KGI Newsletter: July 2006

Contents:

 

Food and Cooking:

-Homemade ketchup

-Tomatillo Salsa

Food system news and commentary:

-Climate change could spell sunset for wine industry

 

From KGI's bloggers:

 


International Kitchen Garden Day is August 27th. How will you recognize the day?

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Will you celebrate it with a salad of garden-fresh tomatoes?

 

Will you invite a nongardener into your garden that day?

 

Will you drop off some of your extra garden produce at a local food pantry?

 

Will you get a few people in your neighborhood together for a garden tour?

 

Will you organize a harvest or planting party?

 

Will you organize an educational event of some sort to introduce others to kitchen gardening?

 

Please let us know how you intend to recognize the day. No matter how small and inconsequential it may seem to you, your little gesture when combined with others' really makes a difference. 

 

Also, please let us know how we can help. 


 

Do you think kitchen gardening should be frontpage news? 

 

Funny...so do we!

 

You can help us make the news in your local community. Here's how:

 

We've written a generic article which we are asking people to adapt and submit to their local papers.  Our experience is that small community papers are very receptive to submission of this sort.  The idea is to get into as many papers as possible in the weeks leading up to Kitchen Garden Day on August 27th.

 

Please let us know how you do.

 

Thank you. 

 


 

Reader Comments:

 

 


Mapping the World of Kitchen Gardens!

Our map project continues to grow in size and scope.  We've added some new categories to it such "gardening groups", "school gardens", "kitchen garden eateries", "kitchen garden B&Bs", and "community gardens".   Please give it a visit and consider adding yourself or a garden-related project or establishment in your area. 

 


KGI Sign Campaign and Contest Update

 

We're extending the deadline for our sign contest to August 21st to have more entries. 

 

It has been asked whether it is possible to create a virtual sign instead of a physical one , i.e. one that is not posted in one's yard but somewhere visible in cyberspace.  Yes, we think this is a nice tweak on the original concept. 

 

So, if you have some digital talents and want to come up a sign or banner that could be added to a website or blog, please let those creative juices flow.

 

 

Dear Kitchen Gardener,

 

Roger called me into duty this month to share some of my thoughts on kitchen gardening from Las Cruces, New Mexico.

After 50 years of basic organic food gardening, I have finally begun paying attention to the principles that guide my choices and actions - not that I have come to them easily, or all at once, or all alone. Sustained gardening is of necessity a journey for the gardener, one that can take them beyond award winning varieties, professionally formulated chemistries and magical soil additives. For many the journey becomes a portal into the nature of nature, the nature of food and even the nature of the gardener. For we all seek and find ourselves somewhere in the garden – as imperfect as it may be.

Over the last few years, my garden (usually preceded with some adjective like “food” or “kitchen”) has become more than a place to grow food and more than a way to beautify the yard. In fact, never would it delight the eye of a landscape architect or grace the pages of Gardening Magazine. However, there are patches of beauty throughout the year, mixed in with the heartbreak of withering leaves, brown spots, gnawed stems and chewed fruit. Seems all the players in my garden are focused on their own needs rather than mine.

I sometimes stand in the ragged tapestry of green beds and marvel at how little there is to eat. What is for dinner – often drives me to the store and yet the garden has had a profound impact on our diet. In part because of what has grown there (memory being a persistent aspect of eating) and in part because of the qualities that we had discovered in the food. Food from the garden has informed our taste, so that we now require the flavor and nutrient density found in the olden style, pre-industrialized, earthly grown fruits, vegetables, eggs and meats. Yes, they can be found here in Las Cruces. The garden also provides a space for seeing and observing as well as a trampoline for my intellectual exercises.

Most of my garden looks like the gardener is ignorant of the rules or at least fails to comply with the standards for clear cutting, tilling, timing, rotating and spacing. That is an accurate observation, which brings me to the principles that are ultimately responsible for the look and function of the garden.
 

Basic Principles of Sustainable Food Gardening

• The sustainable food garden is a biological community of diverse organisms, an ecosystem that includes the gardener.

• The processes and activities for starting a garden are different from those needed to maintain a garden. It is not necessary or desirable to start a garden over again every year.

• The gardener is as cultivated by the garden, as the garden is by the gardener.

• The food garden is an international collection of species assembled to meet the gardener’s food preferences. However, locally adapted varieties will be the most productive and often the best flavored.

• Plants affect each other. They have synergistic and symbiotic relationships both above and below the soil surface. They grow best when in diverse relationships with other plants.

• Some food plants are more “wild” than others are. They need less gardener intervention and management and will reseed themselves endlessly in their season requiring only thinning and watering.

• The garden and gardener benefit from saving seeds.

• Weeds and pest insects are important members of the food garden community.

• Plants that bloom and produce seeds contribute to the well being of all organisms in the garden community, including those living in the soil.

• Healthy garden soil is more than a substrate to hold roots, water and chemical nutrients; it is a complex living community. Healthy soil is essential for producing healthy food.

• Digging, plowing or roto-tiling the garden damages the soil community and soil structure.

• Soil should only be disturbed as required to sow seed, set transplants and harvest roots and tubers.

• Decay is part of the living cycle.

Now that I have this, as yet incomplete, set of Principles, how do I use them?

Next month I will continue this exploration at my website and blog with some Guidelines for a Sustainable Food Garden.

Stay tuned,

Darrol Shillingburg

Las Cruces, NM

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Yes, we're really nutty enough to think we can regrow a better food system...but not without your help.

 

Support KGI through a secure, online contribution here.

 

Support KGI through our print & mail donation form, click here.


 

Do you have:

1 piece of paper?

ink in your printer?

and 10 minutes?

Then, you have all you need to help KGI spread the word about kitchen gardening.  We have updated our flyer.  Could we ask you to print it out on your computer and post it in your community where you think gardeners and local food lovers might see it?  We've had good luck posting it on public bulletin boards in town halls, natural food stores, and libraries. Thanks!

Download the flyer here (PDF document, guaranteed virus-free!)


THE BEST ZUCCHINI RECIPE EVER?

INGREDIENTS:

1 bushel zucchini
1 raincoat
1 pair of sunglasses
1 fast car

DIRECTIONS:
Go to a busy parking lot. Drive around until you find an unlocked car.
Put the zucchini in the back seat and drive away FAST before you are discovered!