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I'm an experienced, energetic and creative (if I do say so) writer/editor focused on inspiring people to eat locally, cook simply and enjoy healthy l...
 
 
 
 

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The Importance of Local Food

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I recently spent two days, two glorious days, with Julie Kramer, the publisher of Edible Ohio Valley magazine, visiting Snowville Creamery in Southeastern Ohio. The creamery itself is a metal-clad building that occupies a piece of The Brick, the dairy farm whose milk is bottled there. It's a Rube Goldbergian setup of pipes and vats that safely and efficiently turn milk into two-percent, skim and the most wonderful whipping cream you'll ever come across; it's what I use to make butter from scratch. (Want to make homemade butter? It's fun and super easy.) Depending on the day, the milk goes from cow to creamery to my grocery shelf in Cincinnati within 24 hours. Talk about farm-to-table.

And it matters. This is important stuff, people. We're a fast-food nation, and we need to slow down!

We're very quickly losing farmland to development, about one acre per day in the U.S. Increasingly, small dairy farms are throwing in the towel because they no longer get a decent price from huge food conglomerates and milk production is concentrated among large operations.

At The Brick, the cows meander the hillsides munching grass. Grass. The cows eat grass. They're outside. They come into the milking parlor twice a day, and what they give goes straight from the animal to the creamery. Snowville milk tastes like milk, not water and additives. It's gently pasteurized to maintain flavor and nutrients, and it's not homogenized, so the cream rises to the top. It changes with the season. Right now, it's grassy-tasting; in summer, it'll be a bit sweeter from the clover in the pasture. The butter I made last weekend was an almost shocking shade of bright yellow; I'm told the cows have been eating the dandelions in the field all spring.

Used to be, there were small family-owned farms all over rural America, and small creameries and butchers and independent deliverymen processing and bringing all this good stuff to customers within a 100-mile radius or so. Even city folk would get food that was produced in the same county or region. Local was the norm.

These days, agriculture and food production happens on a huge scale, in concentrated parts of the country, and gets shipped to us. Even in late spring, those tomatoes you're buying in the grocery are coming thousands of miles from California or Mexico. Small dairy farmers don't use county co-ops; their cows' milk goes to some centralized processing plant where it's mixed up with milk from all over the place, boiled to make it last longer (which cooks off the bacteria, and also the flavor, the enzymes and the nutrients) and shipped hundreds of miles.

The families who persevere—who sink their savings and retirement into caring for their animals, who plant and pick produce, who handle delivery themselves and work 8-day weeks and never get vacation—these people deserve our thanks and our support. They're on the crazy side of crazy, and they're doing important work.

Which is why we need to support them. Purchase eggs and beef and poultry from the local farmers selling at your neighborhood market. Stop at the roadside stand to get tomatoes. Shop farmers' markets. In some cases, you'll pay no more than you would at the grocery; in some cases, you'll pay a little more; in some cases, a lot more. Think about what you're getting, and what went into it. Our national food system is broken, and the people who run it aren't at all motivated to change anything. It's up to us to vote with our dollars. We have to take responsibility for making food healthier. Our lives depend on it.

So, what do you think? Do you prefer to buy local or do you seek other options? Does price matter to you? You're invited to share your thoughts in the Comments -- I'd like to create a conversation!

 

Bryn Mooth, writer & editor

writes4food.com

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midnightbliss 5 pts

buying local produce also means fresher and tastier produce. unlike fruits from other places that needs to be picked before they are fully ripened.

Bryn Mooth 5 pts

Thanks, Rachel! Price and convenience are certainly important, especially for busy parents -- but many neighborhood markets have late afternoon/evening hours that suit folks coming home from work. And you're right about pricing: My research found studies conducted on both coasts that indicated farmers' market prices on most (not all) items are comparable to grocery prices. Happy shopping!

Bryn Mooth, writer & editor

writes4food.com ( http://www.writes4food.com )

Bryn Mooth 5 pts

Yes! LocalHarvest.org is a great resource for local markets. These days, farmers' markets are popping up all over, and not just on weekends: in Cincinnati, my hometown, you can visit a neighborhood market every day of the week except Monday.

Bryn Mooth, writer & editor

writes4food.com ( http://www.writes4food.com )

Rachel@SimpleRewards 5 pts

I agree with you wholeheartedly. Living in an area where there is a rich agricultural base (and many of my friends have been raised on farms and are now farming themselves), I've realized how silly it seems to go to the store to buy food from far away when I have such a bounty right here and know where it comes from and who I'm supporting. Price does matter to me, but I'm willing to pay a little more if necessary. I've found at farmer's markets though, that with smart shopping, I actually pay less than at the local store.

Otsdawa Junction Farm 5 pts

for finding local farmer's markets and/or farm stands is

http://www.localharvest.org/

Support a farmer - Eat your vegetables!

Farmer Julie
www.OtsdawaJunctionFarm.com ( http://www.OtsdawaJunctionFarm.com )

seasonalfoodchef 5 pts

I definitely prefer to buy locally available food. I grew up on a farm and am firmly committed to supporting the local Farmer's Markets. The cost is sometimes slightly higher, but totally worth the benefits gained in taste, nutrition and health!

maxime68 5 pts

with even adults nowadays not knowing anymore where our most common food comes from it's more important than ever to shop local.
and while it may sometimes be more expensive, it is fresher (shorter time of transportation) and often keeps longer than what you get at supermarkets/discounters.
Farmers in my region have created another means to find and keep new customers - they offer baskets filled with vegetables, for the same price all year long. Commuters can pick them up at their local train station.

Virginia DeBolt 5 pts

I've been doing a lot of reading lately about food production, factory farming, processed food, animal production, the environment, the earth, and health. It's all convinced me that the one thing that would have the most impact on each individual life and on society in general is to eat local food.

Virginia DeBolt, BlogHer Section Editor for Tech
virginia.debolt@blogher.com

Virginia blogs at Web Teacher ( http://www.webteacher.ws/ ) and First 50 Words ( http://first50.wordpress.com ).