Tag Archives: agriculture

The Magic of Mushrooms | Lucky Peach

Even for people who donā€™t enjoy eating mushrooms, there is still intrigue in learning how they grow. Thereā€™s something mystical and magicalā€”I mean I do get a lot of people asking about ā€œmagicā€ mushrooms but I always comment that I think all mushrooms are magical.

I really like being able to watch a culture start from a little piece of tissue. From one tiny piece youā€™re able to grow thousands and thousands of pounds of food. We start our cultures in petri dishes. To create that culture you can take a piece of a mushroomā€”you can take any mushroom out of a grocery store and put that into a petri dishā€”and it will grow an exact replica of the original mushroom.

Once I establish the culture on the petri dish, I put it into a test tube. The test tube is my master culture that I put into a refrigerator, and I can keep that for five to ten years. You want to keep track of each of your generations and how far youā€™ve separated it from the initial spawn; mushrooms, unlike plants, break down and cause genetic mutations really quickly if you donā€™t keep track. All of our bags are labeled.

We grow our mushrooms first in grain. I use barley or millet. We soak the grain in water then sterilize it in a pressure cooker for about four hours. After that it we cool it down and put it in front of hyperfilters that blow sterile air out at us so we can open up all the bags of grain without fear of things (i.e. competing fungi or bugs) flying into them. Then we take the myceliumā€”the fungal network of the mushroom from the petri dishā€”and add them to the sterile grain. That goes out on the shelves to grow. How long depends on the species; oysters usually take about two weeks on grain. Then from there, we break the mycelium back up into grain and put it into our next substrate, which is a sawdust mixture. Thatā€™s what will eventually produce mushrooms.

We set up fifty-pound barrels with stacks of forty sawdust bags each, and then steam-pasteurize them. Weā€™re lucky to live in an area where thereā€™s lots of wood substrate, so itā€™s easy to get cheap sawdust. We take the sawdust and mix it together with barley and oat flour, and that gives it the carbohydrates and sugars to make the mycelium happy. If we just put it in sawdust, it wouldnā€™t workā€”maybe it would produce one or two mushrooms. We go through three or four yards of sawdust every other week, and to see that sawdust turned into food for people, thatā€™s really rewarding for us.

We have a regular greenhouse that weā€™ve tarped so we can control the sunlight and the heat. A lot of people think mushrooms need to grow in complete darkness, but that really isnā€™t true: they like a little bit of light. We just open up the bags in here and give them high humidity. They like 80 to 90 percent humidity. As long as they donā€™t get too hot, usually we can grow year-round. When the mushrooms are grown, weā€™ll do one long slice down the middle of the bagā€”then after a while, when the bag ages to about a month or so, weā€™ll do a second slice, just to try to get as much out of it as we can.

Every mushroom is different. Oysters usually take about four weeks from start to finish; shiitakes are about forty-five to sixty days. This is why the prices are different with mushrooms, generally; some take longer than others to grow. Maitake takes up to seventy days to get mushrooms, so thatā€™s why theyā€™re $18 a pound in the grocery store.

Ria Kaelin, Christianā€™s wife and partner in the business offers a concluding thought.

We so traditionally think of growing food as you put a seed in the dirt and nurture it and it will give you something. Whereas with this, you go, How does that even work? Almost like weā€™re not connected to that microbiological world. We are! But we donā€™t sometimes stop to see it.

via The Magic of Mushrooms | Lucky Peach.

Where to Find the Best Celery in the World | Lucky Peach

I was first clued in to the funny relationship some chefs have with celery a decade or so ago, when I worked for a summer at Chanterelle, the long-running and now-departed restaurant of David Waltuck. While there was certainly celery in the kitchen, Waltuck banished it from his stocks and braisesā€”it was an outcast, an unacceptable aromatic. In The French Laundry Cookbook, Thomas Keller notes that he doesnā€™t use celery in stocks either, citing its bitterness. And Jacques Pepin has talked aboutĀ being clonked over his jeune tete with a head of celeryĀ during his apprenticeship. (Or was that George Orwell while he was down and out in Paris and London?)

Either way, I think these guys may just have never met the right celeryā€”that, of course, being the bleached celery of Lancaster County, PA. Unlike the stringent, vegetal stuff you find wilting in crisper drawers across America, Lancaster celery is feathery, delicate, and pale yellowā€”so sweet, so nutty, so tender that common celery pales in comparison. It is shorter and smaller than supermarket celery, and more or less string-free.

via Where to Find the Best Celery in the World | Lucky Peach.

I Think I Cran | Lucky Peach

starvation-alley-web

Jessika Tantisook of Starvation Alley Farms knows the image everyone has of cranberry farming. ā€œYes,ā€ she laughs, when I ask about the Ocean Spray ads featuring guys in waders submerged to their chests, surrounded by floating berries. ā€œItā€™s just like that.ā€ For a few weeks each year, anyway.

In 2010, Tantisook and her partner, Jared Oakes, moved to Washington to take over ten acres of cranberry bogs from Oakesā€™s parents. They decided to turn it into the stateā€™s first organic cranberry farmā€”despite all expert advice to the contrary.

Five years in, the farm is now certified organic. They produce their own raw, unsweetened cranberry juice, which has found devoted customers among health-seekers, craft-cocktail connoisseurs, and farmersā€™ market shoppers alike. And the pair is working with neighboring farms to help them make the same transition to organic. Tantisook estimates there are fewer than twelve organic cranberry farms in the country, totaling three hundred acresā€”compared with about forty thousand acres of cranberries grown nationally.

via I Think I Cran | Lucky Peach.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Asparagus* | Lucky Peach

IN THE FIELD

Itā€™s a spring afternoon in the middle of asparagus season, and Iā€™m crouching in a field with Jim Durst, an organic farmer in Californiaā€™s Yolo County, northwest of Sacramento. Here and there green spears poke upward through the dirt. These asparagus will be picked tomorrow; they can grow whole inches overnight. ā€œIt looks totally different in the morning,ā€ Jim tells me. ā€œIt looks like a little forest of trees, sticking up. And after they harvest, it looks like somebody logged it.ā€

Asparagus is a member of the lily family, so it has very extensive root systems. It grows mostly along waterways. The roots can go down about anywhere from twelve to twenty feet.

The warmer soil temperature stimulates growth, so as soon as it warms up in the spring, the spears start to emerge. We harvest every day, because the spears can grow two to three inches a day. The spear is actually a branch trying to get up and get going. Once you cut a spear off, the plant sends up another shoot. So harvesting stimulates productionā€”it keeps it going. During the harvest time, we are cutting the field every day. We harvest particularly spears of a certain height, ā€™cause thatā€™s what we put in our box. The market determines that to be nine and a half inches.

via Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Asparagus* | Lucky Peach.

This Video Explains How So Much Food Gets Wasted In America

There’s a certain school of thought about sustainability that argues that the worst problem in the food system today is waste. The idea is that we expend a tremendous amount of resources — water, gasoline, fertilizer, pesticides, labor — growing food that never actually feeds anyone. Food waste advocates also argue that the world’s farms already produce enough food to end hunger for good, if only the food that’s currently thrown out could make it to the dinner plates of those in need.

The most obvious source of food waste is in the home. Who, after all, hasn’t had the experience of buying five or six bags of groceries at the supermarket, only to end up throwing out a good portion when it spoils before you have a chance to eat it?

via This Video Explains How So Much Food Gets Wasted In America.

What Is Quinoa? A Breakdown For Those Of Us Who Eat It But Don’t Truly Understand It

QUINOA

Second only to maybe kale, quinoa is the health food star of our time. The Food and Agriculture Organization named 2013 the International Year of Quinoa, after all. This tiny grain-like food is full of good-for-you nutrition and tastes great in just about anything: salads, omelettes and even cakes.

We’re willing to bet you’ve eaten a good deal of the stuff, but do you know what it really is? It’s okay if you don’t, because not many of us do. Today’s the day we change that with a few fun facts and photos that tell us about where quinoa comes from.

Here are 8 important things everyone should know about quinoa:

via What Is Quinoa? A Breakdown For Those Of Us Who Eat It But Don’t Truly Understand It.

 

quinoa

Going to Seed | Lucky Peach

I first encountered Anthony Boutard at his stall at the Hillsdale Farmersā€™ Market, in southwest Portland, half a decade ago. Anthony was wearing a little felt cap, like youā€™d find on a yodeler, and a red raincoat that hung down to his knees. I bought some plums and dried beans and, in the intervening years, and found that he is a rare specimen: a plant breeder, seed producer, and farmer, all rolled into one.

What makes Anthonyā€™s practice so different from typical seed operations is that he grows his plants in uncomfortable settings. Itā€™s a very old idea, but uncommon for contemporary breedersā€”most of whom coddle their plants with ample water and fertilizers, creating populations of weak ā€œprima donnas,ā€ as one farmer explained to me. Anthonyā€™s outdoor plants have to cope with uncertainty, which increases their resiliencyā€”even though heā€™s mainly selecting them for how good they eat.

Anthony and his wife, Carol, have a loyal following among Portland chefs and eaters, who rhapsodize aboutĀ the Boutardsā€™ seventy-some productsā€” dry beans, flint and popcorns, ancient grains, Chester blackberries, plums, grapes, and greens. They came to farming late in life, but they didnā€™t come ill-equipped. Anthony was raised on Berkshire Botanical Garden, where his father was horticulture director (and where he and Carol met and worked after high school). He is known for his political doggedness and intellectual rapaciousness (he holds degrees from Harvard and the Yale School of Forestry &Ā Environmental Studies, and is a published author). When he smiles, which he does a lot, he looks like a mischievous child who is about to tell you something unexpected. Carol has a fun-loving self-deprecating demeanor, and sarcasm that seems to keep both of them in check. Her deep laugh skitters like an engine revving.

via Going to Seed | Lucky Peach.

All in the Family Tomato | Lucky Peach

THE BEGINNING

My father is a farmer, and my Northern California childhood was spent being spoiled on the wonderful produce that he grew. (Even now, heā€™ll bring me boxes of blood oranges and avocados whenever he visits.) In the past, heā€™s worked with prestigious Napa wineries like Frogā€™s Leap, Fetzer, and Kendall-Jackson, and heā€™s gardened for Steve Jobs. He is also responsible for creating many beautiful and delicious tomatoes, and has a habit of naming them after things close to his heart. Like Burning Spear, named after the reggae legend. Or Marz Round Green, named after my half-brother. And Niya Belle, named after my half-sister. For most of my childhood, however, there was not a tomato named after meā€”a fact I liked to constantly remind him. ā€œWhereā€™s my tomato?ā€ I asked him constantly. ā€œDad, when will I get my own tomato?ā€

FiveĀ years ago, my questions were answered: Dad presented me with ā€œJesseā€™s tomato,ā€ a medium-sizedā€”which made sense, since Iā€™m the middle childā€”red paste tomato that tasted amazing. I needed to know about my tomatoā€”its lineage, its family historyā€”and I had no idea how all these tomatoes that my dad had bred had come to be. Tomatoes could be ā€œpromiscuous,ā€ my father explained: they could mate with other tomato varieties to create new, Franken-baby tomatoes. Mine was a question that, at some point, all kids ask their parents: Where do babies come from?

via All in the Family Tomato | Lucky Peach.

Watch the Trailer for ‘Caffeinated,’ Coming to Theaters July 14 – Eater

The film takes viewers from farm to cup.

For those who are curious about exactly where their coffee comes from, Caffeinated attempts to tell the story. From filmmakers Vishal Solanki and Hanh Nguyen, the documentary exploresĀ America’s most populous coffee-drinking cities and producing countries, featuring interviews with both connoisseurs and farmers. Caffeinated will see a nationwide release in select theaters and streaming services on July 14. SeeĀ the official trailer above.

via Watch the Trailer for ‘Caffeinated,’ Coming to Theaters July 14 – Eater.