Contributed by Dana Cox, Kendall College School of Culinary Arts, Chicago
Just after Labor Day last fall, seven culinary and pastry students, and three chef-instructors (including me) hopped a train from Chicago to Carbondale, Ill., to immerse ourselves in the agricultural life for five days. Our mission? To better understand and appreciate where food comes from. What happens before we pop open a box of pork loins or bag of haricot verts? We would soon discover just that.
Monday
Monday evening we arrive in the heart of Southern Illinois University's (SIU) campus in Carbondale and are met by Dr. Sylvia Smith, our hosting professor who teaches in SIU's foods and nutrition program. We couldn't have asked for a more qualified guide. Smith earned her PhD with a thesis in culinary tourism. Piling into the van (aptly donated to SIU by Anheuser Busch), we are headed to the Green Retreat, a working farm with cabins and guest homes constructed for those weary of urban life and in search of pastoral peace and quiet.
The chefs' guesthouse would soon be filled with teachers, administrators and students from SIU anxious to greet us and give us a tour of the farm. Our first dinner there is composed of sausages and brats made from local bison, grass-fed beef and conventionally raised pork (clearly these folks spoke our language).
Tuesday
Dairy Research
Our first full day begins early with a trip to the research dairy run by SIU staff member Chet Stuemke. This facility houses and milks 36 cows.
We all take a turn at using the milking machine, which greatly improves the efficiency of the process, but also requires vigilant sanitation of udders, workers' hands and the suction cups on the machine.
Specialty Vegetables
The next stop of the day is to see Dr. Alan Walters, specialty horticulturalist at SIU who
Walters informs us that SIU is prolific in winter pumpkin and horseradish production. Collinsville, Ill., is the horseradish capital of the world, and Libby's canned pumpkin
Vermiculture (Worm Composting)
Andilee Warner, SIU's resident vermiculture expert and recycling coordinator, entertains us next at the agriculture school's compost center
1 pound of worms >>> eat 1/2 pound of waste >>>> produce 2 ounces castingsWarner says there are different ways to approach composting: bunker systems, forced air and flow-through reactors. The latter is used at SIU and involves feeding the waste from the top and harvesting the finished matter at the bottom.
Only weeks prior to our trip, says Warner, the government signed SB99 into law
Grains /Cereals
Tuesday afternoon we return to the fields to meet with Bryan Young, "weed scientist" and agronomist. He's not investigating the habits of the dandelion here; rather he studies cereals such as corn (both edible and field corn, fed to livestock), soy and sorghum. Summer cereals are those such as corn and soy, which are planted in early spring and harvested by fall
Soy, Young explains, is desirable for its oil and protein content and can produce about 50 bushels per acre here--60 if it's planted more densely, which also makes the harvest more difficult as plants are forced to grow taller
Aquaculture
Our next stop on the tour would reveal that SIU's research has impacts far beyond the cornfields. Dr. Jesse Trushenski, physiology researcher at the aquaculture facility, meets us in a seemingly remote and secure field. Expecting to see tanks and whirlpools of fish, we are surprised by this destination. Here we'd be introduced to "extensive," or outdoor aquaculture. Dr. Trushenski walks us down rows of square, manmade ponds--they have 90 here--and points out that outdoor installations such as these are low-input with relatively low control, also yielding a low output
Once inside, the humming tanks we anticipated were filled with freshwater prawns, trout and even a variety of rainforest fish called pacu
The loftier objectives of fish farming are not only economic but also to promote sustainability. Eighty percent of the seafood we eat in the U.S. is imported, which means considerable carbon expenditure as well as fishing practices that can be profit-, rather than planet-centric. Fish that are exclusively fed corn and soy don't have the Omega-3 fatty acid profile desirable to health-conscious consumers, but fish fed oil and meal from fatty fish will develop these healing fats. They have discovered at SIU that fish can be "finished" with this marine-rich diet for the last 1/2 pound of body weight, ending up with the same nutritive specs as a fish that has eaten seafood its entire life.
Swine Farm
Our day would end with Dr. Gary Apgar, who refers to himself "the pig guy," with a big smile. Before heading to the barns to see the 100 hogs raised and studied here, Apgar had prepared a presentation for us, and we couldn't have been happier to sit and absorb for a moment after an ambitious (and hot) day of agrarian sightseeing.
Apgar explains that the hog is a remarkably profitable animal, as it is headed to market in a matter of months after birth, and that virtually the whole animal is used either for food or as a component of numerous products for other industries. In the 1980s, the fat-free craze hurt the pork industry, as consumers' view of pork as a fatty food discouraged sales and considerably. The pork industry responded by engineering a meatier, leaner pig via breeding and diet. Thus, the modern-day hog achieves market weight (approximately 260 pounds, according to Apgar) more quickly, has a longer trunk (the portion of the body that pork chops, loin and bacon come from) and has less body fat than the pigs of yesteryear. Apgar tells us, too, that the nation's largest purchaser of pork products is retailer Walmart, and that the company dictates the wholesale price paid for hogs. Farmers, then, are placed into the role of "price takers," having to get their animals to market within the parameters of what the discount behemoth will pay them.
A staff member from the facility responsible for insemination of the female "gestation" animals (sows whose job it is to have one litter after the other) joins us to demonstrate the tools used for impregnation
Next, we make our way with Apgar to the buildings where the hogs are housed. The piglets, only weeks old, are kept in a trailer
The larger buildings on the farm house the animals as they grow and put on weight. They are separated into sections, with each group getting larger as we get deeper into the building
Because pigs do not possess an internal body temperature regulation capacity as humans do, they will wallow in mud
Our final point on the swine tour is the farrowing center, where the gestation sows give birth. There are claw-like devices about the size of a large pig in each pen. These are restraints, we're told, to keep the mothers from rolling over on their babies. The pigs are so stout today that they can literally crush their newborns with a simple position change. There is a small tube hanging over each pen, which Apgar points out is a source of water to drip on the mother and provide some of that evaporative cooling. Gestation mothers have an average of eight-plus piglets per litter, and they can give birth every 4 to 5 months.
Part two | Part three
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