Change comes to dinner : how vertical farmers, urban growers, and other innovators are revolutionizing how america eats / Katherine Gustafson.
2012
TD195.F57 G87 2012 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Change comes to dinner : how vertical farmers, urban growers, and other innovators are revolutionizing how america eats / Katherine Gustafson.
Author
Edition
1st ed.
ISBN
9780312577377 paperback
0312577370 paperback
0312577370 paperback
Publication Details
New York : St. Martin's Griffin, 2012.
Language
English
Description
viii, 280 p. ; 21 cm
Call Number
TD195.F57 G87 2012
Dewey Decimal Classification
641.300973
Summary
"A fascinating exploration of America's food innovators, that gives us hopeful alternatives to the industrial food system described in works like Michael Pollan's bestselling Omnivore's Dilemma Change Comes to Dinner takes readers into the farms, markets, organizations, businesses and institutions across America that are pushing for a more sustainable food system in America. Gustafson introduces food visionaries like Mark Lilly, who turned a school bus into a locally-sourced grocery store in Richmond, Virginia; Gayla Brockman, who organized a program to double the value of food stamps used at Kansas City, Missouri, farmers' markets; Myles Lewis and Josh Hottenstein, who started a business growing vegetables in shipping containers using little water and no soil; and Tony Geraci, who claimed unused land to create the Great Kids Farm, where Baltimore City public school students learn how to grow food and help Geraci decide what to order from local farmers for breakfast and lunch at the city schools. Change Comes to Dinner is a smart and engaging look into America's food revolution"-- Provided by publisher.
"Change Comes to Dinner takes readers into the farms, markets, organizations, businesses and institutions across America that are pushing for a more sustainable food system in America. Gustafson introduces food visionaries like Mark Lilly, who turned a school bus into a locally-sourced grocery store in Richmond, Virginia; Gayla Brockman, who organized a program to double the value of food stamps used at Kansas City, Missouri, farmers' markets; Myles Lewis and Josh Hottenstein, who started a business growing vegetables in shipping containers using little water and no soil; and Tony Geraci, who claimed unused land to create the Great Kids Farm, where Baltimore City public school students learn how to grow food and help Geraci decide what to order from local farmers for breakfast and lunch at the city schools. Change Comes to Dinner is a smart and engaging look into America's food revolution"-- Provided by publisher.
"Change Comes to Dinner takes readers into the farms, markets, organizations, businesses and institutions across America that are pushing for a more sustainable food system in America. Gustafson introduces food visionaries like Mark Lilly, who turned a school bus into a locally-sourced grocery store in Richmond, Virginia; Gayla Brockman, who organized a program to double the value of food stamps used at Kansas City, Missouri, farmers' markets; Myles Lewis and Josh Hottenstein, who started a business growing vegetables in shipping containers using little water and no soil; and Tony Geraci, who claimed unused land to create the Great Kids Farm, where Baltimore City public school students learn how to grow food and help Geraci decide what to order from local farmers for breakfast and lunch at the city schools. Change Comes to Dinner is a smart and engaging look into America's food revolution"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [261]-277).
Linked Resources
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
School bus farm market
Locavore Montana
Institutionalized
Cultivating the Internet
Advocating for agriculture
New farmers in the dell
Seed of learning
Farming their futures
Cultivating the urban jungle
To market, to market
Putting down roots
From prison to prep cook
Organic idyll
Farming in and out of the box
Surf & turf
Going native.
Locavore Montana
Institutionalized
Cultivating the Internet
Advocating for agriculture
New farmers in the dell
Seed of learning
Farming their futures
Cultivating the urban jungle
To market, to market
Putting down roots
From prison to prep cook
Organic idyll
Farming in and out of the box
Surf & turf
Going native.