Saturday, May 30, 2009

Bailey's Buying Club - Ordering is now open for June 5, 2009

Hi Folks,

Wow! Friday's pick-up went pretty smoothly! We have a list of things to improve and are always looking for feedback on what we can do to make it work well for you and your family. (For example, shall I order the rhubarb pies again? They were runny. Erma says she'll thicken them up this week.) I'm wondering how we'll fit all the food in the hall come September. The hall already felt full of so much good food!
Local peanut farmers
I'm loving this peanut butter. It is made with Valencia peanuts which I think are the yummiest. I also like that they don't use fungicides as the peanut farmers in the Southern US do. If you ever are driving near Simcoe, take a half hour to stop at Kernal's in Vittoria - the farm and store that Nancy and Ernie Racz run. The store is surrounded by peanut fields. Real peanut plants! They have a bazillion different flavours of peanuts to sample. The great thing about Kernal's is that their store carries about 90% local instead of 10% like Picards. My kids love the little containers of vanilla ice cream that they sell with a swirl of chocolate sauce and peanuts. We eat it with a little wooden paddle at the picnic table outside next to the elephant statue. We have some of Kernal's peanut butter available still, so order while it lasts. We are able to sell at the same price that they sell it in their store.

If you're looking for a protein-rich snack, try Kernal's peanuts. We are offering salted, chili & lime (very tasty), and garlic. We'll have them on the spontaneous table with samples if you want to taste them first.
Buying locally means planning ahead?
Eating via Bailey's Buying Club means thinking in new ways, eh? In order to eat a local feast on Saturday when your in-laws are coming over, you have to think ahead and place the order the previous Monday or Tuesday. It makes us plan ahead. Not a bad thing. I wish I was one of those people that has the menus planned out for the whole week but I'm not. I just order a pile of food that looks good with a few vague ideas about meals in mind and then create meals out of a well-stocked kitchen. It's easy to cook when I have plenty of good food on hand. Hmmm, maybe one of you organized cooks out there could plan a local weekly menu for the rest of us and you could email us a list of what to order.
Here's my meal ideas for the week:
  • cranberry beans cooked with garlic into a soupy savoury mixture,
  • corn tortillas (with lime juice and salt sprinkled on them),
  • fresh salsa with tomatoes and green onions,
  • side salad from Antony at Soiled Reputations with cheese curds on top,
  • salad dressing? Wine vinegar infused with blueberry, salt and pepper.
It's Bean Season!
You may have thought that it was asparagus season, but I declare it bean season. Now is the time to bake and cook beans before it gets too hot. Last week we sourced local beans from Steve and Dianne Rounds (near London) for the first time. Hilbilly Beans does a great job of making handy mixes, including a recipe on the bag and cleaning the beans so you don't find a stone in your baked beans. So, while you're waiting for the sexier fresh fruits and vegetables to ripen, how about putting a big pot of beans on to simmer. I don't have to tell you that beans go really well with tortilla chips, right? Or bacon, or tomatoes, or just about anything. Ham, bean and asparagus soup?

When your favourite foods are offered

The short answer to this question is that we have not figured out a schedule for this yet. The long answer is that we cannot offer EVERYTHING every week or we would not be able to fit it all in the church. So that means that when Millbank Cheese is offered, you usually won't be able to buy it again until two weeks later. So buy two weeks worth of cheese. Does it seem foreign to you to buy two week's worth of food? Our grandmothers used to go to the grocery store once a month. My friend Jane still does - but she's Amish so she doesn't count :) Can you IMAGINE getting groceries once a month? Now, you don't need to go to that extreme to get local food from Bailey's but you do need to think ahead beyond a day or two. Many things will be offered every other week: Oak Manor flours, maple syrup, honey. Other things will be offered even less such as Tortillas from Doug and frozen meats which may cycle through only once a month.

We drive to Simcoe for peanut butter, popcorn, and oil every month. We'll try to let you know how soon something will be offered again so you know when to stock up. We have a few boxes of beans, popcorn and peanut foods for the next week or two but get them while you can. I don't know when we'll make it to Simcoe again.

Baked Goods
The localness of baked goods can be confusing. We've said that none of them are all-local except for the Spelt Bread from Golden Hearth.

Bread & Bretzel is picking up flour from Dover's mill in Cambridge so it is at least milled locally but the hard flour (bread flours) are from the prairie provinces. They get their eggs and other products from a food distributor. It is hard to trace the farm of origin on eggs because the grading facility is usually the name on the carton.

Eggs and milk are highly regulated which makes it a pain to figure out where they come from but they are also heavy enough and perishable enough that we can assume that they are from somewhere in Ontario. It is just not profitable to truck milk very far. I'm working on sourcing local eggs.

Golden Hearth also uses flour from the prairies. I've learned from Aura, of Golden Hearth, that Ontario-grown hard wheat usually doesn't have a high enough protein content to make the kinds of breads that bakers want. She explained that it takes intimate knowledge of dough and bread-baking to use a flour that has a little different texture or protein (or whatever) than the mass-produced and mass-milled flours. Bakers who use machines want all of their doughs to come out exactly alike with the exact same ingredients and kneading and temperature and all that. At Golden Hearth where they make the breads by hand, they can adjust the kneading or rising time or temperature to accommodate the local flour that responds a bit differently in the dough.

Why bother buying from a local mill when it is all so confusing? The two mills we buy from (Oak Manor and Arva - both offered next week) do not fumigate their mills. They do not add preservatives to the flour. They are both passionate supporters of local food and local farmers and buy local grains whenever they can. When we buy from them we are supporting some of the last local small mills. We need these mills so that we have an alternative to the flours from mega-companies. The small mills also give local grain farmers a steady market for their grains.

Yogurt
Pfenning's is able to deliver Mapleton's yogurt to us this week! Mapleton's is a GREAT organic dairy farm near Arthur (sort of). They make amazing ice cream and it is a fun place to visit with kids. They have a petting barn, a maze, a labryinth and a big play-boat. Visit sometime. The yogurt is very tasty. I prefer the cream on top because it is rich and delicious. I feed the cream to my one year old. We eat about 5 containers a week at our house. Yogurt and pearsauce is almost always the bedtime snack. It lasts at least four weeks in the fridge if you want to stock up.

Millbank Cheese
It is so popular we are going to offer it again. Find it under Dairy and then click on Cheese in the order form. You have to try the Sundried Tomato Garlic Organic Cheddar. Melted on an egg wrap was something a friend recommended.

Beef
We will be offering more beef from Jeff Stager this week. Jeff's beef will not be offered again until the end of June, though organic beef will be offered before then.

Pork, Chicken, Eggs and More
We are offering meats from a new supplier this week. Traditional Farm Foods is a group of farmers (about 90% Amish) working together to raise animals naturally and marketing their meat to nearby cities. They live near Egmondville, Ontario. I've met one of them, Noah, who has an impressive long black beard and kind eyes. They do not use vaccines, hormones or chemicals in the raising of their animals. From them we have convenient boxes of pork chops (boneless) for the BBQ, sausage, and Breakfast Sausage (wouldn't want to eat breakfast sausage at supper now...). We need to order enough from them to justify them delivering on Friday. So if you like pork, consider stocking up. If we don't get enough orders to meet their maximum, we'll cancel your order and try again another week. They also raise chickens and offer whole frozen chickens (free run - indoors) and eggs. Eggs!

Strawberries
We may have some very early local strawberries to order this week. We don't know yet if it will work for the farmer to deliver them from near Simcoe. Go ahead and order them if you want them and if it doesn't work to get them, we'll cancel the orders. And wait for strawberries to ripen closer to home.

I know I should keep these emails shorter but there are just so many stories and details behind these foods that we are sourcing. If you are the kind of person who wants to know more about your food, you'll like long emails. If you just want food - FAST. You can skim the headings and go order. I'll include important logistics at the bottom of these emails.

Still in love of local food and farmers,
Nina
Bailey's Local Foods
baileyslocalfoods.ca

Is this your first email from us?
Read more at baileyslocalfoods.blogspot.com.

You are receiving Nina's message because you are a member of Bailey's Local Food Buying Club.
If you do not wish to receive Nina's messages in the future, please uncheck the Nina's messages box associated with your email address in Account Settings at https://www.100milesystems.com/baileyslocalfoods.ca/account.php

Friday, May 29, 2009

Baileys Local Food Buying Club - Weekly Pickup Reminder

Are you ready for Bailey's Local Food Buying Club's Friday Pickup?

Your food will be ready for you to pick up on Friday, May 29 from 3:30 until 7:00PM in Hilliard Hall at the First United Church at 16 William Street West in Waterloo.

Please enter through the white kitchen door off Caroline Street.

You will find a pickup slip with your name on it listing the items that you ordered this week. Pick up all your items, check out our spontaneous table then head to our checkout area.

We will have extra items for you to purchase on our Spontaneous Table as well as a table with cookies and pastries that you can buy and enjoy. Anyone can purchase items from the Spontaneous Table. You don't even have to be a Member.

There will be room to socialize and mingle. Expect your pick-up to take awhile. It is our first time doing this in a new place so we won't be as efficient as we will be in the coming weeks.

In out checkout area, our volunteers will help ensure that your total payable amount reflects all the items that you received. Please be patient as this area will likely be quite busy.

We accept payment in cash or cheque (made out to Bailey's Local Foods). The total from your shopping cart is always approximate. We will ensure that you only pay for the items you receive as local food can sometimes be unpredictable and items that are priced by the pound are approximate on the order form.

You need to bring your own bags to carry your items home. We do not have any plastic bags. A limited number of cloth bags will be available for sale.

If possible, consider walking, biking or bringing a wagon to pick up your order. If you are driving, please be aware that William Street is currently closed for construction between King Street and Euclid Street, You can access the Waterloo Town Square Parking Lot by Caroline Street, Alexandra Avenue, Willis Way or King Street by the LCBO. We have been asked not to park in the church parking lot.

**Please don't forget to pick up your order! At 7:00PM, if you have not picked up your order, we will call the number you provided when you registered, pack up your order and add the $15 packing fee to your order total. If you have not picked up your order by 8:00PM (or when we finish cleaning up) your order will be donated you still get the pleasure of paying for it. We need to receive payment for this week's order before you can order for the following week.

Thank you,
Rachael and Nina
Bailey's Local Foods

baileyslocalfoods.ca

Is this your first email from us?
Read more at baileyslocalfoods.blogspot.com.

You are receiving this notification because you are a member of Bailey's Local Food Buying Club.
If you do not wish to receive Notifications in the future, please uncheck the Notifications box associated with your email address in Account Settings at https://www.100milesystems.com/baileyslocalfoods.ca/account.php

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Ordering for May 29th ends tonight at 8:00PM

Good Morning Members of Bailey's Local Foods Buying Club,

How is the ordering going for you? We've had some technical kinks in the order form but have them straightened out now. If you had trouble ordering, log in again and give it another go. Please let us know if the order form doesn't work for you, we need to know where the bugs are so that we can get it running smoothly. Thank you for your patience as we figure all of this out!! Rachael and her husband Andrew have been working hard on this order form for many days and weeks. I often receive emails from them from the wee hours of the morning as they work on it. It is my first experience with developing a web-based order form. So many details!! It is good to know that computer programmers CAN contribute to a better world in concrete ways :)

Some people have not been receiving our emails. If you know someone who was wanting to order, please mention to them that now is the time (ordering closes at 8:00PM tonight). If you did not receive either of the two emails sent last week, you can read them at our blog: http://baileyslocalfoods.blogspot.com/. The emails have important info about farmers and products.

Between a Rock and a Hard Place

I was feeling down yesterday because I noticed that two stores in Uptown Waterloo are selling local asparagus for $1.99/lb. Farmers are selling it to me for $2.50 so I don't know how they are able to sell it at that price. I was feeling low because I'm torn between wanting to keep our food prices as low as possible AND wanting to pay farmers a fair price. I am also worried that buying club members will think that the farmers or I am overcharging them. When our buying club was small and run out of our home last year, most of the members knew me and trusted me to not take advantage of them by hiking prices. They also trusted me to buy from farmers who were not overcharging. Now that many of our new members do not know Rachael, Wendell or me personally, you may not know if you can trust us not to gouge you with high prices. I want to build this trust between us. One way we do this is by being completely transparent in how we decide a price. We mark up the foods by 25% or sell them for the suggested retail price - not lower than you would pay if you went directly to that farm or business. (The food on the spontaneous table has a higher mark up because we have to absorb what is left over.) We are committed to paying farmers a fair price. The way I do this is I ask the farmer: what do you need to charge me so that you receive a fair amount and at the same time sell it to me for less than retail since I am able to save you a lot of time and hassle by buying large quantities? If you are ever wondering why something is priced the way it is, send us an email and we'll be happy to tell you what we pay the farmer. I'll also include info about the true costs of food in the weekly emails I send.

The bottom line is: shopping for food through the buying club means that your money is going directly from us to local farmers and food processors. They love selling to us because we are a steady buyer with whom they can plan ahead to increase production for coming seasons. Together we are increasing the amount of local food that is grown and processed in our area. Together we are increasing the resiliency of our communities. When we grow a large percentage of our own food, we can better survive natural and human-made disasters (floods, epidemics, food contaminations, economic collapse, high fuel prices,...). Together we are increasing the incomes of local farmers and food processors and encouraging young people to become farmers. Together we are inventing a new way of moving local food into a city that others are interested in replicating in their cities.

No Head Lettuce
Selema let me know that the head lettuces she thought would be ready this week are not yet. So we'll have to be patient. Maybe next week. She is babying it along with feedings of fish emulsion and TLC but it needs a few more warm days.

100% Spelt Bread from Golden Harvest Baking Co.
Were you looking for our 100% local bread? It was not on the form until Sunday night. There are only 6 available, so hurry up and order if you want a loaf of the yummiest spelt bread we've ever tasted!

Simcoe Run
My Dad is heading to Simcoe on Thursday to pick up the local foods there that we can't find here: peanuts and peanut butter, popcorn, and canola oil. We will be making this Simcoe run less than once a month so if you want any of these products, be sure to order them this week. If there is some left over, we'll offer it next week.

I'll be phoning and emailing farmers at 8:00PM tonight with your orders. On Friday please come expecting your pick-up to take awhile. It is our first time doing this in a new place so we won't be as efficient as we will be in the coming weeks. I think there will be some photographers coming from the The Record so try to look happy! Just kidding.

Again, please email info@baileyslocalfoods.ca if you want your order pre-packaged.

See you Friday,
Nina

Monday, May 25, 2009

Bailey's Buying Club - May 29, 2009

Hi Folks,
Let the local food begin!! We've had some technical difficulties but are ready to go now. Place your orders! We've got fresh tomatoes, lettuces, and grape tomatoes. We've got artisan breads and great sandwich breads (no 100% local breads except for the Spelt Bread from Golden Hearth - and it is the BEST spelt bread I've ever tasted). We've got maple syrup, peanut butter, canola oil, wine vinegar, mushrooms, natural beef, cheeses, flours and grains, corn tortillas and tortilla chips (!!) and popcorn in a variety of colours.
In the coming weeks we'll be able to offer sausage, pork cuts, chicken, hamburger patties, honey, yogurt, and more... like strawberries!
The farmers are working hard to plant the seeds and transplant the seedlings. It's been a wet Spring so many farmers say they are "behind" in planting by a week or two. Antony said the fields were so wet he went birding for a few days because he could not plant. Others like Selema are right on schedule because their fields dry out quickly. Elmira is known for having soil that has less clay so it dries out more quickly. Great for the Spring. Not great for August. Selema says that she has transplanted 1200 lettuces into her garden to grow into head lettuce. 1200! They asked a neighbour with a greenhouse to grow the 1200 seedlings for them. They are doubling the food crops they planted last year in order to supply food for the families of Bailey's Buying Club.
Selema's sister, Erma, who lives on the same farm is branching out this year and growing us arugula (aka roquette). She does not like to eat the stuff but she likes to grow it for us. She is also making us a few rhubarb custard pies for a few weeks that we'll have to try not to fight over. Rhubarb custard...

New Suppliers
We have three new exciting suppliers this week: a flour mill near London, a farmer near London who specializes in dried beans, and a tortilla maker! Arva Flour Mills has been in the family for over 80 years. They offer less selection than the Oak Manor mill we've been buying from and are not organic. Get this, they generate over half of t he power for the mill from the river (true "hydro"). The bean farmers are Steve and Dianne Rounds. I don't know much about them yet besides the fact that they have a good sense of humour and call themselves "Hillbilly Beans". They even offer a bean mix named "No Bull - Free Gas Beans". Now, farting jokes aside, we all know how satisfying and delicious beans can be when lovingly cooked. We also know how good they are for us and how eating more beans and less meat is good for the planet. My friend Carrie is my inspiration for featuring beans on our household's menu. She makes a mean meal of beans and rice. So humble and yet so good. Add salad and there's a meal. Now, we can even add fresh local tortillas and tortilla chips to our beans and rice (yes, I know rice is imported - I'm okay with that). Doug McKechnie makes fresh and preservative-free corn tortillas and chips and wheat tortillas. He has not been able to find the kind of corn he needs in Ontario so he currently gets it from Illinois or Indiana but he has planted a patch of corn this Spring so that he can use it in his tortillas this Fall.

Beef

The beef this week is from Jeff Stager who we sourced it from last year. It is labelled "conventional" but he rarely uses antibiotics and never uses hormones or steroids. The animals are raised on a combo of about 50/50 grass and grain. I've been happy with the roasts and hamburgers and I'm a beef snob. I don't like steaks in general so I won't comment on those but buying club members raved about his steaks last year. Next week we'll have organic beef available.

Cheese
I'm so ready to stock up on Millbank Cheese again! The Old Cheddar is my favourite. The packages they sell to us are approximately .455 kg but we charge a flat rate for them to make pricing them easier and to keep the price down. (We'd have to pay someone to price each one.)

Stocking up for Winter
I know it's hard to think of preparing for next Winter when it's barely Spring. The sad news is if you want to eat local asparagus or rhubarb July through April, you need to put it in your freezer. The good news is it is SUPER easy to freeze these two items. Just chop and freeze. No blanching or anything. So if you want to eat rhubarb crisp in September or asparagus soup in October, now is the time to buy extra and throw it in the freezer.

The Problem of Super Cheap Asparagus
You may notice that asparagus is super cheap at Value-Mart and other grocery stores. They are playing the "loss-leader" game where they sell a hot item at a loss in order to draw customers into the store who will spend money on other items. There's nothing wrong with this except it warps our perceptions of the real cost of food and some people think that the local farmers who charge more are ripping them off. Far from it! Local farmers usually don't charge enough to cover the true costs and time that go into growing the food. If they would pay themselves and their workers a fair wage, their prices would be three times as high as they are now.

Labelling, Ordering and Forgetting
So, happy ordering. If the farming method for an item is not specified, assume it is conventional. We are working on clearer labels about this. On our website you can read definitions of the labels we are using for farming methods at http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/m4_methods.php.

You have until Tuesday evening at 8 PM to complete your order. You can begin ordering on Sunday and go back and make changes any time you want before Tuesday at 8 PM. When you place an order, you are setting of a chain of events where I phone the farmer, the farmer harvests your chosen items and then washes and packages them before delivering them to First United on Friday afternoon. Please don't forget to pick up your order. If you do (we all forget sometimes!), we will donate it and you still get the pleasure of paying for it. Think of it as a gift to the farmer and the family who receives the surprise box of succulent local food.
See you Friday between 3:30 and 7 PM.
In love of local farmers and local food,
Nina

-----------

Technical notes:

There is a listing of some ingredients at http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/ingredients.php. We will be adding items to this list as we receive them. If there is an item that you would like to see on this list, just ask!

Look for the second line of products when ordering. If there are lots of an item (like mushrooms or loaves) we have created a sub-category for that item.

There is no checkout button. Whatever you have ordered as of Tuesday at 8:30pm will be the order that is processed. You can confirm what you've ordered in the Shopping Basket on the left hand pane. If you place anything in your Shopping Basket that you do not want, please be sure to delete it by Tuesday at 8:30pm, because at that time your order will be finalized.

All prices are subject to change at Friday pickup. We do our best to estimate fair and accurate prices but sometimes errors and changes occur. Please see a Volunteer Helper at Friday pickup to calculate your final cost and check out. Helpers will have their calculators ready to help you!

* indicates an item that may have added tax
** indicates an item's price is approximate; final price will be determined by the exact weight of the your item

If you want your order pre-packed for you this week, please email us at info@baileyslocalfoods.caand we will be sure to have it ready for you on Friday. This feature will be built into the ordering system in the coming weeks. Thank you for your patience!

If you have any error messages appear while you are shopping, email us at info@baileyslocalfoods.cawith the error message that you received and what you were doing (the item you last added to your basket) when the error occurred.

Enjoy the new ordering system!
Rachael

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Bailey's Local Foods New Season Begins!

Happy Spring Everyone!

This is the last email that you'll receive from me if you have not registered for Bailey's Local Foods second season. I'm emailing you all one more time to say thank you for a great season last year and to make sure that you understand that you need to register on our website to be able to order more amazing local foods from local farmers, millers, bakers, cheese makers, - and tortilla makers.

If you registered and did not get an email this week, check your spam folder. Please add info@baileyslocalfoods.ca and lists@baileyslocalfoods.ca to your address book.

It will be even easier to source local foods this year through Bailey's. We have an on-line ordering system that works better than Google DOCS. We have a great indoor space in the gym of the First United Church on the corner of King and William Streets just up the road from my house. We have more local suppliers this year - like a tortilla maker and a dried bean farmer - and mushroom farmers. And we will offer local food ALL year now (monthly buying clubs Nov-May).

Here is the letter we just sent to the members who have registered. It is not too late to register and order for this week. The deadline for ordering is Tuesday at 8PM.

Bye!
Nina

Bailey's Buying Club - May 29, 2009

Hi Folks,
Let the local food begin!! We've had some technical difficulties but are ready to go now. Place your orders! We've got fresh tomatoes, lettuces, and grape tomatoes. We've got artisan breads and great sandwich breads (no 100% local breads except for the Spelt Bread from Golden Hearth - and it is the BEST spelt bread I've ever tasted). We've got maple syrup, peanut butter, canola oil, wine vinegar, mushrooms, natural beef, cheeses, flours and grains, corn tortillas and tortilla chips (!!) and popcorn in a variety of colours.
In the coming weeks we'll be able to offer sausage, pork cuts, chicken, hamburger patties, honey, yogurt, and more... like strawberries!
The farmers are working hard to plant the seeds and transplant the seedlings. It's been a wet Spring so many farmers say they are "behind" in planting by a week or two. Antony said the fields were so wet he went birding for a few days because he could not plant. Others like Selema are right on schedule because their fields dry out quickly. Elmira is known for having soil that has less clay so it dries out more quickly. Great for the Spring. Not great for August. Selema says that she has transplanted 1200 lettuces into her garden to grow into head lettuce. 1200! They asked a neighbour with a greenhouse to grow the 1200 seedlings for them. They are doubling the food crops they planted last year in order to supply food for the families of Bailey's Buying Club.
Selema's sister, Erma, who lives on the same farm is branching out this year and growing us arugula (aka roquette). She does not like to eat the stuff but she likes to grow it for us. She is also making us a few rhubarb custard pies for a few weeks that we'll have to try not to fight over. Rhubarb custard...

New Suppliers
We have three new exciting suppliers this week: a flour mill near London, a farmer near London who specializes in dried beans, and a tortilla maker! Arva Flour Mills has been in the family for over 80 years. They offer less selection than the Oak Manor mill we've been buying from and are not organic. Get this, they generate over half of t he power for the mill from the river (true "hydro"). The bean farmers are Steve and Dianne Rounds. I don't know much about them yet besides the fact that they have a good sense of humour and call themselves "Hillbilly Beans". They even offer a bean mix named "No Bull - Free Gas Beans". Now, farting jokes aside, we all know how satisfying and delicious beans can be when lovingly cooked. We also know how good they are for us and how eating more beans and less meat is good for the planet. My friend Carrie is my inspiration for featuring beans on our household's menu. She makes a mean meal of beans and rice. So humble and yet so good. Add salad and there's a meal. Now, we can even add fresh local tortillas and tortilla chips to our beans and rice (yes, I know rice is imported - I'm okay with that). Doug McKechnie makes fresh and preservative-free corn tortillas and chips and wheat tortillas. He has not been able to find the kind of corn he needs in Ontario so he currently gets it from Illinois or Indiana but he has planted a patch of corn this Spring so that he can use it in his tortillas this Fall.

Beef

The beef this week is from Jeff Stager who we sourced it from last year. It is labelled "conventional" but he rarely uses antibiotics and never uses hormones or steroids. The animals are raised on a combo of about 50/50 grass and grain. I've been happy with the roasts and hamburgers and I'm a beef snob. I don't like steaks in general so I won't comment on those but buying club members raved about his steaks last year. Next week we'll have organic beef available.

Cheese
I'm so ready to stock up on Millbank Cheese again! The Old Cheddar is my favourite. The packages they sell to us are approximately .455 kg but we charge a flat rate for them to make pricing them easier and to keep the price down. (We'd have to pay someone to price each one.)

Stocking up for Winter
I know it's hard to think of preparing for next Winter when it's barely Spring. The sad news is if you want to eat local asparagus or rhubarb July through April, you need to put it in your freezer. The good news is it is SUPER easy to freeze these two items. Just chop and freeze. No blanching or anything. So if you want to eat rhubarb crisp in September or asparagus soup in October, now is the time to buy extra and throw it in the freezer.

The Problem of Super Cheap Asparagus
You may notice that asparagus is super cheap at Value-Mart and other grocery stores. They are playing the "loss-leader" game where they sell a hot item at a loss in order to draw customers into the store who will spend money on other items. There's nothing wrong with this except it warps our perceptions of the real cost of food and some people think that the local farmers who charge more are ripping them off. Far from it! Local farmers usually don't charge enough to cover the true costs and time that go into growing the food. If they would pay themselves and their workers a fair wage, their prices would be three times as high as they are now.

Labelling, Ordering and Forgetting
So, happy ordering. If the farming method for an item is not specified, assume it is conventional. We are working on clearer labels about this. On our website you can read definitions of the labels we are using for farming methods at http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/m4_methods.php.

You have until Tuesday evening at 8 PM to complete your order. You can begin ordering on Sunday and go back and make changes any time you want before Tuesday at 8 PM. When you place an order, you are setting of a chain of events where I phone the farmer, the farmer harvests your chosen items and then washes and packages them before delivering them to First United on Friday afternoon. Please don't forget to pick up your order. If you do (we all forget sometimes!), we will donate it and you still get the pleasure of paying for it. Think of it as a gift to the farmer and the family who receives the surprise box of succulent local food.
See you Friday between 3:30 and 7 PM.
In love of local farmers and local food,
Nina

-----------

Technical notes:

There is a listing of some ingredients at http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/ingredients.php. We will be adding items to this list as we receive them. If there is an item that you would like to see on this list, just ask!

Look for the second line of products when ordering. If there are lots of an item (like mushrooms or loaves) we have created a sub-category for that item.

There is no checkout button. Whatever you have ordered as of Tuesday at 8:30pm will be the order that is processed. You can confirm what you've ordered in the Shopping Basket on the left hand pane. If you place anything in your Shopping Basket that you do not want, please be sure to delete it by Tuesday at 8:00pm, because at that time your order will be finalized.

All prices are subject to change at Friday pickup. We do our best to estimate fair and accurate prices but sometimes errors and changes occur. Please see a Volunteer Helper at Friday pickup to calculate your final cost and check out. Helpers will have their calculators ready to help you!

* some items may have added tax
* some items, such as meat, have prices that are approximate; final price will be determined by the exact weight of your item

If you want your order pre-packed for you this week, please email us at info@baileyslocalfoods.caand we will be sure to have it ready for you on Friday. This feature will be built into the ordering system in the coming weeks. Thank you for your patience!

If you have any error messages appear while you are shopping, email us at info@baileyslocalfoods.cawith the browser you are using, the error message that you received and what you were doing (the item you last added to your basket) when the error occurred.

Enjoy the new ordering system!
Rachael


Thursday, May 21, 2009

Welcome to Bailey's Local Foods - Your registration was successful!

There are two messages below. One from Rachael and one from Nina.

Hi Folks,

We received your registration. Welcome aboard! You can now go to http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/ to log in and order!
- click on the Buying Club link in the menu to log in using the email address and password you provided.
(If you forgot your password, click reset a forgotten password and a new one will be emailed to you.)
- click Account Settings to make changes to your contact information and/or add additional email addresses.
(This might be helpful if you want emails sent to your work or someone else in your household wants to log in and help with the ordering.)

Anyone who has been added to your account can choose to receive the Bailey's Buying Club emails from Nina or notices when the weekly offerings open.

Before our first offering opens, we will have a TEST offering.
- click on Offering and select edit existing order for Friday May 22, 2009 to browse through some of the items we will have available in the coming weeks.

You can put in your own TEST order and make sure this new system works for you. Don't worry, no test orders will be processed.

Items that you select are automatically saved in your shopping basket. There is no need to 'check out'.

When you get Nina's email on May 23rd, you can go online and order for real! Your shopping basket remains open from Saturday to Tuesday each week. If you change your mind, you can change your order until the ordering window closes on Tuesday evening and we start calling farmers.

If you have questions, please email me at rachael@baileyslocalfoods.ca.

Thank you,
Rachael

-------------------

You can begin placing orders this Saturday night!! Soon the local food flow will begin! I get so hungry phoning and emailing the farmers, millers, bakers, and cheesemakers. It all sounds so DELICIOUS! I can only begin to list all that we'll have next week: green onions, lettuces, hot house tomatoes and cucumbers, arugula (roquette), sundried tomato and garlic old cheddar organic cheese, and tender beef roasts. And of course, asparagus. Lots of asparagus!

The poor asparagus farmers. They've had at least two hard frosts. A hard frost makes the spears above ground un-sellable because they go kind of limp and soggy after being zapped by the frost. Lydia picked 24 pounds the other morning and sold them to me at a mere fraction of the cost because so many were damaged. I'm trying to find time to make asparagus pickles. I found a recipe where I don't have to blanch them, just stuff them in a jar and pour a vinegar mixture on top. Hopefully the frost will be done now.

I'll be sending an email on Saturday to let you know when the order form is ready to take your orders. We ask for your patience and good humour as we work out the inevitable bugs of a new order form and a new pick-up system at the First United Church (corner of King and William). If my dad Wendell, Rachael (my business partners!) and I look harried on May 29 just give us a pat or a hug and remind us that we are figuring out a new way to move local food into the city and it is a learning process. We have several volunteer Friday Coordinators who may also be looking harried. Charlotte, Josie, Vicki and Maria will be helping to make things run smoothly on Fridays. We also have a few Friday Helpers who will be helping us out: Vanessa and Esme - and maybe more will be joining us. If we're lucky, Paul and Kelly will jump into the fray again on Fridays.

100 Mile Challenge
Would you like to join a group of 100 people who are eating from within 100 miles for 100 days starting in July? If this tempts you and you want to know more, come to the info night Tue May 26 7-9 PM at the Clay and Glass Gallery. This 100 Mile challenge is organized by Healing Path Centre for Natural Medicine on Allen St. There is more information at http://www.healingpathcentre.com/100mile.html

Inspiring Speaker on how to become a "Transition Town"
In the UK there's a great movement called Transition Townes where folks are working together to make their communities more resilient for the changes that are coming our way. This buying club can be called a "Transition Town initiative" because relocalising the food system is key to being able to handle the changes that are happening in the global food system. I can't go because I'll be setting up for the buying club's first pick up but you can go hear Jane Buchan speak 3-4:30 PM May 29 at UW (see http://baileyslocalfoods.ca/transitiontown.pdf for poster).

June 6 visit to Niagara Farm
Those of you who were part of the buying club last year will remember the amazing soft fruits from Eva and Rene Schmitz' farm in Niagara. They are inviting us to visit their farm on June 6 - before their busy season. Here is more info about the visit:

"The name of the farm is Palatine Fruit and Roses and we meet at 11:00 am at the farm (this means you will need to leave the KW area about 9:00 am). Rene will be available to walk the orchards with us and answer any questions you have (and I mean ANY questions you have....you will learn a great deal from him!). Eva will be tending to the garden centre which is where we will meet! You can either bring a picnic lunch to enjoy after the tour at the orchard, or you may choose to take your family and make a day out of the Niagara region......!!"

The address for you to Mapquest or GPS is 2108 Four Mile Creek Rd., Niagara-on-the-lake, Ontario.


New Farmer Brings us New Foods
We have a new farmer bringing us a selection of gourmet local produce. Antony John farms near Stratford and is one of the few farmers in the area that has mastered the art and science of growing produce year-round in greenhouses in Ontario. His prices are higher but he has good reasons for why and says that his produce tastes better than other mass-produced vegetables. Here is how he explains his approach:

"North Americans are, for the most part, not paying a fair price for their food, and have come to expect cheap food as some sort of birthright. The planet cannot sustain this pressure for mass production at any cost, and there will not be enough farmers producing food sustainably if they cannot cover their expenses with their crops.

We cannot compete with food produced in areas with artificially low labour costs, either from California, or from the Amish. I do not have the advantage of a large labour pool to draw from with low living expenses. I hire all my labour locally, and pay them a fair price. This keeps money in the local economy. Neither do I believe that mass production of organic food with lots of machines is the way to go either. I cannot compete with the efficiencies of machine harvesters, but I will win hands down in every vegetable variety on flavour, nutrition, and quality of life. Quite simply, I am interested in producing top quality food, and someone has to pay for that because it's labour intensive. My carrots are expensive, but they've been called the best in North America by chefs such as Deborah Madison and Michael Staadlander. The greens SEEM expensive, but the leaves are lighter than most salad mixes, so a little actually goes a long way (1 lb feeds 12-15 people). Also, the price for the greens is the same all year. This is so that the summer growing season can offset the huge expenses I have growing fresh salad in the winter months. I could offer a cheap salad mix when it's easy to grow it, and just shut down like most other growers, but that would leave my local workers without jobs, and year round restaurants without product. If they are willing to make a commitment to me, I am willing to return the favour by staying open all year."

Antony will be joining us for a couple Friday pick-up times this year so that we get a chance to meet the farmer and ask questions. I haven't tasted his salad mix yet but I am eager to!

Until Saturday,
Nina for Bailey's Local Foods