I hope you're either enjoying or planning bumper harvests.  We
harvested a great crop of participation and awareness raising at this
year's Kitchen Garden Day celebration and have put together

a short video to share some of what happened that day.
 
While it'd be nice to bask in
the warm glow of those harvests, October is too busy a gardening month
to kick back.  In Maine, there's

pesto and
sauerkraut to be made, squash to be cured, apples to be picked, and
tomatoes to be canned or frozen.  October also offers some of the
crispest, best-tasting salads of the year just ready to be
cut, rinsed, and
spun.  Garlic traditionally goes in the ground on or around
Columbus Day, but that day seems to be slipping back a week or two in
our brave new, globally-warmed world. 
 
October's also a month for
adding new life to tired beds through the addition of compost.  For
those of you who don't have a heaping pile of chocolate cake-like
compost to dig into, autumn's a great time, the best time in fact, to
start a new pile using all those vines and stems that have stopped
delivering, fallen leaves, and the lush, nitrogen-rich grass clippings
that suburban lawns so effortlessly produce in the fall. 
 
The fall is also the best
time for planning and starting new garden projects.  Last week, I
paid a visit to the French School of Maine to help them identify a site
for a new "potager".  Monsieur le Directeur and a
group of professeurs directed me to a rolling,
field available for the school's use just a three minute's walk from the
school.  I felt a bit envious glancing over the grassy expanse,
doing quick math in my head at all the food that such a large plot could
generate.  While the field was gorgeous and had very tall weeds
(usually a reliable sign of soil fertility), I urged them to scope out a
spot closer to the school.  What holds for home gardens holds for
school gardens too: the closer to the kitchen, the better. 
 
We ultimately chose to site
the new garden in a high profile and high traffic spot right in front of
the school.  Not only is it the best spot in terms of sunlight and
promixity, but it sends a strong message that health and good food are
high on the school's agenda.  Once they've got their potager
dug and their systems in place, they can consider turning the larger
piece of land into a true farm capable of supplying their cafeteria. 
 
This experience and some
others I've been a part of recently have got me thinking about where our
schools' priorities are now and perhaps ought to be.  A few years
back, Maine boasted being the first state to prepare its children for
the "information age" by
providing every 7th
and 8th grade student and teacher with a laptop computer. 
Several years into the program, it's amazing to see how comfortable and
skilled Maine's young people have become with this important tool. 
 
This, of course, got me
pondering new "firsts" for Maine and other forward-looking states or
regions, in the US or abroad.  Which state or region will be the
first to prepare its students for the coming "ecology age" by mandating
that every primary or intermediate school in its area have an organic
kitchen garden and age-appropriate garden curriculum?  Surely,
there is no better way to teach health and healthy eating than to engage
young people in the process of heathy food production. 
 
As with the laptop initative,
such an idea would surely encounter resistance, but what revolutionary
idea hasn't?
 
Wishing you a delicious
October,
 

 
 
PS: It's still not too late
to win your chance at over $1000 in prizes through our

Grow-Off Show-Off Contest, but the clock is ticking.  As an
added bonus, the first 50 entries automatically win a free subscription
to Mother Earth News.  Deadline for entries is November 1st. 
Note sure what you can enter, then see

here.
Category:   From the Garden


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Representatives for food service workers and dozens of restaurants at San Francisco International Airport are still in negotiations Friday in an effort to avert a two-day strike at the airport, a spokesman for the union said.
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