-
Get your apple cider, wild blueberry, red velvet, double chocolate or party cake flavors at the counter.
-
This time last year, we had more mangoes than we knew what to do with. But this year鈥檚 mango season in South Florida has been a bust. A University of Florida expert explains why the weather, and even last season鈥檚 bonanza, are to blame.
-
The sequel to the influential documentary 'Food, Inc' 鈥 which shone a light on the country's corporate-driven food system 鈥攆eatures the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, an organization fighting for human rights in Florida farms.
-
With citrus greening and real estate development, some Tampa Bay area residents said it's hard to find fresh squeezed orange juice at restaurants and stores like they used to.
-
A three-day festival will be held on the island of Palm Beach starting March 8 to highlight the achievements of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers. The farmworker-driven program ensures workers know their rights, farmers adhere to them and retailers do their part as well.
-
A proposal aimed at helping what are known as 鈥渇ood recovery鈥 programs, such as food banks, get discounted prices for fresh foods moved forward in the Florida House, with lawmakers looking at a pilot program to help curb food insecurity in the state.
-
Around 90% of the flowers sold at florists and supermarkets in the United States actually pass through Miami International Airport, arriving on hundreds of flights from South America.
-
The newest food benefits program under the U.S. Department of Agriculture will officially launch in the summer of 2024. The deadline for states to sign up was Jan. 1.
-
Gleaning involves picking perfectly good fruits and vegetables from farmers' fields after the harvest, so they can be donated to food banks.
-
A new app called Too Good To Go gives customers a chance to buy bags of perfectly edible food at cut-rate prices as an innovative way to reduce food waste.
-
Nonprofit Feeding South Florida tells 港澳天下彩even middle-class families are asking for help during the holidays in this affordability crisis, while some kids worry about not having school meals during holiday breaks.
-
South Florida activists held a 鈥渨ater fast鈥 to urge Miami鈭扗ade commissioners to pass an ordinance to protect almost 100,000 people required to work outdoors during record high temperatures.