Tag Archives: Food Preservation

Master Food Volunteers Provide Nutrition Education

Master Food Volunteer Program Graduates

Twenty-four participants completed their training for the Master Food Volunteer Program from the New River Valley and the Roanoke Valley on Tuesday, November 1, at Crockett Springs United Methodist Church.

Virginia Cooperative Extension recently graduated 24 new volunteers from the Roanoke Valley and New River Valley from its Master Food Volunteer Program.  These enthusiastic volunteers will help educate citizens about the importance of good nutrition.

The “master volunteer” concept has been successfully used for many years by the Virginia Master Gardener program. By using a similar approach – training volunteers who then pass along the education to the public – the Master Food Volunteer program teaches citizens about nutrition and healthy eating.

Volunteers pay a small fee to undergo 30 hours of training over the course of four weeks where they learn about basic nutrition, meal planning, cooking techniques, food safety, and how to work with diverse audiences. At the completion of the training, the volunteers pledge to give back at least 30 hours of service to their communities by teaching others.

After successful completion of the training program, volunteers are able to select the venues at which they will share their newfound expertise. “Our volunteers can choose from a variety opportunities to assist with nutrition and food education. Some may go into the school system and teach youth about eating healthy. Others may do demonstrations of safe preparation and storage of local foods at farmer’s markets around the region. Or, they can choose to do health fairs, in which case they would maintain an educational exhibit with nutritional information set up to help the public. The opportunities are endless,” says Melissa Chase, state coordinator, VCE Master Food Volunteer Program.

For more information about the Master Food Volunteer Program visit, www.fcs.ext.vt.edu/fnh/mfv/index.html or contact Melissa Chase.

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Food Safety: It’s No Accident

Agents teach consumers how to safely preserve green beans.

Extension family and consumer sciences agents learn about proper techniques for home canning of fruits and vegetables. With the increased interest in home food preservation, Extension has implemented new programs to teach homeowners how to safely preserve foods.

In the early 20th century, Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle, not only shed light on the exploitation of American factory workers, but it also led to a public outcry for government oversight of food inspection and certification. Today, the food safety debate rages on, as headlines highlight the latest food safety crisis – from peanut butter and spinach, to pistachios and tomatoes.

Extension family and consumer sciences agents learn about proper techniques for home canning of fruits and vegetables. With the increased interest in home food preservation, Extension has implemented new programs to teach homeowners how to safely preserve foods.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 76 million people in the United States become sick with foodborne illnesses annually. Of those, 325,000 are hospitalized and 5,000 die.

Each incident is a stark reminder of the importance of implementing proper food safety practices throughout the food production chain – from grower, to manufacturer, to cook and consumer.

Since its formation in the early 1900s, Virginia Cooperative Extension has taken an active role in educating the public about food safety. Predecessors of today’s Extension agents demonstrated the latest canning and food preservation techniques to homemakers in their communities. Back then, homemakers wanted to learn the best ways to use home-produced food to feed their families safe and nutritious meals, and today it is no different. Read the full story in Solutions.

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