Gifts That Keep on Giving: Favorites from the Smile Farms Collection

Looking for a birthday gift that will delight the recipient and carry an extra-special message? Check out the Smile Farms Collection from the 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. family of brands.

Group of workers at Smile Farms

Every gift purchased from this collection will benefit the Farmers of Smile Farms, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting adults with developmental disabilities. Founded in 2015, Smile Farms focuses on providing meaningful vocational, educational, and employment opportunities that generate pride, enhance life skills, and offer socialization experiences.

“Like many other non-profits, Smile Farms has faced significant challenges during a time when our efforts were more needed than ever before,” says Smile Farms Managing Director Diana Martin. “1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. has long supported Smile Farms in its mission to foster new opportunities for people with disabilities. We feel so fortunate to be the recipients of their innovative approach to giving back, especially this year.

“The Smile Farms Collection encapsulates the value both 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. and Smile Farms place on connection, community, and celebrating our differences,” she says. “We are grateful to every person who shops from this collection – they are making a true difference with each dollar.”

About Smile Farms

Smile Farms Group

Smile Farms is the signature philanthropic partner of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. It was started by the company’s founder, Jim McCann, and his brother, CEO Chris McCann.

The McCanns’ brother, Kevin, lives in a group home on Long Island, N.Y., run by the Independent Group Home Living Program (IGHL), and that program’s CEO, Walter Stockton, had mentioned to Jim that he was having trouble finding work for residents.

Jim was happy to help. But when he scanned the local job market, he discovered that there were indeed very few options for people with developmental disabilities. The first Smile Farms campus opened up in 2015.

Diana Martin Headshot

We are grateful to every person who shops from this collection – they are making a true difference with each dollar.

Diana Martin

Managing Director

Smile Farms

Today, Smile Farms has 11 campuses in the New York area. It has expanded its partnerships to include non-profits that serve not only individuals with developmental disabilities but those with other disabilities as well. 

Smile Farms creates meaningful opportunities at local farms, urban gardens, and greenhouses for hundreds of adults and youth with different abilities. There they can grow and sell flowers, plants, and produce in the communities where they live. Almost none of the Farmers have worked before, so for the first time, they are able to experience the satisfaction of mastering new skills, the pleasure of contributing to their team and community, and the thrill of taking home a paycheck.

Make wishes come true with fun, festive gifts

floral embrace smile farms

Floral Embrace

Like a warm embrace, our vibrant Floral Embrace bouquet delivers your sentiments to someone special. A gathering of yellow and orange blooms with pops of bright pink and purple, it’s more than a gift — it’s a way to express how you feel inside.

Photo of the Good Day Bouquet, which will bring smiles and support Smile Farms

Good Day Bouquet

The Good Day Bouquet is a great way to deliver smiles! Bunches of blooms in uplifting colors are gathered into our keepsake smiley face container, delivering just the brightness they need to make their day better. Perfect for celebration-worthy moments and everyday sentiments.

Gourmet Drizzled Strawberries

Gourmet Drizzled Strawberries

Say “happy birthday” with gourmet drizzled strawberries. Fresh and juicy, these irresistible treats will add flavor to any birthday celebration. Choose from two dozen, full dozen, or half dozen.

smile farms hot sauce

Red & Green
Hot Sauce

Heat with Heart™ hot sauce is composed entirely of peppers grown by our Smile Farmers with different abilities. Our fiery red and earthy green sauces are made with hot and sweet peppers grown across six Smile Farms campus locations.

english muffins smile farms

Super-Thick
English Muffins

Our world-famous, super-thick English muffins are the biggest of our three muffin sizes. The extra thickness means they’ll stand up to any topping, with tiny air pockets that make for a crisp bite every time they come out of the toaster.

smile farms moose munch

Moose Munch® Premium Tin

Moose Munch® Premium Popcorn is not your average caramel popcorn. Every detail of the recipe went through intense scrutiny, from the type of corn we use to how the caramel coats each popped kernel. It took over 160 attempts to get the original recipe absolutely perfect.

popcorn smile farms

Butterfly Wishes
Popcorn Tins

Give the perfect gift to make their special day pop! This gift features delicious popcorn in Butter, Cheese, and Caramel flavors.

The beautifully decorated two-gallon tin serves 32 delicious cups.

The 3.5-gallon tin serves 56 cups.

harry gift box smile farms

Harry’s
Gift Box

Harry’s Gift Box, named after one of Harry & David’s founders, features some of our most popular sweet and savory snacks. Favorites like hickory-smoked summer sausage and three-seed crackers are complemented by two of our signature sweet treats: juicy pears and classic caramel Moose Munch® Premium Popcorn.

smile farms birthday win

Fill their special day with sweet moments by sharing a bountiful birthday gift of delicious cookies. We’ve included festive flavors like buttercream-frosted chocolate cake and birthday cake, plus other favorites. Everything is nestled into a cheerful tin featuring the words “Happy Birthday.”

*“Net Proceeds” shall be defined as the gross sales price of the product less any and all taxes, service charges, shipping and handling charges, discounts, gift certificates, promotional gift certificates, promotional offers (e.g. airline miles, points, e-money, etc.) credits, rebates, chargebacks, refunds, credit card processing fees and gift certificate cancellations.

© 2023 Smile Farms Inc.  is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, EIN: 46-5360466.

Planting the Seeds: The Story of Smile Farms

Our series “Growing Smiles” explores the challenges faced by America’s developmentally disabled adults and the solutions provided by Smile Farms, the primary philanthropic endeavor of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc.

It’s planting time, and Tyler is keen to get started. The garden beds are prepped and ready, the weather is perfect, and Tyler concentrates on his task of carefully dropping seeds in the earth. “He’s the most stellar seeder in the world,” says Rob Melnick, who supervises Tyler and other adults who have learning challenges. “He’s our go-to guy for that.”

Tyler’s job helps him develop life-critical skills. It’s part of Smile Farms, a program that trains people with developmental disabilities to work in horticultural settings. For the Farmers, confidence and self-esteem grow alongside the seedlings.

“I like putting the seed into small boxes,” says Tyler. “I add dirt, seed, water, dirt, water to help them grow. Then they turn into plants!”

Growing plants and skills

Smile Farms Famers work on a planting bed

On this day, 26-year-old Tyler is working in the garden of a residential facility operated by Family Residences and Essential Enterprises (FREE), one of the organizations that collaborate with Smile Farms in the New York metropolitan area. Rob, who is vice president of community services at FREE, clearly delights in seeing how the Farmers enjoy their newfound passion and purpose. “By getting your hands dirty and engaging in a meaningful way, the body and soul and mind really come to fruition, especially with our agricultural programs,” he says.

Tyler is on the spectrum and has specific talents. Planting tiny seeds accurately is one of them. “Not just anybody can do that fine-motor skill and be able to very delicately take very minuscule seeds and properly sort them and then plant them,” Rob says.

And that, in a nutshell, is the essence of Smile Farms. Everyone has skills — they might just not have had a chance to develop them yet. It’s also true that everyone can be part of a team and thrive, taking satisfaction from their work.

“Smile Farms is often a first job for our Farmers — and many come to our programs without experience working with others toward a common goal,” says Diana Martin, managing director of Smile Farms. “We offer them the opportunity to literally grow together, individually, as a team, and from the earth. It’s very special to witness their pride in themselves and in the fruits of their labor.”

Part of the nonprofit’s success is a direct result of its commitment to forming relationships with local small businesses, whether with restaurants, stores, or other agricultural ventures. Smile Farms creates a web of experts and supporters, and in turn weaves in an expanding network of partner campuses.

Diana Martin Headshot

Smile Farms is often a first job for our Farmers — and many come to our programs without experience working with others toward a common goal. We offer them the opportunity to literally grow together, individually, as a team, and from the earth. It’s very special to witness their pride in themselves and in the fruits of their labor.

Diana Martin

Managing Director

Smile Farms

The first seed is planted

The Smile Farms story began in 2015 with the McCann family. Kevin McCann lives in a group home on Long Island, New York, run by Independent Group Home Living (IGHL). When the program’s CEO, Walter Stockton, mentioned to Kevin’s brother Jim McCann, founder and chairman of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc., that he was having trouble finding work for residents, Jim told him he’d be happy to help.

But when Jim scanned the local job market, he discovered that there were indeed very few options for meaningful work for people with developmental disabilities. “Work is about a lot more than a paycheck,” says Jim. “It’s about who we are, it’s social, it’s about fulfillment engagement, a sense of contributing, and giving back, learning and growing.”

“Job numbers for people with disabilities were low before the pandemic, and certainly numbers have dropped dramatically,” says Donna Meltzer, CEO of the National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities. “And we don’t know how many of these jobs will come back.”

Pre-pandemic, the employment-to-population ratio for people with disabilities living in community settings was 38.9 percent in 2019, according to the Annual Report on People with Disabilities in America: 2020, compiled by the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability. To put that in context, the ratio for people without disabilities is more than double, at 78.6 percent. And Donna says that the employment rate for people with intellectual disabilities is even lower.

Jim McCann

Work is about a lot more than a paycheck. It’s about who we are, it’s social, it’s about fulfillment engagement, a sense of contributing, and giving back, learning and growing.

Jim McCann

Founder and Chairman

1-800-FLOWERS.COM

Jim was determined to fill that opportunity gap. He and his brother, Chris McCann, CEO of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, embarked on a mission to design a nonprofit that would teach skills and hire people to grow flowers and produce, in turn giving them the opportunity to flourish.

Today, job creation is still a focal point for Smile Farms, but the organization now expands on the educational and vocational programs offered by its partners, too. This helps the Farmers develop more skills, which in turn will lead to a wider range of fulfilling work opportunities.

A dream becomes reality

Smile Farms Farmers
Photo by Valery Rizzo

Smile Farms broke ground on its first working garden in 2015 at IGHL. Today, 140 Farmers receive paychecks funded by Smile Farms, and the organization impacts countless families across 10 campuses. Almost none of the Farmers have worked before, so it’s the first time they are experiencing the satisfaction of mastering new skills, the pleasure of contributing to their team and community, and the thrill of taking home a paycheck. 

The produce the Farmers grow is donated to nonprofits that serve communities in need. It’s also bought by local restaurants — chef Tom Colicchio sources it for his Small Batch restaurant in Garden City, New York, which prides itself on showcasing the best ingredients from Long Island. Some vegetables are enjoyed for dinner by the Farmers themselves, and baskets of them are sold at farmers’ markets to raise money that’s plowed back into Smile Farms and its partners’ projects.

Benefits of working with earth

They get such a great sense of purpose, the feeling that they’re part of something bigger than themselves, that they can give back.

Kim Brussell

Vice President of Public Affairs and Marketing

The Viscardi Center

There’s a powerful connection between working with the land, planting and growing, and health and mental benefits. The American Horticultural Therapy Association describes horticultural therapy as “a time-proven practice” that goes back centuries. Working in a garden or farm setting “helps improve memory, cognitive abilities, task initiation, language skills, and socialization,” the organization says, adding that vocational programs help “people learn to work independently, problem-solve, and follow directions.” 

Kim Brussell, vice president of public affairs and marketing at The Viscardi Center, another Smile Farms partner, notes the personal boost her students feel when they garden and grow. “They get such a great sense of purpose, the feeling that they’re part of something bigger than themselves, that they can give back,” she says. “Their work is very important, and they see it’s important. They’re donating all these cucumbers to a food bank or a mobile market that’s counting on them — and that stays with them.”

Adapting and growing

Farmers at Smile Farms pose in front of a planting bed

Just as the Farmers learn and develop new skills, Smile Farms is adapting to changing times itself. When the COVID-19 pandemic made it impossible for the Farmers to work and socialize together, Smile Farms came up with ways to keep everyone’s enthusiasm and connection strong.

One particularly well-received project? Seed-planting kits. “We thought, ‘Well, we can’t bring our Farmers together, but we can give them something that mimics the experience of watching something grow and getting your hands dirty and watering it, seeing how it grows over time, and we can get it to them at home,’” says Diana. “We created kits by putting together basil, shovels, sun-catchers, and T-shirts,” she says. “Then we paired them with an art kit and painting video so they could explore that area of creativity at home as well.”

Although Smile Farms has only been up and running for five years, Diana says it has innovated and earned itself a solid reputation as a nonprofit leader in creating solutions for unemployment among young adults and adults with developmental disabilities.

Bringing the Heat: At Smile Farms, Hot Sauce Comes With a Kick and a Purpose

Our series “Growing Smiles” explores the challenges faced by America’s developmentally disabled adults and the solutions provided by Smile Farms, the primary philanthropic partner of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc.

It’s hard to write about the upcoming hot sauce from Smile Farms without loading up on the clichés. It’s made with love. It’s all about teamwork. It’s a product that benefits lots of people. And it’s a sauce that gives back.

That’s because all of those are true.

Smile Farms is a nonprofit that trains people with developmental disabilities to work in gardening and horticulture, helping them master new life skills, contribute to a team and community, and take home a paycheck. And, of course, along with those comes a well-earned sense of pride and accomplishment.

This year, all seven Smile Farms partners are planting peppers on their campuses, which means 10 gardens growing about 2,500 pounds of peppers, if the garden gods smile. That should make 6,000 bottles of the hot stuff.

“Over 250 Farmers will be growing the hot and sweet peppers this season,” says Diana Martin, managing director of Smile Farms. “Planting began on May 19, and we plan on an October harvest.”

The perfect pepper plan

Smile Farms is working with Brooklyn Grange, a commercial urban farm that operates the world’s largest rooftop soil gardens — it grows on three roofs in New York City and harvests more than 100,000 pounds of organic produce a year.

The new sauce will be made with peppers grown by Smile Farmers and use Brooklyn Grange’s tried-and-true hot sauce recipe.

“Phoebe Tran, our garden manager, will be visiting each campus once a month to supervise the growing of the peppers for the Smile Farms hot sauce,” explains Michelle Cashen, project manager at Brooklyn Grange.

Michelle lists a slew of peppers with interesting names: The sweet peppers being planted by Smile Farms are Carmen, Escamillo, and Roulette. The hot peppers are Flaming Flare (yes, it sounds a bit dangerous), Hot Paper Lantern, Hungarian Hot Wax, Krimzon Lee, jalapeño, and habanero.

She says the peppers “will be especially good for hot sauce because they are unique, high-yielding, and very flavorful, giving lots of juice. They have a lot of meat to them, and are also bigger than some chile peppers.”

Source of inspiration

At the Smile Farms partner League Education and Treatment Center (LETC) campus in Brooklyn, Mark Handelman had the inspiration to create a hot sauce featuring peppers grown by Farmers on his campus. The idea was to use sales proceeds to help fund the site’s gardens and foster pride and satisfaction when the Farmers see people enjoying the fruits of their labors.

BurnAbility is the catchy name of the LETC hot sauce, created with Brooklyn Grange, and Phoebe Tran still consults at the LETC campus once a week.

Diana Martin Headshot

We want to put something out into the world that says people with disabilities can do everything you can do, and things that maybe you can’t do.

Diana Martin

Managing Director

Smile Farms

LETC program staff say they are delighted with the expertise the Brooklyn Grange team offers: “The Farmers have learned how to employ organic and sustainable methods, including the use of compost, companion planting, and how to attract pollinators and ‘good pests,'” they say. “The farmers are responsible for seeding, planting, tending, weeding, watering, fertilizing, harvesting, storing produce, and composting.”

Louis Pelino, director of Workforce Development for CFCS/LETC, stresses that it’s not just peppers that grow from the farm. “I can tell you that the farmers derive immense satisfaction from working on the farm and producing a product that they can be proud of,” he says. “They are excited to come to work every day and are eager to learn new parts of the process. Each person has found new ways to excel. For most of them, working at the farm is more than a job. It’s part of their identity, for which they are very proud. The paycheck doesn’t hurt either — payday is a very exciting day here!”

When LETC started its pepper project in 2019, Smile Farmers at the campus grew and harvested 337 pounds of hot and sweet peppers that eventually turned into 1,000 bottles of delicious red and green hot sauce.

Sauce specifics

So, inquiring spice connoisseurs want to know: What will be the flavor profile of this new Smile Farms sauce? Michelle is happy to share everything but the secret recipe:

“The characteristics of the Smile Farms hot sauce are that it will be mild to medium in heat and very flavorful,” she says. “Fresh herbs and the variety of peppers will make a difference — we are not using extracts as other recipes do.” One thing that will not be in the hot sauce? Artificial ingredients.

Shining a light on artists

The labels for the hot sauce bottles have had as much thoughtful input as the choice of peppers. For starters, the lively pepper character on the label is “Patty Pepper,” named in honor of Patty Altadonna, assistant to 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. Founder Jim McCann. The background is artwork from the Farmers themselves. “The Farmers at the Viscardi Center made the artwork for this year’s bottles, and every year we will feature art from a different partner,” says Diana. The artwork on the first labels is an orange and red design that conjures up peppers, heat, and flame.

Diana’s face lights up when she talks about the hot sauce labels: “Our partner organizations tell us they have people who are just amazing artists,” she says.

“We want to put something out into the world that says people with disabilities can do everything you can do, and things that maybe you can’t do,” she explains. “Smile Farms is not limited to gardening, even though that’s where we started — we want to bring that awareness in a much larger way. We see the label as a way to highlight those other skills as well.”

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