This article was written last summer for Food Life Magazine about our Summer Farm to Table Dinner Series. It is one of our favorite articles about the farm to date. Enjoy.
http://www.foodlifemag.com/pass-the-potatoes/
Won't you join us around the table this season? July 9 // Aug 6 // Sept 3
Pass the Potatoes
by Josh O'Conner | photography by Sarah Jones Decker & Siobhan Egan
Root Bottom Farm, located in Marshall, NC, is the epitome of phrases like “less is more” and “small is beautiful.”
LOCATED ON A NARROW ISLAND of property hemmed in by a creek on one
side and a road on the other, the farm unfolds in a subtle manner,
revealing a cornucopia of carefully arranged crops which will produce
delicate flavors, textures, and colors throughout the year.
Owners
Sarah and Morgan Decker have worked to create a selection of crops,
which could satiate the palates of even the most discerning eater while
also satisfying the conscience of the most concerned environmentalist.
Root Bottom Farm’s crops are essentially separated into two sections on
the property, with one side being oriented toward perennial crops and
the other side being oriented toward annual crops – with healthy
scatterings of beautifully landscaped areas and flowers to be sold for
cut flowers and floral arrangements. As Sarah puts it, “With the amount
of space that we’re working with, we grow a large variety of crops.”
Everything is organically grown using “no spray” techniques. The farm
functions as a labor of love with Sarah, Morgan, and one full-time
intern providing the bulk of the work necessary to sustain day-to-day
operations and to engage the more long-term goal of transforming the
property from a former hoarder’s haven into a functioning farm. The
couple can recount a number of stories about reclaiming the farm from
its past – noting that the property previously had outbuildings filled
to the ceiling with junk and four vacant mobile homes, one of which was
completely filled with Christmas memorabilia.
In
reviewing Root Bottom Farm’s crops and products, Morgan speaks highly
of the role that microgreens have played in establishing the farm,
“Microgreens have made us a little different, and that’s what made us
unique and attractive to managers of markets.” Additionally, he says
that microgreens provide the basis for multiple restaurant accounts.
Sarah frames it saying, “Microgreens put us on the map.” The farm has
also begun offering some value-added products including pesto and a
garlic butter aptly named “Dragon’s Breath.
In addition to sales at farmers markets and restaurants, Root Bottom
Farm operates what Morgan terms to be an “ESA” (or E-mail Supported
Agriculture) program as opposed to the more traditional CSA box. The ESA
set up acts as another market opportunity for the farm, one that allows
them to capture the seasonal population changes of the local region.
Customers who subscribe to the weekly e-mail blast get a notification
letting them know what is available on the farm; the customers in turn
select what they would like and it is delivered later in the week at a
designated pickup point. ESA offers Root Bottom Farm’s customers the
ability to interactively make choices that cater to their produce needs,
while also allowing them the flexibility to work around vacations and
variations in their weekly schedules.
The ESA concept is not the only thing that sets Root Bottom Farm
apart. Over the course of the summer, Root Bottom Farm will be hosting
three farm-to-table dinners on the property. The meal will feature 100%
local Madison County cuisine – vegetables from Root Bottom Farm, meats
from Dry Ridge Farm and breads from Smoke Signals Bakery. Vegetarian and
gluten free options will also grace a table filled with farm products
harvested the day of the meal. Chef Dava Melton of Blessed 2 Cook will
tie all of the ingredients together into a family-style meal. The events
will also include a tour of the farm and entertainment following the
meal. Dinners will be held rain or shine.


The intent behind the dinners is to form a relationship with the
farm’s customers and to create an opportunity for communal gathering.
The proceeds garnered from ticket sales for the dinner will raise the
capital necessary for Root Bottom Farm to construct a root cellar,
because as Sarah puts it, “A farm focused on root crops should have a
root cellar”. But the dinner is more than an attempt at crowdsourcing
capital; it is a chance to present the farms products in a different
venue, to highlight the local community and the products that it offers.
Sarah adds, “The money is going toward our root cellar, but people are
going to remember coming together for these dinners and passing the food
around.”