A Trip with a Message: Eat Local Seafood

Chefs and teams go out on the Chesapeake to get an up close look at the sustainable seafood supply chain.

A Maryland Blue crab.

A Maryland Blue crab.

By Lani Furbank, Edible DC contributor

“You guys are the front line,” Johnny Shockley says to a group of restaurant industry professionals gathered on the shore at in front of his company, Hoopers Island Oyster Company. “Clean water is vitally important and oysters play a critical role in cleaning water. We can’t get that message to the public without you.”

Oysters are filter feeders, which play a critical role in the Bay’s ecosystem. They improve water quality as they eat. One oyster can filter more than 50 gallons of water per day. According to NOAA, harvests of native oysters are now at 1% of historical levels, but restoration efforts are trying to change that, in partnership with aquaculture companies like Shockley’s. 

Fishermen pull up their pound net to check for fish.

Fishermen pull up their pound net to check for fish.

And so that “front line”, DMV area chefs and restaurant staff are spending the day on the Chesapeake Bay, getting to know the watermen who bring blue crabs, oysters, and rockfish from the docks of the Bay to restaurants in the D.C. area. Each of their restaurants or businesses source sustainable seafood from ProFish, a local supplier that sponsors several of these trips each year.

“Over the last six or seven years, we’ve taken over a thousand chefs out on the bay,” says John Rorapaugh, the sustainable director at ProFish who coordinates the excursions.

“What we’re trying to do with these trips is sell a message and paint a picture,” he says. “The groups come back with a story and that is passed on to their diners and to the people that come to the markets.”

Johnny Shockley addresses the group at Hoopers Island Oyster Company.

Johnny Shockley addresses the group at Hoopers Island Oyster Company.

For the participants, their trip itinerary includes visits to several of the fishing operations that ProFish works with to get up a close-up look at the links in the supply chain in real time, from how the seafood is caught or harvested to processing. This trip included a tour of Shockley’s oyster aquaculture business.

Shockley switched from harvesting to becoming an oyster farmer using aquaculture techniques in 2010.  He recognized the challenges facing the oyster stock in the Chesapeake Bay and was looking for a sustainable solution. “We developed a company to build equipment to do oyster aquaculture based on the fundamentals of the traditional watermen’s way of doing things on the Chesapeake,” he says. The company now operates all around the country, raising oysters in the Bay and selling their equipment from Alaska to the Gulf Coast.  

Chesapeake Gold oysters from Hoopers Island Oyster Company.

Chesapeake Gold oysters from Hoopers Island Oyster Company.

“It’s incredibly important to learn about the impact that oysters can have on the health of the Bay and create that ecosystem that helps the Bay thrive,” says Scott Drewno of CHIKO, who has taken part in the trip multiple times. “In order for them to be successful, we need to buy oysters. Our customers need to eat oysters. We need to continue to create a business around it.”

Drewno is an advocate for sustainable seafood at his Barracks Row restaurant, which sources local products like invasive blue catfish, served daily in fried rice. “If I can continue to learn more about [the Bay], I can translate to the guests,” he says. “I think chefs are uniquely positioned to be able to convey the message from the farmer and the fisherman to the world.”

Workers pick crab at W.T. Ruark in Fishing Creek.

Workers pick crab at W.T. Ruark in Fishing Creek.

Another stop on the trip gave participants an inside look at a crab picking house in Fishing Creek. W.T. Ruark’s employees pick apart crabs by the bushel, sorting the meat into containers of Maryland lump or jumbo lump crabmeat.

The refrigerated picking room is silent but for the constant crunch, snap, and crack of crab shells in the deft hands of the pickers. They’re awarded bonuses based on the speed and quality of their work.

“These ladies here are on what’s called H-2B work visas and they’re brought in seasonally throughout the crab season to work and to fill the demand for labor,” explains Jay Fleming, a photographer and Bay expert who works with ProFish. “These jobs historically were filled by Americans, but the picking houses here can’t find Americans who want to pick crabs. It’s not the most glamorous job in the world, but it’s a necessary thing.”

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This work must be done by hand, because the machines developed to do the job were not effective at keeping the crab meat intact. “That’s why you pay top dollar for jumbo lump crab meat,” Fleming adds.

Mikala Brennan of Hula Girl said watching the pickers helped illustrate “why we pay the price we do, just because of the labor involved with how they do it.”

This was Brennan’s first time on the trip. Her Shirlington restaurant sources local seasonal items like soft shell crabs from ProFish. “I think it’s incredibly important, from a responsibility standpoint, that you know where your food is grown, where it’s coming from and how it’s processed,” she says. “[When you] order food from a vendor, you’re not necessarily seeing how that food is treated, and to see the love and care that they’re putting into it makes it all the better that you’ve made the right choice.”

The final stop on the trip was a boat ride out to watch fishermen pull rockfish from a pound net in the Bay. Then, a seafood lunch was served, featuring just-shucked Chesapeake Gold oysters from Hoopers Island and crabmeat picked at W.T. Ruark that morning.

For Rorapaugh, these trips help ProFish sell more local seafood. “We might have 40 oysters of the day, and 30 of them might be from out of this region, but if one of those chefs has been at Johnny Shockley’s farm and he sees Chesapeake Gold on the oyster list, he’s going to buy that probably three out of five times,” he says. “It builds more connection with a local brand.”

Jay Fleming shows off the day’s catch.

Jay Fleming shows off the day’s catch.

 “As a seafood company, sustainability and traceability are always at the forefront of what we do, and we try to be transparent across the board with that, but the more local products you sell, the easier it is to trace things back. It’s much easier for me to find out where that rockfish came from if it’s a pound netter that’s in Hoopers Island as opposed to a mahi-mahi that was caught in Ecuador,” he explains.

Estimates by NOAA Fisheries suggest that more than 80% of the seafood eaten in the U.S. is imported. “Through these trips we’re really trying to change that number,” Rorapaugh says. “We’re 60% local and domestic. It’s the model that we want to promote to other companies.”

Domestic seafood is typically more accurately labeled and more sustainable—72% of fish landed in the U.S. is certified sustainable by the Marine Stewardship Council.

That’s a big part of why Drewno sources from ProFish. “We only have one planet,” he says. “We need to make sure we’re taking responsibly and making sure that we’re going to have great seafood from the Bay for generations to come. If we stay on the sustainable model and pay attention to those things, then I think we can protect the natural resources that we have down the road.”

Take a Detour on Korean Way in Howard County

By Susan Able

Bibimbap is just one of many dishes that can be found in restaurants along Howard County’s Korean Way.

Bibimbap is just one of many dishes that can be found in restaurants along Howard County’s Korean Way.

While some may go west in search of Korean food (and by west, think Annandale), a thriving Korean culinary scene also exists in Maryland. There are over 166 Korean-owned businesses in Howard County, and dozens of them are food businesses. In recognition of that fact, Visit Howard County partnered with the Korean Society of MD to create a showcase for Maryland’s Korean culture by naming a five-mile stretch of Route 40 “Korean Way.” The Korean Way trail was designed as a resource and starting point for explorations and can be found online at marylandkoreanway.com

Korean food fans, you are in luck as the Korean Way features solid options for Korean barbecue, bakeries and a new HMart that opened in 2014. Having traveled along the Korean Way myself as a culinary explorer, some personal favorites are Shin Chon Garden for barbecue, Tous Le Jours and Shilla for Korean baked goods and, of course, Asian market superstores Hmart and Lotte Plaza for all things Asian. Both markets provide great shopping experiences for the food curious and an absolute guarantee you will bring home something exciting that you’ve never heard of or planned to buy. In fact, Hmart gets its name from “Han Ah Reum,” which means mean “One Arm Full of Groceries,” just as you will be when you leave. Korean chains are represented: Bonchon fried chicken, Kung Fu Tea and Honey Pig all have outposts on Korean Way.

Beyond bubble tea and bulgogi, you’ll also find a trendy Korean skin care product shop on Korean Way. For those not in the know, South Koreans are considered global leaders and innovators in all things skin care, and The Face Shop, known for having high-quality, affordable goods, features Korean-made skin care products made from over 600 natural ingredients: fruits, grains, flowers and medicinal herbs used in Asian medicine.

MD’s first lady Yumi Hogan, who is a Korean American, was on hand to launch Korean Way. “In Howard County, a portion of Route 40 was designated as ‘Korean Way’ to recognize the countless contributions Korean Americans have made to economic development and cultural diversity in Maryland,” she said. “By branding ‘Korean Way’ for tourism and providing useful information through the website, I hope that we can attract more visitors, promote local businesses and create an even more vibrant community and a greater understanding of cultural diversity.”

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Good for You: Local Garlic

By Whitney Pipkin, photo by Jennifer Chase

Garlic adds depth of flavor to recipes and comes in many different varieties.

Garlic adds depth of flavor to recipes and comes in many different varieties.

Apples get all the attention this time of year. But if you really want to keep the doctor away, consider a little Allium a day. We’re looking at you, garlic.

Garlic cloves not only make nearly every savory dish that much better, they also increase your defenses against the common cold, can be stored and eaten year-round and are easy to plant and grow on your own.

Most local produce farmers grow at least two varieties of garlic: hardnecks, which sprout those lovely curly-straw green scapes in the spring and come in stronger, more varied flavors, and softnecks, which store well with soft, braidable strands.

And then there are the rare garlic-only growers, like Jim Reinhardt of Nature’s Garlic Farm on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The farm specializes in flavorful varieties such as “German White Porcelain” and “Music,” offering an online garlic CSA and garlic-growing workshops on weekends in September and October. (That’s when garlic cloves should be planted, pointy side up and about six inches apart, to percolate over the winter before being harvested the following year.)

Reinhardt’s garlic is sold online and at retail stores like Wegmans Food Markets in Maryland, but he warns that most garden-variety garlic sold at grocery stores comes from China. (Buyers can usually distinguish it from domestic garlic, because the roots have been removed to make it through customs.)

“Garlic is an amazing plant,” says Reinhardt, who grew 10 acres of garlic this year and doubles his acreage every year to keep up with demand. “The more I grow it the more I fall in love.”

Garlic and its antibiotic properties have been used to ward off illness for centuries. Travelers were often given a pocket full of the potent stuff to keep them well on the roads—and to have something to plant back home. The plant can adapt to almost any environment, changing its characteristics based on where it’s planted (making “local” garlic that much more enticing.)

If garlic’s always come on a little too strong for you, consider its well-aged relative: black garlic. Virginia Tech’s food incubator happens to be home to a company that’s churning out some of the industry’s best aged garlic, which darkens, mellows and grows in complexity under low heat over time. The Blacksburg-based Obis One, LLC, sells its line of products—including the “Black Crack” pepper-grinder topping that was Saveur Magazine’s favorite condiment in 2016—online and in Mom’s Organic Market stores.

Can’t get enough garlic? Consider a day trip to the 28th annual Virginia Wine & Garlic Festival—where, as the posters say, “It’s chic to reek”—on October 13 and 14 in Amherst.

 For more information, go to naturesgarlicfarm.com, obisone.com,virginiagarlicfestival.com

 

Guaranteed to be Empori-YUMMMY

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DC’s Annual Pop-Up Food Market is Right Around the Corner

Photography by Farrah Skeiky

Food adventurers alert. Get ready to be all in for the The Emporiyum coming November 9-11, 2018 at Dock5 @ Union Market in Washington, DC. The Emporiyum is a one-of-a-kind food marketplace featuring handmade food items from around the country. It’s the perfect opportunity to try new things and purchase gifts and top-quality products from a lineup of artisans you won’t find anywhere else.

This year’s EmporiYUM will feature over seven dozen food and drink vendors from around the DMV and all over the nation. Vendors who have been crowd favorites are coming back include DC’s Fluffness and Timber Pizza, Coco & Co. and Chickn’Cone from New York, and Bon Bon Bon and Dave’s Sweet Tooth of Detroit (among many others). Timber Pizza will be tag teaming The Emporiyum this year with their friends at Call Your Mother Deli.

Chickn’Cone, a start-up franchise from NYC which features bite-size fried chicken in a waffle. How can you resist?

Chickn’Cone, a start-up franchise from NYC which features bite-size fried chicken in a waffle. How can you resist?

Hannah and Stuart Hudson, Emporiyum’s co-directors, are excited to kick off this year’s event with a new Friday Night Preview Party Presented by @DCFOODPORN. This ticket includes first access to The Emporiyum on Friday, November 9 starting at 6pm. Also, it is a chance to meet and learn from Justin Schuble, the man behind @DCFOODPORN, DMV's most followed food account. The Friday Night Preview Party includes access to ALL Emporiyum vendors before anyone else, free drinks, passed bites and special activities from vendors. Decorate cakes with Buttercream Bakeshop, mix drinks with Modern Bar Cart, learn how to select and identify wines with Siptip (and more)! The Friday Night Preview Party is limited to 750 people designed to have shorter lines, less crowds and more time to eat, meet and shop.

VIP ticket holders gain first access to The Emporiyum on Saturday or Sunday starting at 10am. The special VIP hour from 10-11am includes passed bites, cocktail sips and a gift bag filled with fun food treats. VIP is limited to 750 people in the exclusive VIP hour, so shorter lines and more time to sample. General Admission ticket holders will be able to enter at three timed entries of 11AM, 12:30PM and 1:30PM and get the full Emporiyum market experience.

On the drinks menu, beer lovers can taste the creations of Black Narrows Brewing Co. of Chincoteague Island, VA. Cider fanatics can taste the variety provide by Vermont’s Eden Specialty Ciders and DC’s Don Ciccio e Figli will be bringing a wide selection of Amari, an Italian liqueur. Republic Restoratives, One-Eight Distilling, Virginia Distillery Co. will also be showcasing their craft spirits. For beverages of the non-alcoholic variety, SAP! of Burlington, VT will be at The Emporiyum for their first event in the mid-Atlantic and showing their carbonated beverages made from pure maple and birch tree sap. Lost Sock Roasters will have coffee warm coffee and Blue Ridge Bucha will sampling their craft kombucha.

Dozens of new faces to are coming to this year’s Emporiyum market, including:

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2018 Vendors

From the DMV and all over the U.S., food artisans will meet at Dock 5 for a tasting and shopping showcase November 5-7

Complete List of Vendors:

Ajwa Delicacies

Ayoba-Yo

Bad Pickle Tees

Bakefully Yours

Black Narrows Brewery

Blue Ridge Bucha

Bon Bon Bon

Buffalo and Bergen

Bun'd Up

Burnt & Salty

Buttercream Bakeshop

Cake Club

Callie's Biscuits

Chickn'Cone

Cleveland Kraut

Coco and Co

Colada Shop

Cozy Tea Pot

Cream Cruiser

Crude Bitters

Cucina Al Volo

Dave's Sweet Tooth

DCFOODPORN

Don Ciccio

Dough Boy Fresh

Eden Cider

Element Shrub

FireFly Farms Creamery

Fluffness

Found Market Co.

Greenheart Juice

Hare Hollow

Hiatus Cheesecake

Hollow Work

Hubert's Lemonade

Inwego

Ice Cream Jubilee

Iron Paffles

La Vache Microcreamery

Lei Musubi

Little Miss Whoopie Pie

Lost Sock Roasters

Lubanzi Wines

Maketto

Maryland Chickan

Modern Bar Cart

M'Panadas

Navy Hill

Neighborgoods

Nicecream

Not Joe Mama's BBQ Sauce

One Eight Distilling

Petit Pot

Pisco y Nazca Ceviche Gastrobar

Popcorn Queens

Q Caterers

Ramen Burger

Relish Market

Republic Restoratives

Revol Snax

Righteous Felon Jerky

Runamok Maple

SAP!

Sasya

Shouk

SipTip

South Mountain Creamery

Spot of Tea

Sunday in Saigon

Sweet Sticks

Swizzler

The Dough Jar

The Village Cafe

Timber Pizza/Call Your Mother

Trade Street Jam Co.

Trader Joes

True Chesapeake Oyster

True Made Foods Inc.

TRUE Syrups & Garnishes (Standard Cocktail)

Truffleist

Undercover Quinoa

UZU

Virginia Distillery Company

What the Cluck Farms

Whisked

White Envelope Arepas

Woot Granola

Zest Tea

Zesty Z

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Ticket prices are are required for entry and range from $15-80.

Event date and times:

  • Friday Night Preview Party Presented by @DCFOODPORN: 6PM-8PM

  • Saturday: 10AM-4PM

  • Sunday: 10AM-4PM

Event location:

  • Dock5 @ Union Market, 1309 5th St NE, Washington, DC 20002

No Need to Mull it Over!

Mulled Wine and Cider are Fall Favorites Everyone Loves

Spice & Tea Exchange® of Alexandria has all the ingredients you need for delicious mulled drinks.

Spice & Tea Exchange® of Alexandria has all the ingredients you need for delicious mulled drinks.

Sponsored by Spice & Tea Exchange® of Alexandria

With the first sign of changing leaves, we start looking forward to our favorite pastimes of autumn: pumpkin picking, evening bonfires, sipping hot mugs of tea and hayrides to name a few. And our food desires transition to rich, spice-filled dishes. Pumpkin, apple and cinnamon are what we crave to keep us cozy as the days get shorter and the evenings become cooler. 

Another favorite? Serving mulled drinks at cool weather parties, in a thermos at a football game, or as a treat after leaf-raking. Mulled drinks have an ancient history, as the Romans started adding spices to their wine in the 2nd century as a health booster in colder weather. The delightful aroma of mulling spices has become synonymous with the season and are popular around the world, especially at the holidays.

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The Spice & Tea Exchange of Alexandria has made creating mulled drinks easy with our Mulling Mix that comes perfectly portioned in a bag that also acts as a filter for the spices. Delicious in both wine and cider, it is as easy as simply combining all ingredients with a bottle of red wine or one quart of cider, then simmer for fifteen minutes. 

Remember that entertaining is easier with early preparation.  Several hours in advance, combine Spice & Tea’s Mulling Mix with your favorite cider in a slow cooker and set on medium-low. As you finish your hosting prep, your home will begin to fill with the intoxicating aromas of fall. Another pro tip, you can enjoy the mulled wine or cider alone or kick it up a notch by adding your favorite dark liquor, such as bourbon or rum. For a truly impressive presentation, hollowed out apples make a fun cocktail/mocktail glass!

.   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .

Mulled Cider Cups

From The Spice & Tea Exchange®

1 pkg Mulling Mix Spice Blend
Star Anise (optional garnish)
Cinnamon Stick – Korintje (optional garnish)

From the grocer
1 quart of cider
8 large apples
Juice of one lemon

Add the cider and Mulling Mix Spice Blend into a slow cooker and cover. Simmer on low for 3-4 hours or to taste.

Meanwhile, cut off the top of the apples. Use a knife to outline the apple cup “rim.” Spoon or scoop (with a melon baller) out the apple center to the rim line you created. Brush the cut part of the apples with lemon juice to prevent browning. Fill each apple cup with brewed cider. Garnish each cup with a Star Anise and a Cinnamon Stick – Korintje.

Yield: 8 (½ cup servings)
Prep: 10 minutes

The Spice & Tea Exchange® of Alexandria offers more than 140 spices, over 80 exclusive hand-mixed blends, 16 naturally-flavored sugars, an array of salts from around the world and more than 30 exotic teas. We focus on providing high quality products and accessories to home cooks, chefs, and tea lovers in an old-world spice traders’ atmosphere.

Visit our store and become immediately immersed in a sensory experience where you can explore, open the jars and smell and speak with our knowledgeable staff who truly love what they do. We enjoy hearing about good recipes and fun stories, so stop on by! You’ll find us hand-mixing our custom blends and seasonings right in the store, bagging our teas, or putting together unique gifts for our guests.

Spice & Tea Exchange® of Alexandria, 320 King Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 | 571-312-8505 www.spiceandtea.com/alexandria.html

 

 

 

 

 

A Perfect Day Farm: Raising Grass-Fed Beef in Service of an Even Better Tomorrow

By Whitney Pipkin, photography by Kate Warren

At A Perfect Dat Farm, grass-fed beef is a means to an ecologically sustainable end.

At A Perfect Dat Farm, grass-fed beef is a means to an ecologically sustainable end.

The doe-eyed Jerseys and shaggy-faced Red Devon-Angus cattle chewing their way through a field at A Perfect Day Farm are a postcard for grass-fed beef. But for Matt Rales, 34, they’re the centerpiece of a much grander project taking place on the 800-acre farm in Virginia’s bucolic Fauquier County.

“I would say we are first and foremost in the ecosystem services business,” he begins, “and the production of grass-fed beef is a byproduct of ecological restoration.”

It’s an opening salvo in a complex tale about how the careful grazing of cattle can benefit biodiversity, chipping away at climate change as the cows create a landscape that can more efficiently sequester carbon and filter water.

“But I can get into the weeds,” Rales says, self-consciously, halfway through a description of the diverse mammal species that once roamed North America, an ancient system he’s trying to mimic here.

His fiancée, Abigail “Abby” Fuller, 32, laughs.

“I try to translate,” she says.

If Rales wants to relay the story that has just begun at this farm, purchased in 2016, he couldn’t have found a more fitting partner. A documentary filmmaker, Fuller is the youngest and only female director of Netflix’s Emmy-nominated series “Chef’s Table,” having produced episodes on chefs Ana Roš and Tim Raue, with more in upcoming seasons.

“People always ask me if I’m actually farming,” says Fuller, who moved to Virginia from Los Angeles a little over a year ago but still spends almost a third of her time traveling for work. She’s wearing a comfy black jumpsuit, transformed by a pair of galoshes into farm wear for the day. For now, she says, “I move the cows with him and help out, but I’m more focused on growing the farm’s communications and outreach.”

The couple met through mutual friends and talked on the phone for four months before meeting in person. They are planning a January wedding.

“It started with a similar passion for food,” Fuller says, “since I make films about food and he, you know, produces food.”

Matt Rales and Abigail Fuller, the duo behind A Perfect Day Farm.

Matt Rales and Abigail Fuller, the duo behind A Perfect Day Farm.

For Rales, who earned a degree in environmental science at Middlebury College in Vermont, the farm is the culmination of years of studying how to manage animals in harmony with the environment. Rales spent three years working for Virginia’s sustainable agriculture savant Joel Salatin at Polyface Farms and has also worked at farms in Zimbabwe, Botswana and California.

“More than anything I spent a lot of time reading,” says Rales, whose background includes running a “suburban farm” in Potomac, MD, that served DC restaurants such as Komi and Marcel’s.

Rales’ brand of farming is as thoughtful as it is labor intensive, leaving him moving cows through the pastures with the help of electric fencing as often as four times a day at the peak of grass-growing season. At any given moment, up to 99% of the farm’s acres, including another 750 acres being leased nearby, are resting. The cattle munch, fertilize and trample a tiny fraction of the total, leaving behind a matted carpet of plant matter and nutrients that improves soil health over time.

The scientists who study this type of farming in the Chesapeake Bay call it management-intensive grazing, but farmers often refer to it as mob grazing, holistic grazing or rotational grazing. The practices have slowly added followers in the region, with nearly 200 farms included in a 2016 directory of grass-fed-meat producers in Maryland, Virginia, Delaware and West Virginia—a number that’s tripled since the first directory was published in 2005.

For Rales, grazing cattle is a mental exercise that evolves as he learns—both from the latest research and from his own daily experiments—about the impact their presence can have on the land he’s stewarding. He began work at this farm, which had been growing hay and grass without animals for years, with a comprehensive baseline assessment of its soils. Surveys and 88 core samples measured everything from calcium to organic carbon and gives the farm a starting point to compare with future changes.

“It’s way too complex to begin to understand, and we’re learning new things all the time,” he says. “We’re always trying to make adjustments and observe the response of the vegetation, the soil, the land as a whole to the management.”

This scientist-farmer approach doesn’t rely solely on beef sales to support it, at least not yet. The land is also bolstered by conservation easements that prevent development on some of its wooded acres while allowing farming to continue. Rales is also looking to monetize the work the farm is doing for the environment and dreams of them being paid for the “ecosystem services” they provide. On the West Coast, he’s seen conservation groups recognize the role of animals in reviving environments so they can support endangered species or eat away the dry vegetation that might fuel wildfires.

“So far, there hasn’t been a market for it in the East, but we’re certainly interested in creating that or participating in it,” he says.

A sampling of A Perfect Day Farm’s grass-fed beef.

A sampling of A Perfect Day Farm’s grass-fed beef.

Moving here from California, Fuller says she’s found plenty of interest in and around DC in the work they’re doing. Through the group Pineapple DC, Fuller met Kelsey Weisgerber, who manages the school lunch program at Mundo Verde Public Charter School. The two worked together to turn A Perfect Day Farm’s beef into burgers for a school lunch in May.

The majority of the farm’s meat is sold through Hardwick Beef, an aggregator that sells to restaurants and shops around New York City and online (hardwickbeef.com). The farm has started hosting pop-up sales inside the District to meet local demand, along with the occasional farm tour open to the public.

During a late-summer visit, following heavy rains, the fields were Technicolor green, dotted with black-eyed Susans and Queen Anne’s lace. I asked Fuller how well she was resisting the urge to use this as the setting for a film on the promise of regenerative agriculture, and she grinned.

“It’s something I’ve definitely been simmering on,” she admits. “I’m so used to diving into a situation as an objective third party, but to look at something that you’re living in? That takes time.”

 

To find out about a dinner featuring the farm's products in September and a pop-up sale in October, sign up for its  newsletter at APDfarm.com or follow the farm on Instagram @apdfarm.