Thursday, October 23, 2008

where would you like to see Molly Moon's ice cream?

HI all!
Sophia here, I'm the wholesale manager at Molly Moon's. We are so excited to launch our wholesale department! We thought this would be the perfect opportunity for our beloved customers to tell us where you would like to see your favorite flavors of Molly Moon's special brand of ice cream available. Markets, video stores, restaurants, your place of work...anywhere!

We always look forward to your feedback and suggestions, so keep 'em coming!

Sunday, October 19, 2008

breakfast at molly moon's

this morning we did a little test run of breakfast at molly moon's and it was SO fun!

from 9 to noon we served up steaming bowls of locally grown oats, each with a scoop or two of ice cream on top and a really lovely bar of organic and local toppings. we had dried sour cherries, lots of fresh berries, candied ginger, chopped hazelnuts & walnuts, chocolate bits, and then spices: cinnamon, clove, cardamom & nutmeg. paired with vivace coffee with cream and sugar it was a perfect fall sunday morning meal!

i had maple walnut on my oatmeal with a little cinnamon and some berries. i heard people really liking cardamom with vanilla, and a lot of the kids w
ent for strawberry ice cream with berries & chocolate.


the vibe of the morning was really nice -- relaxed, good music, and room for everyone to sit & enjoy. lots of friends & nieghbors. 

so the test-run was a total success, 
and i really like the addition to our molly moon's community, so we'll be doing breakfast every sunday from now on. we'll keep the oatmeal hot and the toppings out until around 2 and start things up at 9 am.


i can't wait to see more of you on sunday mornings!







breakfast at molly moon's
days: every sunday in fall & winter
times: 9 am to 2 pm
eats: oatmeal, ice cream, organic & local toppings, hot vivace coffee

Monday, October 6, 2008

about local and organic

i have gotten various questions over the last few months about which of my ingredients are organic, which are local, and how i choose everything. so i thought i'd write a bit about that and try to answer some questions.

my priorities are local, then organic, and always delicious. this means that i'd rather choose something locally grown or made if it's delicious and naturally produced over something that is organic and grown or made in a land far, far away. and taste and quality of my ingredients are always so, so important. otherwise, our ice cream wouldn't be as good as it is!

so when it comes to local ingredients, i've found a lot of great ones and am always open to suggestions if my customers know of a great farm or producers locally that i don't know of yet. my main ingredient, of course, is dairy. i get my milk and sugar pasteurized and homogenized together for me by the wonderful folks at Snoqualmie Ice Cream. Barry and Shanaz are an amazing couple who get all of their milk from a family owned dairy farm in Lynden, Washington where the cows are raised lovingly and humanely and are not treated with rbst or given antibiotics unless they're sick, but the farm is not registered organic. Barry runs an incredible operation in Maltby. he built an environmentally sustainable ice cream production plant out there where they recover all the heat from their machines to heat their water and do a lot of incredible things to make their business as green as it can be.  they grow much of their own herbs and fruit for their own brand of ice cream in a small farm on the same property as their plant.  that's where i get the dairy and most of the sugar for my ice creams. they pasteurize it and homogenize it for me and package with a tiny amount (less than one quarter of 1%) of tree gums and seaweed extract. it is important to me to support barry and i love his product. UPDATE (2009): Barry used to use corn syrup in the dairy base he makes for me, but after a couple good talks and a good reputation as a big customer for him, he has eliminated it for me. we are now 100% corn free!

other local ingredients include berries (strawberries, raspberries, blueberries), which i get from a few different farmers in western Washington -- some are organic and some are not.

my lavender is organic and comes from the lovely people at Lavender Haze in Sequim, WA. the hazelnuts we've been using in Baracky Road come from Holmquist Hazelnuts in Lynden. the walnuts i use are also grown in Washington. additional sugar (which i only use in the Salted Caramel, the sorbets, and in the toppings) comes from the sugar beet plant that i grew up near in Idaho. it's the closest place i've found to get sugar from, and while it's not organic (there is no organic sugar grown domestically), i feel good about buying local, keeping local jobs.  sugar is a tough decision for me.  organic sugar from paraguay is an option, but it would use tons more fossil fuels being shipped here and i wouldn't know anything about how the people involved in growing and making the sugar are treated and living.  what do you think?

my honey (used for Honey Lavender and a few sorbets) comes from Tahuya River Apiaries. the family who keeps bees for this little business is amazing. they've been working hard to keep their bees healthy through the bee crisis over the last decade in Western Washington. their bees live in the foothills of the Olympic mountains and i buy a 5 gallon bucket of their honey at the Ballard farmer's market every six weeks or so. their honey is the best i've ever tasted. ***UPDATE: we now use too much sugar to buy only from Tahuya River, and Roy from Tahuya isn't harvesting as much as he used to, so we currently also buy wild honey from Glory Bee in Eugene, Oregon.*** sorbets are also a great place to use local farmers' crops. we're just finishing up our run of peach sorbet and cantaloupe mint sorbet. the cantaloupe was grown in eastern Washington and the peaches and mint were grown in western Washington. if you haven't tried those flavors, come in and get them! they'll only be around for another week or two. then we're moving on to washington apples in a spiced cider sorbet and later a local cranberry sorbet.

our coffee is Vivace Coffee. there are so many roasters to choose from in Seattle, but i am a coffee snob and will probably only ever use Vivace in my retail coffee ice cream. i worked hard to create this flavor to have all of the smoothness of a Vivace cappucino and none of the bitterness that most over-brewed coffee ice cream flavors have. ***UPDATE: we have switched to Stumptown Coffee so we can buy beans that are organic and direct trade.***

whenever i use citrus (like lemons, limes or mandarins) i buy organic citrus or citrus juices grown in California. most recently from this farm: www.lemonladies.com

then there are flavors that need a little more than Western Washington can provide, like vanilla and chocolate. i get my organic vanilla extract and beans from Cook's in California (but the vanilla is not grown in the U.S.) and my chocolate is from a wonderful Seattle company, theo chocolate, which is the only fair trade bean-to-bar organic chocolate in the U.S.

as for other things in the shop, the organic sugar and cake cones are all from a company called Edward & Sons in California, and the waffle cone batter is from a local company, but we are working on our own recipe made with local flour. the organic sprinkles are from EAWeber as well. the salt i buy at Whole Foods. the bergamot infused olive oil is now from California as well.

well, i hope that this post can answer a lot of people's questions about our ingredient choices. this is a constant work in progress and i'd love suggestions people have for getting more responsible ingredients.

p.s. our shirts are from alternative apparel, mostly made from organic cotton and recycled polyester fibers -- they have a great social responsibility and environmental mission! and everything in our shop is compostable, if you didn't know already!