Food Matters – Royston Roasting Company

DSC 2191 1These days it seems like coffee fuels the world. You can hardly walk more than a block in any town and you’ll find a place to get a cuppa joe, be it a café, corner store, donut shop or even a gas station. There is no end of choice but you can choose locally roasted beans so you can learn a little more about your jolt of java.

I am pretty fussy about my coffee. I think living in Italy for a year spoiled me, where it was hard to find a bad cappuccino or latte. And I can be quite sensitive to caffeine, but I find the higher the quality of coffee, the fewer problems I have with the caffeine. So there are a few roasters on the Island that I know and trust, and although I have had this particular coffee before, I finally got around to visiting the woman who roasts it in her facility in Royston. Royston is just a few kilometres south of Courtenay, and is also home to the Tree Island Gourmet Yogurt Company, and I want you to remember that connection.

You get to Royston by driving down the Old Island Highway, which is a great road to take this summer if you’re heading up island, very picturesque and not too clogged with traffic. Anyway, just before you reach the first traffic light in Royston when headed north you hang a right into the Royston Roasting Company. It is a roastery, and a café, and a place to learn about coffee, and yes, you can also get a frozen yogurt there made with…Tree Island Gourmet Yogurt. Dyan Spink is the woman behind the roasting. She came to the craft after spending a dozen years at the Comox Valley Farmer’s Market making coffees with other people’s beans:

“So that background really got me interested in the whole world of coffee and I was always buying locally roasted beans from Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands to serve in my cafes and at the Farmer’s Market and I guess it finally came down to to point where I wanted my own label to put on the coffee, ha ha.”

DSC 2179OZTURK Drum Roaster

To go from selling other people’s products to roasting your own, first you need a roaster. And when you go down into the basement of the café, there stands this beautiful piece of machinery. It’s a drum-style roaster made by the OzTurk Company of Turkey. It’s a hands-on manual style that has to be babied, but can roast about thirty pounds at a time.

DSC 2182Hammered Copper

The thing about this roaster is that the drum part is clad in hand-hammered copper in beautiful patterns. The company was founded back in 1948 and today the grandsons of the man who started the business now run it. Dyan and her husband Gary went to visit the factory in Turkey and got to know the family and eventually the family asked the Spinks to be the Canadian distributor for their products, and Dyan couldn’t be more thrilled. That just happened this year and they’ve already sold one smaller-style drum roaster.

RoasteryMe and Dyan Spink

Believe it or not this roaster has become somewhat of a tourist attraction, and I am just one of a growing number of people who have had their picture taken in front of it. They get small to large groups of tourists coming through and nearly all of them leave with a bag of coffee in their hands.

DSC 2194Charming Baristas

Dyan and Gary had had their eyes on this particular piece of property in Royston for a while, because they knew it had potential on a number of levels, a place to roast, a café to showcase their products, an educational area for people who want to learn some home barista skills, and lots of drive-by traffic. Better than having the roaster set up at their house, where they used to have it. People would stop by on Sunday nights to pick up a bag of coffee and say, gee, would you mind making us a latte while we’re here?!

The coffee is all fair trade and certified organic from the best coffee production countries from Mexico and all the way down to South America. Dyan says the certified organic label is important to them because it means the coffee workers in those countries aren’t exposed to some of the nasty chemicals that are still being used in some of the plantations. Fair trade means a good living to the suppliers and Royston Roasting even uses a biodegradable rice paper bag to retail their coffee.

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Food Matters – We Heart Local Awards

“Local food” has become a real catch-phrase these days. We didn’t have to say ‘local’ in the past, because much of our food was produced close to where we live. The good news is that the concept of local food is back, and various agencies are trying to figure out how to promote it. That’s where you come in. 

Eat NaturalBuy Local, Eat Natural

Local food is being shouted from the social media rooftops these days. Right now the nominations for the ‘We Heart Local’ awards are on the go. This is a province-wide opportunity for the public to nominate their favourite local food and beverage providers…the idea being to build the momentum that has really picked up over the last few years and put some faces to it. You go to the Buy Local, Eat Natural Facebook page, then click on We Heart Local to nominate a local hero, but you only have 5 more days to do that. (July 15th) Then everyone has a chance to vote for their favourite nominees.

Buy Local

The people behind this idea include agencies operating under the non-profit Buy Local, Eat Natural label. So you have the BC Agriculture Council, the BC Ministry of Agriculture, and the BC Association of Farmers Markets, among others. It’s nice to see that the ball is being picked up again by government, since some years ago funding was withdrawn from the popular Buy BC program, turning it into a user-pay promotional vehicle. As it turns out, BC is becoming the home of food policy activism, with over a dozen different programs in various municipalities, so it’s not just a fringe sort of movement, people are really paying attention to it. The Bank of Montreal Food Survey that was released about a week ago found that 85 per cent of people in B.C. try to purchase locally grown vegetables and 80 per cent try to buy local fruit.

I have been watching this scene for nearly 20 years now, I think I started noticing people really starting to talk about local food in the late 90’s, when more and more of the chefs I talked to started telling me about the local produce they were discovering and how much more they liked it than some of the imported stuff they had been dealing with. Then there were a handful of restaurants in Vancouver like Bishop’s and Rain City Grill that put the emphasis on local and seasonal, and of course here on Vancouver Island we had Sooke Harbour House that had been quietly doing it for years come more to the forefront when food media started picking up on it. I think the real push came when that couple from Vancouver arbitrarily picked 100 miles to be the longest distance from which they could choose food for their diet…that 100-mile diet really started being copied all over the place and you still find references to it…they started living that diet back in 2005. At the same time the number of farmers markets in the province has skyrocketed and when it just used to be Saturday morning you would find a market, there are markets nearly every day of the week now.

Once again, nominations end on July 15th and then you can go back to that page and view all the nominees and vote for your favourites in each category until August 5th. When that is all over there are plans that will take the program a little farther than naming the winners but that is still in the works so I’ll have word on that when the details are released. There are prizes for people who nominate their favourite locals, 20 $100 gift cards to your local farmers market, and the Grand Prize – a weekend getaway to the Burrowing Owl Estate Winery in beautiful Oliver. All voters and nominators are automatically included into the prize draw.

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Food Matters – Legato Gelato

DSC 2224It’s getting hot out there, very hot, and as the mercury soars, so inevitably do sales of ice cream. There are only a handful of local ice cream makers on Vancouver Island, and I introduced my listeners to one of them on this week’s edition of Food Matters on All Points West.

DSC 2116                      Earlier this week I paid a visit to the home of the main raw ingredient in Legato Gelato. Legato Gelato is made from goat’s milk from Snap Dragon Dairy in Fanny Bay, not too far south of Courtenay. Jaki Ayton and Karen Fouracre own the farm and make the gelato from their herd of goats…and I have to tell you the goats are VERY cute, especially the little ones that were just born this year. But the goat’s milk came before the gelato, and I asked Karen why:

“Well, quite a while ago I developed a lactose intolerance. When we decided to start a farm we thought why not have goats, they are easier to handle than cows and I can drink the milk. So then we started playing around with the milk, making yogurt, soft cheese, some hard cheeses that didn’t work out so well.”

GoatsMature Goats

As their herd increased in size they were able to sell some of their milk to David Wood of Salt Spring Island Cheese, since he didn’t want to have to get all of his goat milk from farms in the Lower Mainland. But then his business plan kind of changed, and they decided to take the processing of their product in their own hands. They decided on gelato after some research, certainly no one else was doing it. They bought a small gelato making machine, tested recipes until they thought they were ready. That meant they needed to have some sort of licensed pasteurizing facility. “Lo and behold,” said Karen, “there was a company setting up just such a plant not 20 minutes down the road in Royston. They wanted to work with us, and although it took over a year to get it going, that’s where we get our milk and eggs for the gelato pasteurized and where the gelato is frozen and packaged as well.”

DSC 2100Karen Fouracre

Last year I told the story of all the hoops that the Tree Island Gourmet Yogurt people went through to build their processing plant, and one of their dreams was to be able to help other people who wanted to process milk products. So that plan has worked out well for all involved. Jaki and Karen make their fruit or other flavouring mixtures at another processing facility, then bring that to Tree Island where the milk and eggs have been pasteurized and put it into their BIG gelato freezer, and then into their packaging. And Karen just happened to give me a few samples to try. My favourites so far are the lemon and the strawberry, made from Ironwood Farm strawberries which are picked just down the highway from the goat farm.

If you’re ever had a strong goat cheese, you know it can be a little, well, goaty. But Karen says fresh goat milk should never smell or taste strongly of goat. I had some of the milk in my tea while I was there and certainly didn’t notice any strong flavour to it. The milk needs to be stored at 2 to 4 degrees C, colder than cow’s milk, and should be used within 3 or 4 days from milking, just like they do when they make gelato. That’s not to say you won’t notice the difference with their gelato, but that’s just it; it’s supposed to taste different.

Their products are becoming more and more popular. At first they were just selling at the Comox Valley Farmers Market, but now they are being carried by more and more shops in the Comox Valley but I think you will see some retailers pick them up here soon, they are coming down to get people turned on to their product next Wednesday at the Hudson Farmers Market. So when you put together good flavour, local ingredients, the bonus that goat milk is more suitable for people who have a lactose intolerance, it all adds up.

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Monday Magazine updates

GoatsGoats

Hey everyone…now that I am writing a monthly column for Monday Magazine, I am also sending them short updates every week with recipes, photos, stuff that catches my eye in the world of food. So I thought I would also post them here, along with a promo for this week’s edition of Food Matters on CBC Radio’s All Points West. Here we go: Thursday on Food Matters, getting your goat….goat milk gelato, that is. I visit a goat milk dairy near Fanny Bay and chat with the farmer who adds local ingredients to the milk for some delicious summertime flavours. That’s Food Matters, right after the 4:30 news on CBC Victoria, 90.5 on your FM band. Yes, there will be tasting!

With warm weather finally here, expect lots of red, ripe strawberries in the fields and at your local farmers’ markets. Here’s a decadent weekend treat:

BC Strawberries and Brie French Toast (From the Fraser Valley Strawberry Growers Association) www.bcstrawberries.com

Ingredients:

¾ cup (175 mL) whole milk

5 large eggs, beaten

1 tsp. (5 mL) vanilla

¼ tsp (1mL) cinnamon

pinch of cardamom

2 tsp (10 mL) sugar

8 slices French bread, 1 ½ inches (3.5 cm) thick

300g brie cheese, sliced

3 ½ cups (875 mL) BC Strawberries, sliced

¼ cup (50 mL) butter

icing sugar

maple syrup

In large bowl, beat together milk, eggs, vanilla, cinnamon, cardamom and sugar.

Cut slices of bread horizontally to form a pocket. Set aside 1 cup of sliced strawberries for garnish. Place slices of brie and strawberries in pocket, press down lightly. Dip bread slices in egg mixture, turn to coat each side. Place bread slices on a cookie sheet, cover and chill for 20 minutes.

In large frying pan melt butter over medium heat. Add bread slices, cook each side about 2 minutes or until golden and cheese starts to melt. Remove from pan, dust with icing sugar and garnish with strawberries. Serve immediately with maple syrup.

Makes 8 servings

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If you want someone else to do the cooking and you haven’t been to the Cowichan Valley for a while, I have two opportunities for you.
On Monday, July 8 I’m teaching a cooking class about the Umbria region of Italy at Kilrenny Farm. http://www.kilrennyfarm.com/2011/04/cooking-classes/
And on Saturday, July 13, I’m cooking up a barbecue extravaganza with Chef Bill Jones at his Deerholme Farm. If you are a fan of grilling’ and chillin’ you won’t want to miss this. http://www.deerholme.com/farm-dinner-bbw-with-the-masters/

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Food Matters – Canadian Association for Food Studies

header2We know that the way in which we eat has changed drastically, mostly since World War Two, when developments in food technology gave us convenience foods, the rise of fast food and global trade in food commodities. Now we are facing a variety of issues in food security and nutrition, issues that are being studied in detail in Canadian institutions. I got to eavesdrop on some of the ongoing observations and I told Jo-Ann Robert’s about them on this week’s edition of Food Matters on All Points West.

What we hear a lot of in the media about food these days is about sustainable food, local food, organic food, or, food safety issues, recalls, illnesses. But there is much more going on behind the scene, more than you can imagine. Most universities in Canada have programs involving food in many ways, be it food associated with agriculture, or society or communications, and something I didn’t even realize existed up to a few months ago is the Canadian Association for Food Studies. This a body that was formed in 2005 to encourage academics as well as other professionals in the food industry to communicate what they’re working on and provide a better understanding across the country of the issues we’re dealing with in the world of food. The recent edition of Congress at the University of Victoria included a convention of the members of the association in a program called At The Edge, Exploring the Boundaries of Food Studies. (pdf file)

My only regret is that I had only one day to devote to attending the conference and even on that day I had some tough decisions to make regarding which sessions to attend and how I could learn the most information over the short amount of time I had available. An ideal way to do that was to attend one of the sessions set up in the pecha kucha (peh-CHALK-chah) format…Pecha kucha is a Japanese word that you can loosely translate as ‘chit-chat’. But in practice it is a series of talks, kind of like TED Talks, but not really. Each speaker gets 20 slides in their presentation and each slide can only be shown for a maximum of 20 seconds, so that means each presentation is only 6 minutes and 40 seconds long.

I’d like to try doing one, as I think it would be quite challenging but it can be even tougher to take good notes over the course of that short space of time! But it was just what I was looking for…to find out what issues people are studying when it comes to food across the country. There were 8 presenters in the session I attended.

The City of Kamloops mounted a great campaign called the Public Produce Project aimed at educating more people about how food grows and what it looks like in a garden. The project turned an empty lot downtown into a temporary, edible garden, which was harvested by the Kamloops Food Bank. The project is now in its third year, people refer to it as a miracle in the neighbourhood with widespread community support and has changed municipal policy regarding urban land use.

In Ontario, a study showed that there are many and diverse initiatives being undertaken in an attempt to reconstruct food systems but they exist at all different levels of government. Some of the agencies involved talk to one another, some of them don’t, so the researcher in this case came up with questions that need to be answered like, ‘how should these agencies grow?’, ‘should they centralize?’, and ‘are they really transforming our outdated food systems or just creating a short-term fix?’ Big questions.

Meantime in Edmonton, a citizens’ panel on food strategy and security was formed. 66 people gave up 8 weeks of their lives to make recommendations to the city. Their main recommendation was that the city should NOT develop what are called the ‘Northeast Farmlands’. City council ignored that recommendation. The presenter discovered that this advisory committee was dysfunctional, it didn’t report directly to decision makers and that the ‘power wielders’ on the committee influenced the final report.

Another presenter looked at what can happen in typical school nutrition programs. Unfortunately, the case is that most of these programs operate with limited budgets and volunteers with a lack of knowledge and a limit to the time they can devote to the program. So food ends up being bought more with time and quantity in mind instead of the quality and appropriateness of the food, for example, it’s easier and cheaper to go to Costco instead of trying to source from local farms.

Another researcher in Nova Scotia looked at the informal food economy and discovered it may be vastly underestimated and that there is a lot happening off the books, anything from criminal activities that could involve theft or poaching, or a more widespread bartering system in existence, or a continuation of traditional wild food foraging and hunting which creates a much more direct food economy than what is the norm in more urban areas, for example. Large companies supply wholesaler, wholesaler supplies retailer, retailer sells to the public.

We also heard about food deserts developing in Prince Edward Island of all places because of the demise of small grocery stores and one I hope to learn more about when the results are published, a study of the food issues being faced by people with mental health issues living in social housing on Vancouver Island. And the final presentation dealt with how our current realities obscure future opportunities to change our food systems and how it is so easy to get bogged down in bureaucracy.

I think the overall tone of that session was cautious optimism, I guess. I think just the idea that people are starting to think about these issues on a more global basis is encouraging, and by global I mostly mean, outside of your own group or agency. Clearly there is a lot of work to be done on how food agencies communicate with each other, and there has to be some value in getting more people on the same page and working out how they can be of assistance to each other instead of a possible hindrance. And that theme was carried on later that day with the keynote speaker of the day, Patricia Allen, the chair, of the Department of Food Systems & Society at Marylhurst University in Portland, who talked about building sustainable and equitable food systems for everyone despite of what she describes as the ‘elephants’ in the room. But that would take me another six minutes to describe…at least!

MM 349x39px

Just One More Thing: My very first column for the re-vamped Monday Magazine hit the street today, and the intertubes. Pick it up and have a look through the whole issue, or if you just want to read my column, you can click here.

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Food Matters – First BC Craft Distiller at Merridale

DSC 1989The Still

Call it moonshine, hooch, firewater, fine brandy, eau de vie or whatever, if you were making small batches of alcohol in British Columbia and trying to make money on it, you were wasting your time and your own money. Alcohol artisans are celebrating now, however, as I explained on this week’s edition of Food Matters on CBC Radio’s All Points West with Jo-Ann Roberts.

DSC 2021Rick Pipes and Janet Docherty

There already are some craft distillers here in BC, but this is how they used to operate. Anything they made had to be sold through the BC Liquor Distribution Branch, where it was taxed at a 140 percent rate. So, as Rick Pipes explained to me on Tuesday, out of a bottle of liquor that would cost you 40 dollars in the liquor store, the manufacturer would get about 12 dollars of that. That’s fine if you are making a lower quality/high volume product because you can still make some profit, but if you are a craft distiller, you are basically doing it for nothing because the cost of making the bottle of liquor is around 12 dollars each. Rick Pipes is the co-owner of Merridale Estate Cidery in Cobble Hill, just down the road from where I live, and for the past five years he’s been trying to get the liquor regulations changed.

BC is well-known for some of its archaic liquor regulations. Rick and some other people who want to be craft distillers had to lobby and send letters and seek meetings over and over again. Here’s how they started:

“In the early days we had to ask to see ministerial aides, and then the assistant deputy ministers and then the deputy ministers and then finally we would get to see the ministers. And at one point we got to see the agriculture minister, and the minister of tourism and small business and they all thought, hey, this is great, we see the value in this, and then we ran up against the gatekeeper in charge of the Liquor Distribution Branch, and they saw the loss in revenue, and they squashed us. Then there was a cabinet shuffle and we had to start all over again but at least we were able to start at the doors of the cabinet ministers.” 

DSC 2031Speakeasy!

The next go-round after the cabinet shuffle got them a reduction in the tax from 170 percent to 163 percent. Needless to say that still wasn’t enough to make it worthwhile to make craft liquors. Keep in mind that about seven years ago Rick had invested a pile of money to purchase a still and construct a brandy house to turn some of his apple cider into brandy. There were many other twists and turns to get to the point where a new designation of craft distiller has been created in the province, and Merridale was the first to get its license, just on Monday, which gives them tax relief and the freedom to make the products they want and be able to sell them at a price they want. On Tuesday they held a ‘Speakeasy’ at the brandy house, hearkening back to the days of Prohibition, Rick and his wife Janet and all the staff and many of the guests dressed up in 1920’s fashions, and I asked Rick what it meant to him to achieve his goal:

“It means that Janet won’t be able to ask me how much money we are going to keep losing in the brandy house! And I will be able to be much more creative with what I do, because I know I can make small quantities of a specialty spirit, maybe something like a quince eau de vie, and I’ll still be able to sell it without losing money on it. I can buy whatever raw materials I want and all the things that have been in my head to do will come out as products now. And because Janet has done such a good job of marketing this place we have thirty thousand people a year coming through here and when I see the look on their faces after they’ve tasted our products then that makes it all worthwhile.”

DSC 2032Products from the Still

The main star of what has been aging there for the past five or six years is the apple cider brandy, which has now been bottled, and he also did a barrel sample for us of his pear brandy, which so many people have never tasted. Even though I am not the biggest fan of pears, I have to say that the sample I tasted was incredible, with a very clear taste and aroma of fresh pear. As for the apple cider brandy, Rick says he did a blind tasting with some friends, family and staff using Merridale brandy and four different brands of Calvados (apple brandy) available at the local liquor store and everyone picked the Merridale as their favourite.

While Rick thinks that more and more distilleries will open soon in BC, including the Shelter Point Distillery north of Courtenay, I’ll have more on that company in a few weeks, he also believes there should be a multiplier effect down the line as the distillers will encourage farmers to grow grains specifically for use at distilleries, he would love to have some Vancouver Island rye, for example, to make into whiskey, and maybe some more malting facilities to prepare the grains for brewing and distilling…and it’s all happened because of a few liquor laws being changed to help create business instead of discouraging it.

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