Passion behind perfect farm produce

farm

Passion behind perfect farm produce

THERE’S no shortage of passion at Daylesford Organic Farm. From Richard Smith in the fields to John Longman in the creamery, Eric Duhamel in the bakery and Jez Taylor in the market garden; the abiding desire to produce real food is at the heart of everything they do.

Over at the farm‘s cookery school, head tutor Vladimir Niza shares the love.

“We all have the same passion for food and the same vision,” he said.

“I am incredibly privileged: no other cookery school in the world is located in the middle of a working farm, surrounded by artisan food producers.

“When I’m cooking I know about the effort and love that has been put into all the ingredients that I’m using.”

This is high praise indeed from a man who has cooked at The Ritz in Lisbon and Paris and worked as a developmental chef for Raymond Blanc at Les Manoir Aux Quat’ Saisons.

And he’s not alone in admiring the work of those around him. Over the past three years the farm has won more than 60 national and international accolades for its food, while its farmshop cafe has been mentioned in the Michelin Bib Gourmand two years running.

But at the same time there are some who regard Daylesford as being almost too good to be true, with commentators referring to its farmshop as the ‘Harvey Nicks of the Cotswolds’ and drawing attention to the high levels of investment from its owner, the industrialist Sir Anthony Bamford and his wife Carole.

Daylesford’s answer to the detractors is to be open and transparent about the food produced on its 2,250 acres on the Gloucestershire/Oxfordshire border and to actively invite people on to the farm to judge for themselves.

In the meantime, those who work there get on with producing food naturally and sustainably, without artificial additives, fertilisers, growth promoters or herbicides.

Richard has been at the farm seven years and is especially proud of the progress that’s being made in breeding British Friesian cows capable of producing satisfactory yields of milk, solely from Daylesford’s organic pastureland, without the need for high-protein supplements and cereals.

“Cows are ruminant animals,” said the senior farm manager. “Our ultimate aim is to breed a cow that will do well from forage-based diets. We are seven years into our breeding programme – in another two or three years we hope to be self-sufficient.”

He’s also excited at the prospect of introducing sainfoin, known in France as holy hay, to the crops grown at Daylesford.

“I’ve discovered that at the beginning of the 19th century, 25 per cent of the Cotswolds was covered in sainfoin. The reason for this was to produce energy for the heavy horses. I think the potential for this crop is very exciting,” he said.

Richard hopes this new innovation will be as successful as the farm’s famous turquoise-coloured eggs, produced by Daylesford’s blue leg bar chickens. The many years of work spent developing this hybrid hen were rewarded in 2011 with two gold stars in the Great Taste Awards.

Milk from the cows goes to Daylesford’s creamery, where it is pasteurised and used for a variety of products, including its multi award-winning cheeses.

For head cheese-maker John, who comes from a long line of Somerset farmers, one of the joys of his job is the way in which he is encouraged to experiment to find delicious new products.

“I love to try different things,” said John, whose range includes traditional English cheeses such as Cheddars and double Gloucesters, blue cheeses and a few varieties unique to Daylesford such as Adelstrop, a rind-washed cheese named after the nearby village.

“I have been making cheese for most of my life but there’s always something new.”

John’s passion for cheese is matched by Eric’s enthusiasm for bread.

The Paris-born baker studied his craft at the Ecole Francaise de Boulangerie et de Patisserie d’Aurillac and believes the secret of good loaves lies with good ingredients and plenty of time.

“Baking is an art, an ancient craft,” he says.

“We make sourdough bread from leaven that’s produced in the mid-afternoon and ferments until around 10am the next day.”

Other products include croissants, which again are given a long fermentation time.

“We make our croissants with butter using a special recipe we designed here,” he said. “They ferment for more than 24 hours and this develops the quality and flavour.”

Over in the 20-acre market garden, Jez says producing sufficient organic fruit and vegetables for farm shop customers, its café and for The Plough at Kingham is his “dream job”.

“We grow everything but we don’t try and satisfy an all year round requirement,” said Jez, who comes from Evesham.

“We grow seasonal crops, although we are able to grow salad leaves all year around using polytunnels.

“Essentially, what we are about is freshness – what we grow is harvested and with our customers within a few hours and this is one of the prime reasons how we can make the enterprise profitable.”

Some 14 people currently work on Daylesford Organic Farm and more are employed in its shops, including two in London. In addition the company successfully sells its products through the online supermarket Ocado.

While acknowledging the huge investment that has gone into the farm, spokeswoman Camilla Wilson said each site is profitable in its own right.

“Daylesford Farms is one of the most sustainable farms in the UK,” she says.

“We are passionate about organic farming: we believe that it is better for us, our animals, the environment and, of course, always tastes better and we welcome people here to judge this for themselves.”


If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest.

Get the best website builder available anywhere –SBI! Click here for more information


farm

Return from farm to Home Page


If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:
facebook likes google exchange
Likerr.eu
GetLikeHits.com
Ex4Me
Web hosting


Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER

Illinois law allows sale of home baked goods, jams, jellies at farmers markets

free web site traffic and promotion
jams

Illinois law allows sale of home baked goods, jams, jellies at farmers markets

Though it opened three years ago, something has always been missing from the Melting Pot Market in Granite City.

Jams, jellies, pies, cookies, breads,” rattled off Brenda Whitaker, the market master, as she excitedly explained new products able to be sold at the market, and farmers markets across the state, thanks to the Cottage Food Law that went into effect this year. The law allows non-potentially hazardous foods, like apple pie, dried oregano or peach preserves, to be produced in a home kitchen and sold at open-air farmers markets like the Melting Pot Market and Edwardsville’s Land of Goshen Community Market. Until this year, that was illegal in Illinois.

About five years ago, the state department of health clarified that it was illegal to sell home produced goods at farmers markets because home baking was not compliant with state standards for food safety and handling.

Crusty breads, jams and fruit butters were removed from farmers markets, unless they were produced in a state-inspected commercial kitchen.

“We’ve had a number of people over the years that were not allowed to continue participating because of health department actions, people who have switched to health inspected kitchen who will probably switch back to cottage food,” said Sherry Chase, market master Goshen Community Market, which opens May 12.

The cost to build or rent a commercial kitchen is out of the question for cottage food producers, who are often home cooks looking to make a little extra cash or farmers trying to supplement their income during the off-season.

The Cottage Food Law makes it easier and cheaper to sell homemade foods at farmers markets. Cottage Food producers must register with their county health department, which costs $50, and pass a 15-hour food sanitation course, also at a cost. But that’s far cheaper than renting or building a commercial kitchen, which costs tens of thousands of dollars. The Cottage Food bill was drafted with the goal of creating scale-appropriate regulations to encourage entrepreneurship, said Wes King, policy coordinator for the Illinois Stewardship Alliance, a nonprofit organization that promotes local food systems and sustainability.

“Ideally we’d hope to see the baker who got a great recipe for a baked good testing it out and being so successful using the Cottage Food Law they will want to expand,” King said. “It creates an opportunity for entrepreneurs.”

For 222 Artisan Bakery in Edwardsville that was the case, said Chase.

“They started selling coffee at the market and that evolved into a storefront and bakery,” she said. “Cottage foods allow you to experiment and test products, talk to customers directly, and develop a business plan.”

Word of the law is slowly spreading in Madison County. Whitaker said 15 people have contacted her about becoming cottage food vendors. Some producers have expressed reservations, Chase said, because of a section on the Madison County Health Department’s registration application states the county can investigate a home kitchen “in the event of a consumer complain or food-borne illness outbreak.”

“They understand the law says the health department is required to inspect,” Chase said. “Their concern is about how much latitude is given to that inspection. It feels like an invasion of privacy.”

“We will not be inspecting the cottage food vendors. Only if it comes to our attention that someone is violating,” said Mary Cooper, Madison County Health Department environmental health services manager. She added that inspections could come in the form of random compliance checks at markets.

There are strict regulations on what cottage food producers can sell: jams, jellies and preserves; fruit butters; breads, cookies, cakes, pastries and high-acid fruit pies; and dried herbs and teas. Products with pumpkin, banana and dairy are among those prohibited for sale. Additionally, all cottage foods and jams have to sport a label with several requirements including the statement “This product was produced in a home kitchen not subject to public health inspection that may also process common food allergens.”

The required food sanitation course covers everything from cross contamination to microbiology.

“This is the same class that the restaurants, schools, hospitals and delivery men in the state of Illinois have to take,” Cooper said. She said she thinks the class is comprehensive enough to ensure cottage food producers keep a sanitary environment and make safe food.

Contact reporter Sarah Baraba at 618-344-0264, ext. 133


If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest.

Get the best website builder available anywhere –SBI! Lick here for more information


jams

Return from jams to Home Page


If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:
facebook likes google exchange
Ex4Me
Likerr.eu
GetLikeHits.com
Ex4Me


Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER

Farmers markets cropping up at hospitals

markets

Farmers markets cropping up at hospitals

Hospitals and health clinics have pharmacies for their patients, but why not add a place to pick up vegetables and fruits, too?

After years of treating their clientele for the ravages of poor nutrition — obesity, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and stroke — some doctors finally are catching on to the idea that prescribing carrots instead of pharmaceutical drugs might be a better option. It’s preventive medicine 101.

The Harris County Hospital District serving Houston, Texas, and its surroundings is among just a handful of health organizations that have incorporated full-fledged farmers markets into its facilities. The reasons are many: Most of the patients coming to its clinics are poor; their neighborhoods are largely devoid of grocery stores selling healthy foods and instead are filled with fast-food outlets and small shops selling snacks; and many of those people with access to supermarkets either cannot afford fresh foods there or do not understand basic nutrition.

As a result, the poor and middle class living in these murky food swamps, where unhealthy food is cheaper and more plentiful than healthy food, suffer disproportionately from high rates of obesity and related diseases. A doctor’s advice to “eat better” is essentially useless given these circumstances. [Diabetes Obesity in America (Infographic)]

The Harris County Hospital District has partnered with a Houston-based nonprofit organization called Veggie Pals to offer fresh vegetables and fruits at a subsidized price via the farmers markets, to compete with the cheaper food options in these patients’ neighborhoods. The easy availability — it’s just down the hallway from the doctor’s office — is coupled with advice about the benefits of these foods and how to prepare them.

Since its start in November 2011, the program, called Healthy Harvest, has sold more than 5 tons of produce from the market, according to Ann Smith Barnes, the medical director of the hospital system’s Weight Management and Disease Prevention department. The program is offered at five facilities and is growing.

Kaiser Permanente, based in Oakland, Calif., is a hospital system that has pioneered workplace farmers markets, albeit originally for its workers and people in the community, not necessarily for its patients. Kaiser Permanente’s program started more than a decade ago at its Oakland headquarters with just a simple, weekly markets on its sidewalk featuring local farmers. The program was a hit and has since spread to dozens of its facilities around the country.

Elsewhere, nonprofits are working in poor communities to enable the use of food stamps at farmers markets, where typically only cash is accepted. Some programs try to sweeten the deal by doubling the face value of the food stamps so that shoppers can buy twice as much produce.

Truth be told, many vegetables aren’t necessarily more expensive than fast food. A one-pound bag of carrots costs only about 60 cents; peeled, these carrots can be a healthy, sweet snack for pennies a day. And now at health clinic markets near you, you just might hear a doctor say, “Take two carrots and call me in the morning.”

  • 5 Wacky Things That Are Good for Your Health
  • 7 Diet Tricks That Really Work
  • 10 New Ways to Eat Well

 

Fruit with Bill & Sheila

_____________________________________________________________________
If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest. This site is hosted by (click on the graphic for more information)markets

Return from markets to Home Page


If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:
facebook likes google exchange
Ex4Me
Earn Coins Google +1
Ex4Me
Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER