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Poppy Corners Farm

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Walnut Creek, California
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"Greenwashing" at Farmers Markets

January 12, 2018 Elizabeth Boegel
Public Market, Seattle - pretty sure these guys are legit and highly regulated

Public Market, Seattle - pretty sure these guys are legit and highly regulated

Piggybacking on my post about buying real honey a couple of days ago, here's another scam of which we need to be aware. Yesterday I received my monthly copy of Mother Earth News magazine. In the 'news' section, there was a brief article titled "How to Ask the Right Questions at a Farmers Market." This is in response to the problem of greenwashing, which is unfortunately becoming more and more prevalent. I first heard about this only about six months ago, but it seems that it's now a common problem. And since I frequently encourage you to buy locally from Farmers Markets, I think it's important that you know there is a dark side.

Greenwashing: "Disinformation disseminated by an organization so as to present an environmentally responsible public image."

We are becoming smarter and more selective consumers, and this means that producers have to come up with new ways to get us to buy their products. It's now quite common at the local Farmers Market to 1) have vendors who are not farmers at all and have no affiliation with the farm, 2) have produce that is grown by large commercial and conventional farms re-sold under the guise of small and local, and 3) have produce with misleading labels. 

It really stinks that we have to navigate the markets, once a safe space, with a more discriminating mind, but guess what? That's how much power your food dollar has. Never think that your everyday buying habits are not making change, because they are, so much so that the big companies have to figure out ever sneakier ways to trick you. 

My own personal Farmers Market, right outside the back door

My own personal Farmers Market, right outside the back door

We'll talk about other options besides the Market too, but first, the Cornucopia Institute, a non-profit out of Wisconsin ("promoting economic justice for family scale farming"), has created a handy printable guide for you to take to the Market with you. It has a list of questions for you to ask the vendor, which will help you determine whether the food is really local, if it's in season, if it's organic. As I've often said here, if you talk to the farmer, you'll learn all you need to know, and this guide will help you to do that. Real farmers are so happy to answer your questions, so happy to talk about the work they are doing, because they are proud of it and proud of their product.

By the way, local small farmers often can't afford the official organic certification. Don't let that stop you from buying from them. Many of them limit the use of chemicals because it's simply a best practice; if you talk with them, they'll be happy to tell you about it. 

Remember the seasons, too. If it's December and your local market has tomatoes, you should be suspicious. However if it's May and your local market has tomatoes, that farmer just might have a heated greenhouse and a very clever touch. You'll know if you talk to them. If you don't know what's in season right now (and how could you help but be confused when you can buy most produce any time of year in any big store?), there are lots of good guides for figuring that out. For instance, you could go to The Seasonable Food Guide and type in your state to find out what's in season during each month. It says that right now, in California, in early January, there are nearly 70 items I can buy that are in season. (Granted, when I type in Minnesota, there are only 14 choices. But still! 14! Pretty amazing in that climate. Some are stored items like sweet potatoes.)

Now I have a confession to make. I actually don't love shopping at Farmers Markets. Most of it has to do with a sort of impulse I feel about wanting to buy something from everyone. I get all weirded out by the vendors watching me look at their produce and then not buying something.I've been to countless markets and I nearly always feel it, especially in the dead of January when the offerings are small (as they should be!) and farmers are probably hurting. Going in there and asking questions of them makes me even more uncomfortable. It feels like asking them to prove themselves. But here's something I know is absolutely true: If I were selling my produce at the market and someone came up and started asking me questions, I'D BE DELIGHTED. I'd be so thrilled to talk about my farm and how I do things. Goodness why do you think I write this blog? Basically to brag about what we grow here! So if a vendor is reluctant to talk to you, well then, you're right to be suspicious.

However! If all of this just makes your skin crawl and you just can't do it, there is another option; you could connect directly with the farms in your area. CSA boxes are a great way to get the produce directly from the farm, delivered right to your door (sometimes there is a pick-up location). You simply sign up with the farm to receive a box of whatever they have growing every week, every two weeks, or every month. Sometimes they ask you to purchase a few months right up front - this is good for them because it gives them the resources they need to buy seed and supplies. It gives them a guaranteed income. And you get a box of great stuff on the regular. 

I'll tell you what, it'll force you to cook what's in season, with new produce that you may never have cooked before. Many of the farms include recipes in their boxes so that you have some ideas to start with. It's a fun adventure! And since these CSA farms offer visits and tours, you'll be able to see firsthand the operation and have the confidence in knowing you're buying the good stuff. You can often even volunteer work time to lower the price of your subscription, which gives you the added benefit of learning what it takes to put food on your plate. 

The amount of different things you can buy from subscription is huge - eggs, wine, dairy - I even bought my parents a fish subscription one year from a local Sacramento River Fish Farm. I think they'd tell you how fun it was to get different kinds of fish every month!  As I've written about here before, we even had a meat subscription for a time from a local grassfed operation. It was great. 

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I just ordered more wheat from a local place near us in the Capay Valley, Full Belly Farm. They aren't really set up for that kind of thing, but I've developed a relationship with them over time and they are happy to send me wheat every six months or so. It just took one phone call that first time to set that up, and they've been so accommodating. We've also been there several times, to eat a fabulous Mother's Day dinner, to pick up organic straw, and just to visit the farm. They have an open door policy. That's the kind of transparency you want! Many, many family farms are doing CSA boxes now, and one great place to figure out who is in your area is Local Harvest. Just put in your zip code and find out what farms are near you!

I'm sorry that we all have to be so discriminating when it comes to our food, and not just at big supermarkets, but also at the small Farmers Market. But it's just one more step in making sure we are eating the very best produce available, and sending a message with our purchases, too.

Tags learning, local, farm to table, organic
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Farm to Table Lunch at Poppy Corners

September 10, 2017 Elizabeth Boegel
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Tom is an administrator at City College of San Francisco, which has a wonderful Culinary Arts and Hospitality Department. Tom is friends with the chair of that department, Tannis, and they often talk about Poppy Corners, and Tom often brings in produce, eggs. or honey for Tannis to taste. Tannis had always wanted to connect her department with our 'farm,' in some way. The department has a fundraising auction every year, and this spring Tannis asked Tom if we would host a farm lunch here, cooked by the department staff. Our answer was an enthusiastic yes! And so we were an item at the auction, and a nice young lady won lunch for six, and that lunch finally took place today. 

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It wasn't as hot as it was last weekend, but it was still around 100 degrees on our back patio, so these six friends from San Francisco got the real inland summer experience! They were cheerful about it and very interested in the farm and everything we're doing here, and the actual lunch was really spectacular. Two of the department staff, Barbara and Mark, came out to prepare and cook it, and they were terrific. They first visited on Friday to reconnaissance, which was interesting in itself - fun to watch them walk around and talk about what they could use and how they could make it all work. The first thing Barbara wanted to see was our kitchen, and thankfully she didn't blanch at how tiny it is. Then we walked around the garden and picked out the reddest, ripest tomatoes for the gazpacho, some cucumbers, some garlic, some basil, a bunch of eggs, and honey. Today, they arrived back at the house with various boxes and bins and knives and aprons and they got to work immediately. 

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As we had already done our own prep work (tidying the garden, cleaning the house, making the centerpiece, minor really), we Boegels tried to stay out of the chefs' way and enjoyed listening in to the chatter: "Your peach pulp is on the second shelf of the fridge." "Will you poach your sausages before grilling them?" "Are those Arbequina olives you preserved?" "I want to present the tortilla on a wooden board," Thrilling, really, to hear how professionals manage all this. At one point I turned to Tom and said, "They sound so calm." Before a dinner party, I usually sound anything but calm.

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Our guests arrived, and showed interest in the farm and its workings right away. Barbara served the peach bellinis, made sure everyone had melon and prosciutto bites, and off we went on a tour of the property. Our guests had lots of questions, some had grown their own veg in containers on balconies, some were home brewers, some were frightened of bees, some were adoring of chickens, all were interested in everything we were doing here and that made it a fun tour. 

Then it was time for lunch! Tom and I were included in the meal, which I didn't expect, but was thrilled about; both Kate and Adam got their fare share in the kitchen so they weren't left out (Adam ate everything, Kate ate the gazpacho). The food was amazing, simple cooking (by expert hands), highlighting the ingredients of summer and the farm. The men especially liked Tom's beer and were very interested in his process and his hop bines. Honeybees visited the flowers in the centerpiece as we ate, a hen crowed that she laid an egg, fritillary butterflies flitted around nearby, and a hawk called from the sky. Our six guests, most in their early 30's, were all incredibly well-traveled and had lots of fun stories to share and were fascinating to listen to.

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This is exactly what we envisioned when we started this farm project so many years ago: People getting together on a hot summer day around a big home-crafted table, all the bounty of the farm on the table in front of us, and nature singing all around us. Yes, yes, yes. 

We had a marvelous time and the food was stupendous. And I didn't even have to clean the kitchen afterward; Mark and Barbara took care of all of that. What a fabulous day!

 

Tags vegetable garden, farm to table, cooking
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