Food & Farming
Farms, Food & Health
Together with supporters like you, we bring together health practitioners, employers, schools, farmers, and others interested in connecting health care, wellness, and locally grown food, and inspire a new and healthier food culture.
Culinary Medicine
Culinary Medicine is a new evidence-based field in medicine that blends the art of food and cooking with the science of medicine. Learn more about Groundwork's involvement here.
Farms, Food & Health Trainings
The Farms, Food & Health Trainings brings together professionals from the worlds of health care and food systems to examine the connection between health care, wellness and locally grown food. Learn more about the trainings here.
FARMS, FOOD & HEALTH
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Farms, Food & Health?
We’ve always known food and nutrition are important to health, but the system for delivering health care has not made food a priority. The philosophy of Farms, Food & Health guides us back to knowing where our food comes from and understanding how to cook with local, nourishing food. It calls for significant engagement from the food system and health care system. We’re connecting the dots between how farmers grow food to how we eat food, and how nutrition play a role in our health.
What is Groundwork's role in Farms, Food & Health?
Since our beginning, Groundwork has been dedicated to preserving farmland. Farms, Food & Health represents an expansion of that focus to include how nourishing, locally grown food can improve individual and community health. Back in 2014 we started a dialog with doctors and other health professionals about the Farms, Food & Health philosophy. They wanted more information about how patients can eat in ways that encourage healthful lifestyles. Our role brings skills and expertise to the dialog by hosting conferences and teaching small groups. We see the value of getting everybody who cares about nourishing food at the same table and talking to one another to come up with new and better ways to improve health with nutritious food.
What does Farms, Food & Health do for the community?
We host educational events that enable the community to experience hands-on learning. Our gatherings make it possible for people to have personal conversations with professionals like dietitians, farmers, chefs and doctors. The Farms, Food & Health philosophy encourages a broad approach to what health is: behavioral, mental, and physical. You can’t have well-being without all aspects combined.
Tell me more about culinary medicine.
Culinary Medicine is an evidence-informed field in medicine that blends the art of food and cooking with the science of lifestyle medicine, nutrition research and our regions local foods. We offer continuing medical education for doctors and allied health care professionals.
Take action.
Be part of Farms, Food & Health by eating locally grown food. Ask yourself, “What is the local part of my plate?” at every meal. Add at least one local item to each meal. Condiment, dairy, meat, vegetable, whatever works for you.
GET INVOLVED!
Resources

story: free healthy food expo with cooking demonstrations and presentations

STORY: CULINARY MEDICINE GAINS MOMENTUM IN TRAVERSE CITY

STORY: CONNECTIONS LINK FOOD, WELLNESS, AND BUSINESS
What's happening now?
Farms, Food & Health News
Ag Forum: In a digital world, is agriculture still relevant?
Yet despite technology’s advancements, the last time I checked food isn’t grown by the judicious application of ones and zeros. Websites don’t plant seeds, and microchips don’t worry about organic certification audits. I’ve never known a software company to bring a handful of loam to its nose and smile at its richness, or let slip a tear of joy at the birth of a calf. With technology taking over our lives, is agriculture still relevant in a world racing to leave old ways behind? Solidly I say the answer is yes.
Win tickets for Harvest@theCommons
On October 11, MLUI will present Harvest@theCommons, a community farm-to-table event that will feature the best ingredients northern Michigan has to offer. You are invited! Not only to the event, but to help generate a buzz about all the good work this community is doing. The task is simple:
Rebuilding ‘foodshed’ and community resilience
“Rebuilding the Foodshed: How to Create Local, Sustainable, and Secure Food Systems,” by farmer and university professor Philip Ackerman-Leist, is the third book in the Bob Russell Resilience Reading Project. He discusses how we came to the largely industrial food system that we have today, where it’s often easier for a school in our region to purchase lettuce from California, for example, rather than from farmers right down the road.