Peggy Grodinsky edits and assigns stories about food and sustainability, and when she has time she writes stories, too. Her first memory of cooking dates back to about age 7, making thumbprint cookies with her mom. Since then, she has written about a hiking trip to Norway, the relationship of a dishwasher and a chef, how obituaries reveal people’s lives as cooks and much more. She has also cooked many a meal, baked many a cake and eaten at many a delightful restaurant -- for which she is grateful. Her interest in the environment, conservation and the natural world is also abiding and deep. Before coming to the Portland Press Herald, she was executive editor of Cook’s Country magazine at America’s Test Kitchen in Boston, food editor at the Houston Chronicle in Texas and editor at the James Beard Foundation in New York. She has also taught food writing at New York University and Harvard Extension. Grodinsky graduated from Oberlin College with a degree in English, and reading is still one of her favorite things.
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PublishedSeptember 12, 2021
Harvest: Potatoes, the time is nigh
Harvesting potatoes requires physical labor, a bit of dry weather and a promise to yourself not to be forgetful. As I mentioned earlier in the season, you can dig up a few new potatoes anytime you want them – either using a trowel to find a few potatoes while leaving the main plant growing or […]
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PublishedSeptember 12, 2021
‘Buy American’ isn’t just for cars or washing machines. A proposed bill applies to flowers
The American Grown Act, supported by Rep. Pingree and Sen. King, asks that the U.S. government buy U.S. blossoms.
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PublishedSeptember 12, 2021
Can’t wait? Poach your pears and make chocolate pear cake
The window of pear perfection is fleeting. We’ve got a fix for that.
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PublishedSeptember 12, 2021
Grow (or otherwise obtain): A fall cover for your garden
In my early years of gardening, I would till the vegetable garden as soon as I’d harvested the crops. I thought it made things look neater and helped to get rid of the weeds. I now know come fall, the garden has to be covered by something, both to add to the soil’s organic matter […]
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PublishedSeptember 12, 2021
Ready or not, here it comes: first frost
Some plants die immediately, others can withstand colder weather for a time.
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PublishedSeptember 5, 2021
Maine Gardener: Hosta pushing out its neighbors? Iris ailing?
September is a good time to dig and divide.
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PublishedSeptember 5, 2021
Grow: Winter squash
In fall, a gardener’s fancy turns to thoughts of winter squash
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PublishedSeptember 5, 2021
Vegan Kitchen: The making of a vegan
Vegan Kitchen columnist Avery Yale Kamila tells how, 30 years ago, she became an impassioned vegan – and never looked back.
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PublishedSeptember 5, 2021
Green Plate Special: The many reasons dill blossoms are kind of a big deal
You can use different parts of the plant in all sorts of ways.
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PublishedSeptember 5, 2021
Like a certain honey flavor? You have bees to thank
The nectar chosen by the insects, which varies by season and region, determines how different honeys taste.
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