The Starter That Saved Our Winter
Maya and Tom walk through their 18-month sourdough journey — why their starter died twice, what a 78°F ferment actually feels like in a cold barn, and how a single loaf became the backbone of their weekly food budget.
"The first loaf that worked, I cried. Not because it was perfect — it wasn't — but because I made it from flour and water and time."
Forty Chickens and What They Actually Cost
Raising laying hens sounds simple until the feed bill arrives. Priya and Cal break down real numbers from their first full year — predator losses, vet costs, the winter egg drought nobody warns you about, and how they finally hit break-even.
"People ask if the eggs are cheaper. That's the wrong question. The right question is: what are you buying besides eggs?"
Pressure Canning Without the Fear
The lid sealed wrong. Twice. Dana and Soren recount the batches that failed, the botulism myths versus facts, and how they built a systematic canning practice that now puts up 300+ jars a season from their half-acre garden.
"Fear of the pressure canner is really fear of commitment — to the harvest, to the work, to the idea that you can actually feed yourself."
Seed Saving Is How You Own Your Land
Before hybrid seeds, farmers kept their best plants for next year's crop. Ruthanne and James explain open-pollinated varieties, seed isolation distances, and why building a personal seed library is the most radical act of food sovereignty available to anyone with a windowsill.
"You don't own land until you can grow food on it without buying inputs. Seeds are where that starts."