UMass Student Food Pantry usage growing on campus despite No. 1 dining in the nation

Since opening Fall Semester 2018 the food pantry has increasingly catered to the needs of graduate students

By: Chris McLaughlin

A sign for the UMass Student Food Pantry, located in Bartlett Hall Room 317C. (Photo, Chris McLaughlin)

Walk into the a nondescript office space of Bartlett 317C on the third floor of Bartlett Hall, and you’ll find shelves and boxes that line the walls stocked with donated Campbell’s canned goods, Kraft brand pasta, Goya beans and more than enough snack foods. However, this seemingly obscure corner of campus at the University of Massachusetts Amherst plays a more important role than meets the eye.

The Princeton Review has ranked UMass Dining as No. 1 for three consecutive years, but at the same time the UMass Student Food Pantry, run by and for UMass students in this space, has only had higher levels of usage since opening in fall of 2018, leading to concerns about food insecurity on campus for the university’s most vulnerable populations.

“Food insecurity is a huge problem nationwide,” said Anna Drexler, a sophomore public health and women, gender and sexuality studies major. She is one of the 30 student co-organizers at the UMass Student Food Pantry and a member of Alpha Phi Omega, the national community service fraternity who founded the food pantry. Drexler has seen the food pantry evolve from concept to present. Continue reading “UMass Student Food Pantry usage growing on campus despite No. 1 dining in the nation”

Late winter and early spring usher in prime New England maple sugaring season

Late winter and early spring are prime maple sugaring season and throughout New England this past month sugar shacks have been hosting maple weekends including Hollis Hills Farm in Fitchburg, Mass.

What makes March an ideal sugaring season is the fluctuating daytime thaw of around 10 degrees above freezing and nighttime temperatures below 32 degrees Fahrenheit said Hollis Hills owner Jim Lattanzi, who started Hollis Hills Farm with his wife Allison back in 2014.

The fluctuating late winter and early springtime temperatures put pressure on the maple trees causing sap to flow from tap holes. A tree must usually be at least 40 years old to be ready for tapping.

Hollis Hills, which prides itself as the largest maple producer in Eastern Mass., has around 6,000 taps and then processes about 80,000 gallons of maple sap each spring season.

For perspective, it takes 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup as the watery sap from the trees contains only two percent sugar. Comparatively the usual gallon of maple syrup contains about two-thirds or 66 percent sugar in content.

To make the maple syrup farmers put the collected sap through an evaporation process to remove excess water until the sap is boiled down to the thicker caramelized sugar. Large amounts of sweet-scented steam bubble up from the “evaporator” via log fueled flames underneath the machine.

Filtration will also take place to remove any contaminants, such as dirt or tree bark, caught in the sap. The maple producer can make syrup ranging from a light and mild tasting golden color, to darker and richer amber color and taste, to even a very dark powerful tasting syrup made generally toward the end of the season.

According to the Massachusetts Maple Producers Association, sugaring season serves an important purpose in employing more than 1,000 farm workers at over 300 producers. These maple producers also serve as beacons for tourism during this season with on average over 60,000 visitors and two million dollars in revenue.

The MMPA added income from maple sugaring allows dairy farmers in the region to stay in operation by providing them with a secondary crop.

Based on the United State Department of Agriculture’s 2018 state agricultural overviews, Massachusetts produces 72,000 gallons of maple syrup. This is certainly more than the New England states to the south. Connecticut produces only 18,000 gallons annually, while Rhode Island’s production is so negligible it is not even listed in the state’s overview.

However, Massachusetts is far from being the largest producer in the region. On the flip side of things, the New England states to the north play a far greater role in maple syrup production.

New Hampshire claims third place by exceeding Massachusetts with a total of 163,000 gallons of syrup produced annually. Maine comes in second with a total of 539,000 gallons annually, but pales in comparison to Vermont.

Best noted of the New England states for maple sugar production, Vermont reigns supreme with a whopping 1,940,000 gallons produced annually.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started