Times Colonist

Chefs source produce from Mexico City floating farms

- LISA MARTINE JENKINS

MEXICO CITY — At dawn in Xochimilco, home to Mexico City’s famed floating gardens, farmers in muddied rain boots squat among rows of beets as a group of chefs arrives to sample sweet fennel and the pungent herb known as epazote.

By dinnertime, some of those greens will be on plates at an elegant bistro 20 kilometres to the north, stewed with black beans in a $60 US prix-fixe menu for well-heeled diners.

Call it floating-farm-to-table: A growing number of the capital’s most in-demand restaurant­s are incorporat­ing produce grown at the gardens, or chinampas, using ancient cultivatio­n techniques pioneered hundreds of years ago in the preColumbi­an era.

While sourcing local ingredient­s has become fashionabl­e for many top chefs around the globe, it takes on additional significan­ce in Xochimilco, where a project linking chinampa farmers with highend eateries aims to breathe life and a bit of modernity into a fading and threatened tradition.

“People sometimes think [farm-totable] is a trend,” said Eduardo Garcia, owner and head chef of Maximo Bistrot in the stylish Roma Norte district. “It’s not a trend. It’s something that we humans have always done and we need to keep doing it. We need to return to it.”

Xochimilco, on the far southern edge of Mexico City, is best-known as the “Mexican Venice” for its canals and brightly coloured boats, where locals and tourists can while away a weekend day listening to mariachi music and sipping cold beers.

It has also been a breadbaske­t for the Valley of Mexico since before the Aztec Empire, when farmers first created the “floating” islands bound to the shallow canal beds through layers of sediment and willow roots.

There’s nothing quite like it anywhere else in the world, and Xochimilco is designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage site. But that World Heritage status and Xochimilco itself are threatened by the pollution and encroachin­g urbanizati­on that plague the rest of the sprawling metropolis.

Enter Yolcan, a business that specialize­s in placing traditiona­lly farmed Xochimilco produce in Mexico City’s most acclaimed restaurant­s. Those include places such as Gabriela Camara’s seafood joint Contramar and Enrique Olvera’s Pujol, which is perhaps the country’s most famous restaurant and regularly makes lists of the world’s best.

Yolcan has been around since 2001, but it’s only in the past year that business has really taken off, with the number of restaurant partners increasing by a third during that period to 22. Last month, five of them teamed up with Yolcan for a dinner to benefit chinampa preservati­on.

The company directly manages its own farmland and also partners with local families to help distribute their goods, lending a much-needed hand as an intermedia­ry.

“The thing about the chinampa farmer is that he does not have the time to track down a market or a person to promote his product,” said David Jimenez, who works a plot in the San Gregorio area of Xochimilco. “Working the chinampas is very demanding.”

Yolcan’s operation covers about six hectares and churns out 2.3 tonnes of produce a month. Due to the high salinity of the soil drawn from canal beds, the strawcover­ed chinampa plots are particular­ly fertile ground for root vegetables and hearty greens such as kale and chard.

Diners reserve weeks in advance for a coveted table at Maximo Bistrot, one of three restaurant­s Garcia runs.

Meticulous­ly prepared plates of chinampa-grown roasted yellow carrots with asparagus purée arrive at the table, accompanie­d by sea bass with green molé sauce and wine pairings in tall glasses.

Garcia estimated he gets about two-thirds of his ingredient­s from Yolcan or other organic farms nearby. He was born in a rural part of Guanajuato state, where his family raised corn and largely ate what they grew, so sourcing local is second-nature.

“I think all of the world’s restaurant­s should make it a goal to use these alternativ­e ingredient­s,” Garcia said, stirring a pot of beans flavoured with the aromatic epazote herb. “Even though it’s a little more expensive, a little more difficult to find.”

Chinampa produce generally sells for 15 to 100 per cent more than comparable goods at the enormous Central de Abasto, the go-to wholesale market for nearly all of Mexico City’s chefs that is so monolithic, it sets prices across the country.

But chefs who buy from Yolcan are happy to pay a premium, knowing they’re getting vegetables free of chemical fertilizer­s or pesticides and also supporting a centuries-old tradition.

Diners at Maximo Bistrot said they enjoyed their meal, especially the burrata with chinampa-grown heirloom tomatoes. One couple said they are willing to pay the prices of these high-end eateries in order to have the best produce.

“We’ve eaten in 26 countries around the world, and for the price and quality, this was awesome,” said Kristin Kearin, a 35year-old masseuse from the U.S. “I honestly think that using small producers is going to come back.

 ??  ?? A farmer paddles his canoe to his floating farm known as a chinampa, in Xochimilco, Mexico City. Chefs at some of Mexico City’s most sought-after restaurant­s buy their produce from the famed floating gardens.
A farmer paddles his canoe to his floating farm known as a chinampa, in Xochimilco, Mexico City. Chefs at some of Mexico City’s most sought-after restaurant­s buy their produce from the famed floating gardens.

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