GIVEAWAY-licious $25.00 Gift Certificate to FOODZIE CLOSED


And the winner is chosen by True Random Number Generator

Min: 1
Max: 211
Result:
55 = HOLLY! Holly chose foods from
DolceNonna as her winning picks!

Foodzie is the most amazing site for foodies; the place where you'll find the most fantabulous food and beverages made by small food companies!

Foodzie is an online marketplace where you can discover and buy food directly from small passionate food producers and growers. They are helping change the way people eat by helping the small food producers across the country find customers and grow their businesses!



Foodzie believes that instead of a small number of large food companies there should be a large number of small food companies (yay for that!).

They are obsessed with good food and passionate about connecting those that like to eat it with the people who make it!


WHAT YOU GET:

One lucky winner will receive a $25.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE to use in any shops on Foodzie!

(I received one, too, and still can't decide where to spend it!)




HOW TO WIN:

Visit Foodzie and take a look around - then pop back here and leave a comment with your contact info!

For additional entries:

(5) Twitter this post
(5) Blog about this contest; linking to this post
(5) Follow my blog

Let me know if you have done these things so I can give you additional entries. This contest is open to everyone.

DRAWING:

MIDNIGHT on Sunday, February 28! Good luck!! CLOSED

Small Things = Big Difference or the bitter truth about your Valentine's Day chocolate

I don't want to be a stick in the mud

(although what is wrong with being a stick in the mud anyway other than the fact you are getting .. well .. muddy..)

and ruin your Valentine's Day chocolate binge .... but ....

much of the world's cocoa (chocolate's main ingredient) is grown in developing nations by very poor farmers.

70% of the world’s cocoa production is grown in West Africa employing more than half the country. Most of the world’s cocoa production includes child slave labor and starvation level wages for farmers.

U.S. chocolate manufacturers have deflected responsibility for the conditions on cocoa plantations, citing lack of ownership of the plantations although 4/5 of the chocolate candy market is controlled by three major American firms — Hershey's, M&M/Mars and Nestle.

Now, I know you need your chocolate fix now and then. I need mine, too and I have to admit I have not always been so mindful of the brand I was buying (I am now), but one small thing we can do that would make a big difference is to choose chocolate with meaningful eco-labels.

This can help make a real difference in the lives of the people who grow cocoa and this can also benefit the environment.

Organic certification means that:

• Farmers emphasize the use of renewable resources and the conservation of soil and water to enhance environmental quality

• Crops are grown without using synthetic fertilizer or the most persistent pesticides

• Crops are produced without genetic engineering or ionizing radiation

Fair trade certified means that:

• Farmers and workers receive a fair price for their product

• Trade is done directly between farmer-owned cooperatives and buyers

• Crops are grown using soil and water conservation measures that restrict the use of agrochemicals

There are alot of fair trade chocolate choices these days and they can be found at your local grocery store. We can stop buying what the major candy companies provide us on the backs of impoverished farmers, children forced into slave labor and the environment.

It may cost a bit more, but good chocolate really is a luxury, was never intended to be a daily treat, and can be one pleasure you do not have to feel the least bit guilty about.

(the dark kind is even good for us)