Aida Mollenkamp on Eating Seasonal: So Fresh, So Clean
Posted in Exhibitions, The Edible Garden on July 2nd, 2009 by Plant Talk – Be the first to comment![]() |
Aida Mollenkamp is host of Food Network’s Ask Aida. She helped kick off The Edible Garden with a cooking demonstration in the Conservatory Kitchen. |
I’m a self-proclaimed minimalist. I don’t really know how it happened (a result, most likely, of having moved 16 times in the past 10 years), but it has permeated all parts of my life, including my kitchen. Despite that, I’ve always made space for some homegrown produce in my life—or on my windowsill, to be more precise. And having a garden to eat from is the basis of how I learned to cook, a reality that’s not easy for anyone. (It helps that my home region of Southern California is an agricultural utopia where nearly anything will grow anytime of year). And while I’ve never had enough space to sow a full garden, the idea of eating as fresh and as in season as possible has stuck with me.
With green, sustainable, and local as the buzzwords du jour, it can become intimidating figuring out how, if at all, it can work for you. All that moving I’ve done and all the creative ways people have embraced those tenets in my current hometown of San Francisco has led me to this conclusion: Make sure whatever you do works with your lifestyle, and you’ll be more likely to stick with it in the long term. There are plenty of resources out there for the gung ho: you can get a subscription to a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), get a plot in a community garden, or just support your local farmer or grocer who you think is doing it right.
And, there’s a huge upside for the food obsessed—you and your family start to learn a lot about ingredients you once may have considered mundane (like that Brussels sprouts grow on stalks, that chickpeas are tasty fresh, that freshly grown cucumbers actually have taste, or even that kids will eat freshly picked tomatoes like candy once they’ve experienced how sweet they actually are). read more »









