We just say “NO” to corn syrup.

With the recent announcement by the FDA that they will not allow the Corn Refiners Association to change the name of “corn syrup” to “corn sugar” on food labels, I thought I would celebrate by  finally putting out a little blog I’ve been sitting on for a few months that covers our relationship (or lack there of!) to corn syrup and why it’s so important to us at BBx.

Some of our all-natural ingredients: Raw Cocoa Powder, Organic Brown Rice Syrup, Coconut Palm Sugar, Vanilla Beans

Corn syrup is the primary invert sugar used in confectionery.  What’s an invert sugar, you ask? Well, it’s a culinary term used to describe a kind of sugar that’s pretty shy and keeps to itself….  (Damn.  How did that “dad joke” get into this blog post?!)

Invert sugars are extremely important in confectionery.  Their primary function is to prevent the candy, whether it’s a hard candy or a fondant or everything in between, from crystallizing.  But what exactly is an invert sugar?  Simply put, it’s a syrup of some kind.  It can be any syrup; some common examples are agave, honey, maple, or as I’ve mentioned, corn syrup.  Some confectioners even make their own invert sugars using granulated sugar that they cook into a syrup.

I’m not going to get all nerdy and go food scientist on you but suffice to say using an invert sugar makes manufacturing or making confections much easier, the downside being that it can add a significant cost to the price of a finished product if you’re trying to use a non-corn syrup alternative.  Let’s talk about how corn syrup goes from kernel to bottle and why that matters.

Corn syrup is made using a process called wet milling.  It is described pretty succinctly at Sweet Scam, a corn syrup advocacy group:

“To make high fructose corn syrup, the corn is first harvested and sent to the wet mill.

Next, the corn is crushed in a mill and then run through screens in order to separate the corn starch from other parts of the kernel.

After being separated, natural enzymes are added to the liquid, which converts some of the sugars in the liquid from glucose to fructose. The resulting liquid is typically 42 percent fructose and 58 percent glucose.

From there, the liquid is passed through activated carbon and filtered.

The final product is called HFCS-42, and is used to sweeten many baked goods.

Some of the HFCS-42 then goes through a liquid filtration process to increase the fructose content, creating a liquid that is 90 percent fructose. This product is called HFCS-90.

Finally, the two liquids, HFCS-42 and HFCS-90, are blended to make a mixture that is 55% fructose. The final blend, called HFCS-55, is widely used as a sweetener in sodas.”

It is noteworthy to mention two things here:
1) The “activated carbon” described above is most commonly what is called “bone char,” charcoal made from the bones of dead animals, usually cows.  So most conventionally processed sugars, even the granulated kind, are not vegetarian or vegan.
2) There is only one non-GMO, organic corn syrup out there that I’m aware of and, to my knowledge, it’s not being used by any candy makers.  When you see corn syrup on a food label, what you are getting is something that began as a genetically modified, chemically-farmed food crop that has been highly processed into a nutritionless sugar substance.

It’s hard to understand how the Corn Refiners Association can call this product “natural” considering how many steps, alterations, and chemical processes it has to undergo to be usable in the form of corn syrup.  Don’t be fooled by claims that all sugars are the same because they are chemically composed of glucose and fructose.  That is a truth but it fails to recognize that in order for the body to digest and integrate glucose and fructose, it needs a set of essential enzymes and nutrients that are stripped away in the refining process making it terribly difficult for your body to digest.  Hence the spike you get in blood sugar when consuming highly refined sugars like corn syrup.  But don’t take my word for it, read more from our guest blogger, nutritionist and dietician Alex Mart.

According to this infographic, high-fructose corn syrup consitutes 10% of caloric intake in a typical American’s diet.  So corn syrup is cheap and it’s in everything.  How did we get here, you may wonder?

According to the Environmental Working Group’s 2011 Farm Subsidy Database, between 1995-2010, corn was subsidized by the US Government in an amount exceeding $77 billion, making it the most highly subsidized crop as well as extremely cheap for food producers to use in their products.  In addition to the consistency the producer is able to maintain as a result of the heavy processing of the product, the cost savings over other alternative ingredients makes is an obvious choice.  So the candymaker, or other food manufacturer, is gaining a cost savings and enjoys minimal variance in results of their finished product.  Why wouldn’t anyone use this instead of the more costly alternatives like honey, maple, and brown rice syrup?

Our country’s Obesity Epidemic has been garnering a lot of media attention recently. HBO’s Weight of the Nation and Gary Taubes’ Newsweek cover story are only two very recent examples of the much needed growing dialogue on the subject.  It’s becoming clear that one of the biggest contributing factors is the overuse of refined sugars.

Some confectioners are wisely starting to shift their invert sugar to healthier alternatives.  We at Barbary Brix use organic brown rice syrup from sustainable, organic Northern California growers, Lundberg Family Farm.  Let’s talk about how this is made and what it is.

Janet Souza over at Lundberg described their process for us:

1)      Brown rice is cultured with plenty of water and gluten-free enzymes
2)      The enzymes help digest the brown rice and convert the starches to sugars
3)      The resulting liquid is cooked down into brown rice syrup

Simple, right?  None of this chemistry mumbo jumbo.  We love it and feel great about using it in our product.  Unlike corn syrup, this organic brown rice syrup has the nutrients and enzymes your body needs to break it down efficiently and integrate it for ready use as energy in your body.  Your body is able to do this at a more sustained rate, so you get less of that spazzed out sugar rush; basically, it’s significantly lower glycemic than refined sugar.

We also love the flavor it imparts!  Unlike the flavorless, saccharine-y corn syrup, brown rice syrup adds a creamy, earthy, almost maltiness to our caramels.  We often get asked why our product tastes so buttery despite the fact that we don’t add butter.  In addition to the high quality, organic cream we use, we believe the inherent creaminess of the brown rice syrup amps up this quality in our product without making it too sweet or cloying.

To summarize,  in my humble opinion, it’s time for all of us as consumers to start expecting healthier food alternatives that exclude corn syrup.  It’s in everything from pasta sauce to “fruit” juices; just take a gander at those food labels and you’ll see!  We want to see food manufacturers treat their consumers’ health with respect; taking the 10% of caloric intake from corn syrup OUT of our food products would be a great step in the right direction.

It’s a tall order and nothing will be fixed overnight.  Mark Bittman at the New York Times wrote a great, balanced piece last year on the subject of the past/present state and future possibilities of farm subsidies and their relationship to our food choices, corn syrup included.  If you’d like to become more informed, it’s well worth your time to give it a read.

In the meantime, go ahead and feel good about enjoying your corn syrup free Barbary Brix caramels and spread the love about healthier, responsibly made candy options!

Yours Truly, Melissa

Straus Family Farm & Creamery Chef’s Tour, Part I: The Farm

Oh to be a Straus cow, what a lovely life!

We arrived bright and early with only a few unexpected navigational hiccups and one coordinational mishap (not surprisingly mine) on our way from San Francisco to Marshall in West Marin, California to see for ourselves why the dairy products from the first certified organic farm west of the Mississippi are so incredibly outstanding.

After rendezvous’ing with the other participants in Straus Family Creamery’s twice-yearly Chef’s Tour, we all piled into six cars to head up to the beautifully situated dairy farm on Northern California’s picturesque Tomales Bay.

Overlooking Tomales Bay, CA

Bay Area Fog... Just because you can't see Tomales Bay, doesn't mean it's not there and stunning behind its shroud.

After a nice foot bath on the way onto the property to prevent any outside contaminants and germs, the first thing we saw on our walk up was the “maternity ward,” a large fenced yard speckled with a small collection of the most pregnant cows in the herd.

Pregnant Cows Enjoying Some Delicious Fodder

Cows, like humans, gestate their offspring for nine months.  Straus cows spend the last two months of pregnancy off of the milking line, relaxin’… just making a baby cow and noshing on fresh grass in the pastures all day.  The last few weeks of their pregnancies are spent together, close to home, awaiting the big day when their calves are born.

Momma Cow in the "Maternity Ward"

At Straus, 100% of the calves they add to their herd of approximately 600 cows are bred and born right on the Farm.  They are a mix of Jerseys and Holsteins, some pure bred and some mixed. In the herd there are also a few Swiss Brown cows[i] for diversity.

As we continued on the tour, we learned the reason for the mixed herd.  Holsteins produce a greater volume of milk with a lower fat to water ratio, meaning they produce a less creamy milk.  Jerseys, on the other hand, produce a lesser volume of milk with a higher fat to water content, meaning they produce a smaller amount of creamier milk. The diversity of the herd makes for a richer milk product when it is combined at the Creamery.

Back in the 1940s, Bill Straus, a German Jew who escaped Nazi Germany, started this herd with 23 Jersey cows, all named for various friends and relatives.  The herd is now nearly 600 healthy, organic cows strong, 275 of which are milking cows.  “The Girls” are given lots of space and live in an environment that is “as stress free as possible.”  This is not only important for their general well-being and happiness but it also keeps them all in excellent health and as a result there is a very low incidence of illness in the herd.

How do you give a herd of cows an environment that is as stress free as possible you might wonder?  Well, in addition to basic comforts like sleeping in a warm barn full of foam mattresses covered in rice hulls, at Straus the cows spend a good amount of their time grazing on fresh grass in the pastures.  Due to erosion concerns and the health of the herd, they spend their time out there when the weather permits, mostly from April to November, with the exception of very wet conditions.  To supplement their pasture diet, the Farm purchases 100% organic, vegetarian feed from a local mill and also throws in some nutrient rich silage that is fermented right there on the Farm with fodder from local, organic cover crops like alfalfa.  (I tried some, it was delightful!)  An interesting factoid related to the feed at Straus is that they are the first dairy product company to be non-GMO Project Verified!  Trust us, this is NO small feat and we commend their tireless efforts to this cause.  Not surprisingly, they are also Animal Welfare Approved.

Our wonderful Tour Guide showing off some of the ingredients in the organic, vegetarian feed.

Silage, a fermented fodder densely packed with nutrients from local, organic cover crops.

We then moved on to my favorite part of the tour.  I don’t think too much discussion on the subject is required so so just sit back and  enjoy this adorable intermission with a BABY COW PHOTO MONTAGE!!!

Baby Bertha is so sleeepppyyyyy....

Are you enamored?  We were!

As we were walking down the hill from the calf barn, I noticed there was something amiss…  Ever driven down I-5 or through an area with lots of dairy or cattle farms?  What’s the first thing that comes to your mind?  The acrid smell of animal waste, right?  Well, I was shocked when it suddenly occurred to me that all the time we had been on the farm discussing organic practices and taste testing probiotic cow fodder, I had yet to smell poop!  “What is this witchcraft?!?” I wondered to myself.  As we got closer everything was revealed; the answer is kind of magical, as it turns out…

Two words: METHANE DIGESTER.

View of the Methane Digester overlooking Tomales Bay.

Sounds pretty badass, right?  Well, it is.  Read on.

With a grant to help them get started, the Farm was able to put in an amazing piece of equipment that allows them to take the liquid waste[ii] from the cows as well as the waste water from the Creamery and through an anabolic process that separates the methane gasses, they create RENEWABLE ENERGY that powers everything on the farm, even some of the vehicles.  Read that sentence again if the amazingness hasn’t sunk in yet.  Not only does this drastically reduce their carbon footprint by negating their emissions, it also allows them to put the would-be detrimental by-products of raising milking cows to a very good use.  The system hasn’t just been environmentally beneficial, the Farm saves ~$4,000 a month in energy costs and the whole system paid for itself in only four years from the time it was installed.  I’m no financial guru but talk about a good ROI!!  That’s not just smart business, it’s environmentally responsible business that is paying off in every way.

Looking out towards the pastures...

You might be thinking that it’s impossible to beat that kind of eco-friendly cred!  Well, you’d be wrong.  Bill Straus wasn’t the only California pioneer and champion of responsible farming.  His wife, Ellen Straus was green waaaaay before it was hip!  She co-founded our country’s first agricultural land trust, the Marin Agricultural Land Trust, which can be credited with protecting and preserving the farming way of life in west Marin County, making it possible for the thriving, organic community of farmers that cultivate there today.   Albert Straus, their son, took on their legacy and converted the Straus farm to organic in 1994, the same year he founded the first 100% certified organic creamery in the US.  Talk about legit!

As we piled back into our cars to head to the Creamery, I have to admit I got a little verklempt ruminating on what a beautiful, holistic system the Straus Family and their colleagues have built in that place.  I truly admire the legacy that environmentalists Bill and Ellen Straus began and that their son Albert is now continuing to build.  I’m so tremendously grateful we have access to a product not only outstanding in flavor and quality but surpassing in environmental responsibility, not just for our candy products but for my personal use as well.  If I wasn’t a hardcore devotee to the line of Straus products before, I would be now.

To be continued at the Creamery….

Love,
Sugar

***Photos courtesy of the amazing Cap’n Rob!!***


[i] See what I did right there?  I made you recite the phrase “How now brown cow?” involuntarily in your head.
[ii] The solid waste is turned into organic fertilizer!  Nothing goes to, ahem, waste around here. Pun intended.

Natural Products Expo West – THIS WEEK

We’ll be heading down to Anaheim join the venerable collective of producers exhibiting at the Buyer’s Best Friend “city of food” as Adam of BBF put it.  This will be our first trip to Expo West and we’re very excited!  Come say hello to us at Booth #3899 for caramel treats and sweet dance moves.

Okay, there won’t be any dancing (unless you ask Sugar very nicely – it doesn’t take much to get her to embarrass herself) but there will be delicious caramels!  We’re bringing these ones:

The Salty Dog {Balinese Sea Salt Caramels}
The Eligible Heiress {Vanilla Bean Caramels}
The Distinguished Gentleman {Cocoa Bean Caramels}
The Windfall {Roasted Almond + Vanilla Bean Caramels}
The Mother Lode {Raw Cocoa Nib Caramels}

So much deliciousness (and maybe awkward dancing).

See you there!
The Cap’n + Sug 

Thank You!

Just wanted to take a minute out of the hectic production schedule to thank everyone that came out to the party on Tuesday night. We are lucky to have so many friends and supporters that we can draw a full house all night on a Tuesday night!

We ended up selling out of everything that we brought with us, and have been steadily adding additional orders to our production queue. We are going to be taking orders through Friday, December 17th, so if you are looking for a last minute holiday gift, you have a little over a week left.

You can place orders here!

Also, if you have any questions, feel free to email and we’ll get back to you as soon as we can.

Happy Holiday Party Season,

-Cap’n

Underground Market Debut – fingers crossed!!!

Barbary Brix is officially in the running to sell our delicious caramels at the San Francisco Underground Market! We drop off samples to the head market muckymucks on November 23 and we’re hoping that, when they come out of their caramel-eating-pleasure-induced-comas, they will invite us to sell at the next market on December 18th.
3 reasons why the Underground Market is awesome:
1. Vendors are all small operations like ours that are just starting out (read: badasses)
2. We get to watch new people experience the candy-gasam that is Barbary Brix caramels
3. Perfect timing to take holiday gift orders
Keep your fingers crossed for us! If When we get in we want to see everyone there! Save the date – DECEMBER 18th!