Organic Industry

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Oatmeal Fuels Your Day…and More!

Friday, January 29th, 2010

At Country Choice Organic, we work hard to minimize our operational “footprint”, constantly reviewing our packaging materials, transportation, and warehousing to make sure we only use what is necessary to deliver the freshest, best tasting organic products. 

Our parent company, Grain Millers, the largest miller of organic grain in North America, shares this concern and has developed a novel way to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels and help the local community.  In partnership with the local school district and private enterprise, Grain Millers donates oat hulls to heat a middle school in St. Ansgar, IA., home of one of Grain Millers largest oat mills. 

This is the first school in Iowa to be heated with biomass energy, which replaces the natural gas previously used to fuel the school’s boilers.  “We use biomass in our facilities to replace fossil fuel consumption with renewable energy sources,” says Steve Eilertson, Grain Miller president.  “Extending the opportunity to our local community partners lets us broaden our impact.”

So next time you sit down to a hot bowl of Country Choice Organic oatmeal, your breakfast might be fueling more than you. It might be sustainably heating a classroom in Iowa, which is a warm thought to start the day. 

Read more about heating St. Ansgar Middle School here.

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Healthy School Breakfast? How Notable!

Friday, November 13th, 2009

One of our more rewarding endeavors is a partnership with a company trying to transform school breakfast.  Obviously this is no easy task, but with reams of data pointing to the importance of breakfast and reports exposing the empty calories masquerading as breakfast in many schools it’s a fight worth fighting. (Read about breakfast in Chicago Public Schools http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/chi-cps-breakfast-nov05,0,209332.story?obref=obnetwork).

Notables® by Mission Nutrition, creates a grab ‘n go breakfast that kids eat at their desk.  There are NO TABLES involved (get it?).  Each Notables breakfast, when paired with milk, exceeds the minimum federal School Breakfast Program nutrition requirements by pairing shelf-stable whole grain foods and fruit products in a fun bag. 

They are committed to offering only the highest quality foods in a convenient, kid-friendly manner…which is where we come in.  Notables is currently using specially formulated Oatmeal on the Run bars in two of their bags, meaning kids get all the nutrition of a bowl of instant oatmeal right at their desks.

Our teams are busy looking for other healthy ways for kids to eat and will update you with our progress.  In the meantime, make sure your kids start their day with a notable breakfast…no matter where they eat.

You’ll find more information at http://www.notables.com.

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What’s Food Got To Do With It?

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

I attended the Natural Products Expo in Boston last Friday and came away thinking, “Who eats like this?”  Sure, all the usual suspects were there with samples of organic ice cream and yogurt, but clearly nutrients were the star of the show.  Competing booths worked hard to assert their Acai street cred or tout their Goji berry-ness.  In fact, it seemed much of our natural “food” had devolved into carriers for the latest super fruit or micronutrient.  Combined with the abundant display space devoted to colon cleansing, wrinkle removal and pet acne, it made me wonder, “What’s food got to do with this?” 

I was reminded the next day, spending time with a third generation Maine lobsterman. Mackerel Cove We joined Herman and Monique aboard the Jocelyne K under a warm afternoon sun (much appreciated considering their day started at 5:00 a.m.) and spent a few hours motoring around Mackerel Cove.  We listened to lobster stories, learned about a lifestyle passed down to generations and heard the pride these “farmers of the sea” take in providing real food to people.  We stopped along the way, dining on lobster stew, mussels, steamed lobster and fried clams.  Nothing fortified, not a goji berry to be found…and yet I never felt healthier.

Learn more about Maine lobstermen at http://lobstersonthefly.blogspot.com/

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Naturally Organic

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

“Organic” is an agricultural claim that speaks to how crops are grown and handled.  It represents a commitment to growing things without the use of artificial fertilizers, genetically modified organisms or pesticides.  Said another way, organic ingredients are grown naturally.  For processed food, that purity extends to the manufacturing and handling of the products you find on your favorite grocers’ shelves.  In exchange for this commitment, products containing at least 95% organic ingredients proudly display the USDA Organic seal.

When it comes to “Natural”, however, companies’ commitments are sometimes lacking.  While it’s generally accepted that natural products contain no artificial ingredients, preservatives or flavors, the definition of artificial remains a little fuzzy. That’s because there is no natural products standard, leaving manufacturers to write their own rules and shoppers left reading the fine print. A “natural” label offers no insight into how the ingredients were grown, so natural growers can use persistent and toxic chemical fertilizers, pesticides, sewer sludge, GMOs…you get the picture.  This lack of commitment to the process allows for cheaper ingredients, but at what cost?

This confusion is on sale daily in “Natural/Organic” sections of grocery stores everywhere.  The serenity of fake wood floors and soft lighting blurs the real differences between natural and organic products and makes it difficult to know what you’re buying.  In an ideal world, agriculturally unique organic products would have their own section and natural products would live with their conventional cousins.  However, we don’t live in an ideal world, which means each of us needs to make informed buying decisions for our families.

Complicated food labeling and lack of natural standards only harms shoppers, as natural foods are becoming even more pervasive. In a recent article, the Chicago Tribune tackled the increasing popularity of natural labeling, “When the “natural” label is applied to processed foods, the picture grows even more complicated. According to market research firm Mintel International, “all natural” was the second-most common claim on food products launched in 2008. But with few regulations, the term is pliable enough that many brands apply it to products with ingredients not available to the average home cook.”

For the record, Country Choice Organic is committed to organic agriculture and believes choosing organic products benefits our customers and the Planet.  This belief is displayed on every carton in the form of the USDA Organic seal.  What about you…are you ready for a commitment?  Share your personal food commitments by sharing what matters to you and your family below.

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