Flint Hills Breadbasket
  • NEW FHBB BUILDING
  • Need Food?
    • The Market @ FHBB >
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      • Sign Up
      • FAQ
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    • Partner Markets >
      • Peace-Full Pantry
      • Grace Baptist Food Pantry
      • First United Methodist Church
      • Seven Dolors
      • First Presbyterian Church
      • Temple of Peace Pantry
      • Riley, KS Pantry
    • Other Food Resources >
      • Blessing Boxes
      • Common Table
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      • Cats' Cupboard
  • Want to Help?
    • Volunteer
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  • Who are We?
    • FHBB Staff
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    • Food For Thought
    • About Us
    • Impact Report
  • Contact Us
  • NEW FHBB BUILDING
  • Need Food?
    • The Market @ FHBB >
      • Shopping Hours
      • Location
      • Sign Up
      • FAQ
      • Inside The Market
    • Partner Markets >
      • Peace-Full Pantry
      • Grace Baptist Food Pantry
      • First United Methodist Church
      • Seven Dolors
      • First Presbyterian Church
      • Temple of Peace Pantry
      • Riley, KS Pantry
    • Other Food Resources >
      • Blessing Boxes
      • Common Table
      • Harvesters Drive-Thru
      • S.N.A.P.
      • W.I.C.
      • Cats' Cupboard
  • Want to Help?
    • Volunteer
    • Partner with Us
    • Donate
    • Blessing Box Sponsor Support
    • Host a Food Drive
    • Learn About Food Insecurity
  • Who are We?
    • FHBB Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Food For Thought
    • About Us
    • Impact Report
  • Contact Us

Food For Thought

All
Director's Notes
Events

FHBB's 2025 Word of the Year: Dignity

2/5/2025

 
Jennie Jordan, Engagement Manager
​

How should we treat people? For a long time, I was taught people should be treated with RESPECT. I needed to respect my family, my teachers and adults in general. I knew I needed to be kind and to speak with deference, but I didn’t know why. I didn’t understand why I should be required to do these things, but I did it because it felt right. As I’ve aged and matured, I found the word all the grownups should have taught me instead.

Dignity.

One word made a difference in understanding why I should practice kindness and understanding with every person whether they are my parent, my child, or a stranger.

Read More

Free Grocery Stores

12/18/2024

 
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Karla Hagemeister, Executive Director
​
It sure feels good when you’re ahead of the trend. In a December 13, 2024, article in The Washinton Post (How Free Grocery Stores are Easing Hunger and Fighting Waste), Karla Marie Sanford highlighted the evolution of free grocery stores from their roots in food pantries. Key differences between a free grocery store and a food pantry are the stores’ focus on dignity and choice, with language, policies, and practices that value each person. In this developing model, barriers to access such as income limits and employment requirements are replaced by an emphasis on seeing each person and meeting them at their need.
​
The reason for a person’s need is irrelevant when you exist to provide access to healthy food choices. It’s right there in our mission- healthy food choices.

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Serve With Allie: Give time and Find your Community

9/6/2024

 
At FHBB, we have amazing volunteers who bring their time, energy, and passion to serve our community. Allie brought her own special energy to our volunteer team by joining us a few months ago and has had a connection to the Breadbasket for years.

"Years ago, the Breadbasket provided a place where my kids and I could support our community," Allie shared. "It gave us perspective and a window into how a
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Read with Karla: Food Insecurity Book LIst

8/2/2024

 
  1. Reinventing Food Banks and Pantries: New Tools to End Hunger by Katie S. Martin
  2. How the Other Half Eats by Priya Fielding-Singh PhD
  3. Food Waste, Food Inescurity, and the Globalization of Food Banks by Daniel N. Warshawsky
  4. Poorly Understood by Mark Robert Rank, Lawrence M. Eppard, Heather E. Bullock
  5. Poverty, By America by Matthew Desmond
  6. The Stop: How the Fight for Good Food Transformed a Community and Inspired a Movement by Nick Saul, Andrea Curtis
  7. $2.00 a Day: Living on Almost Nothing in America by Kathryn J. Edin​
  8. Big Hunger: The Unholy Alliance Between Corporate America and Anti-Hunger Groups by Andrew Fisher, Saru Jayaraman

Cook with Jennie: Chicken adobo

7/19/2024

 
Jennie Jordan, Engagement Manager

​Cooking has been a major part of my life since I was a small human. My mom loved creating meals for me and my older brother that were healthy, diverse, delicious and full of love. From a young age, she had me in the kitchen helping and learning, growing my love of cooking which I've held onto as I grew up and passed through the different phases of adulthood. She sometimes shares stories of how we were tight on money in my early childhood and how being on WIC gave a little help along with her being creative with the food budget.
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David, Myrna and Jennie from 2000.

Read More

Support during a health struggle

7/11/2024

 
Jerry was diagnosed with cancer and unable to work, which meant his savings went to pay for his mortgage, car, and health care. This left no room for food in his budget, so he came to FHBB for help through our services. Jerry was impressed with the amount of nutritious food available, such as fish, vegetables, fruit, yogurt, oatmeal, beans, and soup, which he attributes to his success in “beating cancer.” Through conflicts with doctor appointments, he was grateful the staff provided time accommodation, allowing him to continue receiving services.​

Jerry expresses tremendous gratitude to the Breadbasket for helping him through a difficult time in his life and states, “I will do whatever it takes to help the Breadbasket as they helped me.” 
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Read With Karla: How the other half eats

7/2/2024

 
Karla Hagemeister, Executive Director
​
I am an avid reader in my “spare” time, often juggling two or three books at once- I like a little variety of content depending on how much brain space is available. While my fiction diet covers a wide range of content, my nonfiction tends to center around issues that are close to my heart- public policy, leading a nonprofit organization, and food insecurity. Fortunately, there is a lot of overlap in these areas, and I find golden nuggets in almost everything I read.
​
I finished How the Other Half Eats-The Untold Story of Food and Inequality in America by Priya Fielding-Singh, PhD over the weekend. The content of Dr. Fielding-Singh’s book comes from research she conducted as a doctoral student at Stanford University. She interviewed seventy-five families and observed four additional families in greater depth. 
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Read More

Plans and Goals for 2024

1/2/2024

 
Our Executive Director, Karla, chooses a word that helps set an intention in both the personal and professional sides of life. Her word this year is OPPORTUNITY. From reading Managing Your Nonprofit for Resilience by Ted Bilich, she was pulled towards the idea of risk. "Risk is neither good nor bad. Risk is simply the acknowledgement that none of us can see into the future," (pg. 18). Opportunity is a way to express positive risk- taking intentional, smart risks.

As an organization, we want to take the idea of chosing a word of the year to guide our goals with intention.

​FHBB has chosen BUILD as the word for 2024 to help connect some of this years goals.

Read More

2023 Year in Review

12/29/2023

 
We've seen a lot happen in 2023! It's been a fast-paced-never-a-dull-moment kind of year. We continue to grow towards our vision that there is No One In Need Among Us thanks to everyone in the FHBB community. The work we do is only possible with the support of our volunteers, donors and guests. Here are some snapshots of our journey, highlights of the year, shared laughter, and the some of the faces who make everything possible.

Thanks Friends!
Jennie and the FHBB Team

Read More

Harvesters

5/15/2023

 
When our community thinks about food insecurity, it is natural for us to think of the Flint Hills Breadbasket. The Breadbasket was created in 1982 and many residents do not know Manhattan without our building at 905 Yuma. The Breadbasket and our partners at local churches provide critical support to the Riley County area. Our mission is to provide reliable access to healthy food, build connections with community partners, and empower neighbors to meet their basic needs.
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