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Davis: Where Culinary Crossroads MeetBy Elaine Corn |
From April 2007
Shutterstock.com
If you’re crazy for food, Davis is your town. Crime lab for plantsIf you’re crazy for Zinfandel and didn’t hear the latest, it’s not from around here. Zinfandel is Croatian, and the discovery was made in Davis. The university’s Foundation Plant Service published the findings of Dr. Carol Meredith of UC Davis’ Department of Viticulture and Enology after DNA fingerprinting ended the century-old Zinfandel origin argument. Predictably, California grape growers swarmed to get the Croatian clones, but they couldn’t do it without dealing with UC Davis. FPS quarantines all imported vines and rootstock to make sure they’re disease-free.Davis was also the scene of a CSI-like probe that threw cold water on the hot Viognier market. “We not only use DNA fingerprinting to identify exactly what a plant is, but to sort out mix-ups,” says FPS director Deborah Golino. A vine claimed to have been French Viognier by its, ahem, smuggler bore instead the DNA of Roussanne, a less-sexy white grape. Busted. Fair’s fairPachamama Coffee Co-op, owned by 13,000 small-scale farmers in Peru, Guatemala, Mexico and Nicaragua, wholesales coffee with taste as intense as its progressive politics: 100 percent organic, 100 percent fair trade. “We see ourselves as being traded directly from the farmer,” says Pachamama general manager Thaleon Tremain, who began the Davis-based cooperative four years ago with funding from the World Bank. Specializing in specific coffee districts, such as Nuevo Segovia in Nicaragua or Quillabamba in Peru, Pachamama sells primarily through cooperative outlets, such as the Davis Food Co-op.In co-op they trustThe Davis Food Co-op is almost like a public trust. Products are vetted for organic certification, nutrition, health benefits, lack of processing, local production and harvest, democratic or cooperative ownership of production, diversity in food crops, and environmental and economic sustainability. But it’s not all so sobering. The co-op is a bright, clean supermarket full of unusual ingredients to awe the foodie. Turmeric root. Thai black rice. Striped tomatoes. Blue potatoes. Organic corn. The store attracts vegetarians, but it also offers classes on cooking natural pork and bacon. Tastings of olives, wine, mustards and mushrooms are commonplace.Saying no to junkThe bill that banned soda and junk food in California public schools emanated from, you guessed it, Davis. The California Center for Public Health Advocacy, on the outskirts of downtown Davis, had an enthusiastic supporter: Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. California’s School Junk Food Ban and High School Soda Ban have influenced similar bans in the United Kingdom, France and Latvia. What’s next? Watch this Davis nonprofit propose a menu-labeling bill, requiring large restaurant chains to post the nutritional content of dishes on menu boards, and another that would encourage grocery stores to locate in underserved neighborhoodsOn the bookshelfAny place people are crazy about food, there’s bound to be books galore on gastronomic minutiae. UC Davis’ Shields Library is home to 27,000 volumes in 42 languages about all things related to wine and grape growing, the largest collection of its kind in the world. Open to the public.Easy to be greenMost restaurants in downtown Davis offer meat-free dishes. On the menu at Davis Noodle City on E Street, a stand-alone list culls vegetarian items from the rest of the menu for a quick V-check.Botany makes strange bedfellowsCan’t we all just get along? In their new book, the husband-and-wife team of Raoul Adamchak and Pam Ronald posits that the future of food might look a lot like their marriage. He coordinates the organic market garden at the student farm on the UC Davis campus; she’s a plant pathologist in genomics at the university. Their book, The Future of Food: A Marriage of Genetic Engineering and Organic Farming? (Oxford University Press, 2007), may make believers of each side in the other. She has genetically developed rice that can survive long submersions, such as in the event of a flood. He’s focused on community food security, indigenous agriculture systems, farmer-to-farmer networks for developing sustainable agriculture, even agroforestry. The couple doesn’t see agriculture as pharm foods vs. farm foods. “We both love plants,” Ronald says.Place of worshipWhat began 30 years ago as a group of back-to-the-land hippies selling direct to consumers because they couldn’t get their produce sold in traditional stores is now the hub of Davis life: the Davis Farmers Market. “In other places, people make their community around their church or their kids’ school or their job,” says Annie Main of Good Humus Produce. “Here, it’s the farmers market.” Main is one of the original growers who founded the outdoor market at Davis’ Central Park. Another vendor, Trudy Kalisky of Upper Crust Bakery, has been at the market for 20 years. She’s pulled her breads completely out of retail. “I’m strictly farmers market,” she says. Omnivores and vegans flock to the market like parishioners to church. “This is Davis,” Main says. “I can’t think of this community without a farmers market.”advertisement
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