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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMountain Grown: Appalachia's New Local Food Economy
Mountain Grown: Appalachia's New Local Food Economy
Hungry for okra, collards, and trout? In Appalachia, you can now get all your soul food cravings from local farmers.
by Erin L. McCoy
posted Aug 21, 2013
Restaurants like Knife and Fork didn't use to exist in places like Spruce Pine, a town of just 2,200 people nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina. About 80 percent of what the restaurant serves is sourced from within a 40-mile radius. For the most part, the only things that aren't local are beer, wine, and cheese.
"I see myself as less a chef and more as a sourcer or a seeker of great products," says chef Nate Allen.
Ten years ago, Allen says, there was no real demand for local food here. But over the last decade, southern Appalachian consumers have started seeking it out. Restaurateurs, specialty food producers, and farmers have shifted their business models to meet this demand, and for many, the local food movement has been a welcome answer to shifts in the national economy.
Since 2002, skyrocketing demand for local food has been recorded in the Local Food Guide published annually by the Asheville-based Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project. The number of local farms listed in that guide has grown from 58 to 691a startling increase of 1,091 percent. Likewise, the number of farmers markets is up 197 percent, and the number of restaurants serving local food is up 542 percent. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/mountain-grown-appalachia-s-new-local-food-economy
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Mountain Grown: Appalachia's New Local Food Economy (Original Post)
marmar
Sep 2013
OP
d_r
(6,907 posts)1. I've had beer and wine from that area
both are good
devils chaplain
(602 posts)2. Excellent n/t
Flo Mingo
(492 posts)3. I live in Asheville
and I have fresh, local dairy and produce delivered to my door every week. I know exactly where my food comes from and it's 1000 miles fresher than most grocery stores dairy and produce. However, some local grocery chains are recognizing the trend and now have a much wider selection of locally grown produce in their stores.
toby jo
(1,269 posts)4. This has been a great national trend.
Went to a farmer's market last weekend for some good eats. Also found natural soaps, beeswax candles, wreaths and crafts. Will be turning 1 acre of pasture over to specialty crops this coming spring - berries, sunflowers, ginger, garlic, gourds, herbs, etc.
Check one out if you get the chance.
bluestate10
(10,942 posts)5. Great post. nt