September 11, 2007

Localvore Challenge

Interested in eating locally produced food?

Wondering whether Missouri could feed itself?

Want to learn more about our region?

Join Sustainable Farms & Communities, the Columbia Farmers Market, and Slow Food Katy Trail as we challenge Columbia and mid-Missouri residents to spend a week eating tasty & healthy food produced by Missouri's small farmers and entrepreneurs!

Locally-sourced food requires less fossil fuel to produce and transport, is likely to be fresher and of higher quality, and is grown and produced by the small farms and businesses that are an integral part of our regional economy.

Join us in exploring what's available around Columbia while eating healthily and supporting our local community, economy, and environment! You can take the Challenge to eat meals prepared from locally grown and produced ingredients, whether purchased from the Farmers Market and local businesses, or presented by local restaurants. This site presents all the information, listings, menus, and recipes you'll need to spend a memorable week eating the best Missouri has to offer!

Please be sure to register for the Challenge. We need the registration information in order to know how many people are participating and at what level, and to give us feedback to improve future events. We can also use our participation numbers as evidence of the impact of local food purchases on the local economy. We will not share your email, but will use it to keep you informed and updated about the Challenge. When the Challenge is over, we will ask you to complete a survey to give us valuable feedback. So be sure to sign up online!

September 2007

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CSAFood- What might be in your box

  • Greens
    Mizuna, Red Giant and other mustards, Komatsuna, Kales and other greens
  • Turnip Greens
    Purple-Globe, White Top
  • Bok Choy
  • Radish
    French Breakfast
  • Lettuce
    Romaine varieties
  • Okra
    Clemson Spineless, Cajun Delight & Crimson Red
  • Bell Pepper
    A variety of sweet peppers including Jimmy Nardello's (looks like a cayenne but isn't hot), Yummy and others.
  • Eggplant
  • Herbs
    Basil

BrainFood

  • Horticulture, Garden Design, Organic Gardening, Garden Gate etc.: Garden Magazines
    Have reduced subscriptions from about 12 to 5 or 6. Need to add HortIdeas, Growing for Market, and Acres U.S.A. to the mix.
  • Terence McKenna: True Hallucinations and the Archaic Revival

    Terence McKenna: True Hallucinations and the Archaic Revival
    Beautifully strange musings about the origins of consciousness by one of the early psychonauts. (****)

SoulFood

  • Tom Waits -

    Tom Waits: Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards
    What more need I say than that it is a triple Tom Waits record.

  • Robbie Robertson -

    Robbie Robertson: Contact From the Underworld of Redboy
    Incredible synthesis of blues/rock and Native American consciousness. Not to mention, great to shake your butt to also.

  • Of Montreal -

    Of Montreal: The Sunlandic Twins
    Pure joyful exhuberance and silliness.

  • Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds -

    Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds: Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus
    Darkly gorgeous, neo-gothic tales of love and depravity. NOBODY emits love songs like this and survives without a tenacity that is daunting.

  • My Chemical Romance -

    My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade
    Outside my usual, broad, taste but it got in my head while working overnights in sterile processing of a hospital. Worked with a rabid fan who infected me with his hydrophobia.

  • Morphine -

    Morphine: The Night
    More tragic endings, not self-inflicted, and a squanky, deep loveliness.

  • Elliott Smith -

    Elliott Smith: From a Basement On The Hill
    Unbelievably incredible musician with a tragic, self-inflicted end. There is more beauty and pain in his work than I can bear.

  • David Bowie -

    David Bowie: Hunky Dory
    I go through periodic, ravenous consumption of Bowie stuff. Hard to believe what a pioneer he was and, arguably, still is.

  • Brian Wilson -

    Brian Wilson: Smile
    Oh my god!!! After 38 years as mere mystery, inuendo, bootleg, and rumor the successor album to "Pet Sounds" has finally come bounding out of the long, dark night of the soul that Brian Wilson descended into upon the rejection of the album by his record label, his bandmates, and, most importantly, his brothers. It is pure sonic beauty, if a little jumpy due to the modular nature of its composition. Upon close listening in headphones at work, I am falling in love with it. Get in your car, turn it up loud, and drive around on one of those beautiful autumn days. Reminds me sonically of "Songs of Innocence and Experience" by 18th century poet William Blake. Brian Wilson composed this as a 24 year old genius and only as a man approaching retirement age does he see it smiling in the light. (*****)

  • Various Artists -

    Various Artists: Cuisine Non-Stop
    New French music that combines influences like hip-hop, French barroom music, gypsy melodies, and North African beats. Simply enchanting and hysterical, though I don't understand much French. (*****)