Back when the yellow tamaracks and
aspens gave Western Montana a shocking amount of fall color, FoodCorps members
from around the state convened at the jubilant DIY get-together that is the
annual conference for the Alternative Energy Resources Organization, or AERO.
There, sometime between the pie contest and the square dance, Demetrius Fassas
of Ennis, Jessica Manly of Kalispell, and I participated in a short panel on
the various Farm to School efforts at our service sites.
Before that point, the Farm-to-School
projects in my service had felt haphazard and unrelated. At various points
throughout the fall, I found myself G-Chatting with Nicki Jimenez to figure out
the packaging of local carrot coins, serving decidedly non-local grapefruit in
classes at Bigfork, and driving down miles of a wooded back road to pick up
buckets of carrots and beets from a generous local gardener. It felt more than
a little bit scrappy. Preparing for the AERO panel, which emphasized the
diversity among our three service site situations, allowed me to see these
projects as a cohesive, localized farm-to-school effort at each of my three
school districts--Somers/Lakeside, Bigfork, and Cayuse Prairie, which are all
small town or rural schools in the Southern half of the Flathead Valley.
Somers is certainly ahead of the game;
Robin Vogler, my supervisor and the Food Service Director there, has been
recognized for her deft and progressive incorporation of local products into
her menus. Robin has established a school garden and even a hydroponic
greenhouse to supply her salad bar with lettuce through the winter. Being a
relatively small school district, she has developed steady and fruitful
relationships with small local growers, and she is astonishingly open to new
ways of getting local food onto her students’ trays.
Bigfork School Districts, meanwhile,
has just hired a dedicated new Food Service Director, Ginny Kirby, who promptly
implemented a salad bar and plans to start purchasing local food over the next
few months. At Bigfork, Ginny and I have worked together to make plans for
buying local, but in the meantime, she has offered me sample amounts of
non-local produce for taste tests in my classes. While I might prefer these
fruits and veggies to be local, they are still healthy new products on her
lunch line that kids need introducing to, so I see it as a first step. I trust
that once Bigfork does start to purchase local foods, the kids will still
recognize me as the food lady and be just as fanatical, if not even more eager,
to taste honeycrisp apples grown on the shores of Flathead Lake as they are to
taste raw zucchini from California. (Yes, many first graders begged me for
thirds and fourths of raw zucchini slices. Who knew?)
Cayuse Prairie
is certainly the strangest of all my incarnations of Farm-to-School -- after
all, they don’t even have a lunch service. But the principal helped me put out
some “vegetable wanted” ads in their newsletter and on Facebook, and to my
surprise, the vegetables started to appear (here was where I ended up driving
down a back road for root vegetables). In fact, produce kept appearing
reliably, if serendipitously, until the December holidays. So, in an improbable
situation, the Cayuse Prairie community came together to feed the students
super-local fruits and vegetables, re-acquainting them with sweet, fresh
versions of familiar foods like carrots, apples, pears, and beefsteak tomatoes,
as well as introducing them to some funkier new foods like purple potatoes,
beets, spaghetti squash, and (of course) the hippest vegetable of them all,
kale. Most of the time, a majority of the students had never tasted these novel
veggies and fruits, and with a brief introduction to each food, the whole
lunchroom would ceremoniously bite into our new vegetable at the same time. I
knew something was working when a fourth-grader, somewhat crazed from his
sublime encounter with kale chips, professed to me, “I will eat ANYTHING you
bring. Anything.” I believe it.
So even in a rural school without
school lunch service, students deserve and deeply appreciate local produce.
Serving and eating local foods connects local gardeners to the school, makes
eating food fun and interesting, and at least introduces kids to food that is
healthy and can be grown in their valley. When a lunchroom full of middle
schoolers said a collective “Cheers to Mike,” the farmer who grew our pears, it
was impossible not to feel the connections we were making. It’s a start,
anyway.
Written by Service Member Zoe Tucker, serving with Somers, Cayuse Prairie, and Bigfork School Districts in the Flathead Valley.
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