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Rebecca Scott

  • From the law:

    “Farm direct marketer” means an agricultural producer that sells farm direct products or producer processed products directly to the retail consumer.

    I take that to mean that anyone can sell these types of goods, including a home gardener. That’s my interpretation — I’m not sure what’s the ag dept’s interpretation is.

  • David replied to the topic Ghee and Cordials in the forum Oregon 10 years, 8 months ago

    1) I am really not sure about ghee, but I’m almost certain this would not be allowed. You need to call the ag dept for clarification.

    2) This isn’t allowed under the cottage food law. You need special licensing to sell alcohol.

  • Maya started the topic Ghee and Cordials in the forum Oregon 10 years, 8 months ago

    Hi
    I am new to the cottage industry, and I have a couple questions.
    1) I make ghee – which is clarified butter (basically cooked butter). I know it is illegal to sell unpasteurized milk, but are there any laws about selling butter made from pasteurized milk?

    2) I also make medicinal cordials which are made with brandy and honey that I would like…[Read more]

  • David replied to the topic Vanilla Extract in the forum Oregon 10 years, 11 months ago

    For interstate sales of any food item, you need to make it in a commercial kitchen, not your home kitchen. You can call your health dept to learn about how to get licensed as a regular food business. If you only want to do intrastate sales, vanilla extract might be considered a cottage food, but I don’t know for sure for Oregon. That would also be…[Read more]

  • Brandy, I just found something that I had missed in the past: “A license is not required for a domestic kitchen type bakery that is operated in behalf of a nonprofit institution or is otherwise not operated for profit.”

    So it looks like you’re good as long as you’re only doing baked items.