Gourmet News • May 2021

Page 1

FEATURED PRODUCT:

FEATURED PRODUCT:

SPECIAL ISSUE INSIDE:

Borges USA

Enstrom Candies

Naturally Healthy

SEE PAGE 18 (Following Naturally Healthy)

SEE PAGE 20 (Following Naturally Healthy)

SEE INSERT

GOURMET NEWS www.gourmetnews.com

®

T H E

B U S I N E S S

VOLUME 86 • NUMBER 5 MAY 2021 • $7.00 • Cascadia Creamery Wins Fourth Good Food Award PAGE 8

• Super Indulgent Ice Creams Offer Desserts for Dessert PAGE 10

• A Mild-Flavored Milk for the Dairy Averse PAGE 10

• Healthy Snacks from the Pacific Northwest PAGE 12

• Newell Brands Rewards Small Businesses Caring for Community PAGE 12

• Fontanafredda and FPT Industrial Prepare for World’s First Zero-Emissions Barolo

N E W S P A P E R

BY LORRIE BAUMANN

You won’t find either compassion or respect listed on the ingredients labels for Wicked Crisps, a brand of snack crisps that requires no compromises from consumers who want bold contemporary flavors in a snack that doesn’t ignore their nutritional needs. The seven flavors of vegetable crisps sold under the brand are Red Curry Hummus, a field pea hummus made into a crisp and baked with red curry flavor; Roasted Garlic and Asiago Cheese, which is what it sounds like baked into a broccoli crisp; Cheesy Cheese Pizza, which is a tomato crisp with cheese flavor baked in; Sea Salt and Hummus, which is a field pea hummus crisp

BY LORRIE BAUMANN

Little Toad Creek Brewery & Distillery is bringing out a Classic

(Following Naturally Healthy)

• Editor’s Picks (Following Naturally Healthy)

• Ad Index PAGE 24

G O U R M E T

sprinkled with sea salt; Spinach Parmesan, which features Parmesan cheese baked into a spinach crisp; Sweet Potato Souffle, which combined whole sweet potatoes in a crisp with a little honey to sweeten it and vanilla for flavor; and Spring Vegetable Medley, which combines tomatoes, spinach, broccoli, sweet potatoes and field peas together with a little salt. The Spring Vegetable Medley contains 120 calories in a 21-crisp serving that also delivers 13 percent of the daily value of calcium and just 3 grams of fat and 1 gram

I N D U S T R Y

of total sugars. The 4-ounce bag contains four servings. The Sweet

(Following Naturally Healthy)

Mule in a can this month to join a line of three other playful takes

on the Moscow Mule that are made from real ingredients and then canned for consumers who plan to spend some time outdoors with their friends this summer while enjoying cocktails that feature complex flavors and natural ingredients. The three original flavors in the line are the Watermelon Jalapeño MixedUp Mule, Mojito Mixed-Up Mule and Gin & Grapefruit Mixed-Up Mule.

Maybe the Dish Should Be Grits and Shrimp BY LORRIE BAUMANN

“They’re all not-from-concentrate and they pack all that fresh, natural flavor into the can,” said Teresa Dahl-Bredine, co-Owner of Little Toad Creek along with her husband, David Crosley. Their business started out nine years ago as a remote inn and tavern at Lake Roberts, New Mexico, which is surrounded by the Gila Wilderness Area, the nation’s first national wilderness area – designated as wilderness in 1924 at the instigation of environmentalist

Marsh Hen Mill won two Good Food Awards this year, one for its Unicorn Grits and one for Black Eyed Peas. Unicorn Grits are so called because they’re made from a red corn, and the addition of a little lemon or lime juice as they’re cooking brightens the color to add a little magic, according to the company. If it’s a surprise to see a brand other than Geechie Boy Mill winning prestigious prizes for grits, then you won’t be at all surprised to learn that they’re the same company – Geechie Boy Mill has changed its name to Marsh Hen Mill in a graceful gesture of acquiescence to the same kind of objections that caused Quaker Oats to retire Aunt Jemima and Mars Inc. to rename Uncle Ben’s Rice. “Geechie” is a name that refers to the Gullah Geechie, the descendants of enslaved people who settled in the lowland areas of the Carolinas and Georgia. For a white farmer to call his tomato operation Geechie Boy was culturally acceptable in 1968, when Raymond Tumbleston trademarked the name and painted it on the sides of all of his buildings. Tumbleston eventually sold the

Continued on PAGE 16

Continued on PAGE 14

Potato Souffle contains 3 grams of fat and 3 grams of sugar in a 21crisp serving that also delivers 12 percent of daily calcium. They’re gluten free, non-GMO, organic

Half a World Southwest from Moscow

• Featured Products

PAGE 22

T H E

A Crunchy Snack That’s Wicked Good

PAGE 16

PAGE 17

F O R

Continued on PAGE 13

Cookies to Feed the Homeless and Hungry BY LORRIE BAUMANN

Mystery novelist Charlotte MacLeod knew that all she had to say to describe a character that she wanted her readers to love was that she looked like a woman who made good cookies and would give you some. Angela Pepe, Owner of CurlyTop Baker, is a woman who makes good cookies and, if you just needed a cookie, she’s also a woman who would give you some. If you can afford to buy your cookies, though, she’d rather sell them to you, especially if you’re buying for a specialty grocery store. “Twenty percent of our

proceeds go back to feeding the homeless. That’s our big why,” said Mark Pepe, her husband and CurlyTop Baker’s Managing Director. “We also delivered trays of cookies to hospitals last week. We’re always looking for ways to make an impact in our community.” Angela and Mark Pepe found a commercial kitchen and launched their cookie business three years

ago as a for-profit way to fund Angela’s charity project of feeding the homeless. “As word spread on how good a product she had, she wanted to expand feeding the homeless,” Mark said. “We’re working with specialty grocers and resorts in Las Vegas to develop our wholesale business.” CurlyTop Baker cookies are made with premium ingredients like pure vanilla, real butter, cage-

free eggs and are offered in unique flavors that include Bacon Chocolate Chip, Campfire Cookie (a cookie take on a s’more); Potato Chipper and Raspberry Black and White. “We feel that we don’t want to compromise on quality,” Mark said. “Our signature cookie is our Chocolate Chunk Original. We are very generous with our cookies. You can tell what kind of cookie it is just by looking at it.” In its four years in business, CurlyTop has expanded its market reach beyond the Las Vegas Continued on PAGE 16


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.