April 25, 2008
~ This is the Weekly E-letter of the Center for Urban Education about Sustainable Agriculture ~
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Special events & announcements

Waste Wise Celebration continues tomorrow!

giveaway bagOur week of Waste Wise festivities continues tomorrow with a lineup of fun events and educational activities. Come pick a complimentary reusable bag (locals only), play our Reclaim Game, head to the Port Commission Hearing Room to view The Story of Stuff, visit our information tables and, of course, use our new Waste Wise stations for anything you have to throw away!

Waste Wise volunteers needed!

Help CUESA green the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market! As a Waste Wise volunteer, not only will you help divert waste from the landfill, you'll also help teach thousands of shoppers to become more waste wise. For more information, please contact Ashleigh Collier at ashleigh@cuesa.org.

Local chefs and farmers pair up at Macy's ~ April 30

farmer and chefThe second installment of the Macy's Get Green series, produced in partnership with CUESA and featuring farmers from the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, is set for Wednesday, April 30. Joel Schirmer of Dirty Girl Produce and Steffan Terje of Perbacco restaurant will talk about the importance of farmer and chef dialogue in both planting and menu planning. Then they will prepare a delicious dish so you can taste the results. Seating is first-come, first-served starting at 6 pm in the Union Square Cellar Kitchen at Macy's. A $10 donation to CUESA will get you a seat at the demonstration, a sample of the featured dish, a glass of wine from Benziger Family Winery, a Ferry Plaza Farmers Market tote, and a sample of Origins' new organic skin care line.

Growing Deep Conference ~ June 5 to 7, 2008

The Business Alliance for Local Living Economies is holding their 6th annual conference, Growing Deep, in Boston this June. Click here for more information >

CUESA programs

Saturday, April 26 ~ Waste Wise Celebration

Click here for the schedule of events >

Saturday, May 3 ~ Market to Table

10:30 am - Meet the producer

11:00 am - Seasonal cooking demonstration
Alexandra Lopez, The Food Diva

11:45 am - Seasonal cooking demonstration
Aida Mollenkamp of CHOW.com

All programs will take place in front of the Ferry Building on the north side.

This week’s feature: Making cooler food choices

squash plantsCUESA volunteer Michelle O'Herron wrote this week's feature.

On March 31, CUESA hosted the second lecture in a two-part series about food and global climate change. While the first discussion focused on how climate change may affect agriculture, the second turned the question around to look at how our food choices affect the climate. Panelists Helene York, Director of Bon Appétit Management Company Foundation; Gail Feenstra, Food Systems Analyst at the UC Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program; and chef Laura Stec, author of Beyond The Global Warming Diet: Cool Recipes for a Hot Planet, shared their perspectives on this issue. This week, we offer a brief summary of some of the information they presented.

Approximately one fifth of all the energy consumed in the United States goes into feeding Americans. Only about 21% of that energy is actually used for agricultural production, providing things like fuel, fertilizer and electricity. A whopping 48% is used for transport, packaging and processing, and the remaining 31% for home refrigeration and cooking. While these figures are sobering, the good news is that we can make choices about how we grow, transport, package and dispose of our food that will reduce both our energy consumption and our contribution to global warming.

But where do we start?

Panelist Dr. Gail Feenstra and her colleagues at UC Davis have adopted a way to calculate the environmental impacts of food production that has been under development in Europe for the last decade. Known as “life cycle assessments," this system quantifies the carbon footprint of each step in the food production and distribution process, including irrigation, fertilizers, fuel, packaging and transport between the farm, wholesalers, retailers and the end consumer.

Because the data does not exist for food production in the United States, the UC Davis team worked with experts from Europe to figure out how to apply the life cycle assessment methodology here. They decided to apply five dilemmas or trade-offs consumers often face to a set of case study foods. The dilemmas included common consumer quandaries such as “local or organic?” and “meat or vegetarian?”

Their analysis revealed “hotspots”— points in the process where there is high energy use and high greenhouse gas production. They discovered that the biggest climate impacts came from livestock raised in feedlots, synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, heated greenhouse production, air freight, post-retail transport and food waste at all points in the supply chain. Thanks to the life cycle assessment, we can now focus our efforts on addressing these hotspots.

Panelist Helene York has used this assessment to advance the sustainable food sourcing practices of Bon Appétit Management Company. Bon Appétit is setting a stellar example of how both companies and individual buyers can chose to move towards a more sustainable food system. On average, over 30% of the food used in the company's 400 cafés nationwide comes from within 150 miles of where it is being served. Bon Appétit’s comprehensive approach also includes investing in farmer co-ops, consolidating their trucking system and incorporating biofuel vehicles—all part of the company’s goal to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 25%. Under the company’s recently unveiled Low Carbon Diet program, chefs and customers are given sustainability guidelines to help them make better choices.

In her upcoming book, Beyond The Global Warming Diet: Cool Recipes for a Hot Planet, chef and author Laura Stec agrees that we need to make better food choices, and describes how to make satisfying meals using sustainable sources. She contends that while it is not realistic to expect most people to radically change their eating habits, there are small steps that nearly everyone can take. The key, she argues, is to not make a low carbon diet about rules, but to emphasize the connection we get from sharing a meal and our enjoyment of food as a sensual experience.

The abundant agricultural resources available here in California provide tremendous opportunities to take Laura’s advice and make better choices about how we approach food and eating. Thanks to the work of people like Helene and Gail, we also know what we need to do to make the greatest difference. To learn more about climate-friendly eating, or to create your own low carbon diet, please see the following websites:

asi.ucdavis.edu/research/energy_food_system.htm
www.eatlowcarbon.org/
www.laurastec.com/

Check the e-letter next week for a link to a downloadable mp3 of the talk.

Market update

Ferry Plaza Farmers Market logo

This is the most up-to-date information about which sellers will and won't be attending the market as of Friday, when we send this letter. If there are no changes to a seller's status, they will not be listed. To find out which farmers regularly attend each market, click here. Please understand that there are often last-minute changes--it's the nature of farming!

Saturday, April 26

In/returning: The Apple Farm, Bernard Ranches, Dirty Girl Produce
Out: Happy Quail Farms, Little Organic Farm (for the season)

Tuesday, April 29

In/returning: Bruins Farm, Ella Bella Farm

Seasonality synopsis for April

Returning this month (weather willing): Torpedo and Stockton Red onions, English peas, snap peas, snow peas, rhubarb, basil, raspberries, squash blossoms, fresh bay leaves, miner's lettuce

Plentiful: Spinach, asparagus, avocados, green garlic, spring onions, kumquats, nettles, broccoli, rapini greens, artichokes, baby turnips, carrots, strawberries, mizuna, radishes and radish greens, fava beans, pastured eggs, chard, baby beets, fresh herbs

Winding down/limited supply: Brussels sprouts, tulips, citrus

Farms/Vendors that may be returning this month (weather willing): Ella Bella Farm, Happy Quail Farms, Shogun Fish Co., Balakian Farms, Lucero Organic Farms

Recipes for April

Strawberry Ceviche from Chris Borges, Taste Catering

Marinated Fresh Baby Artichokes from Linda Carucci, author of Cooking School Secrets for Real-World Cooks: Tips, Techniques, Shortcuts, Sources, and Hints

Spinach Salad a la Grecque from cookbook author Joyce Goldstein

Spring Greens Puree with Homemade Sourdough Crackers from Jessica Prentice of Three Stone Hearth

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Email Maggie Gosselin (maggie@cuesa.org) with questions or comments about the E-letter. Want to sign up for the E-letter? Click here. Missed an issue or want to re-read an article? Click here
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