North Coast Food Web to move to Astoria Food Hub Operating larger commercial kitchen space with the opening of the Astoria Food Hub. Located in the old Sears building on Marine The North Coast Food Web may only be Drive, the hub will lease spaces to busi- nesses, including a flower shop and a cafe 10 years old but it has already outgrown its with its own roastery, both located in the space in the cheerfully painted building in main hall, and a cured meats purveyor in the Astoria. The nonprofit, which runs a small weekly basement. The front, street-level area will host a retail market offering local prepared farmers market, conducts educational pro- grams, operates a commercial kitchen, and and frozen foods. The hub will also offer will in March be moving downtown, to commercial kitchens, cold storage as well as Astoria Food Hub. an array of business support services, such At the new location, the food web’s pro- as marketing, packaging, and distribution. In grams will continue to expand. Its weekly the next phase, the basement will also house farmers market now brings together pro- a restaurant and a speakeasy. duce, eggs, meat, and other goods from In that sense, the food hub “aspires to be some 35 vendors located within a 100 mile a platform for food businesses on the North radius of Astoria. Many Coast,” said co-founder, of the vendors are first- Jared Gardner, who also ‘WE’LL SHARE time retailers, so the owns the Nehalem River RESOURCES IN nonprofit, said execu- Ranch. “It’s very much THE SPACE,’ SAID about pooling resources tive director Jess Tan- tisook, “is their entry and creating efficiencies TANTISOOK, point to the local food in food production and WHICH WILL system.” Vendors can distribution.” MAKE FOR launch their businesses If the food web is a GREATER or test new products at “baby incubator,” as Tan- EFFICIENCIES tisook calls it, which a much smaller price aims to support the cul- than a traditional gro- FOR CLIENTS. ture of local food produc- cery store would charge. tion, the food hub will be In addition to a larger a bigger commercial operation for businesses office space, the food web will be operating that wish to scale up past the nascent stage. an expanded commercial kitchen at Asto- ria Food Hub. Virus precautions permitting, One such business is Cascadia Cured, the its state-of-the-art kitchen will help grow its brainchild of Jeff Graham, former executive educational programming. While the cur- chef at Fort George Brewery. The basement rent kitchen accommodates up to nine con- tenant will cure meats and make packaged current cooks, the new kitchen will be avail- products, like salami or prosciutto, using able to fit up to 25. Clients will also have inputs from area ranches. the hub’s cold storage and palette spaces Graham will also help with educational available to them for rent. programming in the commercial kitchen, “We’ll share resources in the space,” said teaching, let’s say, “someone who makes Tantisook, which will make for greater effi- chimichurri at home but wants to make it ciencies for clients. into a business.” The food web is running a capital cam- In its early days in the mid-1930s, the paign, “Dough for the Decade,” with the John E. Wicks-designed building was home goal of raising $500,000 to support improve- to the wholesale produce distributor Mason, ments in the new space. Donations can be Ehrman & Co. whose lettering is still visible made online at NorthCoastFoodWeb.org. on the riverfront facade. “It’s fun to get back The organization’s move will coincide to the roots,” Gardner said. BY PETER KORCHNAK Delivery driver Daniel Brew and market coordinator Lila Barrett load a van for home deliveries at the current Food Web location. Jeff Graham, left, and Jared Gardner, right, at the Astoria Food Hub building. The North Coast Food Web is moving to a new location at the Astoria Food Hub. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2022 // 7