August 2008

Fresh dug RI potatoes!

Narr PotatoesIt’s late August and fresh-dug potatoes are here, with once-a-season texture and flavor! Fresh potatoes are such a different experience that Farm Fresh RI is teaming up with RI DEM Division of Ag, Canaan Produce, 5 potato growers and a dozen groceries to make sure the fresh crop of RI potatoes stay in RI and get enjoyed by RI eaters. Our collaboration is also re-building relationships between local grocers and local potato farmers. Starting mid-September, you’ll find purple Narragansett bags at your favorite local market, with fresh-dug potatoes from:

Check back for a list of participating grocers in the next few weeks, but first the back story:

Wines aren’t the only reds and whites that flourish along the RI coast. Not too long ago, the fields of Aquidneck and Sakonnet bustled with potatoes that fed New England and beyond. Our RI variety is ideal for making baked potatoes and also potato chips. So much so that Cape Cod Potato Chips began with potatoes from Maplewood Farm in Portsmouth!

The Ocean State’s coastal climate and soils still are fertile ground for spuds. But for years potato prices have stagnated and Idaho potatoes have flooded the marketplace. Local connections and farmer-grocer relationships were lost, and RI potato growers increasingly had to turn to out of state wholesalers – or else grow turf or houses. The farms that still grow food have come out wiser, and nowadays many potato farmers are diversified and grow many other veggies, too. The proliferation of farmers’ markets and recent successes in the RI farm-to-school program have also been key to securing the future of the farmland and our food supply. But RI can produce a lot more potatoes than can be sold at farmers’ markets, and yet there are a lot of Rhode Islanders getting their potatoes from Idaho because supermarkets are buying from national wholesalers. That doesn’t make sense, and it’s not good for farmers or RI.

We think revitalized farm-to-grocer connections will be a foundation for more secure farms and more secure food that will benefit Rhode Island’s farmers and eaters for generations to come. If this fall’s pilot collaboration for selling RI potatoes under the purple Narragansett label works, next year may even be the start of a RI potato growers coop (with a new logo) – not unlike what Rhody Fresh is doing for local dairies and hopefully with all the same success!

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RI reds (and whites): The coastal wines that made the Local Food Fest sparkle

Rhode Island wines really shone at the Local Food Fest this year. If you haven’t tried RI wine recently, you’re missing out. The same sea breezes that moderate the climate on Aquidneck and Sakonnet make for complex and deeply satisfying wines. The three Rhode Island winegrowers you enjoyed at the Local Food Fest also offer regular tastings. Follow the Coastal Wine Trail from Newport Vineyards to Greenvale Vineyards to Sakonnet Vineyards and you’ll find the vistas and vines are as grand and pastoral as the flavors. Visit between now and October to see the grapes ripening in the early autumn sun! (By the way, Newport Vineyards’ 2007 Riesling just won Best of Show at an Atlantic wine competition this month, is home to the Saturday Aquidneck Growers’ Market, and produces a “Rhody Coyote” hard cider with local apples.)

Between wines, Local Food Fest guests enjoyed a selection of local brews, from rich and fierce to smooth and sweet, care of RI favorites Newport Storm, Narragansett Beer and Trinity Brewhouse.

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Other standouts at the Local Food Fest:

The work that we’re doing at Farm Fresh to connect local farms with chefs and eaters is all the more important given the news out that RI still is at the top of the nation for farmland prices. (Actually, we’re number two this year. $12K/acre -vs- $12.2K in Mass.) The chefs at the Local Food Fest are committed to RI farmers. We hope that the colorful bounty and seasonal, fresh flavors inspired all of us to appreciate that eating closer to home is both good for our taste buds and good for Rhode Island.

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Rain or shine, Local Food Fest shines on RI’s food producers

Food Fest 2007Good rain = good food. But couldn’t it have waited a day? Luckily, the weather is looking like it will be just clouds by 4pm today. So the party is on! We’ll see you this evening under the big tent at Castle Hill Inn & Resort in Newport for a celebration of the RI bountiful harvest. Just think about how much juicier the peaches and tomatoes harvested this morning will be!

Online ticket sales will continue until 1:15pm and then we expect to have some available for sale at the door at Castle Hill. Bring an umbrella just in case and prepare your palate for warm summery flavors, care of these talented local farms and food producers:

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