Extended Out-of-Stock Items

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We continually work hard to make sure our shelves are fully stocked with the high-quality, nutritious food that you expect from us. In spite of our efforts, we are still waiting longer than normal for some of your favorite brands to be delivered. In an effort to keep you updated with the latest information, we’d like to share some of the primary factors that are currently preventing us from stocking some popular items.

The following are a few of the brands and types of items experiencing longer-term stocking challenges. 

  • Frontier Coop cannot fulfill much of our bulk herb/spices orders.

  • There is a nationwide shortage of pumpkin and right now we can't find any canned pumpkin. We do currently have fresh pie pumpkins available in produce.

  • Fresh produce is impacted because of the fires in California and the resultant bad air quality that is keeping agricultural workers away.

  • Many well known brands are severely challenged with production delays: Amy's, Pacific, Bob's Red Mill, Simply Organic herbs and spices, and others....

  • Some canned food items such as tomatoes and beans. 

  • Most items from India (Tasty Bite).

We will continue to monitor product availability and do our best to provide alternatives for long-term out-of-stock items.

We appreciate your patience and understanding during this time. We will have all of your favorites back in our stores as soon as we possibly can.

Sycamore Land Trust Provides Environmental Education

Sycamore Land Trust was our Positive Change recipient in September. It is with much thanks to our customers who rounded up last month that we are able to present them with $10,773.56!

Sycamore Land Trust has been protecting land, restoring habitat, and connecting people to nature in southern Indiana since 1990. They protect 10,070 acres and counting.

Sycamore protects land by owning and caring for nature preserves, and by holding conservation easements that protect privately owned properties. They acquire land through donations, purchases, and bargain sales (partial donations). Stewardship of their nature preserves includes restoration projects to improve natural habitat, and building and maintaining trails for free public use.

As of August 2020, Sycamore has protected 117 properties totaling 10,070 acres in southern Indiana.

Sycamore operates an Environmental Education Program that connects people of all ages to nature, including more than 6,800 people in 2018. They plan to use some of the money raised to continue their education program, as well as support their conservation and habitat restoration work.

Sycamore’s Communication Director Abby Henkel was thrilled to receive notice of this donation saying, “Thank you for that wonderful news! It's absolutely incredible. Our community is so generous! We are so thrilled to be a recipient of Positive Change this year and to continue our partnership with Bloomingfoods.”

To learn more about Sycamore Land Trust and their Environmental Education Program, visit their website at: sycamorelandtrust.org.

September Board Update

As a co-op, we are only as good as the involvement of our owner/members and our community, so I invite you to become more involved. You could run for the board during our election or join a committee. Our monthly board meetings are open to owner/members and your feedback and questions are welcome. Together we can keep creating a community and co-op that looks to support one another and be a place of equality.

Opportunity to Meet the Candidates

As a co-op, we are only as good as the involvement of our owner/members and our community, so I invite you to become more involved. You could run for the board during our election or join a committee. Our monthly board meetings are open to owner/members and your feedback and questions are welcome. Together we can keep creating a community and co-op that looks to support one another and be a place of equality.

Bloomington Community Orchard Teaches Others To Grow

Bloomington Community Orchard was our Positive Change recipient in August. It is with much thanks to our customers who rounded up last month that we are able to present them with $11,616.69!

Bloomington Community Orchard is an organization devoted to growing fruit for the community and growing their orcharding skills through educational opportunities. The publicly owned orchard is maintained by volunteers, and the harvest is available to everyone in the community.

BCO has big plans to use some of the donated money to expand their educational materials and help others grow.

We received the following note from Bloomington Community Orchard Board Chair, Josh David:

“We are currently refocusing our efforts to invest more in the development of the Orchard flagship site (e.g., with the rainwater-harvesting system we installed this year), while compiling more on-demand educational resources to put on our new website to help individuals and communities with their growing efforts.  We’ve also seen a spike in other communities around the country asking us how they can create something like the BCO in their own regions, so we’ve started advising others on how to cultivate their own community or campus orchards, and are in the process of writing a “How to Start a Community Orchard” handbook that we can hopefully get published and distributed to libraries around the country, to help others learn from our experiences, and turn the BCO into a sustainable model for other communities around the country (and world) to replicate. 

 From all of us at the Orchard, thank you again for nurturing the local food movement and always finding more ways to give back to the community!”

Visit their website to learn more about BCO, ways you can become involved, and how your continued donations can support this organization and our community.

http://www.bloomingtoncommunityorchard.org/


Watermelon Fun Facts

watermelon sliced with a bite taken out of one slice

Did you know that watermelons are actually vegetables and that there are over 200 varieties to choose from? Even though they are sweet and refreshing, they belong to the Cucurbitaceae family, along with squash and cantaloupe.

Watermelons are about 90% water and can range in weight from a few pounds to a few hundred pounds. According to Guinness World Records, the largest watermelon was grown in a backyard garden in Tennessee and weighed a whopping 350 pounds!

A simple wedge of watermelon is a classic summertime treat, but watermelon is also very versatile. It can be add it to cold soups, fruit platters, salsa, and salads.

Try adding watermelon cubes into a bowl of cottage cheese, or slide them onto a skewer and freeze for several hours for a nutritious snack. You can also use cookie cutters to cut slices of watermelon into fun shapes for the kids (of any age).

Juicy watermelon also makes a delightful drink. Simply put cubes in the blender then strain to make watermelon water that is sweet, hydrating, and oh, so satisfying on a hot summer day! It is also a great base for summer cocktails. And when you’re making a smoothie, toss in a few chunks of watermelon to sweeten it up, too.

And did you know that watermelon is a no-waste food that you can eat every part of it? You can roast the seeds for snacking, and use the hollowed-out rind as a punch bowl, or even cut it up and pickle, marinate, or candy it.

Fruits like strawberries, peaches, apricots, pears and blueberries pair well with watermelon, as do cucumbers, red onion and jalapeño peppers. For compatible cheeses, think Brie, feta, bleu, Fontina, and mozzarella. Serve watermelon with chicken or pork, shrimp, salmon, crab and lobster. Sprinkle it with sesame seeds, and season it with black pepper, salt, ginger, mint and tarragon.

Choose watermelon with a deep color and no white streaks. The fruit should be heavy for its size and have a hard rind that's smooth and free of cuts or bruises or dents. Don't worry if the watermelon you're eyeing has a yellowish spot on one side. That's actually a good sign; it's where the melon was resting on the ground and shows that it wasn't harvested prematurely.

Watermelons don't continue to ripen after they're harvested, so you'll want to bring home one that's ready to eat. Explain to other shoppers who are looking at you suspiciously that a ripe watermelon will yield a resonating "thump" when slapped with your open palm.

You can store the melon uncut, in a cool place, for up to two weeks. Once cut, wrap in plastic wrap—or place chunks in a covered container—and refrigerate it, cut side up, for up to a week. And don’t forget that you should always wash melons before cutting. If it’s dirty on the outside, the knife can carry that to the inside.

If you’d like to try a savory recipe, this Mojito Watermelon Salad is a delicious complement to any summer dinner or as an afternoon snack. Enjoy the rest of your summer and enjoy that watermelon every way possible!

 
 

Where Did All The Groceries Go?

Chip and soda isle at Bfoods West

DEAR BLOOMINGFOODS OWNER-MEMBERS & SHOPPERS,

Although concerns about the overall health of the US food supply chain have mostly subsided, we are still experiencing longer-term out-of-stocks with some of your favorite brands. In an effort to keep you updated with the latest information, we’d like to share some of the primary factors that are creating these out-of-stocks. Additionally, we’d like to share a few of the brands and types of items with which we’re experiencing longer-term stocking challenges. 

The primary factors that have affected the availability of some of your favorite grocery items are:

  • The initial stockpiling and panic buying led to “pipeline” shortages

  • Transportation & distribution disruptions and delays

  • Production and facility capacity is greatly reduced (production hours have changed, physical reconfiguration of some facilities for safer work experiences has slowed production and employee health concerns have altered shift work)

  • At home cooking and eating while restaurants operate at reduced capacity results in increased consumer demand for in-store groceries

  • Travel restrictions and agricultural distribution disruptions have curtailed the supplies of imported products (i.e. canned tomatoes)

  • Shortage of raw materials (i.e. rice is harvested once annually and with the spike in demand, some reserves have been depleted until the next harvest in the fall.)

  • Weather: the regional apple crop that we expected later this summer has been destroyed by late spring frosts

  • The surplus of produce (fruits and vegetables) that would normally be sold to shuttered schools and restaurants is causing quality issues in warehouses across the country

  • The whole agricultural sector is being affected by a shortage of seasonal workers

  • State regulations regarding Hot Bar/Salad Bar/Buffet style services have dictated what we can and cannot offer (our Kitchen and Deli staff have implemented some creative solutions!)

These are a few of your favorite brands that are experiencing availability challenges:

  • Amy’s Frozen foods

  • Amy’s Canned soups

  • Field Day (all categories)

  • Seventh Generation cleaning supplies and paper goods

  • Many varieties of tofu 

  • Bob’s Red Mill

  • Lundberg Family Farms rice

  • Bubbies pickles (some varieties) and horseradish

  • Applegate Farms frozen sausages

  • Follow Your Heart Vegenaise

We are frequently communicating with representatives from our distributor, United Natural Foods, Inc. (UNFI) and will continue to monitor product availability and do our best to provide reasonable alternatives for long-term out-of-stocks. In spite of the difficulties of this pandemic, our mission still remains the same. We will continue to do everything we can to provide healthy, high quality, sustainable, and environmentally-sound products at a fair price to our community.

Thank you for your patience and understanding. 

Sincerely,

The Bloomingfoods Team

Thank You From Habitat for Humanity of Monroe County

Bloom Frame Up Day-66 Many people lifting a wall frame

Dear all our friends at Bloomingfoods,

Thank you for helping build Positive Change in our community. It is hard to put into words the emotions we are all experiencing as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to upend our work and our daily lives. As we face the challenges ahead, we are so grateful for the impact made by Bloomingfoods’ patrons through your Positive Change program. As we restart our construction program, we will put this gift right to work helping families seeking safe and affordable shelter in Monroe County. We feel doubly blessed for the anonymous matching gift in our benefit during the first week of June - we are so happy to be part of such a kind and caring community! Habitat for Humanity has always been a community-based organization, and we will continue to offer our hand to the hardworking families in Monroe County who need it most. With your partnership, we stand ready to accelerate efforts to build strength and stability with renewed energy and commitment. Thank you to everyone at Bloomingfoods for helping Habitat families to move forward in the face of challenging times.

In partnership,

Colleen McKenna Development
Director, Habitat for Humanity of Monroe County

Our Co-op Thrives when Our Owner-Members and Community are Involved

As a co-op, we are only as good as the involvement of our owner/members and our community, so I invite you to become more involved. You could run for the board during our election or join a committee. Our monthly board meetings are open to owner/members and your feedback and questions are welcome. Together we can keep creating a community and co-op that looks to support one another and be a place of equality.