Archive for 2010

Oregon will have a FoodCorps!

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010 by Lola

Hot off the Press: Oregon has been selected as one of ten states to participate in a new national Farm to School and school garden service program that will place young adults in high-need communities to connect children with healthy food.

The program is called FoodCorps. Patterned after the public service model of AmeriCorps, FoodCorps leverages federal funds to help its service members build and tend school gardens, conduct nutrition education, and increase the quality of food served in the cafeteria. FoodCorps, described as a domestic Peace Corps, aims to serve vulnerable children, improve their access to healthy and affordable food, and train the next generation of farmers and food systems professionals through hands-on experience.

In a competitive selection process, the FoodCorps planning team reviewed 108 host site proposals submitted from 39 states and the District of Columbia. The ten selected host sites all have proven success in improving the quality of school food, capacity to grow with FoodCorps across their region, and compelling community need that service members will readily address. In Oregon, the program will be run through the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

The ODA is the only state department of agriculture or state agency selected to pilot the program. Most other sites include academic institutions and non-profit organizations.

“FoodCorps is one more tool for the Oregon Department of Agriculture to forward our work in procuring and promoting Oregon agricultural products in schools, supporting agricultural and environmental literacy, and cultivating agriprenuers,” says Michelle Markesteyn Ratcliffe, ODA’s Farm to School Program Manager.

The first crop of five FoodCorps members in Oregon are expected to be in place by September 2011. Placements and details will be determined this coming spring.

For more information, contact Michelle Markesteyn Ratcliffe at (503) 872-6600.

Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs) Workshops for Washington Producers

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010 by Lola

We wanted to share this opportunity with any interested Washington food producers. Washington State University Extension is offering workshops for food safety training that share information, establish a forum for detailed discussion and also present an opportunity  for participants to qualify for a free onsite mock audit / consultation. From Washington extension:

Good Agricultural Practices Workshops

“Many farmers are seeking information about Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs) in response to recent produce outbreaks and the need to meet requirements for third-party GAPs certification. This course provides specific information regarding on-farm produce food safety. A multi-disciplinary group of WSU faculty and regulatory agency representatives will offer science-based information.

A two-series workshop will be conducted. Session 1 provides a GAPs overview and initial guidance on implementing on farm food safety practices. Session 2 offers participants the opportunity to discuss and work with speakers to address food safety issues specific to their farming system. Participants must attend a Session I workshop to attend Session II.

Participants interested in preparing for third-party GAPs certification that complete Sessions I and II and complete a series of assignments can qualify for a mock audit with WSU Extension faculty and staff.* Registration for both workshops is 75.00.

Visit the food safety website for registration and updated information. Workshop start times will vary slightly
between locations, specific information will be provided on the website:
http://foodsafety.wsu.edu

Session I
Full day workshop (approximately 8:00am – 4:00pm)

November 3, 2010
Yakima County Bldg
Basement Conference Room
104 N 1st St
Yakima, WA 98901

December 2, 2010
Fort Worden State Park
200 Battery Way
Commons Bldg Room B
Port Townsend, WA 98368

December 3, 2010
WSU Snohomish County Ext.
Cougar Auditorium
600 128th St SE
Everett, WA 98208-6353

January 13, 2011
Whatcom County Ext. Office
1000 N Forest St # 201
Bellingham, WA 98225-5594

January 14, 2011
Washington State Natural Resources Building
1111 Washington St. SE, Room 172
Olympia, WA 98501

Session II will be held the week of February 28 – March 3, 2011.
Locations to be announced at a later date.

Sponsored by: This material is based upon work supported by USDA/NIFA under Award Number 2010-49200-06203.
Funding for this project was provided by the Washington State University Western Center for Risk Management Education and the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA).

*Participants completing Session I and II will receive a certificate of completion for an educational course in GAPs. Our WSU Extension GAPs team serves in an advisory capacity for growers on food safety issues. WSU is not an official GAPs third-party certification organization and cannot guarantee third party certification.

For more information contact:
GAPS: Karen Killinger, Ph.D.
WSU Assistant Professor
Phone: (509)335-2970
Email: karen_killinger@wsu.edu

Registration: Cathy Blood
Conference Coordinator
Phone: (509)335-2845
Email: blood@wsu.edu

Social Justice, Food Justice and Tacos

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010 by Lola

On September 27, Tacos El Jornalero opened at the workers plaza on Martin Luther King Blvd near Burnside. Unlike the countless other food carts springing up all over Portland, Oregon, this taco cart is an experimental business that couples social justice with food justice. (more…)

Tis the season for cranberries, heritage turkeys, filberts and more

Monday, November 15th, 2010 by Deborah

It’s that time of year. We’re starting to think about all the things we’re thankful for. High on our list is the seasonal bounty of fall. As you think about your sourcing needs this fall, don’t forget to use the search box above to your advantage. Type in “turkey” or “nuts” or “winter squash” and peruse the profiles of numerous producers in our region who can help you bring fall’s bounty to your customers.

There are so many great local options in the Northwest. For example, did you know that Oregon cranberries are among the finest in the world? Why? Our moderate climate means the berries can stay on the vine longer. As a result, they are bigger, sweeter, and more red than other commercially available cranberries. Watch the video below and then type the word “cranberries” into the search box above to support one of the many cranberry growers in FoodHub.

We are thankful for the fertility of this region and the resourcefulness of its growers and cooks.

Food buying clubs source in bulk directly from producers

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010 by Megan

“FoodHub has been a great way for us to find local sources,” says Susan Baker, co-founder of Columbia County Natural, a non-profit food buying club started in May of 2010 in Scappoose, Oregon. Susan Baker and Monique Tindall started the buying club to provide more options for local residents, who have minimal access to regionally grown fresh fruits and vegetables. (more…)

FoodHub: A Tool for Farm to School

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010 by Amanda

“Quite frankly, I had no idea of the farms that were in our area.” – Lisa Vincent, Nutrition Services Operations Supervisor, Beaverton School District

Have you ever wondered how many farms are located close to your school district and how to get in touch with them? Check out FoodHub’s video featuring Susan Barker and Lisa Vincent of Beaverton, Oregon School District Nutrition Services. They explain how FoodHub helps make it easier to execute their Farm-to-School program by finding local farms and local products. Springbank Farms’ Brian and Michelle O’Driscoll talk about the pride they take in selling to schools.

From Heaven to Earth: Rural farmers connect with urban school districts and restaurants

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010 by Megan

Treasure from Heaven Farm sits in the northeast corner of Oregon, near the border with Idaho. On five acres, Andrea Sandberg and her family raise tree fruits, berries, and vegetables; free range geese, chickens and ducks to reduce the insects and mulch the crops; Nigerian milking goats; and pigs. (more…)

Eugene area FoodHub members make the news

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 by Deborah

Culinary connection

FoodHub is an online resource linking area food buyers with the region’s farmers and food processors


By Diane Dietz

The Register-Guard

Appeared in print: Sunday, Oct 17, 2010


The pledge at Adam’s Sustainable Table is to serve wholesome, unadulterated organic and local foods.

This spring, under chef Melissa Williams wanted Oregon cranberries to sprinkle on salads. She knew they existed, grown in bogs around Coos Bay. “Somebody must be drying them,” she remembers thinking.
Ordinarily, finding a new local food would mean a multi-hour quest, involving many phone calls.

But this time she tapped into the newly created regional FoodHub internet site — and instantly posted her desire for cranberries before an audience of hundreds of farmers, food processors and other suppliers.

That’s how she learned that Hummingbird Wholesale — only 10 blocks from the restaurant — not only stocked the cranberries, but also dried them locally and finished them with a touch of Oregon blackberry honey.

“It’s hysterical to me how the connections can be happening a mile apart or 100 miles apart,” said Deborah Kane, a project director at the Portland-based Ecotrust, which founded FoodHub.

FoodHub is a virtual marketplace launched in February and intended to re-create a regional economy for meat, vegetables and other foodstuffs by linking wholesale buyers and sellers in Oregon, Washington, Alaska, Montana, Idaho and California.

The project sits at the apex of at least a half dozen social movements:

The FoodHub gets more local foods into the locavores’ grocery stores. It serves the farm-to-school movement by helping food service directors find local foods in quantities they need. It can mean that food travels fewer miles between farm and table, reducing green house gases.

The FoodHub also allows for smaller-scale food production, which some regard as safer than larger multi-state operations. And chefs are insisting on the delicate colors and flavors of vegetable varieties that no longer have to be bred for sturdiness to withstand long-haul shipping.

Offered fresh this week on FoodHub: late season green beans, chestnuts, winter squash, Jonagold apples, apple-finished pork, and gourmet lamb to be butchered in November.

“It’s getting pretty exciting to grow a lot of food in Oregon, sell it in Oregon and Washington — and people no longer have to buy from China,” said James Henderson, farm liaison with Hummingbird Wholesale. “Farmers are taking better care of the land, and we’re making a living, so it’s all good, good, good.”

The tighter the farmer-buyer-consumer cycle, the greater the potential for profit for the region.

The Willamette Farm and Food Coalition estimates that Lane County residents spend $1 billion on food annually. Today, only 3 percent of that stays with local farmers.

“Every connection that gets made on the FoodHub,” Kane said, “is a sale that didn’t leave the region.”

The FoodHub was created with grants from federal, state and local government — including from the Eugene Water & Electric Board, which was an early supporter.

Businesses pay $100 a year to use the site, although many have been offered scholarships to jump start the system. So far, more than 620 buyers and sellers have signed up.

Kane expects the FoodHub will be self-supporting on fees alone in about two years.


Forging links

Creating an Internet link between farmers and restaurateurs was an obvious move, Kane said, because each group is dependent on the other’s success. But the link didn’t arise in the ether the way that other business sites do.

“The food and ag community, they’re kind of late adopters,” Kane said. “Think of where they’re operating physically. Farmers are in fields; chefs are in kitchen.

“On the chef’s side, it has largely been a fax-and-phone kind of business. I would say the same is true on the farm side,” she said.

The FoodHub designers had to consider how much business information the farmers — who had historically been relatively private — would be willing to share on the web, Kane said.

The FoodHub offers a lot of choice, she said. “Their profile is theirs to manage. They’re sharing as much or as little as they feel comfortable with,” she said.

Linda Davies, a manager at Winter Green Farm at Noti, said the FoodHub is pretty comfortable to use.

“If I send a message out — whoever responds to me, it’s not public. If five farmers respond to me, the other farmers don’t know who has responded to me. It’s all like regular, closed e-mail. It’s all individual. You have to make personal contacts and then do your business.”

The buyers

Buyers on FoodHub so far include 35 bakeries, 46 caterers, 19 colleges or universities, 42 food service contractors, 48 grocery stores, 14 hospitals or other health facilities, 92 restaurants and 73 public schools — from Burgerville to Eugene School District to the Oregon State Prison.

“You have all these food service directors in the state of Oregon who really didn’t know where to begin,” Kane said. “FoodHub has given them a place to start.

“They can come into the site and immediately type in arugula or tomato or carrots — or whatever it is they’re looking for — and get a really nice list of qualified producers that might be in their area.”

The FoodHub database lists 2,000 products, including all the standard vegetables and meats, plus venison, beers and spices.

In July, chef Williams at Adam’s Sustainable Table used the FoodHub to locate enough rocket greens for 350 plates when catering the International Pinot Noir conference in McMinnville.

This week the restaurant has posted a call for goat butter.

Banquet chef Tim Hill at the Lane Community College conference center joined FoodHub a week ago and said he hopes to buy a lot of local foods.

“Sustainability is a key point of our business. We would really like to do anything we can do to help the local economy and to cut down on carbon emissions. It’s a better product, too, almost always.”

Tim Stevens, co-owner of Vanilla Jill’s frozen yogurt at the Coburg Station, said he sources everything he can locally. His FoodHub profile said he buys a dozen items including eggs, almonds, hardy kiwi and rhubarb.

Chef Eric Bertrand at Ratatouille bistro at Crescent Village in North Eugene said the FoodHub is a great concept,

“I made connections with some people I really enjoy. And I found some new suppliers for me,” he said. “I go at least once a week to check on what’s going on there.”


The sellers

The FoodHub’s sellers include 11 bakeries, five breweries, 15 dairies, 241 farmers, 23 fishermen, 14 wineries and 98 food processors or manufacturers.

They seek links with specific buyers, or — when they have an oversupply of a certain crop — they post their produce on the FoodHub’s marketplace, for instance: “I’ve got 500 pounds of late season heirlooms. Call with your best offer.”

Some of the sales have been mind blowing for long-time farmers, Kane said. This week, for example, the Woodburn School District sought 700 pounds of carrots.

“We keep hearing story after story from farmers who never imagined in a million years that they would be selling to schools,” Kane said. “That was a market that went away a long time ago as the nation commodified the products that were being sent to schools.”

Farmer David Hoyle of Creative Growers in Noti already had buyers for most of his crop of heirloom vegetables this year, but he signed up and created a profile for his company on FoodHub.

“We sat back fisherman-style,” he said. “We were asking ‘Who was out there that we weren’t working with, who was flying under our radar and who would see our profile (and) take a bite.”

The listing brought him three new accounts.

Future business opportunities will be made plain when the FoodHub aggregates all the supplies and all the demands at the site’s first-year anniversary. Already, Kane can see unfulfilled demand for all things poultry.

“Eggs. Absolutely. Free range eggs. Farm fresh eggs. People can’t get enough chickens. They can’t get enough eggs,” she said.

5 Tips for Success from FoodHub

Friday, October 15th, 2010 by Deborah

Using FoodHub to increase your business connections is easy. Here are five simple steps you can take to maximize your chance of success on FoodHub.

1.       Upload a Photo: Uploading a photo to your profile personalizes your information. Use a photo of yourself, your operation or your logo.

2.       Be specific: Be specific about your selling/buying protocols so that people know how to do business with you. Check out Cascade School District’s profile to see a great descriptive paragraph about how to do business with them.

3.       Tell your story: Telling your story gives a personal touch to your profile – letting people know who you are, what your values are and why they should do business with you. Check out Hummingbird Wholesale’s profile for a great example of a personal story.

4.       Update Your Product List: Complete a product list and update it as seasons and availability change. If you’ve listed all your products on your profile, people will find you when they search for that product. SELLERS: If you haven’t listed all the products you sell on your profile via the “My Products” tab, you WILL NOT SHOW UP in search results. If you haven’t created a product list, check out Barking Moon Farm’s impressive product list.

5.       Check and respond to your FoodHub Messages! People may be contacting you to do business with you! Many of these messages are time sensitive; don’t let a business opportunity pass you by.

The Pretty Pickle connects with Gales Meadow

Sunday, September 19th, 2010 by Megan

Margaret Shell is the talent behind The Pretty Pickle Company of Salem, Oregon. When Oregon vegetables are at their loveliest, Margaret makes pickles that range from classics like Spicy Dilled Green Beans and Bread and Butter Pickles to more wildly flavored offerings like Sweet Hot Pickled Garlic and Meyer Lemon Tapenade. (more…)

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