October 12, 2007
~ This is the Weekly E-letter of the Center for Urban Education about Sustainable Agriculture ~
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Special events & announcements

Sunday Supper photos

Click here to see a slideshow of our Sunday Supper fundraiser, held on September 30, 2007. Thanks to Barry, Eva, and Lori Jan for their wonderful photography!

Harvest Festival ~ October 26 through 28

The Ferry Building Marketplace hosts the fifth annual Harvest Festival from Friday, October 26 through Sunday, October 28, and CUESA is celebrating with fun harvest activities at the Saturday farmers' market. The schedule is as follows:

Friday, October 26
CCOF, one of the oldest and largest organic certifiers in the country, hosts an Organic Beer and Wine Tasting from 4 to 8 pm in the ground floor Marketplace of the Ferry Building. $25 for 10 tastes; $15 for 5 tastes.

Saturday, October 27
During the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, join us for these activities:

10 am to noon:  Apple variety tasting

10 am to 2 pm: Apple pressing, butter churning, and wool spinning

10:30 am: Meet the Farmer with Stan Devoto of Devoto Gardens

11 am: Seasonal cooking demonstration by Jay Foster of Farmerbrown

11:45 am: Louise Fong Bonham and students from Presidio Hill School demonstrate recipes from their new cookbook, What San Francisco Families Eat!

Sunday, October 28
Inside the Ferry Building Marketplace, from 11 am to 2 pm, visitors shop to the sounds of live music and taste an array of olive oils and honeys with local experts. Outside, face painting and the Barnyard by the Bay farm animal corral will be available to kids of all ages!

For more information about these events, click here.

Gourmet Wine Cellar ~ November 8, 2007

Join Gourmet magazine for an evening of delicious food, noteworthy wines and creative cocktails. A portion of the event’s proceeds will benefit CUESA. The event is at The Galleria at the San Francisco Design Center from 6 to 9 pm. For tickets and information, go to gourmetscoop.com or call 877.490.3337. Tickets are $115.

CUESA Programs

Saturday, October 13 ~ Market to Table events

10:30 am - Meet the producer
Howard McGinnis of McGinnis Ranch

11:00 am - Seasonal cooking demonstration
Bibby Gignilliat of Parties that Cook

Noon - Seasonal flower arranging demonstration
Gordon Devon Gaster, Jr.

Saturday, October 20 ~ Market to Table events

10:30 am - Meet the producer
Minh Tsai of Hodo Soy Beanery

11:00 am - Seasonal cooking demonstration & book signing
Jill Nussinow, author of The Veggie Queen: Vegetables Get the Royal Treatment

Noon - Seasonal cooking demonstration
Keith Hammerich of City College of San Francisco

All events take place in our Dacor teaching kitchen in the arcade north of the Ferry Building's clock tower unless otherwise noted.

This week’s feature: Farms, markets and foods of Northern Spain

SpainCUESA’s Executive Director, Dave Stockdale, wrote this week’s feature.

In September, I was fortunate to lead a group of sixteen travelers on an educational fundraising tour to farms, wineries, artisan food operations, public markets, and cultural sites in and around Barcelona and San Sebastian, Spain. We also took Catalan and Basque cooking classes and enjoyed many great meals. Here are some of the highlights:

Farms
The Gallecs Rural Area (GRA) lies just north of Barcelona. These 526 hectares of agricultural and forested land, historically part of a larger region, have so far avoided the industrial fate of adjacent properties. Unfortunately, the future of the area and its remaining farmers is uncertain. We visited with the GRA Consortium and local Slow Food leaders who are working together to conduct farmer trainings, maintain wildlife habitat, and create branding for the unique crops produced there, all in hopes of generating enough public support to ensure preservation of this land. We walked the trails and toured bean and onion fields before enjoying a homemade meal prepared by one of the region’s directors, Marina Duñach. To learn more about this project, click here.

Outside of San Sebastian, in the beautiful and rugged Basque countryside, we visited with Pello Urdapilleta, a former engineer who, in researching his ancestry, discovered a long family history of pig farming. When he also learned that the only remaining Basque pig breed was endangered, Pello rededicated his life to saving and developing a market for the heritage breed. Euskal Txerria pigs have short legs, long floppy ears, and black spots. They forage for acorns, chestnuts, hazelnuts, and grass most of their lives, until Pello switches them to a diet of corn, fava beans, and bran just before slaughter. Pello uses traditional methods to cure the meat, which we had the opportunity to sample alongside wonderful local cheeses and txakoli wine.  To learn more about Euskal Txerria pigs, a Slow Food Presidium project, click here. To view a short video of the pigs foraging during our visit, click here.

Also south of San Sebastian, we visited Aroa farm, a 3.5-hectare organic operation owned by Jaime Burgaña. In the fields, we sampled intensely flavored herbs, salad greens, and wonderfully sweet strawberries--just a few of the many fruit and vegetable varieties Jaime grows. Aroa sells directly to many leading Basque chefs, who try out new recipes in the farm’s test kitchen. Jaime and his wife Rosa, who have learned a great deal in the kitchen observing these chefs, prepared us a delicious meal featuring their produce and fresh, local tuna.

Markets
The city of Barcelona operates over 40 public markets, the largest and most famous of which is La Boqueria. Recently acknowledged by the US-based Project for Public Spaces as the best public market in the world, this large, indoor marketplace features high quality, beautifully displayed fresh produce and meats and prepared foods from around the world.  There is also a small local producers’ area adjacent to the main building. In San Sebastian, we toured La Brecha market, where a local producer’s market flanks the outside of the building, which contains a variety of specialty stores, butcher shops and fishmongers in a format similar to the Ferry Building. To learn more about the Barcelona market system, click here (website is in Catalan).

Food
In addition to cooking lessons and on-farm meals, we had many opportunities to eat our way through Northern Spain. Catalan cuisine is known for its signature sauces such as alioli, romesco and sofrito. We enjoyed no less than three different delicious types of paella, a variety of dishes featuring salt cod, a stuffed tortilla (omelet), and many other regional specialties. 

Basque cuisine is deceptively simple. It does not rely as much on the varied sauces, but rather on using fresh products and celebrating their quality and flavor.  Highlights included freshly harvested and sautéed wild mushrooms, roasted peppers, and grilled fresh local fish.  Pintxos (tapas) reached their zenith in San Sebastian, where we spent several late nights tasting our way through the city.

People
Of the many great farms, markets, wineries, restaurants and other places we visited, perhaps the greatest memory of all is of the interesting people we met along the way. They shared their passions, talents, homes, and stories, while always encouraging and reminding us to slow down and enjoy life fully. Thanks to all of you!

See a slide show of the tour >


CUESA plans to coordinate additional international farm and market tours in the future.  To give feedback on when and where you might want to travel, please complete this survey>

Market update

Ferry Plaza Farmers Market logo

Sorry--there's no market update this week! To find out who is in and who is out of the Saturday and Tuesday markets, please talk to the friendly staff and volunteers at the CUESA information booth. The "Ins and Outs" section will be back next week.

www.cuesa.org

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
© CUESA 2007. Please ask permission before reproducing.
Banner photo courtesy of Scott Lawrence.
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