The Allergy and FreeFrom Show 2013 – food and skincare

Allergy Show2013 Allergy and FreeFrom Show? Packed – humming – hectic – and that was at 10.30 in the morning. Come 1.30 – try rammed, jammed and ‘don’t leave your stand as you will never get back’…

To be fair, large buggies swollen to twice their width by hundreds of bulging carrier bags were responsible for at least some of the traffic jams but, despite the larger and deliciously lighter venue and the wider aisles, it was the crowds of keen and eager freefrom-ers who were responsible for most of the squeeze.

As exhibitors, presenters of the FreeFrom Skincare Awards’ winners and, on Sunday, front-woman for an excellent presentation for Action Against Allergy by Dr Marie Wheeler on paediatric allergy (apart from being very knowledgable, she was a genius at getting people to ask questions!) – we were very much part of the Allergy Show organisation – so had a slightly different take on the event to the many visitors. While I will therefore offer you a few brief thoughts from our perspective, for very thorough visitor reviews of both the show and many of the exhibiting products I refer you to the excellent blogs at What Allergy?, YesNoBananas, and GlutenFreeB .

From our point of view – from behind our rows of FreeFrom Skincare Awards testing products – the show was excellent. Lots of interested and involved consumers wanting test out balms and creams, and lots more anxious to fill in Cressida’s ‘freefrom food in vending machines’ questionnaire and fulminate about how there was never anything they could eat in the vending machines they met. (For more on this see yesterdays’ blog on vending.) The show also gives us an excellent opportunity to catch up with freefrom manufacturers and retailers that we already work with and to check out both new food and new skincare products.

The three blogs above give a pretty good run down of the more exciting new food products at the show. All three mention Venice Bakery, very newly arrived from Los Angeles with their thin and crispy gluten, dairy, egg and soya free pizzas – both bases and topped pizzas! Really delicious… We also really liked the new gluten-free (and dairy/soya but not egg)-free bread from Ireland BFree. (Interestingly yet another Irish gluten-free bread was on show at the Free From Food show in Freiburg earlier in the week – more anon.)

The newly launched Food Heaven soya ice cream stand (think latter day Swedish Glace) was next door to us and was mobbed from the moment the show opened! Excellent vanilla and raspberry flavours, plus chocolate mousses and cheesecakes – fuller reviews in the pipeline on FreeFromFoodsmatter. (Their Sicilian Lemon Cheesecake was a winner at last year’s FreeFrom Food Awards.)

In terms of new small manufacturers, Cressida got very excited over Heck’s sausages (so small they they have not even got a website up and running yet) while I got very excited over the thought that either the Port Royal veggy patties or the wonderful Rita’s Fugason vegetarian pasta pies (thin layer of soft pastry enclosing delicious veggie fillings), both of whom were exhibiting in the V-Delcious part of the show, might soon become available in a gluten-free version. Cressida was also enthusing about the new Ilumi range of gluten, dairy and nut-free ready meals from Tanfield Foods, and about…..  and about…… But I shall not go on as if I do, I might never finish. However, we will be reviewing all of the new products both from existing and new manufacturers over the next few months so just stay tuned in and you will get all the low down!

If you cannot wait and you want to know more, the Exhibitor list for both the Allergy and FreeFrom Show and for the V-Delicious show give you links to all exhibitors’ websites.

Meanwhile, if you want to know more about the skincare aspect of the event, check in to the FreeFrom Skincare awards site for the winners of this year’s awards (pictured below) and to the Skins Matter blog where Alex has already reported on the show and the awards.

Meanwhile – well done to the Allergy & Freefrom Show team – a really well organised and successful event! And now we are all looking forward to Liverpool in October….

FreeFrom skincare Awards winners

Healthy vending – there is such a thing?….

imagesThat was the response of 80% plus of those who took part in our vending survey at the Allergy and FreeFrom Show last weekend. But why? A vending machine is only a box. There is absolutely nothing instrinsically either healthy to unhealthy about it. But because, over the last 40 years, most vending machines have come to be owned by the makers of either fizzy drinks, crisps or chocolate bars, the boxes themselves have become synonymous with the unhealthy junk food that is now castigated by food regulators and banned from many public outlets.

But this does not need to be the case – or at least that was the message of the Being Healthy conference hosted by 24Vend, a vending consultancy run by Gillian White, herself a coeliac – and a fitness instructor!

How were we involved? Well, we were early converts to Gillian’s message as we saw vending machines not only as outlets for healthy foods but as immensely useful outlets for safe and tasty freefrom foods, so rarely on offer when, as a freefrom-er, you are out and about or ‘on the go’. Such keen converts are we, indeed, that one of the new categories for next year’s FreeFrom Food Awards will be FreeFrom ‘foods to go’ and freefrom foods for vending machines.

We had also offered to run a survey at the Allergy Show and had put together a hamper to tempt visitors to fill in the survey – although we need not have bothered. At least 95% of the visitors we asked if they would like to fill in a survey positively grabbed it out of our hands, only too anxious to tell the vending industry that they rarely used their machines now because there was never anything in them that they could eat but that, if there were to offer some freefrom foods, they would be onto them like a shot!

So how does the vending industry view healthy eating? Well, the more far sighted among them see it as a get out of jail card. As the cost of treating obesity, and all the many health problems that stem from it, rockets, so regulations governing foods which are seen to contribute to it (all of those foods traditionally sold via vending machines) tighten and vending machines (seen as the cause rather than an innocent partner) are thrown out of schools, workplaces and other public spaces.

In fact, this is ridiculous. In our 24/7, grazing existence, vending machines are a perfect way to provide food to the on-the-go consumer – always open, always available. They just need to be filled with healthy, and ideally, freefrom food. And if they are, they can be very successful.

Proving the point was a presentation at the conference by Tracey Graham of Abercromby Vending. She and her brother (she a caterer, he a vending machine mechanic) started their business six years ago with capital resources of a mere £6,000 so they knew that they had to do something different if they were to break into the market. So they decided to go ‘fresh and healthy’. Initially it was a perception struggle but they persuaded their suppliers to go with them, to offer discounts and to really promote this revolutionary idea – and it paid off. Amazingly they have now won the contract to supply the whole of the Glasgow NHS with healthy vending!

Taking the workplace perspective, training consultant Liz Morris of Working Families is also a vending machine enthusiast seeing them as an excellent way to combat ‘presenteeism’. This is the state in which you sit at your desk (and so are ‘present’, rather than ‘absent’) but are simply not focusing and therefore being very unproductive. Although some presenteeism may be down to just wishing you were somewhere else, much can be laid at the gate of our Ultradian performance rhythm – the cyle in which we can  perform well for 90 to 120 minutes but after that our performance falls off and we need around 20 minutes of R&R. Ideally we should stand up and move around to recoup our forces and get up to speed for the next 90 to 120 minute bout of maximum efficiency. Going off to a vending machine filled with healthy snacks would be a perfect way of both getting that R&R and refuelling during the Ultradian dip!

easelSchools are another area where vending machines have got themselves a really bad name – indeed, many schools have thrown them out altogether – although they do offer real benefits. They could, for example, significantly reduce lunchtime queuing, a real problem in large schools with only 45 minutes to get all the kids
through the dining process. Now that so many schools are focusing on good hydration as a route to better concentration, they could also provide an easy access to water. (Illustration courtesy of the School Drinks Company.) And, with the future in view, children who get used to using vending machines to access healthy snacks at school will be much more likely to continue to do so when they move on to the workplace.

However, although the potential is great, all speakers recognised  that they had a lot ot work to do. Healthy vending will really only take off if there is a good supply chain, if the offer is interesting and varied (just three health snacks will not cut it), if it is really well supported in terms of price (a small premium for health is acceptable but only a small one and ‘offers’ are really helpful in gaining market share) and if it is imaginatively promoted and marketed – and that includes really attractive and appealing looking machines – not those dreary black things that are what we have come to expect a vending machine to look like. Plus app.s which allow you to calorie count your vending purchases, tie-ins with gym membership, special promotions or events or any other ‘service’ which engages the consumer with vendor.

vending_machineThe School Drinks Company website illustrates a number of approaches to promotion. Theirs are aimed specifically at schools so very much focused on performance but there are lots of ideas there for anyone wondering how to maximise their vending potential.

And let’s hope that we will be able to add our two penni’worth next year with some really exciting award-winning freefrom products to go in the machines! Indeed, It’s Only Natural, shortlisted twice in this year’s awards, is already on message with some wonderfully jolly vending machines that are going to be out there very soon selling their delicious Moshi Monsters and 1/5 fresh fruit lollies. We hope that many people will follow in their footsteps!

Meanwhile, if you want some inspiration, the AVA (Automatic Vending Association) got together with the University College Birmingham to create a brand new Culinary Product Development module for final year Culinary Arts Management Degree students – the judging for which followed the Being Healthy conference. The winners, I am delighted to say, were the Gail Pastry Company (seen below) with their gluten and wheat-free pastries filled with Chicken Jambalaya, BBQ Pulled Pork and Apple Sauce, Steak and Red Wine and Portobello Mushrooms!! My colleague Richard Erlich, chair of the Guild of Food Writers, who was one of the judges, was positively raving about how good they were!

For those who want to know more, the AVA has also produced a useful report on healthy vending which will be available on their site very shortly – at which point I will give you a link.

Gail Pastries

PS. For some other cool ideas on vending – how about raw milk?….. see this great blog on The Bovine, about raw milk vending machines in Poland.

 

Freefrom, freefrom and more freefrom…

As you might have noticed from the dearth of recent blogs, the last two weeks have been heavily taken up with freefrom food events – first the first European FreeFrom trade show in Germany, then the Allergy and Freefrom Show (complete with the presentation of the Freefrom Skincare awards) and then finally, the Being Healthy vending conference at the AVEX (vending) trade show at the NEC on Wednesday.

All were actually very interesting – sufficiently so for me to go on about them at rather more length in the next three blogs, so this is to warn to anyone who is really not interested in freefrom food that they should ignore the next three blogs and that ‘normal service’ on a wider range of issues, will be resumed very soon…

twitter-logoHowever, just before I get going, a little bit of crowing – not on my behalf but on Alex Gazzola’s. As you may be aware he runs all of our six Twitter accounts – and through his efforts we have just hit the magic number of 10,000 followers! No, I know it is not Lady Gaga’s 3 million or even Stephen Fry’s 1.5 million, but 10,000 followers is 10,000 people who are interested enough in the subject of food allergy and intolerance, coeliac disease or other diet related conditions to ‘follow’ one of the FoodsMatter Twitter accounts and to whom we can, hopefully, offer some useful information or advice. Not a bad number!

Sadly, I have to report that our Facebook following (for which I am responsible…) is not nearly so impressive.  FoodsMatter does not do too badly with nearly 1500 people ‘liking’ us, but the other pages, (CoeliacsMatter, FreeFrom FoodsMatter and Freefrom Recipes Matter) lurk down in the low hundreds. So, if only to keep my end up, I would really appreciate any ‘likes’ that blog readers were able to push my way!

My next jobs are to get to grips with those two other very popular social media tools – Linked In and Pinterest. Linked in because I know that both our FreeFromFood Awards sponsors and entrants could really benefit from a Linked in awards group; Pinterest on the recommendation of Micki Rose of TrulyGlutenFree who says it is invaluable. (For those who have never head of it, it is an on-line notice board on which you ‘pin’ items of interest with a link to more details. There are notice boards for a wide range of subjects and interests or, you can start on of your own. I have actually got as far as joining…..)