agriculture Archives - Tasting Kauai
 

Top Navigation

Tag Archives | agriculture

Pau Hana Friday For October 5

NEWS:

Tasting Kauai

Gaylord's Mai Tai made with Koloa Rum. Click the picture for recipe. Daniel Lane photo

Gaylord’s Mai Tai made with Koloa Rum. Click the picture for recipe. Daniel Lane photo

 

If things look a little different to you, it’s because our website is getting an update. Besides a slightly different look, we are adding a payment option so tours can be booked online. Marta is writing a series of e-books which will be compiled into one book called A Culinary Romp Through Paradise: The Foodie’s Guidebook to Kauai. The book will have detailed listings of farmers markets, farmers, seasonality and descriptions of exotic produce, restaurants and food trucks, products made on Kauai with ingredients grown on Kauai, food related events, grocery stores that carry local products and more.

A series of e-books will be released as they are completed, which will be chapters in the final book. Since we are frequently asked, by locals and visitors alike, “Where are the best paces to eat?” we have compiled a list of our Top 20 Restaurants. We also support the Kauai artisans who hand-craft their products with passion, honesty and quality ingredients. Our Top 20 Artisans list features our favorite farm-fresh goodies.

Details can be read under the “Books” tab, which will be completed early next week. For now, you can check out what’s coming. Later, you’ll be able to download our Top 20. Part One: Restaurants, the first in our e-book series, is due to be released in November 2012. We have a lot of tasty information to share, and want to serve it like a multiple course dinner. Each e-book can be consumed and digested at you’re leisure, and just when you’re hungry for more, the next e-book should be fresh out of the oven! Continue Reading →

Lilikoi Rum Yum

Lilikoi Rum Yum

Lilikoi Rum Yum. Daniel Lane photo

Lilikoi Rum Yum. Daniel Lane photo

We’re all about supporting locally grown food, and that extends to beverages. We feel extremely fortunate to enjoy rum made just a few miles away, with sugar grown on Kauai, as well as Kauai spring water. Naturally, the Koloa Rum Co. is  our liquor of choice. Here at Tasting Kauai, Dan Lane is not only the photographer, but bartender. Since we had an abundance of nutritious passion fruit juice, Dan blended it with Kauai Spice rum, and came up with this refreshing drink. I like it when I can feel healthy while enjoying a cocktail! Continue Reading →

Redefining CSAs and B & Bs on Kauai

North Country Farms. Daniel Lane photo

North Country Farms. Daniel Lane photo

“For years, we did three farmers markets a week,” says Lee Roversi, organic farmer and founder of North Country Farms. “Then Hurricane Iniki came, and for a long time, there were no markets.”

On September 11, 1992, Hurricane Iniki struck the island of Kauai at its peak. With winds of 145 MPH, the category 4 hurricane devastated most of the island, destroying over 1,400 homes, severely damaging over 5,000 homes, causing close to $2 billion in damages, and taking six lives. Continue Reading →

Introducing Denver Food Warrior Magdalen Thulson

Maggie Thulson at Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah. Magdalene Thulson photo

Maggie Thulson at Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah. Magdalen Thulson photo

The Real Time Farms (RTF) Summer 2012 Food Warrior class consists of people from all over the United States. Over the summer, my fellow Food Warriors are documenting the food systems in Boston, Chicago, Denver, New York, Rhode Island, Washington D.C., and myself in Kauai. All counted, there are 25 of us.

I have to say, I really like the title Food Warrior!

Magdalen (Maggie) Thulson is a Denver Summer 2012 Food Warrior. She is mastering in anthropology at Beloit College in Wisconsin. While she is on break, she’s back in her hometown in Colorado with her family. Her internship at RTF will provide an opportunity for her to get to know her local food systems, and she sees similarities between this internship, and anthropology.

Harvesting cacao in Peru. Magdalene Thulson photo

Harvesting cacao in Peru. Magdalen Thulson photo

“Food is central to everything,” the 21-year-old tells me. We are video chatting in a Hangout on Google+. “The art of cooking and community puts you in touch with your food.”

Thulson graduates next May and is considering joining FoodCorps. “It’s similar to AmeriCorps,” she says. “You help get gardens in schools.”

The goal at FoodCorps is to give youth a lasting relationship with healthy food. Over a year, “Service Members” create healthy food environments for children and go on to become farmers, chefs, educators, and public health leaders. “These visionaries, armed with the skills to improve school food, will improve all food,” the website says.

Drying cacao in Peru. Magdalene Thulson photo

Drying cacao in Peru. Magdalen Thulson photo

After reading the book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver, Thulson was inspired to learn about where her food comes from. At Beloit, she joined Slow Food, an international nonprofit created to protect honest food, farmers and heirloom fruits and vegetables.

Recently, Thulson spent time working at a farm in Peru through World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WWOOF). The network of organizations links volunteers with organic farmers, and helps people share more sustainable ways of living. “I took my fall semester off of school and went there for a few months to work and learn about food.”

Magdalene's host father in Peru planting bananas.  Magdalene Thulson photo

Magdalen's host father in Peru planting bananas. Magdalene Thulson photo

As a student, she banded with 15 classmates to form a Dining Co-op, a national trend that combines home cooked meals, community, and significant cost savings. “We all pitched in and bought three CSA shares,” she says. “That way, we could have high-quality food, meet people, and cook and share meals together.”

Community Supported Agriculture, or CSA, in when a person buys a share in a local farm. The share enables the farmer to plan his growing season based on how many shareholders he has. The farmer can use this information to anticipate how many seeds to buy, how much labor to budget for, and she can determine other factors such as water consumption, composting or fertilizing needs, and packing materials. In return, every week, for the duration of the growing season, members get a box of just harvested produce.

Peru Farmers Market. Magdalene Thulson photo

Peru Farmers Market. Magdalen Thulson photo

“The CSA was great—I wouldn’t have been able to eat the food all myself so it was good to have the dining co-op to share it with,” she says. “We were always happy with the produce we got. The farm was very close to our school, so we were able to make a couple of visits as well. It forced us to be creative in our cooking because we had no idea what would be in the box each week (I was introduced to cooking with kale and kohlrabi, and making squash ten different ways). We also learned about what was naturally growing at the time/place.”

For now, Thulson’s biggest worry about the internship is talking to strangers. “I’m a little nervous about talking to people I don’t know. But I just got back from my first farmers market for the internship, and I made some contacts.”

You can follow Magdalen’s Food Warrior internship, and her exploration of the farmers, food artisans and markets in Denver at her blog Denver Feasting.

“I am excited to expand my own and others’ knowledge about food availability in Denver. I am also hoping to get more comfortable connecting with strangers and learning how to ask the right questions to get the most interesting stories.”

Spreading the Seeds of Aloha,
Marta Lane
Summer 2012 Kauai Food Warrior

 

Guest Post by Daniel Shipley

21 year-old Daniel Shipley

21 year-old Daniel Shipley

Daniel Shipley lives in British Columbia and writes about food and travel at Northern Rambler, a blog about discovery. While living on Kauai for a year, he worked in the kitchen at Oasis on the Beach, a seaside restaurant that showcases farm-to-table cuisine. Inspired by this young man’s passion for food, I asked him to write about his island experience for Tasting Kauai.

It was an easy decision for me to move to Kauai. My parents had recently moved and I hadn’t spent time with them for a couple of years so it was really a no brainer. As a foodie, what drew me to the island were the alien-like fruits and vegetables that at that point were a mystery to me. Continue Reading →

Join Our Mailing List

hvcbmemberbig