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Archive for January, 2011

Head Chef, Jim Watkins, Sous Chef, Wendy Northcutt, and 21 Acres farmer, Rosy Smit

The PSFN Farm to Table team is pleased to announce the success of the very first Farm to Table delivery!   Two months ahead of schedule, the first Farm to Table delivery went off without a hitch on Wednesday.

PSFN member Rosy Smit, manager of 21 Acres Farm in Woodinville, personally brought 50 lbs of leeks to Chicken Soup Brigade/Lifelong AIDS Alliance on Capitol Hill.   Rosy harvested the leeks herself that very morning – it doesn’t get much fresher than that!

Head Chef, Jim Watkins, and his team prepared the leeks Thursday as Caribbean tilapia dish with lime and leeks.  The dish was served with rice pilaf, yams, and mixed vegetables.  The PSFN F2T team was able to speak with several Chicken Soup Brigade kitchen staff and volunteers and they were all excited about the product and excited about getting more local produce!

Chef Watkins grew up on a family farm in Virginia, himself, and had very kind words to say about the important work our local farmers are doing.

Congratulations to 21 Acres and to Chicken Soup Brigade for making the first successful Farm to Table linkage!  PSFN and the CPPW Farm to Table Partnership is very confident that we’re on our way to a smoothly operating and sustainable Farm to Table model!

If you’re a farmer interested in selling to the Farm to Table project, or are interested learning more, contact Karen Mauden, Farm to Table Coordinator at (425) 466-8722; Karen@psfn.org

The PSFN Farm to Table team is hard at work connecting local producers to our three senior meal programs.  We have several committed producers, but are looking for more.

We want YOU!

PSFN Farm to Table (F2T) is looking to fill the pipeline of produce deliveries for January, February, March and April.  We would love to speak now with anyone that has winter produce to sell. In fact, we would love to speak to you if you have any produce to sell in 2011 – if you want to work with F2T, this is the time to be heard while you have the opportunity to order and plant seed for our project.

PSFN’s role is to connect farms directly with senior feeding sites and childcare centers.  We will work with you, the producer, to figure out the logistics, coordination and timing of deliveries should there be any challenges.  It is a new business model and we are in the initial stages – we welcome you to join us to provide input.  By April we will have established the systems and networks we need to get the job done. We want to hear what you have to say now as this will help us create the best future business model for all involved.

What can you bring to the table?

Our mission is to bring local fruits and vegetables to the meal sites, so produce is our top priority.  We are currently looking for available winter produce in order to meet our commitment to bring fresh food to the tables of local seniors by March 2011.  The pilot stage of the project will continue through the height of the growing season and we will be seeking an enormous diversity of spring and summer produce.

Benefits

Our F2T partner sites can offer you these benefits:

1.    Volume sales

  • Catholic Community Services (Lakewood) is serving 500-800 meals/day
  • Chicken Soup Brigade (Seattle) is serving 200 meals/day + 120 grocery bags/day
  • Two new sites (Auburn, Seattle) are requesting produce as well – each serving 120 meals/day
  • City of Seattle Childcare will be ready for orders in the near futureDon’t have large volumes?  We’re happy to try to aggregate products from several area farms to meet volume needs while offering steady business to many producers.

2.    Opportunity to sell surplus produce and “seconds”

Should you have any produce that would otherwise be written off as lost sales, we have sites that will pay for that produce

3.    Potential for long-term, large-volume local customers

4.    The opportunity to participate in the nation’s first-ever senior-focused, wholesale, institutional, direct marketing local food project

Pricing

Price – it is always an issue, what are the sites looking for? Generally, an EP (Edible Portion) price of $.50-1.20/lb; AP (As Purchased) pricing of $1.50/lb or less.  If serving a whole portion, such as an apple, the sites generally stay in the 20-30 cents/each range.

We will not ask you to price your product in any specific way. You are in business, and we want you to have a sustainable business, one that can support you and those that work for you, and help your farm continue profitably.  We are pleased for any way that the F2T project can help you, and any way that you can help F2T.

Contact

If you’re interested in participating in or learning more about the Farm to Table project, please contact Karen Mauden, Farm to Table Coordinator: (425) 466-8722; karen@psfn.org

Thank you for your interest in helping us ensure ALL of our neighbors have access to fresh, healthful food.

Tell us a little bit about your background.

I came to Washington when I was 16 as a foreign exchange student from Turkey.  My family has been farming primarily cotton in Turkey so I have a little background with that.  Cotton is an important agricultural export and quite popular so that’s why my parents did it.

I came back to Washington when I was 18 to attend college because I already had friends here, knew the area and the schools.  I majored in Business and Economics and graduated from University of Washington.

I am relatively new to the food industry but I was familiar with local food production back in Turkey. It was normal to visit the markets with all kinds of fresh produce that looked and tasted delicious.  I first met Tony Ataee (Founder, Crown Pacific), because I was thinking of importing Turkish apricots.  As I talked with Tony, I realized it was not feasible for me to do because the margins were too small. So I began helping out around here and then jumped right in when the opportunity came up. I’ve been with Crown Pacific for about a year.  Now I help build the business, expand into new growth markets, etc.

Michele Catalano is the Site Sales & Community Relations of Full Circle, a leading organic produce and artisan food provider located in Carnation, WA.  Full Circle is a big proponent of making fresh, local, healthful food available to, and accessible by, seniors.  Because of this, Michele, and Bill Brown, Full Circle’s Allocation & Sales Manager, were quick to jump on board with PSFN’s Farm to Table program which will connect local growers with senior meal programs.  PSFN Farm to Community Coordinator, Emma Brewster, chatted with Michele last week about Full Circle’s role in this exciting new project.