NORTHWEST AGRICULTURAL SHOW SPECIAL SECTION | INSIDE PR T N EN Y ES ED BY HA RV E S T C A P I TA O L C M PA 51 ST ANN February 16-18 • Re UAL SHOW gister to att GUIDE end at No rthwestAg Sh ow.com S227064-1 EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER CapitalPress.com Friday, February 5, 2021 Volume 94, Number 6 $2.00 RAISING RADICCHIO’S PROFILE WORLDWIDE By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press iri Erickson-Brown first fell in love with radicchio while she and her husband were working on farms in Europe in the early 2000s. They ate a lot of the red winter vegetable while in Italy, where it is commonly grown. Erickson-Brown was intrigued. “What is this weird vegetable that every- body says is so hard to grow?” she recalled wondering. Radicchio is a leafy chicory, often used to add color to salads. And, by all accounts, radicchio is an acquired taste. It’s bitter, which means customers need some education and recipe examples from chefs, said Laura Lewis, who runs Washington State University’s Food Sys- tems Program. “You may not necessar- ily want to have a straight-up radicchio salad,” Lewis said. “But there are some beauti- ful radicchio salads that you mix with things like citrus.” Erickson-Brown compares radic- chio to a hoppy beer, dark chocolate or coffee — the taste is hated by kids but loved by adults. “It starts out as something that seems horrible, but then it’s your favorite thing,” she said. “Radicchio is like that.” S Getting organized Radicchio proved to be an important crop in 2007 when Erickson-Brown and her hus- band, Jason Salvo, started their 15-acre farm, Local Roots Farm, in Duvall, Wash. “For a farm that grows 40 different crops, to have 1 acre dedicated to just one is a little unusual,” Erickson-Brown said. She and Salvo sell radicchio for $3 to $5 per head. They grow roughly 14,000 heads in a good year. RADICCHIO AT A GLANCE Radicchio (ruh-dee-kee- oh) is part of the chicory family. Though it’s been around since the 1500s, the most popular red variety, Chioggia, was bred in the 20th century. A winter crop, it origi- nated and is still widely grown in Italy, which has a climate and latitude similar to the Pacific Northwest. It overwinters in the field and holds well in storage. See Radicchio, Page 11 — Wikipedia Shawn Linehan Culinary Breeding Network Pacific Northwest radicchio farmers saw all aspects of growing, packing and mar- keting the crop during a January 2020 tour. Local Roots Farm Both photos by Shawn Linehan Culinary Breeding Network Farmers Jason Salvo and Siri Erickson-Brown of Du- vall, Wash., are helping lead the formation of the Pacific Northwest Radicchio Grow- ers Association. They’ve been raising the crop for 15 years, ABOVE: A radicchio field in January. TOP PHOTO: Radicchio is the focus of a new effort to spark interest in the vegetable from farmers, chefs and consumers. Lawsuit names Easterday Ranches in misappropriation scheme Tyson Foods seeking more than $225 million in damages By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press Cody Easterday PASCO, Wash. — Tyson Foods is suing an Eastern Washington beef sup- plier for allegedly defrauding the com- pany out of more than $225 million by falsifying records and submitting faked invoices for more than 200,000 cattle that, in fact, did not exist. The lawsuit was filed Jan. 25 in Franklin County Superior Court, and accuses Easterday Ranches, based in Pasco, Wash., of perpetrating the scheme over a period of several years. Easterday Ranches is part of the larger Easterday farming operation, which also grows 25,000 acres of potatoes, onions, grain and forage in the Columbia Basin. The lawsuit maintains that in meet- ings with Tyson Cody Easterday, the farm’s president, admitted to the fraud, which it says he constructed in order to offset more than $200 million in losses incurred in the commodities trading markets. Easterday did not immediately respond to messages for comment. FOR A RELATED STORY PLEASE SEE PAGE 11 “Over the last several years, Defen- dant (Easterday) has submitted false invoices to Plaintiff (Tyson) for reim- bursement, identifying cattle that did not exist; has requested and received reim- bursement from Plaintiff for feed that was not in fact purchased; has submitted fictitious inventory records to Plaintiff; and has otherwise schemed to defraud Plaintiff in a way that has caused Plain- tiff losses in excess of $225 million,” the lawsuit states. Tyson Foods is the world’s sec- ond-largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef and pork. The com- pany does not own or operate feedlots, but employs buyers in beef-producing areas who visit independent feed yards and public auctions to buy animals for its processing plants — including one near Pasco, which Easterday Ranches supplied. Tyson entered into a cattle feed- ing agreement with Easterday Ranches in 2017. In a filing with the U.S. Secu- rities and Exchange Commission, Tyson reported that Easterday provided See Lawsuit, Page 11 Vilsack advanced by Senate Ag Committee Committee hearing reveals what to expect from Vilsack’s second round at USDA By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Senate Agriculture Committee Tuesday unanimously advanced to the full Senate Tom Vilsack’s nomination to return as head of the USDA. Vilsack, 70, was also agriculture secretary during President Barack Obama’s two terms. The former governor of Iowa has been a key adviser to President Joe Biden, who nominated him to lead USDA. “It’s not lost on me, ironically, that this is Groundhog’s Day, and I realize that I’m back again,” Vil- sack told senators Feb. 2. Vilsack said that if he’s con- Founded in 1945 by Farmers and Ranchers. We still measure success by the acre. firmed, many of his priorities will remain the same as when he served under Obama, but others will change. “This is a fundamentally differ- ent time, and I am a different person and it is a different department,” he said. Vilsack said his four priorities will be climate change, food inse- curity, competition and inequity. Senators in the committee — some in person, others calling in virtually — asked Vilsack Tom Vilsack dozens of questions over the 2 1/2-hour meeting. Vilsack’s answers gave a See Senate, Page 11 Welcome to Our Caldwell, Idaho Team! Becky Temple, Alan Bullard, Logan Schleicher, and Gaye Doanato. 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