RACHEL BELLE

America’s food spy: He snuck 15,000 exotic plants to the US

Feb 26, 2018, 6:13 PM | Updated: Feb 27, 2018, 6:26 am

If you really think about it, an American grocery store is a magical place. We casually place avocados and zucchini in our baskets, bags of cashews and seedless grapes, without a second thought to how they got there.

All of these foods originated in other countries, and one man is responsible for bringing their seeds to America.

This is how farmers were able to grow them and why you can buy them all in one store. That man is David Fairchild.

RELATED: World’s first tearless onion for sale in Washington

“David Fairchild was a young man of the late 19th century,” said Daniel Stone, a writer for National Geographic magazine and author of the new book, “The Food Explorer: The True Adventures of the Globe-Trotting Botanist Who Transformed What America Eats.”

“He grew up in Kansas and he had two passions: plants and traveling,” he said. “He finds his way to Washington [DC] and becomes a government food spy; an explorer, an adventurer, who’s tasked with going all over the world, touching every continent, to find exotic crops that didn’t exist in America and to bring them back and introduce them to farmers.”

Fairchild brought in more than 15,000 different plants, including avocados; nectarines; mangoes; pistachios; types of seedless grapes; kale; types of peaches and citrus.

“Fairchild went to more than 50 countries, all by boat, all of which took weeks or months to get to,” Stone said. “He’d go to outdoor markets and he’d ask people what the best foods were. He’d asked growers how they were grown, how much water was needed. Then he’d pack all of the seeds and he’d ship them back to Washington. It was a really long process. It was also very dangerous. It was really difficult, especially in parts of the world like Indonesia and Malaysia that were kind of wary of outsiders, they were wary of westerns and they didn’t really understand why this man from America was so interested in their plants. It was suspicious.”

America’s food spy

Stone said the food scene in the United States, at this time, was dull. There wasn’t much variety.

“You had a lot of corn, you had a lot of wheat, you had meat and dairy,” he said. “But not a lot of variety, certainly of fruits and vegetables, in America’s earliest days. And that was a problem because more than half of the labor force were farmers. So farming is a huge portion of the economy and when everyone is growing the same thing, no one is making very much money.”

Adventures were the easy part for Fairchild, despite being arrested and catching diseases. Getting American consumers to try new foods was harder.

“What we eat is curated,” Stone said. “Our whole supermarket is like a museum exhibit that a group of people have decided, over decades, that this is what we eat and this is what we have available. Most of food is marketing. That’s when you start seeing advertising campaigns. The types we see for avocados or a new type of mango smoothie. People are pretty wary of outside foods so to indoctrinate a new food and to really introduce it is a very difficult process.”

Many Americans would consider apples and bananas to be standard fruits, while mangosteens and dragon fruit are exotic. But it’s all in the marketing. If things had gone a different way, if Fairchild had brought back different seeds, and never discovered others, bananas might have only been something you saw on a trip to southeast Asia.

Fairchild also brought cherry blossoms to the US. He made a deal with the Japanese government. So when you see the beautiful pink and white blossoms blooming this spring, think of Davis Fairchild, America’s food spy.

Rachel Belle

Rachel Belle...

Rachel Belle

Belle: This isn’t goodbye, it’s see you later

After 20 years in news radio, I'm leaving my post at KIRO Newsradio to focus on making my podcast "Your Last Meal" full-time!

1 year ago

emily post etiquette...

Rachel Belle

Emily Post’s “Etiquette” goes modern: Advice on pronouns, hugging

In 1922, Emily Post published her very first etiquette book. Since then, 18 editions have been published by five generations of Posts.

1 year ago

Friluftsliv...

Rachel Belle

Combat winter blues with friluftsliv, the Nordic tradition of being outside

Friluftsliv is part of the culture in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Iceland and Denmark, places that are darker and colder than Seattle in winter.

1 year ago

small talk...

Rachel Belle

Most Americans hate small talk, but Seattleites continue talking about weather

Out of 1,000 people surveyed, 71% said they prefer silence to small talk and 89% of Gen Z use their phones to avoid making small talk.

1 year ago

(Igordoon Primus/Unsplash)...

Rachel Belle

Seattle sperm bank in desperate need of Black donors

Only 2% of American sperm donors are Black men, which is causing a lot of heartache for women specifically looking for a Black donor. 

1 year ago

Photo courtesy of Rosie Grant...

Rachel Belle

Woman cooking recipes engraved on gravestones says they’re all ‘to die for’

You know that recipe your family requests at every holiday, potluck and birthday party? What if you had it engraved on your tombstone?

1 year ago

America’s food spy: He snuck 15,000 exotic plants to the US