Summer 2023 issue

Photography By | Last Updated August 01, 2023
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In the realm of edible sunlight, a serendipitous muse, a local bee graces our lens. It’s a genuine moment of nature’s spontaneity amid this era of Photoshop and AI, sweet as the fleeting partnership between blossoms and bees.
Editor's Note

Local food, global connections

My husband Mike and I were married in Brazil in November 2008, a few days after Barack Obama was elected the first Black president of the United States. For our small wedding party, it was an uplifting moment of solidarity with a culture entirely different from our own. Here we were in a tiny fishing village in Bahia—Brazil’s most African state—that saw few American tourists, and everywhere we were recognized as such, people would pump their fists, shout something that included “Obama!” and flash huge celebratory grins.

Partly through this connection we made friends with a few locals, who wound up helping organize some of our wedding events and attending as guests. Without speaking a lick of each other’s language, we bonded further over food. Our wedding reception ended up being as local as it could get, featuring the food of the region—rich stews cooked in coconut milk and dendê (palm) oil, local seafood, chile sauces, cassava in everything, and exotic fruits made into ice cream—along with a local capoeira troupe and local band.

Never have I traveled anywhere that hasn’t made some kind of impression on me, but Bahia—especially the people and their food (which go hand in hand)—has particularly influenced my feelings of human culture. And in an era when global and local forces seem eager to pull us apart, never underestimate the possibilities when they join, especially when it comes to food.

I was not at all surprised that Farm Collaborative Executive Director Eden Vardy was inspired to launch the annual farm-to-table Community Meal (the foundation of the organization itself) after learning about a hunger-relief program that supports farmers in Brazil. In this issue, read about Brazil’s restaurantes populares and other pioneering food and farmer-support policies that Vardy hopes we in the United States can learn from (“Behind Brazil’s Contrasts, a Food Policy Pioneer,” page 48.)

In “Cooking Globally, Thinking Locally” (page 54), globe-trotting chefs share how they spread the love of local foods—without being constrained by any one particular culture.

Here in the Roaring Fork Valley, cattle ranchers weather national and global challenges to continue doing what they love, which includes stewarding the land that’s vital to supporting their ever-evolving livelihoods (“‘More Than Just a Job,’” page 34).

In “Plight of the Bees” (page 28),” learn about the global forces of climate change that are threatening bees locally and around the world—species that are key to food systems everywhere. And in “First Foods” on page 26, delve into maíz de concho and other foods through which a San Luis Valley organization is revitalizing indigenous foodways and culture.

Finally, in Edible Traditions (page 61), the Aspen Historical Society tells an immigrant story similar to those told all over the country: how food traditions and recipes from alpine areas of Europe became Aspen cuisine.

Through all these stories, I hope you’ll agree that there’s an intrinsic value in locally produced food that goes way beyond basic nourishment—and that it’s the people who grow the food, nurture the land and animals, perpetuate the foodways, and promote food equity who can make a difference—sometimes globally.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                

 

Catherine Lutz, editor                                                                                            

 

‘More Than Just a Job’

With their connections to land and seasons, five generations of ranchers have helped steward the Roaring Fork Valley ecosystems ...

Someone's in the Kitchen

But not just anyone. These Roaring Fork Valley chefs take their cues from what they can find nearby, working with local ingredients in...

Behind Brazil’s Contrasts, a Food Policy Pioneer

It was an unassuming venue for one of the most delicious meals I’d ever had: row upon row of long communal tables, walls bare of...

Q&A: Cooking Globally, Thinking Locally

In the worldly culinary landscape of the Roaring Fork Valley—yet one that is quite small—local and visiting diners benefit greatly from the...

Plight of the Bees

It’s a bluebird day in Silt, and Derrick Mannes and I are surrounded. Glowing jars of honey and bricks of buttery beeswax line...

First Foods

In the high desert of the San Luis Valley, anthropology professor and farmer Devon Peña, PhD, holds a cob of pearly white flint ...

All Juiced Up

“You can’t eat a box of kale,” Sonya Bolerjack, chef-owner of Aspen Chefs To Go, says with a laugh when asked about the motivation...

One Scoop, Two Scoop, Made-by-You Scoops

On a train or in a car Make your ice cream near or far. Playtime, downtime, at the pool Edible science, now that is cool!   You can...

A Toast to Dry Drinks

“There’s a million and one reasons why somebody wants to not drink on a particular evening,” says Greg Van Wagner, wine and beverage...

Appetite for Adventure

Gone are the days when high-quality dining options could only be found in Front Range cities and cosmopolitan resort towns. Now,...

Catch and Eat

“No harvest of the resource means better resource.” That’s the common perception, anyway, among a large contingent of fishermen and -...

A World of Influences

The end of the 19th century marked an era when thousands of people migrated to the American West seeking opportunity. Some hoped to...

So Much More than Peas and Carrots

Each Saturday from mid-June to early October, I’m filled with a genuine sense of urgency to get down to the Aspen Saturday...