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5 Reasons Why Good Food Makes a Great Gift

written by

Meg Peery

posted on

November 25, 2022

It's the holidays! Which means strings of colored lights, crinkly wrapping paper, and celebrating the important people in our lives.

If you're like us, you try to gift loved ones in ways you know they will genuinely appreciate and gift in a way that won't make you crazy.

One way we love to do this? Food!

Here are 5 reasons why we love giving food as a gift:

ONE | Food is family, food is community

Michael Pollan said it best—food is more than fuel (though it's surely that as well). Good food links us to the important people in our world. Food keeps us connected. Around the corner or across the country, wholesome, delicious food bonds us together.

TWO | Food is magic

Good food is summer sun, fresh air, and green grass—in December! Food that is deep-frozen and vacuum-sealed locks in nutrients from warmer months. It captures the slow vibe of summertime—loved ones can thaw (and savor!) individual packs at their own pace. They can choose which selection is for now, and which is for later—according to the "food mood" of the moment.

THREE | Food is adventurous

Foodie or not, trying something new and delicious at the recommendation of a friend or loved one...is fun! Sharing food that you love gives a glimpse into your world, and brings something new to someone else's kitchen.

FOUR | Food is easy, and food...gets eaten!

Food is a fantastic gift because while you've personally made the selection and included a personal note, someone else packs and delivers it...and it arrives, delights, and disappears (in the best possible way)! Easy for you, deliciousness (instead of more "stuff") for them.

FIVE | Food is health

If we didn't know it before the pandemic, we sure know it now: being healthy is everything. Nourishing the people who matter most to you with the best food on earth? We think that's the best gift on earth.

Why do you love to give food as gifts? Tell us below!

And be sure to check out our tasty, pasture-raised Holiday Gift Boxes right here.

More from the blog

Family Friendly Weeknight Bolognese

If you're like me, family dinners are important.  It feels like there are a million different responsibilities these days, and it's easy to get so busy that there doesn't seem to be time to sit down as a family and enjoy a filling, nutritious meal - much less cook one! The more I learn about the food industry, the more committed I become to making my family's food from scratch as much as possible. So then the challenge becomes finding recipes that fit my criteria...  For a meal to be a winner in my book, here's what it needs to be: easy to make with very few separate stepseasy flexibility for dietary needs of individual family memberscustomizable for personal tasteeasy to swap ingredients to a) make it seem like a different dish sometimes and b) use what I have on handbe overall inexpensive (since I have a growing family of 6)have no "weird" ingredients or crazy spices. (In other words, it has to be "kid approved") Now. A quick browse on Pinterest might yield hundreds of recipes that mostly match those criteria, but as soon as I click the mouth-watering picture and actually read the recipe, my stomach churns at all the pre-packaged, ingredient-laden, seed-oil-filled "conveniences" that cook used. 😞 My meals also must be nutritionally dense and use no mystery ingredients or seed oils. Since I created this family-friendly weeknight Bolognese recipe that actually meets all of these requirements, I thought I'd share, because you may be "in the same boat" searching for recipes like this for your family, too.  Hannah's Family Friendly Weeknight Bolognese Ingredients: 16 oz dry pasta (For extra kid-friendliness, I usually choose penne or rotini) 1 pound ground beef 1 pound ground pork sausage (My go-to is breakfast sausage, but you can use any flavor. It does need to be pork sausage because of the fat content.) 2 whole carrots (diced) 1 small onion (diced) 1 1/2 tsp salt (I only use REAL salt) 1/2 tsp ground black pepper 1 tsp EACH dried basil, dried oregano, dried parsley (substitute with 1 Tablespoon of fresh herbs when able. 😊) 4-8 garlic cloves (diced) - depending on size and preference 16-32 oz pasta sauce or tomato sauce - based on preference (I use my home-canned tomato sauce, but any will do) 1/2 cup whole milk or heavy cream (again, depending on preference) Steps: Cook pasta according to package instructions for al dente and set aside. Cook and crumble meats together in a large saucepanIn the meat pan, add vegetables and spices/herbs and cook until tenderAdd tomato sauce and simmer for 10-15 minutes to infuse flavorsStir in milk (or cream) and cook until warmStir sauce into cooked pasta and serve immediately with parmesan Recommended sides:  Green salad or caprese (tomatoes, mozzarella, basil, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper) Sauteed kale or Swiss chard Roasted green beans, squash & zucchini, or asparagus Garlic toast Let me know if you try this dish, what you changed, and how you liked it! There are endless substitutions and changes that make this meal so so easy to keep in the back of your mind and just use whatever you have on hand. And its so easy that even kids can help with prep (which I love to have my kiddos do).