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Killaloe Family's Creation Could Be Nutritious Cure For The Munchies
On one of the hottest days of the year so far, Christina and Robbie
Anderman left their home in the hills to come to the city to give away ice
cream.
Well, not ice cream, exactly, but rather a non-dairy frozen dessert that
mimics many of ice cream's fine qualities.
Well, not dessert, exactly.
Cool Hemp is so full of nutrition you could eat it for dinner.
The Andermans are showing off their creation to shoppers at the Rainbow
Natural Foods store on Richmond Road, and the shoppers are licking it up.
"It did taste different (from ice cream), and I was trying to figure out
how," said Christine Jannasch, 47. "It's nuttier, not as firm, the
sweetness not as cloying."
Ms. Jannasch tried the Cool Maple flavour, which is sweetened with
100-per-cent pure Quebec maple syrup.
Like the other two flavours, Cool Chocolate and Cool Vanilla, Cool Maple
contains only certified organic, certified kosher and fairly traded
ingredients. Oh, and 100-per-cent THC-free hemp milk.
The Anderman family, which includes sons Daryl, 19, Ethan, 17, and Ben, 12,
scratches out a living at Morninglory Farm, a three-decades-old community
between Killaloe and Wilno in the highlands of Renfrew County.
They started out making hempseed balls and cookies, and still deliver nine
dozen cookies to the Rainbow food store every two weeks.
About 4 1/2 years ago, Ms. Anderman started experimenting with hemp milk
and a hand-cranked ice cream maker, and has been producing Cool Hemp on a
small scale for about three years.
"I wanted to make some kind of food in which the most important part of
hemp, which is the essential fatty acids, are preserved," Ms. Anderman said.
Since freezing it is the best way to preserve hemp's nutritional qualities,
a frozen product seemed a good idea.
The product's popularity led to a need to expand, and the Andermans went
looking for partners.
They found 25 of them, some with money, some with hempseed, and raised
$160,000, a fortune when your average yearly income is $12,000.
On May 1, they produced 13,000 litres, about a two-month supply, in a
factory in Renfrew, packaged it in a funky new tub, and stored it all in a
freezer in Ottawa. They've got a distributor to put it in stores as far
east as Halifax.
"I love the fact that it is organic hemp, has a good taste and has a lot of
nutritional value," said Rainbow's assistant manager, Dorothy Wilson, 39.
Cool Hemp also gets closer to the texture people want in ice cream
alternatives than other alternative products, Ms. Wilson said.
Five-hundred milli-litres will set you back a cool $6.99. The Andermans say
the cost is high in part because the many regulations that govern hemp's
production are costly. Organic food, and food bought from suppliers who
give Third World producers a fair wage also push up the price.
Cost was certainly no object for Esther Jesionka, 9. Arter finishing her
taste test, she said to her mother, Anna, "This is really good. Can we get
some?"
Newshawk: Jane Marcus
Pubdate: Tue, 19 Jun 2001
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2001 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact: letters@thecitizen.southam.ca
Website: Ottawa Citizen
Details: MapInc
Author: Janet Hunter
On one of the hottest days of the year so far, Christina and Robbie
Anderman left their home in the hills to come to the city to give away ice
cream.
Well, not ice cream, exactly, but rather a non-dairy frozen dessert that
mimics many of ice cream's fine qualities.
Well, not dessert, exactly.
Cool Hemp is so full of nutrition you could eat it for dinner.
The Andermans are showing off their creation to shoppers at the Rainbow
Natural Foods store on Richmond Road, and the shoppers are licking it up.
"It did taste different (from ice cream), and I was trying to figure out
how," said Christine Jannasch, 47. "It's nuttier, not as firm, the
sweetness not as cloying."
Ms. Jannasch tried the Cool Maple flavour, which is sweetened with
100-per-cent pure Quebec maple syrup.
Like the other two flavours, Cool Chocolate and Cool Vanilla, Cool Maple
contains only certified organic, certified kosher and fairly traded
ingredients. Oh, and 100-per-cent THC-free hemp milk.
The Anderman family, which includes sons Daryl, 19, Ethan, 17, and Ben, 12,
scratches out a living at Morninglory Farm, a three-decades-old community
between Killaloe and Wilno in the highlands of Renfrew County.
They started out making hempseed balls and cookies, and still deliver nine
dozen cookies to the Rainbow food store every two weeks.
About 4 1/2 years ago, Ms. Anderman started experimenting with hemp milk
and a hand-cranked ice cream maker, and has been producing Cool Hemp on a
small scale for about three years.
"I wanted to make some kind of food in which the most important part of
hemp, which is the essential fatty acids, are preserved," Ms. Anderman said.
Since freezing it is the best way to preserve hemp's nutritional qualities,
a frozen product seemed a good idea.
The product's popularity led to a need to expand, and the Andermans went
looking for partners.
They found 25 of them, some with money, some with hempseed, and raised
$160,000, a fortune when your average yearly income is $12,000.
On May 1, they produced 13,000 litres, about a two-month supply, in a
factory in Renfrew, packaged it in a funky new tub, and stored it all in a
freezer in Ottawa. They've got a distributor to put it in stores as far
east as Halifax.
"I love the fact that it is organic hemp, has a good taste and has a lot of
nutritional value," said Rainbow's assistant manager, Dorothy Wilson, 39.
Cool Hemp also gets closer to the texture people want in ice cream
alternatives than other alternative products, Ms. Wilson said.
Five-hundred milli-litres will set you back a cool $6.99. The Andermans say
the cost is high in part because the many regulations that govern hemp's
production are costly. Organic food, and food bought from suppliers who
give Third World producers a fair wage also push up the price.
Cost was certainly no object for Esther Jesionka, 9. Arter finishing her
taste test, she said to her mother, Anna, "This is really good. Can we get
some?"
Newshawk: Jane Marcus
Pubdate: Tue, 19 Jun 2001
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2001 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact: letters@thecitizen.southam.ca
Website: Ottawa Citizen
Details: MapInc
Author: Janet Hunter