December 2, 2007 at 2:45 am
· Filed under food supply, eat local, howto, cooking, agriculture, csa

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Since the container gardening doesn’t seem to have a high yield, and since our local organic market has expensive produce and the nearest real farmer’s market is in the next town over, we’ve opted to become subscribers in community supported agriculture (CSA), a relatively new business model for farms that should keep us in locally produced, seasonal, organic produce for months.
CSA can be very cost-effective and convenient, but many people don’t feel comfortable with the idea of cooking whatever it is the farm is growing. So, we’ve brought along Ilona, our friend, local foodie, and fellow CSA subscriber. Rhett and Ilona go to town dissecting the first shipment from Redland Organics and discussing ways to make quick, simple, satisfying meals without bending over backwards.
Interested in trying out CSA for yourself? Just check out Local Harvest to see if there’s a farm near you!
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Formats available: MPEG-4 Video (.m4v), Quicktime (.mov)
Tags: green, greentime, green lifestyle, food, agriculture, cooking, community supported agriculture, organic
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May 15, 2007 at 6:25 am
· Filed under diet, food supply, eat local, reduce, do it yourself, howto, cooking

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We’ve been featured in Riptide, the blog of New Times Miami, a newspaper dedicated to local culture! Thanks go out to Tamara Lush for making this possible. You can see the article about us here.
Rhett shows you how to use a brewing technique similar to methode champagne to put bubbles in flavored sugar water and make your own soda. This is the traditional technique for making soft drinks such as ginger beer and sasparilla, and it makes for something sweet to serve with dinner or at parties.
Rhett’s ginger beer recipe: place 1/2 cup sugar, 1/8 tsp yeast, 1 tbsp (to taste) ground ginger root, juice of 1/2 lemon, and water to fill to 1″ head room in a 1L bottle. Cap, shake, and let the yeast do the hard work for 24-48 hours at room temperature.
This easy recipe came to us via this WikiHow article. This technique can be adapted to any number of flavorings and levels of sweetness. The only limit is your imagination! If you’d like to make cola, a good recipe can be found in OpenCola. WikiHow provides a simple-to-follow recipe.
Formats available: Quicktime (.mov), MPEG-4 Video (protected) (.m4v)
Tags: soda, homebrew, diy, diet, do it yourself, reduce, green lifestyle, green, environmentalism
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