I am double posting this from the Cooking Forum, but I thought it would fit here, too.
CSA's are local farms that supply directly to consumers. So basically, I will pay a set fee each week for produce. The farm then selects what I get based on availability. For $5 extra dollars, they will deliver, too!
The benefits are threefold: better politically by putting money directly in the pockets of local farmers, better health wise putting better quality food in my family's tummies and better ecologically, no pesticides or chemical fertilizers. I thought the price I was quoted was really reasonable for organic produce, I guess because we are cutting out the middleman. Anyway, here's a quote from the email.....
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All of the vegetables are grown by organic methods and I strive to have a huge variety. Some things we grow are heirloom tomato varieties from the 19th century, patty pan squash, zucchini, standard tomato, sweet salad tomato, sweet and white potatoes, peppers, kale, spinach, mustard greens, okra, straight neck squash, strawberries, figs, blueberries, possibly black berries, garlic, melons, and the list goes on. Of course, the menu changes with season. You will be supplied an abundance of these vegetables and some substitutions are allowed. Usually you will go home with at least 1 and 1/2 to 2 grocery bags packed full.
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I think I am going to do this. Anyone else subscribe to a CSA? It sounds so yummy, I can hardly wait for spring!
Here is the database for CSA farms.
http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/csa/csastate.htm