given the current direction of the climate crisis and the humanitarian catastrophe ongoing I intend to make my house and garden into as useful a place as possible for those in need. I have about 40 m² of garden to use, I read somewhere that this could feed about 2 people and that you need about 20 m² of garden to feed a person year-round. folks in my village suggested I start out growing pumpkins, carrots and onions together initially.
currently the garden of the social housing I live in is almost entirely tiled over. the municipality offers a subsidy of €4,- per m² of tiling replaced by greenery. my garden is 52 m² but I still need a little bit of space for walking and parking my bike so I should be left with about 40 m² of gardening space for which I should be able to get a subsidy of €160,- for the food garden.
could this amount be enough to get my food garden started? I live in the Netherlands where it rains a lot so I will likely be able to obtain most of the rainwater from my rooftop or a (for now) freshwater lake nearby. what do I need to learn about / read to build a reliable food garden?
fast food chicken nuggets are made from mechanically seperated meat that's made from chicken left over from cutting the the chicken filet. It is chicken but it only mostly meat🤮.
you can make pretty bomb chicken nuggets yourself by preparing them with only actual chicken filets though.