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Calling Washington farmers interested in selling to local schools for Taste Washington Day

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010 by Lola

Washington School Nutrition Association (WSNA) and the Washington State Department of Agriculture Farm-to-School Program are partnering to celebrate Washington agriculture on September 29 with TASTE WASHINGTON DAY. Schools around the state will be serving a locally-sourced meal and providing education and activities to celebrate the farms that feed us.

WSDA Farm-to-School Program will provide support to match up farms and schools and facilitate the purchasing process. Many school nutrition directors are off for part of the summer, so we’d like to start the process as soon as possible.

We will also help schools add educational activities to the day, whether that’s posters in the cafeteria, inviting a farmer to lunch, or visiting or lunching in a school garden.  We want Washington’s kids to spend that day considering the farmers who grow their food, and we want Washington farmers to help us bring that to life!

For more information, to be listed as a participating farm, or to get help linking to your local school districts, please contact Tricia Kovacs, WSDA Farm-to-School Program Manager, at tkovacs@agr.wa.gov or 206-256-6150.

EVOO Cannon Beach Cooking School ties it all together

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010 by Lola

FoodHub has members who grow food, who cook food, who process food, who deliver food, and now, as we excitedly welcome one of our newest members, EVOO Cannon Beach Cooking School, who teach food!

Bob Neroni and Lenore Emery fell in love with Cannon Beach twenty years ago. In 2004, they left behind corporate careers in the food industry in Seattle, moved to Cannon Beach and opened EVOO (named for their favorite staple, Extra Virgin Olive Oil), where they have since taught hundreds of classes together on everything from handmade pasta to knife skills to Seafood 101.

Guests of EVOO are treated to fun, informal classes featuring fresh seasonal ingredients—right now, that means fiddlehead ferns, asparagus, morels, scallops and pea vines. Believers in the Slow Food movement, Neroni and Emery offer classes that focus not just on food, but also on the experience of preparing meals together. And thanks to FoodHub, Neroni and Emery can more easily fill their guests’ plates with Oregon’s finest ingredients, helping EVOO dish out fabulous meals on the Oregon Coast for many years to come.

Photo by Carole Topalian

Salvador Molly’s likes it hot

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010 by Lola

Today’s trivia: How large is a bushel of peppers?

One person to ask is Margot Wilcoxon, chef of Salvador Molly’s, who posted a request in the FoodHub marketplace for a local farm to grow 80+ bushels of habañero peppers. Salvador Molly’s has been serving up flavor-packed food for fourteen years on SW Sunset Boulevard. The restaurant also runs booths at three area farmers markets, selling handmade tamales.

How large then is a bushel of peppers? Others to ask include Anne and Rene Berblinger of Gales Meadow Farm, who were among the ten respondents to Wilcoxon’s post. Gales Meadow Farm sits in Washington County in the Gale Creek Valley. With over 250 varieties of vegetables and herbs—among them ancho, cayenne and jalapeño peppers—the farm had what Salvador Molly’s sought in terms of “variety, quantity and price,” Wilcoxon says. “They were personable and knowledgeable about their product and their growing capacity”

Wilcoxon made verbal contracts with Gales Meadow—which will grow jalapeños, tomatoes and cilantro—and two other local farms to provide her with not only peppers, but also other ingredients for salsas and tamale fillings.

“Hopefully we will enter into partnerships where we can let the grower know what we will buy next season, allowing them to plan, grow and get some stability in their business,” Wilcoxon continues.

A bushel is approximately 30 pounds. This year, with 80 bushels of hot peppers grown only one county away, Salvador Molly’s will receive some 2,400 pounds of local heat. Spicy!

Photo by Carole Topalian

Gervais School District finds local lettuce

Monday, May 10th, 2010 by Lola

In late April, Clare Columbus, Nutrition Services Director for the Gervais School District, found out that her regular farmer would not be able to supply the lettuce she needed for the April Harvest of the Month she had planned. (The Harvest of the Month is a program in which the cafeteria features one seasonal ingredient from a local farmer in their menu.) Instead of panicking, Columbus used FoodHub to send a quick message out to several farms nearby that listed themselves as having lettuce, as well as posting to FoodHub’s Marketplace section. By the end of that day, she had found her lettuce! Ivan Maluski from Tipping Tree Farm in Colton (only 6 miles down the road from Clare!) got in touch and delivered the lettuce himself the next week. Now Clare has developed a new relationship with a local farmer, and Ivan has a new customer. Match-making success!

Photo by Scott Trimble

Little Pots & Pans plans ahead

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010 by Lola

Kris Pennella, owner of Little Pots & Pans (LP&P)—a Portland-based company that makes savory tarts—was looking for farms to grow zucchini, tomatoes, onions and butternut squash for tart fillings. She hoped to purchase, process and store enough in the late summer that LP&P would be able to use local produce in their tarts year round.

Kris posted a request to the Marketplace. She notes that her experience in the past trying to find local farmers who would grow directly for LP&P was time-consuming and not always fruitful. “Unless you’ve made previous contact with farmers… it’s tough to gauge if they’re interested in wholesaling their produce and/or could handle the volume you’re looking for,” she says.

Shortly after placing her Marketplace post, Kris heard from about one dozen interested farmers. She is now working out the details with several local farms and looks forward to harvest time, when she will begin “processing, storing and using all the great produce, creating even more phenomenal fillings for LP&P tarts.”

As a buyer, she notes, she hasn’t often thought about when farmers plant their crops. The opportunity to make forward contracts brought that consideration into the fore of her mind.

“My goal is to create on-going connections in order to have a network of suppliers as we (and they) grow,” she continues. “I’m running around telling everyone how excited I am to have local farms grow for us.”

Oregon, Washington Host FDA Listening Session on Fresh Produce Food Safety Standards

Monday, April 26th, 2010 by Lola

This comes from the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Attend to make your voice heard:

Small farm operators and interested parties in Oregon and Washington are invited to comment on fresh produce food safety standards being developed by the US Food and Drug Administration. A listening session co-hosted by the Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) and Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) is scheduled for May 5, 2010 in Portland with officials from FDA, the US Department of Agriculture, and the two hosting state departments of agriculture on hand to take input.

FDA is currently developing fresh produce safety standards for farms and packing houses along with strategies and cooperative efforts to ensure compliance. Officials are interested in hearing concerns and experiences with implementing food safety requirements in farming and packing operations. The input will help guide efforts to enact food safety regulations for the produce industry over the next few years.

ODA Director Katy Coba and WSDA Director Dan Newhouse will provide opening remarks at the listening session.

The Pacific Northwest Small Farms Listening Session will be held Wednesday, May 5, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon at the Sheraton Inn Portland Airport, 8235 NE Airport Way. Registration is not necessary. For more information, contact Sherry Kudna, ODA, at (503) 986-4619 or by e-mail at skudna@oda.state.or.us

Listening session agenda here.

Federal docket providing background information on FDA procedure here.

Portland Public Schools Makes Deal for Radishes

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010 by Lola

This month, Portland Public School students who eat school lunch will find that their salad bars include fresh radishes from Gabe Trif of Cal Farms in Oregon City.

Gitta Grether-Sweeney, the assistant director for the district, posted a request on FoodHub’s Marketplace section for 200 pounds of radishes. Trif was one of three respondents. Connection made!

Gitta has another post in the Marketplace section right now for mixed greens for the salad bar. FoodHub farmers, be sure to login regularly to check Marketplace posts!

The opportunity to connect with school districts and get regionally produced foods into the school cafeteria has never been greater. FoodHub is here to help jump start the connections. There are a number of new school districts in FoodHub—see the list below. Do you produce food in or near these communities? If so, be sure to connect!

David Douglas School District
Hillsboro School District
Kings Valley Charter School
McMinnville School District
North Marion School District
Sheridan School District
Willamina School District

Photo by Carole Topalian

March Marketplace Madness!

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010 by Lola

If you thought all the action was on the basketball court this month, you forgot to tune into the FoodHub Marketplace. Like a Craig’s List for regional food, this live feed of products—either those available for sale or wanted for purchase—is constantly changing. And, good news, those posts are resulting in connections and sales.

Consider this post from Grand Central Bakery: “We are in search of local rhubarb for pie season. We prefer once a week deliveries to our North Portland Bakery. We need 250-350 pounds per week while in season (April – July).”

FoodHub member Big B Farms responded to the post, struck a deal, and is now set to deliver rhubarb. “It was like magic,” said Grand Central Bakery’s Laura Ohm.

Help us keep making magic.

Not a FoodHub member? Join today.

Already a member? Be sure to read through and respond to those Marketplace Posts! It’s March Madness for sure.

The Herbfarm

Monday, March 22nd, 2010 by Lola

In Woodinville, Washington—northeast of Seattle—an incredibly special dining experience awaits. The Herbfarm Restaurant serves nine-course meals that change weekly to reflect the offerings of the season and region. Much of their produce and meat comes from their own property, but like a trained pig to truffle mushrooms, they also sniff out the hidden gems around them. For that reason, this week they have joined FoodHub with a request to regional farmers who have “heirloom vegetables, heritage animal breeds, and foods of unusual or higher-than-good quality.” Are you just such a farmer? Log in and send them a message!

Photo by Carole Topalian.

The Ten Most Inspiring People in Sustainable Food

Monday, March 8th, 2010 by Lola

On Friday, Fast Company came out with their list of the “Ten Most Inspiring People in Sustainable Food.”

Among them is Deborah Kane, the Vice President of Food & Farms at Ecotrust and the driving force behind our very own FoodHub. The reason, they wrote, for her inclusion:

“Last month, Ecotrust began allowing Northwest food producers and buyers to utilize FoodHub, an online resource aimed to simplify their connections with each other and increase food trade in the Pacific Northwest. Kane continues to expound Ecotrust’s mission to inspire fresh thinking that promotes social equity, economic opportunity and environmental well-being.”

Congratulations Deborah and FoodHub!

Find the full list here.