Appetite for local garlic growing in Alberta
Customers now buying a year's worth, just so they don't miss out
WhenMark Visscher and his wife Brenda moved back to his family's farm about 10 years ago, they renovated the house he grew up in and made it their own.
Then they looked out at the 2 acres, now dubbed Deep Roots Farm, and saw it was too small to run cattle but just the right size to grow garlic.
In2015, they planted their first crop,2,500 garlic plants for the 2016 season. Like tulips, garlic is planted in the fall.
The Visschersquickly sold out. So the next year they planted more, and more again the next, each year selling out. This past Monday, they finished planting 30,000 cloves, all by hand, for next summer's crop.
Visscher says their early customers would come to their farm, about 10 minutes outside of Red Deer,and buy a pound, about 10 to 12bulbs.
"The next year, they come back like, 'We ran out' and'That was so good.' So then they'll buy five pounds and then they tell their friends," Visscher told CBC's Edmonton AM. "So now we have people buying 10, 20, 30 pounds all at once."
For the Visscher family, 12 poundsconstitutes a year's worth of garlic.
WATCH | Consumers hungry for local garlic
Some days they have garlic with every meal, starting with a little in their eggs in the morning, and ending with a couple of cloves of black garlic for dessert at dinner.
"When you ferment it, it takes on a sweeter taste; it really pairs well with chocolate," Visschersaid."I prefer a red wine or dark beer ... but even a nice tea goes well with it."
They sell their garlicfrom thefarm with little advertising.
People like being able to see where the food is coming from, but theyalso enjoythe animals, take pictures in the sunflower field and have an experience that's a little different from the farmer's market, he said.
While Canada is not a major player in the garlic market, local garlic is seeing a lot of interest in recent years.
Part of the interest is a result of the local food movement, another is more people cooking at home and wantinggood tasting food, Visscher said.
"We have no problem selling all we can grow. Our limitation is labour and land."