This is a good list and a big challenge. How can we find
permaculture friendly ways of sourcing these foods?
The person who originally brought up the challenge of sourcing these crops in another thread, mentioned that this was a very important part of how they get their food:
... to me the essential value in local isn't about how far something traveled to get to me but rather the connection between the producer and the consumers that shapes how the farmer farms.
I love this definition. I'm going to run with it.
(warning, this is going to get long, so I'm going to break it up into multiple posts)
So my challenge, how do I source the foodstuff from the list using that definition? My limitations is that I don't know what life is like in other parts of the world/continent/country, so I can only speak to my own
local area. However, maybe someone can find something useful in my solutions.
1. Any kind of food grain or grain product other than possibly corn and popcorn -- ready-made bread, tortillas, granola, pasta, crackers, breakfast cereal, etc.
Oh, I love it. Start me off with a tough one.
I've spent a good deal of my life wondering about this one too. I'm a grain girl. I'm always gonna be a grain girl. I eat grain. Mostly wheat, but oats as well. And then there is beer... I like grain. Living without grain is not an option... but how do we get grain without buying into the whole industrial food complex thingy?
The first hint of solution was when I discovered
Island Grains. I was completely blown away by the thought that I could grow my own grain. I was younger then and much more excitable than I am now. Why didn't I see it before? The place where I live was established as a 'bread basket' if you will, for growing grain for the troops during the crimean war. Sure, the local climate has transformed a lot since then, but maybe I could try growing grain.
My next step in this process took me to the local library where I found two
books:
Small Scale Grain Raising and Homegrown Whole Grains by Sara Pitzer. Later on I also discovered Uprisings : a hands-on guide to the community grain revolution by Sarah Simpson, which has a lot about communities getting together to grow their own grain.
Then I discovered some seed companies specialize in grains for home growing. Companies like
Saltspring seeds and
Backer Creak seeds. It may seem like a small packet of seeds, but grow it, and it becomes a surprising amount of grain. Save half for next year, eat half... and after a few years you'll have
enough for field. I was completely shocked by how easy these crops are to grow. Plant the seeds (often in the fall), maybe weed a bit once, then harvest. My goal is to eventually have a quarter acre in grain, which on a bad year will be more grain than our household could ever dream of eating. The rest will be for trade or livestock
feed. But really, I could probably grow enough grain for my family in my garden taking advantage of fallow spots and overwintering the crops.
While I was discovering all this, a local farm started growing grains and lentils for sale. They
sell whole wheat kernels, whole grain flour, and lentils. They also grow barley for a couple of the local micro breweries... which is where I get beer when I don't feel like malting my own grain and brewing my own. The owner/brewmaster has gotten to know me quite well.
Edit to add: I forgot to mention the two local bakeries in town that buy the wheat from that local farm. One bakery mills it themselves, the other has it sent out to a mill. They bake the bread with the local wheat and it is AMAZING! A few years ago, it wouldn't have worked, but now people are starting to demand local food so we have local bakery with local grain.
2. Any kind of dry bean/pea/lentil at all.
This isn't as much of a challenge for me as the first food. I already grow pulses to help improve the soil, so I have a sizeable source for soup peas, dry beans, chickpeas and far to many favas. (getting the food is one thing, learning how to cook with them, a much larger challenge.
There's a good thread going on here about cooking with dry beans and peas.)
Again, the two seed companies I linked to above have a wonderful selection of pulses to grow.
But say, for some reason I didn't want to grow nitrogen fixers on my farm anymore... or perhaps I had a bad harvest. How could I source these pulses and still follow the local definition I quoted at the beginning?
The local farm that grows the grain I mentioned above, also grows lentils. I'm not a big fan of the lentil, but it's local. Five minute drive from my farm. The farmer who grows them sells them. I can also buy them in the local grocery stores that focus on local crops. Lentis aren't chickpeas, but they are a good source of protein to fall back on.
One of the biggest challenges for me was to find 1) pulses that grow well here and 2) a source of good seed. The second happened by chance when I was getting out a book on cooking pulses and discovered that our book library now lent seeds. A seed library - you borrow the seeds in the spring, grow them, save seeds, return some of the seeds you saved. Membership free and it comes with free growing and seed saving classes. Just up my street. One of the varieties of warm weather beans I borrowed was Hutterite soup bean. It cooks up to this delicious mush that, when cooked with bacon (from the pig who lives up island from me... oh wait, pork is next but one. Good!) and maple syrup (is that on the list? Oh yes, number 11) it tastes like heaven.
The first challenge, finding pulses that grow well here, was part adapting the plants to our location and part thinking outside the box when I realized that food also grows in the winter.
Now I grow most of my pulses over winter while it's raining.
Fava beans do especially well here. Summer beans are always hit and miss due to the summer drought.
While we are at it, I would like to add a 12th thing to the list: Salt. Very difficult to source. I'm curious if people who don't live by the sea have found solutions for this.