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Jocelyn Engman of Choice Earth CSA shares her passion, intelligence and poetic wisdom about eating in season from the CSA garden (Community Supported Agriculture).
Savvy Veg also has an article about Jocelyn's evolution from chemist to organic farmer, which is good background for 'Eating In Season'.
Both articles originally appeared in The Iowa Source.
I didn't pay much attention to the soil or it's smell or the seasons in general before my husband and I came back to Iowa to start our community supported agriculture (CSA) garden. I didn't pay any attention to the land, though farming is what I came from and what I grew up with.
Only now am I starting to get the feel of 'reconnected to the land.' What we put in our mouths nourishes our lives, and the soil is the start of all nourishment. More than that, being awake and aware is the only way we know we're alive; eating is acknowledging life.
Consider gardening for a summer, even if it's only two tomato plants and a patch of lettuce. If that's not an option for you, join a local CSA. These growers sell advance shares of the harvest directly to their members. For a set price, CSA members receive weekly shares of produce throughout the season. It's a lot like owning your own garden:
Those are the obvious benefits of CSA, the benefits that first appealed to me. Every year I find more reasons why I like CSA, and this year, I'm beginning to think that I missed the best point of all. Joining a CSA is like eating from a garden, and when you eat from a garden, you eat by the seasons.
The seasons are fundamental to life in the Midwest. When it's winter, it snows and we wear coats and forget all about swimming at the lake or barbequing for the Fourth of July. Yet we eat as if summer never passed, with cucumbers, zucchini, broccoli, green beans, asparagus, and peppers proudly stacked along the aisles of our grocery stores. Over the last few decades, genetic engineering, faster trasnportation, and better preservation technology have transformed our food delivery system, so we eat as though seasons don't matter.
What I learned from being part of a CSA is that while having year-round grocery store access to fresh fruits and vegetables seems like a good thing, it comes with a price, and in the end it puts us asleep, deadens us to the real costs of food convenience. We waste fuel and energy in transporting our-of-season produce to the winter states, and eating long-distance encourages large-scale gardening.
This 'industry' of commercial farming can be brutal on our soils and burn them out through the use of petrochemicals. Even organic farms can be industrial, and that's one more reason to consider eating locally by the season - you'll know exactly how your farmer treats the soil and the vegetables that go into your mouth.
And those are just the obvious losses that accompany our modern food systems. When we start to ignore the seasons, to deaden ourselves to the rhythms of growth, we lose even more.
For thousands of years, our ancestors were connected to the food they ate - first through hunting and gathering and later through agriculture. From the vantage point of history, it's been a very few years indeed since we lost touch with the growing process, gave up the sense of renewal that comes from watching the greens come up with the lengthening days.
USDA data shows that recently grown crops have up to 38 percent less protein, calcium, vitamin C, phosphorus, iron, and riboflavin than the same crops had in decades past.
Part of the problem is that we're eating out of season, consuming produce that never fully ripened in the field. Not only are we growing nutrient-poor vegetable varieties and harvesting them before their prime, but we're growing them in nutrient-poor soil. While we sleep through the seasons we deaden our health.
People in our society aren't getting full enough. It seems funny saying that, after listening to reports of the obesity epidemic in our country. Aren't full tummies the problem? Not exactly. If we keep eating empty food, then we'll keep experiencing the desire to eat, we'll never know fullness, and we'll over eat.
But we need more than nutrients to help us feel satisfied. We need taste. in the culinary world, chefs and connoisseurs are beginning to bemoan the loss of variety and flavor that has accompanied our modern food system. It's this full-bodied taste that we crave, deep down, and it this craving that drives us to keep eating even though we may not know what we're searching for.
Eating in season brings us all closer to the land. My family's CSA, Choice Earth, describes the choice I made when I came back to gardening. It was the choice of returning to the earth, of going back to the land, to the soil, to a home I almost forgot I had even known. Every year I find more reasons to like CSA, and this year it's eating in season.
Jocelyn Engman, Choice Earth CSA, Southeast Iowa, April 2006
SV Note: To find a CSA in your area, search on Green People Directory