Sunday, June 14, 2009

A Tale of Two Breakfasts

Many years ago, when I first heard about the concept of food miles (how far your food travels from farm to dinner plate), I realized that there was something very wrong with the food system in this country. As a market gardener, I was intimately familiar with the concept of local produce, but I hadn’t thought much beyond that. At the same time, I had just about given up eating pork products because most of the commercial pork in this country is raised in Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) a.k.a. factory farms, which are generally super bad news for the environment.

My real awakening came from reading a column in Edible Chesapeake magazine called "A Tale of Two Breakfasts". Author Tom Harbold (who happens to be a regular customer at our farmers market) compared two breakfasts—his usual morning routine, versus one featuring ingredients he had purchased from local farmers. Wow, he had even been able to buy his breakfast bacon locally! Plus he had met and talked to the people that had produced his food! It made me realize that local applied to more than just produce, and gave me something to aspire to.

Fast forward to 2009. We are very fortunate to have some new meat vendors at our farmers market this year, so I finally have a source for bacon! Here was my Sunday morning breakfast today:
  • Pasture raised heritage breed bacon from the farmers market (hooray!)

  • Eggs from our backyard

  • Two slices of sunflower/oat mini-loaf from the farmers market, spread with fresh farm butter from Trickling Springs Creamery in Chambersburg, PA (which I buy at Roots Market in Clarksville) and strawberry/rhubarb jam from the farmers market (although I will have homemade strawberry jam soon, strawberries are in season!)
Yummy (and local)!

Kris

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