In Our Spring 2023 Issue

Last Updated March 16, 2023
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Spring 2023

Dear Reader,

Living in the smallest state has its rewards, including one you can recognize throughout the articles in our Spring issue—the sense of community that binds Rhode Islanders together, particularly within Rhode Island’s close-knit food community. This issue is filled with inspiring examples of Rhode Islanders supporting one another in their work: teams working hard together to make a food business thrive, whether it’s in the kitchen or on the farm; or neighbors helping neighbors to get healthy foods where they’re needed most.

Be sure to read the story about the mobile food pantry and other programs engineered by the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Center in Newport to improve access to healthy foods for their clients. It also illustrates how higher food costs and the March 2023 end of Covid emergency allotments to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program’s (SNAP) benefits will impact individuals and families with children across Rhode Island. There’s information there, too, on what you can do to help your neighbors in need.

Giving back to the community was top of mind for Paul and Lori Kettelle, the owners of PVDonuts who opened Oak Bakeshop in Providence late last year. In their story, you’ll also learn how their team works together to create the unique menu they call “a little bit Jew-ish, a little bit not,” but one that seeks to celebrate Jewish baking traditions, both sweet and savory.

Adena “Bean” Marcelino of Black Beans PVD can’t wait to open her 25-seat café so she can cook for the community in which she was raised and to give back by offering cooking classes to the youth in her neighborhood. She wants them to learn how to grow food and to cook it. Hers will be one of three food businesses set to open in 2023 within Southside Community Land Trust’s new Healthy Food Hub on Broad Street in Providence.

The sense of community pride is palpable at the new Hope & Main Downtown Makers Marketplace, where food items from over 100 local “foodpreneurs” are available for purchase from the café menu or the adjacent shelves and refrigerated cases. Many of the products made by Hope & Main’s maker members stem from generational family recipes, which offer a delicious sampling of Rhode Island’s diverse foodways.

Genie Trevor Spring is finally upon us—the season for one of the most anticipated native foods of the year: the strawberry, which plays a key role in traditional foodways of Native American communities. I hope it brings you food for thought as we welcome the change in seasons with longer days and brighter, juicier flavors.

Notable Edibles, Bean-to-Bar Chocolate

Bean-to-bar chocolate-makers are completely different from chocolatiers, stresses Steven Schneider, who established Gansett Craft Chocolate...

Cookbooks and Much More

Tradition holds that a child might follow in the footsteps of a parent, but in the case of Lizzy Young, she went through other careers...

From the Shores and Meadows of Block Island

As a person with long-time allergies and lots of medications, Johanna Ross sought knowledge from an herbalist in New York, where she taught...

What’s your Jam

“Most families would get behind their children and help them create the best life for themselves—that’s what you do,” explains Debbie Wood...

Hope & Main Downtown Makers Marketplace

A New Café and Market on Westminster Street Showcases Local ‘Foodpreneurs’ This past January it was standing room only in the sun-filled...

Mussel Up to Dinner

Glistening Bivalves and Aromatic Vegetables Overdeliver Flavor and Fanciness in Under 20 Minutes Spring: The days grow longer and things...

PVDonuts Owners Lori and Paul Kettelle Launch Oak Bakeshop

Their New Bakery’s Offerings are a Little Bit Jew-ish, a Little Bit Not How many Millennials already have their retirement business up and...

Black Beans PVD

Comfort From-Scratch Cooking with Adena “Bean” Marcelino Growing up in Providence’s West End in the 1980s and gathering food from her...

Luckyfoot Ranch in Saunderstown

Moving Boulders and Building Soil Pay Dividends in Healthy Produce for a New England Farmer The name Luckyfoot Ranch evokes a notion of...

Chef Peter Carvelli of Foglia in Bristol

An Attorney-Turned-Chef Pairs Plant-Based Food with Fine Dining Turns out, the fact that Foglia in Bristol is an entirely vegan restaurant...

Strawberry Moon Thanksgiving

Expressing Gratitude for Seasonal Gifts Through Storytelling Storytelling moons are used to share traditional Native American lore and it...

Mobilizing Food at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Center

A Pantry on Wheels Brings Nourishment to the People When the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Center’s (MLK) mobile food pantry...

Mindful Mixology

The Art of the Spiritfree Cocktail If you’ve been paying attention, you’ve probably noticed a shift in how our culture is drinking,...

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