2026 Farm to Summer Campaign
Registration open May 5 - August 1, 2026
What is the Kick It with Carrots Campaign?
“Kick It with Carrots” is a statewide effort to promote summer meal sites by celebrating local CARROTS as the most chill vegetable of the summer. And we bet kids will think so, too! With a collective focus on this familiar, readily-available veggie, we hope to increase participation of children at Iowa summer meal sites and support local producers.Whether you’re a Summer Meal Site Sponsor, community partner, local food advocate, farmer, volunteer, or teacher, you can support this farm to summer campaign. Participants are required to source local carrots from area producers. In addition, participants are encouraged to share promotional materials and learning opportunities with local schools and community partners to help spread the word.Get on the map!
Register your local campaign by completing this google form. You’ll see your site added to the map along with other Iowa schools, child care sites, and community organizations within 3 business days. Please complete one form per site.
Note: All Iowa Farm to Summer Campaign events are planned by local schools, ECEs and community groups. Participation from volunteers or the general public is at the discretion of the host site.
Campaign Outreach Toolkit-Link here!
This resource supports 2026 campaign participants in promotion and outreach of the 2026 Iowa Farm to Summer Campaign, “Kick it with Carrots.” Within the Outreach Toolkit, you’ll find suggested copy for promoting your campaign on social media, in newsletters, blogs, and more. Spread the word about your community campaign by sharing information, pictures and highlights that celebrate your work!
Finding Local Food
Use these resources to connect with local farmers and food hubs near you!
IDALS Farm to School Producer Directory can be used by schools and early care sites to find locally grown food and by producers to list their available products.
The Iowa Food Hub Directory lists location, product, and contact information for food hubs serving Iowa communities. A Food Hub is a centrally located facility that purchases and aggregates local food from numerous farms, then stores, sometimes processes, and distributes to local or regional purchasers.
Practical Farmers of Iowa Local Food Directory hosts information about PFI-farmer-raised products; this directory offers farm name, website, cities served, and available products. Just enter the name of your city or town.
Iowa MarketMaker is useful for producers, buyers, consumers. Search by location or product to find producers and contact information.
Staff with ISU Farm, Food, and Enterprise Development can offer direct consultation and connections to local farmers.
Food Education Resources
Videos:
Farm to School: Carrots, Reap Food Group
All about Carrots, Eating Healthy with Michelle- ISU Extension and Outreach Cerro Gordo County
Recipes:
Carrot Recipes for Home and for School Food Service, University of Connecticut
Carrot Edamame Salad, Veggie Fun Kitchen
Growing:
Growing Carrots in Containers, Iowa Master Gardeners
How to Grow Carrots, CBeebies Down on the Farm
Tips for Taste Testing
Taste tests build a culture of trying new things in an encouraging, positive environment! Taste testing is a simple, versatile learning activity that offers youth the opportunity to try small samples of local foods, reflect on their preferences, and use their voice to share feedback. The following tips are designed for sites to support on-site or take-home taste testing.
For Congregate or Grab n’ Go Meals: Consider if/how the local food should be processed, packaged, and included in take-home meals.
COMING SOON
Share these Tasting Instructions + Best Practices: To encourage on-site or at home taste-testing, consider sharing these taste test instructions:
Reflect: Encourage youth to use their senses and take it slow while tasting the sample. What does it sound and feel like? Does it remind you of any other foods? What do you like?
Don’t Yuck My Yum! Remind youth to avoid saying negative things about how something tastes, as it might hurt feelings and discourage others from trying something new. Encourage students to use language like “it’s not my favorite.” Note: No one has to try the food, but everyone is supported and encouraged to participate. Everyone’s opinion matters.
Voting: Once everyone has tried a sample, they will share their opinion of the food. A thumbs up (“I like it”), sideways thumb (“it was ok”), or thumbs down (“it wasn’t my favorite”) is a simple, respectful voting system.
Share the Recipes: Students love to share what they have done and learned at school with their families. One taste test can easily turn into four or five!
Share the Smiles: Post photos, voting results, comments or recipes to your site’s Facebook page or other social media platforms, and please use the following hashtag: #IowaFarmtoSummer