NEWS

A Compost Bike Trailer- Making Soil in Brooklyn

A Compost Bike Trailer- Making Soil in Brooklyn

Have you been passed by a trailer of compost recently while riding your bike?

Compost for Brooklyn, founded in March 2010 in New York, is a group that transformed a vacant lot into a community composting project and a refuge for native plants and community members.  Every week, neighbors come to the garden to visit, and drop off their veggie scraps and other organic waste. In the summer of 2011 alone they received over 8,600 pounds of food scraps from individuals, local schools and businesses from the area.  The garden grows native plants that provide food and shelter for birds and insects.  The group also does education about urban soil and the environment.

Compost for Brooklyn partnered with Ditmas Park CSA and built a CSA / Compost Bike Trailer, which uses a bicycle as a delivery and cargo carrying transportation device to both deliver CSA shares and to collect compost from CSA members.

Want to build one?  A detailed set of free construction documents are available online.  All materials used to make the bike trailer are easily and inexpensively accessible at local hardware stores.

 

Image Source:
www.instructables.com/id/CSA-and-Compost-Bicycle-Trailer/

 

Links:

http://compostforbrooklyn.org/about/

http://www.instructables.com/id/CSA-and-Compost-Bicycle-Trailer/

 

No More Phonebooks? Let your Fingers help you Opt Out

No More Phonebooks? Let your Fingers help you Opt Out

I remember years ago when I wanted to find an address, phone number, or a resource for something (like where I could buy metal for a new art project) – and I would pull out the phone book and spend a few minutes looking things up.   In the last 5 years – my use of the phone book has changed to where I never use it – and whenever I have – I found it does not usually have what I am looking for.

Today I use the internet and online Yellow pages  to find phone numbers, addresses, and resources – and my phone book has gone from a weekly use, to sporadic, to none.

I also have increasingly felt annoyed with the number of phone books that I get sent to me.  There once was one company (usually with a name with Bell in it) – and the white pages and yellow pages.  Today I get phonebooks from multiple companies – and the books do not fit in one drawer.  I usually end up recycling most of them.

Did you know that there are about 540,000,000 yellow page directories printed each and every year in the United States?   To make these, over  7,200,000 barrels of fossil fuel, 3.2 kilowatt hours of electricity, and thousands of trees are use – all in one year.

Want to opt out of getting phone books delivered to your house?  There is a website where you can contact the company that delivers your directores, and request for them to stop.

Goto www.yellowpagesgoesgreen.org, which has listings for phone book companies.   Click on opt out – and you will goto www.yellowpagesoptout.com where you enter your zipcode and the site will provide you with the local company/s responsible for shipping/delivering your phonebooks.  For my zipcode, 44121, six (!) came up.  I registered, completed the form to opt out – and hopefully I will not get any more phone books that I need to recycle.

Image Source:
sfreporter.com

Links:

www.yellowpagesgoesgreen.org

www.yellowpagesoptout.com

 

Root-to-stem cooking

Root-to-stem cooking

Use all parts of the vegetable?  Called root-to-stem cooking (which gets its name from nose-to-tail meat butchery) is a emergent approach to cooking.  Root-to-stem applies to using the skins, roots, or other parts of plants that you might usually throw away or put in the compost.  Using the skins of carrots, the tops of turnips, chive flowers, and the roots of cilantro plants are examples of root-to-stem that are increasingly being used in the kitchen.

Community gardeners, chefs, and “foodies” are looking to use more parts of plants and vegetables – in an effort to make more waste, and also to experiment with what parts of the plant are good (or even sometimes better) to eat in terms of taste, texture, or nutrition.

Last summer on a visit to Blooming Patches CSA farm in Newberry, Ohio,  I learned about eating the leaves of broccoli which are said to have more nutritional value than the flower part that we generally eat.

Eating dandelion flowers, dandelion leaves,  and cornstalks (which can be chewed on and is sweet like sugar cane) are new trends that you might see at the farmers market.

If we reconsider what goes into the pot and what goes into the trash – what new flavors and dishes will emerge?  Using the skins and roots is a practice that people used to practice, but with industrialized foods and awareness of pesticides changed our view of the skins, rinds, and roots as being dirty, unhealthy, and necessary to throw out.

Pre-industrial cooking included the practice of being thrifty and using everything that you had – so cooking fried green tomatoes or pickled watermelon rinds were foods that were preserved.  My 85 year old neighbor Fannie used to use all parts of celery, carrots, and turnips in her soup – and once told me that it made soup taste better.

Eating the leaves on top of a radish, using fennel stalks as a “bed” for cooking fish, cooking the leaves that grow around the head of a cauliflower, using nasturtium leaves in a salad, and cooking the leaves and shoots of sweet potatoes are all examples of stem-to-root cooking.

It is possible to eat the thicker parts of vegetables like beets, chard, and other greens with the technique of braising, which is a combination cooking method using both moist and dry heat – cooking at a high temperature, then simmering with some water.

On the blog of Kale Kitchenworks, called 2 minutes for Dinner, there are posts labeled “Otherwise Trash.” These are recipes and suggestions that include saving a cooking liquid – and using it later.  Examples include using grain water for a soup base, or vegetable water for a mock stock. As the site says, “The strategy is to cook one thing, but take away two, the item you’re preparing and the liquid left over

Want to start stem-to-root cooking?  Here’s some ways to get started:

CARROT, CELERY AND FENNEL LEAVES Mix small amounts, finely chopped, with parsley as a garnish or in salsa verde.  Taste for bitterness when deciding how much to use.

CHARD OR COLLARD RIBS Simmer the thick stalks in white wine and water with a scrap of lemon peel until tender, then drain and dress with olive oil and coarse salt. Or bake them with cream, stock or both, under a blanket of cheese and buttery crumbs, for a gratin.

CITRUS PEEL Organic thin-skinned peels of tangerines or satsumas can be oven-dried at 200 degrees, then stored to season stews or tomato sauces.

CORN COBS Once the kernels are cut off, simmer the stripped cobs with onions and carrots for a simple stock. Or add them to the broth for corn or clam chowder.

MELON RINDS Cut off the hard outer peels and use crunchy rinds in place of cucumber in salads and cold soups.

POTATO PEELS Deep-fry large pieces of peel in 350-degree oil and sprinkle with salt and paprika. This works best with starchy potatoes like russets.

YOUNG ONION TOPS Wash well, coarsely chop and cook briefly in creamy soups or stews, or mix into hot mashed potatoes.

TOMATO LEAVES AND STEMS Steep for 10 minutes in hot soup or tomato sauces to add a pungent garden-scented depth of tomato flavor. Discard leaves after steeping.

TOMATO SCRAPS Place in a sieve set over a bowl, salt well and collect the pale red juices for use in gazpach  or risotto.

TURNIP, CAULIFLOWER OR RADISH LEAVES Braise in the same way as (or along with) collards, chards, mustard greens or kale.

WATERMELON SEEDS Roast and salt like pumpkinseeds.

 

Images:

The Examiner

The Foodista 

 

Links:

Recipes – Stem to Root Cooking

2 Minutes to Dinner – “Otherwise Trash”

Real Time Farms

Want to start a community garden – or a farm?  OSU Cuyahoga County Extension Office Has Opportunities

Want to start a community garden – or a farm? OSU Cuyahoga County Extension Office Has Opportunities

Last week I attended a workshop about starting a community garden given by the Ohio State University Cuyahoga County Extension office.

In the workshop, the presenters talked about the steps of planning and implementing a community garden, and also introduced the classes, grants, and opportunities that are available through the OSU Extension office for community members.

How to start?  One of the first steps is to make and write a plan about the garden.  Will the garden be individual garden plots, a communal growing space?  What kind of location :  a vacant lot, a school, public housing, church?  How will the produce be distributed –  used by gardeners, 20% or more donated, or 100% donated?

Other steps for getting started include getting written permission to use the land by the landowner, obtaining permission for water access, and testing the soil for lead and fertility.

Soil should be tested for PH and baseline nutrients, and also for ESP lead and other contaminants.  The area should also be examined for “dead zones” – places that might look patchy, or like things do not grow in the area.  Sample should be taken from multiple locations on the site, deeper than 6 inches down, and more than one sample should be tested.

Planning steps include determining goals for the community garden, figuring out roles for running the garden, recruitment, and determining the decision making process.  Determining where Seeds, tools, a plan for planting, need to be developed, as well as a overall vision for the garden.  In most gardens there is a leader or assistant leader who helps organize the garden.  Guidelines need to be setup –are pesticides allowed, is there a gate to lock, a plot fee, fertilizer, water costs, etc?  Will there be volunteer work days that are voluntary – where common spaces are weeded – and decisions can be made?

Part of the grant program of the OSU extension program is to provide soil testing, educational and individual assistance to get the garden going in the first year, site visits, print and web resources, and networking and event opportunities.

The OSU Extension office has an application process and a worksheet that needs to get filled out to apply for the mini-grants of up to $400 for new gardens.  There is an application and worksheet that you must fill out.   The paperwork has been designed to help answer key questions of your group, and to help with planning.  Priority for the grants is for areas that have less access to fresh food, and also gardens that have a plan with youth activities.

The OSU Education office has several training programs that are available.  The “Dig In” program  is a 8 week course community gardener training program.  The program is to help new gardens create new rules, management, contact lists, and get organized for running a community garden.

There also is a 12 week farm oriented course called the Market Gardener Training Program.  This program focuses on business development and marketing for farms.  Also – if you want to farm and do not have land, you can get land to use on Kinsman Farm in Cleveland.  There is also a hotline you can call to get advice about diagnostics, pest and disease treatments, and other issues.

Other drop-in workshops that OSU Extension office offers throughout the year include topics such as how to raise chickens, caring for fruit trees, new tools, urban farming policy, and other topics.

The deadline for the training programs is January 3.  and the garden mini-grant is due February 24th.

Need more information or application materials for the gardening and farming programs?  Contact Amanda Block at the OSU Cuyahoga extension office at [email protected] or goto the website cuyahoga.osu.edu.

Image Source:
OSU – Extension Oregon
OSU – Extension Ohio 
Links:

OSU – Extension Ohio  http://cuyahoga.osu.edu/

Grants and Applications – OSU Extension office 

A Gas Shortage? Gas Bag Vehicles

A Gas Shortage? Gas Bag Vehicles

During World War I and II, there was a limited supply of gasoline.  One alternative to cars running on  gasoline was the gas bag vehicle.  Cars and buses were converted to being fueled by uncompressed gas, which was stored on the roof of the vehicle in a balloon tank.

These gas bag vehicles were built in France, the Netherlands, Germany and England and were an improvised solution to the gasoline shortage.  The fuel in the balloons were powered by what was called “town gas” or “street gas,” which is a by-product of turning coal into coke (which is used to make iron.)   The tanks were either hard or soft bag-like structures, put on the top of cars and buses.  The tanks were large, since more gas was needed to get adequate mileage.

With the gas bag vehicles, it was easy to tell how much fuel was left since the gas bag would deflate as the car was driven. One risk of using the vehicles was the risk of fire, and obstacles that were overhead.  Drivers had to know the heights of bridges before driving underneath.  The vehicles could only go 30 mph, so that the fuel tank would stay secure on top of the vehicle.

Gas bag buses could still be seen in China in the 1990s, mostly in the area of Chongqing where the vehicles were used as a cheap public transportation option.

Today gas bag buses are not in use – but are interesting examples of how rising energy prices can drive energy technology innovation.

Links:

Gas Bag Motor Cars

Gas Bag Buses