Loading...
Village Squire, 1980-04, Page 8Judi and Art McMichael have this sign outside of their Goderich store. Soon Vivien will be getting a partucr in the business, Eric Eberhardt, manager of the Perth County Food Co-op in Mitchell. Vivien's store, Gentle Rain, is named appropriately in the Festival City. She took the name of her store from Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice. In Grand Bend, Mary Morrice chose the name "For Goodness Sake" because it portrayed the light-hearted aspect she wanted to convey. A friend jokingly suggested it and she liked it and took it. Mary prepackages everything in her store, except the spices. She prepackages because of space limitations and in the winter it allows her to keep items in cold storage upstairs. She finds prepackaging eliminates guesswork and trying to visualize how much an item weighs and costs. Mary can barely keep up with the demand for her own baked whole wheat bread. She admits though, when the business increases in the summer, she probably will get baked goods from another source. ARVA FLOUR Mary buys her flour from Arva Mills in Arva, Ontario who use a slow milling process. Normally, vitamin B is lost because the steel rollers produce heat and destroy it. But in Arva, the slow milling saves the vitamin B. She sells it at the same price as the mill does. Like Vivien Dawson, Mary does not sell vitamins. She wants people to get their vitamins naturally in food. She doesn't see vitamins as a good substitute for practicing good nutrition. Mary would like to sell dried and crisp banana chips. But all she can find are artificially coloured and flavoured chips. But when the day comes when she finds a natural banana chip, she'll supply her customers with one of their favourite requests. Fruit and nut mixes or trail mixes, are a popular seller in the store. So are peanut butter, cheese and spices. Her best selling PG. 8 VILLAGE SQUIRE/APRIL 1980 flour is a mixture of two thirds unbleached white and one third whole wheat. Jana Natural Foods sells the same items as the two other stores, but there's a difference. Judi and Art McMichael sell wicker items and wooden toys at the back end of the store. The McMichaels stock a greater variety of prepackaged foods such as salad dressings, teas, juice, potato chips and coffee subsitutes. They even have an herbal cigarette with no nicotine. A bread which Judi Flails unusual is essene bread. The main ingredient is organically grown wheat. The wheat is sprouted. It is very heavy and moist --darker and heavier than whole wheat bread. Other novelty items are arcauna eggs, which are light blue in colour and fertilized. They also sell home made jellies --tomato, pineapple and pepper flavour. A tasty snack is toasted corn --expanded corn toasted but it's not popcorn. For spring they are selling nylon kites, puddle jumpers and pocket frisbees. They hope to expand into kitchen utensils and local vegetables. MUSIC IN THE AIR One of their customers commented, "Ijust love the shop. I like the atmosphere - there is music in the air. I can get products here that I can't normally buy in a supermarket. I like the variety. And 1 like the idea of no additives." In the store, customers can either measure out their own food or let Judi do it. People can bring their own glass or plastic containers for peanut butter, molasses and oils. Like Gentle Rain, the customers are charged about 20 cents if they must buy containers. Both Judi and her husband Art are from the Seaforth area. They now live in Dungannon. After having her fourth child, Judi stopped teaching kindergarten Her husband used to work away at construction during the week. Judi had worked in a natural foods store before. It seemed a likely