Everyone’s Serving Gourmet Greens
Last week I attended the New York Fancy Food Show in hopes of ferreting out some great organic, natural, sustainable or local finds for canvas’ food pages. I eagerly hit the Organic Foods “pavilion” of the show, knowing I would see some great new items.
I did not.
Sadly, the area set aside for organic companies was sparse and has the usual run of the mill offerings at a food show: some chocolate, jams, crackers, a few cheeses. One of the items I was pleased to see was organic vanilla beans from Tahiti—something that any serious baker will surely want to procure.
Dejected, I headed to the main show floor and began to stroll through the glitzy, shiny, displays manned by professional marketers. As I stopped here and there, something began to be very obvious. Nearly every one of these food product companies had a natural, organic, sustainable, or local offering. It seems that, at long last, “green” foods are totally mainstream.
With my colleague, canvas production manager, Jen Malone in tow, I happily sampled, tasted, and queried the various proprietors. Some of the notables were offerings from Sustainable Sourcing LLC, a company dedicated to finding pure and ethically sourced products like HimalaSalt, a pink salt from the Himalayas. The company’s manufacturing process are energized by 100% wind power and 5% of profits go back to the environment.
Another find was an organic, naturally caffeinated and simply delicious energy drink called essn ENERGY and produced by SkylarHaley out of San Francisco, makers of antioxidant berry blends. The drink is delicately flavored with pure cane juice and is antioxidant rich. It will be in your local Whole Foods by the end of the year, company reps told us.
One very clever company was tsp spices, that made prepackaged organic spices measured out to equal a teaspoon. The packaging, like a narrow sugar package, is airtight so spices don’t lose their potency or aroma.
There was also a company selling a very good organic chai mix, and from Gluten Free Pantry we tasted chocolate chip cookies that were better than conventional counterparts we sampled on the show floor. These are but some of the many many products we saw there including a display by the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce of locally made offerings from that borough at the other end of our island.
As we left we talked about how those items that once only occupied the specialty section in the grocery store are now par for every course—literally. We also talked about how we never thought we’d see this day. The credit goes to all the conscious eaters and consumers out there who are always seeking a better food and health experience—you.
And since you deserve to know what’s coming down the pike in the new arena of sustainable gourmet dining, we will be sharing our finds with you, the readers, both here on the site and in the print pages of canvas—so check back often.