Note: You are reading this message because you do not have a standards-compliant browser. To learn more about web standards and to download a web standards-compliant browser, please visit this site.
Contacts:
R. David Smith, New York Farm Viability Institute, Inc., 315-453-3823;
Allison Sacheli, Sacheli’s Onion Jelly, 585-554-6876 (after 5 pm &
weekends), farm: 585-554-3238
Photos by request – farm, family, processing, product jpgs: karalynn@gisco.net,
315-465-7578
When
the demand for a food gift created in her Franjo Farms kitchen in Potter,
NY, grew way beyond family and friends, Allison Sacheli needed help
adapting her onion jelly recipe for commercial production. That help came
from the NY Ag Innovation Center (NYAIC), an initiative of the
farmer-driven New York Farm Viability Institute, Inc. designed to help New
York’s agricultural and green industry producers realize farm-level
success.
Dr. Olga Padilla-Zakour, a NY Ag Innovation Center food processing
specialist, offered a commercial canning course that was perfectly
scheduled for Allison. Allison says, “The timing of the course was
serendipitous. I could not have done without it or the Ag Innovation
Center consultants. There would not have been another, or a less
expensive, way for me to set up the required processing protocol and to
navigate the necessary licensing paperwork so easily.”
“Dr. Padilla-Zakour and her team are the best clearinghouse for any
information you may possibly need. The networking they facilitate is
phenomenal. They can quickly tell you who to call to arrange the required
commercial kitchen inspection and FDA (federal Food & Drug Administration)
and New York State
Ag
and Markets licensing. The NY Ag Innovation Center consultants are always
my first call,” she says.
Allison began making onion jelly in 2000 using some of the 9.5 million
pounds of onions the family grows at Franjo Farms as a Father’s Day gift
for her father-in-law Tony Sacheli. In light of the popularity of pepper
jellies, Tony had been teasing Allison about making onion jelly.
Allison packaged the gift using a label featuring family patriach Luciano
Sacheli who had started onion farming in Elba, NY, in the 1930s.
The jelly soon found favor with family and friends who shared it with
others, sparking local demand for the product. Allison began selling
Luciano Sacheli’s Onion Jelly at the Canandaigua Farmers Market. Regional
retailers asked to carry the product; customers asked for other flavors.
Finger Lakes vacationers returned home and soon 35 of their hometown
specialty shops across the U.S. called Allison for samples and shipments
of her eight different products.
In addition to helping Allison develop an approved process for commercial
food handling and packaging, the NYAIC consultants also helped her find a
source for jars and labels that Allison designed with Sacheli family
members’ names and faces.
In the last
year the Internet has drawn worldwide demand such that Allison, the mother
of three young children, anticipates asking the NYAIC consultants for
assistance in locating a co-packer, who will process and package under
Alison’s private label. NYAIC consultants are ready with a list of
possibilities and tips on developing a co-packing relationship.
“Through the Ag Innovation Center, entrepreneurs like Allison have access
to a variety of resources to assist them in the development of value-added
farm products,” says Dr. Padilla-Zakour. “We can provide assistance with
regulatory compliance, evaluation of safety and quality issues, scaling up
from kitchen to commercial production, process development, equipment,
packaging and ingredients recommendations, and specialized training.”
The value-added production assistance from NYAIC has helped Franjo Farms
extend its selling season beyond the September to April timetable. Allison
says, ”Selling onion jellies year-round is an e
nterprise
that allows the farm to produce a value-added income during the months we
are not selling fresh or storage onions.”
NYFVI – NYAIC projects help farms through projects to increase sales,
improve business planning and production efficiencies, and increase
consumer demand for NY farm products in local, national and global
markets. For more information about the New York Farm Viability Institute,
Inc., its NY Ag Innovation Center and its grants programs, go online to
www.nyfarmviability.org or call 315-453-3823. The Institute is located at
159 Dwight Park Circle, Suite 104, Syracuse, NY 13209.