Archive for the ‘Grocery stores’ Category
| April 2, 2009 |
| 11:00 am | to | 6:30 pm |
Photo by Danny Pederson-Bradbury
Steep Hill Food Co-op’s next no-markup day is Thursday, 2 April. This means non-working members save 13% and non-members save 25% off their bills. Working members will get a further 10% off shelf prices. It’s a great chance to stock up.
Steep Hill carries:
- Bulk organic grains, flours, cereals, nuts, seeds and beans (some locally-grown)
- Organically-grown fruits, vegetables and juices
- Locally-baked goods and baking needs
- Organic/free-range eggs
- Organic beef, naturally-raised chicken and pork, and Saskatchewan fish
- Herbs, spices, coffees and herbal teas
- Special dietary needs
- Personal care and household items
No-markup day at Steep Hill Food Co-op
When: Thursday 2 April, 11:00am-6:30pm
Where: Steep Hill Food Co-op, 730 Broadway Avenue, Saskatoon, SK (Google map)
For more information: Steep Hill Co-op, (306) 664-4455
Posted: April 2nd, 2009 under Action, Event, Good deal, Grocery stores, Local food, Saskatoon, food, organic. Tags: Action, food, grocery store, hot deal, Local food, organic, Steep Hill Co-op
Comments: None
| April 21, 2009 |
| 6:30 pm | to | 9:00 pm |

Members of the Saskatoon Co-op are invited to attend the Annual General Meeting, which will be held Tuesday 21 April at 7pm.
The March newsletter addressed a number of environmental issues, outlining the Co-op’s green policies and initiatives. At the upcoming AGM, We Are Many Festival (WAM) organisers will be putting forth several environmentally-friendly resolutions. You will have the opportunity to vote on LEED-standard building for all new Co-op edifices, independent energy audits of all existing buildings, and local food procurement (aka the perennial problem of pork, pickles, and potatoes).
If you’re a Co-op member (if you’re not, you can sign up at any Co-op store), come vote for these changes–they can have a dramatic impact on our city because the Co-op is one of our biggest companies.
When: Tuesday, 21 April, 6:30 registration, 7pm call to order
Where: Commonwealth Ballroom, Hilton Garden Inn, 90 22nd St E, Saskatoon (Google map)
For more information: Saskatoon Co-op web site, WAM Facebook group
Posted: March 26th, 2009 under Action, Community, Energy, Event, Farming, Food miles, Grocery stores, Local food, Saskatoon, environment, food, producers. Tags: Action, Co-op, Community, Energy, environment, Event, Farming, food, Grocery stores, Local food
Comments: None
The Environmental Working Group has just released the 5th edition of its Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides. This handy cut-out-and-carry card lists which fruits and vegetables have the highest (and lowest) levels of pesticides so you can see at a glance when it’s most important to buy organically-grown produce and when the benefits of organic are less dramatic.
An EWG simulation of thousands of consumers eating high and low pesticide diets shows that people can lower their pesticide exposure by almost 80 percent by avoiding the top twelve most contaminated fruits and vegetables and eating the least contaminated instead. Eating the 12 most contaminated fruits and vegetables will expose a person to about 10 pesticides per day, on average. Eating the 15 least contaminated will expose a person to less than 2 pesticides per day. (Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides)
Living in Saskatchewan, it’s much easier to find organic versions of some of the Dirty Dozen than others, especially if you prefer to buy more locally-grown produce. For instance:
- I don’t remember ever seeing organic BC peaches, nectarines, pears, or cherries–I have seen Washington-grown ones at Safeway, but their taste was disappointing (I’ve eaten amazing organic soft fruit while in Washington, so freshness is obviously the issue, not inherent quality!). Most times, I would really rather eat something else entirely rather than risk spending a lot of money on imported out-of-season fruit that turns out to be sour or woody.
- Grandora Gardens (at the Saskatoon Farmers’ Market) and other vendors sell bell peppers treated with biological controls during late-spring/summer/early-autumn. You can grow your own in the summer.
- It has become much easier to buy organically-grown strawberries in the supermarket–both Safeway and Extra Foods often have Driscoll’s organic berries for sale during the spring and summer (imported from California). Local u-pick strawberries are not organically grown and although they certainly try to minimise chemical application, I am unsure about the level of pesticides involved. It’s pretty easy to grow your own–they are perennials and like all berries, taste a thousand times better picked straight off the plant.
- Organically-grown celery is easily found at (most/selected branches) Safeway, Sobey’s, and Extra Foods–let me know if you have trouble tracking it down.
- I’ve not seen organically-grown kale, but suspect it would be available at Dad’s–this is not really something I ever buy as there are so many other options for locally-grown greens (buy grow, freeze, or sprout your own year-round).
- Lettuce, again, is available from Grandora Gardens and other farmers’ market vendors in season. It is also ridiculously easy to grow your own from early May-September.
- Chilean grapes are often treated with up to 17 different pesticides. If you can’t find organic ones, US-grown grapes use fewer pesticides.
- Organically-grown carrots are available in grocery stores, but the ones from the farmers’ market are far superior in taste. I don’t know if conventional Saskatchewan carrot growers need to use as many pesticides on their carrots as those grown further south–our drier climate and colder winters can help reduce the need for many fungicides/insecticides.
And as far as the Clean 15 goes?
- I tend to buy onions either from the farmers’ market, but I have no qualms about buying conventional Manitoba-grown ones from the grocery store.
- I don’t buy a lot of avocados but will likely continue to get the odd regular one from the grocery store.
- I tend to buy fresh corn in season from the farmers’ market, and then conventionally-grown frozen.
- I generally have a greater concern about whether pineapple (and other tropical fruit) is fair trade and what the working conditions are for the farm workers than whether it’s organic.
- I’m not a huge mango fan!
- I buy asparagus in season from the farmers’ market. I never buy it from South America as the food miles are just too appalling.
- I buy fresh peas from the farmers’ market and am still trying to find a large-enough, sunny-enough patch to grow my own. Otherwise, frozen conventional.
- Kiwi fruit gives me an anaphylactic reaction, so I never buy them! It is very high on the list of allergy-inducing fruit, so be careful before giving it to children or serving it to guests.
- I buy cabbage from the farmers’ market is so fresh and delicious and economical, but good to know that the grocery store is an acceptable backup.
- I have personally never figured out how to make eggplant edible, myself! I’ll happily eat someone else’s.
- I don’t think I’ve ever bought a papaya!
- I never buy watermelon out of the summer season because it comes so far and tastes so dreadful, but will feel more comfortable about buying it from the grocery store when I do (now, if I could just find a fool-proof method for choosing a good one! Any advice?).
- Interesting that broccoli rates so highly. I would have thought it would have ranked much worse because of all the tiny flowers that are vulnerable to pests! I like to buy it locally when it’s in season because it’s so beautiful and fresh, and bought organic when it’s on sale. But I will feel much happier about picking up a bag of regularly-grown from the bargain bin in future!
- Again, interesting that tomatoes rated so highly. I would have thought they’d be worse, although I suppose if they’re grown in a greenhouse, pests are not a huge problem. My main issue is that grocery store tomatoes taste vile, and conventionally-grown tomatoes can be vulnerable to salmonella due to bad growing practices. Avoiding pesticide residue is not the only reason to buy organic! I grow my own in the summer, and buy from Grandora/other farmers’ market vendors during late spring/summer/autumn. (it takes a *lot* of energy to heat a greenhouse in Saskatchewan, or even BC, in the winter–very possibly moreso than growing them in a hot southern field and trucking them north). Seasonality is my main consideration–I haven’t bought a fresh tomato for months (and yes, I am missing them A LOT).
- Sweet potato is something else that I’d usually get at the regular grocery store.
Here are the lists of the best and the worst–you can get a printable version of the EWG Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides that you can put in your wallet here. Remember, avoiding pesticide residue is not the sole reason for buying organically grown produce–organic practices can help improve soil, reduce water usage, improve environmental conditions for animals, birds, and insects, and may (but certainly not always!) go hand in hand with better working conditions for farm workers. It often (but again, certainly not always) may have a lower risk of disease or contamination. Conversely, local conventionally-grown produce may in fact have a better environmental footprint than imported organic. But reducing pesticide exposure is a pretty major concern for most organic consumers, and so it pays to know exactly what you’re eating.
The Dirty Dozen (always buy organic)
- peach
- apple
- bell pepper
- celery
- nectarine
- strawberries
- cherries
- kale
- lettuce
- grapes–imported (this is a US guide, so this would mean non-US-grown grapes)
- carrot
- pear
The Clean 15 (lowest in pesticides)
- onion
- avocado
- corn
- pineapple
- mango
- asparagus
- peas
- kiwi
- cabbage
- eggplant
- papaya
- watermelon
- broccoli
- tomato
- sweet potato
Posted: March 12th, 2009 under Action, Community, Farmers' markets, Farming, Food miles, Grocery stores, Health, Local food, Local food ideas, Saskatoon, education, food, gardening, organic, producers. Tags: Action, advice, agriculture, Farmers' markets, food, Food miles, fruit, gardening, grocery shopping, Grocery stores, Health, Local food, organic, pesticides, Saskatoon, Saskatoon farmers' market, study
Comments: None
I initially described this acorn squash as a leftover, but really it wasn’t, because it had never actually gotten as far as being cooked. It had simply sat in a bowl in the counter for three weeks, staring at me accusingly while I tried to avoid looking at it. That’s what you get for buying something you don’t often buy without having a specific plan for how you’re going to use it!
The other issue with the squash is that I had only bought one of them, which really wasn’t going to go far enough to feed four people in any recipe I already knew, so there it sat. I finally realised that it wasn’t actually going to leap onto the stove itself (although I suppose it might have, if I’d left it another couple weeks). So I turned, as always, to Chef Google. This simple recipe for apple acorn squash soup from BC Tree Fruits* took care of that squash, a few apples that weren’t quite as crisp as they once had been, and part of a huge bunch of parsley that seems to have no end. It also finished off the chicken stock I had in the freezer, which prompted me to make another batch of stock that in turn used up some not-so-crisp celery and more of that never-ending parsley. The crisper drawer is now in much better shape. Only nice fresh vegetables remain and I don’t have to feel a twinge of guilt or apprehension when I open the drawer. A fridge really isn’t any different than the rest of the house–if any part of it gets ridiculously cluttered, then it can become very difficult to concentrate at the task at hand (in this case, cooking).
Food waste really has become a huge issue for me over the past few years, and I’ll soon be starting a series on how to drastically cut down on the amount of food that gets thrown in the (compost, hopefully) bin. In the past it was quite common for me to have to chuck stuff out, but now it’s a pretty rare exception. It’s not that hard to change your habits–some menu planning, inventory-keeping, thoughtful grocery shopping, and liberal use of your good friend Google will all help to get your groceries into your stomach where they belong, rather than the landfill. An estimated 5% of food is thrown out of Canadian fridges–at least–on a regular basis. In Britain, it’s about 1/3rd and in the US, estimates are as high as 40%. I can’t see why Canada’s level of waste would be much different. Cutting back on this unnecessary waste is the easiest way to reduce our consumption and ease the demand for food production, not to mention reduce the significant methane gas emissions caused by decomposing organic matter in landfills while saving you some significant money on your food bills too.
As Alex Renton wrote in the Observer a few weeks ago, there would be no need for GM crops if supermarkets and consumers weren’t so wasteful. The first and easiest place to start is with a warming winter bowl of soup like the one above!
* Those are walnuts floating on the top. They weren’t about to go bad–I just thought they would taste good, and so they did. Next time I will candy them. Yum. It could easily be made into a vegetarian soup by substituting vegetable stock.
Posted: February 27th, 2009 under Action, Cooking, Fear of food, Food waste, Grocery stores, Leftovers, Recipes, composting, environment, food, food rescue, vegetarian. Tags: Action, carbon emissions, composting, Cooking, environment, food, food rescue, Food waste, grocery shopping, Leftovers, recipe, vegetarian
Comments: 1
| January 29, 2009 |
| 11:00 am | to | 6:30 pm |

Photo by Danny Pederson-Bradbury
Steep Hill Food Co-op’s next no-markup day is Thursday, 29 January. This means non-working members save 13% and non-members save 25% off their bills. It’s a great chance to stock up.
Steep Hill carries:
- Bulk organic grains, flours, cereals, nuts, seeds and beans (some locally-grown)
- Organically-grown fruits, vegetables and juices
- Locally-baked goods and baking needs
- Organic/free-range eggs
- Organic beef, naturally-raised chicken and pork, and Saskatchewan fish
- Herbs, spices, coffees and herbal teas
- Special dietary needs
- Personal care and household items
No-markup day at Steep Hill Food Co-op
When: Thursday 29 January, 11:00am-6:30pm
Where: Steep Hill Food Co-op, 730 Broadway Avenue, Saskatoon, SK (Google map)
For more information: Steep Hill Co-op, (306) 664-4455
Posted: January 23rd, 2009 under Action, Event, Good deal, Grocery stores, Saskatoon, food. Tags: Event, food, Good deal, grocery shopping, grocery store, Steep Hill Co-op
Comments: None
My source spotted a few organic produce specials at the Extra Foods on Broadway: a 3lb bag of organic BC Gala or Granny Smith apples for $2.99 and organic bananas are under a dollar. She said that organic avocados were also on sale. The flyer lists organic BC Ambrosia apples for $1.29/lb, but I’m not sure if they’re available at the Broadway location or not. The location on 51st Street has a good range of organic produce.
I also checked the Safeway flyer online and they have a lot of organic produce on sale. I like that you can search their flyer for the word ‘organic’ (or any word, obviously!): strawberries ($3.49), lots of Canadian/US apples for $1.49, celery $1.49, green peppers $2.99, Canadian white mushrooms $1.99, frozen blue/raspberries/mango $5.49, (these are all Club Safeway specials so you need to use one of their loyalty cards).
Extra Foods on Broadway has moved apples and other organic fruit further down the store to the middle aisle because the organic ‘ghetto’ section was getting too crowded. It’s great to see organic produce being normalised and put right among the ‘regular’ food. Safeway has been doing this a lot more in the past year. I was thrilled to see one of their main strawberry specials last year was all-organic and given high profile right at the front of the produce department at the 85h Street location–they didn’t even have a non-organic variety offered at all that week, which is great, considering that strawberries are one of the most chemically-treated fruits out there and a great organic choice.
Posted: January 23rd, 2009 under Action, Good deal, Grocery stores, Saskatoon, food. Tags: Action, food, fruit, grocery shopping, Grocery stores, hot deal, information, organic, organic food, Saskatoon
Comments: None
“Do you know where I could find pork products that are natural…from happy pigs, etc?”
- Rachel, Saskatoon
I am not a fan of the way most pigs are treated to provide grocery stores with quantities of pork. Permanently confined in a windowless smelly building on hard bare floors in cramped conditions, large-scale pig barns certainly do not allow pigs to express their “pigness”, as Joel Salatin would say. It is a cruel way to raise these animals, who would spend their time foraging and rooting if left to their own devices. I also found, when I used to buy it years ago, that grocery store pork often had a nasty backtaste to it–to me, it sometimes smelled (and seemed to taste) like a pig barn! I now buy my pork from Pine View Farms. It has a wonderful flavour with none of that taste. They don’t raise the pigs themselves on their own farm, but sub-contract out to another farmer near Hague, who raises them in small numbers on straw:
“Our hogs are raised according our All Natural protocol. No antibiotics, growth hormones or animal byproducts are fed or administered. We do not use gestation crates, sows roam free and farrow in birthing pens on straw. The feeder pigs can roam around outside and root in deep straw to satisfy their natural instincts.” –Pine View Farms web site
We usually buy a side of pork from them at a time, but there are a number of retailers in town who sell their products. Steep Hill Co-op usually has chops, bacon, and ground pork. Their bacon and chops are available at Dad’s Nutrition Centre, as well as their mild Italian and chorizo sausage. Greystone and Attridge Co-ops also stock Pine View pork (cuts will vary). It is cheaper to buy directly from Pine View Farms, however. You can go out to the farm store, or they will also deliver to your house for a flat fee of $18/order. I have combined an order for friends in the past, which saves on time and gas for everybody.
There will soon be another option for pork raised to ‘beyond organic’ standards in the Saskatoon area: Lori Walldner, a former organic producer of pastured livestock, is now marketing a variety of food products by organic fellow-farmers ranging from meat and eggs to grains and (coming this summer) vegetables. She expects to have pork available in March–I’ll post again on her other products when I have more information (I’m also double-checking a longer list of Saskatchewan producers and suppliers and will add it when it’s done).
Naturally and/or organically-raised pork (Saskatoon area)
Pine View Farms ph: (306) 239-4763
Lori Walldner ph:(306) 955-8402
Posted: January 19th, 2009 under Action, Ethical food, Farming, Grocery stores, Local food, Saskatoon, food, producers. Tags: Ethical food, factory farming, livestock, Local food, local producers, meat, pasture-fed, pork, Saskatchewan, Saskatoon
Comments: None

Silky shark and bottlenose dolphin, Costa Rica (Sharkwater documentary)
Last week it was reported by Rob Stewart (director of the documentary Sharkwater) that both Loblaws and The Great Canadian Superstores were selling canned shark fin soup in the run-up to the Chinese New Year. He wrote on his blog:
“After Sharkwater’s release in Canada, Galen Weston, the CEO of Loblaws, brought me out to dinner with his wife Alexandra, and expressed his great interest in supporting the cause…Selling shark fins en masse; supporting the destruction of sharks, the oceans and the ecosystems we depend on for survival is how Loblaws supports the cause. Its outrageous that its happening in our own backyard… after we already know shark populations have dropped more than 90%. Help us fight this, and show Loblaws and Galen Weston that this was a bad decision… and lets get shark fin removed from Canadian Superstores. There’s still time to turn this around.” –Rob Stewart on the Abandon Fear blog
I’ve previously written about the dire situation of the world’s shark population. When I read Rob’s post today I got set to fire out an email of complaint to the corporate head office, but then learned (to my delight) that Loblaws had already withdrawn shark fin soup from all its stores’ shelves a few days later in response to the public outcry. This just goes to show the importance of letting the powers that be (whether they be corporate or governmental) know our opinion about how they run their business (or what they decide to do with our money). Speak out! Fill in a comment card, call your MP, write a letter to the editor! You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. For more information on what you can do to help sharks (and other ocean life), visit www.savingsharks.com.
Posted: January 15th, 2009 under Action, Ethical food, Grocery stores, Seafood, education, environment, food. Tags: Action, endangered species, environment, Ethical food, food, Grocery stores, oceans, Seafood, Sharks, soup
Comments: 2
Happy new year! Holiday festivities are now over for most people and there’s not much to do apart from dig yourself out from the snow and finish clearing out the fridge of festive leftovers. A friend of mine, Tom, suggests the following New Year’s Day recipe:
Humpty’s Last Stand
Take all remaining 2008 food, chop, add egg and bake. Ready for 2009!
I have already made turkey pot pie, stock, creamed turkey, a couple of coleslaws, and chilli and am now down to half a leek, a grapefruit, and a cup of gravy. Oh, and a pound of chestnuts. I fear it may require more than eggs to transform those ingredients into an edible concoction!
While you’re enjoying the revitalised dregs of 2008, here is a list of some of the top food stories from the past year. 2008 was a tumultuous year, which brought a huge amount of hardship to people worldwide–as well as some exciting developments that promise some hope of change in 2009.
- Although the first shocks were felt in 2007, it was in 2008 that the food crisis began to bite hard. Skyrocketing food prices, riots, privation, and starvation–it was a perfect storm formed from a combination of factors, including food commodities speculation, the rush to biofuels, crop failure, spiking oil prices, natural disasters, and governmental incompetence (or malice). Towards the end of the year, some organic growers and vendors (like Whole Foods) were beginning to feel the pinch as consumers looked for ways to reduce their food bills.
- The previous few years brought the term ‘locavore’ and the 100-mile diet to the fore, but in 2008 a backlash arose against the strict application of ‘food miles’ without consideration for other environmental impacts such as method of production. Turns out transport doesn’t count for everything when it comes to carbon emissions.
- In March, Brad Wall’s Saskatchewan Party government withdrew funding for Station 20 West, a non-profit public centre that was to include dental, medical, and mental health services for Saskatoon’s core neighbourhood residents. CHEP and the Elizabeth Fry Society were also expected to join the centre, as well as a cooperative grocery store (area residents have been without a full-service local grocery store for a decade). In April, thousands of supporters gathered to protest the cuts in a community march. Having spent the year fundraising, Station 20 West now plans to break ground on its revised centre (which will include the grocery store) this May.
- Uncertainty about the food crisis led to a sharp increase in the number of people planting gardens, many for the first time, this past spring. Seed sales skyrocketed in Canada, the US, the UK, and elsewhere. Many city people (including me!) dug up their front lawns to plant vegetables instead.
- It was another rotten year for rotten food–in Canada, with the Maple Leaf foods listeriosis outbreak, which killed 20 people across the country, and the E. coli outbreak from contaminated lettuce at a North Bay Harvey’s fast food restaurant. Fingers were pointed at the Canadian food inspection system. The US scrambled to find the source of a salmonella outbreak (first incorrectly linked to California tomatoes, then later to Mexican peppers), while in China, tens of thousands of babies were harmed by melamine-tainted milk (which had then also entered the global food chain).
- Honeybees, which are succumbing in droves to an as-yet-unsolved combination of ailments called Colony Collapse Disorder, continued to decline. Parasites and pesticides appear to be chief culprits, but many of the hive deaths and disappearances are unexplained.
- There were catastrophic floods in Iowa, as well as another year of catastrophic drought in Australia, as well as ever-increasing evidence of the effect of climate change on the ocean–salmon in Alaska attacked by a warmer-water parasite, while west-coast oysters were hit by a bacteria deadly to shellfish larvae that appeared to be connected to a new anaerobic dead zone in the ocean. These natural and unnatural disasters demonstrate yet again how dependent we are on the earth and weather behaving as we expect they should so we can grow sufficient food.
- Several more fisheries were forced to close or are driving themselves close to collapse because of insufficient fish, due to manmade contamination or overfishing–US west coast salmon from California to Oregon, and bluefin tuna in both the Mediterranean and off the coast of Japan. Taras Grescoe’s book Bottomfeeder warned of the imminent need for humans to stop eating so far up the ocean’s food chain and to reject unsustainably-caught fish if we are to prevent mass oceanic extinction.
- Seventeen Canadian municipalities, including the city of Toronto, decided to ban the sale of bottled water on their premises and forty-five more are set to debate the issue. It’s time to go Back to the Tap!
- ABC News’s Senior White House Correspondence Jake Tapper called Barack Obama “an arrogant, arugula-eating, fancy-berry-tea-drinking celebrity”, while sustainable food fans cheered when Obama revealed that he had read Michael Polan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma. Pollan wrote an open letter to the ‘Farmer in Chief’ and a campaign began to create an organic food garden on the White House Lawn. And he hasn’t even taken office yet!
- Burger King released a men’s cologne that smells like a Whopper hamburger. Well, I suppose it’s better to smell like one than eat one…
- The launch of Vert-à-Go! I’ve learned a huge amount since starting up this web site last March, and I’m looking forward to covering more food issues and providing more information on where to find sustainable, organic, local and ethically-produced food over the next year. Thanks for reading!
Posted: January 1st, 2009 under Energy, Farming, Food miles, Grocery stores, Health, Hunger, Local food, Roundup, Transport, Uncategorized, environment, food, gardening, politics. Tags: economy, environment, food, Food miles, gardening, Hunger, Local food, organic food, politics, Roundup, Saskatoon, Station 20 West
Comments: 2
Spotted at Safeway: Earthbound organic iceberg lettuce on sale for $1.47, as well as a 4lb box of organic Chinese mandarin oranges for $4.99 (our spotter got the last box of oranges on display at the 8th St Safeway that day–we’re not sure if they had more in the back or not). I haven’t seen organic mandarin oranges anywhere else, so will try to find out if more are available. Their sale runs until Saturday 13 December.
Posted: December 11th, 2008 under Action, Good deal, Grocery stores, Saskatoon, food, vegetarian. Tags: Action, advice, food, grocery store, hot deal, organic, produce, Saskatoon, supermarket, vegetarian
Comments: None