Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Classic Fettuccine Alfredo Recipe

Serves 4
Prep time: 15 minutes
Total time: 25 minutes

Ingredients

kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1 pound|454 grams fettuccine 
6 tablespoons|85 grams unsalted butter
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 ½ cups|350 ml heavy cream
1 cup|120 grams grated parmesan cheese, plus more for serving
2 tablespoons minced fresh parsley

Directions

  1. Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook until al dente, about 13 minutes. Drain, reserving 1 cup|250 ml of the cooking liquid.
  2. In a large skillet, melt the butter over medium. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant and soft, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the cream and bring to a simmer. Cook until slightly thick and reduced by ⅓, 5 to 6 minutes. Stir in ¾ of the cheese and whisk until melted, then toss in the pasta and ½ cup|125 ml of the cooking liquid, plus the parsley. Toss to combine, adjusting with the remaining pasta water to achieve a creamy consistency. Season with salt and pepper, then serve with more parmesan.

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Engelman Baking buys assets from US peer H&F Bread Co.

Engelman Baking has bought a clutch of assets from a peer in the US as part of a push by the Georgia-based business – itself recently acquired – to expand through M&A.

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FrieslandCampina expands in Indonesia; provides Covid update

Dutch co-operative FrieslandCampina is to build a new dairy plant in Indonesia, described as one of its "largest and fastest-growing markets".

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Ferrero 'eyeing move for UK biscuit maker Fox's'

The Italy-based confectionery giant, home to brands including Kinder and Nutella, is reported to be working on a possible bid for a UK biscuits business.

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New products - Danone enters organic baby-milk segment with Aptamil and takes its Two Good yogurt range to Australia; Kellogg debuts Just Right Fusion cereal Down Under

This week's selection of new products include Jammie Dodgers muffins from UK firms Speedibake and Burton's Biscuits and dairy-free cheese snacks from ParmCrisps of the US.

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Jacob's cracker brand no longer for sale

Pladis, the UK snacks business, has revealed the current corporate thinking surrounding the future of cracker brand Jacob's.

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Singapore's Shiok Meats secures funding to build first cell-cultured food plant

A cell-cultured meat start-up in Asia plans to build its first manufacturing plant ahead of the launch of its first product.

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Ferrero to invest in Nutella plants in France

Italian confectionery group Ferrero is investing in a European spreads plant, including a new logistics centre.

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Tesco makes plant-based food commitment

Tesco has made a commitment to boost sales of plant-based products such as ready-meals and meat alternatives over the next five years.

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Thai Union to back food-tech companies through venture fund

Seafood giant Thai Union has announced that it is investing in a number of food-tech businesses through its venture fund.

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Ferrero to invest in Nutella plants in Normandy 

Italian confectionery group Ferrero is investing in a European spreads plant, including a new logistics centre.

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Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Utz buys H.K. Anderson pretzel assets from Conagra Brands

Recently-listed US snacks maker Utz Brands has acquired assets of a filled-pretzel brand from Conagra Brands.

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Wellness Natural buys SimplyProtein snack brand from Simply Good Foods

Wellness Natural, a newly formed natural food company in Canada, said it has acquired an established US snacks brand.

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Wellness Natural acquires snack brand from Simply Good Foods

Wellness Natural, a newly formed natural food company in Canada, said it has acquired an established US snacks brand.

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Norway 'mulls tax cut on confectionery'

The Norwegian government is said to be considering changing rules linked to taxes on sugar-laden food and beverage products and alcohol.

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Alternative-protein investor Lever VC details China strategy

Lever VC, an investor in start-ups offering alternatives to meat, dairy and seafood protein, has outlined the ambitions for its strategy of backing fledgling businesses in China.

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Cappello's eyes mainstream grocers as US frozen-food firm gets investment

Cappello's, the US frozen-food business, is looking to build distribution in a growing but competitive part of the store after attracting fresh investment.

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New products - Kellogg debuts Just Right Fusion cereal in Australia; Speedibake, Burton's Biscuit Co. team up on NPD; ParmCrisps launches dairy-free cheese snacks

This week's selection of new products include Jammie Dodgers muffins from UK firms Speedibake and Burton's Biscuits and dairy-free cheese snacks from ParmCrisps of the US.

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Unilever reveals start date for UK HQ move after shareholder approval

Shareholders of Anglo-Dutch consumer goods giant Unilever have voted on whether to approve changes to its corporate structure which would see its headquarters unified in London.

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Lantmannen invests in oats production at Ostgotland plant

Swedish agri-food firm Lantmännen plans to invest in a plant in the south-east of the country to increase oats production.

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Monday, September 28, 2020

UK food groups' reporting of Covid-19 cases questioned

A UK-based consultancy claims there is consistent under-reporting of Covid-19 cases and deaths at food plants in the country due to a HSE "loophole".

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Canada's Olymel to invest in poultry plant expansion

Canadian pork and poultry processor Olymel is to invest CAD31.5m (US$23.5m) in expanding one of its plants.

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Nestle launches dairy, plant-based accelerator

Nestlé has launched an R&D accelerator the company says is intended to "drive innovation and speed-to-market" of dairy and plant-based products.

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The Meatless Farm secures new funding for international expansion

The Meatless Farm Co., an alternative-protein business in the UK, has secured fresh financing from a group of new and existing investors.

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Instagram's Jelly Cake Revival Turns Vintage Camp Into Modern Art

Jelly first came to Lexie Park in a dream. In her over-10-year career as a fashion designer, Park felt a pull toward texture and transparency, and as she’s transitioned into food over the past year, those qualities drew her to jelly. She wondered what she could suspend and preserve inside a translucent, wobbling mass.

Now, Park has become one of Instagram's most iconic jelly artists. Through Nunchi, which she has developed into a full-time food business, she makes colorful, glassy-looking cakes that her followers fawn over for their pastel hues and glints of sparkle. Often, they have alternating layers of cloudy and clear confection, or pieces of fruit, jelly flowers, and even cartoon bunny heads floating inside. "I feel like [it's] psycho but cute," said Park, of the aesthetic that has earned her collaborations with brands like Nike (a swoosh floating atop tiers of baby pink and blue jelly) and the razor company Billie.

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Jelly cakes by Lexie Park/@eatnunchi | Photos courtesy Lexie Park

Not all of Park's work is so dainty. "When I first started, all my previous cakes and posts were a little bit crazier and uglier, in a sense," she said. Her cakes for commissions are primarily cute, but her more experimental jellies have an edge: a fish sliced into four pieces drifts in a jelly aquarium; Pedialyte forms caviar spheres, served in a tin; blobs surround a skin-colored baby, as though it's gestating in an alien womb. "I'm very extreme in my personality, so I don't want to just stick to one [style]—it's really based on how I feel."

In its growing Instagram niche, jelly art is all about duality. Jelly cakes can be adorable and pastel, like a child's toy—or they can be grotesque, making familiar foods look inexplicably foreign. Duality exists in the format of jelly itself: Whether it's made with animal-based gelatin or seaweed-derived agar agar, jelly looks artificial enough to seem almost inedible, and to some, there's still a knee-jerk aversion to Jell-O on premise alone. Despite jelly's niche revival on Instagram and groups like Show Me Your Aspics, which has accumulated more than 42,000 members since 2016, some people still feel that technicolor Jell-O and jiggling, vintage-inspired molds of meat are pieces of the past that they would rather forget.

jelly-cakes-by-lexie-park-eat-nunchi-2.jpg
Jelly cakes by Lexie Park/@eatnunchi | Photos courtesy Lexie Park

But jelly isn't just a medium; it's a state of mind. It engulfs an object and solidifies, making anything set inside visible yet distant, like insects trapped in amber. A photo is a reminder, but jelly is an encapsulation; it has the power to literally suspend items in time and place. The perfect California produce that Park gathers for her cakes, like family farm-grown peaches that taste like "nature's candy," stay pristine in jelly, twinkling in the sun as perfect as they were when Park cut them. For the food artists exploring the scene, jelly can call back the past and capture the present.

Park left fashion for food when she turned 30 as part of a "quarter-life crisis" that prompted her to take risks. "I wanted to try something completely new, but I think I was also holding a part of my youth," she said. She drew from her warm memories of the Sanrio characters and Morning Glory stationery of her childhood when thinking through her jelly cakes. Look at a Little Twin Stars design, and suddenly, the soft shapes and colors of a Nunchi cake carry a pleasing nostalgia. "I was thinking, what will make me feel like a kid again?" she explained.

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Jelly cakes by Kiki Cheung/@murder.cake | Photos courtesy Kiki Cheung

Kiki Cheung, who runs the Hong Kong-based cake studio Murder Cake, feels similarly soothed by jelly. As a result of the political protests last year, Cheung felt exhausted; baking cleared her head. Now, her cherub cakes are her most recognizable work: A glossy layer of jelly surrounds a wistful three-dimensional baby angel, pale like a Victorian cameo portrait. "I always imagine my cake is a pond," Cheung said. "There is a cherub antique floating on the water. Perhaps it creates an extreme sense of peace and calm." (The idea of calm might seem dichotomous with a bakery named for murder, but this is because cake is "born to be murdered," Cheung said, unable to be eaten without being destroyed.)

Working as a fashion editor, Cheung is surrounded by eye-catching visuals, and though she loves color, she struggles to incorporate it into her clothing. Jelly cakes, however, give her countless ways to express that creativity, so her work drifts between "kawaii, gothic, vintage, and girlish" depending on her mood or on customer requests.

At times, Cheung tags her cakes with phrases like #uglyfoodisbeautiful. Though the ugliness of Cheung's smooth, pleasingly shaped jellies is debatable, it's a nod to the way a friend once described her work. For this reason, too, Cheung sees her jelly art as a freeing break from the "aesthetic fatigue" of seeing beautiful things. "There is no boundary between pretty and ugly," she said. "Perhaps occasionally we need some 'ugly' things to refresh our tired eyes."

jelly-cakes-laura-taylor-instagram.jpg
Jelly cakes by Laura Taylor/@laurctay | Photos courtesy Laura Taylor

Still, if Park and Cheung's cakes are dreamlike, like preservations of pleasant moments, then other designs in the Instagram jelly scene might be more like nightmares. A 2014 Globe and Mail piece about the aspic comeback in high-end restaurants concluded that when done right, aspics could be a "culinary horror show" no longer. But what if you want to capture that sense of disgust?

Laura Taylor works in public relations for the fashion industry by day, but she started making jelly cakes as a hobby after discovering her grandmother's vintage Jell-O molds, finding that ideas tend to come to her as she's falling asleep. Once, she suspended hard-boiled eggs in clear jelly, with each section of the mold magnifying and refracting a chalky yolk. She's made jelly in the shape of a koi fish, with lychee fruit inside, and a red jelly cake spiked with yellow plastic fingers, each with a pointy red fingernail.

Jelly is intriguing because it's different from what people see in daily life, Taylor said, though the medium calls to mind the Jell-O she made with her family as a kid. Jelly can look artificial and gross, mirroring a movement within fashion toward the weird and grotesque, she added. "When I saw that people were updating jelly cakes and doing them for modern times and making them super weird and cool, I was, for some reason, super attracted to it," she said. "I think that kind of nostalgic part of it threw me into it a little bit as well."

janims-jelly-cake-art-instagram.jpg
Jelly cakes by Jasmin Seale/@jasnims | Photos courtesy Jasmin Seale

In Australia, graphic designer and photographer Jasmine Seale makes jelly cakes that are more art project than they are edible, drawing inspiration from "gross aspic recipes" and using ingredients she's scrounged from the garbage or found rotting in the fridge. Currently living out of a van, Seale is trying to find ways to make jelly on the road. Her work, posted on the Instagram page @jasnims, is the type that sears itself into your memory: Coarse, curly hair shakes within pale yellow jelly and falls on the ground with a plop, and ramen noodles dangle in blue goo into which Seale inexplicably inserts a grubby MacBook charger.

For Seale, jelly cakes are about the feeling and the format—but not so much the taste. Her worst so far, she said, was a pickle brine jelly with piped mashed potato that required so much gelatin to hold its shape that it had the mouthfeel of rubber. Since much of her work is made with garbage, Seale doesn't usually eat it. "I sometimes give the top a little lick to see how it tastes but it's never nice," she said. When it comes to her work, revulsion is an understandable (and somewhat intentional) response.

Like Instagram's messy cake scene, the jelly niche is refreshingly transgressive. It's a creator's state of mind molded into a shaky and gelatinous form, blurring the lines between dinner and dessert, past and present, edible and inedible, disgusting and delicious. Jelly congeals a vibe into jiggly layers, trapping a moment in time for viewers to interpret however they please.

"I want people to have a good time looking at them, maybe have a laugh, maybe be a little confused—something that makes you want to zoom right in," Seale said. No matter how you feel about her work, she finds a sense of excitement in grossness, whether that's by photographing moldy food, or by immortalizing waste—like a crusty, half-eaten sausage roll her housemate left in the trash—in jelly.

"You know how people are pretty gross, with all that pus and body fluid, but also beautiful and sexy?" she asked. "That's what I want my jellies to feel like."

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Beet and Orange Polenta with Mushrooms and Swiss Chard Recipe

Serves 4
Prep time: 15 minutes
Total time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

2 cups|500 ml beet juice
2 cups|500 ml whole milk
1 cup|170 grams quick-cooking polenta
6 tablespoons|80 grams grams unsalted butter
2 naval oranges
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
8 ounces|230 grams Swiss chard
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 garlic cloves, minced
8 ounces|225 grams mixed mushrooms, quartered if buttons or shiitake, separated in 2-inch pieces if beech mushrooms

Directions

  1. Bring the beet juice and milk to a low simmer in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the polenta and cook, stirring occasionally, until thick, about 5 minutes. Fold in 4 tablespoons|60 grams butter until melted and combined. Zest in one of the oranges and squeeze in the juice. Season with salt and pepper and keep warm.
  2. Remove the stems from the Swiss chard and dice. Roughly chop the leaves and set aside.
  3. Melt the remaining butter with the oil in a large skillet over medium-high. Add the Swiss chard stems and garlic and cook until the stems are slightly soft, about 3 minutes. Add the mushrooms and cook, tossing occasionally, until slightly golden, 6 minutes more. Add the Swiss chard leaves and cook until wilted, 1 to 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
  4. Divide the polenta among plates and top with the mushroom and Swiss chard mixture. Zest the remaining orange over each dish and serve.

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China advises importers to avoid frozen foods from "heavily-hit" Covid countries

China has reportedly advised importers to avoid frozen foods from countries "heavily hit" by Covid-19 as the virus has been detected on packaging.

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UK retailers issue warning on prices of no-deal Brexit

A UK trade body has warned consumers face the prospect of higher prices if no free trade deal is agreed with the European Union by the end of the year.

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US meats firm Johnsonville eyes more international M&A

The privately-owned group sees acquisitions as a way of its overseas business growing to the size of its domestic arm.

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Friday, September 25, 2020

Aviko acquires potato plant from Unilever under new tie-up

Aviko has acquired a plant in Germany from a FMCG major with which the Dutch potato business has formed a partnership. 

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Union expresses anger at Savencia plant closure plan

A French trade union has reacted angrily to plans announced by Savencia Fromage & Dairy that will affect the future of workers at one of the cheese group's facilities.

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New products - Spain's Noel launches healthier-for-you meat snacks; Hormel adds breakfast combos to Black Label range; Conagra takes Gardein brand into soups

This week's batch of new product offerings include new breakfast items from Hormel Foods and Conagra Brands moving into plant-based soups.

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Big Meat Is Selling Veggie Burgers—But It's Still Destroying the Environment

It’s time to wake up. On Global Day of Climate Action, VICE Media Group is solely telling stories about our current climate crisis. Click here to meet young climate leaders from around the globe and learn how you can take action.

The American supermarket is changing. Dairy shelves are increasingly crowded with coconut yogurts, oat milks, and cashew cheeses, while "meatless" sections eat up more and more shelf space to make way for new options in plant-based burgers, soy "crumbles," and assorted nuggets and sausages.

As shoppers have cut back on animal products—whether due to environmental concerns, health issues, or an ethical stance against animal cruelty—and look for appealing replacements, there's no shortage of companies offering up choices. While dairy alternatives have seen the most stratospheric growth in recent years, meatless options have also seen a surge in popularity as beef and chicken substitutes become more enticing to the mainstream, with a 37.8 percent growth in sales from 2017 to 2019, according to research from the Good Food Institute. From March to May of this year, sales of plant-based meats rose 264 percent over just nine weeks amid a major uptick in home cooking during the COVID-19 lockdown. And as start-ups like Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods bring the spotlight to the expanding profit potential in the plant-based meat market, Big Meat is angling for its share.

It's clear from alt-milk's current success that Big Dairy has essentially failed to contain the soy, almond, and oat milk industries, though certainly not for lack of trying. Meat companies seem to be trying a different approach: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

Through hopeful new lines and marketing campaigns, the meat industry is showing shoppers how its own products can be integrated into plant-forward eating instead of being replaced entirely. In 2019, Tyson—which produces an estimated 20 percent of all beef, pork, and chicken in the United States, and has previously backed Beyond Meat—launched a line of "plant-based" and blended meat products called Raised & Rooted. Perdue announced that it, too, would offer blended nuggets, alongside a five-year goal of making blended meat 5 percent of its overall business. Smithfield, the world's largest pork producer, followed suit with a meatless brand called Pure Farmland, as did Hormel under the name Happy Little Plants. This June, JBS, the world's largest meat processing company, jumped in the arena with its line of OZO faux meats, under its new subsidiary Planterra Foods.

Now that many of the world's biggest meat corporations are getting into plant-based products, the question remains as to whether they can effectively contribute to the movement for more climate-friendly food. Is there reason for consumers to trust their new direction, and is it even possible for these companies to ameliorate the problems caused, in part, by their own systems of industrial meat production?

The more plant-based a diet is, the more environmentally sustainable, a research review published in Sustainability concluded last year. That verdict echoed high-profile guidance from researchers of a study in Science in 2018, who found that avoiding animal products has "transformative potential" for the environment. The land use and greenhouse gas emissions of animal-based food production have majorly contributed to the climate crisis, in which experts now estimate that just seven years remain until the effects of global warming become irreversible. The science is there: Moving toward a future less dependent on animal agriculture is both responsible and unavoidable.

Naturally, there's a financial incentive for meat companies to launch vegan-friendly lines, according to Brian Kateman, co-founder and president of Reducetarian Foundation. His goal through the Reducetarian movement is to view meat consumption not as an all-or-nothing choice, but through the perspective that every vegetarian meal a person eats helps advance a world in which fewer animal products are consumed. "It's not necessarily because [meat companies] loathe factory farming, or have decided that they want to abandon the primary ways in which they make money," he said.

Kateman believes it's "unquestionably a positive development that meat companies are investing, producing, [and] promoting plant-based products," but there's good reason to be skeptical of their reasons for getting into the game and their methods of marketing those products. Many companies of this size will just go wherever the money is: In 2018, responding to the rising interest in non-meat protein, Perdue chairman Jim Perdue said, "Our vision is to be the most trusted name in premium protein. It doesn’t say premium meat protein, just premium protein. That’s where consumers are going."

For this reason, Kari Hamerschlag, deputy director of food and agriculture at Friends of the Earth, doesn't see the meat industry's current push into vegetarian options as an effective step toward a more sustainable food system. "I actually think that these large company investments will do very little to cut the massive impact of the world’s largest meat companies," she said. "Unless these companies actually slash their emissions, then they are not doing what they need to do to address the climate crisis."

Meat, fish, and dairy production use roughly 83 percent of the world’s farmland and are responsible for around 57 percent of our food system's greenhouse gas emissions, according to that 2018 Science study on reducing food's environmental impact. Even more disproportionate is the fact that all of that animal agriculture—and the environmental harm that comes with it—accounts for only 37 percent of the protein in our food supply. Producing a single kilogram of beef emits 60 kilograms of greenhouse gases (CO2-equivalents), while farming peas (which are used in numerous vegetarian meat substitutes) emits just one kilogram of these emissions per kilogram produced. When it comes to beef, most of those emissions come from land use and farm-stage processes like manure management and methane emissions. According to the EPA, manure management—yes, dealing with cow poop—alone accounts for 12 percent of the agriculture sector's total greenhouse gas emissions nationwide.

With these statistics in mind, it's difficult to see how Big Meat could be meaningfully interested in environmental causes while continuing to obtain most of their profits from factory farming. "It's greenwashing, and it's a smart marketing tool, and it's a profit," Hamerschlag explained. Greenwashing, a term coined by environmentalist Jay Westerveld in 1986, refers to practices that mislead consumers about a company or product's environmental practices or benefits, whether that's through false claims, self-congratulatory statements without backing evidence, or just vagueness.

For example, a bag of Tyson's Raised & Rooted meatless nuggets offers the slogan "100% delicious. 0% compromise," without even explaining what that compromise is. Other examples of greenwashing include the many instances of companies labeling foods "sustainable" without evidence or proof of third-party certification. Kateman pointed out that labeling around these claims needs to be honest: As he has written, Tyson's use of "plant-based" for its nuggets can be misleading since they contain eggs, breaking from the common understanding that "plant-based" means vegan.

"[Meat companies] are meeting the market, but they are not addressing climate change," Hamerschlag said. "Let's just be clear about that: They are not slashing their greenhouse gas emissions—in fact, they continue to grow, because they're expanding their operations in the meat sector." Though large meat companies have announced emissions reduction initiatives—Smithfield has committed to reducing absolute emissions 25 percent by 2025, and Tyson is working toward a 30 percent reduction by 2030—Hamerschlag cited concerns with the scope of their emissions reporting. These same companies have made false promises before: In 2007, Smithfield promised to eliminate gestation crates, and later claimed to have fulfilled this commitment in 2018, but animal welfare groups found that the company was still keeping many pigs in cramped, unsanitary conditions.

The average American eats over 200 pounds of meat per year, according to data from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, amounting to some of the highest meat consumption in the world. But as Hamerschlag pointed out, even if American meat consumption goes down, domestic meat production could still remain high due to the demand for exports. Before the pandemic hit meat processing plants hard—unsafe workplace conditions for meatpacking workers have caused at least 42,000 cases of coronavirus and more than 200 deaths—the pork industry was still expanding. Driven by exports to China, pork production hit a record last year, the New York Times reported.

"I think the key thing to keep in mind is that in order to be a real solution to climate change, the meat companies need to start tracking, reporting, and setting serious greenhouse gas reduction target goals that would actually require them to divest, and produce less meat and dairy overall, rather than just adding a plant-based option to their portfolio," Hamerschlag said. While it is a "real climate solution" for consumers to eat more vegetables and legumes, and specifically, to opt out of factory-farmed meat, she concluded that it's crucial for meat companies to curb production and emissions, as well as for the government to tip the scale by integrating reduction goals into its food procurement programs.

Unlike the smaller vegan start-ups that we've been seeing more and more of in health food stores, these massive meat companies are equipped with resources to not just meet the demand for these options, but increase it. They have a large reach, distribution channels from supermarkets to stadiums, and capital to fund R&D, marketing, and investments in plant-based food brands. "Anywhere that food is served, these companies have, in one way or another, connections, so they're really able to accelerate the distribution of these products," Kateman said. Because of these resources, analysts have forecasted that companies like Tyson and Nestle will eventually become the leaders in the meat substitute space.

Danielle Nierenberg, co-founder and president of the sustainability-focused think tank Food Tank, would also ask for more from meat companies than just blended burgers and copycat veggie nuggets. "What I'd like to see from the Tysons and other big meat companies in the world is reversing some of the practices that have been so destructive to public health and the environment and to animal welfare," she said. "That would be a bigger step forward in curbing climate change and the environmental problems that come from industrial meat production." Big companies have power to sway things, Nierenberg added, pointing to Walmart's push into the organic sector. Though the chain's move into organic was controversial, its sheer size made those products more available to suburban shoppers, and familiarized more people with the concept in general.

"I think it's really important that we not let perfection, be the enemy of the good."

Ultimately, it's unclear whether it's possible to truly divest from the meat industry's systemic problems by buying plant-based products produced by those same corporations, even if doing so could help shift consumer thinking. While consumers could ostensibly avoid some of these issues by buying vegan food from smaller start-ups and independent companies, financial ties to the meat industry are common: OSI, which supplies meat to McDonald's, also produces Impossible Burgers, and Lightlife is owned by Canadian meat packaging goods company Maple Leaf Foods.

Despite the benefits that come with large meat companies' ample resources and wide distribution channels, Hamerschlag does not personally want to see the profits from meat substitutes going to corporations whose "exploitative" business model gives her "significant concerns with the labor practices, the environmental practices, and health practices."

But shopping ethically is never perfect—that's part of the ethos Kateman promotes with the Reducetarian movement. Earlier this month, oat milk brand Oatly, which has boasted about its products' environmental benefits and company sustainability, came under scrutiny for receiving an investment from a firm with ties to deforestation. But as Oatly has explained in response, it hopes this partnership will push other private equity firms to invest in green companies, ultimately resulting in maximum change for the environment.

A whole foods-based diet that relies on vegetables and legumes rather than processed meat and dairy substitutes is the safest bet when it comes to environmental friendliness and ethical consumption—but ultimately, we've just got to do our best. "The point is it's a spectrum. I think it's really important that we not let perfection, be the enemy of the good," Kateman said. "If someone has decided to cut back on animal products, eat more plant-based foods, regardless of the source, that's something to be celebrated."



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Fideos and Spicy Chicken Meatballs Recipe

Serves 6
Prep time: 45 minutes minutes
Total time: 1 hour

Ingredients

for the meatballs:
2 poblano chiles
1 jalapeño 
½ medium red onion
¼ cup|60 ml olive oil 
1 pound|454 grams ground chicken 
1 cup|60 grams panko breadcrumbs
¼ cup|15 grams cup finely chopped cilantro 
2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika 
½ teaspoon cayenne 
½ teaspoon ground cumin 
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 large egg
1 lime, zested and juiced

_for the tomato sauce and fideos_**:** 
1 ½ pounds|685 grams ripe tomatoes (or heirloom if you’re feeling fancy and they’re in season), roughly chopped
2 garlic cloves, smashed and peeled 
½ medium red onion, roughly chopped 
¼ cup|60 ml olive oil
7 ounces|200 grams fideos or vermicelli
2 tablespoons unsalted butter 
1 tablespoon tomato paste 
¼ cup|60 ml heavy cream 
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste 
crumbled cotija cheese, to serve
lime wedges and cilantro leaves, for garnish

Directions

  1. Make the meatballs: Heat the oven to broil. Toss the poblanos, jalapeño, and onion with 2 tablespoons of the oil on a baking sheet. Broil, flipping once, until charred, 12 to 15 minutes. Set aside until cool enough to handle, then peel, discarding the skins and seeds, and finely chop. Transfer to a large bowl and mix with the ground chicken, panko, cilantro, salt, coriander, paprika, cayenne, cumin, garlic, egg, lime zest, and juice.
  2. Pour the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil on the baking sheet. Form the chicken mixture into about 36 balls and place on the baking sheet. Broil until the meatballs are brown, 7 to 8 minutes. Set aside.
  3. Make the tomato sauce: Purée the tomatoes, garlic, and onion in the bowl of a blender or food processor until smooth.
  4. Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium. Add the fideos and, working in batches, cook until they are golden and toasted, about 4 minutes per batch. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the fideos to a bowl.
  5. Add the butter to the saucepan to melt, then stir in the tomato paste. Cook until dark and caramelized, about 1 minute. Add the reserved tomato purée and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to maintain a simmer, then cook until the tomato purée has reduced slightly, about 8 minutes. Add the toasted fideos and the cream and cook until the fideos are tender, about 6 minutes more. Add the meatballs and their juices and season with salt and pepper.
  6. To serve, divide the fideos among plates and top with a few meatballs. Sprinkle with the cotija and cilantro and serve with lime wedges.

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Dutch plant-based firm Vivera invests EUR30m to double capacity

Vivera, a plant-based business in the Netherlands, plans to invest on one of its facilities to meet the increased demand for vegan and vegetarian products.

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Cell-based meat firm Mosa Meat gives funding update

Mosa Meat, the Dutch start-up developing cell-based meat that counts Switzerland's Bell Food Group as an investor, has issued an update on its Series B round of investment.

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B&G Foods to drop insensitive imagery from Cream of Wheat porridge

US consumer goods group B&G Foods is joining other food manufacturers in dropping insensitive imagery from packaging.

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Thursday, September 24, 2020

German, French consumers buying into cell-based meat concept - research

New research has suggested that a large percentage of consumers in two major European markets are comfortable with the concept of cell-based meat.

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Australia's Murray River Organics to sell citrus, grape assets to Costa Group

Murray River Organics, an Australia-based producer of dried fruit snacks, is selling a portion of land to a local fruit and vegetable business.

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General Mills wins new customers but remains cautious on guidance

Winning customers and expanding capacity as General Mills trades through the Covid-19 pandemic were among topics discussed as the US giant reported its fiscal Q1 numbers.

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PZ Cussons books impairment charges against Australia-based food brands

UK consumer-goods giant PZ Cussons has revealed that it has booked impairment charges against two of its food businesses.

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Trading through Covid-19 and beyond, daily food industry updates - Thursday 24 September (free to read)

Daily updates on how Covid-19 is affecting the world's packaged food sector – and how executives see the market and consumer behaviour taking shape in the months ahead.

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New products - Hormel adds breakfast combos to Black Label range; Conagra takes Gardein brand into soups; UK's Finnebrogue launches plant-based bacon; Kerry's meat-free burgers

This week's batch of new product offerings include new breakfast items from Hormel Foods and Conagra Brands moving into plant-based soups.

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S2G Ventures, Canada fund CDPQ team up on sustainability-focused investments

US venture-capital firm S2G Ventures has linked up with Canadian peer CDPQ to back entrepreneurs working on "concrete solutions to climate change".

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Agrokor successor Fortenova attracts interest for frozen foods business

Croatia's Fortenova Group, which emerged from the restructuring of Agrokor last year, said it has received a number of offers for its frozen foods business.

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VC firm S2G partners with peer in sustainable food investment initiative

US venture-capital firm S2G Ventures has linked up with a Canadian peer in a co-investment partnership that will promote sustainability in the food chain.

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Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Industry warning after UK issues "worst-case" EU trade assumptions

The UK food industry has issued a warning over the shipments in certain foods should the country's government worst-case assumptions for post-Brexit disruption come to pass.

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Pilgrim's Pride makes CEO appointment after Jayson Penn's exit

Pilgrim's Pride has promoted a company executive to the roles of president and CEO of the US poultry processor as Jayson Penn is "no longer with the company".

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JBS announces Amazon deforestation fund

Brazilian meat giant JBS has launched an initiative to help tackle deforestation in a region of its homeland.

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Trading through Covid-19 and beyond, daily food industry updates - Wednesday 23 September (free to read)

Daily updates on how Covid-19 is affecting the world's packaged food sector – and how executives see the market and consumer behaviour taking shape in the months ahead.

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New products - Conagra takes Gardein brand into soups; UK's Finnebrogue launches plant-based bacon; Kerry's Richmond brand rolls out meat-free burgers

This week's batch of new product offerings include plant-based bacon from the UK's Finnebrogue Artisan and meat-free burgers from Kerry Foods.

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UK food-to-go market forecast to decline as work-from-home policy curtails demand

The UK food-to-go-market is expected to decline by almost half this year before "bouncing" back somewhat in the following 12 months.

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Kiddyum rescued from liquidation by potato supplier Albert Bartlett

Kiddyum, the UK-based kids' healthy meals manufacturer, has been rescued from liquidation by a UK vegetable supplier.

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Classic Manicotti Recipe

Serves 8
Prep time: 30 minutes
Total time: 2 hours

Ingredients

for the sauce: 
2 tablespoons olive oil 
1 medium zucchini (about 10 ounces|300 grams), roughly chopped 
1 small yellow onion, roughly chopped 
3 garlic cloves, smashed 
2 pounds|900 grams fresh tomatoes, roughly chopped 
½ teaspoon red pepper flakes 
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste 
1 ½ cups|20 grams basil, plus more to garnish 
2 tablespoons unsalted butter 
granulated sugar, to taste (optional)

for the crepes:
6 large eggs
2 ¼ cups|340 grams “00” flour 
1 teaspoon kosher salt 
4 tablespoons|65 grams unsalted butter

for the filling: 
3 cups|700 grams ricotta cheese 
2 cups|140 grams grated fontina cheese 
2 cups30 grams roughly chopped baby arugula, plus more to garnish
½ cup|60 grams grated parmesan 
2 large eggs 
1 lemon, zested and juiced 
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Directions

  1. Make the sauce. Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan over medium-high. Add the zucchini and onion and cook until lightly golden and soft, 4 to 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, 1 minute more. Add the tomatoes, red pepper flakes, salt, and pepper and let the mixture bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to maintain a simmer and cook until the tomatoes have begun to cook down and the sauce has thickened slightly, about 10 minutes. Stir in the basil and butter and season with salt and pepper. Cool slightly, then transfer to the bowl of a food processor and purée.
  2. Make the crepes. In a large bowl, whisk the eggs with 1 ½ cups|375 ml cold water. Add the flour and salt, whisking until a smooth, pourable batter forms. If the batter is too thick whisk in 1 tablespoon of cold water at a time until the batter pours easily.
  3. Heat 1 teaspoon of the butter in a 10-inch nonstick skillet over medium. Ladle about ⅓ cup|80 ml batter into the skillet, tilting the skillet so the bottom is entirely coated. Cook until the bottom of the crepe is set and just golden, 1 to 2 minutes. Invert the crepe over a clean kitchen towel to cool. Repeat with the remaining batter, adding butter to the skillet as needed.
  4. Make the filling: In a large bowl, combine the ricotta, fontina, parmesan, arugula, eggs, lemon juice and zest, salt, and pepper.
  5. Heat the oven to 425°F. Spread 1 cup|250 ml of sauce in the bottom of a 9-inch-by-13-inch baking dish. Place one crepe, golden-side-up, on a clean work surface. Add a scant ½ cup|100 grams of the filling in a line across the bottom and delicately roll. Place the crepe, seam side down, in the baking dish. Repeat with the remaining crepes until the baking dish is filled snugly. Spread 3 cups of sauce over the manicotti, then tightly cover with aluminum foil. Bake until the sauce is bubbling, 20 to 25 minutes. Sprinkle with the parmesan cheese and garnish with more basil and arugula. Serve with any extra sauce on the side.

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Mars gives Uncle Ben's new brand name amid racial stereotyping concerns

The Uncle Ben's brand, owned by US food and confectionery giant Mars, has a new identity amid concern the old image may lead to claims of racial stereotyping.

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Hochdorf consolidates Bimbosan infant-formula production into former ingredients site

Hochdorf is consolidating infant-formula production in Switzerland, with plans to sell what will become a redundant site.

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Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Indonesia's Garudafood eyes majority stake in Prochiz cheese firm Mulia Boga Raya

The Indonesia-based group, also present in snacks and confectionery, wants to add to its dairy business through M&A.

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FMCG giants try again on deforestation

Seventeen of the world's largest FMCG groups and retailers have launched another bid to tackle deforestation.

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Plant-based meat business Daring raises $8m in US funding round

Faux-chicken business Daring has raised multi-millions in a funding round outside its domestic market.

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UK plant-based meat business Daring raises $8m in US funding round

UK faux-chicken business Daring has raised multi-millions in a funding round outside its domestic market.

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General Mills makes greenhouse gas emissions pledge

US food major General Mills has pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across its "full value chain".

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Aryzta-owned La Brea Bakery invests in automation

An Aryzta business in the US is investing in automation as part of a "long-term investment" by its parent company.

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Mondelez on look-out to buy healthier brands

The US-based snacks giant, home to Cadbury and Oreo, is interested in buying brands offering healthier snacks, its CEO has said.

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New products - UK's Finnebrogue launches plant-based bacon; Kerry's Richmond brand rolls out meat-free burgers

This week's batch of new product offerings include plant-based bacon from the UK's Finnebrogue Artisan and meat-free burgers from Kerry Foods.

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Trading through Covid-19 and beyond, daily food industry updates - Tuesday 22 September (free to read)

Daily updates on how Covid-19 is affecting the world's packaged food sector – and how executives see the market and consumer behaviour taking shape in the months ahead.

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US ice-cream maker Blue Bell handed fine for 2015 listeria outbreak

Blue Bell Creameries, the US ice-cream maker, has been handed an eight-figure fine by a federal court over a listeria outbreak in 2015.

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Astral Foods CEO Chris Schutte hospitalised after accident

Chris Schutte, the chief executive of South African poultry processor Astral Foods, was admitted to hospital last weekend after he was involved in a motorcycle accident.

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Plant-based firm Green Monday raises $70m from investor group

Green Monday, a plant-based start-up in Hong Kong, has received a new round of funding from a diversified investor group.

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Jatenergy enters Taiwan, Vietnam and Chinese supermarkets

Australia-based dairy and infant-formula business Jatenergy is expanding into two new Asian markets, it has announced.

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Monday, September 21, 2020

UK baker Finsbury waits for clarity on Covid, Brexit before resuming financial guidance

Finsbury Food Group, the UK bakery business, is still refraining from providing financial guidance amid the uncertainties posed by Covid and Brexit.

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Food majors accused of "hypocrisy" over plastic reduction commitments

Some of the world's biggest food companies have been criticised in a new report which has looked at their sustainability credentials.

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PepsiCo announces new renewable electricity targets

US food and beverage heavyweight PepsiCo has announced its target date for sourcing 100% of its electricity from renewable sources.

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French agri-food co-op Even names Christian Griner CEO

There's set to be a change at the top of Even, with CEO Christian Couilleau to step down from the helm of the French agri-food co-op after 27 years in charge.

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PepsiCo announces new renewable electricity target

US food and beverage heavyweight PepsiCo has announced its target date for sourcing 100% of its electricity from renewable sources.

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Nestle to expand infant-formula production in Russia

Nestlé is to expand its infant-formula manufacturing operation in a key emerging market, it has announced.

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Trading through Covid-19 and beyond, daily food industry updates - Monday 21 September (free to read)

Daily updates on how Covid-19 is affecting the world's packaged food sector – and how executives see the market and consumer behaviour taking shape in the months ahead.

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Nestle teams up with Dawn Foods on foodservice NPD

Nestle has formed a collaboration agreement with a US bakery manufacturer to produce branded foodservice products.

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UK soup maker Re-Nourish eyes exports after investment win

Re-Nourish, the UK soup maker, has received funding from the venture arm of a major food-ingredients supplier and an unnamed investment angel.

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India food-processing minister quits over new farm laws

New laws in India drawn up to improve prices for farmers have led to the resignation of the country's minister in charge of food processing.

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Pumpkin Cheesecake Oat Bars Recipe

Serves  8-10
Prep time: 20 minutes
Total time: 1 hour and 40 minutes

Ingredients

for the crumbs and crust:
1 ½ cups|240 grams all-purpose flour
1 ½ cups|170 grams rolled oats
1 cup|___grams light brown sugar
1 teaspoon kosher salt
½ teaspoon baking powder
16 tablespoons|230 grams unsalted butter
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

for the filling:
8 ounces|226 grams cream cheese, at room temperature
½ cup|130 grams granulated sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon ground cloves
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
½ teaspoon kosher salt
1 large egg
1 (15-ounce|425 gram) can pumpkin purée, preferably Libby’s

Directions

  1. Make the crust and crumble: Heat the oven to 350°F. Line an 8-inch square baking dish with parchment paper.
  2. Mix the flour, oats, sugar, salt, and baking powder together in a medium bowl. Melt half of the butter, then mix with half of the oat mixture in the prepared baking dish, pressing into the bottom in an even layer. Refrigerate until ready to use.
  3. Cut the remaining butter into cubes and, using your fingers, mix into the remaining oat mixture with the cinnamon until pea-sized crumbles form. Refrigerate until ready to use.
  4. Make the filling: Using a hand mixer, beat all of the ingredients in a medium bowl until smooth. Pour over the prepared crust and top with the prepared crumble. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  5. Bake the crumble until golden, about 1 hour and 10 minutes. Cool slightly, then cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours before serving.

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Owner of Greek food group Vivartia in talks with CVC Capital Partners

The owner of Vivartia has received a binding offer for the Greece-based food group from a European private-equity fund.

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Owner of Greek dairy firm Vivartia in talks with CVC Capital Partners

The owner of Greek dairy firm Vivartia has received a binding offer to acquire the business from a European private-equity fund.

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French baby-food firm Yooji raises more cash, names new CEO

Yooji, the French baby-food start-up, has attracted more funding, including, again, from one of the major names in the sector.

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Friday, September 18, 2020

Nestle CEO forecasts sales for "health-science" division

Nestlé chief executive Mark Schneider expects to double the monetary value of its health and nutrition business by next year.

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Food groups slammed for selling "empty packets" to French consumers

Seven food companies and grocers have been accused of misleading French consumers with products providing too much packaging and too little content.

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New products - Saputo adds US to Cathedral City roster; Premier Foods debuts Sharwood's reduced-sugar sachets; Nestle's NAT Bears cereal in UK; Good Good Krunchy Keto Bars hit US

This week's selection of new products includes faux meatballs from Beyond Meat in the US and plant-based additions to Symington's Naked pot meal range in the UK.

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US meats firm Johnsonville buys Vermont Smoke & Cure

Johnsonville, the privately-owned US meat products group, has sought to expand its range through the acquisition of a local peer.

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France's Mademoiselle Desserts invests to meet post-Covid demand

Mademoiselle Desserts Group, the France-based frozen bakery supplier, has announced how it plans to meet an expected increase in demand for its products post-Covid.

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US snacks maker Cheeze Kurls sold

The own-label manufacturer, based in Michigan, has a new owner, moving the business out of family control.

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Chef Diana Dávila Made Free Food for Families in Response to COVID-19

The role of restaurants as a community space has shifted significantly in 2020. Amid a struggling hospitality industry and with continued health risks and restrictions on indoor dining in many states, restaurants have been forced to re-envision the communal experience of food. VICE asked chefs and restaurant owners: Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, what has finding community through food looked like for you? These conversations took place in late July and early August, and the situation for the restaurant industry continues to change quickly.

After Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker announced the statewide shutdown of bars and restaurants on March 15 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, chef Diana Dávila quickly pivoted Mi Tocaya Antojería, her three-year-old Chicago restaurant, into a to-go operation. But with unclear guidelines and a shortage of information, Dávila decided to close the restaurant after just one day. In May, Dávila reopened Mi Tocaya to participate in Erik Bruner Yang's Power of Ten initiative, a Capital One-sponsored program that funded restaurants to partner with local organizations to feed communities nationwide. Working with the Logan Square Neighborhood Association, Dávila and Mi Tocaya provided free meals for families at local elementary schools.

With Mi Tocaya's participation in the initiative over, the restaurant is currently doing to-go food and minimal outdoor dining, despite state regulations allowing limited indoor service. Dávila told VICE about how the initiative helped her and her staff better understand their community, and what survival for Mi Tocaya might look like.


“We opened back up [in May]. A friend of mine who lives in D.C. started this project called the Power of Ten initiative. He got funded, and it was about small business owners giving to the community. Basically, they gave us money as if it was a catering order, and we got to hire a couple people, we got to help our community out, and the business gets a little bit of money, too. Obviously, we did apply for PPP [loans], so it kind of came in all at the same time.

I feel like [the Power of Ten initiative] really changed a lot of [our] employees; I almost feel bad about how good it felt. So many times—especially in this industry, as cooks who work long hours—there's not a lot of community work that gets done. We were doing more than 1,000 meals a week, and going to different locations—not just preparing the meals, but [also] delivering them and being with people; that's when you can really understand [your community]. There's nothing like giving something with no desire of receiving anything except for their enjoyment of the food—their enjoyment of what it is that you're giving.

This is our community; let's try to make an impact here in our community first.

It's extremely rewarding; that's what I mean when I said that I started feeling guilty about how good this makes me feel. We all sort of had that feeling, but meeting and interacting with people in our community and in our local schools felt really amazing. I think it really made everyone want to do more.

What does it mean to actually be a part of your community? Sometimes you just kind of forget. Why is it important for you to be involved in your community, and know what its strong suits and what its weak points are? [This idea] is really what is going to make you a better contributing [member]. Almost none of [our employees] are married, none of them own their houses, and there are only a few that have children. I always want to call them kids, and they're not; they're in their 20s, and a lot of times they have all this stress and anxiety about, oh, the world is all gone to shit. It really does start this like: What is it that you can do to help? That's how you get to learn about all of these systemic things that we talk about every single election.

I didn't know where I wanted to do this. I was like, Should we do first responders? Should we do this, should we do that? Should we go to the South Side? But you know what? There is a need here in our neighborhood. This is our community; let's try to make an impact here in our community first. I live right by the restaurants, my children go to public school, but you never stop learning. I had never actually paired up with a nonprofit organization in my own community [continuously].

That saying that it takes a village to raise children—100 percent, it really does. We've kind of gone into this like: What happens if you don't have family that can help you out? I love children; it sucks that sometimes, we're not able to take care of them as much as we should. If I can do something to help families in that regard, where you don't have to get shitty food from a place that is not good for your children's nutrition, [I will]. The food that we make is vegetables, protein—good for you, and it tastes delicious.

Being a chef, you can do so many things; it doesn't mean you have to have a restaurant. For me, I have always been in love with going out to eat. Right now, with patio [dining], we get to have that. We have a really cute patio right outside our restaurants. We lean more on the side of safety: All we have is four tables, and we don't accept any tables larger than 4. I think it's nice, and these guests never have to come inside.

Right now, we're trying to figure it out, because we still haven't been able to be stable. Just in these weeks, it's been whether it's to-go food only, but then, [the city is] opening up patios—and then our to-go business went down—and then after that, we had everything that happened with the beginning of the protests with George Floyd. All of these things have created instability. Now, [restaurants] can open dine-in, and our to-go business dropped again.

When we want something, when something's important to us, we do our everything to be able to make that happen.

I feel a responsibility to protect my employees as well. I have no idea where [guests] have been, if they take [the virus] seriously, because there are people out there who don't. For me, I'd rather lean toward safety. I feel comfortable with the four tables on the patio; I really don't feel comfortable with people inside.

Right now we are starting to wean off of this PPP, and match our labor to the average sales that we can get at this point. Our team is very strong right now, and everybody has been helping everybody. We pay everybody a fair hourly wage, and now, tips get distributed to everyone. It's all of our jobs to do this; it creates a stronger team.

My husband and I are pretty dogged—we're persistent. When we want something, when something's important to us, we do our everything to be able to make that happen. I don't want to close. I want Mi Tocaya to survive, and I'm going to do my absolute best to try to make that happen. But, you also have to know when it's not going to work. You have to be prepared for both.”

This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.



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Celery and Date Chicken Stew Recipe

Serves 4
Prep time: 10 minutes
Total time:  1 hour and 45 minutes

Ingredients

1 ½ pounds|680 grams bone-in, skinless chicken thighs (about 6)
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large yellow onion, diced
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
3 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1 head celery, cut into 1-inch pieces
4 cups|1 liter chicken stock
1 cup|30 grams finely chopped parsley
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
6 ounces|170 grams medjool dates, pitted and roughly chopped 
steamed basmati rice, to serve

Directions

  1. Season the chicken all over with salt and pepper. Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium-high. Add the chicken and cook, flipping once, until golden, about 7 minutes. Transfer to a plate.
  2. Add the onion to the saucepan and cook, stirring, until lightly golden, about 3 minutes. Add the turmeric and garlic and cook 1 minute more, then stir in the celery. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes, then return the chicken to the pan along with the stock, parsley, and cinnamon and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to maintain a simmer and cook, partially covered, until the chicken is tender, about 1 hour and 30 minutes. Add the dates and season with salt and pepper. Cook for 10 minutes longer, then serve with the rice.

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End deforestation initiative in Brazil gets 'big meat' backing

A Brazilian meat giant has signed up to an initiative to help end deforestation in its home market with a local peer reportedly following suit.

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Orkla CEO forecasts jump in plant-based sales

The Nordic food group, home to vegetarian brands Naturli' and Anamma, wants to double its revenue from plant-based products in two years.

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New products - Premier Foods debuts Sharwood's reduced-sugar sauce sachets; Nestle launches NAT Bears cereal in the UK; Good Good takes Krunchy Keto Bars to the US

This week's selection of new products includes faux meatballs from Beyond Meat in the US and plant-based additions to Symington's Naked pot meal range in the UK.

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Emmi strengthens desserts presence with deal for Indulge Desserts

Swiss dairy group Emmi has strengthened its position in international desserts with the acquisition of a business in the US.

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Thursday, September 17, 2020

Eight Fifty Food Group 'mulling London flotation'

Eight Fifty Food Group, one of private-equity firm CapVest's two major food platforms in the UK and Ireland, is reportedly weighing up a move to list in London.

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New products - Nestle launches NAT Bears cereal in the UK; Good Good takes Krunchy Keto Bars to the US, General Mills debuts keto-friendly Ratio range

This week's selection of new products includes faux meatballs from Beyond Meat in the US and plant-based additions to Symington's Naked pot meal range in the UK.

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Hilton Food Group "well-placed" to weather recession, Covid-19 escalation

Hilton Food Group said it is well-placed to weather the escalation in the coronavirus crisis and a possible recession.

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Danone plans capex to support Alpro initiatives

French dairy giant Danone is to invest in facilities in Belgium and the UK where one of its major brand's products are manufactured.

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US frozen-food firm Overhill Farms set for Covid fine

Overhill Farms, the US frozen-foods supplier, faces a fine in California for allegedly failing to protect staff from Covid-19.

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US-based Hilo Nutrition acquired by local PE firm Highlander Partners

Hilo Nutrition, a US business focusing on health and wellness, has been acquired by a local private-equity firm for an undisclosed sum.

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New products - Nestle launches NAT Bears cereal in the UK; General Mills debuts keto-friendly Ratio range and reveals"mess-free" Old El Paso Tortilla Pockets

This week's selection of new products includes faux meatballs from Beyond Meat in the US and plant-based additions to Symington's Naked pot meal range in the UK.

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UK snack-bar maker Halo Foods sold to US PE firm Peak Rock

Halo Foods, the UK snack-bar maker once owned by Finnish food group Raisio, has its second private-equity owner in four years.

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The Bay Area's Only Ohlone Pop-Up Is Preserving Its Culture Over Zoom

The role of restaurants as a community space has shifted significantly in 2020. Amid a struggling hospitality industry and with continued health risks and restrictions on indoor dining in many states, restaurants have been forced to re-envision the communal experience of food. VICE asked chefs and restaurant owners: Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, what has finding community through food looked like for you? These conversations took place in late July and early August, and the situation for the restaurant industry continues to change quickly.

Since 2018, Vincent Medina and Louis Trevino, members of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe and Rumsen Ohlone community of the East Bay respectively, have run the pop-up restaurant Cafe Ohlone in Berkeley, California out of the patio of University Press Books. At the helm of the only Ohlone restaurant in the world, Medina and Trevino serve their traditional foods, as well as honor—and introduce to those unfamiliar—the culture of the East Bay's indigenous people.

On March 14, Medina and Trevino closed Cafe Ohlone ahead of the state's shelter-in-place order, and last month, the bookstore announced it would close permanently because of the pandemic. Despite the pop-up's current closure, Medina told VICE how he's finding hope by drawing on his community's history of resilience, and how Cafe Ohlone will continue on.


“We opened Cafe Ohlone in September of 2018. We did this because we wanted to be able to create a physical space within our homeland, where people have never left, where our family and our tribe still continues to live and thrive. We wanted to be able to create a tangible space for our community, to be able to eat our traditional foods and be around our traditional culture and have a safe space in our very urban homelands.

We also wanted this to be a space where we could educate the public about who we are as the indigenous people of this area: teach them that we've never left, that our elders are strong, and that our ancestors' strength has carried us through a lot of hard times that have come with colonization. There's much more to our story than just colonization. We believe that when people can learn about who we are—not in a museum setting or in a past tense setting, but as contemporary people that are keeping our traditional culture alive—then those people are more likely to stand with our community.

We closed early in the pandemic. Our community has survived through a series of extremely painful, very real pandemics that affected our ancestors directly. Even though we're young, healthy people, we know that we can carry something back home. We want to make sure that we are responsible about who we are and keeping our community safe—that means closing early, even if it means, of course, a financial loss.

After we saw that this wasn't going to go away after two weeks, we immediately shifted this work that we were doing at the cafe. Every week, we come together over Zoom for language classes in this beautiful multi-generational effort, where our language—which is heavily suppressed, along with our foods and every other aspect of our culture—is growing by the week. We feel it in a tangible way as we see young babies growing up with this language and elders in these Zoom classes.

We've also been doing some cooking classes over Zoom, which has been really exciting because so much of our traditional foods are gathered. Where I live with Louis and my community, and also where we gather so many of these foods, is where my great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother was born. She was born before the missions, before colonization, and we're still right there in that area. To know that we're gathering in these places—that we're right there together in this super specific area—makes us have a lot of clarity in this time that's also very confusing in many ways. It gives us a lot of sanity and strength in knowing that we're home.

That was always the hope that our family had: that we would have these things forever.

We call ourselves the Virtual Verona Band. Today, our tribe here in the East Bay is called Muwekma, which means "the people," but before the tribe was reorganized back in the 1980s, all of our great grandparents that are alive today were once members of an older tribe over in Pleasanton called the Verona Band of Alameda County. That tribe existed right after the mission times, right after our family was enslaved in the missions and there was a lot of pain. Shortly after, Americans came in, and there was another big wave of pain with the genocide imposed against our people by the American government.

We look back to that, and we think about the conditions that our family was going through: the racism, the discrimination, the violence, how they banded together to look after one another and our culture for the common good, and how they survived those things. That's what gave us the idea of calling this the Virtual Verona Band—so really think about that time of coming together and protecting culture, just in a modern framework.

It's been so exciting to see the interest that's there and how it's growing regularly. You just hear so much hope right now, which is something that's contrasting a lot of what's in the national conversation right now. There's also a lot of challenges out there; we can't shy away from that either. But it presents us an alternative, which is that when we have culture, when we have these roots, when we have our families, when we know that there's these things that we could be able to tap back into, that we could have a second time back in our world. That was always the hope that our family had: that we would have these things forever.

I feel like both Louis and myself, we've known that our work has been good for our people. This is what our life's work has been about—to make sure that we honor those sacrifices and make the road easier for those future generations. That dedication is shared within our tribes, within our community. Right now, that's just really shown our strength. It's showing how much people care, how much people love our culture, and that includes us as well.

Our people have always been good at adapting to changes, when we wanted to, on our terms.

As a result of the pandemic, the bookstore that we were using the space from closed. It's a time of transformation. By late August, early September, we're going to be unveiling these carefully curated boxes that are going to be the next stage of Cafe Ohlone during the pandemic. These cedar boxes are going to be full of all of the components of our traditional meals.

You would open it and the first thing you would see would be this explosion of Ohlone culture. They would smell these herbs, which connect them to the landscape that we come from. They take off that first layer of herbs, and there will be all the components of what makes one of our meals special. They would see a password to a protected Vimeo link, where our community would be interpreting in English and Chochenyo the meal that they're about to eat, what makes this meal special, where these ingredients are sourced from, the connection to village sites and ancestry that we have, and the fact that our people are still living in these spaces.

We're thinking of it as a way to keep the story and our work moving forward in a way that's still intentional, that's curated, that's slow, that's cautious, that would be about how beautiful our culture is. This whole thing of the Virtual Verona Band and being able to be together with our people over Zoom: This is a new reality. Our people have always been good at adapting to changes, when we wanted to, on our terms. This is something that is on our terms.

We think about what our ancestors would think of us if they could see—which we believe they are—us together on Zoom, being together speaking our language in this modern way, and it's such a cool thing. It makes us feel connected together, it's productive and effective, and also, it's doing what we need to be doing, which is keeping our culture moving forward.”

This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.



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Vertical-farm operator Infarm gets more funding

Infarm, the Germany-based vertical-farm operator, has attracted more funding to fuel its bid to "make a truly global impact".

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Greenyard raises annual profit guidance as sales surge

Belgium-based fruit and veg supplier Greenyard has adjusted its FY earnings guidance based on a changing sales picture.

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Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Disgraced Politician Anthony Weiner Has a New Job Selling Fancy Countertops

Last week, a Brooklyn countertop company sent out a press release, telling potential customers that they were just a couple of clicks away from having a sparkly, color-flecked counter that looks like someone detonated a Tampa Bay Rays outfielder in the middle of their kitchen.

"One of the amazing things about IceStone’s patented process for making the most environmentally friendly surface in America, is that we use recycled glass that can be found in almost any color imaginable," the release said. Although the most amazing thing about IceStone could be that the company's new CEO is former Congressman Anthony Weiner.

Yes, the Anthony Weiner who apparently had a habit of sending pictures of his penis to a Twitter follower; the Anthony Weiner who called himself "Carlos Danger" when he sent a picture of his junk to a 22-year-old woman; and, indeed, the Anthony Weiner who spent 18 months in prison for sending sexually explicit messages to a 15-year-old North Carolina girl.

According to Weiner's LinkedIn account, he was hired as IceStone's CEO in May of this year, listing his location as "Anywhere People Care About the Environment." Dal LaMagna, the company's owner (and the founder of the Tweezerman brand of beauty tools), told the New York Post that he'd known Weiner for several years, and had even visited him in prison.

"I wanted to help him any way I could. He served his time and coming out is tough. And so I said, ‘Can you work for IceStone?’ because he knows everybody in the city and the company is in Brooklyn," LaMagna said, before adding that Weiner is "a better CEO" than he is.

The New York Times contacted Weiner to confirm his new gig and, although he seemed happy to chat about the company's recycled glass surfaces, he was less willing to talk politics. "Republicans like environmentally sustainable countertops as much as Democrats do,” he said, because apparently he watched _The Last Danc_e, too.

But what about the countertops? According to a 2015 Curbed profile, the 17-year-old company's mission has always been to offer a sustainably made surface for kitchens and bathrooms, one that doesn't rely on shady labor practices or environmentally hazardous production processes.

One of IceStone's signatures is its use of recycled glass, which provides the bright colors and hint of shimmer in its surfaces. Every year, the company sources more than a million pounds of glass from industrial recycling facilities in the United States. (It also reuses 90 percent of the waste water that it generates, a fact that Weiner dropped on LinkedIn, too.) IceStone sells its products to both residential and commercial customers; some of its biz clients include Campbell's Soup, Heineken, NASA, Wells Fargo, and Whole Foods.

Although LaMagna said that one of the first things Weiner did after joining the company was to rebuild the website, the new CEO hasn't added his picture, his bio, or any reference to himself to the "Meet Our Team" section. "At IceStone, we are proud to be judged by the company we keep," the site's homepage says. Maybe that's what Weiner's lowkey afraid of.



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This Minnesota Pop-Up Pivoted to Feeding the Revolution

The role of restaurants as a community space has shifted significantly in 2020. Amid a struggling hospitality industry and with continued health risks and restrictions on indoor dining in many states, restaurants have been forced to re-envision the communal experience of food. VICE asked chefs and restaurant owners: Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, what has finding community through food looked like for you? These conversations took place in late July and early August, and the situation for the restaurant industry continues to change quickly.

After George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis on May 25, people took to the streets demanding justice. By the end of the week, the St. Paul-based chef and House of Gristle pop-up founder Jametta Raspberry was out there, too, serving meals to protesters. With state-wide restrictions on indoor gatherings due to the coronavirus pandemic, Raspberry's pop-up and catering operations had ground to a halt, forcing her to pivot to a home-based cheese and charcuterie business instead.

But as Minneapolis and St. Paul mobilized through an outpouring of local and national support, Raspberry asked herself where her knowledge of the food industry could be the most useful, and she reached out to the people around her. Through volunteer support and donations, House of Gristle served thousands of free meals beginning in May, and Raspberry plans to continue doing so. Raspberry told VICE how she tapped into her local network to provide food, and why we have to continue working together.


“The idea of House of Gristle was created in January of 2019 based on the idea of an "anti-restaurant concept" that would help dismantle disparities that I've experienced as a chef in the industry. Prior to that, I worked for about 15 years in various kitchens. The intent was to create a concept that allows women and women of color—specifically Black women—that were interested in the culinary industry to participate, and to allow them an opportunity to have ownership and management.

We don't define our cuisine; it's presenting food as a way to bring people together and connect people across all cultures and races and genders and things like that. That's kind of what "gristle" means—it doesn't mean this literal thing. We're represented by different kinds of people graciously believing that this can be a shift, or at least help shift the culture a little bit. It's really important to intentionally try to make that space safe for everyone.

I was like, well, what's the immediate action I could take? Free food.

Our entire concept was built on social interaction. [With the pandemic], I had, like, a 93 percent stop in business.

I have been a part of protests prior to this. I've felt like social justice was always at the core of who I was, just based on my experience. With this particular incident, I wanted to be used in a different way, and I thought I had an opportunity to not be in the front line. When the grocery stores burned down and were vandalized, I knew instantly—because I know the area—that was gonna affect the entire flow of food. Because I understood that, I was like, well, what's the immediate action I could take? Free food.

The first day, I spent my money making tacos. I called some friends like, "Look, this is where I'm going to be. Do you want to help?" The next day, 10 more people showed up. It got bigger and bigger and all of a sudden we had this full-on operation, and we had to learn how to work together. We've collaborated with the French Hen Cafe, and we're fully operating out of that on their off hours. There was a call to action.

We did, I think, 5,000 [meals] in the first two weeks, and we're doing about 150 a week now. We have limited resources, but we're trying to really get organized so we can do it in the most effective and efficient way. We're trying to be smarter about it, so we've slowed down. It was every day the first three to four weeks, and we're at about twice a week now. There are four core House of Gristle [employees], and we have maybe three other volunteers. We're able to do a lot within just our core group right now, but they lend their time. If we have a bigger need, we have a website where people can sign up.

People have to deal with so much; you have so many decisions to make, and hunger should never be one of them.

When the fires happened and things were burning down, it was really chaotic, where there were so many places where people needed things, and organizations had to split up to take on a certain area and certain needs. Now, I really want to focus on the kids that are going to be affected by the in-home learning and being food-insecure. I feel that they don't have much of a choice in all of this, and I really want to hone in on helping them. I have two kids I've raised all the way into college, so I know closely about what they're thinking, what they care about—not [in everything], but when it comes to food. It made the most sense for me.

People have to deal with so much; you have so many decisions to make, and hunger should never be one of them. I think that's at the core: Let's just make sure everybody's fed. It was natural to go into my social network community and ask for help and be like, "This is what I'm doing. What can you do?" I was moved to do it, and to keep going.

There were a lot of people that stepped up and showed up that I didn't even think would ever. I was seeing people that I used to work with [in the food service industry], and maybe we briefly had an interaction, or maybe we briefly had more of a professional [relationship], as opposed to a friendship, but they came through. I felt more appreciative and I was grateful for the community of people that felt the same way as I do.

This pandemic really exposed a lot—that just means that we've all got to get to work and take care of each other.

My reality is that I'm still confined by limitations of racism and sexism. I still have to participate in the system that I really don't want or respect. I'm not a food writer, I'm not a speaker, I'm not a whatever—I can just cook food, and I'm going to keep using my voice and the power that I have in my business to keep that dialogue going. The first thing I've learned [from this experience] is that I can do it; I may have doubted myself because of systemic racism and oppression in really every crevice of life, being a Black woman, but I restored confidence in myself and kept pushing.

I didn't want to do anything in vain, and we were able to come together and see something form and grow out of literally nothing. That's pretty amazing, and that just gives me hope. [I'll do it] until the resources run out, and hopefully they never do. This pandemic really exposed a lot—that just means that we've all got to get to work and take care of each other.”

This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.



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Canada food retail body issues own call for grocery code of conduct

Canada's largest retail trade body has joined calls for a grocery code of conduct – although its demands have sparked concerns at one le...