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Using Energy from the Sun to Dry Pomace

September 11, 2018 Sandra Avant, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

Pomace, the heavy puree left over after fruits and vegetables are juiced and processed, is used mostly as a feed additive for livestock. The rest of the wet puree is discarded in landfills.

Energy Research and Science

Late Blight: A Ripening Issue for Central Pennsylvania Farmers

September 25, 2015 USDA Northeast Climate Hub (Luke Blair, 2015 Summer Intern)

Perhaps there is such a thing as too much of a good thing. Many farmers in central Pennsylvania would aptly agree to this notion after experiencing above average amounts of rainfall this summer. In fact, rainfall during June and July in central Pennsylvania was more than four inches above average...

Conservation

From Tomatoes to Yarn: Value Added Producer Grants Help Agriculture Entrepreneurs Get Ahead

June 05, 2015 Katharine Ferguson, Chief of Staff, Rural Development

“When you are a small farm, you don’t have a lot of capital.” says Julie Donnelly of Deepwoods Farm, a small tomato farm she runs with her husband in Bradley County, Arkansas. Despite being in an area known for its tomatoes, Deepwoods Farms was having a hard time getting ahead. “We couldn’t get past...

Food and Nutrition Farming Rural

Strengthening Produce Businesses, One Program at a Time

March 16, 2015 Heather Pichelman, Agricultural Marketing Service Fruit and Vegetable Program Promotion and Economics Division Director

Successful businesses all seem to have a common bond – a commitment to quality, consistency, and integrity. During a recent trip with my colleagues, I saw firsthand the many ways that companies are turning to my agency – the USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) – to provide these factors to...

Trade

Breeding a Tastier Tomato

November 05, 2013 Sandy Miller Hays, USDA Agricultural Research Service Information Staff

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. If you want to stir consumers’ passions about produce, just mention tomatoes. There’s no shortage of outrage about those...

Research and Science

High Tunnel Gives Kentucky Farmers Advantage with Berries and Other Produce

November 05, 2013 Christy Morgan, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Kentucky

Similar to the old adage, when Chris Adams married the wife, he married the family – and the family farm. Lucky for him, he loves farming and enjoys working with his in-laws to manage the 4,000-acre farm of soybeans, wheat and corn. Now it’s his full-time job, working with his brother-in-law to...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

New Mexico Farmers Supply Local Food to Community with Conservation

September 23, 2013 Mark A. Smith, NRCS New Mexico

Everything that siblings Adán and Pilar Trujillo do on their Chimayó, New Mexico, farm connects with the community. Their lettuce and chile peppers feed students at local schools. And they sell their rhubarb, rainbow chard and red Russian kale at the community market just down the road in Española...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Summer Harvests Can Turn Into Summer Meals for Kids

July 23, 2013 Deborah Kane, National Director, USDA Farm to School Program

Summer is the season when harvests of healthful foods are most abundant: gardens overflow with zucchini and berries, trees are laden with sweet, ripe fruit, and farmers tend and harvest crops from dawn until dusk. Despite the seasonal abundance, many children go hungry when school is out and the...

Food and Nutrition Farming

Reducing Food Waste: It's More Than Just Cleaning Your Plate

July 11, 2013 Robert Fireovid, ARS National Program Leader for Quality and Utilization of Agricultural Products

When you think of steps that can be taken to improve our environment and mitigate climate change, "reducing food waste" probably doesn't come to mind right away. But in fact, food waste is an important factor in climate change, because wasted food represents 20 percent by weight of the solid waste...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Research and Science

Yeast Genes Improve Shelf Life of Tomatoes

July 06, 2010

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from the USDA's rich science and research portfolio. By Avtar Handa, Purdue University I don’t know about you, but I find it frustrating to go into the grocery store looking...

Food and Nutrition Research and Science
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