Saturday, August 22, 2015

An arugula-growing farmer feeds a culinary revolution in Cuba

An arugula-growing farmer feeds a culinary revolution in Cuba
By Nick Miroff August 21 at 7:46 PM

CAIMITO, Cuba — Like all homestead stories, Fernando Funes Monzote's
starts with an epic battle against harsh elements and long odds.

Funes, a university-trained agronomist, settled on a badly eroded,
brushy hillside here outside Havana four years ago and began digging a
well into the rocky soil. The other farmers nearby thought he was crazy,
or worse — a dilettante with a fancy PhD whose talk of "agroecology"
would soon crash into the realities of Cuban farming.

Funes had no drill, so he and a helper had to break through layers of
rock with picks and hand tools. Seven months later and 50 feet down,
they struck a gushing spring of cool, clear water.

"To me, it was a metaphor for agroecology," said Funes, 44, referring to
the environmentally minded farm management techniques he studied here
and in the Netherlands. "A lot of hard work by hand, and persistence,
but a result that is worth the effort."

Today Funes is one of the most sought-after figures in Cuban culinary
circles. Finca Marta, the 20-acre farm he named in honor of his late
mother, supplies organic produce to many of Havana's top-rated
"paladares," the privately owned restaurants that are transforming the
island's reputation for uninspired dining.

Funes grows more than 60 varieties of vegetables, fruits and herbs in
carefully terraced planting beds designed to conserve water. He's
planted woody shrubs to divide his cattle pastures with "living fences"
that also provide habitat for birds. His beehives yielded 1.5 tons of
honey last year.

The farm and its irrigation systems run almost entirely on solar power,
and Funes operates a "biodigester" that captures methane from manure and
pipes it right to the kitchen stove where it burns clean and blue.

Funes's vision of Cuban agriculture is radical, because it's a
throwback. He advocates smart, resource-efficient artisanal farming as
an alternative to both capitalist agribusiness and the disastrous
state-run agricultural model implemented here in the 1960s, whose legacy
is a country that imports 60 to 80 percent of its food.

With Cuba restoring relations with the United States and looking to
reinsert itself into the global economy, Funes sees the very survival of
Cuban rural culture at stake.

His goal, he says, is to give Cuban farmers a way to make a living at a
time when so many have given up on it and moved to urban areas. "If we
don't want foreign companies to come in and dominate Cuban agriculture
all over again, that means we need to give Cuban families a way to stay
on their farms," said Funes, who grew up at an agricultural research
station where his father, a crop scientist, and his mother, a biologist,
both worked.

Twice a week Funes stuffs his old Russian Lada sedan to the roof with
Italian arugula, cherry tomatoes, endive and bean sprouts and delivers
fresh greens to more than two dozen restaurants in the capital.

Such items are virtually unknown to most Cubans but are increasingly
sought after by chefs catering to tourists, foreign residents and a
small but growing segment of Cuban consumers who are looking to break
out of the pork-and-plantains routine.

"More and more Cubans are discovering these vegetables and learning to
broaden their horizons a bit," said Alain Rivas, the head chef at El
Litoral, a two-year-old cafe along the oceanfront Malecón boulevard, one
block from the U.S. Embassy, that offers fresh organic salads with
ingredients from Funes's farm.

At $8 to $10, the salads are well beyond the means of ordinary Cubans,
but Rivas said many of his customers are local.

Rivas often plans his menu by talking first to Funes, a level of
farm-to-table coordination that is also unheard of here. A few years
ago, barely anyone in Cuba had cellphones. Now Funes keeps in touch with
chefs, restaurant owners and other customers by e-mail and text message
and says better planning minimizes waste.

Most Cuban farmers don't work this way, overproducing crops with the
expectation that much of their harvest will be lost because they don't
have the means to reach markets quickly. This approach yields a glut
during the winter growing season, crashing prices. Then high-demand
vegetables, such as lettuce and tomatoes, go scarce again during hot
summer months when crops quickly spoil under the broiling Caribbean sun
and growers don't want to risk the losses.

"Part of the problem could be solved by more efficient distribution and
coordination," Funes said.

The other part, of course, is better access to equipment and technology.

In recent years, Cuban President Raúl Castro has transferred millions of
acres of unproductive state land into the hands of private farmers and
cooperatives in an attempt to reduce food imports. But the results have
been underwhelming. There's a greater abundance and variety at produce
markets, but prices have mostly increased, in part because so many
intermediaries are involved.

Cuba's crushing agricultural bureaucracy still makes it essentially
impossible for farmers to import tractors, trucks and other agricultural
equipment that could boost production and cut costs. Government pledges
to create wholesale markets for tools and other farming supplies have
yet to materialize.

Funes would like to upgrade his Russian sedan to a refrigerated truck.
He's adding a maternity home to his delivery route as part of his
expanding social mission and wants to begin distributing
a weekly produce basket to ­individual families, a Cuban version of the
CSA (community-
supported agriculture) subscription model.

Funes said he doesn't need more land and can increase
his harvests simply by more-
intensive methods. And he's more interested in getting other Cuban
farmers to adopt better practices and try a little agroecology in their
fields.

"It doesn't matter what you call the system," he said. "What matters is
the use of natural resources and the possibilities you can provide for
farmers to make a living and remain rooted on their land."


Nick Miroff is a Latin America correspondent for The Post, roaming from
the U.S.-Mexico borderlands to South America's southern cone. He has
been a staff writer since 2006.

Source: An arugula-growing farmer feeds a culinary revolution in Cuba -
The Washington Post -
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/an-arugula-growing-farmer-feeds-a-culinary-revolution-in-cuba/2015/08/21/35307864-407d-11e5-b2c4-af4c6183b8b4_story.html

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