now in season

February 2010

Angel-Valley

Part Two: Saving Our Soil

By Jeremy WaltherPhotography by Jenny Stufflebeam Editor’s note: In Part I of Saving our Soil, Jeremy Walther introduced us to an unsung, oft-overlooked hero: the

dutch-baby

The Incredible Edible

By Elizabeth WinslowPhotography by Jody Horton A universal symbol of life, fertility and rebirth, the egg indeed represents abundant possibility. I only had to try

Inwood Estates

By Terry Thompson-AndersonPhotography by Dustin Meyer Dan Gatlin and his wife, Rose Mary, built the Inwood Estates Vineyards winery and tasting room in Dallas in

Picking-olives

Texas’s New Boom

By Terry Thompson-Anderson Photography by Marla Camp The olive tree has been firmly rooted in Mediterranean culture since the early days of civilization. The Greeks

chickens

The Eggman

By Andrea Abel Photography by Andy Sams The late afternoon sunlight casts a warm glow across the green pastures of Jeremiah Cunningham’s 90-acre Coyote Creek

Dewberry Hills Farm

By Elizabeth Winslow Photography by Jody Horton Jane Levan always said she’d leave Austin when the last goat left Brodie Lane. That day came in

vital_farms-MCU

Pastured Poultry: Vital Farms

By David Ansel Photography by Robert Kraft (self-potrait) and David Ansel (mobile chicken unit) “My guitar is under the bed, next to all the rifles,”

soup

Bryce Gilmore

Photography by Jenna Noel It’s no secret that Austin has become a hotbed for mobile vendors: tacos, crêpes, wurst—even locally made funky clothing and accessories

Still Life with Garden

By Cara White Lowrimore Photography by Leigh Jackson Whether providing food for the needy or instructing a hundred energetic kids at vacation bible school, the

Trip to Bountiful

Last spring, Oriental medicine practitioner Dr. Paddy Tawada had a butternut-squash moment. This very much resembled a lightbulb moment, except the vision that lit up

Meat and Greet

On a recent damp Wednesday, under a gray sky and a forecast of plunging temperatures, “brisk” more aptly described the weather than the business at

If You Build It, They Will Come

Aaron Blanco, owner of San Antonio’s Brown Coffee Company, remembers his early foray into life with the bean. “I started like everyone else . .