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Collaborative INSIGHTS Newsletter
Providing Transparency To Alaska's Food Supply Chain
4 December, 2007 VOLUME 4 ISSUE 17  



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Local Farmers Market Produces Newsletter
Kudo's To The Mud Goddess
Answering Your Questions On Alaska Nutraceuticals
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Ester Farm Wins Award For Community Food Project
Wind Power In Rural America
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Archive Issues
Issue 16, Matanuska Valley
October 8, 2007
Issue 15, Interior Alaska and Fairbanks
September 15, 2007
Issue 14, Yakutat
August 15, 2007
Issue 14, Kenai Peninsula - Part 2
August 1, 2007
Issue 22, Kenai Peninsula - Part 1 of 2
June 1, 2007
Issue 21, Ketchikan Alaska
April 10, 2007
Issue 20, Kodiak Island
March 1, 2007
Issue 18, Unalaska /Dutch Harbor '07
February 1, 2007
Issue 17 - 2007 Collaborations
January 15, 2007
Issue 18, Interior Alaska - Bison, Birch Syrup and Beauty Products
December 15, 2006

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LAST ISSUE: Last issue's collaborators?   Mary Smith and Tim Lathrop of the Plitt Company  (Chicago, Seattle, BC, Alaska, Chesapeake and Boston) who were out fishing so late one Alaska summer's night  - that it was actually dark.  That is a long day of meetings to be topped off on the river courtesy John Hodel and Mark Ingrim.


Local Farmers Market Produces Newsletter

Although it isn't exactly summer yet, it's not too early to get your name on the list to receive the South Anchorage Farmers' Market Newsletter.    Regular visitors to this market can sign up to receive this newsletter to help them prepare for what to expect at the next marketplace.    Read the issue below and follow the instructions on signing up.  It's free, it's fresh. 

With the growning number of consumers seeking local food sources, the choice of Farmers Markets throughout Alaska is also growing with great success.   For a complete list of Farmers Markets
click here.



Thursday, October 18, 2007
Greetings!
This will be the last newsletter of the year, since next Saturday is our last Farmers’ Market! Don’t forget, the location for these October market days is behind the Dimond Center, in front of the Dimond Center Hotel, near Wal*Mart.
I don’t know about you, but I was sure impressed by the amazing variety of beautiful vegetables at the market last Saturday! And chilly temperatures or no, this is the time when our cold-temperature-loving produce is sweet and delicious after these frosts. Come out and stock up with all those long-storing vegetables: squash, cabbage, carrots, potatoes, onions, and beets. And get your last chance at the lovely green Alaskan vegetables!
I was amazed at the fresh greens at Mr. Rempel’s stand… of course I stocked up on more collards, but there was spinach, too! And I don’t think you can beat his carrots.
Don’t forget the delicious apple butter and jams at Alex Davis’ stand, and he had boxes of big, beautiful chioggia beets! (Yes, I bought a box… couldn’t resist!) You can still find the cheese from Cranberry Ridge Farms at Alex’s stand, too—have you tried all the varieties yet?
What about the fantastic variety of potatoes from Mr. Stockwell? He still has those dark purple potatoes, and my favorite, the Butterballs (they roast up so brown and caramelly—he thinks it’s because they have a higher sugar content) plus gorgeous little wrinkly Savoy cabbages!
Did you get a load of the storage onions at VanderWeele Farms? This will be the first year you can get Alaskan storage onions—how great is that? Unlike onions you buy at the grocery store, these onions are so fresh and juicy that they squeak when you cut them up. I’ll be cooking up hearty soups and stews all winter with those babies! I made an incredible tomato soup with them this week, but I’m going to save that recipe for my Bakery Bulletin next week. Email me at riseandshine@gci.net if you’d like to sign up. And have you bought your pumpkin yet?
David at Mile 5.2 Greenhouses still had lots of herbs that you can buy to overwinter in your window… wouldn’t it be fun to have fresh thyme for the picking all winter?
Rise & Shine Bakery has moved to winter venues—if you’d like more information about ordering and picking up bread through the winter, email us at riseandshine@gci.net.
Your turn!
I wanted to say thank you for a wonderful summer—without you, there would be no Farmers’ Market! I know it takes a special effort to come out and support your local farmers on Saturdays and Wednesdays, and it sure is appreciated. In that vein, as the Market Reporter, I’d like to ask YOU a few questions! After all, it’s your market! Do you have suggestions for us? We’d love to hear from you—what you like, what you don’t like about the market, and how we can serve you better. Don’t feel like you have to answer all the questions—we’d just love to hear your input on whatever you’d like to write about.
Market Logistics
Since last summer, the market has really taken off… How fantastic that the farmers came, and then you did, too!
1. How did you hear about the market?
2. What do you think about the hours and days of the market? The beginning dates and ending dates?
3. Any comments on the location?
4. How often did you go the market, and did you mostly hit the Wednesday market or the Saturday one?

Newsletter
This has been such a fun summer, reporting on what’s new at the different stands at the market, and sharing some of my favorite recipes.
1. What influence did the newsletter have on your market-going? Did it help remind you to go to the market on Saturday or Wednesday?
2. What did you think of the weekly commentaries on the fresh produce? Did you want more detailed descriptions of what the farmers had?
3. Did the descriptions of different vegetables and other foods inspire you to try new things, shop at different farmers’ stands, help you plan for your shopping, or your weekly meals? If so, how?
4. What did you think of the recipes? Did you wish the recipes were simpler, or more complicated? Did they inspire you to try vegetables or other foods that you hadn’t tried before?
5. What did you wish was in the newsletter that wasn’t there?

Food
We discovered this year that introducing a new vegetable to the market this year (eggplant) was quite successful. We think part of the reason for its success was because people had read about the eggplants in the newsletter. The newsletter can give farmers a little extra confidence to try growing new things, since they know I can get the information to you about a new product.
1. Do you have comments you’d like to share about the products you found at the market this year? Positive or negative, we’d appreciate your feedback.
2. Is there a new vegetable or fruit you’d like to see at the market that you think might be grown here? (Want to hear my idea? Fennel!)
3. What about other foods? Are there other Alaskan products you can think of that would be good additions to the market?
Next year
As a little preview for next year… the Saturday South Anchorage market will open in May—I’ll let you know in an email next year what Saturday it’ll start. The Wednesday market will start on July 2nd. The hours of the Saturday market next year will be the same as this year (9am-2pm), but the Wednesday market hours will be a bit earlier, and a bit shorter: from 10am to 4pm.

October 20: The last South Anchorage Farmers' Market of 2007! Hours: 10am-2pm
Location: Dimond Center, in front of the Dimond Center Hotel, behind the mall near WalMart.

For more information about the market, contact Arthur Keyes, South Anchorage Farmers' Market Manager, at 354-5833, or at amkeyes@mtaonline.net.
You’re getting this email because you’ve visited the South Anchorage Farmers' Market and signed up on our email list. Please respond to this email if you’d like to be removed from this list, or if you’ve gotten this message from a friend and would like to be added to the list. Also, let me know if you’d like back issues of the newsletter—just write to me at southanchoragefarmersmarket@gmail.com.
Cheers! And see you at the market!
Alison Arians


 
Buyers Guide - Wild Alaska Salmon Wrap



Available At Taco-Loco
600 West International Airport Road
Anchorage, Alaska 99518

In 2008 At Your Local Grocer
Food & Related Events

Global food and related tradeshows, conferences and events that encourage learning, access and business connections.

Alaska School Nutrition Association
 Conference and Show
December 4th-6, 2007 
Anchorage, Alaska

Anchorage Air Cargo
Holiday Social, 5-7:30
December 6, 2007
Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum

Fancy Food Show
January 13-15
San Diego, California

Japan International Seafood & Technology
Jan. 23-24, 2008 
Osaka, Japan

Cool Chain Europe
January 28-30, 2008
Brussels, Belgium
  
Pacific Fisheries Technologists Conference
February 3-6, 2008
San Francisco, California

Symphony of Seafood
January 31, 2008
Anchorage, Alaska

Boston Seafood Show
February 24-26
Boston, Massachussets

Alaska Diversified Livestock Association
February 21-22, 2008
Anchorage, Alaska


Natural Products Expo West
March 13-16, 2008
Anaheim, California

Seoul International Seafood Show
Mar. 27-30, 2008
Seoul, South Korea

National Restaurant Show
May 17-20, 2008
Chicago, Illinois

Japan Int'l Seafood & Technology
July 2008
Tokyo, Japan


View Into Alaska

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Ed's Kasilof Seafoods





2008
Symphony of Seafood
Deadline Extended For Entries
December 14, 2007

January 23 - Seattle

January 31 - Gala Soiree
Awards Ceremony

Anchorage, Alaska


Kahiltna Birchworks
www.alaskabirchsyrup.com





GFC is solely supported by its membership - companies and organizations, working together to create greater efficiencies in the supply chain of food and food-based products.  Global Food Collaborative Membership 


Published by Global Food Collaborative - Alaska
Copyright © 2007 Global Food Collaborative, LLC. All rights reserved.
Global Food Collaborative, LLC. and its agents used their best efforts in collecting and preparing the information published herein. However, Global Food Collaborative does not assume, and hereby disclaims, any and all liability for any loss or damage caused by errors, whether such errors resulted from negligence, accident, or other causes.
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