For many years I spent my summers, filling 3 freezers with foods directly grown in our own soil. What wasn't frozen was preserved. Potatoes and carrots and onions were put in the root house to keep all winter. When I cooked meals I knew there would be flaours in the food.
Sadly, because times do change, I am forced to purchase produce in the stores.
So I ask the question, Where Has The Flavour Gone? Tomatoes are in the stores, half ripe, and even if you let them set for a week they are tasteless and tough. Potatoes are a disaster. They are nothing more than fillers. Onions, used to bring the tears immediately to a person's eyes. On occasion you get an onion that will bring a slight watering, but I repeat only slight.
I try to purchase Ontario produce. It doesn't matter what store, it's all the same. I often buy from roadside stands. Same thing----no flavour.
Is the soil depleted? Is it the very seeds themselves, which have had the good bred out of them? Have our vegetables become just a fillers? Is this why so many spices are being used in foods?I know my conversation thread will offend some, but I am serious and I find it alarming as our Ontario farmers compete with USA and other countries. How can we return to good old fashioned Ontario farm produce that was second to none?
Frances
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Have you visited some of the Farmers' Markets and talked to the farmers operating some of the stalls?
Many of them are growing some of the heritage varieties of vegetables and picking them the day before so they keep their flavours.
Many in our mostly urban society love the low price of food so the Walmart driven industrialization of food is not likely to end soon for the bulk of the market.
I do think if you do some searching, you can find some local food from some great local farmers.
Joe Dales
Have you visited some of the Farmers' Markets and talked to the farmers operating some of the stalls?
Many of them are growing some of the heritage varieties of vegetables and picking them the day before so they keep their flavours.
Many in our mostly urban society love the low price of food so the Walmart driven industrialization of food is not likely to end soon for the bulk of the market.
I do think if you do some searching, you can find some local food from some great local farmers.
Joe Dales
I think it is naive in the extreme to blame this all on urban people. I see lots of farmers shopping at Wal Mart contributing to the same system that devalues our work, buying their food at M&M and so on. This is not an urban/rural situation, but the way our society in general has evolved. Lots of farmers are as cut off from the food they eat- unless they are generalists growing livestock and crops, dairy, chicken and so on as many in urban areas. I have met lots of urban people who value our work more than some other farmers too. So we need to quit blaming the urbanites and look in the mirror sometimes too.
Joe Dales said:Have you visited some of the Farmers' Markets and talked to the farmers operating some of the stalls?
Many of them are growing some of the heritage varieties of vegetables and picking them the day before so they keep their flavours.
Many in our mostly urban society love the low price of food so the Walmart driven industrialization of food is not likely to end soon for the bulk of the market.
I do think if you do some searching, you can find some local food from some great local farmers.
Joe Dales
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