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Can the Food and Farming Awards change the way we cook?

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Emily Angle Emily Angle | 14:33 UK time, Wednesday, 13 June 2012

This week nominations open for the Food and Farming Awards. It鈥檚 the 13th year that the awards have been going and they already feel like an institution. Each year the programme tells amazing stories of food producers and advocates. I always find myself welling up when I listen to the awards. I鈥檓 not ashamed.

There are a lot of food awards about: taste medals, ethical awards, writing awards. But听the Food and Farming听awards are important in improving our food culture at its roots 鈥 where and how ordinary people shop and eat. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e one of the most credible awards, because it鈥檚 from the listeners,鈥 says听judge and Michelin-starred chef听Angela Hartnett. 鈥淭his is not a niche exercise for people who just call themselves foodies.鈥澨

Last year鈥檚 winner of the Best Local Food Retailer award, , is a project that started when the village shop was closing as a commercial concern. The villagers kept it going, staffed by volunteers. They not only kept it going, but made it into the kind of shop that鈥檚 enjoyable to shop in frequently.

Brockweir and Hewelsfield village shop

The local alternative to the supermarket - Brockweir and Hewelsfield village shop near Chepstow.

The manager Alison Macklin says, 鈥淲e basically are a normal shop. We trade for business, but we don鈥檛 have shareholders who are expecting us to make huge profits.鈥 The difference is that the people and the produce in the shop are part of the local community. Sometimes the food is as local as the back door as they sell veg from the volunteer allotment.

鈥淭hat excitement about local food inspires others, and the more people that get inspired, the more suppliers there are,鈥 she adds.

These Welsh villagers now have a viable alternative to the homogenous supermarket.听 Their fruit and veg doesn鈥檛 have to travel up and down the country through distribution centres 鈥 it鈥檚 food that tastes fresher and demands to be cooked well.

And these are hard times for small food producers and retailers. The moment in the spotlight that nominees and winners receive can keep a business going.

It鈥檚 a similar story with food markets. The bump in attention improves the numbers of buyers and sellers. Farmers markets often provide access to products that are difficult or impossible to find in supermarkets: traditionally smoked fish, artisan cheeses, forgotten fruits like damsons and medlars from the local allotments, game from nearby estates.听 Last year鈥檚 winner is selling catfish, turbot and pomfrets 鈥 would you see that at Tesco or Morrisons?

Bolton market fish counter

Bolton market's fish counter

It鈥檚 not just about getting great ingredients, but being exposed to new ways of cooking. When I moved down to the Bristol area last year I began to notice the takeaways and shops around me that were nominees or winners, proudly displaying their laminated certificates. Often they are places I wouldn鈥檛 seek out (or even find, in more rural areas) without this recommendation.

Since then I鈥檝e been hooked on authentic Gujerati curry- quite different to the usual takeaway fare, with the emphasis on highly-spiced听vegetarian dishes. It鈥檚 amazing food and I鈥檓 now cooking it up at home. (Try this undhiyo听to see what I mean.)

I sometimes wonder how I can possibly advocate my own local food outlets as the best in the country. They aren鈥檛 top of the fifty best restaurants list, or rolling in Michelin stars.听 But it鈥檚 not really about that 鈥 if you think someone else should go to your farmers鈥 market, shop, takeaway, then nominate it. If you love it, chances are other people will, too.

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall expresses it best in the nominations programme this week, 鈥淭he awards听continually remind us that there are some incredibly dedicated and creative people doing brilliant work. If we set our sights high and reward the people who are doing great things it can have a great effect on our food culture.鈥

Listen to 2011 awards programme

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