
When it comes to fighting against food deserts and seeking food justice, Houston-area Black farmers are literally on the front lines.
Food deserts are urban areas where affordable, good-quality fresh food is hard to find. In Houston, more than 500,000 residents live in food deserts, many in predominantly Black neighborhoods like Acres Homes and Third Ward.
According to a Kinder Institute study, over half (53%) of Black households in Harris County experience food insecurity, and one in five Black residents lack easy access to fresh food.
Some advocates reject the term food desert, preferring food apartheidโa phrase coined by activist Karen Washington to describe the racially and economically driven systems that determine who gets access to healthy food and who doesnโt. Whether one says โdesertโ or โapartheid,โ Black people are catching the short end of the stick when it comes to food access and the illnesses that result.

Though only 1.3% of Americans grow food for the rest, Black farmers are disproportionately few. They make up just 3% of all Texas farmers, yet Texas leads the nation with 11,741 Black producersโnearly a quarter of all Black farmers in the U.S.

The Defender spoke with some local Black farmers to hear what food justice means to them, and how theyโre working to achieve it.
Food Justice defined
โFor me, food justice is about people knowing where their food comes from, being able to see a farmer who looks like them, and having equitable access to fresh food,โ said DeShaun Taylor, a licensed midwife who co-owns Taylor Made Farms with her husband, Jazzyyy. โWe shouldnโt have to drive from Acres Homes to The Woodlands for a tomato. Thatโs injustice.โ

Taylorโs understanding of food justice is deeply tied to her profession and scholarship. In her masterโs program thesis on the topic, she listed several examples, including the impact of Black male malnourishment.
โWhen a man is malnourished because heโs in a food desert, that affects our childrenโobesity, cancer, learning disabilitiesโit becomes a cycle.โ
Her husband added that access to clean, healthy food isnโt just about survival, itโs about breaking intergenerational patterns.
โWeโre growing and keeping things as organic as possible, and connecting with other farmers around the city to get our food to local farmersโ markets,โ said Jazzyyy. โWeโre working to become a CSAโcommunity-supported agriculture farm.โ
For Della Holden, founder of The Socialites Riding Network and Socialites AgriVersity, food justice means self-reliance.

โWeโre taking back the responsibility of growing our own food for our own people,โ she said. โYou donโt have to wait for grocery stores to produce it. Thatโs where the justice comes in; being able to survive and stay alive in these economies.โ
Holdenโs AgriVersity, located on land her family has owned for decades in Sunnyside/South Park, serves as both a community garden and a training space.
โWe have different organizations we partner with. They get hands-on training on sowing their own seeds. Within that growing season, theyโre responsible for their box,โ she said. โWe educate them on how to live off the land and grow their own food.โ

Shaka Von Thomas, who heads the Houston Board of Food Security and The Happy Camper Houston, offers another layer to the definition.
โFood justice is knowing the history of your food,โ said Thomas. โWhen food is sprayed with chemical compounds, you donโt truly know what youโre eatingโor how itโs affecting you over time.โ
Taylor Made Farms: Healing from the ground up
The Taylors, both military veterans, purchased 4.24 acres in Conroe in March. By May, they had moved in and begun growing. For DeShaun, the calling began during her first pregnancy.
โI just wanted the best for my baby,โ she said.
Now, the Taylors not only cultivate produce, but also host youth field trips and collaborate with other Black farmers. They recently added a mobile home on the property to serve as an Airbnb and classroom for doula trainings and youth farming workshops.
โWe want to teach kids that farming is not just about foodโitโs about freedom,โ said DeShaun.
Socialites AgriVersity: Returning to roots
Holden describes herself as a โcountry-turned-city girl returning to her roots.โ Her reentry into agriculture began when her elderly relatives, who owned the familyโs Sunnyside property, fell ill.
โGod put it on my heart to help them,โ she said.
Holden now raises horses, chickens, and pigs, while overseeing a community garden, and invites the community to learn alongside her.
โJust schedule a time with me,โ she said. โWe have events where the community comes out to see what we do.โ
Holdenโs collaborations with other farmers and groups like the Houston Tool Bank and Shaka Von Thomasโs Board of Food Security are part of her mission to make farming communal, not competitive.
Houston Board of Food Security: Data for the people
Thomas and the Board are working to merge technology and agriculture to better meet community food needs.
โWeโre partnering with community gardens to facilitate consumer-supported agriculture,โ Thomas said. โWeโll hand out QR codes people can scan to tell us what they need planted. That data helps us know what to grow for families who can pay, and those who need donations.โ
He says the project will eventually map the cityโs food needs in real time.
โAs we build that data, we can start to supply the market with more and more farm-fresh foods.โ
Fresh Houwse Grocery: Hub for Black food power

Perhaps the most visible face of Houstonโs Black food movement is Fresh Houwse Grocery, co-founded by Jeremy Peaches and Ivy Walls.
Located at 9441 Cullen Blvd., the store is one of Houstonโs few Black-owned groceries, and a hub for Black farmers and product makers.
โThereโs a whole collective of young Black farmers here in Houston,โ said Peaches. โFrom gardening and food processing to creating productsโitโs a great ecosystem.โ
For Peaches, food justice is multi-layered.

โItโs the hands-on workโstarting a garden, no matter how smallโbut also the advocacy. Thatโs the most important part because it involves politics,โ shared Peaches.
He emphasizes the economic side too.
โOne percent of people control 99% of food production,โ he stated. โWeโve been growing for thousands of years, but now that we have the product, what are we going to do with it? Thatโs the lingering question.โ
Peaches sees a positive cultural shift happening.
โPeople are being product makers, putting out fresh food, and creating a culture we havenโt seen much in Houstonโagriculture on the front street,โ he added.
DN VIDEO: Learn about the support needed and the message to youth about farming.

