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	<title><![CDATA[Grist - Comment Feed for Great veggies&#8212;and a model for city farming&#8212;thrive at Boggy Creek Farm models.]]></title>
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            <title>Comment #1 by mihan</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/mad-flavor-in-austin-kale-and-the-city/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 04:58:51 -0800</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Tom,</strong></p><p>This is amazing! The most exciting food find since a friend pointed me towards Anson Mills' grits.</p><p>
God, I miss being near a good farmers' market.</p><p>
I think I know what some people will be getting for the holidays...</p>
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				<p><strong>Tom,</strong></p><p>This is amazing! The most exciting food find since a friend pointed me towards Anson Mills' grits.</p><p>
God, I miss being near a good farmers' market.</p><p>
I think I know what some people will be getting for the holidays...</p>
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            <title>Comment #2 by Tom Philpott</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/mad-flavor-in-austin-kale-and-the-city/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 05:27:57 -0800</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Anson Mill grits...</strong></p><p>...now that's some spectacular stuff. And I know for a fact that that company works withy micro-scale farmers and gives them a good price. </p>
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				<p><strong>Anson Mill grits...</strong></p><p>...now that's some spectacular stuff. And I know for a fact that that company works withy micro-scale farmers and gives them a good price. </p>
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            <title>Comment #3 by David Roberts</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/mad-flavor-in-austin-kale-and-the-city/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 05:57:43 -0800</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>I love grits!</strong></p><p>Are Anson Mill grist available way up here in Seattle? Anybody know?</p><p>
(I'm a southern boy at heart, I guess.)

<p>www.grist.org</p></p>
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				<p><strong>I love grits!</strong></p><p>Are Anson Mill grist available way up here in Seattle? Anybody know?</p><p>
(I'm a southern boy at heart, I guess.)

<p>www.grist.org</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #4 by Tom Philpott</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/mad-flavor-in-austin-kale-and-the-city/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 06:16:22 -0800</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Life-changing grits<p>I don't know if anyone retails Anson Mills products out there, but you can get them through the company's <a href="http://www.ansonmills.com/" rel="nofollow">Web site. The prices are damned high for grits, but when you reflect that most corn is GMO and grown in environmentally hideous ways, and that farmers get a pittance for it, and that Anson pays a good price to its suppliers, then it starts to make sense. That, plus the fact that the grits have wonderful flavor--they taste of corn. Their suppliers use heirloom varieties bred for flavor, not yield. <br>
I know AM is committed to small farmers because a few years ago, they approached my own Maverick Farms--a 3 acre operation--about growing for them. They were looking to diversify their growers geographically; we're in the mountains, and most of their growers are in the lowlands of South Carolina. A flood washed out the test plot of heirloom field corn we were growing for them; and then we never got certified organic, which is what they require. But i was damned impressed by the attention they gave us--and even more so by the quality of the grits. Try 'em out. </br></a></p></strong></p>
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				<p><strong>Life-changing grits<p>I don't know if anyone retails Anson Mills products out there, but you can get them through the company's <a href="http://www.ansonmills.com/" rel="nofollow">Web site. The prices are damned high for grits, but when you reflect that most corn is GMO and grown in environmentally hideous ways, and that farmers get a pittance for it, and that Anson pays a good price to its suppliers, then it starts to make sense. That, plus the fact that the grits have wonderful flavor--they taste of corn. Their suppliers use heirloom varieties bred for flavor, not yield. <br>
I know AM is committed to small farmers because a few years ago, they approached my own Maverick Farms--a 3 acre operation--about growing for them. They were looking to diversify their growers geographically; we're in the mountains, and most of their growers are in the lowlands of South Carolina. A flood washed out the test plot of heirloom field corn we were growing for them; and then we never got certified organic, which is what they require. But i was damned impressed by the attention they gave us--and even more so by the quality of the grits. Try 'em out. </br></a></p></strong></p>
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            <title>Comment #5 by kmp</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/mad-flavor-in-austin-kale-and-the-city/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 06:44:05 -0800</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Now I'm hungry</strong></p><p>although not for grits - blech. &nbsp;Guess I'm a Yankee through and through.</p><p>
Glad to hear the local food scene is alive &amp; well in Austin. &nbsp;I just spent four days in San Antonio, which I have decided to rename "Food Hell, TX."</p><p>
As a person who generally eats pretty healthfully and one who is also trying to shave off a few pounds for an upcoming mountaineering trip, I can tell you that it is damn near <strong>impossible</strong> to eat healthily in downtown, touristy San Antonio.</p><p>
I would guess there are some farmer's markets and health food stores somewhere in SA, but they certainly are not within a stone's throw of the Riverwalk, and without a car I was subjected to bad TexMex restaurants are far as the eye could see, occassionally interspersed with a rib joint, steakhouse or Italian restaurant. &nbsp;</p><p>
Endless salads of iceberg lettuce, four shaved pieces of carrot, two pink wedges of tasteless tomato, and about 700 storebought croutons. &nbsp;No fresh fruit to be found, anywhere, except the Starbucks at the airport (which I generally refuse to patronize); I might have compromised my standards this once had it not been for the cloud of fruit flies hovering over the blackening bananas. &nbsp;Nary a fresh vegetable either - generally the "vegetable of the day" was some form of potato. &nbsp;Even my old standby, soup, was impossible: baked potato soup, chili, steak(?!) soup. &nbsp;Breakfast was equally impossible; plenty of maple walnut sticky buns, danishes, frosted pound cake posing as breakfast, but no fruit, yogurt, bagels, plain old toast.</p><p>
I know that the Riverwalk area is strictly for tourists, and I have actually enjoyed extremely good, authentic Mexican food in years past in SA... but is this how people really want to eat? &nbsp;Who can eat filet mignon and mashed potatoes for lunch and stay awake all afternoon? &nbsp;Who can eat 16 oz of chicken at a sitting along with a full platter of fettucine alfredo?</p><p>
I realize that I am likely on the healthier end of the food spectrum here in the US but I'm just baffled by the options (or lack thereof) available to me in San Antonio. &nbsp;</p><p>
I'm so happy to be home. God bless the Hudson Valley and it's bounty.</p>
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				<p><strong>Now I'm hungry</strong></p><p>although not for grits - blech. &nbsp;Guess I'm a Yankee through and through.</p><p>
Glad to hear the local food scene is alive &amp; well in Austin. &nbsp;I just spent four days in San Antonio, which I have decided to rename "Food Hell, TX."</p><p>
As a person who generally eats pretty healthfully and one who is also trying to shave off a few pounds for an upcoming mountaineering trip, I can tell you that it is damn near <strong>impossible</strong> to eat healthily in downtown, touristy San Antonio.</p><p>
I would guess there are some farmer's markets and health food stores somewhere in SA, but they certainly are not within a stone's throw of the Riverwalk, and without a car I was subjected to bad TexMex restaurants are far as the eye could see, occassionally interspersed with a rib joint, steakhouse or Italian restaurant. &nbsp;</p><p>
Endless salads of iceberg lettuce, four shaved pieces of carrot, two pink wedges of tasteless tomato, and about 700 storebought croutons. &nbsp;No fresh fruit to be found, anywhere, except the Starbucks at the airport (which I generally refuse to patronize); I might have compromised my standards this once had it not been for the cloud of fruit flies hovering over the blackening bananas. &nbsp;Nary a fresh vegetable either - generally the "vegetable of the day" was some form of potato. &nbsp;Even my old standby, soup, was impossible: baked potato soup, chili, steak(?!) soup. &nbsp;Breakfast was equally impossible; plenty of maple walnut sticky buns, danishes, frosted pound cake posing as breakfast, but no fruit, yogurt, bagels, plain old toast.</p><p>
I know that the Riverwalk area is strictly for tourists, and I have actually enjoyed extremely good, authentic Mexican food in years past in SA... but is this how people really want to eat? &nbsp;Who can eat filet mignon and mashed potatoes for lunch and stay awake all afternoon? &nbsp;Who can eat 16 oz of chicken at a sitting along with a full platter of fettucine alfredo?</p><p>
I realize that I am likely on the healthier end of the food spectrum here in the US but I'm just baffled by the options (or lack thereof) available to me in San Antonio. &nbsp;</p><p>
I'm so happy to be home. God bless the Hudson Valley and it's bounty.</p>
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