The Rush is on for Maui Gold

Photo courtesy of Maui Gold Pineapple

Leave your picks, shovels and gold pans at home. You only need a sweet tooth to enjoy the gold rush that’s striking the Hawaiian island of Maui: Maui Gold® pineapple.

One week ago today a group from Latham Hi-Tech Seeds had the pleasure – and I do mean pleasure – of touring the Maui Gold Pineapple Company. We began with a walk through its production facilities where we saw employees hand-sorting pineapples according to color. The greenest pineapples are shipped to the mainland since the firmer fruit withstands shipping better.

Our next stop along the tour illustrated just how efficient the Maui Gold Pineapple Company is; there is very little waste. Pineapples that don’t meet size requirements for shipping are used locally. Before the smaller fruit are put in a large grate, however, their crowns are removed. These crowns are then used to seed the next pineapple crop, plus removing the crowns allows more fruit to fit in each crate.

After touring the production plant, we boarded a bus for a field tour like no other! Maui Gold pineapples are grown across 1,350 acres on the slopes of Haleakala. This location in upcountry Maui provides the perfect growing conditions for this particular variety of pineapple: warm, sunny days, cool nights, fresh water and rich, volcanic soils.

A pineapple is perfectly ripe in the field for only 48-72 hours. Once picked, pineapples will not ripen further.

Since quality is the pineapple company’s primary concern, Maui Gold pineapple is harvested within a 2-3 day window. Maui Gold Pineapple Company is the only pineapple grower in Hawaii with employees dedicated to assessing sweetness and consistency in the weeks prior to harvest. As a result, Maui Gold pineapples are always handpicked at the optimal stage of ripeness.

If you’re like me, you’re a bit skeptical about a company’s claim to be the best tasting pineapple. But Maui Gold made a believer out me because you can literally taste the difference. The Maui Gold variety was developed to be lower in acid and sweeter tasting for fresh consumption. Pineapple that is more suitable for canning, however, is completely different. The high volume canning industry prefers plants that are naturally hardy and highly acidic.

It takes 18 months to grow a Maui Gold® pineapple.

One can honestly taste the nuances between pineapples. Our guide, Steve Potter, selected three pineapples fresh from the field. Each pineapple was in a different stage of ripeness. We started by tasting the least ripe pineapple, which is probably the most similar to what we’d buy here in the grocery store. We thought it was good until we tasted the second pineapple, which was much sweeter. Steve handed us a slice of the third pineapple and said, “You’ll taste hints of coconut in this gold pineapple.” I was skeptical, but he was right! I took a bite and couldn’t believe the difference. It was almost like biting into a piña colada.

Speaking of pina colada, I know understand where it gets its name. The name pineapple comes from the combination of the Spanish word “pina” due to its resemblance to a pinecone, and the English word “apple.” The English called it an apple because of its tasty fruits.

If you’d like to try these tasty fruits from the comfort of your own home, you’re in luck! You can order Maui Gold® pineapples online. You can also get a taste of the tropics by trying Hawiian cole slaw. It was served aside a grilled fish sandwich at the Haliimaile (pronounced hi’lee-my’lee) General Store where we enjoyed lunch following the tour. Another common food in the Hawaiian islands is pineapple salsa, which I’m eager to make sometime soon with fish or Hawaiian chicken kabobs. In the meantime, I’m going to try my hand at making a Pineapple Upside Down Cake with Rum-Caramel Sauce.

 

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake

Topping:

  • 1, 8-ounce can pineapple slices
  • 2 T. butter or margarine
  • 1/3 C. packed brown sugar
  • 8 maraschino cherries, halved
  • ¼ C. pecan halves

Cake:

  • 6 T. butter or margarine, softened
  • 1 C. granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1½ C. flour
  • 1 tsp. baking powder
  • ½ C. milk
  • ½ tsp. vanilla

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. To make the topping, drain the pineapple slices but reserve the juice. Measure the juice and add water to make ½ cup. Set aside.
  3. In a 10-inch skillet with an oven-safe handle and straight sides, melt 2 T. butter. Stir in brown sugar and pineapple juice; bring to a boil. Cook and stir about 7 minutes or until the mixture is thickened. Remove from heat. Spread the syrup evenly over the bottom of the skillet. Cool.
  4. Arrange the pineapple slices, maraschino cherries and pecans over the syrup mixture; set aside.
  5. To make the cake, combine 6 T. butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl. Beat with an electric mixer on medium speed until well blended, scraping sides of the bowl. Beat in eggs.
  6. In a small mixing bowl, stir together flour, baking powder and salt. Add the flour mixture and milk, alternately to the creamed mixture, beating well after each addition.
  7. Stir in the vanilla and lemon extract. Carefully pour the batter over the syrup mixture in the skillet, spreading to reach the edges. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes or until a wooden toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean

Cool a few minutes in the skillet. Carefully invert the cake onto a serving platter.

Breakfast Bowl 2012: Latham Wants to be the “Fan Favorite”

Every second counts! And that’s why Latham Hi-Tech Seeds hopes to take 10 seconds off the clock by receiving the most number of votes in a Facebook poll being sponsored by Franklin County Farm Bureau. Please vote – and encourage your friends & family to vote – between Feb. 13-24.

This poll is just one of the ways Franklin County Farm Bureau is celebrating Food Check-Out Week, Feb. 19-25. This year’s theme is “Stretching Your Grocery Dollar With Healthy, Nutritious Food.”

To help illustrate this theme, Franklin County Farm Bureau is hosting a “Breakfast Battle ” on Feb. 24 beginning at 8 AM at Fareway in Hampton. Three-person teams, including one from Latham Hi-Tech Seeds that is being captained by yours truly, will battle it out to see which one can purchase enough items for breakfast, lunch and dinner for a cost of $45-50 dollars in the quickest amount of time.

The Breakfast Battle is being planned as a fun event for participants to have fun, while getting people together all in an effort to make a difference for those who are less fortunate. Franklin County Farm Bureau will pay for all of the groceries purchased during this competition. The grocery items will then be delivered to needy families throughout the county with the help of the Franklin County Food Pantry in Hampton and the Immanuel UCC Food Pantry in Latimer.

“Today, we have so many choices when we purchase food at the grocery store,” says Jim Dannen, Franklin County Farm Bureau President. “We, as farmers, want to show people not only on where their food comes from, but help consumers choose foods that are healthy and wholesome. Eating healthy on a budget takes planning.”

Let the planning begin! I’d appreciate any tips you can provide to help me plan three meals within the $45 to $50 budget. Feel free to send me your ideas at shannonl@lathamseeds.com. Also feel free to share some recipes with me to assist with my grocery shopping list!

Hemann Family Lands in Mitchell County, Iowa

After embarking on a journey that lasted five years and took him across six states, pilot Dale Hemann landed in Mitchell County.

Today Dale and his wife, Cindy, feel blessed to raise their four children in the remodeled farmhouse where Dale lived as a child. They also raise corn and soybeans plus sell Latham® seeds. In addition, Dale contract feeds hogs and finishes Holstein steers after starting them on the bucket.

“We love it here,” says Cindy, a native of Wellington, Kansas. “We’ve lived in enough places to appreciate the quality of life in rural Iowa.”

Like many high school graduates, Dale left his parents’ home in rural Osage, Iowa, and enrolled in college. Dale earned a bachelor’s degree in Aviation Technology and a commercial pilot’s license before moving to Arkansas where Dale worked for a freight outfit as an airplane mechanic, flying to other cities where he did maintenance right on the ramp.

After Dale earned a master’s degree in Aviation Safety from the University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg, he had a short stint as production manager at Kestrel Aircraft in Norman, Oklahoma. He then made the move to Tulsa, where he worked for American Airlines. It wasn’t long before a friend of Dale’s called to let him know that Raytheon had an opening for an engineer in Wichita, Kansas. Dale got the job and moved once again. Shortly after moving to Wichita, Dale and Cindy got married. Cindy then left her job at College of the Ozarks in Branson and joined Dale in Wichita.

After a year in Wichita, Dale was contacted by a friend with whom he had worked at American Airlines. He thought Dale would be a good fit for a newly created position in his department at FedEx in Memphis, Tennessee. Dale and Cindy packed up and moved to the Memphis area, settling in Olive Branch, Mississippi. The Hemann’s oldest two children were born while they were living in Mississippi.

With their young family in mind, Dale and Cindy began their journey “home.” They knew they wanted to raise their children around extended family members and in a rural area where there kids could play freely without some of the worries that come with city living. Dale took a position as a ramp/operations manager with FedEx and subsequent transfers moved the family to Madison, Wisconsin, and then to Ames, Iowa. They were thrilled when a position opened with FedEx in Rochester, Minnesota, just 60 miles from Dale’s hometown.

While commuting home from work one day, Dale had a heart-to-heart talk with his dad. Dale was growing weary of switching jobs and moving his family. He was seeking stability and believed that farming would provide that. Plans were made for Dale to begin farming with his dad. Meanwhile, his parents, Larry and Rosemary, made plans to build a house in town. Dale farmed long distance for the first year, commuting to Osage on weekends and using vacation days as needed to get the farm work done.

“None of this would have been possible without the help of my dad,” says Dale. It was an interesting time for all family members. Larry and Rosemary moved out of their house in the country one weekend, and Dale’s family moved in the following weekend.

That was eight years ago, and the family has done lot of growing. Dale and Cindy’s oldest daughter, Lindsay, is now 13. Emily will turn 12 on Feb. 29, and Whitney is 9. Their son, Alex, is 7.

“I love that we live in the country where our kids have lots of room to play,” says Cindy, who grew up in town where she enjoyed playing with neighborhood kids. “They find creative ways to entertain themselves, and we host lots of play dates.”

This time of year the children are busy making crafts, trying experiments and baking. Four active kids with a host of active friends means lots of kitchen time!

“We recently made clay. We had to make volcanoes two weekends in a row because our kids wanted to make them with their friends,” says Cindy with a smile. “Although we’re constantly cleaning up the kitchen, it’s worth it. We’re making memories.”

Cupcakes are one of the Hemann kids’ favorite things to make. The family’s favorite show is Cupcake Wars, which has no doubt inspired some of their fascination with muffin tins and decorating tools.

Although they enjoy sweet treats, the family’s favorite meal centers on beef. Today they’re sharing a recipe for Beef Brisket.

Slow Cooker-Barbecued Beef Brisket

Serves: 6

  • 3 pounds fresh beef brisket

DRY RUB:

  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 tsp. chili powder
  • 1/2 tsp. garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp. onion powder
  • 1/4 tsp. celery seeds
  • 1/4 tsp. pepper

SAUCE:

  • 1/2 c. ketchup
  • 1/2 c. chili sauce
  • 1/4 c. brown sugar
  • 2 T. cider vinegar
  • 2 T. Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp. liquid smoke flavoring
  • 1/2 tsp. dry mustard

Directions:

  1. Combine ingredients for dry rub and rub all over brisket.
  2. Place brisket in slow cooker.
  3. In a bowl, combine sauce ingredients.
  4. Pour half of the sauce over the brisket.
  5. Refrigerate remaining sauce.
  6. Cover and cook brisket on high for 4-5 hours or until meat is tender.
  7. Serve meat with reserved sauce.