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Archive for July, 2010

On July 21, 2010, City of Seattle-King County Public Health announced the 2010 award recipients who applied for $8.9 million in Communities Putting Prevention to Work (CPPW) grants.  Award recipients represent many talented and passionate local organizations committed to increasing healthy choices for King County residents.

Seattle Human Services Department was awarded two HEAL (Healthy Eating/Active Living) grants and Puget Sound Food Network (PSFN) is receiving partial funding for its participation in one focused on connecting local food to Seattle’s least served communities through the Congregate/Home Delivered Meal Program.  The goal of this project is to make healthy foods, preferably local products, affordable for senior congregate and home-delivered meals and child care centers by cooperatively purchasing fresh local produce through a Farm-to-Table partnership.

Aging and Disability Services will set up regular Farm-to-Table coordination meetings to create a strategy for and track the progress of the cooperative purchase of local produce from local farmers. Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) will assess senior meal provider capacity to plan seasonal menus, store and prepare fresh produce. WSDA will also train meal site managers as needed. WSDA and PSFN will work together to identify and link meal program purchasers to ethnically diverse farmers who have produce available at an affordable price. Clean Greens Farm will expand growing capacity within existing land to offer produce that meets meal provider cost and produce specifications. Meal providers will purchase processing equipment as needed, facilitate staff training, and pilot test cooperative purchasing at 2 to 3 meal sites. After the pilot test, meal providers will implement cooperative purchasing for home-delivered and congregate meals. WSDA will assess the feasibility of expansion of cooperative purchasing to ELFS child care centers.

PSFN is receiving a total of $57,624 of the $200,000 awarded to this specific project to hire a contractor who will serve as “benevolent broker” for a 12-month term, and act as PSFN’s project liaison working directly with local food producers on behalf of senior meal services, childcare centers and public school sites identified by Seattle Human Services in underserved South Seattle.  It will be PSFN’s responsibility to directly identify local food sources, negotiate pricing and create solutions that will lead to a richer understanding to create opportunities for expansion and modeling for similar models in other cities, especially underserved communities.  PSFN will be tasked with tracking and reporting our contributions to this project, identifying key obstacles, and creating new solutions for the future.  The full project’s duration is twenty months starting this month.  Recruitment for the 12-month HEAL project contractor will commence in late 2010.

PSFN is proud to be engaged in this new partnership because it has enormous potential to make a positive impact on the health and sustainability of both urban and rural communities, while helping to preserve our rich farming traditions in Northwest Washington by creating diverse market opportunities for local food.

For more information about CPPW, it’s goals and a full list of direct grant recipients, please visit http://www.kingcounty.gov/healthservices/health/partnerships/CPPW.aspx.

Please contact Lucy Norris, PSFN Project Manager, at lucy@psfn.org for information related to PSFN’s role in this important new project.

PSFN is pleased to welcome Ann Leason to the Northwest Agriculture Business Center in Mt Vernon.  Former AmeriCorps State Member assigned to NABC, Ms. Leason exceeded expectations as PSFN’s Data Manager and quickly became an important team member we could not afford to lose.  After a short break, she will return to PSFN as part-time PSFN Operations Manager starting July 26th. Ann will manage specific member accounts.  She will also act as key liaison between PSFN project leader and existing and potential members while managing day-to-day operations for the Network at the Mt Vernon office. Ann will continue to be the communications hub for offsite project and account managers, and will facilitate member training and outreach. Her combined professional experience in farming, corporate food marketing, communications and event management fits her new role at PSFN.

 

Ann is passionate about community, farming and the importance of local food. She spent three years as a part of Cardo’s Organic Sprout Farm in Ponder, Texas. She was also part of the operations team of a newly opened CSA, also in the North Texas Area. She is a member of the 2009 WSU Master Gardeners of Skagit County and holds a B.S in Radio-Television-Film from the University of Texas at Austin.

 

We asked Ann what she likes best about living in Washington.  “I like the diversity of Washington and Skagit County specifically…. I love that a variety of crops will grow in this soil, and there are many different types of farmers growing the food.

“While growing up in Texas, especially in my small farming community, there were only tomatoes, peppers, garlic and cows. Here – so many different crops are available almost year round. The temperate climate has allowed me to grow veggies that I used to just drool over in seed catalogues.

“And the trees – I sometimes still feel claustrophobic by the mere size of them. I never knew there were so many shades of green.”

 

Join us in welcoming Ann to NABC staff!  Ann can be reached at 360-336-3666.

Across the country, there are a growing number of hospitals getting involved with the local food movement.  Right here in Northwest Washington, we have plenty of great examples to boast about.  Last week PSFN’s Lucy Norris caught up with one such leader: Chef Chris Johnson, Food Services Director at United General Hospital in Sedro-Woolley, WA.  United General is a great example of a community hospital in a rural area who has shown they can do better, to make better choices for the community they serve.  We applaud the efforts of Chef Johnson, his amazing staff, and the hospital administration for their efforts.

Tell us a little about your background and your current position.

Chef Johnson and boxes full of local products purchased at the Skagit WholeSale Market

As a chef, I have worked mainly in locally owned restaurants.  I helped open the old Sweetwater Bistro in Mt. Vernon (The Trumpeter is now in that space).  The food scene has really changed around here.  I remember walking over to the Mt Vernon Farmers Market in the early days.  It was pretty sad in the beginning but nowadays there’s an awesome variety of foods and so many more food producers there.  I’ve also taught at the Skagit Valley College. I still work part-time at the La Connor Brewing Co.  It’s a really great time to live here and cook for a living.

I remember one instructor telling his students about the importance of buying from local farms.  He didn’t preach about it, but you could tell he was passionate.   He was sourcing local thirty years ago-when a chef had to go out of the way to buy local.  Now, there are resources to help anyone who is the slightest bit interested.  There’s no excuse not to buy local.

I’m now the Director of Food Service for United General Hospital responsible for inpatient meals as well as the cafeteria, called Coho Café.   I supervise 13 full time employees including a registered dietician (who is smarter than me), and some really amazing cooks and dishwashers.  It’s a great group of people.

Institutional food gets a bad wrap, and rightly so.  So much of the ready-to-eat foods are highly processed.  This food has made people sick over time and too many of those people end up in our hospital because of poor diet.  United General is a community hospital in a rural area and we have a responsibility to do better, to make better choices for the community we serve.  Skagit Valley is the perfect place to start something like this (Skagit WholeSale Market and Puget Sound Food Network).  There are a huge variety of crops here and people want to eat it.  We’re pretty lucky.

When I got here, the staff was not cooking from scratch.  Food was already prepared, so all they had to do was heat it and serve.  Training is an ongoing process.  For example, golden beets aren’t that fancy, but the cooks didn’t really know what to do with them.  Still, they are always open to trying new things.  Everyday is a chance to learn something new and it keeps our work interesting. We all work well together.

It’s a small hospital so we serve about thirty-five inpatient meals per day.  About a hundred and fifty people visit the cafeteria.  The cashiers tell me that new people are coming for lunch these days– the cashiers have never seen some of these visitors before.  People tell me they like the food a lot.  I also talk to people about what we’re doing with buying local food. We’ve got the support from administration.

How long have you been sourcing local food for this kitchen?

It started last year.  We bought two CSA shares from Hedlin Farm last year.  Every Friday was like Christmas.  That was the day boxes were delivered.

This year we got more serious with buying local products. I started getting more products from Hedlin and reached out to Sakuma for berries. I also work with Taylor Shellfish and have made some new contacts through the Skagit WholeSale Market.  (Editors note: Chef Johnson is a new PSFN member!)

We’re taking baby steps integrating local food into inpatient meals.  Right now, Sakuma berries are served to patients twice a week.  Hedlin’s lettuce mix is also served.  We slice Hedlin’s tomatoes with sandwiches when we have them.  Tasteless softballs we get from the distributor do not compare to delicious and ripe, local tomatoes.

So what’s going on in the cafeteria these days?

The Coho Café offers specials throughout the week that include local products. This is the inaugural “Farm Fresh Friday” and we are having Taylor Shellfish Farm clams sauteed w/Skagit River Ranch Sweet Italian Sausage and Hedlin Farm Fennel.  For those who prefer meatless, we have the sausage-free version made with Twin Sisters mushrooms.  We’ll also have Ralph’s Greenhouse Glazed Carrots, and whatever else I can find to cook up!

The menu for next week includes Taco Day- it’s not gourmet but people love it.  I just bought some organic ground beef from Skagit River Ranch at the Skagit WholeSale Market this week.  I am also trying their organic ground pork that I’ll combine to create my own seasoned taco filling.  I’m also making spinach lasagna made with Ralph’s Greenhouse spinach and San Juan Island Pasta Co noodles. There will be baked San Juan Island Pasta Co rigatoni and Twin Sisters Mushrooms.  I just bought some Skagit Fresh sparkling beverage and it sold out. I want to get more.

A recent visitor told me, “I never thought to come to a hospital for steamed clams!” If I can sell this food in a small hospital in Sedro Woolley, any business around here can and should do it.  As soon as you start putting local on your menu and letting people know — people will go crazy, and flock to it.

The Skagit WholeSale Market launched just three weeks ago in Mt. Vernon. You came the first day and every market day since.  Tell me about your experiences so far.  How did you find out about it?

Actually, Celeste at Sakuma Bros told me about it.  I had called to place an order and she told me to meet her there to collect my order.  I didn’t really have any expectations.  But while I was there, I met other food producers.  I order from Hedlin and Sakuma every week anyway, so now I can pick up stuff at the market now.  Since coming to the market, I have orders with Ralph’s, San Juan Island Pasta Co, Twin Sisters, and Skagit River Ranch.  I also found out that Samish Bay Cheese does more than the hard cheeses like gouda.  I had no idea they also do fresh cheese and yogurt, too!  It was also great to see Don from Nerka SeaFrozen Salmon this week.  I used to buy from him when I was at the Sweetwater Bistro.  It’s excellent quality fish!

The Skagit WholeSale Market and PSFN are both awesome!  The Market is so refreshing because you can have a face-to-face relationship with the people who grow your food, versus clicking a button in an ordering program.

There is a popular belief that local food is just too expensive for institutional budgets.  So how do you do it?

Actually last year when we started sourcing local food, we came under budget.  So this year, they gave us less budget because apparently they think we don’t need it.  Nah, we’re OK.  Since participating in the Skagit WholeSale Market, I haven’t compared the invoices with my regular line distributor, but I’m pretty sure we’re spending less this year.  The farmers have been willing to work with me on invoicing.  As a hospital employee, I can’t just write a check.  On Thursdays when I come back with my products, I sit down at my desk and sign off on the invoices.  Then I walk them straight down to Finance.  I do this as quickly as possible so the producer doesn’t have to wait long to get paid.  It’s a leap of faith for small farmers but that trust grows when you do what you say you are going to do.

I look at the cost of sourcing local from a different angle.  For ready-to-eat foods, I was paying for labor twice.  Now I pay once for labor- my co-workers seem to like what we’re doing and we’re attracting more business.  Sourcing local makes perfect sense.

(Editor’s Note: Created by Chef Johnson and inspired by local, seasonal bounty, “Farm Fresh Friday” at Coho Café happens Fridays from 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.  Come and enjoy menu items made with fresh produce from local farms, including fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses and more.  Affordable, healthy, and delicious! It will change the way you think about hospital food! For more information, please call (360) 707-4238. United General Hospital is located at 2000 Hospital Drive • Sedro-Woolley, WA 98284.  Visit www.unitedgeneral.org.)