February 28, 2007

When honeybees vanish will our food follow?

by Alexei Barrionuevo, published Februray 27, 2007 in the New York Times

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David Bradshaw has endured countless stings during his life as a beekeeper, but he got the shock of his career when he opened his boxes last month and found half of his 100 million bees missing.

In 24 states throughout the country, beekeepers have gone through similar shocks as their bees have been disappearing inexplicably at an alarming rate, threatening not only their livelihoods but also the production of numerous crops, including California almonds, one of the nation’s most profitable.

“I have never seen anything like it,” Mr. Bradshaw, 50, said from an almond orchard here beginning to bloom. “Box after box after box are just empty. There’s nobody home.”

The sudden mysterious losses are highlighting the critical link that honeybees play in the long chain that gets fruit and vegetables to supermarkets and dinner tables across the country.

Beekeepers have fought regional bee crises before, but this is the first national affliction.

Now, in a mystery worthy of Agatha Christie, bees are flying off in search of pollen and nectar and simply never returning to their colonies. And nobody knows why. Researchers say the bees are presumably dying in the fields, perhaps becoming exhausted or simply disoriented and eventually falling victim to the cold.

As researchers scramble to find answers to the syndrome they have decided to call “colony collapse disorder,” growers are becoming openly nervous about the capability of the commercial bee industry to meet the growing demand for bees to pollinate dozens of crops, from almonds to avocados to kiwis.

Along with recent stresses on the bees themselves, as well as on an industry increasingly under consolidation, some fear this disorder may force a breaking point for even large beekeepers.

A Cornell University study has estimated that honeybees annually pollinate more than $14 billion worth of seeds and crops in the United States, mostly fruits, vegetables and nuts. “Every third bite we consume in our diet is dependent on a honeybee to pollinate that food,” said Zac Browning, vice president of the American Beekeeping Federation.

The bee losses are ranging from 30 to 60 percent on the West Coast, with some beekeepers on the East Coast and in Texas reporting losses of more than 70 percent; beekeepers consider a loss of up to 20 percent in the offseason to be normal.

Beekeepers are the nomads of the agriculture world, working in obscurity in their white protective suits and frequently trekking around the country with their insects packed into 18-wheelers, looking for pollination work.

Once the domain of hobbyists with a handful of backyard hives, beekeeping has become increasingly commercial and consolidated. Over the last two decades, the number of beehives, now estimated by the Agriculture Department to be 2.4 million, has dropped by a quarter and the number of beekeepers by half.

Pressure has been building on the bee industry. The costs to maintain hives, also known as colonies, are rising along with the strain on bees of being bred to pollinate rather than just make honey. And beekeepers are losing out to suburban sprawl in their quest for spots where bees can forage for nectar to stay healthy and strong during the pollination season.

“There are less beekeepers, less bees, yet more crops to pollinate,” Mr. Browning said. “While this sounds sweet for the bee business, with so much added loss and expense due to disease, pests and higher equipment costs, profitability is actually falling.”

Some 15 worried beekeepers convened in Florida this month to brainstorm with researchers how to cope with the extensive bee losses. Investigators are exploring a range of theories, including viruses, a fungus and poor bee nutrition.

They are also studying a group of pesticides that were banned in some European countries to see if they are somehow affecting bees’ innate ability to find their way back home.

It could just be that the bees are stressed out. Bees are being raised to survive a shorter offseason, to be ready to pollinate once the almond bloom begins in February. That has most likely lowered their immunity to viruses.

Mites have also damaged bee colonies, and the insecticides used to try to kill mites are harming the ability of queen bees to spawn as many worker bees. The queens are living half as long as they did just a few years ago.

Researchers are also concerned that the willingness of beekeepers to truck their colonies from coast to coast could be adding to bees’ stress, helping to spread viruses and mites and otherwise accelerating whatever is afflicting them.

Dennis van Engelsdorp, a bee specialist with the state of Pennsylvania who is part of the team studying the bee colony collapses, said the “strong immune suppression” investigators have observed “could be the AIDS of the bee industry,” making bees more susceptible to other diseases that eventually kill them off.

Growers have tried before to do without bees. In past decades, they have used everything from giant blowers to helicopters to mortar shells to try to spread pollen across the plants. More recently researchers have been trying to develop “self-compatible” almond trees that will require fewer bees. One company is even trying to commercialize the blue orchard bee, which is virtually stingless and works at colder temperatures than the honeybee.

Beekeepers have endured two major mite infestations since the 1980s, which felled many hobbyist beekeepers, and three cases of unexplained disappearing disorders as far back as 1894. But those episodes were confined to small areas, Mr. van Engelsdorp said.

Today the industry is in a weaker position to deal with new stresses. A flood of imported honey from China and Argentina has depressed honey prices and put more pressure on beekeepers to take to the road in search of pollination contracts. Beekeepers are trucking tens of billions of bees around the country every year.

California’s almond crop, by far the biggest in the world, now draws more than half of the country’s bee colonies in February. The crop has been both a boon to commercial beekeeping and a burden, as pressure mounts for the industry to fill growing demand. Now spread over 580,000 acres stretched across 300 miles of California’s Central Valley, the crop is expected to grow to 680,000 acres by 2010.

Beekeepers now earn many times more renting their bees out to pollinate crops than in producing honey. Two years ago a lack of bees for the California almond crop caused bee rental prices to jump, drawing beekeepers from the East Coast.

This year the price for a bee colony is about $135, up from $55 in 2004, said Joe Traynor, a bee broker in Bakersfield, Calif.

A typical bee colony ranges from 15,000 to 30,000 bees. But beekeepers’ costs are also on the rise. In the past decade, fuel, equipment and even bee boxes have doubled and tripled in price.

The cost to control mites has also risen, along with the price of queen bees, which cost about $15 each, up from $10 three years ago.

To give bees energy while they are pollinating, beekeepers now feed them protein supplements and a liquid mix of sucrose and corn syrup carried in tanker-sized trucks costing $12,000 per load. Over all, Mr. Bradshaw figures, in recent years he has spent $145 a hive annually to keep his bees alive, for a profit of about $11 a hive, not including labor expenses. The last three years his net income has averaged $30,000 a year from his 4,200 bee colonies, he said.

“A couple of farmers have asked me, ‘Why are you doing this?’ ” Mr. Bradshaw said. “I ask myself the same thing. But it is a job I like. It is a lifestyle. I work with my dad every day. And now my son is starting to work with us.”


Almonds fetch the highest prices for bees, but if there aren’t enough bees to go around, some growers may be forced to seek alternatives to bees or change their variety of trees.

“It would be nice to know that we have a dependable source of honey bees,” said Martin Hein, an almond grower based in Visalia. “But at this point I don’t know that we have that for the amount of acres we have got.”

To cope with the losses, beekeepers have been scouring elsewhere for bees to fulfill their contracts with growers. Lance Sundberg, a beekeeper from Columbus, Mont., said he spent $150,000 in the last two weeks buying 1,000 packages of bees — amounting to 14 million bees — from Australia.

He is hoping the Aussie bees will help offset the loss of one-third of the 7,600 hives he manages in six states. “The fear is that when we mix the bees the die-offs will continue to occur,” Mr. Sundberg said.

Migratory beekeeping is a lonely life that many compare to truck driving. Mr. Sundberg spends more than half the year driving 20 truckloads of bees around the country. In Terra Bella, an hour south of Visalia, Jack Brumley grimaced from inside his equipment shed as he watched Rosa Patiño use a flat tool to scrape dried honey from dozens of beehive frames that once held bees. Some 2,000 empty boxes — which once held one-third of his total hives — were stacked to the roof.

Beekeepers must often plead with landowners to allow bees to be placed on their land to forage for nectar. One large citrus grower has pushed for California to institute a “no-fly zone” for bees of at least two miles to prevent them from pollinating a seedless form of Mandarin orange.

But the quality of forage might make a difference. Last week Mr. Bradshaw used a forklift to remove some of his bee colonies from a spot across a riverbed from orange groves. Only three of the 64 colonies there have died or disappeared.

“It will probably take me two to three more years to get back up,” he said. “Unless I spend gobs of money I don’t have.”

Text copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

Photo credit: Strollers


February 26, 2007

How to prune central leader apple trees

Pruning fruit trees is one of those garden tasks that is hard to pick up from a book. It's best to learn it directly from an expert in the orchard, ideally by making a few cuts yourself. Whether you are a home orchardist, a Star Wars fan, or both, there's something to make you happy in this short instructional video. May the pruning force be with you!

(for general info on the pruning of apple trees, this link may be of interest)

February 23, 2007

You want bumper stickers? We have bumper stickers!

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There are many ways to promote kitchen gardening and local foods, not all of which require a spade. Here's a way of getting the word out about food gardens where they may just be needed most: in the urban and suburban jungle!

Click here to order yours online.

February 22, 2007

Peas that please

By Barbara Damrosch, published Thursday, February 22, 2007 in The Washington Post

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At the time of our country's founding, the saying was that a good gardener could produce peas by the king's birthday. The date was the Fourth of June, and the ruling monarch was George III, nicknamed "Farmer George" for his zest for agriculture. Less beloved by his former colonists, his connection with their pea crop became remote. Northerly states strove for a July 4 harvest instead, a choice both patriotic and timely for their climate. Meanwhile, in the region of the nation's capital, the traditional date for English or garden pea planting became George Washington's birthday, which happens to be today, Feb. 22.

Free now to honor the George of our choice, any American gardener is still nonetheless subject to the imperious whims of weather, temperature and the state of the soil. Whether you go out today with packet in hand depends on whether your soil can be properly worked. If it is still frozen, you will have to wait at least a week or two. If it has thawed but is still gummy with moisture, wait. Peas germinate best in a soil that is cool and moist, but not cold and wet.

If you are very sharp at this game, you might already have dug some shallow trenches for your peas last fall and filled them with compost, covered with an inch or two of soil. You can then plant your peas without having to do any more than cover them with an inch of soil, pat the furrow and say, "Go!" Apart from organically enriched soil, pea plants need consistent moisture when flowers and pods are forming. Lime is also needed if the soil pH is below 6.

To read the full article at washingtonpost.com, please go here

Photo credit: Lobo235

February 21, 2007

How to make Italian-style meatballs

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Ahhh....meatballs. If only we could grow them in the garden. Luckily, we can make them in the kitchen, using herbs from our gardens. The New York Times is offering a helpful tutorial on how to build a better meatball.

For those already prepared to dive, hands first, into the mixing bowl here's the recipe:

Ingredients:
2 pounds ground beef
1 cup fresh bread crumbs
1/2 cup finely grated Parmesan
1 heaping tablespoon chopped fresh basil
1 heaping tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/8 teaspoon ground cayenne pepper
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 eggs
3 tablespoons olive oil.

Procedure:
1. In a large bowl, mix all ingredients except olive oil by hand, using a light touch. Take a portion of meat in hand, and roll between palms to form a ball that is firmly packed but not compressed. Repeat, making each meatball about 2 inches in diameter.

2. In a large, heavy pot heat olive oil over medium-high heat. When it shimmers, add meatballs in batches. Do not crowd. Brown well on bottoms before turning, or meatballs will break apart. Continue cooking until browned all over. Remove meatballs to a plate as each batch is finished. Let meatballs cool slightly; cover and refrigerate until needed.

Yields about 16 meatballs.

Photo and recipe credit: The New York Times

February 2007 Newsletter

To read the full newsletter online, please go here: http://www.kitchengardeners.org/newsletterfebruary07.html 


Dear Kitchen Gardener,

Envy is not an evolved emotion, but I have to admit to feeling pangs of it at the sight of these plump, colorful potatoes.  They arrived in my e-mail inbox courtesy of New Zealand gardener, Rachel Knight, who grew them and is the subject of our latest kitchen gardener profile.

It's not that I don't have potatoes of my own.  We grew six varieties last season and still have a number of them left.  The problem is that mine look too much like what they are: tubers harvested in October stored until late February in less than optimal conditions.  My family and I are quite new to our current house, so we're still getting to know what works where, inside and out.  Our potatoes have held up surprisingly well in our cool basement with very little sprouting.  Within a couple of weeks, we will have made our way through all the large and medium ones and will be down to the nugget-sized ones, many of which will end up as seed potatoes. 

Seeing this photo and the different varieties it features made me think about just how undiscovered the potato is for many gardeners and cooks.  Sure, we all know what a potato is, may have grown some, and probably know a handful of recipes that call for them. That said, most us are probably still just scratching the surface of what this white-fleshed wonder can do.  This thought led me to take a quick inventory of my family's own potato usage. 

As some of you will know from previous newsletters, I live in a Belgo-American household, so potatoes are a staple in our cooking.  Here are some of the different ways that we've prepared ours over the course of the past year in no particular order: mashed, baked, boiled, oven-roasted, pan-fried, Belgian fries, potato soup, latkes, potato bread, Spanish potato tortilla, Flemish-style mashed potatoes (stoemp), potatoes au gratin, and various potato salads in the summer.  We, of course, use them in other ways too such as in soups and stews, but these are the dishes that came to mind where potatoes play the starring role. 

This list isn't bad, but it could be longer and more culturally diversified.  For example, I'd love to try my hand at making home-made potato gnocchi or spicy, potato-filled somosas .  For me, the joy of cooking is stepping out of the comfort zone to explore uncharted territory.  Occasionally, I find myself completely lost in the culinary wild with various burns and cuts, not to mention a bruised ego. 

More often than not, though, I find my way back to something that's not only palatable, but quite tasty.  And when I'm really good, my cooking manages to arouse a whole range of emotions in my eaters and dinner guests: pleasure, wonder, gratitude, and - who knows - maybe even a touch of envy. 

Hang in there until next month.  The days are getting longer, warmer, and brighter for most of us and more bountiful for others like Rachel whose summer season is reaching peak.

February 19, 2007

Marvelous mulch

by Cindy McNatt, printed February 17, 2007 in the Orange County Register

turnipmulch022007.jpgI dropped a pile of books off at the local library the other day and saw the groundskeeping crew blowing the last gram of organic matter out of the landscape.

The leaves were gathered to throw in the trash and the plants that lived there, daylilies and rhaphiolepis, looked stunted and sad as they choked on the fumes of the leaf blower and shivered at the loss of their leafy blanket.

Mulch is a simple idea. Leaves that fall to the ground and carpet the surface to keep it cozy are an essential part of how nature makes soil. Leaf litter is a mulching process as old as the planet.

Yet we routinely clean up the litter that ironically leaves only dirt behind. And dirt isn't soil unless it contains organic matter.

A top dress of mulch not only provides it, it offers other immediate benefits. Joanne West of Sierra Soils in San Juan Capistrano offers five:

"Two to three inches settled on the top of exposed soil helps hold moisture in, keeps the soil temperatures even around the root zone of plants, prevents weeds from germinating, prevents erosion and makes landscapes look neat and tidy," she said.

The long-term benefits are more mysterious. When organic matter is within reach, earthworms will work their way to the surface, aerating the soil along the way, to pull bits and pieces of plant matter down to ultimately make soil.

Worm colleagues such as insects, fungi and bacteria get into the act also in an exercise that makes the environment come alive.

You can make your own mulch by simply letting leaves lie where they fall. If you don't like the look, a second simple approach is to rake the leaves into a pile, run the lawn mower over them, and then throw the clipped contents back into your beds.

Photo courtesy of Cherry and Eric

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February 13, 2007

Hope in the form of seeds

by Jennifer Rich, published February 13, 2007 in the Bradenton Herald

What does a small packet of vegetable seeds have to do with the world economy?

Ask Mike Mueller and he'll tell you it's the hope for the future of developing countries like Haiti, Afghanistan and Uganda.

The seeds represent a way out of poverty and into entrepreneurship for some of the poorest residents on the globe. Mueller and a small group of others in Manatee County involved in a nonprofit organization known as Hope Seeds are trying to provide food security for these countries by showing individuals how they can grow and harvest their own crops year after year.

The organization has a 2,000-square-foot air conditioned warehouse that holds hundreds of thousands of packets of seeds worth $300,000 to $500,000 on two acres of leased land at 5174 County Road 675.

Seed packets specially formulated for each country's need, culture and climate are being shipped to regions hit by natural disasters like flooding, which wiped out most of Guyana's crops, and Tropical Storm Jeanne, which hit deforested Haiti, washing away fertile topsoil and taking 2,000 lives. Each year, Hope Seeds provides packets of seeds and more than 300 tote bags of personal hygiene packages to orphanages in Haiti.

The United State's usual response of sending "leftover" food supplies to these countries hit by devastation is not the way to promote a lasting solution, Mueller said.

"If we want to save the world's problems, we shouldn't just send them what we have leftover," he said. "It is often easier to ship leftover food than show them how to grow it."

The faith-based organization works with missionaries in these countries who understand the local conditions and shepherd through the seeds so they will reach their destination.

"Millions of hungry people don't have access to seed there, while farmers here have seed companies fighting for their business," Mueller said.

Organizers also make sure they are shipping seed that will be successful for each country. In Afghanistan, for instance, people don't eat broccoli. But they do like cauliflower and cucumbers. Haitians like Swiss Chard but didn't know how to prepare it, so the missionaries working with Hope Seed showed them how.

Hope Seeds is working with eight ministries or strategic partners in Haiti to start a new business enterprise of raising crops for seed and then selling that seed and seedlings to farmers to replenish their crops. It is a way to promote food security and ensure that despite famine, drought or other natural disasters, Haitian farmers will have enough good seed for the next year.

Mueller hopes Hope Seeds Haiti will become successful enough that the business can become a model for starting other similar enterprises in developing countries providing commercial quantities of seed.

"They (Haitians) don't have access to established (seed) depots where farmers can count on having good seed each year," he said. "This is one of the biggest dilemmas they have in struggling nations."

So far Hope Seeds Haiti, started in 2003, has produced $4,000 in annual gross sales and gotten the attention of area farmers who are starting to purchase seeds and soon seedlings for their own gardens.

Enoch Firmin, manager of the project, is here for a nine-month stay to learn more about seed and plant production to bring the expertise back to his country.

"He went ga ga when he walked into our grocery stores here," Mueller said. The abundance and variety of vegetables and fruits astounded him "He asked, 'Is it always like this?' "

Hope Seeds is run mainly on private donations and also receives support from local clubs, churches and organizations. In the last three years, the organization has shipped 300,000 packs of seed valued at $1 million.

Mueller, who has been involved in mission work at Hope Lutheran Church in Bradenton, used to be in the wholesale seed industry, selling vegetable seed to farmers as an agent with Harris-Moran Seed Co. and later as an independent agent with his own seed company.

Board member Frank Sinot thinks with a higher profile and more donors, Hope Seeds could mean all the difference for developing nations.

"We are on the threshold of doing wonders," Sinot said. "We could do 10 times what we do now if we reach our goal of doubling or tripling our donor base in two years."

Copyright of the Bradenton Herald

February 9, 2007

Portuguese kale soup

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Hearty, spicy and flavorful -- a classic soup that just makes people happy.

Ingredients:
6 strips of bacon, cut into 1 inch pieces
1 cup diced onion
4 cloves garlic, minced
4-6 cups water or chicken stock
6 cups kale, washed and cut up
8 ounces sausage (linguisa, chorizo or any hot spicy sausage) thinly sliced
1 large can kidney beans
4 cups finely chopped potatoes
salt, pepper and hot pepper sauce to taste

Procedure:
In large pot, cook bacon, garlic and onions over medium heat until bacon starts to crisp and onions are just tender. Add water or stock, kale, and sausage. Bring to boil and then reduce to a simmer. Continue to boil gently (covered) for 15 minutes. Add potatoes and kidney beans. Allow to cook for another 15 to 20 minutes. Stir in seasonings and simmer the soup for another 30 minutes before serving.

Recipe and photo: Caryn74

Help support KGI by using GoodSearch.com

GoodSearch.gif

Now you can raise money for Kitchen Gardeners International just by searching the Internet at GoodSearch.com.

You use GoodSearch.com like any other search engine, but each time you do, you help support KGI's outreach and education activities.

Here's how it works:
-Go to www.goodsearch.com (which is powered by Yahoo! and yields the same search results)
-Type "Kitchen Gardeners International" in the "I'm supporting" box and click "verify."
-Type in your search query like with any other search engine.
-GoodSearch shares advertising revenue with KGI, so every time you search the web at GoodSearch, you'll be supporting our work.

GoodSearch also has a toolbar you can download from the homepage so that you can search right from the top of your browser.

You can keep track of how much we've earned by clicking on the "amount raised" button. The more people who use the site, the more money we'll earn, so please spread the word.

Just 500 people searching four times a day will earn $7300 for KGI this year. That helps plant a lot of kitchen gardens. Think of what 3,000 people searching could do!

February 8, 2007

Savoring Spring's Temptations

By Barbara Damrosch, published Thursday, February 8, 2007 in The Washington Post

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"Never shop when you're hungry" is good advice. On the way home from work it's easy to fill the cart with food you don't need. On Saturday, after breakfast, there's a chance you'll stick to your list.

With seed shopping, though, you have no choice. You're starved for the taste of fresh garden produce. So here come the new seed catalogues to tempt you in midwinter, when your resistance is low.

I always succumb. Theoretically a seed is the world's biggest bargain: One tiny speck yields so much food! But I'm lured by catalogue descriptions into buying far more than I can grow. Luckily, most seeds keep their spark of life for years if stored in a dry place, and I share extras with neighbors.

Recently I spent a stormy day by the fire with a tall stack of catalogues and surveyed the riches of spring 2007. The top starlet of the season seems to be a very dark brown, mildly spicy chili-type pepper called Holy Molé, highly touted as the first hybrid pasilla pepper, an elongated type that's a current favorite with chefs. It was chosen this year as a coveted All-America Selection -- an award given after objective trials in test gardens nationwide. Holy Molé was repeatedly praised as the perfect pepper for molé, a luscious Mexican sauce sometimes enriched with unsweetened chocolate. I'm skeptical. Making the sauce browner has little to do with producing a good molé, and some "chocolate"-colored peppers struggle to get past muddy purple-green. Organic Gardening magazine gave it a positive write-up but noted that three of its four testers would not grow it a second year, and it scored low for flavor. I'll wait on that one.

Dark vegetables are a big hit in the 2007 lineup. Thompson & Morgan is among the catalogues introducing the Black Cherry tomato, with dusky purplish skin. I like the heirloom black tomatoes I've grown, even though they aren't very prolific. A cherry version sounds great, because cherries have higher yields. This one would look great in a bowl with orange Sungold cherry tomatoes and some red ones, such as the Cook's Garden's Ladybug, a crack-resistant cherry ("Our Tomato Taste Testing Winner of 2006").

To read the full article at washingtonpost.com, please go here

Photo credit: Angelo Cesare

Seed sources on the Web:
Thompson & Morgan, http://www.thompson-morgan.com; Cook's Garden, http://www.cooksgarden.com; Burpee, http://www.burpee.com; Nichols, http://www.nicholsgardennursery.com; Renee's Garden, http://www.reneesgarden.com; Pinetree Garden Seeds, http://www.superseeds.com; Seeds of Change, http://www.seedsofchange.com; John Scheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds, http://www.kitchengardenseeds.com; Bountiful Gardens, http://www.bountifulgardens.org; Johnny's Selected Seeds, http://www.johnnyseeds.com; Fedco Seeds, http://www.fedcoseeds.com; Seeds From Italy, http://www.growitalian.com; Vermont Bean Seed, http://www.vermontbean.com; Shumway's, http://www.rhshumway.com.

February 7, 2007

Video how-to: knife sharpening

Life can occasionally seem dull during the cold, dark days of winter. Your garden is frozen solid, or close to it. You've already gone through your seed catalogues, twice. Well, if you're looking to live on the edge a bit, why not start by sharpening those dull knives of yours? Here's the Food Network's Alton Brown to teach you how.

Bringing the garden indoors

By Anne Wallace Allen for the Associated Press

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Winter is a cold, dark time in Grand Rapids, Mich. But inside Scott Zomerlei's house, there's always a hint of spring.

The downstairs hallway of his two-story home has a modest lettuce garden growing under a light. In the upstairs hall, strawberries thrive.

``I can have a fresh salad any time I want for pretty much no money and I know it's totally organic, because I grew it myself,'' said the 24-year-old, who works at a hydroponic equipment store. He says he enjoys living with the glow of growing lights and the lush smell of plants.

He's hardly alone. Exotic or extensive windowsill gardens have become a big business. And this is way beyond pots of basil or chives.

As the American palate has diversified, many home cooks want more than old standbys, such as thyme or oregano. And increasingly, they are getting it. Even high-rise apartment dwellers are finding they can grow exotic produce.

Living room-friendly dwarf citrus trees can be found on eBay, online gardening sellers, even in the pages of upscale food catalogs. With the right conditions and care, lemons, limes and miniature oranges can be an arm's length from your couch or kitchen.

There also are mail-order dwarf banana trees guaranteed to thrive in any climate -- as long as they're indoors. And Herbkits.com of Springville, Utah, sells kits for growing medicinal herbs, as well as herbal teas, such as chamomile.

The appeal is part novelty, but also part offshoot of the local and organic foods movement. People want to know where their food comes from and how it was produced. It's hard to be better acquainted with one's food than this.

``It's just crazy popular right now,'' said Jay Lawrence, owner of Growco Indoor Gardening, the Grand Rapids hydroponics equipment store where Zomerlei works. In hydroponic gardening, plants are rooted in a nonsoil substance and fed liquid nutrients.

Of course, indoor edibles come at a price. While a clay pot of oregano might cost a few dollars, dwarf citrus plants run $50 or more. And once you get into more serious growing systems, the cost of powering them must be factored in, too.

Wattage determines the size of the area you can garden, Lawrence said. His store sells all-in-one hydroponic growing systems, including a 3-by-3-foot enclosure, for $1,547. Smaller all-inclusive systems, suitable for a tabletop, start at around $199.

Christopher Casacci, who sells hydroponic equipment in his Niagara Falls, N.Y., Sunlight Solutions, is trying to take advantage of the efficiency of hydroponics to grow truffles on the roots of indoor hydroponic hazelnut trees.

His customers tend to grow more conventional indoor food, such as strawberries, which are popular because they grow well hydroponically and produce plenty of fruit. Others grow wheatgrass, which is popular for smoothies with the natural foods set.

Of course, Casacci sometimes wonders whether his equipment is being used for illegal, rather than culinary, purposes.

``I can't make assumptions,'' Casacci said. ``I've seen people come into my store and I had kind of wondered, and then I found out later that they're growing kosher food and they're Jewish.''

Recently, Aerogrow, a Boulder, Colo., company, introduced AeroGarden, a product intended to take the effort out of hydroponics and make it countertop-friendly. The company dubbed the device the ``world's first kitchen garden appliance.''

The self-contained lighted unit -- which comes with plants or seeds -- even alerts you when the plants need water or nutrients.

The company is planning a number of exotic seed kits, including a Japanese collection that will include mitsuba, nira chives, red shiso, cress and shungiku, said Sylvia Bernstein, director of plant products for Aerogrow.

Future kits will include strawberries, miniature raspberries, dwarf eggplants and tiny broccoli, as well as lavender and herbs from Mexico and South America, India and Southeast Asia.

But for some, the humble lemon tree is enough. Katherine Berg, of Boise, Idaho, has one from Florida in her home, and she works hard to make sure it gets enough sun through the window to sustain it. She said she watches the tree closely for aphids and other pests and even helps out when the tree needs to be pollinated, because there are no bees in the house to do the job.

``You have to be a bee,'' said Berg, who works at Far West Landscape & Garden in Boise. ``You rub the inside of the flower with a Q-tip, and rub the inside of the next flower. Otherwise, they won't set fruit.''

Article copyright of the Associated Press
Photo: Joel Johnson

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February 2, 2007

Recipe round-up

Here are some recent recipes that may be of interest. When possible, try to cook and eat "in season" using local ingredients.

San Francisco Chronicle:

JaMand's Guac Salsa Cruda & Avocado Guacamole Tamarindo Style Regalito's Guacamole Salsa Fresca Zazil's Guacamole Chipotle Roast Pork Cuban Sandwiches Pasta with Cottage Cheese Cottage Cheese Latkes Cornish Hens with Wine-Marinated Sauerkraut


New York Times:
Tortilla Soup  Broiled Steak With Pineapple and Onion Salsa Hard-Shell Clams With Parsley Pesto Spaghetti al Limone Lemon Confit Shortbread Tart Chicken Breasts With Fennel and Lemon Thai Chicken Satay

February 1, 2007

Parsley: an herb that stands up to winter

By Barbara Damrosch, published Thursday, February 1, 2007 in The Washington Post

parsley020107.jpg

I used to think that parsley was especially prone to winter predation by rabbits or deer. As its growth slowed in cold weather, something would always nibble it to the ground. Because it is very cold-hardy, the bright green foliage normally would persist in the garden long after most crops had succumbed to winter, and the plants sometimes have still been there in spring.

It seemed logical that creatures foraging for food in the cold season would find them. But when even the ones protected by a cold frame were chewed down to little nubbins, I knew I'd have to look elsewhere for a culprit. The trail led to my husband. Some people chew gum, others keep their hand in a bag of chips. He grazes on parsley. He loves its flavor and puts great trust in its nutritive powers.

It's widely known that the plant is good for you: high in calcium, potassium and folate, richer in iron than spinach, higher than oranges in vitamin C. Just how many grams of these vital substances you obtain from eating it is never quite clear to me, even when linked to a fixed unit such as one cup. What's a cupful of parsley? How full do you cram it, and how hard do you mash it down to measure it? That is irrelevant, according to my mate. For him it's a simple fact that chewing parsley stimulates the digestive juices, keeps you from getting colds and helps you deal with winter. He leaves a trail not of cookie crumbs but of parsley stems from which he has nibbled the leaves. We have learned to sow plenty, for a generous supply. This year, with winter's mild beginning, our crop was abundant.

Not long ago parsley emerged from the garnish ghetto and became a bona fide culinary herb. Cooks embraced the flat-leaf kind, as opposed to the more firm-textured curly type, but both still have their place. In our house, parsley has further progressed from herb to full-fledged vegetable. There aren't many green plants you can pick generous bunches of in January, but parsley holds its own with spinach, leeks and kale. Also, there aren't many culinary herbs whose flavor is mild enough to eat in large quantities. Recently I pureed a big bunch of it with some cream, then simmered the mixture to reduce and thicken it, melting in some Parmesan cheese and pouring the sauce over ravioli. It drew raves, as did a quiche in which parsley was the key player.

To read the entire article at washingtonpost.com, please go here

For more info on parsley cultivation, please go here

Some parsley recipes worth exploring:
PARSLEY GARLIC BUTTER
PARSLEY DUMPLINGS
PARSLEY AND SWEET ONION SANDWICHES

Photo credit: Corydora