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On Wednesday PSFN helped organize something we’ve never done before: an aggregated buying model serving the families of our Farm to Table (F2T) child care centers! This event is yet another spin-off of our Farm to Table project, a public health project in partnership with Seattle’ Human Services Division. So far under F2T we’ve put together a wholesale institutional model where child care centers can purchase large quantities of fresh, organic produce from area farms, and a CSA model where smaller, home-based child care operations can have a reasonably sized CSA box delivered right to their door.  The Refugee and Immigrant Family Center (RIFC), an Early Childhood Education and Assistance Program (ECEAP) preschool under the City of Seattle’s Youth and Family Empowerment (YFE) Program has been a participating site in our Farm to Table project since Spring 2011, and yesterday became an integral part of our latest model, customized to fit the needs of the community.

Wednesday’s event at RIFC kicked off a new and unique outreach model for the Farm to Table Project: providing families of RIFC children with take-home “Good Food Bags” (local, seasonal selections of organic produce). This is a spin off of Toronto’s Good Food Box program. The idea is that the site purchases large quantities of seasonal produce at a wholesale price, then when families come to pick up their children they can pack a bag of fresh, affordable produce to take home.

Elidia Sangerman, Director of RIFC, kicked off the event by explaining the purpose of the event: making healthy food directly from the farm available to families, all while saving money on seasonal produce. The proposal (if the families like it) is to have local produce available mid-day between child pick up and drop off times for two RIFC site programs. Families will bring their bags, choose their produce, and take home $5-7 of fresh, healthy food.   Natalie Thomson, project manager of YFE’s involvement with Farm to Table, then spoke about the history of RIFC purchasing local food for its children through F2T for the past 9 months, and about their desire to extend the reach of this healthy food by connecting it to parents and siblings as well as RIFC’s young students.

Bill Brown, Sales Manager at Full Circle and our go-to ‘celebrity’ farmer for the F2T project, talked to families about local farming, seasonal produce and it’s high nutritional value, as well as Full Circle’s goal to get healthy produce to children and families. Full Circle has been a wonderful partner on the Farm to Table project, and provided all the produce for the event.

Everyone who attended helped prepare a community dinner under the direction of Leika Suzumura (Leika works with Community Kitchens Northwest and PCC). Cutting, slicing, chopping, cooking, and baking – everyone took a turn! A

menu of tortilla soup, mixed chard salad, parsnip mashed potatoes, and oatmeal chocolate chip cookies were enjoyed by all! Clean up was a group event as well, accompanied by lots of shared stories and laughter.

Today, the feedback from parents and families was unanimous: they would love to participate in a more permanent “Good Food Bag” program. We are off to a good beginning…. who knows where this good food, good will, and good energy will take us!

For more photos of Wednesday’s event, check out our Facebook page.

By Guest Contributor Sherrye Wyatt

Let the battle begin!  On November 5, Taste of Ebey’s attendees enjoyed an Iron Chef experience as Camp Casey’s Mess Hall B was transformed into Kitchen Stadium for a culinary cook off to celebrate the secret ingredient: Rockwell Beans.  Sponsored by Whidbey Island Grown and the Northwest Agriculture Business Center, the entertaining event was part of the Ebey’s Forever conference. Several Puget Sound Food Network members participated.

Sherrye Wyatt, who works on the Whidbey Island Grown brand and island tourism, organized and moderated the session.  Her introductions were sprinkled with dramatic lines from the popular cooking show including  “The time has come to once again ask life’s most savory question: Whose cuisine reigns supreme?” and “Ala Cuisine.” On a more serious note, Edible Seattle Magazine Publisher Alex Corcoran spoke on the growing “locavore” movement.  He explained the important role public relations and the media play in helping gain public support for preserving rural farm land.  But the main stars of the show were those who grow and serve the famous heirloom legume, Whidbey Island farmers and chefs.

Gardener Vin Sherman, Sara Perdue of Prairie Bottom Farm and Georgie Smith of Willowood Farm each captivated the audience as they shared family recipes and humorous stories from their own experiences  growing Rockwell Beans in Ebey’s Landing. The main floor show was a fast paced hour long cook-off between Scott Fraser, owner of Fraser’s Gourmet Hideaway in Oak Harbor and Mark Laska, owner of Ciao in Coupeville.  They were assisted by volunteer sous chefs Nan Devlin, consultant from Portland, Oregon and Jessica Muzzall of 3 Sisters Cattle Co. of Whidbey Island.

The afternoon’s highlight was when audience members joined the chef’s in the kitchen as they noisily chopped, sautéed, sizzled, and blended the beans into four original succulent variations.  The session ended with everyone sampling the chef’s creations.

Please join us in welcoming our newest AmeriCorps volunteer, Carolyn Goodrich.  Carolyn has accepted the position of Special Projects and Research Coordinator with NABC.

Carolyn will be responsible for a comprehensive evaluation of US based food networking sites, evaluation of USDA designated food innovation sites, as well as NABC database development.  She will also support NABC’s multiple USDA Rural Cooperative Development efforts and promote understanding and use of the cooperative business model for marketing and distribution of agricultural products.

Carolyn brings non-profit program management and leadership skills developed while directing animal welfare programs in Washington and California.  She holds a bachelors degree in Zoology from Oregon State University.  Carolyn is interested in community programs that provide food access and education to underserved populations as well as those that support small-scale sustainable farms.

Carolyn is also a co-owner/operater of Aslan’s How Organics, a certified organic farm in the Skagit Valley.  The farm’s CSA model offers work shares and accepts EBT/WIC in an effort to increase access to organic produce for lower income consumers.  This year, through a partnership with the local YMCA Oasis Teen Shelter (and a Puget Sound Food Network connection), homeless youth volunteered on the farm in exchange for a CSA share to help feed shelter residents.

We’re very glad to have Carolyn on board!

Carolyn can be reached at carolyn.goodrich@agbizcenter.org / (360) 336-3727

Both Carolyn and Emma Brewster, PSFN’s AmeriCorps Member, serve with on the SCORE AmeriCorps Team housed by the Skagit County Community Action Agency in Mount Vernon.

PSFN is pleased to announce the return of Emma Brewster for a second AmeriCorps term. Emma has been serving as PSFN’s Farm to Community Coordinator, focusing primarily on the CPPW Farm to Table Project with Seattle and King County.  This project aims to connect locally-produced fresh fruits and vegetables from PSFN member producers to typically underserved consumers through institutional markets, including free or subsidized child care and senior meal programs. The F2T project is a 20-month project, and PSFN has been happy to have Emma on board for the first ten and a half months of the project, helping to get the purchasing model and infrastructure up and running.  Now that the F2T project is half finished and there’s less foundational work to be done with meal partners, Emma is transitioning roles within PSFN as she begins a second AmeriCorps term of service. As PSFN’s Communications & Outreach Coordinator this year, Emma will continue to work part time on the Farm to Table project, seeing it through to its completion in June 2012, and will take on a broader outreach role with PSFN.

As PSFN’s Communications & Outreach Coordinator, Emma will lead PSFN’s external communications including PSFN’s weekly Live Market Fresh Sheet, quarterly newsletters, this blog, and social media outlets including Facebook and Twitter. Emma will help coordinate press and media relations and manage publicity about PSFN and our parent organization, the Northwest Agriculture Business Center (NABC).  If you are a PSFN member with an event to promote or have other news or resources to share, send them Emma’s way!

Within her duties of Communications & Outreach Coordinator, Emma will also be serving as a Regional Field Organizer with The Real Food Challenge, a national program of The Food Project.  The Real Food Challenge works to support the purchase, distribution, and consumption of “Real Food” – food that is locally produced and community based, and produced in ways that are fair to humans, humane to animals, and ecologically sound – on college an university campuses nation-wide. Emma will be working with campuses all over Washington to develop strong student leaders who will work with their college or university dining services to help increase the purchase of Real Food.

While PSFN’s mission focuses on increasing the production, distribution and consumption of regionally produced food in NW Washington, specifically, PSFN sees this partnership with the Real Food Challenge as an opportunity to build on our foundation of working with institutional and larger commercial buyers to connect producers with additional viable institutional customers in our region.  Additionally, the Real Food Challenge has a broader aim of helping to tackle rising obesity rates in the U.S. by both changing the food served in dining halls on campuses, and by using the purchasing shift and regional infrastructure development inherent to local and alternative sourcing to support the regional distribution of, and market for, fresh, healthful, locally-produced products to all communities. This commitment partners well with the work Emma and PSFN have been doing with Public Health – Seattle & King County through the Farm to Table project under the Communities Putting Prevention to Work grant program. Because of its innovative approach to public health solutions, The Real Food Challenge was recently nominated for a Vh1 Do Something award. Check out this video from the awards ceremony to see the role Real Food Challenge plays in public heath enhancement in our communities.

We’re happy to have Emma on board for another term of service, and are eager to explore market opportunities for PSFN members through her expanded outreach work.  Welcome back, Emma!

Emma is a member of the SCORE AmeriCorps team, housed by the Skagit County Community Action Agency.

Yesterday, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn paid PSFN’s Farm to Table project partners his second visit this year!  Mayor McGinn dropped by Beacon Hill Community Day School (of the Community Day School Association [CDSA], an Early Learning and Family Support [ELFS] ECEAP subsidized child care center), to witness the site’s third Farm to Table delivery of fresh produce from Full Circle. The Mayor first honored PSFN when he paid a lunchtime visit to a F2T senior center with U.S. Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, Kathleen Merrigan in early March.

Full Circle made the delivery of 5lbs of red radishes, 3lbs of salad mix, 3lbs of baby chard mix, 4lbs of baby arugula, and 1 case of baby mixed lettuce at 7:40 am. All of the produced was purchased – no donations here!

The students, a little perplexed by all  the hubbub, asked, “What are all these people doing here?” After recognizing the Mayor, Chloe, one of the CDSA children commented, “I’ve got him on my radio in my car!” The students were excited to see Full Circle farmers Bill and Sabrina again, saying, “They’re ba-ack!” After a previous Full Circle visit, the children helped to make a cookbook, which they proudly showed Mayor McGinn yesterday.

The Mayor also took questions from the children including some about his favorite veggies. While he said it was hard to pick just one, some of his favorites include beans, kale, and tomatoes. He also mentioned that as a child in a family of six with a mother who was a teacher by trade, he was exposed to cooking at a young age, a hobby he still enjoys today.  Another question came from a child who wanted to know if he was allowed to eat pie. Mayor McGinn replied that he also loved pie, especially when made with delicious fresh fruit! And that pie was ok every now and then as a special treat but probably not every day. …Wise words!

During the visit, Feng, the child center’s cook, used the produce to prepare the students’ morning snack: mini quiches with chard, accompanied by  fruit and English muffins. The afternoon snack later included the radishes from that morning’s delivery. Ever tried radish chips? Yum! The children helped prepare their own snack by helping with slicing and baking!

ELFS launched its child care F2T pilot project March 23. Even though the child care sites began their pilot several months after senior center partners Senior Services, Catholic Community Services, and Chicken Soup Brigade began theirs, ELFS sites already account for over a third of all Farm to Table purchases. In addition, the ELFS sites have ordered 100% organic produce!  An unexpected (and thrilling!) success of the pilot project is that several families of children who attend Beacon Hill CDSA have subscribed to Full Circle’s CSA program (as have some staff members of the center!), committing to receive a weekly box of fresh, whole, organic produce for their own homes!

Following the delivery, PSFN Project Manger Lucy Norris was invited to Rainier Community Center to participate in an exclusive roundtable discussion with the Mayor and King County Public Health regarding the City’s partnership with the federal Communities Putting Prevention to Work (CPPW) grant program which funds the Farm to Table Project. We appreciated this opportunity to meet with Mayor McGinn, Seattle & King County Public Health, industry reps and key individuals involved in CPPW Healthy Eating Active Living projects to discuss opportunities and challenges inherent to increasing healthy food access for lower-income communities.  Jerry DeGrieck, Seattle’s Department of Human Services highlighted the Farm to Table project, specifically noting PSFN’s efforts in creating viable market opportunities for local farms to sell fresh produce directly to institutions which provide meals to children and senior citizens in underserved neighborhoods.
Working with ELFS and other city child care agencies has been a joy for PSFN. We hope to soon help launch a second child care pilot project connecting locally produced fresh fruits and vegetables with home-based (residential) childcare providers in underserved neighborhoods. ELFS and the King County housing Authority will be project partners.

Congratulations to all Farm to Table partners on yesterday’s success! For more photos of yesterday’s Mayoral visit, check out our Facebook page.

PSFN’s Operation Manager, Ann Leason, and Farm to Community Coordinator, Emma Brewster, spent this last weekend in Missoula, Montana attending the 2011 Joint Annual Meetings of the Agriculture, Food, and Human Values Society (AFHVS), Association for the Study of Food and Society (ASFS), & the Society for Anthropology of Food and Nutrition titled Food and Agriculture Under the Big Sky: People, Partnerships, Policies.

University of Montana, Missoula Campus

The meeting in Big Sky Country was just what the conference title promised: a tremendous convergence of all folks food (we met gastronomy students, nutritionists, produce distributors, winemakers, Thai agronomy students, chefs, grocers, sociology professors, corn farmers, policy makers, buffalo ranchers, food anthropologists, cookbook authors…) all looking to think and work collaboratively on a wide array of contemporary food and agriculture challenges.

Ann and I were privileged to present on the recent work of PSFN with institutional foodservice in the Puget Sound region. Our session was titled, Equity, Health & Regional Food Economies: the Power of Institutional Markets. Ann introduced session attendees to PSFN’s work setting up and hosting its Wholesale Markets in the Skagit Valley and Seattle last summer. (This year’s Wholesale Markets will run mid-July thru early September. Contact ann@psfn for more info on buying and selling). Ann spoke of the successes of the Wholesale Markets for PSFN Members– producers and buyers alike! She shared anecdotes of Chef Chris Johnson’s overhaul of the Coho Cafe at United General Hospital and how sponsor Wholefoods picked up Dale Sherman’s unique sugar hubbard squash to sell in all of their Washington and Oregon stores. I then presented PSFN’s involvement in the CDC-funded Farm to Table (F2T) project, which is working to connect fresh fruits and vegetables from local producers to typically underserved consumers in Seattle and King County. The Wholesale markets, namely working with Chef Chris Johnson and Chef Peter Roberge of Skagit Valley Hospital, as well as PSFN’s periodic cooperation with Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility opened PSFN’s eyes to the opportunity of institutional purchasing to local producers and thus and opened the doors for the F2T Project.

Co-presenter Crissie McMullan with Emma and Ann

Also on our panel was Crissie McMullan of Grow Montana, and one of the founders of Montana FoodCorps, and now advisor to the National FoodCorps program. Crissie also works for the National center for Appropriate Technology. Crissie shared her work integrating locally produced products into the University of Montana, Missoula dining halls, and in establishing the FoodCorps program first in Montana and now as an advisor to the development of a national Food Corps. Together, we were able to speak about farm-to-institution purchasing specific to hospitals, senior meal programs, childcare, elementary schools, and university cafeterias. Our session harnessed a decent-sized and active audience: a mix of academics, farmers, students, educators, non profit groups, and others. One of the most interesting attendees was a representative of the Center for a Livable Future of Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health. The mission of this institute is to bringing together research and thinking on the confluence of agriculture, food, and public health – a liaison which, for us, became somewhat of a theme of the whole conference.

The Keynote Address solidified this theme of food and health. Albert Borgman, Regents Professor of Philosophy at the University of Montana since 1970 and former classmate of Wendell Berry, delivered “The Culture of the Table: Reweaving the Contexts of Celebration.” Borgmann quoted Aristotle, reminding us that “nutrition and growth are marks of life,” uniting and syncing all creatures. In this way, Borgmann called eating a universal act which has the perhaps unique capability of uniting necessity and transcendence.

Borgmann pointed to food’s unique ability to both playing a role in determining culture, and to indicate and communicate the culture of a family or community to others. Anyone who has shared a meal abroad or with a family of another culture can attest that eating has the power to “disclose the world we live in.” The way we eat is a response to the world we live in whether illustrating culturally-steeped meals using food food endemic to a region, or by illustrating the now complicated, perhaps multinational system through which food arrives at our plates.

Borgmann spoke of this transformation of food, eating, and living over the last century saying, “the mark of a new epoch is when the inconceivable becomes the plausible.” Indeed, so many inconceivable ideas are now commonplace in modern life, and especially in modern food production in America (and elsewhere, I presume, as Dr. Borgmann himself hails from Freiburg, Germany). Borgmann posited that Because of technological development and the differentiation of spheres in American life and labor and productivity, America has experienced a loss of “competence and comprehension.” That once, every person knew an essential, marketable skill, whether they were a baker, smith, or a miller. Because of this, individuals were capable and indisposable in their communities– resilient communities of interdependent skilled individuals.

Now, individuals and communities are less skilled, less engaged with one another, and therefore less resilient. The table, (both in literal and figurative interpretations– think of the expression for collaboration and cooperation,“coming to the table”) has the power to reweave the resiliency of communities through engagement and health. As he said it, the table designates the place where we eat. It is like the picnic blanket which, though somewhat arbitrary, when laid on the ground distinguishes the civilized from the uncivilized, creating a stage and a space for eating. The table then, in comparison, elevates and stabilizes that place of security and civility, (just as families coming together for meals stabilizes family life and health).

The table is a Gathering place. It gathers people– people who are dear to one another, who are accepting of one another, and who have agreed to sit with one another. It gathers food from many places, and it gathers “strands of diverse views of the world into a fabric of understanding.” Borgmann reminded us that “you cannot gather what has no extension” and that things that may be gathered are inherently things that can be traced… whether to the grocery store, to the farmers’ market, or to the original source. It is this traceability, he thinks, that will begin to restore competence and comprehension to American families.

With this traceability of food in mind, Borgmann challenged the audience to “push people to what’s better and better within the limits of the possible.” This method is very much a theme in PSFN projects, especially in the Farm to Table project where limited budgets, time, and cook skills limit the use of whole, fresh fruits and vegetables in senior and childcare meal programs.  We all try to work together to do the best we can with what we have, and that’s a success!

Chefs and Catering staff (curiously constumed as fly fishermen and "farmers"...) at Feast

Other conference Events included a beautiful exhibit of documentary photographs by Katie Knight, “Montana Solutions: A Documentary of Grassroots Leadership” (view here) and “Feast,” the conference dinner event showcasing locally-sourced Montana foods.

And of course, no visit to any new city is complete without a visit to the local Farmers’ Market, and Ann and I gave it a thorough “professional investigation” Saturday morning. We sampled delicious Raspberry Chipotle Sauce (much like that of PSFN friend Aldrich Farms) which the producers suggest pairing with BBQ chicken or marinated flank steak. We (expectedly) found some buffalo jerky, and (unexpectedly) some shrimp ceviche…? At least the tomatoes were local!

All in all, it was a marvelous conference. We met a wonderful diversity of very interesting, smart, and hardworking folks, all working in different ways to study or change the evolving food system. It’s rumored that next year’s meeting will be held in New York City, if you’re interested in joining the caravan to the big city!

For more photos of the conference, visit our Facebook Page

Yesterday was the Grand Opening of the Seattle Wholesale Growers Market!*  A cooperative of growers from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska, this market brings together the best the Pacific Northwest has to offer in locally grown cut flowers, greens and ornamentals.

Check out these beautiful pictures taken at the market’s Grand Opening yesterday!

Thanks to Rosemary Washington for her beautiful photographs of the market. Check out Rosemary’s blog!

See more pictures of the Seattle Growers Wholesale Market on our Facebook Page

As a PSFN member, the Seattle Wholesale Growers Cooperative sought technical assistance from NABC in establishing this cooperative and the market.  NABC’s Jeff Voltz was essential in helping to organize the cooperative. PSFN is hosting a page for the market on our website and develops and sends the weekly fresh sheet for the market.

The market’s soft opening was April 20, but a cold spring delayed many crops by 3-4 weeks. Because of this, only some member farmers participated earlier in the season. Now the market is officially open for business and more and more vendors and crops will come each week.

Current Members of the Seattle Wholesale Market Cooeprative include
:
Alaska Hardy Peony, Fritz Creek, AK
Charles Little & Company, Eugene, OR
Dan’s Dahlias, Oakville, WA
Everyday Flowers, Stanwood, WA
Glacier Peonies, Homer, AK
Gold Peak Flowers, Tillamook, OR
Greenwood Wholesale Floral, Seattle, WA
J. Foss Garden Flowers, Chehalis, WA
Jello Mold Farm, Mount Vernon, WA
North Fork Farm, Deming, WA
Oregon Coastal Flowers, Tillamook, OR
Peonies Plus, Elma, WA
The Cooperative and its market is a membership-based organization, and each farm pays to participate.

The Seattle Wholesale Growers Market is open for business Mondays 6 AM – 12 PM; Wednesdays 6 AM  - 2 PM and Fridays 6 AM to 2 PM at the  Original Rainier Brewery Building in the heart of Georgetown, 5840 Airport Way South, Seattle. This market is WHOLESALE ONLY. You must bring a copy of your Washington State Reseller’s Permit to obtain a buyer’s pass. For more information please contact info@seattlewholesalegrowersmarket.com or call Diane Szukovathy at 206-290-3154.


*Not to be confused with PSFN’s Wholesale Markets! PSFN’s second seasons of Wholesale Markets in Seattle and Mount Vernon will begin again in mid-July. These food markets serve as a physical hub for producers and buyers of high-quality, locally-produced foods to meet one another and make purchases. This year, the Skagit Wholesale Market will be held on Thursday mornings, 8:30 -10:30 AM in the underpass parking lot of the Skagit Valley Food Coop, 202 South 1st Street in Mount Vernon. Interested vendors should contact Ann Leason, ann@psfn.org. Details on the Seattle Wholesale Market will be released shortly.

Yesterday, PSFN hosted the King County Member Training sessions and participated in the F2T Child Care Pilot Kickoff hosted by City of Seattle Early Learning and Family Support Division (ELFS). The events had been booked on the same day for the same time, so we figured, “Why not hold just the events right next door to one another?” It ended up being a big hit.  The events were held at the 2100 Building in Seattle, a building which houses thirteen nonprofit organizations which connect kids to the community that supports them, and has public meeting venues.  Because of the convenient location, PSFN staff was able to attend both events; producer members attending member trainings were able to pop their head into the enlivening Child Care Kickoff, learn about the project and its sales opportunities; and the early learning and school age community was able to meet some of the producers they’ll be working with. Talk about a new community truly coming together!

The King County Training Session was the second of five PSFN Member Trainings this spring.  The Skagit Training sessions were held March 7, and upcoming trainings include: Snohomish County on April 6 at the Snohomish County Extension Office; Island County on May 4 at the Coupeville Public Library; and Whatcom County, TBA.  The one-on-one training sessions are an opportunity for PSFN members to sit down with their individual Account Manager and PSFN’s Operations Manager to discuss ways PSFN can use its tools and resources to help move the business or organization forward.  Yesterday PSFN staff helped members source organic local flour for child care centers, gain sales access to large-scale feeding programs, and source local products for a new local retail outlet, among other things.

PSFN Operations Manager, Ann Leason, with Heidi and Rosy from 21 Acres in Woodinville discuss ways to move forward with their business. F2T Coordinator, Karen Mauden, looks on. 21 Acres is a producer member of PSFN as well as a F2T partner, but will soon be acting as a buyer as well. Their retail and processing facility in Woodinville will be nearing completion in the coming months.

In the next room, the Early Learning and Family Support (ELFS) Farm to Table Kickoff event, welcomed nearly fifteen early learning and school-age child care providers to join the Farm to Table (F2T) Project!  So far, PSFN’s F2T Project has been focused on senior meal programs.  Another realm of the project, however, is child care centers, and yesterday was the beginning of an eight-month pilot project!  The pilot will include eight ELFS-affiliated child care centers. Each center is required to make four local food purchases between now and October 2011.  Just as the providers will encourage their tots to give the new local produce a few tries, we’re hoping that by encouraging at least four local purchases, the providers themselves will get used to a new healthy habit of buying locally!

PSFN’s Farm to Community Coordinator, Emma Brewster, gave a presentation on the basics (who, what, where, why, how) of agriculture in the Pacific Northwest and how to source kid-friendly food locally.  Karen Mauden, PSFN’s F2T Coordinator, explained the ins and outs of ordering locally through F2T.  PSFN also shared fun kids recipes from PSFN Member, Breanna Oberlin, PNA Kids! Food Service Manager (Phinney Neighborhood Association) and a registered dietician. Breanna already works with whole, local foods which she gets from PSFN member, Full Circle.  Perfectly, Full Circle is the designated F2T producer for child care for the first two months of the pilot! These recipes, used by an actual care giver, nutritionally analyzed for children, made with local produce in season now from the designated farm, and already “field tested” with kiddos – were a dream come true! Thanks, Breanna, for sharing your great ideas!  PSFN and ELFS were fortunate to be joined by Bill Brown and Sabrina Wilz from Full Circle at the kickoff.  We’re so happy that the early learning and school age community at the meeting were able to personally meet the farmer they’ll be ordering from!  Both Bill and Breanna will be joining PSFN’s F2T Team this weekend at a similar Coalition for Safety and Health in Early Learning (CSHEL) training event this weekend, where we will spread the word about child care’s new and growing role in F2T!

The F2T Child Care Network (Child care sites in purple; Farms in red)

Rochelle Carlson, PSFN Member and F2T Partner from Catholic Community Services also attended the kickoff. She made the trip from Lakewood to Seattle to share with child care providers her experiences buying whole produce through F2T for her senior congregate meal programs in King County.  As both a F2T meal-provider partner/buyer, and as a mother of young children in child care, Rochelle offered a unique perspective on the ease and value of F2T for the new child care participants.  Thanks so much, Rochelle, for making the trek on our behalf!

Between the member trainings and the kickoff, yesterday was definitely a busy day for PSFN. Though busy, this is just how we want to use our time: working in person with members; making introductions and forming relationships among them; and learning from various perspectives how we can better connect all sorts of players in the local food system.  PSFN’s F2T Team is overjoyed to be working with ELFS and with the early learning and school age community as a whole. The enthusiasm and energy among this community is palpable, and we can’t wait to get started! See more pictures from the ELFS Kickoff Below, and even more on our Facebook Page.

Bill Brown and Sabrina Wilz of Full Circle join F2T Partners from PSFN, WSDA, ELFS, and other City agencies with the F2T Child Care Pilot Site Providers!

Jackie’s on board! Sandria Woods-Pollard collects a letter of commitment for Farm to Table from a child care provider!

Carol Cartmell, left, will advise child care meal providers on recipe development and nutrition using local, whole foods. Here, she visits with Full Circle representatives Sabrina Wilz and Bill Brown. Full Circle will be providing all the local foods for the child care sites for the first two months of the pilot.

Natalie and Sandria show off their signed letters of commitment from child care providers!

This past weekend, PSFN’s Farm to Table (F2T) Coordinator, Karen Mauden, was invited to attend the first ever Tribal Cooks Retreat at Bastyr University. Hosted by Muckleshoot Senior Program (a F2T meal-provider partner) and Northwest Indian College, this 2-day retreat helped “sharpen both knives and healthy cooking skills” of selected tribal cooks working at Muckleshoot School, Senior and Daycare feeding sites.  This training opportunity is especially exciting for PSFN’s F2T Team, as it addresses skill development for both senior and child care meal providers, the dual foci of the F2T project.

Chef Tom French, Founder/Director of Experience Food Project; Valerie Segrest, Native Foods Nutritionist and Wendy Burdette, Muckleshoot Senior Program Manager created an eventful and meaningful curriculum.

Saturday’s agenda included:

  • Basic skills: knives, kitchen organization, time management
  • Foraging Native Foods and Plants
  • Balancing menus using fresh foods from the Pacific Northwest
  • Cooking methods with whole grains
  • Salad Dressing and Sauce Preparation
  • Integrating Nuts, Herbs and Berries into dishes
  • Creating shared meals with local foods
  • Friendly Team competitions

Chef Tom noted that originally tribes foraged, gathered, hunted and fished for their food. This does not typically happen in society in general anymore. Now, food comes to us, which limits our choices. As we return to gardening and foraging we can select our food with purpose and intention.  These themes fit well into tribal culture which Valerie and Wendy seek to encourage. At Muckleshoot Indian Tribe, Wendy has partnered hunters, gatherers and fishermen with specific tribal elders who are no longer are able to participate in those activities. This has created a greater bond of community, commitment to traditions and hope that future generations will eat and celebrate northwest native foods and traditions, which in turn will lead to better health.

Tribal cooks were thrilled with the retreat. They were challenged to, and succeed in, presenting plates with a rainbow of colors and bursting with flavor. Splitting into teams from School Lunch, Senior Feeding and Daycare cooks were challenged to create and present nutritious, balanced and welcoming meals. The results included beautiful Breakfast Frittatas, Poached eggs on Herbed Potatoes, Bountiful Vegetarian Breakfast Burritos, Hazelnut Encrusted Salmon and much more. It seemed everyone felt empowered to return to the tribal community and create healthier, more colorful and flavorful foods from the bounty of the Pacific Northwest.

What a great event! PSFN is overjoyed to be working with Wendy and with Muckleshoot Indian Tribe on the Farm to Table project. We’re very impressed at the focus given to kitchen skills and training by the tribe. These are necessary skills for working with the fresh, whole foods the F2T project makes available to meal -provider partners, and we’re inspired by their initiative! While popping into the retreat, Karen delivered Muckleshoot’s first F2T delivery: 50 lbs of potatoes from Full Circle. Here’s to the beginning of what we hope will be a very successful partnership!

Emma and Lucy tabling for PSFN at the reception. Photo courtesy of Washington State Senate Democratic Caucus

Last Wednesday, PSFN accompanied NABC to Olympia for a legislative reception in the capitol building. The reception was an opportunity for legislators and visitors to the state house to sample an array of locally produced foods and learn more about the economic benefits that are a result of NABC programs.

PSFN staff were able to update returning legislators and guests on the progress and impact of PSFN since its debut a year ago, showcase PSFN’s unique and evolving role in the regional food economy, and spread the word about the growing success of the Farm to Table project – an especially interesting initiative to representatives from urban districts.

Legislative attendance was high, and PSFN/NABC affiliated producers brought some great products to share. Larry Stap of Twin Brook Creamery came to dole out samples of his delicious Chocolate milk. Dave Dodson of Edaleen Dairy showcased his refreshing peppermint ice cream. Dorie Belisle of Bellewood Acres gave samples of her apples and cider. Karen Bishop of Ebey Road Farm distributed her yummy grain snacks – a big hit with some of the young aides and interns.  Sarah Richards of Lavender Wind Farm offered an array of Lavender-infused baked goods, spreads, and health and beauty products.  Other products showcased at the event included various pickles from Pleasant Valley Farm (the horseradish sauerkraut and pickles were a favorite!), maple yogurt from Grace Harbor Farm, very popular pepperoni sticks and salami from Del Fox Meats, and Roozengaarde’s tulips – nearly every attendee left with a small bouquet!  Other attendees included Jeanne Youngquist of Mike & Jeans, Laura Faley of Hidden Meadow Ranch, Phil Tucker of Whatcom Natural Beef, and Sarita Schaffer of Viva Farms.  Thanks to all of the PSFN members and local producers who came to showcase their projects and products.

See more photos and a write-up of the event on the Senate Democrat’s blog post, Senators take time to meet ‘the people behind the potatoes