tcdup wrote:I heard this interesting piece on
NPR today about how Germans don't expect (or seemingly WANT) out-of-season produce.
It's a real mindset difference.
Welcome to my world
First, let me reiterate what I say all the time on the Local Beet, being an ardent locavore does not mean I eat exclusively from within some defined range or boundary. I am staring, as I type this, at some bananas. What I pretty much ascribe to is a notion of, if it comes from here, or can from here, then I stick to that. Otherwise, as a farmer once told me, I go as far as needed to get what I need.
That out of the way, there are a few huge hurdles that make our mindset different from cited above. Foremost, we have a huge fallow period, from at least November until around late April where there is very little possibility of agriculture without the use of interventions such as covered rows or indoor production. So, what is "in season" is limited to storage crops or indoor crops. Willing to live with that? Making things more difficult, storage crops require more work in the kitchen and then, they have all these negative connotations as peasant foods or depression foods. Thus, the demand for year-round asparagus.
Worse, we are inundated with chefs and restaurants with access to the world and put the world on our plate. Even the chefs who pay homage to local, call themselves farm-to-table, rarely hold the mindset cited above. When one of the most notable "Midwestern" chefs says local to him means within the 50 US states, how are the rest of us supposed to think any differently.
I dream of a world where we all hold a mindset of not expecting or wanting out of season produce. I also belong to a tribe that's been waiting 5000 years for their Messiah.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.