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Exeter Farmers’ Market hosts a NH Eat Local Week raffle

Posted on July 28th, 2008 in Events by admin

Yet another idea for participating in NH Eat Local Week!

The Exeter Farmers’ Market is celebrating NH Eat Local Week with a raffle of local foods donated by market vendors. Farmers’ Market vendors have donated pies, spice blends, garlic, potatoes, maple syrup, gift certificates for locally prepared foods, and two dozen ears of corn for prize baskets to be raffled off Thursday July 31.

Raffle tickets will be sold for $1 apiece or 4 for $5 at the Exeter Farmers’ Market in Swasey Parkway from 2:15 – 6 PM on Thursday, July 31. Winners will be able to pick up their prize baskets during NH Eat Local Week on August 7 at the Exeter Farmers’ Market.

Share your ideas and plans for participation in the comments -

Office Participation in NH Eat Local Week

Posted on July 26th, 2008 in NH Eat Local Week Challenges by admin

Here’s a really great idea for participating in NH Eat Local Week as an office by the University Office of Sustainability at UNH!

I decided to pose a challenge to my office: Make a dish using local foods during the NH Eat Local Week and bring it into the office to share. … tell everyone what it was like – from finding the foods to preparing the recipe to sharing it with the rest of us.  I’m happy to say that UOS was up for the challenge. “Bring in your local dish” dates were assigned and everyone is plotting what to bring.

Read more about the University Office of Sustainability’s NH Eat Local week, including a chronicle of their participation throughout the week, at Discover(ing) Sustainability >

Leave a comment to share if your place of work has decided to participate in NH Eat Local Week - and remember that participation takes many forms!

NH Eat Local Week in The Hippo

Posted on July 25th, 2008 in In the news by admin

A story about the increasing market for locally grown foods is on the cover of Manchester’s The Hippo, and includes this bit about NH Eat Local Week:

… “New Hampshire Eat Local Week,” which will be held Aug. 3 to Aug. 9. During that time the 3,400 farms in New Hampshire will be promoted to residents and the thousands of vacationers who visit.

“We hope to reach people who are curious, but weren’t inspired by other eat-local challenges. We are challenging people to start shopping at a new farmers’ market, bring a friend or host a locally grown dinner,” Patterson said.

There’s been a Web site set up, www.nheatlocalweek.org, where you can sign up for the challenge …

Read the full article by journalist Susan Ware Flower >

Agricultural Commissioner Lorraine Merrill on NH Eat Local Week

Posted on July 24th, 2008 in About, In the news by admin

New Hampshire’s Agricultural Commissioner Lorraine Merrill used her weekly column in the Market Bulletin to talk about NH Eat Local Week:
Weekly Market Bulletin - Wednesday, July 23, 2008

From Your Commissioner…

NH Eat Local Week Catches on with NH Eaters

New Hampshire Eat Local Week is off to a great start. We received Governor Lynch’s proclamation of August 3-9 as ‘New Hampshire Eat Local Week’ just in time to print it in last week’s Market Bulletin. Print and broadcast media are spreading the word, and groups all around the state are excited about participating in Eat Local Week challenges and activities.

Dedicating a week to the celebration of “all of the local food that is grown and raised in New Hampshire” is the brainchild of Sara Zoe Patterson. The Rye resident is coordinator of Seacoast Eat Local, an organization with the mission of connecting consumers with sources of locally grown and produced foods. “What better way to discover more about our state, support our farming community members, encourage food self-reliance, and make a positive impact on our environment than a week of local eating!” she explains on the new website www.nheatlocalweek.org.

The Upper Valley Localvores also lent support to establishing a week devoted to eating more locally. Localvore (or locavore) was recently chosen as the Oxford American Dictionary ‘Word of the Year.’ Localvores are people who are committed to eating foods from their local foodshed, sometimes defined as within a 100-mile radius of their homes, sometimes more in terms of a region. The Seacoast and Upper Valley groups have been communicating with their extensive networks—other local food advocacy groups, Slow Food chapters, chefs, and more—to build support and enthusiasm for the state’s first official Eat Local Week.

The website has links to several of these organizations around the state, including Plymouth and Keene.
The really great thing about NH Eat Local Week is this grassroots origin, propelled by consumer (or eater) demand. These are fans of locally grown and produced foods, citizens who value good, fresh, quality foods and products produced by their neighbors and local businesses. These organizations foster and celebrate relationships between local farmers and the people who are their customers, directly or indirectly. Seacoast Eat Local sponsored an eat-local challenge last September, which culminated with a pot luck supper and barn dance at Berry Hill Farm in Stratham, owned by Agricultural Advisory Board member Caroline Robinson.

The week of August 3-9 was chosen for NH Eat Local Week because it is also National Farmers Market Week, creating opportunities to highlight farmers markets as places to find local foods and connect consumers with local farmers and growers. NH Eat Local Week encourages people who are just discovering or getting interested in obtaining more of their diet locally to explore local foods and sources. For more advanced local-eaters, it’s a chance to engage in a little friendly competition to ratchet up their local food quotient. The NH Eat Local Week Challenge Card suggests three levels of participation: Sprout, Seedling, or Perennial.
This will be a week of truly local-based, grassroots events. Everyone is welcome to create ways to participate and celebrate our local foods and farms—and to extend the spirit and activities beyond this one week. Groups are planning pot-luck events, and some restaurants will feature local foods.

Popular books by Barbara Kingsolver and Michael Pollan have inspired many people to venture into finding more of their food locally. People are even learning to prepare and preserve more of their own foods, rediscovering traditional seasonal flavors and specialties—and the benefits of families coming together for meals. We’re seeing bigger crowds at farmers markets, and increased traffic at farmstands around the state.

Lorraine Merrill, Commissioner

Governor declares August 3-9, 2008 NH Eat Local Week

Posted on July 18th, 2008 in In the news by admin

State of New Hampshire

By His Excellency

John H. Lynch, Governor

A Proclamation

NEW HAMPSHIRE EAT LOCAL WEEK

AUGUST 3 - 9, 2008

WHEREAS, New Hampshire farmers can provide an extraordinary variety of locally grown, healthy, and delicious foods directly to the public; and

WHEREAS, New Hampshire residents are learning how to live in a more sustainable way for our environment, our economy, and our communities; and

WHEREAS, The people of New Hampshire value knowing where our food comes from and how it is grown or produced, including supporting the humane treatment of animals and environmentally responsible agriculture; and

WHEREAS, The State of New Hampshire encourages the growth of local businesses and a local workforce, and wants local farms to continue to be part of our landscape; and

WHEREAS, Increased support for New Hampshire grown food and agriculture brings added income to the State; and

WHEREAS, Knowing from where our food comes and the farmer who grew it adds to our eating pleasure and contributes to better personal health; and

WHEREAS, Eating more New Hampshire grown foods helps preserve the New Hampshire way of life that we cherish;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOHN H. LYNCH, GOVERNOR of the State of New Hampshire, do hereby proclaim August 3 - 9, 2008 as NEW HAMPSHIRE EAT LOCAL WEEK and encourage all citizens and businesses to participate and support locally grown foods.

Given at the Executive Chamber in Concord, this 11th day of July, in the year of our lord two thousand and eight, and the independence of the United States of America, two hundred and thirty-three.

John H. Lynch

Governor

Help spread the word

Posted on July 18th, 2008 in Images and downloads by admin

Download, print, and distribute or hang flyers using this file: nheatlocalweekflyer.pdf

Use this web banner to promote NH Eat Local Week on your website:

Printable version of the NH Eat Local Week Challenge cards: nheatlocalchallengecards.pdf
(two per page, fits on the back of the flyer if desired)

Need different sizes or different styles? We’ll be happy to try to make that happen. Email sarazoe @ seacoasteatlocal.org

NH Eat Local Week in the news

Posted on July 14th, 2008 in In the news by admin

Eating locally: NH seeks consumer-farm link

By PAULA TRACY
New Hampshire Union Leader Staff

Riding a wave of concern over tainted vegetables, rising transportation costs and a surge to go green, the state Agriculture Department is using the opportunity to sink new roots in local farms.

Rolling out a “New Hampshire Eat Local Week,” Aug. 3-9, the state is marketing farmers’ markets and promoting farm tours to connect consumers and vacationers to New Hampshire’s 3,400 farms and the food Granite Staters eat.

This summer, for the first time, the state is trying a new sort of challenge to get residents to eat local. Merrill said next month’s New Hampshire Eat Local Week will coincide with Farmers Market Week.

A new Web site, www.nheatlocalweek.org, details the effort to get people to try a new vegetable, take a friend to a farm stand, find a restaurant that serves locally grown food, discover a new farm and other ideas to help expand the state’s almost $1 billion farm industry.

read the full article at the Union Leader website >

NH Eat Local Week is coming!

Posted on July 7th, 2008 in About by admin

We’re creating NH Eat Local Week to celebrate all of the local food that is grown and raised in NH. Our farmers have a lot to offer, and what better way to discover more about our state, support our farming community members, encourage food self-reliance, and make a positive impact on our environment than a week of local eating!

NH Eat Local Week will be from August 3-9, 2008 and everyone is welcome to join in!

Ideas for participating in NH Eat Local Week >

Tell us about your plans for NH Eat Local Week >

Live Free and Eat Well!

Ideas for participating in NH Eat Local Week

Posted on July 7th, 2008 in NH Eat Local Week Challenges by admin

Individuals, groups, and businesses are welcome to participate in NH Eat Local Week in whatever way makes the most sense to their communities - the NH Eat Local Week Challenge is just a starting point - other ideas are most welcome!

Download a printable version of the NH Eat Local Week Challenge Card

Celebrate the bounty of New Hampshire grown food! Mix and match challenges from any of the categories and see what a difference you can make for your local economy, your health, your community, and your environment.

Sprout

  • Visit and buy food at a new to you farmers’ market or farm stand
  • Cook and eat two meals from  NH grown foods*
  • Find a new farm to buy from
  • Share NH grown food with a friend (either a meal, some fruit or vegetables, cheese, whatever works!)
  • Eat out at a restaurant that supports local agriculture and order the most local menu item

Seedling

  • Try a new to you vegetable from a farmers’ market or farm stand
  • Find and buy a NH grown foodstuff that will be available year-round (maple syrup, honey, cheese, milk, butter, meat, etc.)
  • Cook and eat 6 meals from NH grown foods*
  • Bring a friend who’s never been to a farmers’ market or
    farm stand
  • Eat out at a restaurant that supports local agriculture–let your waiter know that is why you chose to dine at that restaurant

Perennial

  • Buy an in-season food in bulk and can, freeze or dry some for the winter
  • Cook and eat 12 meals from NH grown foods (bonus points for inviting friends or neighbors over for one of these meals)*
  • Replace a purchased foodstuff with one you’ve made yourself with mostly local ingredients: ex: ketchup, salad dressing, pickles
  • Teach a friend or family member to cook a new recipe based on local food
  • Encourage a local restaurant to increase their support for local agriculture–talk to the manager, chef or owner or provide information about local farms

* exemptions for spices, salt, and small amounts of other ingredients are allowed

Download a printable version of the NH Eat Local Week Challenge Card

Share your ideas for participating in the comments!