UC Master Food Preserver Program
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UC Master Food Preserver Program

Delicious, healthful strawberries will be available soon at valley roadside stands

Central Valley strawberry stands are expected to open soon, and if the next few weeks remain dry, as expected, it looks to be an excellent production year, report UC Cooperative Extension farm advisors in Fresno, Merced and Sacramento counties. One stand in Fresno opened on April 9, and others will begin selling this weekend.

Valley strawberry production is small compared to Southern California and Coastal production areas. Nearly all the farms are just a few acres in size and the bulk of their produce is sold at roadside stands. UC farm advisors work closely with these producers to help them grow safe and wholesome fruit.

The farmers are mainly Mien and Hmong refugees from Laos, a Southeast Asian country that neighbors Vietnam.  When the U.S. left Southeast Asia in 1975, thousands of Hmong and Mien fled their homeland to avoid persecution. Over 120,000 were eventually resettled in the U.S. The population today has expanded to an estimated 300,000.

Many of the first-generation immigrants were farmers in Laos and turned to farming in the U.S. These growers lease small plots and grow several varieties of strawberries, such as Chandler, Camarosa, Albion and Seascape. Few have formal agricultural education.

In addition to offering production assistance, UC Cooperative Extension farm advisors Richard Molinar in Fresno, Maxwell Norton in Merced and Chuck Ingels in Sacramento offer food safety training  to reduce the risk of a foodborne illness outbreak associated with strawberries. Working with the California Strawberry Commission, Molinar and Norton have for the last five years held intensive food safety workshops that included hands-on training about proper handling of the fruit and personal hygiene. The farmers were given training materials in Hmong and English that they could use to teach the workers they hired about reducing any chances of the fruit becoming contaminated. Twenty-six growers in the Fresno region and 27 in the Merced region participated in workshops. Many are currently learning about third-party food safety audits with the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

In Sacramento County, Ingels and a team of researchers provided on-farm training in pest management and food safety. Ingels’ team worked directly with 11 strawberry growers in 2009 and 2010.

“On the first visit to their farms, we found out their current practices and then provided training,” Ingels said. “We came back a second time to do further training and evaluate their progress. We visited the farms a third time to determine whether changes to their practices were being sustained. There was definitely a shift (for the better).”

With an increasing focus on food safety, many produce buyers, suppliers, and consumers want to know that good agricultural practices are being used on the farm. The programs in the various counties help to document and verify that farms are producing fruits and vegetables in the safest manner possible and that the farmer is aware of potential problems and  steps to correct them.

Richard Molinar, left, and his assistant Michael Yang, center, work with a Southeast Asian strawberry grower.
Richard Molinar, left, and his assistant Michael Yang, center, work with a Southeast Asian strawberry grower.

Posted on Tuesday, April 12, 2011 at 12:35 PM

Comments:

1.
Can we trust that these berries are not being poisoned by Methyl Iodide and other pesticide/fungicide/herbicides?? I want so badly to buy these berries because they are so flavorful compared to the nasty ones at the grocery stores. I cannot trust the chemical toxic potential in these berries -- forget "foodborn illnesses"....lets talk about longterm physiological damage...

Posted by Nancy Marsh on April 28, 2011 at 3:00 PM

2.
Nancy: I share your same concern over strawberries, and they can be sprayed a considerable number of times - IN OTHER PARTS OF THE STATE. But I have worked closely with the growers here in Fresno for over 15 years and I can assure you that all 26 growers are about as close to organic as can be without being certified. They spray hardly at all - there might be 1 insect spray in a year, but often not even that. They do not use methyl iodide in Fresno strawberries, or weed killers, or even insecticides. They do use a nitrogen fertilizer called UN32 and that is the only reason they cannot be organic. Most of the strawberry farmers have attended our yearly food safety meeting held at the UCCE office.  
 
The only caution I would give you is do not buy from the street corner vendors with umbrellas as they come over from the coast to sell. Our growers are in the wooden roadside stands and are found on the Fresno County Fruit Trails map online at http://www.gofresnocounty.com/ . Chandler has been the favorite for 20 years, but for a special treat try the delicious Albion variety - at Siongs farm on Willow and Behymer, or at Vues farm on Manning and Bethel. Enjoy.

Posted by Richard H. Molinar on April 28, 2011 at 7:34 PM

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