Ciao Oct/Nov 2019 Ciao_OctNov2019_web | Page 33

foodsources “organic”, “all-natural”, “free-run” or “free-range”. As organics’ popularity has skyrocketed, these certifications and pseudo-certifications (beware poultry boasting “enhanced housing”, which Stefan says merely means a perch has been added to the chickens’ small cages) have become hard to parse. Wary shoppers should look not just for “grass-fed” beef but “grass-finished”, which indicates the cows have not been moved to a feedlot, and eggs from “free-range” or “pastured” chickens (“free-run” chickens are not caged, but are housed inside a barn). Ultimately, the best way to learn where food comes from is to talk to the person who produced it. Stefan says he used to feel guilty about not being able to satisfy customers looking for celery in the spring or a red tomato in the dead of winter. But he’s come to realize the necessity of a shift in consumer behaviour. Eating seasonally may be the most important factor in how people should eat, he says. Caring for the stability of our environment is also key. The unpredictability caused by climate change—late frosts, early winters, floods and storms—can all have extremely adverse effects on farming, and farmers are already grappling with managing the changes. “But the future could be bright if we get the people that are going to make the hard choices to say [...] we do need Stefan Regnier to control what we’re putting in the environment, so there is a future moving forward for everybody.” Farming organically means getting in tune with a system that is “simple but highly complicated,” says Stefan. “But when you get the balance and everything starts working really well, it’s beautiful.” It does seem to require devotion. Just think of the response to the last question you asked a producer at a farmers’ market—the passion in their voice, the details of growing times and temperatures, and the variance of this year’s crop versus last. Try getting that at a supermarket. ciao! / oct/nov / two thousand nineteen 31