How Farming Practices Shape the Food We Eat 🌱
When we think “food as medicine,” we often imagine vitamins, balanced diets, maybe even supplements. But as Daphne Miller argues in Farmacology, the real medicine begins much further back — at the soil itself. The way a farm is managed, from seed to soil to stewardship of animals and land, deeply influences the nutritional and healing potential of the food it produces.
Soil Quality: The Foundation of Nutrient‑Dense Food
Healthy, living soil isn’t just dirt — it’s a vibrant ecosystem teeming with microbial life. This microbial community helps cycle nutrients, enabling plants to absorb minerals, produce phytochemicals, and grow with resilience.
Farms that prioritize regenerative practices — such as minimal tilling (or no‑till), use of compost and green manure, crop diversity and rotation, and avoidance of heavy chemical fertilizers — tend to maintain or rebuild that soil vitality. Studies comparing regenerative farms to conventional ones found that regenerative soils often have significantly more organic matter — which correlates with higher levels of vitamins, minerals, and beneficial phytochemicals in their crops.
In practical terms: plants grown in “living soil” tend to be more nutrient‑dense, flavorful, and potentially more beneficial for our health than those grown in stripped, chemically-dependent soils.
Crop Diversity, Livestock Care & Sustainable Farming
But soil is only part of the story. Miller’s journeys — visiting vegetable farms, pasture‑based livestock farms, and even urban farms — show how thoughtful farming practices extend beyond the ground.
Crop diversity: Rather than monoculture, growing a variety of crops (or rotating them) helps sustain soil health, breaks pest/disease cycles, and allows different plants to draw different nutrients from the soil. This can lead to a more balanced, nutrient-rich food output.
Livestock care / pasture‑based farming: Animals raised on pasture and managed holistically add value back to the land through natural manure, grazing patterns that mimic ecological cycles, and balanced ecosystems that support soil life. As Miller notes, the health of the animal — and by extension the food it produces — reflects the health of the land it lives on.
Sustainable/holistic methods: Avoiding synthetic pesticides/fertilizers, using compost or biofertilizers, rotating crops, and nurturing soil microbes — all these reduce soil degradation and support a cycle of renewal, rather than depletion.
In short: when farms steward the land with care, we get food that’s not only abundant, but truly nourishing.
The Farm School in Action: Farm‑to‑Table, From Soil to Plate
That’s why we love integrating these ideas into our farm school. Our students don’t just learn about nutrition or cooking — they see farm‑to‑table in real time. They help plant seeds in rich soil, tend compost piles to build soil life, harvest vegetables, and care for animals in humane, pasture‑based systems.
By engaging in planting, composting, harvesting, and animal care, students experience firsthand how what happens underground — in soil — affects what ends up on their plates. They witness the full cycle: soil → plant → table → nourishment.
This hands‑on experience cultivates respect — for the land, the food, and the community that shares it. It transforms “Where does food come from?” from an abstract question into a lived, meaningful reality.
Connecting to Weston A. Price’s Legacy
Miller’s message echoes truths long championed by Weston A. Price and those who followed him: high‑quality, nutrient‑dense foods are not simply a product of clean recipes — they’re the result of deeply intentional farming practices, traditional preparation methods, and a respect for the land. Weston A. Price Foundation+1
When soil is treated as a living ecosystem — not an inert medium to be exploited — and when farmers prioritize the health of soil, animals, and plants, the resulting food nourishes our bodies more completely. Traditional preparation methods (fermentation, slow cooking, minimal processing) can further preserve and unlock the full potential of those nutrients.
In other words: good farming + thoughtful preparation = food that nourishes body and soil.
Practical Tips for Families: Bringing Soil, Food & Cooking Home
You don’t need a big farm to benefit from these ideas. Here are simple ways families can start connecting with soil, food, and health at home:
Start a small garden, even in containers or raised beds. Use compost or composted manure to enrich soil rather than relying on chemical fertilizers. Even a few herbs or veggies can foster connection to the soil.
Compost kitchen scraps. Vegetable peels, coffee grounds, eggshells — all make great compost. Composting helps build soil life, even if you’re only gardening on a small scale.
Choose produce from local, sustainable/regenerative farms when possible. If there’s a farmers’ market, farm‑stand or CSA nearby, prioritizing farms that use regenerative or organic methods can help give you more nutrient‑dense, flavorful food.
Cook from scratch and use traditional preparation methods. Simple, home‑cooked meals — especially when using whole foods — tend to preserve more nutrients than heavily processed items.
Teach children where food comes from. Even if you don’t garden, talking with kids about how soil, sun, rain, and care contribute to the food on their plate can deepen their respect for food and nature.
Why It Matters — Beyond Nutrition
As Farmacology makes clear, this way of farming and eating isn’t just about vitamins or minerals. It’s about relationships — to the soil, to the land, to our communities, and to our own bodies. When we care for the earth, we also care for our health. When we treat food as more than fuel — but as nourishment that honors the living land — we participate in a cycle of healing, regeneration, and respect.
That perspective can shape not only what we eat, but how we live, how we teach our children, and how we view our role as stewards — of our health, our community, and the Earth.
