First, and easiest, my go-to web resources:
Oregon Environmental Council: Sure I geek out on figuring out what's in season in Oregon on this site but it's also a super helpful resource for what we can do now, easily, from our teeny tiny Northwest Portland apartments to make and keep our awesome state...errr...awesome!
Oregon Fresh: It's a better resource than the OEC for finding local fruits and vegetables that are in season, year round. I wish it gave me information about meat and seafood.
Sustainable Table: This is a sweet site because it provides information on seasonal ingredients for each state. What's more, it goes more in-depth, dividing each month in early and late season. It also helps you locate farmers markets nearby your abode. (For my Butte-dwelling family, did you know there was one on Park and Main!?)
New Seasons: The website offers a lot of great information about what's in store now -- which you know, as it's part of New Seasons' mantra, that it's fresh, local and in season.
Epicurious: Because...well, you know...sometimes I need a little bit of inspiration.
For my in-house, non-web references:
The New Food Lover's Companion
The Joy of Cooking
(Speaking of pork) Pig: King of the Southern Table
Stack upon stacks of FOODday recipes and articles. What can I say, I'm a nerd who saves newspaper clippings (Yes I've got choice comic strips and squares hung up on my fridge), and the Oregonian typically does a sweet job of offering up tidbits of local food knowledge and cooking suggestions.
Alas, my library is incomplete. I'm sorely jonesing for Harold McGee's On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, Larousse Gastronomique: The World's Greatest Food Encyclopedia, Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest, Mastering the Art Of French Cooking and The Food Substitutions Bible
Sadly, that's just the beginning the list. Looks like I better start saving, eh?
Let me know (If anyone's out there?) of any other really great resources, web or physical, out there!
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