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To: longfellowsmuse

Our wedding cake was done by a housewife who sold birthday and wedding cakes out of her house. Best cake ever. Prettier, tastier, fresher and much less expensive ($45!) than an ugly dried out designer cake we had at wedding two weeks later.


72 posted on 09/02/2013 8:41:50 AM PDT by bgill (This reply was mined before it was posted.)
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To: bgill
New Texas law:

http://www.texascottagefoodlaw.com/

Brief history: In 2011, the Texas Legislature passed SB 81, a bill making it legal to sell certain homemade foods like baked goods which do not require refrigeration, jams, jellies, and dried herb mixes.

While SB 81 opened up great opportunities to thousands of Texans, the bill did have some serious limitations, such as requiring that all sales occur at your home, and some foods which were equally safe, such as candy, were still not allowed. After SB 81 went into effect, an unintended result was that some cities around the state banned cottage food operations on the grounds of “zoning”.

__________________

Solution: In 2013, State Representative Eddie Rodriguez of Austin, along with the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance, and the House Farm-To-Table Caucus, offered up HB 970, which does the following:

expands the list of allowable food to include candy, coated and uncoated nuts, unroasted nut butters, fruit butters, dehydrated fruits and vegetables, popcorn, cereal, granola, dry mix, vinegar, pickles, mustard, and roasted coffee or dry tea

prohibits a municipality from outlawing cottage food operations on the basis of “zoning”
allows sales outside the home, at specific locations such as farmers markets, farm stands, or municipal, county, or nonprofit fairs and festivals

HB 970 also adds to consumer protections by adding the following requirements:

all cottage food operators must complete an accredited food handler's course (can be taken online, usually costs about $10 and takes 2 hours or less)

all foods must be packaged in a way that prevents product contamination, except for large or bulky items

While this does not directly affect the Oregon case, it shows that not all states are insane.

75 posted on 09/02/2013 9:08:51 AM PDT by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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