Rediscovering perennial staple food sources, with Elspeth Hay

Rediscovering perennial staple food sources, with Elspeth Hay

As I continue to advance the tree and perennial food nursery here at my farm, I’m always on the lookout for new resources on anything about growing and breeding perennial food sources, the history of their cultivation, and the cultures that were and are connected to these woodland and orchard based staple foods. For that reason I was super excited to see the new title “Feed us with Trees” from my friends at New Society Publishers, by author Elspeth Hay.

Elspeth is a writer, public radio host, and creator of the Local Food Report, a weekly feature that has aired on CAI, the Cape & Islands NPR Station, since 2008. Deeply immersed in her own local food system, she writes and reports for print, radio, and online media with a focus on food and the environment. Elspeth’s work has been featured in the Boston Globe, NPR’s Kitchen Window, Heated with Mark Bittman, The Provincetown Independent, and numerous other publications. Through her conversations with growers, harvesters, processors, cooks, policy makers, Indigenous knowledge-keepers, scientists, researchers, and visionaries, she aims to rebuild our cultural store of culinary knowledge—and to reconnect us with the people, places, and ideas that feed us.

In this session, Elspeth shares her journey of developing a passion for perennial food systems, particularly focusing on nuts and tree-based staple crops.

Her early exposure to nature evolved into an obsession with acorns and other tree nuts. Her research went on to reveal the extensive use of tree nuts as staple foods across the northern hemisphere and the historical as well as the cultural shifts that led to their decline in favor of annual grain crops. Elspeth delves into the nutritional and ecological benefits of these perennial foods, the complexities of modern industrial agriculture, and the resurgence of interest in tree crops, especially in the American Midwest. She also explores innovative recipes and culinary uses of nuts, especially acorns and chestnuts, while emphasizing the importance of integrating perennial crop systems into modern diets and agricultural practices. This conversation covers a lot of ground from land management, economic models, and the promising future of perennial food systems.

As with all the books that I focus on from my friends at new society publishers, we’re running a book giveaway for “Feed us with Trees.” By now you know the drill. Send me a message on our Discord community. If you’re not already a member you can sign up through the links on our homepage or the bio on Instagram. I’ll choose a winner one week after this episode goes live, and If you live anywhere in North America we’ll send a physical copy. Everywhere else you’ll receive a digital version.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(426)

Small-Scale Processing and Rural Micro-Industry panel

Small-Scale Processing and Rural Micro-Industry panel

Farm viability depends on much more than what happens in the field. While we often focus on production and farm management, many of the biggest challenges farmers face are shaped by what happens. Aft...

26 Jun 51min

Undervalued biodiversity: Fostering overlooked lifeforms

Undervalued biodiversity: Fostering overlooked lifeforms

After the biodiversity panel from the last episode, I got to thinking about how protecting biodiversity is so often reduced to the life forms that humans value. The ones we find beautiful, friendly, o...

15 Jun 1h 19min

Wildlife on farms: Challenges and benefits of coexistence

Wildlife on farms: Challenges and benefits of coexistence

This month we’re tackling the challenges and benefits of wildlife in all its forms. Wildlife and wild spaces are often spoken about as if they're at odds with the goals of farms. We often talk about b...

30 Mai 54min

Are carbon markets the best way to finance regenerative transition?

Are carbon markets the best way to finance regenerative transition?

It’s been over a year now since Climate Farmers let go of its Carbon credit program, and yet I know that many people who’ve been following our company don’t know the full story about how we got starte...

18 Mai 1h 9min

Farms as learning centers: workshops, research, and students

Farms as learning centers: workshops, research, and students

The only real way to learn and gain experience in farming is to get your hands dirty and put knowledge into practice. For that reason farms play an essential role in training others to get into this s...

5 Mai 53min

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

In today’s deep dive episode we’re taking on the behemoth of a topic that is the broken system and relationship between academic institutions and farmers on the ground. For a long time there was tra...

17 Apr 1h 20min

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

In this panel session, we’re exploring one of the most practical and underused opportunities in regenerative farming and rural life: learning to see waste streams as life streams. Across farms and vil...

3 Apr 59min

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Welcome back everyone to the second of the Deep Dive episodes. In this new format the intention is to bring complexity back into the conversations around regenerative agriculture. Myself and many of m...

20 Mar 1h 1min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-kunsten-a-leve
rss-kull
takk-og-lov-med-anine-kierulf
mikkels-paskenotter
sinnsyn
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-sarbar-med-lotte-erik
hagespiren-podcast
smart-forklart
fryktlos
rss-bisarr-historie