SUPPLIER NEWS:
NATURALLY HEALTHY:
NEW PRODUCTS:
Calico Cottage
Kombucha Town
Runamok Maple
SEE PAGE 14
SEE PAGE 16
SEE PAGE 28
GOURMET NEWS
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T H E
B U S I N E S S
VOLUME 85, NUMBER 8 AUGUST 2020 n $7.00
NEWS & NOTES n
Specialty Food Sales Hit $158.4 Billion PAGE 6
RETAILER NEWS n
Meijer Opens Five Supercenters in the Midwest PAGE 10
SUPPLIER NEWS n
Flathau’s Fine Foods PAGE 12
NATURALLY HEALTHY n
Nature’s Path Provides Products for Value-Conscious Pandemicked Consumers PAGE 15
SPECIAL FEATURE n
Comfort Foods PAGE 17
News..............................................6 Ad Index .......................................30
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N E W S P A P E R
F O R
T H E
G O U R M E T
I N D U S T R Y
Boot-Strapping a Novel Food System for a Nation of Desert Dwellers BY LORRIE BAUMANN
Cherilyn Yazzie is a woman on a mission to improve the health of the people around her on the Navajo Nation by increasing food self-sufficiency and access to fresh produce in a very rural area that sits as a sovereign entity in the Four Corners region of the United States, spanning 27,000 square miles in New Mexico, Arizona and Utah – an area roughly the size of West Virginia. Almost the entire Navajo Nation is classified as a food desert by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and only 13 grocery stores were operating within the Nation as of November, 2019.
Those small stores predominately offer highly processed foods with low nutritional value and little in the way of fresh fruits and vegetables. Navajo Nation's food insecurity rates are among the highest in the United States, at 76.7 percent. Household food insecurity is linked to risks of obesity, hypertension and type 2 diabetes. Yazzie was aware that people in her community who didn't have either easy access to a grocery store or homes served by an electrical grid and a municipal water system were heavily dependent on dried and canned foods that they got from either a conven-
tional grocery store or from U.S. government food distributions. “With living off-grid, food storage is an issue that requires frequent trips to the grocery store and there are food safety issues,” she said. She'd become an expert in many of those issues because she has a background in public health, working on education programs to educate tribal members about nutrition. She'd talk to school children about nutrition and its effects on their health only to be told that it was useless for her students to learn how to
Utopihen Farms is the newest brand of premium eggs from a family that’s in its fourth generation of raising laying hens and selling their eggs. It’s a scion of Nature’s Yoke, a producer of 100 percent natural premium eggs since George Weaver III launched the
brand in 2000. Now, he and his son George Weaver IV are inviting consumers to come along with them on a journey with a brand that’s dedicated to the production of pasture-raised eggs. That journey starts in the eastern U.S. where Utopihen Farms currently has distribution, but the company is now making plans to expand the brand’s reach into the Midwest
BY LORRIE BAUMANN
later this year – depending on the COVID-19 pandemic – and ultimately west from there. “We conceived Utopihen Farms to invite consumers to join us in the journey to make positive change in the world,” Weaver IV said. “We’re inviting them to make the change we want to see in the world.... It’s a movement; it’s not just an egg brand. It’s a move to make a journey toward, not just sustainable farming, but sustainable living and to have a larger
Seely Mint Patties have a depth of flavor that’s unmatched by conventional varieties of the same confection. Hand-made in Oregon with Fair Trade-certified European dark chocolate and heirloom peppermint oil grown on one of the last remaining mint farms in the U.S., they’re the product of a fourth-generation farming family that’s been growing mint in the lower Columbia River basin since the middle of World War II. Mike Seely, today’s farmer, says that his grandparents switched their farm from onions to mint while his dad and his uncle were fighting in the Pacific campaign during World War II. A few farms in the region were already growing mint, and it was a crop they hoped to be able to make some money with and could farm without help from their sons. “Dad had spent a year at the University
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Pasture-Raised Eggs for a Sustainable Future BY LORRIE BAUMANN
Real Mint Flavor from a Farming Family
JK Adams Store Feeds the Pandemic-Inspired Need to Bake BY LORRIE BAUMANN
When the COVID-19 pandemic sent Americans home to their kitchens to bake away some of their stress, The Kitchen Store at JK Adams was ready for them with stock that includes not only JK Adams rolling pins and chopping boards but also the baking pans specialty baking ingredients to go along with them, according to Jessi Kerner, JK Adams’ Director of Ecommerce and Danielle Smith, who manages the store that’s located on the premises of JK Adams’ headquarters plant in Dorset, Vermont. JK Adams is marking 75 years
in business this year, and 2020 was supposed to be a year of celebration for the company founded on December 31, 1944. Instead, it has turned out to be the year of the pandemic. Vermont Governor Phil Scott issued a “Stay Home, Stay Safe” emergency order that declared that, “Effective March 25, 2020 at 5:00 p.m., all businesses and not-forprofit entities not expressly exempted in the order must suspend all in-person business operations. Operations that can be conducted online or by phone, or sales that can be facilitated with curbside pickup or delivery
only, can continue.” The Kitchen Store was allowed to continue operations, with curbside pickup, as an essential business, since it sells, in addition to its kitchenware, those baking ingredients and other specialty foods, including products from Nitty Gritty Grain, Co., singlesource, small-batch grain products from a seventh-generation Vermont farming family. “One of the biggest items that we sold during the height of the pandemic was flour,” Kerner said. With 3,500 square feet of space on three floors of the JK Adams factory facility, The Kitchen Store
has plenty of room for a range of specialty pantry items that includes Dorset Maple Reserve’s Pure Vermont Maple Syrup to go with Halladay’s Buttermilk Pancake Mix, Granny Blossom’s Corn Relish and Smokey Apple BBQ Sauce, multiple varieties of Castleton Crackers, pickle kits from Pearl and Johnny, Ajiri teas and coffees and a wide selection of products from Stonewall Kitchen, a fellow New England company. “Vermont is probably the first thing we’re looking at, and then we’ll carry something Continued on PAGE 10