Archive for the ‘Slow Food’ Category


The Approaching Harvest

 

My partner and I meet up in a leaf-strewn parking lot on the outskirts of town last week and hit the road together.  The change of season and the upcoming frost signals the time to visit our farmers and select a date for this year’s olive harvest.  The cool damp morning dictates barn jackets and boots, as we plan to walk the damp orchards, evaluating the ripeness of the fruit.  The Tuscan varietal olives for our L’Autunno blend are grown on a variety of small, family farms and vineyards scattered across the Mendocino and Sonoma wine country.  Each group of trees occupies its own microclimate, and as with wine grapes, must be harvested according to the correct degree of ripeness.  Here in this part of northern California, the olive harvest is often squeezed into the last week of November and the first week of December.  Up here, we need to leave the fruit on the trees long enough to develop a workable percentage of ripe fruit, which, due to our mild climate often means we barely beat the first hard frosts.  Last year, the frost caught us at our home ranch, Shooting Star, in the Anderson Valley.  Luckily, we were able to get the last of the fruit in and over the hill to the press in time, with little or no damage.  We pressed at seven that evening, and the steel building housing the press itself was cold and drafty.  Bundled in sweaters and jackets, we soaked in the pungent and somehow warming aroma of the new oil.
 
We walk together with the first farmer, up and down the rows of trees.  A misty rain falls as my partner pulls both ripe and green fruit from a sampling of the trees and cuts each olive open with a small knife.  Squeezing the pulp between his fingers, he carefully evaluates the ratio of water to oil.  He touches the tip of his tongue to the pulp and smiles knowingly.  The sharp bitterness of the olives foreshadows the complex peppery flavor of the oil to come, a good sign given the relative ripeness of this fruit.  We each leave that afternoon with an unmarked bottle of the farmer’s homemade pinot noir under our arms, and move on to the next farm.
 
When we decide on a date for the harvest, we schedule the press and call the crew bosses.  Since we still hand-pick our fruit, we need to make sure there are enough workers available to strip all the trees and deliver the fruit to the press before the day’s end.  In order to produce the highest quality and most flavorful oil, the olives must be pressed within hours of picking.  Even in this cold, foggy weather, the olives will heat up in their large wooden bins and begin to ferment if left to sit too long.  Many of our farmers are so small that they produce less than a ton of olives each; so we must also coordinate the picking and delivery so we can take advantage of the economies of scale at the press.  The logistical dilemma of delivering most or all of the fruit to the press at the appointed time is a tap dance of sorts, but somehow, each year, we manage to pull it off.  It is an annual reunion, as each farmer arrives with fruit, and stories of the growing season are exchanged as we stand around in the gathering darkness.  Some of them will be paid for their fruit in finished oil, and look forward to tasting this year’s blend.
 
Late in the day, we return to the parking lot and I climb back into my truck for the trek back over the mountain to the coast.  My partner has farther to go, crossing the mountains and valley to the east to return to his own ranch in the western Sierra foothills, where the harvest and pressing are already in full swing.  We will return in early December to repeat this ritual that spans generations.  Olives are a crop for the long haul, and the trees that we harvest from this year will continue to produce fruit long after we are gone.  The air is crisp, the light is slightly golden, and the grape vines stain the hillsides with their reds, oranges and golds.  The seasons come and go, the fruit ripens, and the rhythms of the farm continue for yet another year.
Post by Julia Conway on November 13th, 2008

Think Local, Buy Local, Eat Local

 

The tables at our local farmers’ markets are full of the bounty of the fall harvest, but the chilly winds and the occasional showers remind all of us that we are inexorably marching toward winter. Here on the Mendocino Coast, our wet winter weather makes gardening and farming difficult at best, and next to impossible in some locations. Those of us who produce and consume local food are challenged to find locally grown vegetables through the long slow season. Yesterday, I picked up a flat of San Marzano tomatoes that will finish ripening in my warm pantry and then be processed into the rich red sauce that my Italian grandmother used to make. There is something vaguely comforting about seeing the rows of jars line the shelf, each containing a taste of sunshine at its heart.
 
This year, the potent storm of economic uncertainty hovers on the horizon. A friend’s mother tells stories of growing up on a truck farm in southern California’s Riverside County during the Great Depression. She says that the family always had enough to eat, because they usually couldn’t sell all the vegetables they produced. She told of stewed tomatoes served over baking powder biscuits, a fond memory of a supper long passed, and we all wonder what we will face in the coming winter months. A chef friend of mine calls it “chipmunking,” the storing away of food and supplies in anticipation of scarcity. Today, more than ever, I consider all the sources of food inside that magical circle of our local economy. Some of my favorite farmers, John and Joanne at Noyo Hill Farm, are planning to continue selling vegetables off the farm all winter long. Mendocino Organics, an inland producer has already started planting vegetables for their first-ever winter CSA program. A winegrower friend, and fellow Slow Food member Julie Golden has donated four acres on her Heart Arrow Ranch in Redwood Valley toward the project, along with the Freys, also in Redwood Valley and the Decaturs at Live Power Farm in Covelo. Mendocino Organics is unusual in that they own no land. Their harvests depend on collaboration and cooperation with the community at large.
 
Harvest Market, our local coastal specialty and natural food market has partnered with many of our local farmers this summer to bring locally grown produce to a wider range of shoppers. Their “Local Means Local” program provides a new opportunity for many of these market farmers to sell their produce after the seasonal farmers’ markets close at the end of October. We will be pouring our locally produced olive oil there this coming Thursday the 16th, at the “Customer Appreciation Day,” held annually to celebrate the anniversary of the store’s opening. The Honer and Bosma families, who own and operate the store, are committed to a sustainable local economy, and strive to strike a balance between supporting local food producers and providing lower-cost value options. Ours is an economically challenged community, and many food choices are driven by price alone. In Mendocino County, our average wage is well below that which would support the purchase of a median priced home. The hospitality, fishing and forestry jobs that remain here are largely seasonal, so winter affords little in the way of luxury here.
 
With October designated as “Local Foods Month” in many places, our focus turns to economics on a smaller scale. How do we create a sustainable local food system? How much can be produced here, and which goods must come from farther away? With transportation costs spiraling out of control, what is the true cost of the cheap foods we have become accustomed to in our sprawling industrial food system? As Americans, we have become spoiled by too many choices. I remember returning to California from my first trip to the Italian countryside. I wandered the well stocked aisles of the supermarket and my head literally ached from the overwhelming quantity of food and other goods. As we drove past an auto mall the other day in Santa Rosa, I was struck by the absurdity of the rows and rows of gleaming automobiles, not unlike the rainbow of jars, bottles, bags and boxes that line the supermarket shelves. I longed for the simplicity of the small grocers and itinerant street markets of rural Tuscany. Even without all of this so-called bounty, I never felt that my choices were in any way limited. In fact, the opposite was true. The robust porcini mushrooms; only eight or so in the box, would be sold out by day’s end, and that somehow made them more precious. Anything I would cook using them would be a celebration of their fleeting seasonality. 
 
Many philosophical traditions talk of “daily bread,” the idea of having just what we need as opposed to everything we desire. I realize that, while there is comfort in knowing that the freezer and the pantry are filled to bursting, there is also grace in the simplicity of having only to focus on today. Today, I will not worry about the global economy. I choose not to ruminate on whether the shelves of the supermarket will be full or empty in the coming months. I choose to celebrate the abundance of the harvest and eat well today, with an abiding gratitude for what I have.
Post by Julia Conway on October 9th, 2008