Anyone doing the Eat Local Challenge? →[More:]I'm participating this year. Though I know some people who are going hardcore - no coffee, no chocolate, no olive oil - I decided to take a different approach. Since I budget carefully and basically cook at home most of the time, I couldn't really replace all my pantry staples with local stuff - it would have cost hundreds. So I'm still going to use the things I already have, but I decided to spend my entire food budget for September on food grown or produced within 100 miles of home.
So far so good. I started when I got back from vacation Monday. Fortunately, my standard breakfast of Stonyfield yogurt is within the boundaries. For lunches I've been having completely awesome goat cheese, rosemary, and tomato grilled cheese sandwiches on
this bread. We ate dinner out last night because it was a fundraiser at
Flatbread Pizza, so I chose
Smuttynose IPA and we had a half-and-half special: local potatoes, local scallions, Niman Ranch bacon and sour cream on one half, local squash, zucchini, broccoli florets, tomatoes, and ricotta on the other. Not bad.
In my near future is a mountain of Swiss Chard waiting to be taken from my garden, corn salsa with grilled Kellie Brook Farm chicken, some pesto, and a whole lotta variations on squash and tomato.
Like a lot of local-food efforts, Eat Local Challenge is an easy target for people who want to cry yuppiedom or elitism. But I have to say, since I've gotten deeply involved in the localism movement where I live, it's really enriched my life in ways I wouldn't give up. I've met amazing people and feel more like I
live where I live, less disconnected from the community and the seasons.