Ferments

Producer Spotlight: Hosta Hill

We love ferments in any season, but as storage crops empty out and we hold our breath for spring produce to ramp up, we’re incredibly grateful for Hosta Hill’s delicious ferments. They’re so crunchy and flavorful, they have customers saying, “it tastes so fresh!” Host Hill is a family-owned, women-run business based in the Berkshires. Their business is all about making delicious and nutritious food to sustain communities in the Northeast. Maddie Elling, co-founder of Hosta Hill, took some time to share their story with us.

How was Hosta Hill started? What was its inspiration?

Abe and I started Hosta Hill in the spring of 2011. We were working for a blue cheesemaker and started selling the cheese at a farmers' market in Connecticut. At the time, we were inspired by the food scene in the Berkshires and wanted to start something of our own, specifically related to food and farming. On the side, we were playing around with growing food, raising animals, and fermenting things—tempeh, krauts, and beer. We realized that no one locally was making veggie ferments (or tempeh, which was a product we sold in the first few years of the business). Every week we went to the farmers’ market, we thought ‘we could have so much more on our table!’ We eventually got organized and started selling our sauerkraut, kimchi, and tempeh (a cultured bean product). Being young and ambitious, we also grew the vegetables for our ferments. The goal was to be vertically integrated. We farmed on our own and then in collaboration with another farm until about four years ago when it got to the point of being too much work and needing to focus on our product line of ferments. Since then, we have moved into a larger kitchen and facility that we rent, which has allowed us to scale up. We are figuring out what's next!

What makes your products unique?

People often say our ferments are so fresh tasting, which makes me laugh because they are usually aged four to six weeks at a minimum. That said, I think what makes our products stand out is the fact that they are vibrant and crunchy, giving that feeling of “freshness.” Over the past ten years, we have built our brand organically and with lots of love—literally with blood, sweat, tears, and support from our community and families. I think that shines through the product in a way. We make our food for the people and love to offer a delicious and healing product. We wouldn’t have it any other way.

Can you tell us more about the farmers you work with?

The vegetables that go into our ferments are sourced from regional, organic farms. This means we process in line with the harvest season. We have about four farmers we set up contracts with, and they grow specifically for us. This gives both us and the farmers security around growing and sourcing. MX Morningstar Farm (Hudson, NY) and Whistle Down Farm (Hudson, NY) grow the bulk of our daikon radish. Atlas Farm (Deerfield, MA) and Markristo Farm (Hillsdale, NY) grow most of our napa, red and green cabbage, carrots, and onions. Then we have an array of farmers who will call us up (or vice versa) if they have a bumper crop of something we use or if one of our farmers has an issue with a crop. Luckily we have many talented farmers to call on to supply us.

What is your favorite part of making ferments?

Capturing the harvest! When we receive pallet bins of freshly harvested cabbage and turn it into a bunch of kraut that same day, that is very satisfying! 

What is one of your favorite recipes you make with your ferments?

I love pairing the ferments with so many foods at all mealtimes. Simple ways like curry kraut or kimchi on an egg sandwich are classic. I also really like our crimson kraut on middle eastern foods like falafel or hummus plates—the crunchy, sour veggies complement the savory falafel flavors very nicely. 

Why is buying and selling locally and the local food movement important to you?

I believe buying and selling locally is going to become more important over the next few years. Between climate change and supply chain disruptions, what we can grow or produce in our region and work in collaboration to distribute to communities is going to be (needs to be!) commonplace. As a business, our model has been to process regionally grown ingredients into locally made products and sell them within our region, and we plan to keep it that way. We don't plan to go national anytime soon (though, to be transparent, we do ship from our online shop across the US, but 80% of our sales are in the Northeast and New England). There are veg ferment companies our size doing the same thing in California, Florida, and Colorado, so we figure: keep it local!

How does working with Food Connects help your business/what are you excited about in this partnership?

There are distributors who are all business, and then there is Food Connects. Working with Food Connects feels more like a partnership and less transactional than some of the larger distributors we work with. We feel like we can call up Food Connects with a question in relation to our distribution or to talk about a challenge we might be facing, which allows each of us to understand each other more holistically. We value these human connections and feel that the future will be better with more understanding and collaboration within like-minded businesses, which I hope will ripple out into our communities for the better.

Any events coming up or fun facts about your business/products?

We attend our local Great Barrington Farmers’ Market each season, so we’ll be there on Saturdays from May to November. It’s a great farmers' market and a good reason to visit the Berkshires! Many festivals are coming back this year, and we hope to be at the Bennington, Vermont May Fest on Memorial Day weekend. Fun fact: we used to head up The Berkshire Ferment Festival, a lively one-day festival in the fall featuring an array of fermented food vendors, workshops on all things cultured, music, and more food. It was a super popular event we are considering bringing back this year. Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or signup for our newsletter to be in the know about all things happening with Hosta Hill!

Producer Spotlight: FinAllie Ferments

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Jars bubbling and fresh produce taking on new life means one thing—ferments! This month we are highlighting FinAllie Ferments, based out of Rockingham, VT. Allie Dercoli is the founder and operator of FinAllie Ferments and we were able to catch up with her and learn more about the business.

How did FinAllie Ferments come to be?

Long before a single jar bubbled its way into the hearts and bellies of Vermonters I was traveling the country with my dog Fin. I worked on over 50 farms stretching across the country, learning from farmers how to grow and ferment food along the way. Several years and many miles later, it would be Vermont where Fin and I would take this budding love for fermentation and truly blossom. Knowing the amazing health benefits of the probiotic alchemy that is fermentation, I decided to sell my Vermont-style sauerkraut and kimchi at local farmers’ markets. With my loyal dog Fin by my side, handmade signs, and birch wood labels, FinAllie Ferments soon became a local favorite at the markets, restaurants, and grocery stores in Southern Vermont. Today, FinAllie Ferments is a passionate family of food alchemists working directly with farmers and vendors to deliver the highest quality ferment that is definitely what your belly needs. We craft our small batches with fresh produce that is rooted here in Vermont soil, and slowly aged in oak barrels.

How long have you been making ferments? And what originally inspired you to do so?

I made my first batch of kimchi in Bastrop Texas in 2011. Farmers often have ugly veggies, not of market value. Farmers also often need a way to preserve the harvest. We honor traditional fermentation processes while maintaining our own unique flavor. Each recipe begins as an experiment, inspired by a rich history of ferments from all around the world while honoring the ingredients available in our bioregion. Everything is fermented in oak barrels and ceramic crocks, never in plastic, ensuring complex flavors. Our products are always raw and free of vinegar so that every jar can deliver the beneficial bacteria and micro-nutrients that your gut needs.

Could you tell our readers a little bit about how you partner with other farms in our region?

FinAllie Ferments is 100% Vermont grown. We not only make our products in Vermont, but all veggies are grown in Vermont soil. We pay all of our farmers through our custom CSA program that gives farmers a check in the winter when they need cash to fix equipment or buy seed. Our flavors are unique because Vermont grown food is delicious and eclectic. Our goal is not profit growth, but rather the growth and accessibility of culture in our bodies and community. Our motto, “Cultivating Culture” means bending down, reaching deep into the soil of our collective existence. It’s about honoring the inherited traditions and wisdom of our elders and passing it on. We believe in a future where generations can flourish. We need to rise above the profit-over-people model that is destroying and exploiting the land and its inhabitants. We must strive to promote economic resilience by keeping the flow of money and job opportunities in our local communities. Our farmers are why we're able to do what we do. We work with All Winds Farm, Wild Sheppard, Harlow Farm, Old Athens Farm. Full Place Farm, West River Seeds, Clearbrook Farm, Walker Farm, and Sugar Bob’s Finest Kind.

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What is one of your favorite products you make?

I love to make Black Garlic Kimchi. The flavors are complex and spicy! It’s a two part fermentation, first, the black garlic must be fermented for 10 days then added to our spice paste that includes Vermont sriracha and Sugar Bob's smoked maple syrup.

How does working with Food Connects help your business?

FOOD CONNECTS IS AMAZING! we are excited you have a meaningful presence in our community and that you are connective and small like us. We hope to grow our friendship/partnership with you!

Any events coming up or fun facts about your business/products?

We will be teaching some classes and starting a book club out of the Brattleboro Co-op. We are also running a sale in February to help enrich our farmers’ CSA program.

Anything else you would like me to feature? Anything that you are doing to respond to the COVID-19 crisis?

This year we partnered with the Farmacy program providing people with existing health issues CSA boxes, We donated buckets to Grace Cottage hospital as well as started a fundraiser for the Vermont Food Bank. Buying food directly from farmers is a great way to support your local economy, these times are hard for everyone.