Month: July 2022

Pickles and Ferments

Pickles and Ferments

By Kimberly Hopkins, Guest Writer! This is Kim Hopkins, Salem Depot member, subbing for Julie in writing this week’s article so she can take a much needed vacation. I hope you are all finding ways to keep cool in this heat, and I hope the staff 

Grant Family Eggs – Post from 2016

Grant Family Eggs – Post from 2016

Last fall the Farm Direct Coop and Grant’s Family Farm arranged to come together on an adventure that is our 2016 pastured egg share. The eggs will be lovingly laid by organically fed, pastured hens who now reside in Essex, Ma. The chicken’s journey began 

Leftovers – Post from 2016

Leftovers – Post from 2016

After volunteering last week, a Melrose member made a request that I explain who we partner with for donations, and how it came to be.

She was impressed by the fact the local food pantry came to pick up the leftovers. She also made inquiry about the purchasing process, and how we can know exactly what we are getting. I will save that story for next week, and focus on the first part.

Leftovers are a reality. Some members miss their Share. You may have done it yourself. We have to order everyone’s Share every week unless there has been a hold placed (which in itself only became possible last year). So if four Shares miss, several other members do not take their cabbage or greens, the grower sent a little too much, or for some other unknown reason, there will be leftovers.

We always invite members who miss to go at the end (6:50 ish) of any depot day, speak to the coordinator, and see if they will be able to recoup their loss.

Once these processes are complete – the leftovers must find a home.

Back in the days of the Marblehead Eco-Farm, I believe the leftovers were brought to My Brothers Table in Lynn, a soup kitchen that provides free meals twice a day M-F and once per weekend day. They rely solely on private donations and are sponsoring a walk on October 15th. My Brother’s Table remained the recipient of leftovers for many years out of the Marblehead location.

We organized a volunteer to do the pantry run at the end of the depot day. The volunteer was able to get from Marblehead to Lynn before the kitchen closed up for the evening. We maintained this system for many years until four years ago.

In August of 2013, I received an email from the Outreach Coordinator at the Marblehead Council on Aging. The Department of Agricultural Resources in MA started a program in the early 1980’s to provide coupons for fresh food at local farmers markets to WIC (Women, Infants, Children) recipients and low-income seniors. The state provides a statistical number of coupons, meaning based on the population of the town, there is a formula for determining how many coupons are needed.

When Marla Contacted me, she had 18 seniors who were on a wait-list to receive these coupons. Though they receive over 40 coupons, they needed more.

She wondered if it were possible for her to come pick up some leftover produce at the end of the night to satisfy those seniors on the wait-list. Of course! We have extras every depot day. We invited Marla to come by and see what we have. She was happy to receive what we offered, noting it was of good quality, and surprised by the volume. This cold call turned into a program whereby the depot coordinator drops the leftovers at the senior center. Marla employs a crew of volunteers to drive portions of the leftovers out to each elderly housing complex in the city so those seniors who cannot drive can benefit as well. We have kept the Council on Aging in Marblehead as the recipient of the leftovers for these past four years.

It feels right to keep the food in the community. We have received some really nice cards and letters of appreciation over the years.

When the Eco-Farm expanded to Salem in 2000, we needed to find a place to bring the end of night surplus. The Salem Mission was the name of a homeless shelter in downtown Salem – originally in a church on Crombie Street, and now in the former Youth Center at the decommissioned St. Mary’s Italian Church and renamed Lifebridge.

Lifebridge aims to end homelessness and provides three meals a day almost every day to residents of the shelter and those in need in the community. At the end of the night or the next morning, the depot coordinator (originally me, Julie) would bring the leftover goods to Lifebridge.

At that time, they partnered with St Joseph’s Food Pantry, and any food not used up through meals would go directly to the food pantry. A few changes at St Joseph Pantry and Lifebridge caused our food not to be utilized as quickly as necessary, so started going over to My Brothers Table in Lynn.

One or two times over these years I had dropped some apples and squash off at the senior center in Salem and was rewarded with a really nice note signed by many. I wondered if they would like to partner with us to receive leftovers twice a week. I placed a call to the director and inquired if the seniors would welcome the food? Would it be distributed and utilized? Oh yes was the answer.

So twice a week, late morning when there are Salem seniors there for programs or lunch, I drop off what ever may have been left the night before.

I happen to also work for a local food pantry called The Salem Pantry housed in the former Unitarian Universalist Church at 211 Bridge St in Salem, now a non-profit organization with a multi-use building called The Bridge .

A job I took when homeschooling my children, we would pick up and unload the canned and shelf stable food that fills the bags to be given out each month. On the last Saturday of the month, any Salem resident with proof of residency can attend the pantry for much-needed supplies.

There is very little fresh produce available to the pantry clients. I started diverting the final week of the months produce to the pantry.

 When we expanded to Melrose in 2005, there were myriad challenges. I wasn’t thinking about end of day donations until we had secured permission, a temporary location, and were about to open. I got a call from Joan of Arc Servant’s Heart Food Pantry who wanted to join the coop to provide produce to people in the pantry. What a gift!

I asked if she would be interested in taking all the left behind produce/missed Shares? She was happy to be able to offer this produce to those who used the food pantry. When we expanded to the second day, we needed a further plan and landed on asking a volunteer to take the leftovers after depot closing and drive them Wednesday morning to Bread of Life in Malden. Today, we have a volunteer drive Tuesday leftovers to A Servants Heart where they store the goods in their fridge until Friday pantry day.When we hosted a celebratory Harvest Dinner for our 20th anniversary four years ago, we earned enough of a surplus from ticket sales to send financial donation to The Salem Pantry, Marblehead Food Pantry , and A Servant’s Heart.

We have used surplus Community Aid money to buy bushels of apples for several local pantries and organizations as requested by our members (this was an unusual year where we had some unspent money in the Community Aid Fund – this only happened once).

We are proud to partner with each of these organizations. What is an end of night concern for us (have you closed the depot on a heavy vacation week in August when there is SO MUCH FOOD leftover it is inexplicable?) is an incredible benefit to others.

 One other way we decided to help those who are food insecure, was to apply to accept SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program commonly referred to as food stamps) benefits about five years ago. We have had a Community Aid Fund for many years. We offer financial help to those who feel they cannot fully afford a Share.

 This fund is populated by both the FDC and our members – THANK YOU if you donated!

We decided that those members who receive SNAP should be able to pay for their FDC Fruit and Veggie Shares with their benefit. We now have aid recipients, SNAP users, and new this year something called the HIP program. This is a pilot in MA called the Healthy Incentives Program. There was a lot of paperwork, and government legalese to wade through (Thank You Tamara!!) to get us approved, but we are able to offer this program to SNAP users. How it works is if a member buys their Fruit and Veggie Share with the SNAP card, up to a predetermined amount goes back on their card instantly, so they can buy more, but are guaranteed to have some healthy choices in their diet.

If you want to hear about another aspect of the FDC, just ask.

Apples – Post from 2016

Apples – Post from 2016

IPM Apples One bushel of apples weighs 32 to 38 pounds depending on variety and orchard. We are sourcing from Apex Orchard – Shelburne Falls, MA, Brooksby Farm – Peabody, MA, Cider Hill farm, Amesbury, MA and Cold Spring Orchard – Belchertown, MA. We source 

Immigration – post from 2017

Immigration – post from 2017

By Julie Pottier-Brown On Saturday, April 8th (2017), I attended a meeting in Hadley, MA hosted by Wally Czajkowski at Plainville Farm. The purpose of this meeting was to discuss the current administration’s handling of our country’s immigration policy. Cars and trucks lined the drive 

How Does FDC Find Growers? – post from 2016

How Does FDC Find Growers? – post from 2016

MA Grown and Fresher

By Julie Pottier-Brown, Operations Manager
Technology has changed, but word of mouth is still the best way for us to find suppliers. We used to ask our growers if they had farmer friends who could supply fruit and produce not grown by them. Growers want their neighbors to succeed as much as they want that for themselves. We can usually glean some good leads this way. In the early 2000’s there used to be a publication put out by the MA Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) called The Green Guide which listed growers across the state, their products and whether they were retail, wholesale or pick your own (PYO) operations. It was a very useful tool, even when it was out of date. The state of MA started a digital version during 2020. This version has job postings and seekers as well as product offerings.

Current FDC methods still include asking farmers about their friends, but we also find products at farmers markets, local product trade shows, online trade and wholesale platforms as well as recommendations of our members. We have been sampling an organic dip/dressing called Eco-Bean made in Vermont. Melrose gets to try it this week. This relationship started from a post on Instagram.

Got a recommendation for us? Miss something from our store you tried once & haven’t seen it in stock recently?  Let us know.

Maitland Mountain Pickles – blog post from 2015

Maitland Mountain Pickles – blog post from 2015

Maitland Mountain Pickles are all the rage among Boston area foodies. I had my first taste this past year when I picked up my December bulk order from the Farm Direct Coop (FDC). Of course, I’ve always liked pickles, but these pickles took my love 

Irish Times Elizabeth Benbow – blog post from 2015

Irish Times Elizabeth Benbow – blog post from 2015

Throughout the month of November (2015) Irish Times featured food stories from expats across the globe. Farm Direct Coop member Elizabeth Benbow has enjoyed the last five years as an Irish expat in Massachusetts and in the November 9, 2015 issue of Irish Times, Elizabeth described 

How to Use All Your Shares – Blog Post from 2018

How to Use All Your Shares – Blog Post from 2018

Written by guest editor Susan Butterworth

A few days ago, Maria Westberg Adams shared her blog post on How to Use all your Farm Share Veggies on the FDC Facebook page.

Here’s a link to her web site Halsa Nutrition.

One of her tips is to make a list of what you received and plan meals around it. Posting a list on the refrigerator door, reminding us what’s in there has been a huge help at our house. Storing the produce properly ( thank you to the “How to Store” section in the newsletter!) and Cleaning out the refrigerator once a week has also been hugely helpful to happily getting the most from my Share.

Way, way down the page, Maria lists cooking tips. My mental ears perked up when I got to Grilling. Last summer, for my birthday, my kids gave me my first gas grill. I have to say that Grilling has changed my life when it comes to using and enjoying my veg.

I love roasted vegetables in the winter, but in summer it is such a pleasure to step out onto my little side deck with a platter of gorgeous, fresh vegetables, sliced or cut into wedges, and enjoy the evening air, breeze, birdsong, butterflies and greenery, and flowers, while I cook. Grilling reminds me to be grateful that I live in paradise and have a bounty of beautiful fresh produce in my kitchen.

I peruse the list on my refrigerator door. The other night, a hot one, we had grilled local striped bass in the place of honor on our table. For the sides, it was a clean-out-the-fridge night. We had a slaw made with the napa cabbage, garlic scapes, and carrots from the share. I make a vaguely Asian dressing with toasted sesame oil, rice vinegar, ginger and mustard. Then we prepared the platter of veg for the grill: golden beets, garlic scapes, a parsnip (remember the spring-dug parsnips?), and broccoli.

I’m a minimalist at the grill; I brush everything with Dancing Goat olive oil, use a little salt and pepper, and that’s it.

I like to let the flavor of the veg shine through. It’s interesting how the flavors of the grilled vegetables bloom. Last summer I grilled green cabbage in wedges until it was both crunchy and tender. Did not taste at all like the cabbage my mom used to serve in boiled dinner. Red cabbage would be amazing on the grill. Are you wondering how to use your fennel? Cut into wedges and grill. Simple, delicious. Grilled beets are great; so are grilled onion slices, bok choy, zucchini slices or halves, and mushrooms. I used to boil or roast my corn on the cob. Now I grill it, in the husk. Pairs with grilled tomato slices and basil.

My essential tools are: a silicone brush for brushing with oil and a pair of tongs. The third essential tool is Google. Google grilled corn or grilled fennel or whatever vegetable is floating around the fridge. Lots of recipes to choose from. Easy Peasy. Enjoy your Share!

Riverland Farms – Sweet Potatoes – blog post from 2015

Riverland Farms – Sweet Potatoes – blog post from 2015

 ‘Our friends over at Riverland Farm wrote up a nice piece in their newsletter about their sweet potatoes crop. With their permission, we’re sharing an excerpt of that article here with all of you. Enjoy!  Sweet Potatoes  by Riverland Farm Last week we pulled in