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The Farmer Diaries

Texas gardener oversees unlikely ranch: worms

Marshall Hinsley
Feb 23, 2014 | 6:00 am

Ingesting neurotoxins or traipsing through carcinogens never seemed like a good idea to Garland resident Heather Rinaldi. An organic gardener herself, she started Texas Worm Ranch to help others break their dependence on synthetic fertilizers, weed killers and insecticides.

She offers two products: earthworm castings and Worm Wine, brewed from those castings. Both replenish microbial life that has been killed off in soils ruined by conventional lawn and garden chemicals.

Castings are the digested waste of earthworms fed a diet of leaves, vegetable scraps and other organic material. Known as vermicomposting, the process takes 12 weeks for the earthworms to break down the organic matter and infuse it with beneficial microbes. Once bagged, the castings can be added directly to soil that's to be rehabbed.

Texas Worm Ranch products replenish microbial life that has been killed off in soils ruined by conventional lawn and garden chemicals.

In soil, the castings become food for countless species of fungi and protozoa that in turn convert the nutrients already in the ground into a form plants can take in. They also help the soil to convert lawn clippings, leaves and other plant materials that fall to the ground into fertile nutrients, thus sustaining plant life naturally.

Worm Wine is brewed in a large, oxygenated vat to rapidly increase the microbe population in the concoction. Bottled in recycled plastic jugs, the brew is used as a foliar spray to bolster plants against pests and pathogens.

Rinaldi founded Texas Worm Ranch in response to demand from fellow gardeners.

"Back in 2008, I was already organic and vermicomposting in my garage, growing as much food as I could in my backyard to feed my family," she says. "I got a plot at Lake Highlands Community Garden and started taking my aerated worm casting tea to use on my plants. The other gardeners were like, 'We don't know what you're doing, but your plot looks a million times better than ours, and we want some of that.'"

She began selling Worm Wine out of her garage, growing from one worm bin to 45 worm bins, until she finally outgrew it. She's now in a 12,000-square-foot warehouse off I-635 in Garland, where she employs a full-time operations manager and up to five seasonal employees, in addition to thousands of earthworms who perform the most crucial task in her manufacturing facility.

She uses "red wiggler" worms, native to cooler parts of North America. They live in 4-by-8 foot bins, where they eat, reproduce and generate the waste she sells. A 2-pound bag of castings is $12 with shipping, via her website. Worm wine is $7 a gallon and is sold locally only at White Rock Local Market. Her clientele consists of homeowners, gardeners and lawn care businesses.

"When you have healthy soil and healthy plants, you attract birds like robins that come into your yard and start eating your grubworms, so you don't need to use pesticides," she says. "You support bees and butterflies because you're not using pesticides. They in turn pollinate your fruit trees and vegetable garden. You allow lady bugs and praying mantises to live, and they keep aphids under control."

It ultimately saves time and money. "Once you get organics started in your yard, there's less work for you to do, and you don't have to keep going back to the nurseries to buy more and more chemicals," she says.

She's a lady with a mission.

"My mission is to help one in 10 yards in North Texas go organic," she says. "That would be a huge shift. And then it would spread, because neighbors would see the difference and want that for their own homes. It would snowball."

The red wiggler earthworms perform the most crucial task in the success of Texas Worm Ranch.

Photo by Marshall Hinsley
The red wiggler earthworms perform the most crucial task in the success of Texas Worm Ranch.
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Chocolate News

Richardson dessert shop Chocolate Drip lays out eye-catching treats

Lauren Durie
Dec 26, 2025 | 3:09 pm
Chocolate Drip
Chocolate Drip
Chocolate bear with pistachio sauce at Chocolate Drip

A dessert shop in Richardson has become the toast of the sweets world: Called Chocolate Drip, it opened in August at 1057 S. Sherman St., in a center east of US-75 near Spring Valley Road, where it's rolling out some eye-catching chocolate treats.

Chocolate Drip is a passion project from Mohammad Quzmar, a Palestinian-born owner who moved to Dallas four years ago and taught himself to cook through tinkering. That experimentation has translated into a constantly evolving menu, with new creations appearing whenever inspiration strikes — earning him a growing reputation as something of a modern-day Willy Wonka.

"Chocolate is my passion. I just love being in the kitchen and creating,” he says.

The cafe's offerings are extensive, from sweet breakfast staples like pancakes and waffles to off-menu items teased on the café’s Instagram, such as the Dubai Drip platter — an interactive fondue plate with fruit, brownies, waffles, marshmallows, to be dipped into melted chocolate and pistachio cream.

Many of his items have the kind of eye-catching twists and table-side presentations that draw attention on Instagram, such as the cruffle (a waffle made from a croissant) topped with spaghetti-like strands of gelato, which a server extrudes through a potato ricer right before your eyes.

Other signatures include a teddy bear made of chocolate mousse and kanafa, finished with pistachio sauce for $13.30, and crepes filled with a brownie, with pistachio and chocolate sauce for $15.

Prices are not cheap but these are ultra-decadent items with generous portions, often meant for sharing.

The drink list is ambitious, spanning coffee, matcha, smoothies, milkshakes, and nonalcoholic mocktails. It's obvious Quzmar is having fun, rolling out his versions of viral items like the famous s'mores hot chocolate pioneered by New York dessert shop Glace, which features a cap made of marshmallow meringue that’s torched and topped with a chocolate bonbon.

There are also a few savory offerings like egg-and-cheese crepes, a salmon croissant, and a turkey waffle. Those in the know also come to order Middle Eastern treats like salab, a creamy milk drink topped with cinnamon; and Om Ali, a sugary pudding with nuts, dried fruit, and coconut.

Named after the Gen Z slang for “cool” or “stylish,” Drip is meant to be a hangout spot more than a quick dessert stop, Quzmar says — a place to linger over brunch, then return late night to a place that feels buzzy and fun sans alcohol.

“Everyone who works here is either family or treated like family and everything is homemade with love," he says.

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