Thursday, November 10, 2011

November Staff Selection: Zocalo (gluten free) Flours are 10% off all month!



from Staffer Aaron Golding

It's getting cold and windy and grey and there is a draft coming through my window, and that's a good thing because it makes me want to fire up my oven, release my stand mixer from the cupboard, and get down to some serious baking. For too long the summer - with its oppressive heat, sunshine and barbeques - has condemned my oven to a simple life of storage for pots and pans. Gone, was the yeasty smell of rising bread. Gone, the sweet fragrance of cakes and cookies slowly rising and inside a 325-degree-haven. So it is only now, as the temperature falls, that finally my oven and me are to be properly reacquainted. And this makes me eager to test out Zócalo Gourmet's gluten-free flours.

Provenance has been carrying Zócalo's flours for a while, and now that baking season is in full swing, I think it's time to try some. Now, mind you, I don't have a gluten intolerance but, I am finding that more and more people I know are realizing that they do, and I think having gluten-free flours on hand is a smart idea so that when it's time to get down on some brownies or cupcakes, no one is left out. Also, these flours are so cool that it doesn't matter that I'm not gluten-free, I'm still going to use them. The lack of gluten is just a bonus.

Why? Because Zócalo Gourmet is a great company that supports the small-scale producers of Latin America and their communities, and their flours are all like Latin American super foods. The Sweet Potato flour is perfect for all your baking needs. It is good at holding moisture and also adds just a hint of sweetness not to mention all benefits that this fine root veggie imparts. The Purple Corn flour is good as a substitute for cornmeal or wheat flour, and is loaded with antioxidants that will enrich any recipe. Lastly, is the Kañiwa Heritage flour, which is similar to quinoa, and has a fair amount of protein that will beef up any bread. The Kañiwa is best used in conjunction with another flour because of the density added from the protein. Going half and half will keep your baked goods protein rich while remaining light and fluffy.


Here are some recipes that I pulled off their website that I'm going to definitely try. Enjoy!

http://zocalogourmet.blogspot.com/2011/09/sweet-potato-biscuits-with-wild-forest.html

http://zocalogourmet.blogspot.com/2011/09/kaniwa-chocolate-chip-cookies.html



Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Kathy & Herb Eckhouse from La Quercia Meats





We've been carrying La Quercia's sliced speck, proscuitto & pancetta at our shops for years now, and even on occasion have their lardo. Sure, we've heard a few skeptics ask "Proscuitto from IOWA?"...then they try it and are almost always back for more. It doesn't hurt that you can find La Quercia on some of the best menus across the country, either!


Tell us about your product/company/service.

We make artisan cured meats or salumi – prosciutto, pancetta, guanciale, coppa, lardo, speck, bacon, and lonza – in Iowa. We buy our meat from family farmer groups like Niman Ranch, Heritage Acres, Coleman Meats, and Eden Farms. We use only non-confinement, humanely raised animals. We use sea salt and spices (and time and effort!) to make our meats – we never use nitrates, nitrites, or vegetable substitutes.

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products? We believe that the food we eat can delight us each day. We strive to offer a memorable eating experience – one that causes you to stop and savor the moment. Great food is more than great taste. It is part of a responsible food system that sustains you, the producers, and the craftspeople, restaurants, and stores who support their communities and respect the environment.

Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
We try to get out and meet as many of the farmers who raise the pigs as possible. It is important to understand the “on the ground” meaning of the animal husbandry standards. And it really helps us appreciate the hard work of the farmers and the respect that is owed the animals as well.

What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market? We work with farmers on breeding and feeding, animal husbandry, finding suitable slaughterhouses, timing of “harvest,” finding a mutually agreeable and sustainable “fair trade” pricing system, verification of breed and animal husbandry to support label claims, specific criteria for the cuts we buy, etc.

Is there anyone else on your “team”?

We have to work with the farmers, the slaughterhouse, and the trucking companies that bring us the fresh meat to dry cure and make into our aged meats. “Breeding, Feeding, Killing, and Chilling” all happen before we get the meat. When what you make is 96 percent meat, those elements are critical and must be done well.

How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?
We don’t come out with new products very often, but we are working on expanding our “pork varietals” line. This year, we introduced our Tamworth Country Cured Bacon (made from Tamworth pigs, nicknamed “the bacon pig,” and raised on hillsides in Missouri) and will soon have some Tamworth Prosciutto in limited quantities. We also started making lardo from Iberico de Bellota back fat from Spain.

How did you get into this “line of business”?
We lived in Parma, Italy, for 3 ½ years and really wanted to do something special in Iowa when we moved back here.

What did you do before this?
Kathy worked as a ranch hand and then as a researcher in Agricultural Economics at the University of California at Berkeley before she made home-making and mothering her primary occupation. A long time foodie (Berkeley born and raised) who lived in Europe for several years as a child and adolescent, Kathy is the person all of her friends describe as the best cook they know. She adds intuition and a fine food sense developed through years of making bread and pasta, inventing recipes, and reading cookbooks. For Herb, this is his fifth career. He spent over thirty years in agriculture, from raising seed potatoes to working cattle to developing and marketing commodity crop and vegetable seeds. Before he and Kathy designed and built their prosciuttificio, he spent 5 years researching, experimenting, learning and making prosciutto at home.

Are your products sold anywhere besides Chicago?
Our meats are sold across the United States and in Canada.

What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?
It was so long ago that we don’t remember!

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
Well, we love to eat and we’ve been involved in eating and growing food for decades. It’s a great way to be connected with people and with the world.

Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select? The first question is, “What will taste good?” The most important inspiration is the meat itself. We use really special meat and we always want to honor the animal, so when we use spices or smoke, we want them to be complementary, not overwhelming. We have a very strict policy of only making things we like to eat!

How do you plan to grow your offerings, and why?
We are not planning to get bigger, but we do want to work more on what we call “pork varietals” – distinctive breed characteristics and animal husbandry practices that have a profound impact on the quality of the meat. We are working with farmers who are raising heritage breeds and have special ways of raising their pigs.

What do you see as the biggest benefit (s) you offer to your retailers and consumers?
First, our meats need to be delicious, so we hope that’s a big benefit to everyone who eats them. And then we are really proud of how the pigs are raised and how we make our meats. It’s a sustainable and natural model, food that is well sourced, well made, and great to eat. We would love to know what you and your customers think!

Other than financial, what risks did you take to get your product(s) to market?
We took the risk that we could totally fail, which would have been personally humiliating as well as financially devastating.

Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these?
We live in Iowa, the nation’s largest pork producer and home to many more pigs than people. We had spent 3 ½ years in Parma, Italy, and learned to love salumi in general and prosciutto in particular, so making prosciutto seemed like a good idea.

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
I got a phone call from a nice young man who wanted to give his former girlfriend a special gift to woo her back. We pondered the choices together and selected an assortment of La Quercia dry-cured meats. Fast forward a year and they are ordering prosciutto for their wedding. Another two years, and it’s prosciutto for their child’s christening. It just doesn’t get better than that – being part of celebrating life and community!

Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, "I'm going to do this!" H
erb was enjoying a second platter of prosciutto with a good friend in Italy who said to him, “If you can make something as delicious as this, you are going to make a lot of people happy.” That sounded like a great idea!

If you could have supper with 3 people (living or deceased), who would they be and why?
Herb and I would choose to have supper with our three children. I don’t think I need to explain why!

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Melissa Yen



Some of you may know Melissa Yen was co-owner of Vella Cafe in a former life (she also worked at Provenance). We miss that place (especially the Vietnamese Coffees!) but one segment of Vella is still alive in Jo Snow Syrups. We're in love with these syrups and the cocktail culture, our stores, and certainly our home bar are better off for having them.

Tell us about your product/company/service.
I make artisanal small batch syrups for coffee, snow cones, Italian sodas & cocktails. I start with organic evaporated cane juice & then steep herbs & spices & finish with natural extracts. I also make a seasonal line with farmer’s fruit for the summer for my snow cone stand.

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?
I am so excited about artisanal food products. It makes me happy to offer my product to people. It is the ultimate form of sharing. It is really a little part of me. I feel good about making a product that is normally made with high fructose corn syrup & artificial colors, and being able to provide that as a choice for people.

Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
I get my fruit for my seasonal flavors at the farmers market, so the farmer is right there with me at his stand, selling his fruit. It is great to talk to the farmers & see which plum might be the best for what I am doing, or which would be the best apple.

What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market?
It is pretty straight forward. I make my syrups in such small batches, that I just need to place an order before market to get my fruit, as I guess I use a tad more than an average customer at the market. Eight pounds of fruit goes into each batch of my seasonal flavors.

Is there anyone else on your “team”?
I am a one-woman show, although I could not do it without my husband, Laurent. He is literally the head dish washer, logistics management, junior-syrup slinger, catch all, do-whatever-I-ask-him-to-do-go-to-guy. My graphic designer, Jennifer Mayes also made this whole venture possible. I can’t believe how amazing she made my product look. I really think a strong brand identity & great packaging is a must! I also have a team of the BEST volunteers in the city who work the snow cone stand with me. They all have amazing attitudes even when it is a million degrees outside or pouring rain. I feel very lucky. Also, the small shop owners & cafes that have supported me from the beginning by buying Jo Snow & offering advice & being understanding & appreciating my product.

How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?
I do quite a few custom flavors in small batches & sometimes bottle them for sale for some of my specialty stores on a limited basis. This summer I played with seasonal flavors every couple weeks.

Yes, I am working on new flavors & sizes! Everyone has been asking for smaller sizes & “gift packs” so I am working on the labeling & packaging for those. I also am coming out with real live “soda pop” flavors! I am still working on the fun names for them, but Cola #6 is one of them. It is absolutely amazing syrup that gives you a sense of Coca Cola, but more nuanced, floral, spicy, and artisanal. So fun! There will be a root beer also & a Cream Soda, with a kick!

How did you get into this “line of business”?
Circuitously! I have always been in the food business. It is my passion. I used to co-own a café & was obsessed with this Mexican coffee drink called Café de Olla. I wanted to figure out how to get that great spicy aromatic flavor to my customers in the morning, so I created a syrup to put in lattes. My friend was opening an Italian deli & asked if I could make fruity syrups for Italian sodas, so I did. Once we sold the cafe, I figured out how to bottle the syrups & Jo Snow was born.

What did you do before this?
I co- owned Vella Café where I started making the syrups.

Are your products sold anywhere besides Chicago?
Yes, they have been creeping into different markets through odd connections here & there. Zingerman's in Ann Arbor uses the Café de Olla in their café. The Boston Shaker in Sommerville, Ma carries Jo Snow & they are creeping into restaurants out there. I just sent some to LA & to Columbus,Ohio.

What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?
I don’t think it making snow cones, but that would have been pretty cool if it was! I really don’t know. I used to want to be an archeologist because I was interested in other cultures. Funny, I still am today. That is where I get my inspiration from, other cultures.

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
I have always been in the restaurant business, in college out of necessity. The education you receive by working in a restaurant is immense. To be surrounded by all that amazing food & to be able to be introduced to new & exciting flavors constantly is great. I think I just became more & more enamored by food as I learned more & more.

Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?
See above. I am influenced by other cultures & the flavors of other cultures. Whenever we travel to other countries, the first thing we do is check out their grocery stores & markets. I love the foods of other places.

How do you plan to grow your portfolio, horizontally or vertically, and why?
Right now the plans are to grow my product line horizontally with new flavors & new size, as I have so many ideas for new flavors. The possibilities are endless. As for growing the Jo Snow product line vertically, that also holds so much potential, but for now, I have my hands full with the syrup line & getting a handle on that, as I haven’t even hit my one year anniversary yet.

What do you see as the biggest benefit (s) you offer to your retailers and consumers?
As for consumers, I am offering a quality product that they don’t have to feel bad consuming. I have had so many people tell me that they are trying to cut out “pop” & have replaced it with soda water & Jo Snow Syrups. It makes me feel great that I am helping someone kick a bad habit.

For my retailers, I feel good about supplying them with a unique local product. There is nothing else like Jo Snow on the marketplace right now in Chicago, so I feel like I can really fill a niche for them.

For both consumers & retailers I feel great about providing a high quality, all natural, versatile, affordable product to them.

Other than financial, what risks did you take to get your product(s) to market?
The risk that I would drive my husband crazy! Actually it was a huge emotional risk. A lot goes into creating & producing a food product. When it is your passion, it is a part of yourself that you are offering up. You are exposing your innermost self to the public & you hope that they accept you & love the product as much as you do. It is also your life. You work 24/7 and give up almost all of your “personal” time. You have to love what you do.

Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these?
I have always wanted a food product. I never moved forward with it as I was never passionate about any one idea or product. When I started making the syrups at the café & then for my friend’s café, I saw that I was onto something. I saw that people loved them. So, I knew how to make the product, they were market tested, in a way, so that was half the battle! Now, the other half of the battle, that’s another story 

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
It was actually when we were naming Jo Snow Syrups. My husband & I & our friend were on a road trip to Kansas City to check out this super-cool snow cone stand there. We were driving back & my friend said to me, as only really good friends can, “You know, to be super honest with you, I don’t love the name of your syrup company” (I had another name that just wasn’t sitting right with me either.) So we started brain storming. Let me tell you driving through the stark landscape on the way from Kansas City to Chicago can make you kind of loopy! In that stir-craziness, trapped-in-a-car-for-seven-hours feeling, we came up with Jo Snow! It stated out a little sophisticated with “snow” & then just got goofy by adding “Jo”. Just the way I like it, not too serious!


Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, "I'm going to do this!"

When a certain un-named specialty store owner said “I didn’t know you made sirrops. Why don’t you bottle them & I could sell them.” Thus, Jo Snow was born! Thanks, Tracy! (Oops!)

Friday, September 16, 2011

September Staff Selection: Poggio Farro



Poggio del Farro: 15% off in September
From Staffer Richard Sparks

With the markets at their peak and all that vegetable goodness around, we have gone way beyond meatless Mondays! Most days in fact are meat free, unless the grill comes out, but even then veggies rank pretty high. Because we are big eaters however, we often need to fill in the "gaps". Typically we dive into bread, pastas, eggs and cheeses to bulk up our vegetarian meals, but what really does the trick is a lovely grain concoction, and some hot or cold farro dish always fits the bill.

Farro has been around for some 17,000 years apparently. It fueled the Roman Legions in their conquests and nourished the peasantry. For a time it fell out of favor, but the French gastronomes brought it back with gusto as ingredients to fine soups in their haute cuisine. Now, because of its low gluten properties and high levels of anti-oxidants and vitamins, farro has become a sought after ingredient to healthy, flavorful meals.

Check out these recipes and give farro a try!

Summer Farro Salad
http://www.food52.com/recipes/5092_summer_farro_salad

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Farro with Fennel and Carrots
*This makes a ton of food & is great for potlucks!!

www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Farro-with-Fennel-and-Carrots-237196
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Farro with Mushrooms

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/health/nutrition/21recipehealth.html

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Zuppa di Farro
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2009/10/seriously-italian-zuppa-di-farro.html

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Cristiano Savini



This installment of "Meet Your Makers" is an interview with Cristino Savini, a 3rd generation truffle producer from Tuscany. Savini Truffles are recognized throughout the world as some of the finest truffles; in 2007 Cristiano and his dog Rocco found the world's largest truffle, weighing in at 3.3 pounds! Read his inspiring interview (then try some of his truffle products sold at our shops!):

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?

In Famiglia chi ha comiciato a “trasformare” una passione (quella per il Tartufo) in un vero e proprio lavoro lo ha sempre fatto con soddisfazione e per noi è sempre stato motivo d’orgoglio ed è stato una conseguenza senza nemmeno farci caso. E noi vogliamo continuare a far “godere” i ns clienti con le ns preparazioni a base di tartufo come chi ha cominciato questo cammino!

In our family, those who began "transforming" a passion (that of the Tartufo) into a labor have always done it with great satisfaction, and for us the motivation has always been the passion and love whereas the work followed without us even taking notice. We now want to continue to provide "enjoyment" to our customers with our preparations based on the tartufo - that which brought us on this road!


Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
Nel ns caso i fornitori sono la più grande ricchezza ed eredità lasciata da mio nonno Zelindo, questo è uno dei ns punti di forza. Avere la certezza della provenienza del tartufo oltre alla sicura qualità nel nostro mondo è più unico che raro.

For us, the people (hunters) who bring us the tartufo are the most prized, and our greatest strength. This is the tradition started by my grandfather Zelindo in which we continue today. Our relationship with those who furnish us with the tartufo guarantees the quality of the product - this is rare and unique in our world.

What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market? L’obbiettivo che ci poniamo puntualmente è quello di produrre prodotti UNICI, con una qualità elevate e negli ultimi anni dobbiamo presentare bene anche il pack visto che il mercato dei prodotti di nicchia stà attento anche aquest’aspetto, senza però cadere in inganno, è più importante fare un prodotto buono che avere un pack stratsferico.

Our goal is to bring to market UNIQUE products of the highest quality by staying close to our providers. In the last few years with so many products on the market, we strive to stay focused on the "quality" rather than get caught up in the frenzy of the "quantity" for the marketplace.

Is there anyone else on your “team”?
Siamo un piccolo realtà, e nella ns famiglia abbiamo persone fidate in ogni ruolo che nei momenti di lavoro riesce a fare squadra!

We are really a small operation, and in our family we have workers whom we trust to perform in their role and as a "team" for the good of the company.


How often do you come out with new products?
Tutti gli anni I ns client ci chiedono l news, quindi almeno un prodotto lo preentiamo, quest’anno abbiamo presntato 2 news

Every year our customers ask for something new, thus we try to present at least one new product. This year we have two new products, the Maionese con Tartufo Nero and Filetti di Acciuge, both in Milano at Tuttofood and at the Fancy Food Show 2011 in DC.

How did you get into this “line of business”?
ci sono nato

I was born into this!


What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?
L’architetto

Architect

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
Onestamente sono stati diversi episodi, anche perchè tutto pensavo ma mai avrei detto di fare quello che ho fatto con importanti risultati, ma si vede che il mio DNA mi ha portato sulla via giusta e ne sono felice!

I have to be honest. There have been many times in my life where I have gone in different directions, but I never felt that I was doing something very meaningful. But it's clear that my DNA was deigned to bring me to the right path, and I am now very happy!

How do you plan to grow your portfolio, horizontally or vertically, and why?
Orizzontalmente, mi piace di più… Onestamente la quantità è sempre importante ma mai come la qualità nel ns lavoro quindi non puntiamo mai a fare di più ma puntiamo sempre a fare meglio! La crescita non è repentina ma quando cresci cresci su qualcosa di solido e durturo nel tempo!

I like growing horizontally...honestly, quantity is of course important, but in our work, never more important than the quality. We always strive to do better! Growth is not instantaneous but needs to be solid in order to last!

What do you see as the biggest benefit (s) you offer to your retailers and consumers?
LAVORARE CON UNA FAMIGLIA CHE SI DEDICA AL TARTUFO IN TUTTO E PER TUTTO CHE AL PIMO POSTO A I SUOI CLIENTI E CI FACCIAMO IN QUATTRO PER FAR IN MODO CHE SIA IL PIU’ FELICE POSSIBILE

To work with a family that is dedicated to the product, the tartufo. Above all, we place the customer first and will do everything possible to keep our customers happy!


Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these?
PERCHE’ HO AVUTO LA FORTUNA DI NASCERE IN UNA FAMIGLIA DOVE IL TARTUFO E’ EMPRE STATO COSI’ PREZIOSO CHE MI SONO RITROVATO A FAR QUESTO CON LO SPIRITO GIUTO

Because I had the good fortune of being born in a family where the Tartufo has aways been prized and thus I continue with the same dedication.

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
UN PASSIONE TRASFORMATA IN LAVORO PUR MANTENENDO INVARIATA. MI CI ONO TROVATO SENZA NEMMENO ACCORGERMENE

A passion transformed into a life's work. It happened without me even taking notice!

Monday, August 22, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Koval Distillery



Koval was the first boutique distillery located in Chicago. Founders Robert and Sonat Birnecker left academic careers to bring the distilling traditions and techniques of Robert’s Austrian grandfather to America. Certified both organic and kosher, Koval holds itself to the highest standards of purity and craftsmanship. They are viewed as one of the pioneers in the craft distillery movement in the U.S. and many other small distillers around the country look to them as a model business. Provenance carries a rotating supply of their Lion's Pride Whiskeies, Vodkas and Liqueurs.

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?
First off, we hope to make people happy and be a part of their celebrations! Second, we want people to learn that spirits can be a lot more interesting and creative than what the big companies churn out. We were one of the first to offer white whiskey in the US and we are the only company in the US to offer such a wide variety of spirits made out of so many different grains. We want to provide quality as well as creativity - something a small distillery can do a lot better than a huge brand pusher. We hope that we will get people interested in craft spirits, just as people started to become more aware of craft beer a decade or so ago.

Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
Not all of them but some. Due to organic regulations our grain has to be milled at an organic certified mill and many of the farmers, even those who use organic practices do not always get their grains milled at an organic certified mill. We have to abide by these strict standards of organic purity and thus we do not know all of the grain farmers, save that they are in the Midwest, since their grain goes to an organic mill and we buy from the mill that acts as a broker for organic grain farmers. This approach however allows farmers with both small and large organic crops to gain distribution easily. We know the fruit farmers and have good relationships with the distributor for our herbs. Often times for the volume we need, we have to go through a distributor who buys everything a farmer has and then sends it where it needs to go for the farmer. We could not buy our ginger direct even if we wanted to, since it comes from Hawaii part of the year and Peru the other half. The organic ginger farmers in both places sell all of their ginger to the ginger distributor we use and he sends it on to the companies needing organic ginger, it is just how business is done.

What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market?
When the apples leave the farm for example, we part ways with the farmer. For our apple brandy we had about 7 tons of apples at the distillery that we had to inspect one-by-one, core, and clean (cut off) any bruises. We then mashed them (basically turned them into apple sauce) and let the mash ferment until it was ready to distill. We make seasonal brandies every fall, always a pear and every year we plan to work with a new fruit as well, this past fall was apple and our apple brandy just hit the market after aging nicely in our whiskey barrels.

Is there anyone else on your “team”?
When we started, Robert and I (Sonat) were the only ones at the distillery save my parents on occasion and Robert’s grandfather, who flew over to make sure Robert was carrying on the family tradition with aplomb. Now, three years later, we have an operations manager and distiller, Mark, an Assistant Distiller, Danny, a Distillery Ambassador, Meg, an office manager, Jason, and a Brand Manager, Jen. We are however, a real family business. My mom did all of the artwork on our labels and is a frequent ginger peeler, my father did some of our photography and despite being 80 can make 150 boxes in a sitting (which he does often), siblings and cousins have all been involved in getting out shipments. We now also have team Chicago as volunteers often help us with the hand labeling and packaging, as well as peeling ginger.

How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?
We are always working on new products and currently have over 20! Chicago is the only place that all of our products will be available and our most recent additions are the Lion’s Pride aged whiskey line (10 different single barrel, single grain varieties), our Apple Brandy and Orange Blossom Liqueur. Keep an eye out for an interesting brandy in the fall…

How did you get into this “line of business”?
We wanted to have a different quality of life than we had in Washington DC, where we had “careers.” We wanted something different, we wanted to live in Chicago, be close to family and friends, work together, have our children close at hand, actually make something of high quality; so it became clear that we had to start a family business. There are not that many people who grow up, like Robert, learning how to make brandy and other spirits, so it seemed like a good bet.

What did you do before this?

Before we turned to making liquor, I was a tenured Associate Professor of Jewish Studies and German Cultural History and Robert was the Deputy Press Secretary for the Austrian Embassy.

Are your products sold anywhere besides Chicago?
Yes, we are available in WI, IN, MO, KY, MD, DC, TN, CA, and NY.

What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?
Both of our parents raised us to want to be happy, so that was the goal…not any particular career. I did always want to be a mom when I grew up, so I am thrilled to have two lovely boys.

What was the spark that led you to working with spirits?
Around the time we were looking for a lifestyle change we happened to have spent some time in Austria with Robert’s grandparents, who have a distillery and brewery. When we would talk about the great spirits Robert’s grandfather makes and how it would be great of one could get such things here, my sister started pushing us to stop talking about it and start distilling. So we did.

Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?
A lot of inspiration comes from the small distilleries in Austria and Germany. We also come up with a good bit ourselves.

How do you plan to grow your portfolio, horizontally or vertically, and why?
We just make what we like and enjoy trying new things.

What do you see as the biggest benefit (s) you offer to your retailers and consumers?
We offer the highest quality and most unique organic and kosher spirits in the US. Where else can you find an oat or millet whiskey? Orange blossom or rose hip liqueur?

Other than financial, what risks did you take to get your product(s) to market?
Personal risks galore...but what most people do not realize is that the liquor industry is full of “common industry practices” that we were NOT going to engage in such as buying finished alcohol from an industrial factory and flavoring it (much cheaper than making it from scratch) or give in to the pressure to give kickbacks (free product) to bars and restaurants so that they will carry our brand (something that some in the industry have grown to expect).

Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these?
Family tradition and a market aching for unique hand crafted spirits.

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
In the beginning we did not have a good rhythm down as to how long certain aspects of the packaging process would take us and we had a flight scheduled to leave the evening of our first shipment to visit Robert’s family in Austria. So, to get our first shipment finished we had worked 72 hours straight with our 6 month old in tow. After about 48 hours and much parental help, my sister and brother (who were not in Chicago) started calling their friends in Chicago to ask if they would help us. An old friend of mine and a friend of a friend of my brother’s were there all night long hand labeling Rose Hip liqueur and so many more...I think the saying is “it takes a village”…well, we really saw this in action.

Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, "I'm going to do this!"
After much encouragement from my sister, we read an article in Time magazine about craft distilling and we said to each other…you know, we really could do that!

Who's your all- time favorite band/singer?
We listen to so many different kinds of music. During my last ginger peeling session I listened to some German pop (Wir sind Helden and 2-raum Wohnung), the soundtrack to Amélie, some Swedish pop (The Wannadies), a bit of Franz Ferdinand, The Shins, and John Lennon.

If you could have supper with 3 people (living or deceased), who would they be and why?
My great grandfather Manik Loewenherz who earned the soubriquet “Koval” (it means blacksmith, but in this case, it means the Yiddish slang, black sheep, as in black sheep in the family) after leaving beloved Vienna to start a business in Chicago in the early 1920s. Aside from the namesake connection he helped so many people in my family as well as numerous unrelated children escape Vienna and certain death at the hands of the Nazis. He was, according to my great uncle Siegmund, “a rare kind of a gentleman, one who would without question take off his hat to greet someone passing by during an extraordinary blizzard.” Much of my academic work concerned Vienna from the turn of the century until 1938 and I would love to be able to speak with Manik about his experiences. My aunt Susan Loewenherz: a sculptress, bon vivant, cosmopolitan ex-pat Italian from Winnetka, the life of the party until she succumbed to complications of breast cancer in 2007; because I miss her dearly and she would have gotten a lot of pleasure out of me leaving academia to make whiskey and be a mom. My great grandmother, Ida Ganzoff, who left Pinsk for America - all alone - at the age of 14 after going on a hunger strike to convince her parents to let her go. She worked day and night as a seamstress to put three children through college and graduate school, while taking care of a sick husband. She was wise and intuitive, she had sechel [smarts], an early advocate of organic food and natural farming methods, and the strongest woman I have ever been lucky enough to meet. When asked in her mid-90s what she would have changed if she could, she stated, without missing a beat, “it would have been nice to own a factory.”



Thursday, August 4, 2011

August Staff Selection: Co-op Hot Sauce Products 10% off




This month's Staff Selection is from Jeff Tabels

Sometimes an obsession can lead to bad things and has nothing positive to offer. However, I have an obsession that is not only delicious, but has an unbelievable impact on our community. I'm talking about Co-op Hot Sauce. I won't waste too much time describing my "addiction" but I did open my refrigerator to find 9 different types of sauces at one point.

I am going to take a quote straight from www.coopsauce.com to explain the good things this company is doing. "Co-op Sauce is handcrafted using a variety of wholesome ingredients some of which are grown in Co-op's community garden to create high quality natural sauces. Half of the proceeds generated from the sales of Co-op Sauce go directly to supporting Co-op Image's free youth art center and community arts initiatives based out of Chicago's Humboldt Park Neighborhood." So not only are they growing in a community garden, they are giving to a wonderful program that will benefit the youth of our neighborhood as well.

Provenance carries a few of their mainstays. The Original, which is a mole based hot sauce with wonderfully deep spices and a hint of chocolate. The Habanero, which has the sweetness of carrots as a vehicle for the wonderful heat of the pepper. And the Green Jalapeño, which has the brightness of the fresh jalapeños straight from the garden. Co-op Hot Sauce also has limited run sauces that, in some cases, are a one time only production, and we recently brought in their rubs and Smoked Miso BBQ Sauce. Keep your eyes peeled for new products & in the meantime grab yourself a bottle (or 9) and get cooking!

Try these recipes on the Co-op Website: http://www.coopsauce.com/?page_id=12

________________________________________

Spicy Brown Ale Brined Wings
*from Grilling with Beer by Lucy Saunders


1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup kosher salt
24 oz Brown Ale
5 lbs chicken wings, cut into 3 sections, small tips removed
1 cup butter
2 TBSP minced garlic
¼ cup minced fresh jalapeños (or mix of habaneros & jalapeños)
½ cup hot pepper sauce, or more to taste (I suggest Co-Op Jalapeño)
½ cup Sriracha or Asian sweet hot chile sauce
Pinch of ground cinnamon
1 tsp finely ground black pepper
24 bamboo skewers, at least 10 in. long, soaked in water
2 TBSP black or toasted sesame seeds for garnish (optional)


Mix brown sugar, salt & brown ale in large gallon bowl & whisk until dissolved to make a brine. Place wings in a bowl & stir to coat. Cover & chill 4-8 hours.
Melt butter in large skillet. Add garlic & jalapeños. Saute over low heat until jalapeños are tender. Add hot pepper sauce, Sriracha, cinnamon & pepper. Mix well & simmer 3 minutes. Place in blender & puree until smooth.
Prepare grill. Drain wings from brine & thread on skewers, 3-4 pieces per skewer. Keep pieces of similar sizes together so chicken will cook evenly. Place skewers on grill over indirect heat (or use grill basket). Cook 25 minutes or until very brown & crispy, turning every 5 minutes. Arrange cooked wings on platter, spoon prepared chile sauce over evenly & sprinkle with black sesame seeds.

______________________________________


2300 N. Kimball Burgers
*by the residents of 2300 N. Kimball


2 lbs ground beef
1 small onion, chopped (about 1 1/4 cups)
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
3 TBSP of fresh thyme
2 TBSP Worcestershire sauce
2 TBSP Co-op Habanero Hot Sauce
1 tsp salt
1 tsp ground black pepper


Mix all ingredients thoroughly. Form into 1/4 or 1/3 lb patties. Prepare grill. Cook burgers to your preferred temperature. Patience is a must. You only want to flip the burgers once. In the last minutes, top with a nice slice of aged cheddar & allow to melt slightly. Toast buns & serve with lettuce, tomatoes, onions, etc.



*This recipe works wonderfully served with Co-op's Original Hot Sauce

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Meet Your Makers: June Taylor of June Taylor Co.



June Taylor Products are definitely those of a cult nature. Super small production (a 'batch' of her jam yields 6 jars, for example) yet amazingly balanced, textured and tasteful. Her marmalades are a source of addiction for more than one customer we know. Her ketchup made from dry-farmed tomatoes may be the most expensive ketchup we've seen, but this is the stuff that is made for the best burgers in the best restaurants we can name. Read on to learn more about this interesting and inspiring woman:

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?
To provide the very highest quality available. To make food by hand with honesty and integrity. To economically support family farmers who grow fruit sustainably. To revive forgotten fruits & flavors, and to reintroduce traditional preserving styles for example: infusing flowers and herbs from my own kitchen garden into fruits. To offer a broad spectrum of fruit preserves from marmalades, conserves and butters through syrup, confectionary (peels, fruit cheeses), tomato products, pastes, etc. And let’s not forget to offer products that taste great and offer pleasure to the customer.

Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
Of course, this is a key aspect of my work. I have been buying fruit from some farmers for nearly 20 years, and I have visited their farms & have had the opportunity to understand and appreciate their work. Understanding how the fruit is grown (and the challenges the farmers often face) allows me to develop a greater and deeper appreciation and gratitude for the work of farmers and I think this translates into the final product.

What is involved in working with the farmers to get a product to the market?
Being loyal to them and supporting them by buying their fruit. Understanding that they sometimes cannot provide fruit for you and being flexible. Some years we receive no fruit (eg: this year cherries) or a limited supply; other years there is an abundance. Often I pick up the fruit, sometimes it is delivered to me. Developing the patience & acceptance of a farmer!

Is there anyone else on your “team”?
Yes, I have one full time assistant who has worked with me for seven years and one part time. I also have part time help with office work and my family supports with business with web work, photography, and help in the farmers market.

How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?
All the time. It’s inevitable and impossible not to create new flavors, fruit combinations and discoveries with new herbs & flowers. This year we have made an Obsidian Blackberry Conserve; Strawberry Rhubarb Rose Geranium Conserve; Raspberry & Blueberry Conserve. We’ve also made a Meyer Lemon & Wild Mountain Sage Marmalade and Lisbon Lemon & Ginger Marmalade – and we are only half way through the year! Look out for new preserves…

How did you get into this “line of business”?
I worked in academia in the UK but after settling here I worked in two restaurants: Santa Fe Bar & Grill and Oliveto. After deciding to leave restaurant work I had a baby and it was at that point that my business was also born. I wanted to make marmalades and was introduced to organically grown food and the Berkeley Farmers Market. I had been teaching myself marmalade making (Grapefruit & Meyer Lemon was my first in 1987) at home & I started making small amounts when my son was a baby.

What did you do before this?
I was a Social Science Researcher in British Universities.

Are you products sold anywhere else besides Chicago?
Yes, I sell to a small number of regional specialty food stores and my preserves are also available in Japan. I have a shop (The Still-Room Shop) attached to my kitchen in Berkeley, and am in the San Francisco Ferry Plaza Farmers Market on Saturdays as well as online at www.junetaylorjams.com

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
Having a baby; deciding not to work for anyone else in food again (after two restaurant jobs as a bread baker) and needing to contribute income to our household whilst raising our son. And a love I had always had of making and packaging food. I studied Home Economics for 7 years in high school and loved it, but had not considered a career in food at that time.

Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?
My kitchen garden and walks in nature. I read British antiquarian preserving & confectionary books specializing in the 17th and 18th centuries. I learn a lot from them and derive inspiration, understanding and great pleasure from reading about the preserving work of the past.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Lauren Pett from Rich Chocolates




Rich Chocolates & Candies is a unique company specializing in handmade artisan confections that combine the classic with the contemporary. Lauren's philosophy is that while trends may come and go, chocolate should always be sweet. The next time you are at Provenance, pick up some of her Sea Salt Turtles or other hand-crafted sweets. We can barely keep them in stock!

What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?
I want to make people smile, to make someone’s day a little better. And I want to make chocolate fun! So many people make such serious, frou frou chocolates. It’s just not my style. I want to inject a little whimsy and nostalgia into your day.

Is there anyone else on your “team”?
Not yet- I’m in my 4th year as a one-woman business. I am fortunate enough to have an extremely supportive husband who is able to help out from time to time, and occasionally I’ll have an intern or stages, but for the day-to-day ops, it’s just me and my chocolate.

What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?
As a kid I always dreamed of being an artist of some sort. I was an avid doodler by age 5- my mom would always make sure to bring crayons or pencils so I could draw on diner placemats. This passion for art stuck with me through college, where I received a BFA in photography. But once I was out in the ‘real world’ I realized art would never really fulfill me. I wanted to do something that would connect with people in a positive (and tasty!) way.

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
I had always loved food, desserts in particular, but I never really thought about pursing a culinary career until I had moved out to Chicago and found myself faced with stifling secretarial jobs. I would sit at my desk and daydream about making candies and working with chocolate. After I was laid off for the second time (in less than two years) I decided to go for it.

Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?
A lot of my inspiration is based in nostalgia. I like to take familiar flavors and put a contemporary spin on them. The two best examples are probably the Pub Bark, which was inspired by chocolate-covered pretzels (one of my sister’s favorite treats) and the Honey & Sea Salt Pecan Turtles. Everyone knows turtles, but these are a bit more sophisticated.

Other than financial, what risks did you take to get your product(s) to market?
I think any time you put yourself out there, you’re taking a risk. I’ve poured my entire heart and soul into this company. Rich Chocolates & Candies is 100% “me”, and if people don’t like something I’ve created, it’s hard to not take it personally.

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
My first year in business I participated in the Chicago AIDS Foundation’s World of Chocolate event, during which a drag queen described my truffles as “orgasmic.” I’m not sure you can get a better endorsement than that!

Who's your all- time favorite band/singer?
Belle and Sebastian, followed by Sleater Kinney. And I’ll always have a spot in my heart for Billy Joel. What can I say, I’m from New Jersey.

If you could have supper with 3 people (living or deceased), who would they be and why?
Stephen Colbert, because he’s brilliant and hilarious; Jim Henson, because he was such an inspiration to me from a very early age; and my dad, because I’d really like to catch him up on what I’ve been doing in his name.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

July Staff Selection: Dreymiller & Kray Bacon



From PFW Staffer Jen Rosenthal: Dreymiller & Kray Bacon, 10% off All Month Long!

I'm fully aware that the bacon craze has taken over, so there's not much I can say that hasn't been blogged about, tweeted, smoke-signaled, or shouted from the rooftops these days.

But seriously, who doesn't LOVE bacon?!

In the words of Top Chef, "everything's better with bacon!" So when we got Dreymiller & Kray's new line of smoked bacon-y goodness in, I knew I had to try it. Marrying Goose Island's Belgian-style Matilda pale ale with their signature applewood smoked bacon is a match made in bacon heaven. Smoky and slightly sweet, D & K bacon will catapult most all dishes to out-of-this-world status.

Seeing as I moonlight - er, "daylight" as a grower/gardener, I would be remiss if I didn't remind you that seasonal fare is abound, so this summer when you're shopping at the farmer's markets for all those beautiful vegetables, don't forget to add the bacon. Here's one of my favorite recipes to inspire you:

Potato & Spring Onion Soup (adapted from Saveur.com)

serves 4-6

4 slices of smoked bacon, cut into strips
2 TBSP extra virgin olive oil
2 bunches spring onions (scallions), trimmed
1 medium yellow onion, peeled & coarsely chopped
3 large russet potatoes, peeled & cubed
4 cups chicken stock
Salt & freshly ground black pepper

1. Cut scallions in half crosswise, dividing white & green parts. Coarsely chop white parts & set aside. Finely chop green parts & set aside separately.
2. Heat oil in a dutch oven over medium heat. Add bacon, render until crispy. Remove from pot & set aside on a paper towel.
3. Add onions & chopped white parts of scallions & cook, stirring often with a wooden spoon, until soft, but not brown, 8-10 minutes. Add potatoes & stock & season to taste with salt & pepper. Increase heat to medium-high and bring just to a boil. Reduce heat to medium-low & simmer, stirring occasionally, until potatoes are soft, 30-35 minutes.
3. Mash ingredients with a good old-fashioned potato masher in the pot, leaving some chunky bits. Adjust seasonings. Garnish soup with reserved scallion greens & bacon.



But Chicago Magazine couldn't have said it any better: "HEAVEN is a ripe heirloom tomato, crisp lettuce, and Dreymiller & Kray bacon on toasted sourdough."
Exactly.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Meet your Makers: Steven Stallard of BLiS LLC




BLiS products are a chef's creation. Steven Stallard is a trained chef who chose to focus his passion on handcrafting naturally-sourced gourmet foods. It seems like the ultimate evolution for someone truly interested in the process of creating unadulterated ingredients from the earth to the table. Stallard was the first chef Grant Achatz (Alinea, Next, Aviary) worked for, and Achatz still views him as an inspiration.

We love his barrel-aged maple syrups, his solera-method vinegars and frankly, everything else we've tried from him, from salts to roe to rubs.


What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products? To provide excellent chef driven products that help amplify menu and everyday kitchen experiences.

Do you personally know the people who produce your products? Yes I have relationships with several of them.

What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market? Quality control, tight specs and real working relationships.

Is there anyone else on your “team”? Yes a general manager , several contract workers, and a media / marketing manager.

How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?
As soon as the market and time / finances allow it is quite costly to bring new products to the market and we are always trying new things.

How did you get into this “line of business”?
I have been cooking since I was 9 and foraging not long after that, we grew up with a small garden in the 70’s as a kid (all organic, long before it was a mainstream direction)...so it is in my roots I guess.

Are your products sold anywhere besides Chicago?
Canada, Germany, Singapore and Italy. So far it seems to be growing fairly quickly.

What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"? I wanted to Fish, hunt, forage then cook in that order; the first three led to what should I do with stuff that I gathered.

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
Well I was very interested in food shows as a child; I watched Julia Child the most & even the Galloping Gourmet - anything that I could learn something from.

What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?
My favorite story was when I was in the early stages of barrel aging syrup. The head of the cask blew off, sending 50 gallons of maple syrup on the floor: basically a small and expensive flood and an unbelievable mess to clean up.

Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, "I'm going to do this!"
When I started to make roes that no had ever tried with species of fish that no one had considered as a caviar source. I wanted to lessen the pressure on stressed stock of traditional caviar / roe species

If you could have supper with 3 people (living or deceased), who would they be and why?
Jim Harrison, love the BD character fellow Michigander and great writer plus big foodie; Theodore Roosevelt, the last great president that did a great deal for everyone and Joseph Campbell (no explanation there)- not necessarily in any order.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Meet Your Makers - Adam Seger: Founder/Mixologist-hum Spirits LLC




We've known about Adam (Everyone knows Adam!) since before opening the shop. We had the pleasure of meeting him in 2006 when Logan Square was opened. Now we have the good fortune of working with him and his team at Hum Botanical Spirit. Hum is one of the most unique and versatile bases for delicious cocktails we've had. Now learn a little more about the people and the project:

What do you hope to accomplish through your product?

To inspire other passionate bartenders and entrepreneurial Mixologists to take their hand-crafted products to market


Is there anyone else on your “team”?

Jennifer Piccione runs our operations. She took a leap of faith and left her legal career to do this full time. Her husband Bryce Williford works full-time for CH Robinson and runs or financials. Jenny Kessler who started as an intern is now a partner and our national brand ambassador. Erin Ramsay started as a part-time intern and is now a full-time intern. She does our graphic design, marketing support and a million other tasks that keep us fast and efficient. Dr. Gary Wolford was our 1st investor, sits on our board, is a an international organizational structure consultant. He is our fresh eyes and wise voice of experience.


How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new?

Daily and yes. There are not enough new packages and names for all of the products I have in the 'Laboratory'


What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?

To be a Chef. I loved the muppets as a kid and The Swedish Chef was my favorite character.


What was the spark that led you to working with food & drink?

I grew up in South Louisiana as the son of an Episcopal Priest. Food is the center of entertainment in this culture.


Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?

I love the Estate Rhum Agricoles of Martinique and knew I wanted to create a Rhum-based spirit. As an Advanced Sommelier, I took the mantra 'What grows together goes together" and took Botanicals that would naturally be found on the island and in the cuisine. Hibiscus for color and soul, ginger for peppery spice, cardamom for hedonistic top note, Kaffir lime for brightness.


If you could have supper with 3 people (living or deceased), who would they be and why?

Julia Child - I met her a number of times when she was alive. She is one of the sharpest and most remarkable people I have ever known

Oprah Winfrey - She has inspired and touched so many lives

Anderson Cooper - He would inspire great conversation between Julia and Oprah and is quite easy on the eyes

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

10% off BLiS Products All Month Long!




Our June Staff Selection was chosen by Staffer Nicole Benjamin. Read more about these amazing products!

I remember the day when I first laid eyes on a bottle of BLiS Bourbon Barrel Pure Maple Syrup. Simply beautiful. And the price? Well, a wee bit more than I've spent on syrup in the past, but, as I learned soon after, this was no ordinary syrup.
I went the traditional route at first: BLiS (pronounced "Bleese" drizzled atop pancakes with sausage links on the side. The purity of the maple syrup was evident in each bite with a rich, nuanced complexity that complemented the lemon notes in my golden Dutch baby pancakes. I knew then that there was a variety of ways I would utilize this syrup in my kitchen.

When I'm intrigued by something, I'm curious to know more. While I wasn't surprised to learn BLiS products were a chef's creation, (Chef Steven Stallard), I was fascinated by his story of how a trained chef chose to focus his passion on handcrafting naturally-sourced gourmet foods. It seemed like the ultimate evolution for someone truly interested in the process of creating unadulterated ingredients from the earth to the table. I enjoyed reading about Stallard as the first chef Grant Achatz worked for, and how Achatz still views him as an inspiration.

While his products previously were sold directly to chefs, they're now available at specialty shops like ours. We stock a number of BLiS products, and are offering them at 10% off throughout June.

Here are a few recipes to try:

http://blisgourmet.com/home/recipes/stewed-fruit.html

http://www.kbuxton.com/recipes/dutch.html

http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/05/salade-nicoise-tuna-egg-brunch-salad-recipe.html

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Cedar-Plank-Salmon-354516

Friday, May 13, 2011

Meet Your Makers: Brady Braden, B True Bakery



Provenance has been working with Brady at B True Bakery for a few years now. The introduction was made by a mutual friend & business owner, Kevin Richardson of Soggy Paws. The coconut roches and chocolate chip cookies fly out of our stores. They are great-tasting and satisfying, without the refined sugar or preservatives in many other sweets. Here's more insight to this fantastic business!



How did you get into this line of business”?

About 9 years ago, I made a big change in my life and currently weigh 70 pounds less than I used to. My doctor encouraged me to lose some weight and become more active. I chose to cut-out all processed foods and ingredients from my diet and eat only all-natural, whole grain foods. I love to cook, so the change wasn’t too impossible from a diet perspective. My one big challenge was my sweet-tooth. After looking everywhere, I couldn’t find desserts that fit my new lifestyle. I started working on my old family recipes and converted them from their original processed ingredients to all-natural and 100% whole grain ingredients. Trial and error went a long way, but in the end I had a pretty good start. After 9 years in the Hair Industry as a Colorist, I chose to make a career change. First stop, The French Pastry School here in Chicago to receive my Pastry Certificate. 4 Months after Graduation, B True Bakery was born. I’m excited to offer a unique and one of a kind product that is not only flavorful and delicious, but a better choice than most trans-fat and sugar-laden baked goods.


Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio?

Initially, my product list came from my own personal desires and cravings. Each time I craved a new type of dessert, it was off to the kitchen with an old recipe for some trial-and-error conversion. After that, a lot of my inspiration comes from my customers. They have great ideas for products they would like to see given the “B True” Treatment. As for flavors, I’m a wild child. I cook dinner almost 7 nights a week. I find a lot of my flavor profiles for my sweet dishes and breakfast items come from my savory creations. I have a Strawberry-Basil Oat Scone that is to DIE for. The idea came from a salad I had tasted. I was hooked. A lot of inspiration also comes from ethnic cuisine. Im a big fan of spice, so you see a lot of ginger and occasionally cayenne in my recipes. Sweet and Spicy is one of my signature combos.


What do you see as the biggest benefit you offer to your retailers and consumers?


I know it may sound contrived, but a personal understanding of my food and the mission of B True Bakery is the biggest benefit. I don’t produce and sell just another ‘all-natural’ product, I produce a lifestyle option. Besides my diet, a large portion of my weight loss can be attributed to SPIN. I have been a certified SPIN Instructor for 8 years and currently teach at Lakeview and Lincoln Park Athletic Clubs (and soon to open Lincoln Square Athletic Club). Knowing what individuals like myself want out of a healthy, balanced lifestyle allows me to directly impact my customers in a positive manner. I have a few regulars who have lost and continue to lose large amounts of weight, while still enjoying my baked goods and an active lifestyle. One person comes to mind immeadiately who has lost over 50 pounds in the past 3 years and eats one of our Whole Wheat and Clover Honey Snickerdoodles everyday. That’s a true testament to what we at B True Bakery Represent. B Healthy. B Extraordinary. B True.



Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, “I’m going to do this!”


After being a successful colorist at a wonderful local salon for 7 years, I started to feel like a career change was needed. I very much loved the salon world and the amazing relationship I had with my clients, but felt like it was time to do something for me. Also, after discovering over the years that I STILL couldn’t find decent healthy-options for baked goods, decided I had to be that guy. It was important for me to get a formal education in Pastry before opening my business. I needed to understand not only HOW to bake, but what happens WHEN you bake. Chemistry was familiar to me, from my years of coloring, perming and relaxing hair, but food was different. The French Pastry School offered me such an incredible opportunity for an amazing education. I continue to be an active Alumni, supporting FPS anytime I can. They have gone above and beyond supporting me AFTER my graduation. I know that an answer, advice or assistance is only a phone call away. They are so dedicated to their Program and Education, the success of the Graduates’ shows that as well!

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Fireworks Popcorn: 10% off All Month Long


from Staffer Aaron Golding



Ah Movie Night. That ancient tradition of families, friends, and couples settling down together to watch a film with a giant bowl of popcorn. Legend has it that Mark Antony and Cleopatra got their cuddle on with a big bowl of hot, buttery popcorn and a movie. Growing up, Friday night was movie night. We used it as an opportunity to come together and bond over a witty Woody Allen flick or a bombastic action film. When I was a teenager, movie night was an excuse to sit real close to a girlfriend in the basement with a bowl of popcorn resting on both of our laps. The reason for movie night might have changed but the one constant has always been the popcorn.

Popcorn is easy enough to make: some oil in a heavy pan with a lid, the heat on high, kernels of corn, time, then a little melted butter, salt, some Parmesan cheese, and boom, popcorn. Looking back on it, sharing handfuls of popcorn out of that steel communal bowl, everyone taking turns and getting along, were some of the tenderest moments of my youth. Sometimes the easiest things are the most magical.

So when Provenance brought in Fireworks Popcorn I was excited to try it, having only had the common popcorn found in most grocery stores. Fireworks Popcorn, based in Northern Wisconsin, is a family- owned company dedicated to producing indigenous varietals of popcorn. All of their all-natural, Native American kernels are GMO-Free and harvested without the use of dyes. The colors of the kernels range from gold to rusty-red to purple. The result is popcorn with delicate hulls and a rich, deep corn flavor. The best thing about popcorn is dressing it up with anything your imagination can come up with. I experimented with melted butter, chopped rosemary and grated Manchego cheese. It was awesome. I'll list a few links below, but I suggest peeking in your spice cabinet and refrigerator and composing some jazz with your ingredients.

Movie-Night-Popcorn has grown up.

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/perfect-popcorn-recipe/index.html

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Maple-Pecan-Popcorn-108508

http://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/2010/02/spicy_popcorn_with_piment_despelette_and_marcona_almonds

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Frenchified-Popcorn-107834

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Meet Your Makers: McClure's Pickles



Provenance has been carrying McClure's Pickles for quite some time now, and recently we brought in the McClure's Bloody Mary Mix. Fans of the spice know these products to be very addictive. In fact, some of us have been known to each most of a jar just standing up in the kitchen...ahem... This post of "Meet Your Makers" is a Q&A with brothers & founders Joe and Bob McClure.
____________________________

** Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products? We know a good majority of them, yes and have been working with them for awhile. When you are a smaller manufacturer your direct relationships with farmers help you leverage prices and actually get the produce, as so often it easily gets bought by larger companies who work on volume deals.

**What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market? Simply, just connecting with the farmer to get the best quality produce possible. It all starts with the raw material. Putting bad raw materials into your line...makes for a bad product. There's no magical transformation that occurs.


**Is there anyone else on your “team”? Yes, there's a total of about 15 employees with us currently working to produce our products. Everyone works extremely hard as we grow and we they will be with us while we continue to do so.

**How often do you come out with new products? Are you working on anything new? About once a year we come up with something new....that said, it's not always something that gets to market.

**How did you get into this “line of business”? This is an old family recipe passed down from our mother's side. We grew up making the pickles in Michigan and then in 2006, Bob in Brooklyn and Joe in Michigan started making the product and trying to sell it.

**What did you do before this? Joe was studying classical guitar, composition and then went on to get his phD from Wayne State Medical in Physiology.

**Are your products sold anywhere besides Chicago? Yes, our products are sold nationwide and most heavy presence in the midwest and in New York area.

**What was the spark that led you to working with food? We've always been doing it somewhat and the spark that led us into the business of food was seeking a more steady future by doing something we know very well.

**How do you plan to grow your portfolio? I guess in terms of business operations....vertically and horizontally....it has to be an evolving, growing model...adherence to a strict set of guidelines can certainly point you straight but can also blind you from other potential benefits....so: buying a farm or operating trucks? Maybe. Maybe not.

**Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these?
It's the thing we know best and using that as a foundation we felt we had a good launching pad to start the company.

Friday, April 8, 2011

April Staff Selection: River Valley Kitchens Mushroom Growing Kits



River Valley Kitchens Mushroom Growing Kits: 10% off All Month Long

From Staffer Melissa Yen:

I hate to say it, but I am not much of a gardener. I just get so aggravated when I spend hours pulling weeds. Then, they come back the next week, but for some reason the peppers didn't survive. My only house plants are jades, because they are the only thing I seem to be able to keep alive, besides weeds!

When we got the River Valley Kitchens Mushroom Kits in the store, I was very intrigued. It seemed like a pretty easy, no risk way to grow some veggies, in the house, without the weeds, year 'round. OK, $19.99, I'll give it a shot. The fantasies of mushroom risotto were already playing in my mind.

The instructions are very easy. It warned us to cover the box as our cats might like to dig in the soil. Bad cats! The instructions also said that it may take up to 20 days for mushrooms to appear. That didn't seem like such a long time to wait for my mushroom risotto fantasy to come true.

I was like a little kid, taking the protective rubber maid cover we used to keep the cats away off every other day to see "if it was soup yet"! Then, lo & behold, about 3 weeks later, tiny little mushroom pinheads appeared. Yay! How exciting. The instructions were right. Once the mushrooms form, they can double in size each day. I went away for 4 days & when I checked them when I got home...Whoa!!!! They were full-fledged mushrooms. The next day...Whoaaaa!!!! They could take over the universe, or at least, my sauté pan. The kits will produce for 60-90 days, with "flushes" occurring every 7-14 days.

Here are some recipes (risotto, of course!) to enjoy with your homegrown mushrooms

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Wild-Mushroom-Risotto-102654

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Wild-Mushroom-Crostini-243395

http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2009/08/creamy-mushroom-pate-recipe.html

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Meet Your Makers



The Provenance Food & Wine Blog series "Meet Your Makers" is about the people who bring us the goods. There is a great story behind the people and the products we sell at Provenance and we want to share this info with you. We hope you enjoy reading the answers to these questions, all selected by our staff members. Tell us who you want to get to know better and we'll ask!

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Our next guest blogger post is from Mike Bancroft, Executive Director/Founder of
Co-op Hot Sauce. These little bottles of heat are made in Humboldt Park and have been a hit at the shops! Our favorite is the Mole Hot Sauce, but at any given time Co-op has at least 4 or 5 sauces to choose from. Read more on this great little company that's doing a LOT of good!

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What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products?
With Co-op Sauce we hope to create exciting food goodness that not only helps to sustain itself and all those involved in the making of it, but to generate enough income to pay for the entirety of our general operating budget of the youth arts education and entrepreneurship organization (Co-op Image) and possibly other non government organizations.

Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products?
We know all of the farmers that produce the ingredients for our sauces, including the youth and volunteers that help in the 2 gardens we are directly involved with in Chicago. Many of these farmers we have met through the farmer's markets, such as Montalbano Farms, Piedt Farms, Pine Hill, and Dinge’s. The growers inspire the recipes for all of the local sauces and this year we are excited to continue working them as well as establishing new relationships with farms like Growing Home. These partnerships not only benefit us in the kitchen with amazing Midwestern products but allow for the farmers to offload large amounts of product after market that might otherwise go to waste.

How often do you come out with new products?
As often as I can, that’s my favorite part of getting sauced, but the products are entirely informed by what I can get from our growers. Right now not a whole lot going down but come harvest time it is on, and I can’t wait.

How did you get into this line of business?
I got into this business by accident...or was it "fate by salsa"... either-way I didn’t necessarily picture myself as the hot sauceateria guy in the grand scheme, but I love it. The sauce was born out of recipes I was submitting to my friends and family over 10 years ago. At that point I was calling it Breaking Windy City Hot Sauce (get it?) and it was before my sister and I founded Co-op Image. In 2003 I had a small production of the sauce going at that point, although I think we were emptying dollar store hot sauce bottles into buckets (we ate a lot of wings) and refilled them with what was to become Co-op Hot Sauce. Co-op Image was growing into something that was pretty amazing and the model of the not-for-profit was to sustain itself through its initiatives while maintaining all-free programming for youth. We received the Campbell Co-op Garden in trust from the City of Chicago through Neighborspace in 2004 and we started to try and sell some of the produce in the Humboldt Park Farmer's Market. It was grim, we would sit with our little pile of peppers and some greens while farmers (who had farms) had this awesome cornucopia of stuffs, we couldn’t compete - or make any money for that matter - with the exception of the occasional mercy buy. The kids were the first to point it out as they often worked the early markets doing the math on how much it cost for them to be there and how much we were taking in; it was obvious we needed something that could bolster sales and the hot sauce was it. It was an incredible mess (Anne from Crumb will tell you I still am a cyclone in the kitchen), but it started to work. We manufactured out of my kitchen for awhile, then out of the Co-op Art Center, then to a dedicated kitchen space above Chicago Hot Glass, and finally today we produce out of the back of the Dark Room.

What was the spark that led you to working with food?
I love to eat and cook but what really sparked me to working with food was always being surrounded by chefs who I always considered contemporaries to my own art making. They lived on a schedule similar to mine & were always learning and I was along for the ride. I didn’t put 2 and 2 together as to how important working with food was to me until I started to teach cooking through Chi-Town Chefs at the Co-op Art Center. I can’t live without it: it's a major vent and a source for great inspiration and camaraderie.


What is your favorite story/anecdote that occurred along the way in creating your product?

Three words: Chocolate Habanero Ouch (no one told me they are like twice as hot as regular habs, I was out of commission for hours and the aftermath wasn’t too pretty either).

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

March Staff Selection: Green Le Puy Lentils from France 10% off!



from Staffer Mary Stover

March is an interesting month. We are still wrapped in winter, but are also looking to capture a little bit of spring. I am still making hearty soups for my family, but also yearn for lighter foods. Sabarot Le Puy French Green Lentils are the perfect ingredient for hearty soups and sausage stews and is also equally delicious in salads. These little green gems are delicate, yet earthy & robust. And the best part is that they don't require soaking!

Le Puy Green Lentils are cultivated exclusively in the Le Puy area in the volcanic soil of France's Auvergne region. These lentils are grown without fertilizers and are the first dry vegetable, and only lentil, to obtain the AOC label. This label guarantees authenticity, quality and product origin. And, do you know that lentils also have the highest protein content of all vegetables?

During March, Sabarot Le Puy Green Lentils are 10% off. I hope you enjoy some of these delicious recipes:

http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/green-lentil-hummus"

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/emeril-lagasse/lentil-salad-recipe/index.html

http://www.easy-french-food.com/lentil-tomato-soup.html

http://www.chow.com/recipes/12762-french-green-lentil-and-bacon-salad"

Monday, February 7, 2011

Meet Your Makers!


This new series is about the people who bring us the goods. There is a great story behind the people and the products we sell at Provenance and we want to share this info with you. We hope you enjoy reading the answers to these questions, all selected by our staff members. Next, tell us who you want to get to know better and we'll ask!


Our first interview is with Lee Greene. Provenance struck up a relationship with Lee Greene and her line of imported handmade Italian Foods known as "The Scrumptious Pantry" in December 2009 when she first moved to Chicago. Lee is originally from Duesseldorf, Germany but spent five years in Tuscany working as vineyard manager for Cosimo Maria Masini. We are pleased to be working with her and wanted you to get to know Lee, the producers she represents, and their products a little better.
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What do you hope to accomplish through providing quality products/How did you get into this “line of business”?/What do you see as the biggest benefit you offer to your retailers and consumers?

Before I came to the USA, I worked in Italy and managed a small biodynamic vineyard. That experience showed me three things: First, sense of place, the so called terroir, was an established concept for wines, but it was only minor for foodstuffs, especially commodity type foods like vegetables, grains etc. Secondly, as a small quality oriented farmer you do not have the resources to tell your story and explain to consumers what makes your product different – and more pricey – than industrial foodstuffs. Lastly as a consumer it is hard to understand which product is truly artisanal and farmer grown and which just pretends to be.

I saw an opportunity of bridging this gap by creating a brand vehicle for small, organic farms growing food with a sense of place – using indigenous heritage crops and recipes based on the regional culinary heritage. It creates an opportunity for farmers to bring their food to market and an easy way for the consumer to identify these products on the retail shelf. That is why all our farmers smile from the front label of the packaging.

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Do you personally know the farmers that produce your products/What is involved with working with the farmers to get a product to market/What did you do before Scrumptious Pantry?

Oh yes, I absolutely know everyone, although the process for the Italian and US farmed products is different. As I mentioned, I managed a small biodynamic farm in Tuscany and through that job, I had the luck to meet the most amazing, passionate farmers – passionate about sustainability, about ‘terroir’. Over there, you can be assured that every farmer can give you an hour long talk why his tomato is different than the tomato grown by his neighbor and what to cook with it. Plus, the Italian economy is built on small businesses, hence the processing infrastructure for farmers to turn their produce into food is readily available. So all I had to do was to tap into the pool of these gorgeous products for The Scrumptious Pantry.
When I started working on the US farmed line, I quickly learned that things would be different and take more time. Finding great, motivated farmers that wanted to join was not the problem. We are so lucky to have one of the most vibrant real food movements here in the Midwest! But the products itself were the challenge. Although many farmers now grow heirloom (aka non hybrid) varieties, indigenous varieties are seldom planted. The regional culinary heritage has been flooded away by industrial food production. What is the taste profile of the Midwest? I spent a lot of time researching immigration patterns and cookbooks from 1750 to better understand what the culinary heritage of the Midwest is and how we can capture that in jars and packages. That was an unexpected twist to my job profile. And of course as soon as you have found a great farmer and have a great idea for a product figured out, you need to find a processor! The infrastructure for small food production is virtually non-existent. That poses a constant challenge. But we are finally about to launch two Midwestern - and one from California - in March. We are very excited!
Where do you find the inspiration for the products/flavors you select for your portfolio? How do you plan to grow your portfolio, horizontally or vertically, and why?
This might sound not very managerial, but we do not necessarily have a plan. We have a guideline of what The Scrumptious Pantry products are. And we are constantly looking for inspiration, meeting farmers, ranchers, fishermen to come up with new ideas for foods with a sense of place.

The one thing all our products have in common is that we are a PANTRY. We are building a line of food products that makes the busy lifestyle of our customers easier. A bag or jar that you can pull out when you need to prepare a quick dinner. I love cooking multiple course meals, but that is not everyday reality. The Scrumptious Pantry is composed of products, which allow you to prepare a quick and delicious meal, but at the same time can inspire the home chef to try something new. Like our Eggplant Tomato spread: if you are in a hurry you just need to whisk half a tablespoon in an egg to make a tasty egg dish. But you can also spread a thin layer on a piece of thinly pounded filet of veal, roll it up and broil it in the oven.
Of all the millions of food products you could have specialized in, why these? Describe your a-ha moment that made you say, "I'm going to do this!" What was the spark that led you to working with food?
Because this is the food I like to eat. There would surely have been many other products out there, foods everyone knows and that would have been easier to sell, or food with much higher margins. And although by Business School Profs will kill me for saying that: I do not care about making the highest margin. I care about what we put in our bellies, how we nourish our bodies, cause that also nourishes our soul. I needed to go to Italy and struggle up our up-wards sloping vineyards, spraying biodynamic preparations from a heavy copper tank on my back to realize that if this was the effort necessary to grow healthy food in a healthy environment, I had surely been eating wrong for the first thirty years of my live. Real food, small farmers needed a platform. So I set out to create one.
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What did you want to do as a kid, "when you grew up"?

Well, the usual dreams of little girls, I guess - princess, singer and figure skater. I realized pretty early though that neither of those would work out. The first “real” jobs I found attractive were either journalist or pastry chef. I cannot remember which one came first, but I do find it fascinating that my work now includes elements of both.