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Great Hemp Hope
By Hempology | October 26, 2007
NOW Magazine
Oct.11 2007
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Food products are small-scale, niche-friendly and offer a base for independent entrepreneurs who can substitute sweat and chutzpah for equity a gateway industry, so to speak.
As soon as he tasted some hemp oil in 1993, Herriott was hooked. “It was a no-brainer, since it could work itself into gourmet and health circles,” he said, referring to the rich store of essential fatty acids and antioxidants that make hemp oil an alternative to flax and fish oils, the latter not an option for vegans or those concerned about mercury contamination.
But back in the 1990s, nobody, including Herriott, knew that oil and flour could be produced from hemp seeds while leaving the long stem of the plant available for animal bedding and paper.
Herriott first isolated what he calls hemp flour in 1998, holding the premiere for it at a health food show in Baltimore. He has just patented the cold press machine that can produce both oil and flour.I dropped in to see him earlier this fall at Hempola, his combo oilseed farm, processing operation, farm store and summertime farmers’ market just north of
The part of the seed left after the first tapping is called seedcake. Lab tests required by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency show that the flour milled from seedcake is made up of eight percent oils, 40 per cent protein, 20 per cent fibre and carbs.
Herriott sells it through his own brand of pancake and brownie flour, and markets his leftover flour to one T.O. baker and a leading U.S. one. His latest dream is to find a bread maker who’s interested in a package deal of flour for bread plus diesel oil for the bread delivery trucks.While that deal is being worked out, whatever flour can’t be sold for human consumption can, as soon as government regulations catch up with the possibility, be used as feed for livestock and fish farms. Unlike most farm crops, hemp is all about co-products, not single ones, a reality that stretches the time and skills of any lean cottage industry.Then there are the political challenges: hemp’s possibilities for a quadruple bottom line position it as a front-running alternative to corn-based ethanol fuels.Financially and legislatively supported by many North American governments, corn ethanol requires heavy inputs of fossil-fuel fertilizers and further dependence on the giant oil companies that are key ethanol partners at the distribution end.
As well, corn is the opposite of a nutritional wunderkind. The production of ethanol takes almost everything the plant has to offer, which is mainly carbs. All that’s left is mash that can be fed to cattle. And corn is difficult to grow, usually requiring harsh pesticides and genetically engineered seeds, and its wide rows commonly lead to severe soil erosion.
If all the subsidies that now go to corn ethanol went instead to hemp foods and bio-fuel, the green farm economy could start to rock. And that’s what Herriott wants to oil the skids for to kick-start farm hemp volume to the point where it’s an alternative to chopping down forests for toilet paper and scratch pads, or to growing pesticide-intensive cotton.
As farm entrepreneurs like Herriott succeed, the harvests of the future will start to look very different. It’s hard to get a sense of the scale of possibilities, because agriculture over the past 40 years has not been very innovative, concentrating almost exclusively on new ways of doing old chores.
What Herriott offers are old ways an ancient crop and adaptations to relatively traditional cold-pressing technologies to do new things, multiplying the efficiency of agriculture and in the process inventing ways to localize economies.
When neighborhood farms can produce transportation fuel, wood finish, paper and animal feed as well as premium human foods, we are enroute to agro-ecology, the next revolution in agriculture.
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