Showing posts with label Spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2012

Spring Apple Affair


Isn't apple blossom time just so beautiful?  

Thinking ahead to the fruit these blossoms will create with the help of some pollinator friends & envisioning a time when diverse, heritage apple trees thrive--the rare Milwaukee varietal included--its been exciting to plant & distribute some of our region's most endangered apple tree varietals this Spring.  
Spring is the time for grafting and planting and tending heritage fruit trees.
To celebrate the beauty of springtime and to sell some heritage apples for backyard, farmstead, professional orchard growing, Slow Food WiSE is hosting a special event tomorrow.  
Please join us for the first ever Spring Apple Affair on Saturday, May 12th from 12-4pm at the Stahl-Conrad Homestead in Hales Corners, WI.   

Bring your friends and family (including mom--it is the day before Mother's Day after all.)  Bring a picnic and your favorite apple recipe to exchange.  Bring your work gloves if you want to help clean up our tiny heritage orchard. Leave with a heritage fruit tree, local honey, a Mother's Day present, more knowledge, and new friends. 


Spring Apple Affair

  • Heritage Apple Tree Sales
  • Holistic Apple Tree Care Education  (with organic grower Joe Fahey of Peck & Bushel
  • Local Product Sales, including Viola's Honey & Hack Farm's eggs & vegetable
  • Spring Clean-up of our Heritage Orchard
    Apple Recipe Exchange (bring your favorite!)  
  • Apple Preserves Tastings
  • Special Mother's Day & Kid Friendly Activities
  • And B.Y.O.P.-Bring Your Own Picnic!
  
For more info, to RSVP, or to volunteer, contact Jennifer - Jcasey@slowfoodwise.org.

To read more about our heritage trees and our grower, and to learn more about Slow Food WiSE, read the latest Slow Times.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Spring=Garden=Good


Spring is such a beautiful time for good food.  The wild—ramps, wild onions, fiddelheads, morels, dandelions, violet blossoms.  The cultivated—radishes, pea shoots, asparagus, chives, rhubarb, garlic scapes, tender greens, scallions.  That particular green of sunlight on leaves and the scent of fruit blossoms shake us out of hibernation.  It’s a wonder that we all don’t succumb to spring fever and skip out of work each fine day to forage and tend and till.

Spring is a time when we can set ourselves up to eat well all year-round by grafting fruit trees, planting our gardens, signing up for a CSA, or using that tax refund for a food dehydrator or pressure canner.  It’s gardening that’s on my mind this spring the most.  With a freshly tilled new garden at home and an increasingly popular community garden program at work, I’ve been reflecting on the powerful positive impacts of gardens. Which is why, of course, they’re spreading like wildfires in Milwaukee and across the country—supported by community activists and public health officials alike.

People garden for many reasons—the pleasure of being outside, the remarkable taste of fresh food, the connections made with other gardeners, the security offered by a plot of food, the money saved by growing your own groceries, and so on.  Intuitively, people feel that gardening is good.  And there’s been some good scientific research into the benefits of community gardens to support those intuitions.  A few of the benefits I like to remind people of if there’s even a whisper that they think its all just feel good fluff:
  • Gardening is a promising practice for diabetes prevention and control through healthy activity and food.
  • Children & adults who garden eat more fruits and vegetables.
  • A garden program promotes healthy food security.
  • Gardening reduces stress and calms the nerves.
  • Gardening helps youth with self-esteem.
  • Gardens strengthen communities.
  • Horticultural Therapy “can help with mental health issues, such as post traumatic stress disorder, depression; and anxiety and may help ex-convicts with rehabilitation
  •  Gardening can reduce food miles & support local economies & cultures

Gardening can also promote food biodiversity.  The Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity estimates that “300,000 vegetable varieties have become extinct over the last century.”
By growing heirloom and endangered foods in our gardens we can help save these foods from extinction.  The vegetables that have been boarded onto Slow Food USA’s Ark of Taste are a good place to start if you’d like to grow endangered veggies—they are rare and delicious and storied.  Some Ark of Taste vegetables (seeds may be sourced through Seed Savers Exchange for most of these) that may be well suited for growing in Wisconsin include:
  • Amish Deer Tongue lettuce
  • Grandpa Admire's lettuce
  • Speckled lettuce
  • Tennis Ball lettuce (black seeded)
  • Early Blood Turnip-rooted beet
  • Beaver Dam pepper
  • Bull Nose Large Bell pepper
  • Fish pepper
  • Hinkelhatz Hot pepper
  • Jimmy Nardello's Sweet Italian Frying pepper
  • Sheepnose pimiento
  • Amish Paste Tomato
  • German Pink Tomato
  • Sheboygan Tomato
  • Red Fig Tomato
  • Aunt Molly’s Husk Tomato (ground Cherry)
  • Valencia Tomato
  • Lina Cisco’s Bird Egg Bean
  • True Red Cranberry bean
  • Hidatsa Shield Figure bean
  • Yellow Indian Woman Bean
  • Hutterite Soup bean
  • Mayflower Bean
  • Turkey’ Hard Red Winter Wheat
  • Roy’s Calais flint corn

If you want to learn more about growing food and/or want to be a part of an organized initiative to install home and community gardens in Milwaukee, consider being a part of the 4th Annual Great Milwaukee Victory Garden Blitz. Their motto at VGI: “Move Grass. Grow Food.”  My thoughts exactly…

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Rediscover Real Food



Local eating offers many choices for sustainable nutrition. The following is from an article I contributed to Milwaukee's Live Local campaign newsletter, Vol 1...

As we unfurl from our wintry hibernation, our senses take in the sights and sounds of spring: birds singing, ice melting, trees budding, sap flowing... life is asserting itself. The awakening season provides us inspiration to reflect on the source of our food. Do we enjoy regional cuisine, grown by people we know, or are we eating anonymous, industrialized food?

There are so many reasons to eat local: smaller carbon footprint, support of the local economy, and strong community to name a few. But also important is the unavoidably intimate truth that we become what we eat. Thus our relationship with food and its origins deserves attention.

Spring is a time of new beginnings. Fiddleheads, wild ramps, violets, asparagus, spring greens, morels all make their emergence in the hills and waysides. Streams run high with trout, wild turkey season opens... and for those of us who hunt or gather for our food in supermarkets, we can certainly enjoy some local flavors while we wait for the season to unfold and plan our local eating for the year ahead. As demand grows, local markets stock more and more Wisconsin products, such as cheeses and preserves, so they are available year round. The local food movement is growing by leaps and bounds in Milwaukee and beyond.

Bottom Line:
Learning about local eating in your area can benefit your health and your community. For more information, visit the websites EatLocalMilwaukee and
LiveLocalMilwaukee. For national information, try the 100-mile Diet, Food Routes, the Sustainable Table, Slow Food USA, or Local Harvest.