L.A.'s Culinary Talents Grow Their Own |
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Organic Rosemary & Mint (photo by Chamomile, courtesy of morguefile.com)
Betty Hallock of the Los Angeles Times has penned a terrific read about chefs and restaurateurs i tending urban gardens n The City of Angels in order to give their customers truly unique dining experiences.
Whether their gardens are raised beds in a parking lot, or truly amazing uses of an urban rooftop, the folks she has written about make it clear that the best food travels but a short distance from Nature to plate. (And require no pesticides!)
Check out what some of what she wrote:
The Williamses also installed a small but incredibly varied garden out behind three-month-old Huckleberry bakery, where a few parking spaces come face to face with a raised bed filled with chives, blueberries, violets, lavender, red Swiss chard, doughboy and pineapple tomatillos, strawberries, red bell peppers, African eggplants, high country and sweet 100 tomatoes, and something called magenta spreen greens (a relative of spinach). A few strawberries recently dangled over a custom-made planter, lined with cocoa mulch, not far from the bumper of a Volkswagen GTI.
Ms. Hallock’s piece relates that the folks at Huckleberry have found that “Tending to the vegetables ‘really makes you honor your farmer. My God they work hard.’”
Even if all you’ve got is a windowsill, you can still grow something to eat and enjoy along with your favorite finds at your local farmers market!
If you’d like to read the L.A. Times article cited above go to: In L.A.'s restaurant gardens, freshness is grown to order
Whether you'd like to start a garden in your backyard, or somewhere else in your community, here's some info that might Help:
American Community Gardening Association

