The Borneo Post

They gather to bake bread each week, then give away thousands of loaves

- Cathy Free

MONDAY mornings at 9am, Gary Farrah ties on an apron, washes his hands and spends two hours making and kneading dough, then forming it into plump li le bread loaves.

Gary, 60, had never baked bread until about a year ago, when he heard about Bread Mondays, a community program that helps feed those in need in Fredericto­n, New Brunswick in Canada.

Anyone can sign up to learn how to make homemade bread at Fredericto­n’s Greener Village food bank. Volunteers chat around a flour-coated table while they make about 200 loaves of bread on Mondays, then they get to take home a fresh golden-brown loaf for themselves.

Gary said kneading dough is therapeuti­c both physically and emotionall­y.

“Yes, it’s relaxing - I do enjoy the feeling of my hands in the dough,” he said. “But I also like knowing that I’m doing something that will help somebody else to have something delicious. The more bread I bake, the be er I feel.”

Greener Village CEO Alex Boyd came up with the idea of teaching people to bake during the Covid pandemic.

“We taped a bread-making class and put it on Facebook as a way to get people more engaged with food,” he said. “Then last January, we decided it would be a good idea to do classes in person and bake bread for our food clients who need it.”

The bread, which is made with flour, water, oil, salt, sugar and yeast, is baked in the food bank’s industrial ovens for 25 minutes, then set out for Greener Village’s 2,000 client families, along with other perishable and nonperisha­ble food, such as fresh produce, peanut bu er, milk and canned goods.

Boyd, 39, said the response to the program was so great that Greener Village now offers two bread-baking sessions every Monday, plus a class on Tuesday nights.

About 10 volunteers show up each time and are taught the basics by food bank chef and kitchen manager Yves Dechaine, who adapted one of his grandmothe­r’s old recipes for the project.

“She taught me when I was young, and I now want to pass the tradition of bread-making along, just as any teacher would,” said Dechaine, 47.

“A sense of community is what I hope they take away,” he said. “I hope it’s filling their hearts, because it’s certainly filling mine.”

Volunteers bake more than 800 loaves every month, Boyd said, with a goal of giving away 10,000 loaves this year. Last year they gave away about 5,000. People who want to contribute but don’t have time to help with mixing, kneading and baking can donate flour and yeast to Bread Mondays, he said.

“The main ingredient is love,” Boyd said, noting that food insecurity is on the rise in Canada and in the United States.

A US Department of Agricultur­e report released last year found that more than 44 million Americans live in households experienci­ng hunger. In 2022, New Brunswick had the second highest rate of food insecurity among Canada’s 10 provinces, according to PROOF Food Insecurity Policy Research.

Boyd said he would love to see Bread Mondays take off in other communitie­s. New Brunswick’s Telegraph-Journal recently reported about the popularity of the free bread project in Fredericto­n, which has a population of 66,000. About 22 percent of the population in New Brunswick is food insecure, Boyd said.

“Teaching people to bake bread has a long-term advantage in the fight to combat the rising trend of hunger,” he said. “We’re giving away something freshly baked, with no preservati­ves or additives. And there’s nothing like the taste of hot homemade bread.”

Bread Mondays is also a client favorite, said Greg Doucet, senior manager of services at Greener Village.

“The folks coming to us are disenfranc­hised to some extent, either homeless or barely making ends meet,” he said. “But this is about more than just the bread. People o en tell us that smelling fresh bread takes them back to happier times and memories of family.”

That’s what happened to Dewayne Hamilton the first time he picked up a loaf at Greener Village one year ago. Hamilton, 52, said he was homeless when he was younger, and he has relied on the food bank to supplement his grocery budget for almost 20 years.

This year, he decided to sign up as a volunteer and help bake bread for others who are facing hard times.

“This is my way of paying back, plus I’m relearning a skill I never should have lost the ability to do,” Hamilton said. “My grandmothe­r taught me to cook and bake. In her kitchen, you had to help out. There was no escape.”

His thoughts were with his grandmothe­r when he rolled up his sleeves in the Greener Village kitchen.

“It took me right back - it was like a refresher course,” he said.

“A loaf of bread makes a difference to a lot of people. Without these folks, I don’t know what I’d do.”

Volunteer Amy Chenard said she looks forward to spending cold January mornings kneading dough in a warm kitchen.

“I get out of the house, I get to socialize with other people, and I get to bake, which I love to do,” she said. “I grew up in a home where my parents taught us you help out when you can.”

“Knowing this program is helping to feed so many people makes my heart happy,” she added.

For Gary, his Monday mornings as a baker have an added benefit: he now takes his skills home, and his wife is impressed.

“You could also say she’s amused, because she never thought she’d see the day when I’d be doing something like this,” Farrah said.

“We have a bread machine at home, but since I started baking, we haven’t used it.”

“I like to think that I can bake it be er,” he said.

 ?? — Photos by Jared Scratch/Greener Village ?? Alex Boyd, CEO of Greener Village in Fredericto­n, New Brunswick, with a batch of freshly baked loaves for the food bank.
— Photos by Jared Scratch/Greener Village Alex Boyd, CEO of Greener Village in Fredericto­n, New Brunswick, with a batch of freshly baked loaves for the food bank.
 ?? ?? Loaves cool on racks in the Greener Village food bank kitchen.
Loaves cool on racks in the Greener Village food bank kitchen.

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