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Southern ThoughtsSouthern Thoughts   
A look at hot topics, news and information picked up in travels around the region.
 
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COOL in the Frozen Food Isle
Posted on October 12, 2009 at 3:41 PM
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I admit it doesn't take much to get me excited.

But apparently it doesn't take much to get other Moms excited either.

I was shopping for frozen vegetables when I realized the country of origin was included in the "Use By" stamp on the back of the packages. Woo-hoo!

I hollered down to my friend who also was perusing the veggies. She came down the freezer so I could point out where she also could find it. Then we started flipping packages. Carrots from U.S.? In the buggy. Peas from Mexico? Back in the cooler.

Before it was over a couple other moms checks out what we were doing. And, once again, I gave my now much-condensed speech on why would should buy food grown in the U.S. They also started flipping packages.

I don't know whether this element now is mandated under Country of Origin Labeling. I do know that informed consumers tend to prefer U.S.-grown products - and some not-so-informed also have an emotional response simply to supporting American farmers.

Mostly I know that COOL was a hit in the freezer section.

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COOL in the Frozen Food Isle
Posted on October 12, 2009 at 3:41 PM
Consumers now can tell where their frozen veggies are grown.
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About The Writer
Southern Thoughts

Pam Golden, editor of Southern Farmer magazine, has 25 years experience chronicling life in the south.

She served 11 years in daily newspapers and 3 years in weekly newspapers before being released for good behavior to the blessed world of agricultural journalism.

Pam’s agricultural journalism experience started as a freelance writer for Rural Press USA, while she still worked in daily newspapers. After five years, she became editor of Georgia Farmer magazine, waded through a series of changes and mergers in agricultural publishing, and now continues to work for the same parent company, Rural Press Ltd. of Australia, as an employee of its U.S. subsidiary, Farm Progress Cos., of Chicago. Rural Press was acquired by Fairfax Media in 2007.

Pam and her son, Russ, a freshman at Northwest Florida State College, live in Crestview, Fla. As editor of Southern Farmer, Pam writes about agriculture in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and Tennessee.

Pam earned her bachelor’s degree in communication arts with an emphasis on print journalism from the University of West Florida, Pensacola. She started her studies at Livingston University, now known as the University of West Alabama.


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