Articles tagged with: North Carolina
Reposted from Charlotte Locavore
In early December, my family spent a wonderful weekend in Charleston, South Carolina, a delightful culinary road trip that was a feast to our senses.
On Friday evening, after exploring the French Quarter neighborhood, we headed to Bowens Island Restaurant. Located in the marshlands, Bowens Island Restaurant serves the freshest seafood in Charleston. The oysters, shrimp, fish, and crabs that make up the menu are sourced from the river and creeks that surround the island. You can’t get more local than that!
The rapid growth in the number of farmers markets across the country means that there is increasing opportunity to share for those, like my dad, with delicious family recipes. With the help of authors like Detra Denay Davis, many of them are now turning their passion into a viable and successful business enterprise, enabling them to share what they love with their communities.
With so much color and variety, it is easy to get lost in these markets, which is exactly what Lorraine Plaxico did one day when she was looking for something to draw. Without the intention to start a new line of artwork, she stumbled into the Asheville, NC farmers market, one of most impressive local food scenes in the country. Entranced by the colors and shapes, she set up her pad and pastels and just started making quick sketches of the booths there.
When it comes to snapping turtles and carpenter bees, I’m clueless. It wasn’t in any textbook of mine, nor in my backyard growing up: Nature eludes me.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE—April 13, 2010 (Pittsboro, North Carolina) Congressional efforts to increase federal control over food and agriculture could have dramatic and dangerous consequences for the region’s local food systems and small farmers, according to a report issued today by the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association.
Asheville, NC prides itself on a thriving farm-to-table scene and flourishing network of family farms. While the city owes that reputation to many active organizations and individuals, one local non-profit, the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project, laid the groundwork for city’s food future.
Living back in the mainstream reminds me of the Goliath–size reality of our food system. The majority of Americans today has never been to a farm or have any idea where their food comes from. I am living inside one of Michael Pollan books, the bleak food landscape.
I’m not in Kansas anymore, No longer in the Bay Area where most farms are within 200 miles, where there are farmers’ markets everyday of the week, and where there is a general culture of “Buy Local” and “Eat Healthy”.


