First, the good news. According to the 2015 Nielsen Global Corporate Sustainability Report, 66% of global consumers are willing to pay more for sustainable brands. These results were gleaned from a reasonably large study—30,000 people from 60 countries around the globe—and it’s an increase of 11% in just one year, and 16% over a two-year period.
Chef Blake Luecke has traded his chef’s coat for a green bucket slung around his hips with a length of orange rope. Instead of cooking with snow peas, the accomplished Austin sushi chef is harvesting them. On the other side of a wall of tangled vines is a farmer, Chef’s Garden grower Tom Skrovan, who is filling his own pail of peas. Barely audible above the din of rain pummeling the plastic tunnel sheltering the crop, the two men speak casually across the divide.
Our spring weather this year is so beautiful that it’s got us all in a really good mood. So, to start off this post, let’s play a game about the arugula plant.
New Lab Expands Agricultural Research Capabilities
When you mine Google search data, it quickly becomes obvious that we’re a curious bunch of folks, with questions like these being asked regularly:
Which are the most important crops we grow at The Chef’s Garden? The answer might surprise you. Because they aren’t our top-sellers. In fact, we don’t sell them at all. But they’re more valuable than anything we package into any box destined for any chef at any restaurant.