General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLocavore Losses: California’s Chefs, Artisans Feel the Drought
(Civil Eats) At Nopalito, if the local corn runs out, you might as well shut the doors. Its typical for the restaurants two San Francisco locations to go through 200 pounds of California-grown organic masa in a single day. The grain is at the menus core, used in everything from tamales, to tortillas, to house-made chips.
In mid-September, Nopalitos owner, Laurence Jossel, learned that Giustos, the Northern California grain processor and wholesaler from which Nopalito sources its flours, had run out of corn after severe drought conditions caused the product to dry up. Its been a mad scramble, says Jossel. He and his head chef called restaurants all over the city, searching for a locally-grown equivalent, without luck. In a pinch, they settled on more expensive organic corn flour from Montana and some from as far as Mexico.
We cant run a restaurant based on (corn) without it, says Jossel. With no end to the California drought in sight, chefs like Jossel, and many artisan food makers who rely on local food, are feeling the squeeze.
In January 2014, California governor Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency due to severe drought conditions. Eight months later, with the continuation of one of the driest years on record, 95 percent of the state continues to suffer under extreme drought conditions. Reservoir levels are shockingly low and wells are going dry, a fact that lead Governor Brown to sign emergency groundwater regulation legislation on September 16. .............(more)
- See more at: http://civileats.com/2014/10/01/locavore-losses-californias-chefs-artisans-feel-the-drought/#sthash.h9QC27ZV.dpuf
Liberal_in_LA
(44,397 posts)Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)Eating what is available locally is what it's all about.