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A New Year with New Data

December 18, 2018 Teresa White, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service

This time of year, I can’t help but think about cycles – everything coming full circle – from agriculture (planting through harvest) to the holiday season marking the end of one year and the start of the next. Here at USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), we are at an exciting time...

Research and Science

Tips for Eating Cannibal Sandwiches this Holiday Season

December 17, 2018 Sarah Lichtman, Public Affairs Specialist, Food Safety and Inspection Service, USDA

With each holiday season, there are hundreds of people in the Midwest who are sickened after eating cannibal sandwiches – a dish featuring raw ground beef, often seasoned with spices and onions and served on bread or a cracker.

Health and Safety

Fighting Fire with Fuel Treatments: A Shared Stewardship Approach

December 14, 2018 Jennifer Croft, Applied Fire Ecologist, USDA Forest Service

Fire season now spans the entire year. Before summer even begins, forests are primed in large parts of the country for large fires that spread rapidly in trees that are dehydrated from drought, compromised from fighting off bugs, and often competing for space in overly dense forests.

Forestry

The Name, the Pin, and the Bee

December 13, 2018 Sarah Federman, Agricultural Science and AAAS Fellow, Office of the Chief Scientist

She leans over her dead subject and deftly pushes a pin through its body, securing it to the foam below. To be clear, this is not about a morgue or a serial killer. This is about taxonomy, or the science of identifying, classifying, and naming organisms. The woman in question is a scientist, and her...

Research and Science

Stand Up Your Holiday Feast with a Tasty Rib Roast

December 12, 2018 Jennifer Porter, Deputy Administrator, Livestock & Poultry Program

December is filled with holiday observances and family gatherings, many highlighted by a seasonal feast. While the centerpiece for these feasts is as diverse as our nation, beef is a popular choice, particularly the standing rib roast, a traditional favorite. Last holiday season, the standing rib...

Food and Nutrition Health and Safety

Your Holiday How-To: Keeping Hot Foods HOT and Cold Foods COLD!

December 11, 2018 Meredith Carothers, Food Safety and Inspection Service, USDA

The holidays are here, which means plenty of gatherings with family, friends and food! These get-togethers are usually fun-filled with catching up, laughter and occasional dancing, so don’t let foodborne illness crash your party. One of the best ways to keep foodborne illness off the guest list is...

Health and Safety

‘Noble’ Christmas Tree Illumines Capitol Hill

December 07, 2018 Robert Hudson Westover, USDA Forest Service, Office of Communication

With a brief countdown and the flick of a switch, the towering U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, on the West Lawn of Capitol Hill, lit up the dark. Visitors from all across America, who stood in near freezing temperatures beneath the majestic pine, cheered as the tree’s thousands of lights glistened the...

Forestry

Small Agriculture—The National Agricultural Library’s Newest Digital Exhibit

December 04, 2018 USDA National Agricultural Library

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Agricultural Library (NAL) has launched a new digital exhibit named “ Small Agriculture.” This exhibit showcases three small-scale farming and niche agricultural initiatives that USDA has supported since its establishment.

Farming

Customer Service, Partnership Support A Healthier Start in Life

November 28, 2018 Brandon Lipps, Acting Deputy Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services

Getting out into our nation’s communities and witnessing the impact federal nutrition programs have on lives leaves a lasting impression. On a recent trip to Vermont, I saw firsthand how USDA supports America's nutrition safety net, helping a new generation of Americans get a healthier start in life...

Food and Nutrition

I’m Not Going to Turn Another Clod

November 28, 2018 Robert Hathorne and Chad Douglas, NRCS

Plunging his shovel into a wheat field covered in soybean residue, Gary Hula hefts up a mound of crumbly soil with a grin. The county is under moderate drought and it’s just above freezing outside, but the soil in his shovel is full of moisture and riddled with worm holes—sure signs of healthy soil.

Conservation

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