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		<title>In the News &#8230;</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Sep 2010 21:45:18 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[For Media]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#8216;Twilight&#8217; maze only one of many attractions at Black Island Farms SYRACUSE &#8212; It is not just a corn maze, it is not just a haunted house &#8212; there is a lot more to the Black Island Farms Harvest Festival. &#8221;We specialize in field trips,&#8221; said Dorathy Law, marketing director for Black Island Farms. Those field trips [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>&#8216;Twilight&#8217; maze only one of many attractions at Black Island Farms</h3>
<p>SYRACUSE &#8212; It is not just a corn maze, it is not just a haunted house &#8212; there is a lot more to the Black Island Farms Harvest Festival. &#8221;We specialize in field trips,&#8221; said Dorathy Law, marketing director for Black Island Farms. Those field trips are not just for schoolchildren but also for assisted-living center residents. There are even accommodations for the deaf and blind.</p>
<p>The 24 acres of maze is the largest corn maze in Utah, Law said. The maze will thrill fans of the Twilight Saga, as the theme for this year&#8217;s maze is &#8220;Eclipse,&#8221; a sequel in the series. The largest maze is of Bella, while two more mazes are of Jacob and Edward.  But it wasn&#8217;t the mazes that thrilled 9-year-old Amado Gutieres, a student from Salt Lake City&#8217;s Backman Elementary School whose class was visiting the farm.  &#8221;The slides are the most fun, and I like the sandbox,&#8221; Amado said.</p>
<p>He and his classmates were on a field trip to the farm Monday. Students rode the cow train and learned about farm animals, plant food and different types of plants, such as eggplant.  Farm owner Charles Black showed the children a potted eggplant and explained how the vegetable can be cooked. The kids also climbed aboard a tractor-pulled hay wagon and rode through the pumpkin fields.  The students learned about cows, including that the Holstein is the breed most commonly used to provide milk.  The kids also learned about turkeys, chickens, goats, pigs and peacocks. The children oohed and aahed when they saw baby chickens and turkeys. And they were thrilled with the pig races.</p>
<p>&#8220;It is fun to learn and fun to play,&#8221; Amado said after he crawled out of a &#8220;corn snake&#8221; made of corn husks and huge tubing.  This is the sixth year for the Harvest Festival at the farm the Blacks have been operating since 1962.</p>
<p>Law said the objective of the autumn event is to keep the farm alive, to sustain its rich heritage and to provide entertainment to the general public. It is meant to promote agriculture.  Agri-tainment is a new term formed for farm owners who want to have another source of income to keep their farms viable.  &#8221;Farms have to diversify; it has become a trend,&#8221; Law said.</p>
<p>Black Island Farms is a working vegetable farm along the wetlands in Syracuse. The main crops are carrots, onions and cabbage, but corn, pumpkins, gourds and squash also are grown especially for the Harvest Festival.  Richard Sparks, with Utah Department of Agriculture and Food, Utah&#8217;s Own and Agri-Advocates programs, was there to support the educational programs.  Farmer Charlie Black said the farm will remain open space. Black Island Farms was the first Utah farm to work with the Utah Quality Growth Commission, The Nature Conservancy, and the Utah Department of Agriculture to place a conservation easement on a portion of the property that harbors critical habitat.</p>
<p>Discounted field trips are available for schools. To book a field trip, call 801-774-MAZE or visit the website<a title="www.BlackIslandFarms.com" href="http://www.blackislandfarms.com/">www.BlackIslandFarms.com</a>.  Law said the corn maze is designed to challenge those attempting to find the one exit in more than five miles of twists, turns and dead ends.</p>
<p>Black Island Farms Harvest Festival and Nightmare Acres will open Friday and run through Halloween. The hours for the Harvest Festival will be 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays; 4 p.m. to midnight Fridays; 10 a.m. to midnight Saturdays; and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays.  The haunted house is open from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursdays and from 7 p.m. to midnight Fridays and Saturdays.</p>
<p>Admission for the corn maze is $10 for adults and $8 for children, and the pumpkin hayride &#8212; plus a pumpkin &#8212; is $8 for adults and $5 for children. A combo pass may be purchased at $15 for adults or $10 for children.  Nightmare Acres is $15 for adults. Law said she does not like to frighten children, so she suggests children younger than 12 not go through the haunted house.</p>
<p>Admission to both Nightmare Acres and Corn Maze is $20 for adults.  Oct. 1 and 2 are Military Appreciation Days with discounts for members of the military and their families.  Law said it takes the average person more than an hour to find the maze exit.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><em>Source:  Standard.net</em></p>
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		<title>Fresh Cut</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jul 2007 17:34:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Salt Lake Processor Is 63 and Still Growing Fresh Cut August 2001 SALT LAKE CITY, Utah - It was April 1938 when Charles F. &#34;Chick&#34; Black and his wife Marietta founded Mrs. Condies Salad Company and began making cole slaw in their kitchen after work each day. Today, the family business they started is likely [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Salt Lake Processor Is 63 and Still Growing </h3>
<p><strong> Fresh Cut<br />
August 2001</strong></p>
<p><strong> SALT LAKE CITY, Utah </strong>- It was April 1938 when Charles F. &quot;Chick&quot; Black and his wife Marietta founded Mrs. Condies Salad Company and began making cole slaw in their kitchen after work each day. Today, the family business they started is likely the oldest continuously held family-owned fresh-cut processing operation in the United States.</p>
<p>As a young man in Salt Lake City, Chick worked for Grand Central Market when it was &quot;a nice fruit stand more than anything else,&quot; according to his son, Gary Black, currently president of the family business. It was when he went to Los Angeles to work for another supermarket, that the company founder happened upon the idea for his future business.</p>
<p>&quot;He actually saw a package of cole slaw down there,&quot; Gary recalls. &quot;So somebody was down in the Los Angeles market doing it. This was probably in 1936 and then he came back up to Salt Lake and met and married Mom. Then they started the business in 1938.&quot;</p>
<p>The couple&#8217;s first customer was Chick&#8217;s grandmother, Annie Condie, who owned the Liberty Park Grocery Store. Their first salads didn&#8217;t have a name on the bags and, to help her grandson, Mrs. Condie recommended the new product to her clientele.</p>
<p>&quot;She would say, &#8216;I&#8217;ve got this little package of salad. Try it,&#8217;&quot; Black recounts. &quot;And that was how it got the name Mrs. Condie&#8217;s Salad Company. It carried that name until 1979 when Charlie, Bruce and I bought Mom and Dad&#8217;s remaining interest out and changed it to Condies Foods.&quot;</p>
<p><strong>Raising Vegetables</strong> <br />
During the 1950s, Chick created branches in Denver and Helena, Montana. He closed down the Montana facility because the market didn&rsquo;t support his business and, in 1979, sold the Denver operation to his partner, Leo Barlow. Also during the 1950s, Black&#8217;s entrepreneurial spirit led him to start raising his own vegetables for processing. He started and later closed down a farming operation in Glendale, Arizona, before establishing Black Island Farms in nearby Syracuse, Utah, in 1964, where the family still grows green and red cabbage, carrots, onions, peppers, radishes, spinach and some lettuce. </p>
<p>Just last year, both Bruce and Charlie Black, Gary&#8217;s brothers, retired from Condies Foods. Charlie, who has been in charge of raising vegetables, will continue to manage the family-owned farming operation, while at Condies, the new management team includes Gary as president, Scott Black as plant manager, John Longaker as purchasing manager, and Lorie Longaker as special events manager. Keith Ross is sales manager.</p>
<p>With new management in place, Condies Foods is positioned to continue the pattern of growth it has established over the past 63 years, according to Gary Black. His team is excited about several new products and prospects that fit well with the company&#8217;s production strengths.</p>
<p>About four years ago, Condies began sanitizing and repacking tomatoes for major foodservice customers in the Salt Lake area who wanted to improve the quality and safety of their fruit. That new operation has brought exciting growth to the company and has helped set the stage for the introduction of other tomato and tomato-based products that hold promise for future growth, according to Black.</p>
<p><strong>Salsa&rsquo;s Getting Hot</strong><br />
&quot;We&#8217;ve been doing salsa for a couple of years now,&quot; he explains. &quot;We do a corn salsa for a major foodservice customer and that gives us the basis for doing our own proprietary recipe as a retail pack. Right now it&#8217;s in the grocery stores and sales are building just almost on a constant basis. You see sales slowly increasing as consumer awareness of the product grows. <br />
&quot;It&#8217;s a delightful product. I can see where the retail growth will happen and then we&#8217;ve got foodservice, too. We sell all the major foodservice distribution companies that serve this area. We&#8217;ve introduced it to them and we get tremendously great response when we go to their food shows and showcase it. It&rsquo;s been slow, but I think the salsa is a good, viable product.&quot;</p>
<p>Black and his team are already dicing tomatoes for a variety of customers and now major foodservice operators who are looking at bringing pre-sliced tomatoes into their kitchens instead of buying whole tomatoes and slicing them on-site. He and his staff look at the future of tomatoes in light of recent successes with other fresh-cut items around the country.</p>
<p>&quot;Fruit is an area that is not saturated yet in this market,&quot; Black says. &quot;There is a lot of opportunity in the fresh-cut fruit area. Our thoughts are that sliced and diced tomatoes will blossom like other areas in the next couple of years. We&rsquo;re just in the beginning stages on sliced tomatoes.&quot;</p>
<p>Black says Condies is purchasing a tomato-slicing machine manufactured by TechnoFoods and distributed in the United States by Maxwell Chase Technologies LLC. He chose the unit because it slices fruit, removes both caps for dicing, and deposits usable slices into packages ready for sealing.</p>
<p><strong>Sliced Tomatoes Exciting</strong><br />
&quot;I think the sliced tomato thing is going to be extremely exciting,&quot; says Keith Ross, Condies&rsquo; sales manager. &quot;They could be as exciting as salads were years ago when they started up. Other processed tomatoes will be exciting, too, but the sliced tomatoes will be especially big. Anybody is a potential customer that buys a certain sized tomato and slices it in a restaurant. That&rsquo;s why it&rsquo;s going to be so huge.&quot; <br />
Another product that benefits from Condies&rsquo; tomato expertise is seven-layer bean dip. The company makes two sizes of bean dip trays that include diced tomatoes, cross-cut green onions, diced onions, fresh salsa, manufactured beans, cheese, sour cream and olives.</p>
<p>&quot;People that buy this product like it,&quot; Black says. &quot;It&rsquo;s very good and it sells well. They sell right alongside the vegetable trays that have the carrots, broccoli and cauliflower. Some holiday weekends, like New Year&rsquo;s Day or for the Super Bowl, we sell thousands of them. It&rsquo;s kind of fun to see what happens when we put them on the shelf.&quot;</p>
<p>Black&rsquo;s son, Scott, agrees, &quot;Fruit sales are pretty consistent, but over the last year, the seven-layer bean dip has actually increased. It&rsquo;s constantly increasing. I actually think just those two sizes of bean dip trays we&rsquo;re doing could surpass what we&rsquo;re doing in fruit. Cinco de Mayo is coming up and it will be interesting to see how the dip appeals to the Hispanic population during that holiday. During the Super Bowl, we actually sold twice as much bean dip as fruit. I think it will be a great product.&quot;</p>
<p>Tomatoes are just one of the top four products Condies processes, according to Gary Black, who notes about 75 percent of the company&rsquo;s overall business is devoted to foodservice, while the rest is retail. One popular item among foodservice establishments is potatoes, a product Condies provides precooked, either as mashed potatoes or in various cuts.</p>
<p><strong>Raving about Potatoes</strong><br />
&quot;They&rsquo;re a preservative-free precooked potato,&quot; the company president explains. &quot;Most of them are breakfast-type, sliced, diced or shredded for hash browns. We&rsquo;ve done them for years and I get great reviews from the people that buy them, but we don&rsquo;t sell a lot of retail product. <br />
&quot;We do a lot of things. We do broccoli, cauliflower, carrot sticks, fajita mix, stir-fries and little veggie bags, but when you add them all together, it isn&rsquo;t measured in tons like these four major items. Tomatoes, potatoes, lettuce and onions are truckload items.&quot;</p>
<p>As the 2002 Olympic Winter Games approach, the management team at Condies Foods is preparing for three hectic weeks of booming business by talking with processors in Atlanta who went through a similar experience, according to Scott Black. The XIXth Olympic Winter Games will run from February 8-24 and the VIIIth Paralympic Winter Games will follow from March 7-16. The Olympics are expected to bring some 80,000 visitors to Salt Lake City each day, or a total of about 1 million people.</p>
<p>&quot;If you can imagine, our business will expand so fast and it&rsquo;s just for a short time,&quot; Keith Ross reasons. &quot;It&rsquo;s going to be hard to be prepared. Crews at companies we talked to averaged 90 to 100 hours per week. We want to try to anticipate that a little bit. The companies we talked to ended up having to buy a lot of raw product at the normal produce market. That is normally high-priced compared to buying truckloads off the coast. They couldn&rsquo;t adjust their pricing to compensate and they had some financial problems caused by the whole thing. We&rsquo;ll have some hard times, I think.&quot; </p>
<p><strong> A Future for Tomatoes</strong><br />
Looking beyond the Olympics, however, John Longaker predicts a great future for tomatoes while other segments of the business like potatoes and onions continue at their current rate of growth. <br />
&quot;We may investigate tomato wedges or sliced romas,&quot; Longaker predicts. &quot;There are so many foodservice opportunities and countless uses for tomatoes. We see a lot of growth potential for our company in those areas.&quot;</p>
<p>Given the fact that Condies already repacks tomatoes for customers, the company is in an excellent position to take on a variety of tomato products because it will be able to control its supply of tomatoes at the right stage of ripeness for its products, Gary Black agrees.</p>
<p>&quot;We&rsquo;re right on the frontier of the processed tomato,&quot; he reasons. &quot;Several processors have been dicing tomatoes and amazingly diced tomatoes have a great shelf life. Then this salsa thing has taken off and now the sliced tomatoes are getting started.</p>
<p>&quot;If we were a processor in another area and we needed tomatoes to slice, we would go to a repacker and source them, whereas with us, we just have to transfer them from one side of the building to the other. It allows us to tie tomatoes into our product line very well.&quot;</p>
<p>From their vantage point of more than 60 years in business, Black says he and his energetic management team plan to continue in the same tradition Chick Black started when he put up his first package of fresh-cut cole slaw.</p>
<p>&quot;He was a pioneer in processed salad,&quot; Black concludes. &quot;We will continue that tradition at Condies Foods by being a trailblazer in pre-sliced tomatoes and other great new products. The future is bright for our company and continues to get brighter each day.&quot;</p>
<p>
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