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VOICES

Meeting a food hero who once only served food grown in a prison garden

Seasonal produce should drive the day’s menu, rather than set menus driving the acquisition of produce.

I WAS LUCKY enough to meet one of my all-time heroes at Litfest at Ballymaloe recently. Alice Waters is owner/chef of Chez Panisse, the Berkeley restaurant widely acknowledged as one of the best in the world. Opened in 1971, its founding principles were to use only the finest and freshest seasonal ingredients produced sustainably and locally.

Chez Pannise was literally decades ahead of the local food movement, in much the same way that Myrtle Allen was decades ahead when she opened Ballymaloe House in Shanagarry in the 1960s.

At her Litfest talk, Waters told instructive anecdotes about the early days of the restaurant – how she hired a full time forager before the term forager was commonly used; planting the whole back yard at the restaurant in Mesclun salad to ensure a regular supply; and how her ‘patchwork of suppliers’ included a local couple who would bring in a handful of fingerling potatoes in exchange for lunch. “I had no interest in making money,” she said of that time, “I just wanted the food to be good.”

Helping students to connect with all aspects of food

In later years Alice Waters spread her passion beyond California becoming one of the world’s leading activists for local and seasonal food. The Edible Schoolyard programme, which she started in 1996 at Martin Luther King Jr Middle School in Berkeley contained a one-acre garden, adjacent kitchen-classroom, and an “eco-gastronomic” curriculum – helping students to connect with all aspects of food, from growing to cooking to eating.

She would later partner with Catherine Sneed’s remarkable garden project at San Francisco County Jail, with Chez Panisse serving food that was grown by the prisoners in their garden. Waters got emotional as she spoke about meeting one prisoner who said his first day working in the prison garden was the best day of his life.

Happily there are restaurants in Ireland following a similar approach to Chez Pannise – restaurants where the head grower is as revered as the head chef – the remarkable Harry’s restaurant in Inishowen, Loam in Galway; Mount Falcon in Sligo; Belleek Castle in Mayo and many more.

The idea behind our own GROW HQ, which will open in Waterford next year, is that all of the fruit and vegetables being served in the café will be grown right there on the site. All of these projects turn the standard restaurant modus operandi on its head – seasonal produce driving the day’s menu rather than set menus driving the acquisition of produce. Exciting times indeed.

Things to Do This Week – Pot up Courgettes

This time of the year is all about managing the timing of when you plant seedlings out in the garden. Do it too early and the plants will be knocked back by night-time cold. Do it too late and the plants become ‘pot-bound’ – that is, they have grown too large for their container resulting in tangling of the roots (and possibly bolting issues later on). I’m still too suspicious of the weather to plant out relatively tender plants like courgettes – by potting them on in to bigger pots, you buy yourself a couple of extra weeks where you can keep them in doors.

I sow courgette, squash, cucumber and pumpkin plants in 5cm pots or module trays but they grow incredibly quickly and need to be put in to larger pots within 2 weeks or so. Simply pop the seedling out of it’s old pot, put a little compost in the base of a bigger pot, place the seedling in carefully and then fill it in with compost. It pays to water the plants very well about an hour before hand – the seedlings pop out of the pots much easier then – and of course you need to water again after you have finished potting them on.

Recipe of the Week – Broad Bean Burgers

There’s a bit of work in this Yotam Ottolenghi recipe, but they are incredibly tasty and a great way to use broad beans. This serves four.

Tip of the Week – Growing kohlrabi

Kohlrabi is an excellent, fast growing brassica to grow and will do well sowed in module trays and then transplanted later. Two important tips:

Use module trays as opposed to regular seed trays or pots. Its almost impossible to separate the roots of the seedlings if you sow in a pot and the plants wont like having their roots disturbed (this applies to all brassicas). In a module tray the roots are kept separate, which makes it easy to transplant and means that you don’t have to touch the roots.

Always transplant before the kohlrabi seedlings have reached about 2 inches tall – this will prevent them from bolting.

Give Peas a Chance at Work

With our friends in Cully & Sully, we’re looking for 500 workplaces to take part in our ‘al desko’ food growing challenge by growing peas on their desk at work. Sign up today for a free Give Peas a Chance growing kit for you and up to 5 colleagues. Each week we will be picking our favourite growers to win cool GIY prizes and the top prize is worth €5,000 including a €3,000 garden which you can donate to your local community. Sign up at www.cullyandsully.com/ourgarden.

GIY’s vision is for a healthier, more connected and more sustainable world where people grow some of their own food. Each year we inspire and support over 65,000 people and 1,500 community food-growing groups and projects around Ireland, and run food-growing campaigns, events and publications. www.giyireland.com

Michael Kelly is a freelance journalist, author of ‘GROW COOK EAT’ and founder of GIY.

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