Fresh Produce Discussion Blog

Created by The Packer's National Editor Tom Karst

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Dallas schools' nutrition official to help Michelle Obama promote healthy menus

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/politics/national/stories/DN-whitehouse_04met.ART.State.Edition1.29befa6.html

Dallas schools' nutrition official to help Michelle Obama promote healthy menus

07:41 AM CDT on Friday, June 4, 2010

By TODD J. GILLMAN / The Dallas Morning News
tgillman@dallasnews.com

WASHINGTON – One of the Dallas schools' top nutrition officials will be at the White House today to help first lady Michelle Obama promote healthier school menus.

Obama and the Agriculture Department have launched "Chefs Move to Schools," a program to encourage chefs nationwide to adopt local schools and create nutritious and affordable meals.

Among the hundreds of chefs, educators and school nutritionists on hand to promote the program will be Bradford Trudeau, a certified executive chef who serves as director of production and procurement at the Dallas Independent School District's Food and Child Nutrition Services department.

He lauded the first lady for bringing public awareness to school nutrition programs.

DISD spends about $80 million each year providing 120,000 lunches, 46,000 breakfasts and 10,000 after-school snacks.

"What we're trying to do is get local chefs involved in adopting a school and going out and doing nutritional education, talking to the kids about getting good nutrition, eating fresh fruits and vegetables," Trudeau said.

Dallas is one of a handful of school districts recognized for excellence by the School Nutrition Association, whose president, Dora Rivas, is executive director of child nutrition services at DISD and Trudeau's boss.

Trudeau said he was thrilled at the invitation to the White House, which he hasn't visited since taking a tour as a child. He views it as further recognition of Dallas' efforts to provide healthy meals.

"It's just another feather in our cap," he said.

Bistro in Aisle 9: Supermarkets mimic restaurants

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Bistro-in-Aisle-9-apf-1703193215.html?x=0&.v=2



Bistro in Aisle 9: Supermarkets mimic restaurants

Leave the cart, eat the cannoli: Supermarkets acting more like restaurants

Michael Hill, Associated Press Writer, On Thursday June 3, 2010, 11:57 am EDT

Just beyond the canned goods and produce aisles where he usually grabs his groceries, Jack Curtin recently grabbed a pub lunch.

He started with the chicken breast sandwich special and a nice Belgian ale. His ex-wife had the crusted Atlantic salmon fillet. And they did it without ever leaving the store.

They were in "The Pub at Wegmans" in Collegeville, Pa. And the pub was in a Wegmans supermarket.

And it was all pretty good.

"Let's put it this way," says Curtin, who writes professionally about beer, "if I were shopping and a felt like having a beer, I would have no compunction about walking over there, sitting at the bar and having a beer."

And he can largely because the hugely popular grocery store salad bars of the '80s and '90s have given way to a more sophisticated approach to prepared foods. Shoppers now can dine in on sushi and chardonnay, or grab crusted salmon and grilled chorizo to go.

The grocer-as-quick-serve-restaurant model has done well in the recession, in part because the convenience is good and cost is low.

But even as the economy upticks slightly, ready-to-eat food continues to drive more traffic to grocery stores, increasingly blurring the traditional boundaries between supermarkets and restaurants.

"We don't want you coming to the store once a month, or once a week," says Jim Berndt, Wegmans Food Markets senior vice president for prepared foods, deli and specialty cheese. "We want you coming three or four times a week."

The prepared supermarket food available today is a far cry from the modest offerings of fresh coffee, potato salad and rotisserie chickens of years past. Many supermarkets now even make their eating spaces as inviting as possible with cozy chairs, faux-wood floors and unsupermarket-like soft lighting. They are hiring chefs, and the variety of supermarket eat-in or takeout food is unprecedented.

Wegmans, a five-state chain based in Rochester, N.Y., runs its full-service pub north of Philadelphia inside an existing sit-down area called the Market Cafe. Market Cafes are common in Wegmans stores and feature pizza, sushi bars, burrito bars, Thai food and vegetarian options to eat in or takeout.

Kroger, the nation's largest traditional grocer, has been removing underused salad bars to make space for prepackaged foods like sushi and carnitas. They also have The Bistro at Krogers featuring the likes of tilapia and pork loin. Roche Bros. stores in the Boston area offer meals like steak tip dinners ready for the microwave. If customers don't want to leave home, they can get it delivered.

Whole Foods Market, the natural and organic foods grocer, has pushed the prepared foods concept as far as any chain. Stores offer chicken fried tofu, press-to-order paninis and wheatberry quinoa Waldorf salad. Its flagship store in Austin, Texas, has wine for drinking either in or out of the store, a barbecue station and a place to have food enrobed in chocolate. Shoppers there also can buy a fresh fish, take it to the seafood restaurant 20 feet over and ask them to cook it for takeout.

Industry analysts say prepared foods are a growth area for many chains. Supermarkets saw a 1 percent increase in sales of takeout eaten at home for the year ending in March, even as total restaurant industry traffic was down 3 percent during the same period, according to The NPD Group, a Port Washington, N.Y.-based market research firm.

"This is something that had been happening prior to the recession, and it has only gotten exacerbated by the recession," says NPD Group restaurant industry analyst Bonnie Riggs.

Riggs expects supermarkets to continue to see decent takeout business as the recession fades, largely because NPD projects takeout meals eaten in-home will grow by 20 percent during the next decade.

Peter Romeo, a restaurant trade publication veteran and blogger at Restaurant Reality Check, says industry executives have been looking over their shoulders for decades at the looming threat posed by supermarkets. But he says it never really came until the recent profusion of more sophisticated fare.

"The big change in the last couple of years is that supermarkets have cracked the quality code so they're able to offer a restaurant-quality meal at a price that is usually lower than restaurants," Romeo says.

Consider that Sam's Club recently retailed a ready-to-heat 16-inch cheese pizza for $6.48, several dollars below the price at many pizzerias. Roche Bros. offers its steak tip dinner for $9.99, a price very competitive with casual dining chains.

Industry analysts say consumers often believe -- true or not -- that prepared supermarket food sold amid fresh produce and meats is fresher and healthier than restaurant fare. Supermarkets also can offer a more convenient choice for parents heading home from work, especially if they're already picking up groceries.

Restaurants are taking notice.

At least one private analyst suggested restaurants respond by promoting their strengths, such as quality food and service. Romeo noted that almost all the major casual dining chains now have curbside takeout, a move he said is partly driven by supermarket competition.

In December, Bob Evans opened a "Taste of the Farm" retail area connected to its restaurant in Westerville, Ohio, where customers can pick up a hot spaghetti dinner, a salad or -- talk about blurring boundaries -- Bob Evans-brand grocery products.

Company president and chief concept officer Randy Hicks says the retail centers fit customers' busy lifestyles. More are planned.

Despite the recent trends, a spokeswoman for the National Restaurant Association says she didn't expect customers to abandon restaurants any time soon. Maureen Ryan says the industry group's research shows that more than a third of adults say they don't eat out as much as they'd like too.

"What the restaurant industry has to offer that the supermarkets don't is the experience of excellent service, in many case a wide variety of menu options," Ryan says. "And that's something you can't get in a supermarket.

NZ: Zespri eyes Russia for kiwifruit sales

http://www.freshplaza.com/news_detail.asp?id=64142

NZ: Zespri eyes Russia for kiwifruit sales


Zespri is earmarking Russia as an emerging market with a lot of potential for future growth.

The kiwifruit marketer is congratulating the Government for moving towards a free trade agreement with Russia.

Trade Minister Tim Groser met his Russian counterpart in Moscow on Monday.

Zespri says it is already seeing increased sales and profit from free trade agreements with China and south east Asia.

The co operative says there's an opportunity to increase demand for New Zealand kiwifruit in Russia as its economy strengthens.

Kiwifruit is New Zealand's largest horticulture export, with 390,000 tonnes produced last year.



Source: radionz.co.nz

Trucking jobs added in May

http://www.etrucker.com/apps/news/article.asp?id=85327


Trucking jobs added in May

By Avery Vise

With strong gains in April and May, the trucking industry virtually has erased previous job losses for the year.

According to preliminary figures released Friday, June 4, by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, the for-hire trucking industry added 2,000 jobs in May over April.

Meanwhile, BLS revised its earlier estimate of April trucking jobs upward by 2,600. Those gains offset a 4,200-job loss in February and a much smaller loss in March.

Trucking employment in May was down 36,800, or 2.9 percent, from May 2009. Preliminary data shows payroll employment of more than 1.231 million jobs – down 222,100, or 15.3 percent, from the trucking employment peak in January 2007.

The BLS numbers reflect all payroll employment in for-hire trucking, but they don’t include trucking-related jobs in other industries, such as a truck driver for a private fleet. Nor do the numbers reflect the total amount of hiring since they only include new jobs, not replacements for existing positions.

Nationwide, the economy gained 431,000 non-farm payroll jobs in May, according to preliminary BLS numbers. But the private sector added only 41,000 jobs. Government jobs rose by 390,000 on a net basis, primarily due to the hiring of 411,000 temporary workers for the 2010 Census.

Crop in Hill Country is looking just peachy

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/7037587.html

Crop in Hill Country is looking just peachy

By WILLIAM PACK San Antonio Express-News

The Hill Country peach season is in full bloom, and for the first time in years, even growers are licking their lips with anticipation.

“It's the best crop we've had since at least 2004,” said Jamey Vogel, co-owner of Vogel Orchard near Stonewall. “I don't think the crop could be any better than it is.”

Some Hill Country growers have been picking peaches and other fruit for weeks, filling roadside stands with peaches considered among the tastiest in the state. The heaviest sales season runs through July, but late- blooming varieties could keep peaches in stands through September, growers said.

Last year and in 2006, late freezes and other weather extremes knocked out almost all the area's peaches. The two intervening years saw improvement but fell well short of full production.

This year, the drought ended, winter chilling temperatures reached the right levels and even random weather emergencies, like this week's blustery thunderstorms, didn't inflict much damage.

Jim Kamas, a Texas Agri-Life Extension Service fruit specialist in Fredericksburg, called growing conditions ideal. Peach quality and quantity have soared, he said.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that Texas' peach production was the 15th highest in the nation last year. The value of that production reached $7.2 million.

Armin Engel with Engel Orchard about four miles west of Stonewall, believes his peach crop could hit 100 percent of capacity this year, his first strong crop in at least four years.

“It's about time,” he said.

Growers said prices have been good but vary depending on fruit size and quality. Engel said he has seen half-bushel boxes go for as low as $18 and as high as $35.

“I think people will be pleased,” said Dianne Eckhardt with Donald Eckhardt Orchard near Fredericksburg.

Blueberry-growing gains popularity in Eastern Wash.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2011999676_blueberryboon01.html


Blueberry-growing gains popularity in Eastern Wash.

By Kevin McCullen

BURBANK, Walla Walla County — The boom in the blueberry industry is blossoming across Eastern Washington.

Jim Lott of Blue Mountain Farms in Burbank was among just a handful of blueberry growers five years ago in Eastern Washington, where production of the heart- and brain-healthy crop was almost negligible.

Two years ago, that number climbed to about 2,500 acres. This year, it is estimated at 3,180 acres in Eastern Washington alone, with 9,480 acres across Washington, the sixth-leading blueberry production region in North America.

"The reality is we're talking about an industry that overall is going to triple in size in a short period of time," said Alan Schreiber, director of the Washington Blueberry Commission. "I know of no perennial crop growing at this rate, and certainly none in the Northwest tripling in size.

"Two years ago we produced 28 million pounds of blueberries statewide. This year our projected yield is 39.75 million pounds in Eastern Washington alone. These are astounding numbers," said Schreiber, who estimates harvest across the state this year will be 90.1 million pounds.

Eastern Washington's 3,180 acres of planted blueberries trail only Whatcom County's 3,500 acres, according to commission figures

Eastern Washington isn't alone in its burgeoning embrace of blueberries. Production and new acreage also are growing in other states. The top producers in North America are Michigan, British Columbia, Oregon, New Jersey and Georgia.

Total U.S. production of blueberries jumped from 143.6 million pounds in 2007 to 182.1 million pounds in 2009, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service.

The price processors paid growers dropped from $1.85 a pound in 2007 to $1.39 last year, reflecting the growing number of blueberries on the market.

Mark Villata, executive director of the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council, said national production could approach 400 million to 800 million pounds in the next few years.

The health aspects of blueberries are a driving factor in their popularity.

Blueberries are high in antioxidant phytonutrients, which can help neutralize free radicals — unstable molecules that have been linked to development of cancer, cardiovascular and Alzheimer's disease and other conditions, according to USDA research.

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In a study at the USDA Human Nutrition Research Center, a diet high in blueberries also helped reverse some loss of balance and improved short-term memory in aging rats. And blueberries have shown promise in combating urinary-tract infections.

Industry officials believe there is continued room for growth. Nationwide, blueberry consumers typically are affluent and live in upscale suburban and rural areas, have households with children and are from 35 to 64 years old, according to a 2009 study by the Perishables Group.

Schreiber and growers believe Eastern Washington's climate offers inherent advantages that will allow for continued growth and high quality.

Because blueberry farms are relatively new to the region, they do not have any of the diseases that typically limit production elsewhere, nor are there problems yet with insects, Schreiber said. He said he's also been told by buyers of the region's blueberries that they appear to have a longer shelf life than varieties grown elsewhere.

The growing season also is longer in much of Eastern Washington because of the milder climate, which allows farmers to plant varieties that mature at different times of the year and permits more late varieties. In Grandview, Yakima County, Olsen Brothers Ranches this year will use a newly constructed, $2.4 million packing plant for its organic blueberries. The company has "several hundred" acres of blueberries, including new plantings this year, said Martin Olsen, co-owner.

"We used to have our blueberries trucked to Portland to be packed, and with the amount of blueberries we're (producing) annually, it made sense to have our own facility," Olsen said of the 20,000-square-foot building, which also will include cold storage.

Blueberry growers in Eastern Washington do face challenges. Because the soil in the region is alkaline, many add amendments through their drip irrigation lines to increase the pH of the soil. Consequently, the cost of starting up a blueberry operation can be expensive.

Villata said the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council is working to expand international markets, particularly in Asian countries, as exports now count for about 3 percent of the U.S. crop.

At Blue Mountain Farms, where Jim Lott planted his first blueberries in the late 1990s, his son offered a seasoned assessment of the state of the Washington industry.

"I think it's a bit overplanted right now," he said. "It's going to be interesting to see what happens when all the bushes are in full production in a few years."

Plums and Peaches Kill Breast Cancer Cells

http://www.sevensidedcube.net/health/2010/plums-and-peaches-kill-breast-cancer-cells/

Plums and Peaches Kill Breast Cancer Cells



Breast cancer accounts for 16 percent deaths in women worldwide according to the World Health Organization. Cancer cells can be killed through chemotherapy but normal, healthy cells are affected as well. Texas AgriLife Research scientists found out a promising discovery that plums and peaches may hold the key to finally cut down breast cancer incidence among women without compromising healthy cells.

Scientists Byrne and Dr. Cisneros-Zevallos and his team compared normal cells to two types of breast cancer cells and treated them with ‘Rich Lady’ peach and ’Black Splendor plum, both rich in phenolic acidic compounds chlorogenic and neochlorogenic. The fruit extracts killed the cancer cells but not the normal ones. The same compounds also inhited cancer growth in animals. ‘So this is a very, very attractive from the point of view of being an alternative to typical chemotherapy,’ added Byrne.

This study was published in the Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry and supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Vegetable and Fruit Improvement Center, and the California Tree Agreement.

Six tons of U.S. cherries fail pesticide test

http://focustaiwan.tw/ShowNews/WebNews_Detail.aspx?Type=aALL&ID=201006050020

Six tons of U.S. cherries fail pesticide test
2010/06/05 22:04:37
Taipei, June 5 (CNA) Nearly six tons of cherries recently imported from the United States have been found to contain the pesticide malathion, the Department of Health (DOH) said Saturday.

Pan Chih-kuan, a director of the DOH's Food and Drug Administration, said the two batches of cherries contained 0.02 parts per million and 0.03 ppm of malathion, respectively. Taiwan's regulations do not allow any trace amounts of the substance in cherries.

The two importers are now applying to have the two batches re-examined. If they are still found to contain the pesticide, the first batch, which had not been cleared by customs, will be returned to the shipper, and the second batch, which had been released to the importer to keep refrigerated pending the results of the examination, will be confiscated and destroyed.

Pan said that if a third batch of U.S. imported cherries were to fail the examination within six months, the DOH will ask the U.S. to come up with a plan to improve the situation.

"We will also step up the examination of all cherries imported from the United States," he added. (By Chen Chin-fan and Lilian Wu) enditem/ls