Urban Agriculture
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Urban Agriculture

UC Food and Agriculture Blogs

Removing Poison-Oak from Landscapes and Recreation Areas

[From the August 2013 issue of the UC IPM Green Bulletin newsletter] Removal of poison-oak requires special care. Most people are allergic to it, exhibiting skin rashes when they come in contact with it. Good control may require a combination of...

Posted on Monday, May 12, 2014 at 10:10 AM

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

The brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB), a new invasive pest that originated in Asia, is moving into California gardens and landscapes. This stink bug has devastated fruit and vegetable crops in the eastern U.S. and is beginning to establish itself on the...

Posted on Thursday, May 8, 2014 at 9:41 AM

New Snail and Slug Active Ingredient Available

[From the May 2013 issue of the UC IPM Green Bulletin newsletter] For the last 30 years, the primary mol­lusk (snail and slug) baits used in the landscaping industry have been those containing metaldehyde as the active in­gredient. About 10...

Posted on Tuesday, May 6, 2014 at 3:12 PM

Cottage Foods - a business in your home kitchen?

Have you thought of trying to sell your homemade jam, granola, pies, or candy? Do you have fruit from your orchard or vegetables from your farm that would have more value processed than sold fresh? Maybe a Cottage Food Operation is the place to test your product and your market and start your new business.

Cottage Food Operations recently became legal in California. Before the California Homemade Food Act (AB1616) was signed into law in 2012, no commercial food production was allowed in home kitchens. The new law allows individuals to prepare and package certain non-potentially hazardous foods in private-home kitchens (referred to as "Cottage Food Operations"), and to sell limited quantities of these foods directly to the public or to stores and restaurants for resale.

UC Cooperative Extension educators are offering two-session Cottage Food Operations Workshops at six different locations in Northern California. This hands-on workshop series is designed especially for farmers of fruits, vegetables, nuts, herbs, and honey interested in making value-added products in home kitchens as Cottage Food Operations (CFOs). The workshops are open to everyone. Classes will be small, with a maximum of 35 participants. Sign-ups are coming in fast, and some workshop locations are almost full, so anyone interested is encouraged to register soon. Registration is available on-line. Each two-session workshop costs $25 in advance, or $40 at the door, space permitting.

Workshop participants will learn multiple aspects of starting a safe and profitable home food production business, including the details of the Cottage Food Law, planning, processing, food safety, packaging & storage and marketing. Instructors will be UCCE nutrition educators, economists and farm advisors. Representatives from local environmental health agencies will provide information about the local application process. Each workshop will also feature hands-on demonstrations and tastings by current Cottage Food Operators making a variety of products.

Shermain Hardesty, UC Small Farm Program Extension Economist, is coordinating the project, which is partially funded by a California Department of Food and Agriculture Specialty Crop Block Grant. Dr. Hardesty thinks that marketing may be the hardest part of creating a successful Cottage Food Business for many farmers and other entrepreneurs. She will teach the basic "Four P's" of marketing: product, place, price and promotion.

Another big challenge to producing a commercial food product in a home kitchen, according to Hardesty, could be all the time that the producer will have to take properly sanitizing their home kitchen before and after they do the production work.

Although the new state law requires that Cottage Food Operations be permitted in all counties, with permits issued by the County Department of Environmental Health in each county, fees for registration and permits vary from county to county. Counties and municipalities may also vary in other restrictions and conditions required before Cottage Food Operations receive their necessary business license. Some counties or cities may place limitations on the number of customers per hour to a home business, limitations on open hours for sales from home, and parking space requirements for customers. The workshops will help participants understand how to navigate the registration and permitting process.

A Cottage Food Operation can be a good testing ground for a farmer to assess the marketability of a new product on a small scale. It can also be a low-cost way for a farmer to assess his or her own ability to produce and market a new product. Due to the restrictive nature of some aspects of the Cottage Food law, and the limited scale of production possible in a home kitchen, most producers may have to scale up eventually to be profitable. However, at least one farm family that is currently using a commercial kitchen for jam production is taking the class to decide whether a Cottage Food Operation would be an economical addition to their production capacity.

Registration for all six workshop series' is open now. Workshops take place from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 both days. Lunch is provided. The workshop fee pays for both days. Attendance at workshop session one is required to attend session two. Workshop dates and locations:

  • Fairfield, May 13 & May 20, 2014
  • Ukiah, May 15 & May 22, 2014
  • Eureka, May 28 & June 11, 2014
  • Redding, May 29 & June 10, 2014
  • Jackson, June 12 & June 16, 2014
  • Sacramento, July 1 & July 9, 2014

Cost: $25 in advance/ $40 at the door, space permitting

Register online: http://ucanr.edu/cfoworkshops

For more information: Shermain Hardesty, UC Small Farm Program, 530-752-0467, shermain@primal.ucdavis.edu

Posted on Tuesday, May 6, 2014 at 12:12 PM

Rad-ish or just plain Rad?

I have finally gotten to the bottom of something that has been eating at me for a long time. Why don't more people like radishes? Let's face it, they're just not in the popular crowd and now I know why. Here goes: it's in the name. The vegetable is...

Posted on Friday, May 2, 2014 at 10:54 AM
  • Author: Leda McDaniel

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