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By Lucy Norris, Project Manager, Puget Sound Food Network

Today was Taste Washington Day and participating schools throughout the state celebrated Washington’s seasonal bounty in style, including:

  • Serving a locally-sourced meal
  • Providing education and activities to recognize the region’s agricultural bounty
  • Inviting farmers to lunch
  • Arranging school visits to area farms
  • Connecting Future Farmers of America high school students with elementary students

This year was especially exciting because Seattle Public Schools (SPS) featured grass-fed beef franks from 3 Sisters Cattle Company (3 Sisters) of Whidbey Island on today’s lunch menu:

Seattle Public Schools Taste Washington Day Menu, September 28, 2011

According to Wendy Weyer, R.D., SPS Nutrition Services, “We had the hot dogs in our 70 elementary schools equaling 8,000 servings.  We actually ran out so not all sites had the dogs.”

The full cost for one school lunch is $2.75 for Seattle elementary schools, and students who qualify for free/reduced lunches are not charged.  Considering these locally produced beef franks retail at PCC Natural Markets for $5.99 per 12 oz. pack, the fact that SPS and 3 Sisters were able to reach an agreement on pricing alone is remarkable and inspiring.

3 Sisters Cattle Co. Uncured, 100% Grass-fed Beef Franks are sold at PCC Natural Markets

The connection between 3 Sisters and SPS was sparked on the morning of July 20th at Puget Sound Food Network’s (PSFN) 2011 Seattle Wholesale Market.  As Eric Boutin (former Food Services Director) put it, “We had no buying expectations.  We just wanted to look around at how the market was set up, what products were available, and to gain an understanding of how farm-direct purchasing could work.” Brought together by PSFN, local farmers made connections with local businesses and sold bulk quantities of fruits, meats, vegetables, breads direct-wholesale.  The 2011 season, which ended on August 31, was held in the parking lot of the Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Central District/Capital Hill.  Commercial and institutional buyers, including SPS Nutrition Services, received “weekly fresh sheets” to see what products were offered at wholesale prices and volumes. Buyers then considered if (and how) these products might fit within their meal programs.

It was SPS Central Kitchen Operations Manager, Randall Guzzardo and Mr. Boutin who met face-to-face with farmer Shelly Muzzall and discussed 3 Sisters’ grass-fed hotdogs with packs in hand.  This first meeting sparked negotiations that led to SPS featuring 3 Sisters’ hotdogs on today’s school lunch menu.  After Mr. Boutin’s departure from SPS, it was Wendy Weyer who stepped in and continued talks with 3 Sisters, and placed the first order. The Muzzall’s are excited about this first sale to Seattle Public Schools and hopes to have more opportunities to sell their all natural, grass-fed beef franks in school districts across the Puget Sound region.

One lunch featuring 3 Sisters Cattle Co beef franks and Carpinito Brothers salad greens

PSFN visited two elementary schools in the Wallingford/Fremont neighborhoods including BF Day School and John Stanford International School.  3 Sisters grass-fed beef franks were steamed and served on whole wheat buns made by Seattle’s own Franz Bakery. The hotdogs were a hit!  At John Stanford the hot dogs were sold out during the final lunch stampede, a teacher gave 3 Sisters the “thumbs-up” and another student came back and asked for a second hot dog!

The lunch line at John Stanford International School

In the spirit of Taste Washington Day, the menu showcased some of Washington’s finest produce, dairy, meat including PSFN member Carpinito Brothers of Kent who supplied the salad greens and Shepherd’s Grain Farm who supplied the flour for a popular dessert: chocolate brownies.

Learn more about 3 Sisters Cattle Co.

3 Sisters Cattle Co. has Natural, Uncured Beef Franks and Pepperoni made with Whidbey Island’s own local grass-fed beef!  Their premium grass-fed cuts represent your fresh-air, rural community. They are a healthy, homegrown alternative to national brands. Contact Shelly at (360) 675-2136 / shelly@3sistersbeef.com.  Plymouth Poultry is their distributor.

To learn more about PSFN membership benefits including weekly fresh sheets, seasonal wholesale markets, and other strategic marketing assistance please contact info@psfn.org or visit PSFN’s website.

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.

(continued from Summer Newsletter)

Spring was a tricky time in terms of bringing in Farm to Table orders due to flooding and low temperatures which lagged behind the seasonal norm. During this time, because of limited produce selections and  fewer farms able to get product out of the ground,  it was difficult for sites to meet minimum orders for delivery.  But by mid June, Mother Nature had changed her tune, and Farm to Table orders are now briskly coming in! So far (since October) PSFN has coordinated direct sales for 6 PSFN Member farms resulting in 26 deliveries to 14 institutional sites as part of the Farm to Table project. Since mid-April, 8 daycare centers alone have purchased the bulk of produce from our farms! And the growing season is just getting started!

Impressed by the progress of the Farm to Table Project in child care settings, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn paid a special visit to Beacon Hill Community Day School to witness the site’s third Farm to Table delivery of fresh produce from PSFN member Full Circle Farm! This was the second visit by the Mayor to a F2T site this year! The Mayor first honored PSFN and the Farm to Table Project when he visited a delivery from Nash’s Organic Produce to Central Area Senior Center with U.S. Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, Kathleen Merrigan, in early March.

As the project develops over time, we learn more about the specific limitations of, and opportunities with, certain farms and meal sites.  Since April we’ve learned from our meal site partners that -  different from how global food economies work – geography really makes all the difference when connecting farms and meal sites locally. So, we’ve changed the way we do our fresh sheets, which now reflect only the  farms that are able deliver into specific geographic areas within a set minimum order, and/or farms with pick up opportunities within only a few miles of a participating meal site. For example, Muckleshoot Indian Tribe, based in Auburn, has been picking up their orders directly from at Mosby Brothers Farms (Auburn) and Carpinito Brothers (Kent). Now that’s LOCAL!

We’ve also begun to expand the meal providing agencies we’re working with! Working with Aging and Disability Services has put us in touch with Mt Si Senior Center, who we then connected with Full Circle Farm; and El Centro de la Raza and Sea Mar, who we connected with Viva Farms for specialty Oaxacan herbs and produce for traditional meals.  Extending outside of the King County Area, we’ve been able to connect Snohomish Senior Services with Maltby Produce, and Suquamish Tribe with a Nash’s Organic Produce out on the Peninsula.

We’re also in Initial discussions with Farm to Table partners, King County housing Authority (KCHA) and Early Learning and Family Support (ELFS) division of Seattle Human Services, talking about a second child care pilot project. This second project will connect fresh produce with home-based child care providers (those who operate small businesses out of their own homes as opposed to at a center). We home to seen be able to create a customized CSA model which might bring more usable boxes of products to these programs (picture a box that’s 1/4 apples, 1/4 carrots, 1/3 peaches instead of one box of many products in small quantities).

We’re so pleased with the progress of the Farm to Table project so far, and are very fortunate to work with such committed, enthusiastic, and imaginative partners. We look forward to the what this busy growing season has in store for us, our partners, and the seniors and children who will reap the fresh, tasty benefit from the project this summer!

(…continued from Summer Seasonal Newsletter)

Not to be confused with PSFN’s Wholesale Markets, this cooperative of growers from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska brings together the best the Pacific Northwest has to offer in locally grown cut flowers, greens and ornamentals.

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 (to subscribe, contact ann@psfn.org).

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 is the early part of the season. With the Grand Opening of the market May 18, the market has been open for business for nearly 2 months and is thriving!

Just look at these flowers!

Current Members of the Seattle Wholesale Market Cooperative Include
Alaska Hardy Peony, Fritz Creek, AK
Charles Little & Company, Eugene, OR
Choice Bulb Farms, Mount Vernon, WA
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
Peterkort Roses, Hillsboro, OR
ZCallas, Tilamook, OR
…plus occasional guest vendors!

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. To subscribe to the weekly fresh sheet, contact ann@psfn.org

Check out our Facebook Album for some more beautiful pictures of the Seattle Wholesale Growers Market

Last week, PSFN’s Parent organization, the Northwest Agriculture Businesses Center (NABC), held its Hard Cider Production & Orchard Management course! Hosted by the WSU-Mount Vernon Research Center, the class was split into the two phases of cider production: orchard management and cider production itself.

Gary Moulton teaching course participants grafting techniques at the Red Barn Cidery orchard

The Orchard Management and Cider Fruit Production course was taught by Gary Moulton of Washington State University. Gary is an orchardist and cider production expert and has been working in the field for decades. The topics discussed in this hands-on course included soil quality, orchard layout, rootstock selection, variety selection, pollinators, irrigation, pruning, thinning, pest management, harvest methods, and grafting techniques.

The hands-on class then led the students down the road to the Red Barn Cidery. Gary Moulton and Drew Zimmermen (owner) gave the students a detailed tour of the cider orchard and processing facility. After a hard day’s work, the students and instructors kicked back and relaxed in the beautiful Red Barn tasting room. Talk about perks of the trade – a post-class happy hour doesn’t get much more convenient than that!

Practical Production of Cider and Perry students learning how to titrate

For the remainder of the week, focus shifted to cider production in a week-long course, Cider Making: Principals & Practices taught by cider production expert Peter Mitchell. The first part of the class focused on giving participants a broad appreciation for cider and taught the tenets of cider and perry production. Then things got a lot more in depth… Students were granted access the experimental cider lab of the WSU-Mount Vernon Research Center. In the lab, students were taught how to test the chemical properties of their cider and were given the opportunity to create their own cider recipes with the advice of Mr. Mitchell.

On Friday, the final day of the course, class was held at La Conner Flats! Members of the local agriculture and cider community were invited for a lunch time cider networking event. These community members were able to critique ciders made by class participants and offer valuable feedback, support, and advice.

What a great week! The Cider Principals & Production class will be held again if we can muster enough interest. Contact Ann Leason with any questions about future cider classes: ann@psfn.org / (360) 336-3666.

For more photos of the cider production classes, visit our Facebook Page!

This Saturday, the City of Seattle kicked off its Summer Food Service Program for Seattle children. The program helps ensure recipients of free or reduced-price school lunches have access to nutritious daily meals when school is not in session over the summer months. This year, PSFN Member Maltby Produce is selling fresh produce to the program.

PSFN is ecstatic to be part of Seattle Human Services Department’s Kids and Teens Eat Free Summer Food Service Program. The program, beginning today and running through Friday, August 26, provides free breakfasts, lunches and snacks for children and youth aged 1 – 18.  The meals are served to children at 90 approved sites throughout the city where at least half the children are eligible for free or reduced-price school lunches. Sites include designated community centers, Seattle park playgrounds, Boys and Girls Clubs, YMCAs and YWCAs, and other community sites throughout Seattle and parts of King County.

Samples of the produce bags to be included in this year’s Summer Food Service Program. Community guests were able to take these home!

In addition to daily packaged meals and snacks, participating children will have access to free bags of fresh produce to bring home to their families weekly.  The fresh produce bags are an exciting addition to the meal program this year. Because of City of Seattle partnerships made through the Farm to Table project this year, PSFN was chosen to coordinate the produce bag pilot.  PSFN’s Karen Mauden and Lucy Norris visited over five serious farm candidates for the program, interviewing only PSFN members. Based on highly competitive selection screening criteria given to us by the City of Seattle, we chose
Maltby Produce/Marshland Orchards as the exclusive local produce grower for this groundbreaking program and we’re confident they will do an exceptional job!  Maltby will be selling fresh fruits and vegetables to fill 8000 bags to be distributed among participating children at meal sites over the course of the 2-month program. We hope this will lead to more opportunities for local farms to connect with schools and other city feeding programs in the future.

The Seattle Summer Food Service Program is funded by a $225,000 Walmart Foundation grant. The grant is part of a larger 25 million dollar project to support summer learning programs, nutritious food access  and job opportunities for kids and teens over the summer. Through this summer giving initiative, Walmart will feed 8 million nutritious meals to more than 85,000 kids, help 20,000 students enroll in summer learning programs and provide jobs and training to 5,000 youth. This 25 million dollar project is itself part of a broader Walmart commitment promising two billion dollars to help fight hunger in America.  Walmart has committed to help areas where federal, state, or other government funding for healthy food access has been cut.

Natalie Thomson of Seattle Human Services Early Learning and Family Support (ELFS) division, Carol Cartmell, nutritionist for the Child and Adult Care Food Program, Maltby Produce’s Marijke Postema, and PSFN’s Lucy Norris.

On Saturday, Seattle Human Services was joined by PSFN, Maltby Produce, Walmart Foundation representatives and community guests at the New Holly Gathering Hall in Southeast Seattle to kick-off the program! Key speakers included State Representative Eric Pettigrew representing Washington’s 37th Legislative District (South/southeast Seattle area), and U.S. Congressman Jim McDermott. McDermott, a child psychologist as well as politician and a known champion of poverty issues, spoke about how eating well consistently is crucial for children’s proper development, allowing kids to reach their full potential. Human Services Director Danette Smith agreed, saying, “When it comes to our kids, we must do everything possible to provide them the nutrition needed to be healthy, active and ready for the future.”

An interesting facet of the program is the integration of eating, learning, and physical activity. Seattle Human Services Director Danette Smith emphasized the importance of connecting kids to meals and to educational programming over the summer break so that “they may gain, not lose, nutrition and learning opportunities over the summer months.”

Emphasizing this marriage of healthy eating and learning, the launch event included a diverse array of performances and activities.  Seattle Parks and Recreation sponsored a performance by the Adefua African Music and Dance Company which offered a rhythm of welcoming and a rhythm of healing for the community members at the gathering. This group will offer free African music, dance, and language education for kids at Othello Park over the summer. City volunteers read the book, From Head to Toe by Eric Carle in both English and Somali. The book encourages children to move different parts of their bodies, and builds confidence in children’s physical abilities by repeating, “yes, I can!” There was also a performance of Mexican music, and dance performance by the Union Gospel Mission’s Youth Dance Troupe!  Tabling organizations offered books and information on summer reading programs for kids, free blood pressure tests, and nutrition information from families.  Continuing this tie between healthy eating/active living and summer education, as part of the Summer Food Service Program the Seattle Public Library will provide fun and educational programming in conjunction with the feeding program (such as story times in five different languages!) as well as provide free books for children at story time sites.

PSFN Project Manager, Lucy Norris, and Maltby Produce’s Marijke Postema and her husband, John, spoke at the kick-off, expressing their excitement about their business’ involvement in this important summer program.  Maltby Produce brought beautiful produce displays including samples of the produce bags which will be distributed through the program. They also provided case loads of beautiful, fresh veggie snacks for the event including baby cucumbers, cherry tomatoes and broccoli for munching on! It was a riot to watch skeptical tots take bites out of rainbow carrots with the tops still on– they were a big hit!  Maltby Produce and PSFN are really excited to play a role in introducing new and exciting fresh fruits and vegetables to children and families in need in our community!

This program is a real win-win for Seattle children and Maltby Produce (and all local producers!). It goes to show that connecting fresh, healthful foods with children and families in need is a viable and exciting market opportunity for small- and mid-sized local producers! As PSFN’s Lucy Norris said,

There is ripe opportunity for PSFN to continue working within our region to build a self-sustaining food system that mobilizes businesses and institutions, aids underserved communities and increases the profitability of farmers in Northwest Washington.  Opportunities like the Summer Feeding Program led by the City of Seattle can serve as an example for other communities within the region and other parts of the United States.

We’re so pleased to be able to be a part of this exciting program. Stay tuned for updates on the project and photos of some of the first produce deliveries!

For more pictures of this weekend’s program launch, visit our Facebook Page
Komo 4 News coverage of the launch: http://rainiervalley.komonews.com/news/parents-kids/special-summer-program-keeps-kids-going-hungry/649299
City of Seattle Press Release: http://www.seattle.gov/news/detail.asp?ID=11854&Dept=21

For more information or to find out where a child you know can receive summer meals, contact Javier Pulido, Program Coordinator, Human Services Department, at 206-386-1140 or javier.pulido@seattle.gov.

The details for the second season of PSFN Wholesale Markets are officially released! These business-to-business local food aggregation sites (in Seattle and Mount Vernon) will be open for business beginning the third week in July, and PSFN is now actively seeking business and institutional buyers


Seattle Wholesale Market

Wednesday Mornings 8:45 AM – 10:00 AM

July 20 – August 31

Mt. Zion Baptist Church overflow parking lot, 1634 19th Ave (and Madison), Seattle

(Eastern-facing grass lot across from church)

More info: http://www.psfn.org/seattle-market/

Skagit Wholesale Market

Thursday Mornings 8:30 – 10:00 AM

July 21 – September 8

Skagit Valley Co-op parking lot, 202 South First St, downtown Mount Vernon

More info: http://www.psfn.org/skagitmarket

PSFN’s Wholesale Markets aim to make locally grown and produced goods easily available to institutions and businesses in Seattle, Skagit County and surrounding areas. The Markets are a great way for restaurant and foodservice buyers to get their produce, grains, beans, meat (lamb, chicken, beef, pork and seafood), and pasta in the same place at the same time, at wholesale quantities and prices! The Wholesale Markets are not traditional farmers markets but rather “pick up and pay” sites for wholesale buyers.  Institutions and business that may benefit from this wholesale market include schools, daycare centers, retirement communities, country clubs, hospitals, restaurants, bakeries, grocery stores, distributors, and caterers, among others. Because of the business relationship focus, we discourage non-business entities from using the site. (Keep reading to find out how individual shoppers and eaters can play a role!)

Each week, the markets will each feature a diverse selection of fresh, seasonal and value-added foods all produced in the Puget Sound region.  Each market will host around 15 unique vendors. While Wholesale Market vendors are all PSFN members, any commercial or institutional buyer can shop – member or not!  Interested buyers can visit the markets to shop on-the-spot, to help plan seasonal menus, to sign up for the weekly fresh sheet, and to place orders with producers ahead of time for the next week!  While featured vendors will bring a limited selection of product to display and sell, most orders should be placed in advance from the weekly fresh sheet.

Chef Chris Johnson of UNited General Hospital with purchases at the 2010 Skagit Wholesale Market

On Monday, July 18, PSFN will begin distributing the weekly fresh sheet for both markets. The fresh sheet will include vendor contact information, available products, and quantities available for wholesale.  To receive the weekly market Fresh Sheet for either the Skagit or Seattle Wholesale Markets, contact Ellen Manderfield (ellen@psfn.org) with your contact information: name, email, phone number, and business name. There is no fee (for vendors or buyers!) to participate in the Wholesale Markets.

While the Wholesale Markets aren’t accessible by every shopper, locavores can help spread the word! If you have a wedding or special event planned  for this summer, tell your caterer that you’d like local food on the event menu. Have a favorite restaurant? Ask them for local Thursday or Friday specials inspired by their Wholesale Market purchases!  Have family living in a retirement community or receiving senior meals? Suggest a fresh, local lunch to the agency for more nutrition bang for their buck!

PSFN is especially excited to bring this year’s Seattle Wholesale Market to Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Mt. Zion and five other Seattle churches are part of a groundbreaking project with the University of Washington School of Nursing called Moving Together in Faith and Health. They are working to stem the tide of chronic diseases such as high blood pressure and diabetes in their surrounding community. Bringing local farms, businesses and institutions together at Mt. Zion will be an excellent way for our food community to work together to benefit all.  Mt. Zion’s Senior Pastor, Rev. Aaron Williams, says this partnership comes at a crucial time. “As we move together to implement policies that promote healthy eating and active living in our churches, our partnership with PSFN and its Seattle Wholesale Market will make fresh, locally grown produce affordable and accessible. We are empowering our churches and our community by giving them healthy options.”  For more details on the public health impacts of the Wholesale markets and other PSFN projects, check out this blog post by Johns Hopkins’ School of Public Health’s Center for a Livable Future!

Check out these stories written about last years’ markets:
PSFN Member Goes Extra Mile To Source Local for Sedro-Woolley Hospital
New Skagit WholeSale Market Brings Local Suppliers, Buyers Together (Grown Northwest)
WholeSale Market Brings Together Farmers and Chefs (Go Skagit.com)
WholeSale Market Aims to Connect Local Producers to Retail Buyers
Farmers cater to wholesale buyers’ needs (Capitol Press)
An interview with Chef Chris Johnson of United General Hospital (Grown Northwest)
Skagit WholeSale Market takes inventory of its first season (Skagit Valley Herald)

We’re so excited for another successful Wholesale Market season! Wholesale buyers, we hope to see you there!

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!

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