Ciao Apr/May 2018 CIAO_AprMay2018_Digital | Page 10

foodsources Spreads the Word Flora & Farmer preserves a place at the top Kim Bialkoski has dedicated the last six years proving to Canadian consumers that her jars are filled with more than sweetened produce. Setting herself apart in the preserving industry, Kim founded Flora & Farmer to create preserves using only quality ingredients and methods without compromise. Historically, food preservation has permeated every global culture, yet has seen a recent resurgence in Canada. Emerging on Toronto’s food scene several years ago, fermenting, canning and pickling have become an extension of an artisanal movement celebrating the return of pre-industrial aesthetics and flavours. More than a culinary trend for Kim, preserving has become her lifelong passion. A gardening enthusiast since youth, she collected issues of Ciao! magazine while her peers found amusement in Seventeen. A keen sense for crocking pickles, Kim was soon concocting flavourful combinations for spreads, relishes and sauerkrauts. Hitting the mark with her wares at local farmers’ markets, her hobby is now her ultimate career. The goal to maintain authenticity of flavour and health-conscious preparation is behind Flora & Farmer’s promise to produce only high 8 ciao! / apr/may / two thousand eighteen quality products. The growing selection of products is largely made without additives to ensure optimally healthy condiments. Implementing a slower simmering process helps reduce and condense her mixture, rather than using the commercially used pectin as a thickener. Although this method is more time consuming and expensive - as liquid is lost as it evaporates - the health benefits and added flavour outweigh the costs. The practice “goes against the food rule of today,” says Kim “which is to produce as much as you can as fast as you can. Mass-produced jam companies can charge $3 per jar because sugar costs a tenth of the price of fruit.” Adapting to Manitoba’s short growing season and sourcing organic fruits means getting crafty with year-round freezing of all fruit. The ongoing challenge allows Kim to up her creative ante in the off-season, stemming creatively blended preserves. Kim’s f lair for combining flavours gained local recognition in 2016, when she claimed bronze in the Great Manitoba Food Fight for her original and single best selling item - applekraut. The uniquely sweet and pickled condiment serves as an anti-inf lammatory (products) By Kelsey Schaefer