It can be easy to get discouraged these days. Everywhere we look, there are signs of a struggling planet and, often, it’s difficult to see a clear path to an effectual response. 2022 may well eclipse recent years as the hottest on record. Rainfall has alternated between being absent or violent in Pennsylvania, one of
MoreI've been on a pizza bender. Those little balls of dough call to me from the freezer almost nightly, crying out to be topped with asparagus and mushrooms or roasted garlic and goat cheese. And since last week, I think they know that there's a jar of Jersey Fresh tomatoes sitting in the fridge, waiting
MoreOn May 2, I spent some time at the Chestnut Hill Home & Garden Festival, manning the Grid table. Happy Cat Organics was stationed two booths to our left, so I was able to impress upon tomato guru Tim Mountz to select four varieties from his massive collection for inclusion in my community garden plot.
MoreAm I allowed to say that sprouts are my favorite food? Do they count?
Sprouts really are magical (and not just because they seem to be infinite when you're eating them from their tiny store-bought containers). Sprouts are rich in digestible energy: vitamins, minerals, amino acids, proteins, enzymes and phytochemicals—all of which happen to the beans
Grid‘s annual Food Issue was put to bed late last week, and will be arriving on our shores within the next few days. Come celebrate our biggest issue ever this Thursday at Swift Half Pub (in the Piazza). Drinks are $1 off (5-7 p.m.), and at 7 p.m. Flying Fish taps a firkin of their
MoreBack in February, The Griddle covered West Philly's Hybrid X Team, and their mission to raise funds to compete in the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize Competition.
Now, we have an update: The team raised the funds, and the competition is well under way. The field—which began with 111 teams—has dwindled to a mere 28, and Hybrid X
Last Thursday, the House passed the Home Star bill, a $5.7 billion stimulus program that will offer rebates to homeowners for energy efficiency renovations. The bill has been unofficially dubbed "Cash for Caulkers."
Here is a report by the Associated Press on how the program will work:
How the proposed Home Star, or Cash for Caulkers, program
This weekend, I found myself in a random debate. The argument was eventually settled with the old adage, “Besides that Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?” I found that saying drifting into my mind again this morning when I read this Inquirer story on Chad and Courtney Ludeman’s new energy-efficient Kensington home. The story goes
MoreA new reason to head over to Headhouse Square, even when the famed farmer’s market is not up and running! Bodhi Coffee opened today and, according to City Paper’s Meal Ticket, this place is offering a great cup o’ joe and some sustainable fixings.
The space was assembled using reclaimed materials from a number of local
We’ve been gushing over Sustainable 19125 for quite some time now. The initiative, developed by the Partnership for a Green Community, is on a mission to make 19125 (that’s Fishtown, Olde Richmond and East Kensington) the greenest neighborhood in Philly. As part of that effort, they recently launched of their Walk/Bike/Ride campaign. The no-car transportation
MoreHow much do you know about hemp? May 17-23 is Hemp History Week, a joint project of Vote Hemp and the Hemp Industries Association. On May 15, Melissa Miles, Organizer of the Eastern Pennsylvania Permaculture Guild, will be partnering with Kimberton Whole Foods to host a Hemp History Week Town Hall Meeting. The meeting will
More