Update: British Airways plane catches fire in flight 12:54 PM
Twenty-two Jamaicans vie in NY Diamond League Saturday 12:37 PM
Ganja weighing 767 pounds found in cesspool truck 11:34 AM
James, Bryant voted to All-NBA first team 11:14 AM
Coalition Cayman Islands govt likely 9:40 AM
Two drown in St Ann on Labour Day 9:29 AM
News
Eat Jamaican food this Christmas – JAS president
BY OSHANE TOBIAS Observer staff reporter
Sunday, November 25, 2012 | 1:27 PM
MAY PEN, Clarendon – Senator Norman Grant, president of the Jamaica Agricultural Society (JAS), has urged Jamaicans to mark their support for the ‘Eat Jamaica’ campaign by shunning imported foods this Christmas.
Grant, who was speaking today during the ‘Eat Jamaica’ Ecumenical Service at the New Testament Church of God in Clarendon, said eating locally produced food is a way of paying homage to Jamaican farmers.
“We need to acknowledge and celebrate the work of our farmers for what they have been doing across the length and breadth of this island,” Grant said.
“Each and every one of us has a responsibility to ensure that we protect the agriculture sector, so this Christmas there is no need to look to imported food; our farmers in our rural areas will provide.”
Grant also endorsed the practice of backyard farming.
“We want to re-establish Jamaica as a farming country, so the JAS is asking all Jamaicans to get back into the habit of farming in your backyard and in the schools.”
Meanwhile, Agriculture and Fisheries Minister Roger Clarke said eating more Jamaican food will help to reduce the country’s high import bill.
“Growing what we eat and eating what we grow is very important if we are ever to become a developed country,” Clarke said.
“When you to the United States, the people eat what they grow and then send the rest to countries like Jamaica. Here in Jamaica, we have some people who love the foreign mentality; they would even import air if they could. But the more we import is the worse we will become.”
Clarke also told Jamaicans to substitute rice and flour with locally produced ground provisions.
“We don’t really need to eat any rice and flour,” he said. “You can crush the yellow yam and eat it like rice, so starting now, when you go to a restaurant ask them to put a piece of yam in the plate instead of rice.”
“When I was a boy,” Clarke continued, “we never used to eat rice and flour. We would eat yam, banana, coco, and dasheen. Only on Sundays you would taste up yuh mouth with little rice and then on Mondays we gone back to our good food.”
Other Stories
Former JHTA head 'shocked' by Bartlett's devaluing of local hotels
A university dream comes true for three wards of the state
Cash-for-gold man murdered in Buckfield
KPH increasing bed capacity to address patient overload
St Mary Infirmary residents pampered as building gets facelift
'Show the good side of the children'
Opposition calls for more focus on PATH food subsidy
St Elizabeth puts work into Labour Day
Homestead Place of Safety gets facelift from LIME Foundation
Major housing project for Bernard Lodge
Digicel Foundation completes renovation of Denham Town Golden Age Home
Two Dominicans rescued by cruise liner
Update: British Airways plane catches fire in flight
Waltham Park residents protest police killing
Ganja weighing 767 pounds found in cesspool truck
James, Bryant voted to All-NBA first team
Police kill one of St Catherine's most wanted
Coalition Cayman Islands govt likely


