Thursday, October 25, 2012

Cider Tour: Finnriver

We took an overnight up the Quimper penninsula to Chimacum and Port Townsend to get away and visit cideries, starting with Finnriver in Chimacum. Chrystie was incredibly nice to us, the tasting room is beautiful, and the cider is AWESOME. We'd tasted the black currant cider in Seattle and were excited to get some to bring home.

Christie offered the dry and delicious pear sparkling cider -- it's would be great with dinner. For an apertif, or a sweet fiend like me, add a drop of pear wine with apple brandy.  Wonderful. My favorite is currently sold  as "spirited apple wine." It tastes like an excellent, applish port, but apparently it can't be called port for abstruse liquor-law reasons. We bought a bottle and I had a drop before my evening bath. We call it Not-Port.

Chimacum is beautiful and the food/cider/farm scene around there flourishing. We talked to many enthusiastic participants, and enjoyed abundant locally-grown food and drink.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

A Good Start in Broadforking

A customer sent us this charming picture of an 18-month-old getting a head start on the broadfork.  He seems to be having a good time. Whee!

Thursday, October 4, 2012

We've been reading Will Allen's terrific The Good Food Revolution, which puts the urban gardening movement in the context of his own life, his family's story, and the larger picture of the Great Migration of African American people from the South to the North. I really appreciated his historical perspective on how the move north, for many people, exchanged one set of problems for another, including the loss of a direct connection to the land and the ability to grow and eat healthy food. Allen's work is so inspiring -- he's learned to grow food in a northern, industrial city, recruit people to get involved in farming, and teach people about composting, tilapia growing, beekeeping, keeping chickens... His organization Growing Power really does grow like a weed, like a bean plant, like a blackberry bramble -- spreading, growing new roots, starting seeds everywhere.

The urban food movement might be the most hopeful thing now happening in our culture. It's a direct response to problems of unemployment and poverty, diet-related health problems like diabetes and heart disease, and the consolidation of our food system by a few multinational corporations. Growing our own food -- from rural farms to city lots and rooftops -- is as revolutionary as it gets. Also nonviolent, healthy, and fun!