Posts Tagged ‘food’

Supporting Local Food is Getting Easier

// May 10th, 2008 // Comments Off // On the Radar

Tailgate Market: Sign

Something pleasant this way comes.

Spring and open markets.

The Matthew’s Market opened a few weeks ago, the Tailgate Market has begun to ramp up, and Yorkmont Farmers Market has many new faces, are you one of them?

The markets are truly brimming with activity, the weather has been fantastic, and the offerings are truly amazing. From meats, eggs, breads, pastries, chocolates, soaps, fixtures, and more. It is really amazing what is being produced in our region and the potential of what more could be.

If you have been waiting for a time to get to the markets, stop. They are closer and have more varieties than in many years. In Charlotte-Mecklenburg, County Health, has setup a number of roadside produce stands to help get many neighborhoods closer to the source of their food.

The point is get out once a week, early to mid-day depending on market choice and meet your farmer, buy some great food, or enjoy the crafts of a producer and support local.

Find Local Food and Farms

For more information on regional farming check out the Carolina Farm Stewardship and Slow Food Charlotte. Beyond the plate get involved and support where you can.

From Sun up to Sun Down, in the Rock Hill Area

// March 1st, 2008 // Comments Off // MoBlog, On the Radar

It’s been a full day for Robin and myself. A bunch of photography friends were heading to Asheville for some lessons, others were following along to take pictures on the town. I wanted to do something more normal. What’s more normal and low-key than visiting friends and skydiving? hah!

We woke early and bolted across the South Carolina border ready to see some good friends we don’t see enough of currently at Cupps Cafe. You can’t beat their cinnamon rolls and scones for a perfect way to start the day.

Hanging out till lunch time we grabbed a couple of “Mother Cluckers” and bolted to the dropzone down the street at Skydive Carolina to get some well needed therapy.

I’ve been grounded because of travel time, reserve repacks, and good ol’Winter Mother Nature. The skies just haven’t been friendly (and during February their not supposed to be) until today. With the temps in the 60s and a wind holding at about 15mph I got aloft and cruised around the skies in torpedo like fashion.

Gene repacked my reserve a few weeks ago and I had him flake my main. He used it to show students what a long term pack job does as mine came out in a pretty good square. It would have deployed, just sniveled a lot. No worries!

Today’s ride was great. Soft opening into a light right turn. I hung around the tandems then found a holding pattern until 1k where upon I entered the landing pattern.

Having a steady wind brought me nearly straight down and a perfect soft landing awaited me. What a purification process for the mind. Like a friend said, ‘You look blissed’, and I felt it.

We ended the day by coming back into Cupps for a dinner round where we drank a fantastic crisp sweet Riesling, ‘Clean Slate’, while working on the text for an upcoming Charlotte Art. Migrating over time into nachos and some delicious white-bean pork soup. Man this place rocks.

Time to head home.

Down the Rabbit Hole, Alice in Charlotte

// October 4th, 2007 // Comments Off // Activism, Culinary

>In another moment down went Alice after it, never once considering how in the world she was to get out again.

Luckily our Alice had the company of some adoring fans from our own celebrity chefs, the [Slow Food community](http://slowfoodcharlotte.org), and the [public at large](http://www.charlotteobserver.com/192/story/303217.html). From September 26th through 27th, Chef Alice Waters visited Charlotte, North Carolina gave talks, went on walks, and ate some of the best seasonal regional culinary fare the Queen City could muster.

North Carolina has lush land and when not suffering serious drought is a land of plenty. We’re overdue getting on the band-wagon of smart food choices for ourselves, our children, and supporting those that feed us. Alice Waters coming to Charlotte and delivering her [ideals](http://www.chezpanissefoundation.org/) to our city, our region, is a swift way to draw focus to the importance at hand.

Alice Waters at JWU (by ciordia9)

Chef Waters was brought to Charlotte via the Grateful Growers, Slow Food Charlotte, and Charlotte Shout. Her first stop on her tour was the Johnson and Wales campus where she had a lunch with school officials and Compass Group associates. She gave about a 45 minute [lecture](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1443584153/in/set-72157602163643386/) speaking of the importance of food in our culture, lack of food culture, obesity in America, and how very few are taking the correct initiatives to change it because of the bottom line. It was a fantastic discussion where she laced a few beautiful provocative statements which went towards the Compass Group (the Compass Group is a mega-multinational-conglomerate with a hiring capacity over 500k, King Kong of the commercial restaurant business).

Alice at Ratcliffe: Speech from above (by ciordia9)

For the evening festivities [Slow Food Charlotte](http://slowfoodcharlotte.org) held a lottery seating for it’s members at [Ratcliffe on the Green](http://ratcliffeonthegreen.com/). There Mark Hibbs, Executive Chef of Ratcliffe, and Owner Zach Goodyear pulled out all the stops for a regional and seasonal Carolina tasting menu. Heirloom gazpacho, [Local salads](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1455086938/in/set-72157602163643386/), cheeses, [coastal fish](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1454221093/in/set-72157602163643386/), [stuffed chicken](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1455091552/in/set-72157602163643386/), [grateful pork](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1454226591/in/set-72157602163643386/), and a perfect soft [apple dessert](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1455095666/in/set-72157602163643386/) ending.

Alice at Grateful Growers: Shitake (by ciordia9)

The next day she was greeted by Lell Trogdon of Slow Food Charlotte, and Kathleen Purvis of the Charlotte Observer and taken to [Grateful Growers](http://ggfarm.com) located in Denver, North Carolina. There she met many local sustainable farmers, chefs, and instructors from the area. The farmers of Grateful Growers, Natalie Veres & Cassie Parsons did the full tour explaining their raising of tamworth hogs, breeding program, how they raise chickens (the chics even get a good dose of classical music), and the movement cycles of the coop pens for the betterment of the land and the fowl. They ended their tour at the shitake logs which many Slow Foodies and friends helped last November to plug. They had just bloomed a few days before we got there and they plucked one off a log for Chef Waters. By the looks of it she really enjoyed her time with the farm girls.

Alice at Art Institute: Chef Waters & Artisan Manager Ron Smith (by ciordia9)

With the sights and sounds of a farm in our heads many of us caravaned over to the Art Institute of Charlotte to follow Ms. Waters to her next visit. At the Art Institute she signed books and met more of our local chefs and dignitaries. Then [Chef Joe and Chef Tany](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467877431/in/set-72157602163643386/), with the help of their culinary students, produced a magnificent six course meal that left us all wobbly. [House cured charcuterie](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1468717854/in/set-72157602163643386/), [butternut squash soup](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467870803/in/set-72157602163643386/), [goat cheese puff pastry](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467868997/in/set-72157602163643386/), [local pork belly & shank](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467872927/in/set-72157602163643386/), [beef short-ribs](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467845631/in/set-72157602163643386/), and a great [sweet potato cheesecake](http://www.flickr.com/photos/ciordia/1467875251/in/set-72157602163643386/). Again all local, all in season, all wonderfully presented.

Alice at Blue: Chefs (by ciordia9)

After a short reprieve there was a reception for Ms. Waters at [Blue](http://www.bluerestaurantandbar.com/) with Executive Chef Gene Briggs. Alice got to meet some other regional Slow Food chapters and had a bit more face time with chefs of the area. Once again fantastic fare and enjoyable conversation followed her and this was no exception. There wasn’t as much time to relax and socialize as her main lecture at Queens Universities Dana Auditorium was coming up fast.

Alice at Dana (by ciordia9)

When she arrived at Dana I heard that she was amazed at the turnout. Thom Duncan said that Chef Waters was used to speaking to small groups of people and to have 500+ people show up to hear her talk was fantastic. We had groups from all over the eastern seaboard from New York to Florida that wanted to learn about the work Alice has been doing with the [Edible Schoolyard & School Lunch Initiative](http://www.chezpanissefoundation.org/work.html).

She went through a great speech calling out the education system for a lack of perspective. How were we teaching kids about their own and our planets emergencies. There was an urgency in her tone while she explained how food was culture and that we had for far too long relegated food to maintenance. The growing, cooking, serving, and eating of food is culture. That the more we separate ourselves the more we lose empathy, responsibility, integrated mathematics, design, biology, etc.

Living the fast food lifestyle of fast, cheap, and easy is driving us towards a sort of animalism. We teach by example and what we’re teaching is a dereliction of self and environment. Yet there was redemption in something as simple as a garden. How beautiful and poetic.

There are many things that stand in the way. The current farm bill promotes the food conglomerates getting cheap food, corn mainly, that allows them to make quarter sodas and feeding the population into obesity faster than we can walk. The farm bill should be a [food bill](http://slowfoodcharlotte.org/video/video/show?id=859287:Video:1383) and it should support farmers trying to create wholesome products raised through methods which produce a more nutritious, safer, food choice. It doesn’t, so get on the phone! The hidden cost of low cost fast foods is what balloons the health care bill while not at all making incentives for good business. The power of lobbyists.

Her solutions of getting kids graded on lunch, building gardens, bringing culinary ability back to the lunchroom, is a large endeavor with far reaching fantastic ramifications. It’s not insurmountable but it will require dedication and people, parents, teachers, turning on the lights of those above them. Everyone must see this for what it is, what it is doing, and wanting to not participate in the capitalising of Mother Nature via food conglomerates.

She left Charlotte with a standing ovation and chills running up many of our spines. Myself, and Slow Food Charlotte would like to kindly thank Chef Waters for gracing us and exposing us to better thoughts. As we carry this knowledge forward we would like to work with any group out there that is trying to facilitate change. Many activist, pro-humanist groups are working on the same problems and we need to touch base and support one another. Join us at [Slow Food Charlotte Online](http://slowfoodcharlotte.org) and participate in the discussion. Help move the needle forward.

Hello.. Goodbye.. Buongiorno

// May 27th, 2005 // 1 Comment » // On the Radar

I have been so busy.. so very very very busy.. My day jobs office is moving. If moving weren’t a difficult enough thing we’ve decided to cut out our infrastructure and really go lean. Not a bad thing at all, but I’m going on vacation and coming back right when our move occurs. I think my corner of the world is tight. We have a lot to do on my return, last minute data tosses and a whole lot of shutting down. Be on the lookout if your local for a craigslist bonanza.

That’s taking day and night cycles. Overlapping that is Italy, which I must say I think we’ve done a great job. We have the hotels, trains, museums, and tour all booked. I’ve hopefully cracked open my Treo from the grip of AT&T and have purchased a Italy TIM card.

We will be staying at the following:
* Milan, Hotel Baveria Mokinba

* Monterosso, Hotel 5 Terre

* Florence, Hotel Aprile

* Venice, Pensione La Calcina

We’ve spec’d out a number of restaurant’s from resources in print, web, and referral. I think our palate will be sufficiently overwhelmed. We are also planning a day trip to San Gimignano which I hear has the worlds best chocolate gelato. Ah the many wonderful things to run around at.

In tow will be a bag of clothes and a backpack full of technology, books, and maps. Boy are we styling. ;-) If you are around one of these area’s when we are (May 31-June 9), drop me an email and lets grab a cappa o del vino.

A lot of people helped pay for this trip. It’s part honeymoon, part vacation, and part business research. Thanks to all those who are making it possible.

-a

Oi Maggianos

// April 2nd, 2005 // Comments Off // MoBlog

Oi Maggianos

We waited over an hour and a half to sit down for dinner. We had called ahead but they said no one was there. Hah. 15 minutes later they were slammed. At least as usual once in and settled we were in for a great tasting meal. Now we have to rush home so we can hook Jeff up with some dessert.

-a