CSA advocates will tell you that joining a Community-Supported Agriculture project is the next best thing to growing your own food. You support a farmer for a whole season, and every week you get to pick up locally grown, organic, just-picked produce that still radiates life and earth. But what happens if you’re just too busy to cook for yourself? Over the course of the season the vegetables can start to pile up in the fridge. You start to feel guilty throwing away the soggy bok choi in the back of the vegetable crisper, and dread the next influx of fresh vegetables that will be piled onto last week’s unused produce.
Sweet Deliverance, a new business run by a Natural Gourmet Institute grad, Kelly Geary, offers a solution for busy New Yorkers. You pay for a CSA share. Geary will pick it up for you, prepare wholesome fresh meals, and deliver them to your door at a time that works for you – for an extra weekly fee of $250. Local food, and home cooked meals, with no work by you! It’s the ultimate in no-fuss, locally-grown convenience. And honestly, it creeps me out.
I’m thrilled that the CSA being supported through the Sweet Deliverance CSA is the Garden of Eve, the same farm that supplies Tuv Ha’Aretz in NYC and Long Island. But one of the primary purposes of CSA is to get people more engaged with their food. To encourage them to learn how to cook, and to think more deeply about where their food is coming from. Although I see the appeal of a service like Sweet Deliverance, I think it actually does a disservice to members (although, granted, it still supports a farm – and gets customers eating healthy, local meals instead of takeout). But ultimately, it feels to me like a perversion of the CSA concept, turning it from a model which tries to empower members into yet another opportunity for people to continue the fast-paced, disconnected routines.
I’d love to hear other readers’ thoughts about this…

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