The Conversation Feature: Dr. Jennifer Black

The Conversation Feature: Dr. Jennifer Black

The Conversation Feature: Dr. Jennifer Black

“More than food banks are needed to feed the hungry during the coronavirus pandemic.”

Dr. Jennifer Black, CSFS Associate and LFS Professor, recently co-authored an article in the Conversation on the issues with food banks and challenges of addressing food insecurity during COVID-19 through food banks.

Check out the full article here.

CBC Feature: Clare Cullen

CBC Feature: Clare Cullen

“I think this whole COVID pandemic has made people think that our food system, the distribution system may be damaged by a pandemic like this,” said Clare Cullen in a recent article published in the CBC.

Check out the full article here.

National Observer Feature: Dr. Hannah Wittman

National Observer Feature: Dr. Hannah Wittman

Janice Ammundsen cuddles one the baby goats on her Quadra Island farm.

Janice Ammundsen cuddles one the baby goats on her Quadra Island farm. Photo: Rochelle Baker

“COVID-19 is making visible these really deep cracks in our food system…we don’t have the necessary public infrastructure to sustain a regionally resilient food system because a lot of our agriculture investment is focused on exports,” said Dr. Hannah Wittman in a recent article published in the National Observer.

Check out the full article here.

5 Lessons for Food System Thinking from COVID-19

5 lessons for food system thinking from COVID-19: Susanna Klassen

COVID-19 notifications at a grocery store.

COVID-19 notifications at a grocery store. Photo by Allie Smith.

“Civil society groups working on food systems change have argued that this crisis presents an opening to do things differently. Indeed, many are poised to use this crisis for transformation — coalescing around issues like a Universal Basic Income and rights and protections for migrant workers, and using strategies like rent strikes to build collective power. Are we as scholars equally poised to respond? Or alternatively, are we courageous enough to support their efforts where they align?”

CSFS grad student Susanna Klassen’s blog post explores the challenges and opportunities that COVID-19 presents for our food system.

Check out the full blog post here.

*Cancelled* Ayurvedic Healing Teas and Elixirs

Ayurvedic Healing Tea and Elixirs

About this Workshop

In this hands-on workshop, you will learn how to make teas and elixirs to enhance your digestion, detoxification and energy using traditional Indian spices. We will explore the medicinal properties of cumin, coriander, fennel, cardamom, cloves, ginger, turmeric and fenugreek and make them into simple health tonics. Take home a recipe for turmeric milk and chai!

About the Instructor

Muneera is an Ayurveda health coach with over 18 years of experience in living and sharing Ayurveda. She is passionate about bringing the traditional wisdom of Ayurveda to our modern context in a simple and practical way. She enjoys a wellness practice on the unceded lands of the Coastal First Nations in Vancouver BC, and also runs an online group program on Ayurvedic living and cultivating better daily habits.

Date and Time

DATE Thursday, May 28 | 6:30 – 8:00 pm (1.5 hours)

Location

UBC Farm

3461 Ross Drive, Vancouver BC

Cost

$29 Standard ($25 Student) + GST

Register for this workshop

Welcoming Sean Smuckler as Interim Academic Director!

Thank you Juli and welcome Sean!

We want to say a heartfelt thank you to Juli Carrillo for gracefully stepping into the unknown and taking on the role of Interim CSFS Academic Director during Hannah Wittman’s study leave this past year. Juli helped guide the CSFS with keen insight, heart, and dedication. She always looked for what was best for the CSFS and the UBC Farm, and was instrumental in helping us through the most intense period of this COVID-19 crisis. We wish her and her family well with the new baby, and look forward to ongoing collaboration (and baby photos!).

Juli passes the baton on to Sean Smukler, who joins us as interim Academic Director during this most unprecedented time. Thank you for stepping in, Sean! We look forward to working closely with you, even if remotely, from now until Hannah Wittman’s leave ends in July.

Read more about Sean here.

Globe and Mail Feature: Dr. Hannah Wittman

Globe and Mail Feature: Dr. Hannah Wittman

Photo Credits: The Globe and Mail

“What we need is to build a resilient, regional food system that can produce a wide range of foods, and that can protect the future growing capacity of the land, so that it can pivot to adapt to crises like this,” said Dr. Hannah Wittman in a recent article published on the Globe and Mail.

Check out the full article here.

BC Food Web COVID-19 Food Systems Resources

BC Food Web COVID-19 Food Systems Resources

We know that it’s been hard to sift through the plethora of resources coming out every day about COVID-19, so we have compiled a list of COVID-19 food systems resources, media articles, and other content on the BC Food Web. We’ve created this repository for BC producers, processors, and for anyone else that is interested in finding information that may help them navigate this unprecedented time. We will also be updating this page regularly with new information as it comes out, so check back frequently for updates.

Note: We are not the authors of this content nor has this content been peer-reviewed. We hope this will be helpful to our network. If you come across any additional resources that you think should be listed here please feel free to send them to bc.foodweb@ubc.ca.

Spring Foraging

Spring Foraging

About this Workshop

How would you survive without a grocery store? Chef Robin Kort will teach you how to find wild spring treasures; food like seaweeds, mushrooms, edible plants, and roots that you can find in our forests, meadows, and oceans. This workshop will cover everything you need to know to safely gather, prepare and cook unique flavours found only in nature. This is an identification walk only (no picking, no cooking demonstration) and includes a sampling of wild edibles and an open discussion with wildcraft expert Robin Kort.

About the Instructor

Chef Robin Kort is a professional wildcraft guide and owner of Swallow Tail Culinary Adventures. She’s worked alongside some of the cities best chefs from Hawksworth to Chef Andrea Carlson of Burdock & Co. She is a member of the Vancouver mycological society and has been running wild mushroom foraging trips and cooking classes for 6 years. Chef Robin has been interviewed for her food and wine expertise on the Food Network with Bob Blummer, CBC with Steven Quinn, Montecristo Magazine, Vancouver Magazine, the Huffington Post, Conde Nast Traveller and the Globe and Mail.

Date and Time

Saturday, May 9 | 1:00 – 3:00 pm (2 hours)

Location

UBC Farm

3461 Ross Drive, Vancouver BC

Cost

$40 ($34 student pricing) + GST

Register for this workshop

*Cancelled* Let Food Be Thy Medicine

Let Food Be Thy Medicine

About this Workshop

This workshop explores how to bring the healing effect of herbs into your daily cuisine. Certain herbs are used in the kitchen on a regular basis and although these herbs are used for flavour, they also have a medicinal component. Others are mostly overlooked as a food even though there is great potential for incorporating them into your regular meal plan. When a family member is sick, we can tweak our recipes to make them more conducive to healing. We can prepare food according to the seasons to stay balanced and healthy in all different types of climate and weather. Take home samples of healthy condiments that we will create together.

Remember to bring a 250 ml – 350 ml wide mouthed jar with lid, a mug, and weather appropriate attire for the session.

About the Instructor

Sarah Orlowski is a Master Herbalist, an advanced level Qi Gong Practitioner and feels honoured to have had training in certain First Nations herbal traditions. Sarah has her Permaculture Design Certificate, believing that growing in accordance with Nature is the sustainable way of the future.

Currently, Sarah runs an organic orchard and medicinal herb farm (certified with Kootenay Mountain Grown) with her husband in Grand Forks, BC. Here she trains student apprentices in growing and maintaining plants and making herbal products. She has a private clinical practice, giving health consultations and Qi Gong treatments.

Date and Time

DATE Saturday, July 11, 2020 | 2:00 – 5:00 pm (3 hours)

Location

UBC Farm

3461 Ross Drive, Vancouver BC

Cost

$40 Standard ($34 Student) + GST

Register for this workshop