Dinners at the Farm
Transcription
Dinners at the Farm
DINNERS at the FARM Dinners at the Farm is a series of bene t dinners shing and the often forgotten value of eating granted by the Eastern States Exposition celebrating local food, farms and community. fresh, vibrant food that was just harvested by Organization as part of Working Lands Alliance Created in 2007 by Jonathan Rapp, chef and a dedicated farmer you know and trust. The and American Farmland Trust. The award was owner of River Tavern Restaurant in Chester, dinners also raise funds for local agricultural and presented at a ceremony held in the state capitol Conn. and Drew McLachlan, chef and owner of humanitarian non-pro t organizations such as on November 16, 2008. Recreating a sense of Feast Market in Deep River Conn., Dinners at the Working Lands Alliance, a project of American connection to farming, cooking and eating is what Farm serves as a vehicle generating awareness of Farmland Trust, CitySeed Urban Farmers Market, Dinners at the Farm is all about. the importance and vitality of our local farming SLOWFOOD-Connecticut, Connecticut Farmland community and the delicious, wholesome and Trust, Shoreline Soup Kitchens & Pantries among On the following pages is a collection of publicity abundant food it provides us. Each dinner is a others. In the past two seasons we’ve donated clips generated by Dinners at the Farm. Each tells unique experience held in the very elds from over $28,000 and purchased over $60,000 worth the story of the dedication and hard work of all which the evening’s menu is sourced. The menus of produce from local farmers. Through their those involved but especially they capture the are spontaneous and bountiful, highlighting the hard work with Dinners at the Farm, Jonathan excitement and energy of supporting something richness of our local traditions of farming and and Drew were awarded the PathFinder Award so bene cial to so many. national media Futuristic Guides and Farm Dining coalition of customers—something absolutely crucial in a town with fewer people than the number that walked by Etats-Unis in a day. In our own minds, we were the best restaurant around—but the fact was, we weren't connecting with our customers. A Moveable Feast I set out to change that, starting with my own attitude. By PAIGE REDDINGER Our customers here at River Tavern have a different set of assumptions and expectations of a restaurant than I had come to expect in New York City. Good food and service are still paramount, but they want it in a package that’s familiar. Our customers tend to be more conservative and less excited by the prospect of being challenged by their dinner. While our fundamentals remained unchanged, I redirected much of the focus, work, and imagination that I had given to cooking to the task of growing a truly successful, sustainable business—one based on a real concern and strategy for making our customers happy. The Entrepreneur: Jonathan Rapp, 41 Background: After a 10-year run operating the Michelin-starred, critically acclaimed New York City restaurant Etats-Unis with his father, Rapp moved to the small village of Chester (Conn.) seven years ago to strike out on his own. The Company: River Tavern is a 55-seat restaurant serving a menu that changes daily, sourced with local ingredients. From the outset, Rapp hoped to create a neighborhood spot that was good enough to draw customers from across the whole state. Revenues: $1.6 million (estimated for 2008) His Story: When I opened River Tavern in tiny Chester, I knew the path to becoming successful in rural Connecticut would be different than in Manhattan, but I gured that my restaurant experience coupled with my intimate knowledge of the area would give me a big head start. I had a successful concept, a large group of excited supporters, and was opening in a charming, well-to-do town with a reputation for sophistication. Two dif cult years later, with business shrinking and criticism even from supporters impossible to ignore, I was trying to gure out what had gone wrong and how I could x it. The restaurant was essentially bankrupt, kept alive for the moment with loans from friends and family. It was time to take a hard, unforgiving look at my assumptions, my approach, and our execution. TAKING STOCK I had been cooking since I was 12; my rst restaurant job was at 14. My hero was Alice Waters, who had made a religion of cooking careful, simple food from only the freshest, locally produced ingredients. I was a disciple. Etats-Unis was about the food. I spent hours each week at the Union Square Greenmarket, lugging hundreds of pounds of local produce back to the restaurant. Two more mornings a week were spent at the Fulton Fish Market scouring the stalls for the freshest sh. In the open kitchen, I was driven, uncompromising, and I must admit, a bit of a jerk. Too often, customers could hear and see my dad and me arguing. Our staff likewise endured my occasional profane outbursts. But the food was great and we had a loyal following that appreciated the restaurant for its quality and unique personality. The food press loved us. Of course, we also alienated plenty of customers. But with literally millions of potential customers, great publicity, and 30 seats, it didn't much matter. New York City rewards that kind of obsessive, slightly arrogant focus. Rural Connecticut? Not so much. By Year Two, the trouble signs were too numerous to miss. Numbers were declining for both customers and revenue. There was a persistent drumbeat of criticism of virtually every aspect of the restaurant, except the food. No matter what we did, we couldn't shake the perception that we were too expensive, too “New York-y” (a nasty epithet here), and on top of that, had inconsistent, aloof service and a menu that was too limited. My staff and I became increasingly demoralized. With losses mounting, I had to go back to my investors and family for more money just to make payroll and pay necessary bills. I was getting desperate. The bottom came at the end of 2003. With my newborn son in intensive care, I became distracted from the business. Worse, the restaurant now felt like a stone around my neck. My father suggested that I sell and start over. When we took a hard look at the numbers, we discovered that there was nothing to sell. As tempting as it was at that point to just give up, deep down I knew I couldn't allow myself to quit. I was doing what I loved right? I couldn't fail. Revising the Recipe I realized that I had had the equation backwards. I was making decisions based on what I wanted. I hadn't been willing to make the compromises (as I saw it) sometimes necessary to create a broad For starters, I red my very talented chef who refused to make the changes that I felt necessary to save the restaurant. We renovated the dining room to make it more comfortable and warmer, and we expanded our offerings with an inexpensive bar menu full of simple favorites. We also tried to make the restaurant more accessible, opening for lunch and dinner every day. We offered a roster of half-priced weeknight specials: wine on Mondays and Tuesdays, cocktails on Wednesdays, beer on Thursdays, and a family dinner on Sundays where children could eat for free. Once we implemented those changes, we started thinking about how to extend our reach and capture new customers for the future. We began publishing a seasonal calendar of special events: monthly wine lunches, town-wide holiday events, and art openings with local artists. Our collaborations with local artists, restaurants, and businesses draws on and reinforces our image as a member of an unique, thriving village. Our customers love the sense that we are working creatively together to make Chester vibrant. By far the best and most promising idea I’ve had is Dinners at the Farm, a summertime series of outdoor dinners that we put on in the elds of local farms. The food, 100% locally produced, is cooked from scratch on our bright red 1955 Ford re truck kitchen. Each dinner bene ts a local agricultural nonpro t. O ver the past two seasons, we have donated $28,000 and purchased over $50,000 worth of food and wine from local producers. More than 150 guests show up on any given night. I now get as much satisfaction from the challenges of keeping my restaurant fresh and exciting as I did from cooking. It is now more than twice as busy as it was and growing at 20% a year—teeming daily with regulars and newcomers. With the economy slumping, things will certainly be tough in the coming months, but I think we are in a better position than many of our competitors. Looking back over the last four years, I am amazed at the change in my restaurant. River Tavern now embodies the idea that while you can’t be all things to all people, you can be a lot of things to many. —edited by Stacy Perman As the sun sets in the horizon, a member of the Outstanding in the Field team chops vegetables on the cutting board as guests wait eagerly in the fields. “Forget trying to get a reservation at Joel Robuchon or The French Laundry. This summer's coveted tables are out in farm fields, literally. A raft of new businesses started by restauranteurs and food enthusiasts are offering outdoor culinary experiences everywhere from the Napa Valley to Spain's Basque country. The idea is to supply diners with great food and ambience and to reconnect them to the land where the food is grown while supporting local farms and artisans.” “... ...Dinners at the Farm meals, however, are always prepared by its founders, chefs Jonathan Rapp of River Tavern in Chester, CT and Drew McLachlan of Feast Gourmet Market in Deep River, CT. They started the company two years ago after hosting several outdoor dinners at nightfall after a local farmer's market. Rapp and McLachlan make everything from scratch right down to the bread, charcuterie and preserves. Due to the increasing popularity of these dinners which range from $100-$180 a plate, they sell out months in advance. Rapp and McLachlan are even contemplating franchising their business by creating partnerships with other chefs and farms to help spread the word about supporting small local agriculture and preserving farmland. At the end of the day, all the cooking and hard work boils down to one simple fact: "There's just something about the spirit of cooking and eating in the very field that the food came from that's pretty special," says Rapp.” www.dinnersatthefarm.com Diners across the U.S. head to the farm Posted 9/28/2007 3:53 AM By Cara Rubinsky, Associated Press Writer LYME, Conn. — Forget the maitre d’ and import ed caviar. Sophisticated diners are now tromping across muddy elds and braving mosquito bites to eat gourmet food at its very source. Outdoor dinners at family farms, popular on the West Coast for several years, are making their way east as part of a local food movement fueled by concerns about tainted food and a desire to eat vegetables grown nearby rather than halfway around the world. “The cruel irony is that this is the way every one used to eat,” said chef and restaurant owner Jonathan Rapp, a co-founder of Connecticut’s Dinners at the Farm series. “Now it is special, and hopefully we’re going to get to a point where it becomes ordinary again, where eating whole some, locally grown delicious food is every day.” While the U.S. Department of Agriculture doesn’t keep statistics on farm dinners, the Con necticut program isn’t alone. A California company, Outstanding in the Field, started with two farm dinners for 60 to 70 people in the Santa Cruz area in 1999. A few years later, Chef Jim Denevan and his crew were traveling across the country. This year, joined by chefs from all over, they’ll have served 80 to 140 people at ea ch of 14 dinners in California, Massachusetts, Canada, Illinois, New York and Kentucky since June. The next is Sunday in California’s Sonoma County. “Everybody has to eat and they eat every day, yet previously no one had any idea where their food came from,” Denevan said. “People realized along the line that the story of where the food came from might make food more interesting but also make it taste better.” Denevan has been pleased to see similar din ners elsewhere, including some put on in Oregon by a company called Plate & Pitchfork. “I think our goals have been met when they just kind of pop up in obscure places and people don’t necessarily know where they got the idea,” Denevan said. Connecticut’s Dinners at the Farm series was conceived last fall as Rapp hunched over a Weber grill in the pouring rain to cook at a fundraiser. He and local farm owner Chip Dahlke wanted to feed more people the same way. They enlisted Drew McLachlan, a chef and gourmet market owner, to join them in planning and executing 10 dinners, each held at a different farm to raise money for charities. USA Today picked up the AP wire story as did over 30 other publications throughout the country [Including a slideshow with commentary]. They out tted a 1955 Ford F600 with a smok er grill and a six-burner commercial range and approached area farmers about supplying produce and locally raised meats. “We’re friends with the people who grew all this food,” Rapp said. “Most of the people who eat here know the people who grew this food. It adds a whole other human element to it.” They originally hoped to feed 80 people at each event, but now draw nearly twice that. A recent dinner in a southeastern Connecticut horse pasture drew more than 150 people, who gathered at long tables for a 10-course meal made only of ingredients from less than 30 miles away. “Whatever is happening here, it’s a good thing,” Dahlke said. “This will probably be re membered like Woodstock was in 1969.” Guests who pay $85 a ticket never know exactly what they’ll be eating or who they’ll be sitting with until they show up that night. Often the farmers who produced the food are there to talk about it. “It’s very exible and free, and in a lot of ways that’s sort of the point, that we’re working with whatever’s available, whatever’s freshest, whatever’s best at that moment,” Rapp said. Guests are warned ahead of time to wear sturdy shoes, and no one seems to mind the occasional bug bite or mud puddle. “This is so wonderful to actually be in the spot where your food was grown, and it reconnects you to nature,” said Alyse Chin of East Haddam, whose sister bought her and her husband dinner tickets as a birthday present. Course after course emerged from the kitchen, bruschetta and pizza appetizers followed by three different types of salad, a hearty sh soup and three main courses. Stomachs already full, diners groaned, then dug in as volunteer waiters distributed bowls of peach cobbler. Strangers no more, they shook hands and exchanged phone numbers, promising to call or visi t. It’s a scene familiar to Kathy Stephenson of Old Lyme, who attended a dinner this summer and was so smitten that she became a volunteer member of the kitchen staff. “There’s a glow under the tent, it’s great food, people are happy,” she said as she chopped squ id to top a pizza appetizer. “They’re drinking wine and they’re eating great food and I think they know they’re part of something really special. It’s really magical.” Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Diners Across the U.S. Head to the Farm Sep 28 02:53 AM US/Eastern By CARA RUBINSKY, Associated Press Writer LYME, Conn. (AP) - Forget the maitre d’ and imported caviar. Sophisticated diners are now tromping across muddy elds and braving mosquito bites to eat gourmet food at its very source. They out tted a 1955 Ford F600 with a smoker grill and a six -burner commercial range and approached area farmers about supplying produce and locally raised meats. Outdoor dinners at family farms, popular on the West Coast for several years, are making their way east as part of a local food movement fueled by concerns about tainted food and a desire to eat vegetables grown nearby rather than halfway around the world. “We’re friends with the people who grew all this food,” Rapp said. “Most of the people who eat here know the people who grew this food. It adds a whole other human element to it.” “The cruel irony is that this is the way everyone used to eat,” said chef and restaurant owner Jonathan Rapp, a co -founder of Connecticut’s Dinners at the Farm series. “Now it is special, and hopefully we’re going to get to a point where it becomes ordinary again, where eating wholesome, locally grown delicious food is every day.” While the U.S. Department of Agriculture doesn’t keep statistics on farm dinners, the Connecticut program isn’t alone. A California company, Outstanding in the Field, started with two farm dinners for 60 to 70 people in the Santa Cruz area in 1999. A few years later, Chef Jim Denevan and his crew were traveling across the country. This year, joined by chefs from all over, they’ll have served 80 to 140 people at each of 14 dinners in California, Massachusetts, Canada, Illinois, New York and Kentucky since June. The next is Sunday in California’s Sonoma County. “Everybody has to eat and they eat every day, yet previously no one had any idea where their food came from,” Denevan said. “People realized along the line that the story of where the food came from might make food more interesting but also make it taste better.” Denevan has been pleased to see similar dinners elsewhere, including some put on in Oregon by a company called Plate & Pitchfork. “I think our goals have been met when they just kind of pop up in obscure places and people don’t necessarily know where they got the idea,” Denevan said. Connecticut’s Dinners at the Farm series was conceived last fall as Rapp hunched over a Weber grill in the pouring rain to cook at a fundraiser. He and local farm owner Chip Dahlke wanted to feed more people the same way. They enlisted Drew McLachlan, a chef and gourmet market owner, to join them in planning and executing 10 dinners, each held at a different farm to raise money for charities. They originally hoped to feed 80 people at each event, b ut now draw nearly twice that. A recent dinner in a southeastern Connecticut horse pasture drew more than 150 people, who gathered at long tables for a 10-course meal made only of ingredients from less than 30 miles away. “Whatever is happening here, it’s a good thing,” Dahlke said. “This will probably be remembered like Woodstock was in 1969.” Guests who pay $85 a ticket never know exactly what they’ll be eating or who they’ll be sitting with until they show up that night. Often the farmers who produced the food are there to talk about it. “It’s very exible and free, and in a lot of ways that’s sort of the point, that we’re working with whatever’s available, whatever’s freshest, whatever’s best at that moment,” Rapp said. Guests are warned ahead of time to wear sturdy shoes, and no one seems to mind the occasional bug bite or mud puddle. “This is so wonderful to actually be in the spot where your food was grown, and it reconnects you to nature,” said Alyse Chin of East Haddam, whose sister bought her and her husband dinner tickets as a birthday present. Course after course emerged from the kitchen, bruschetta and pizza appetizers followed by three different types of salad, a hearty sh soup and three main courses. Stomachs already full, diners groaned, then dug in as volunteer waiters distributed bowls of peach cobbler. Strangers no more, they shook hands and exchanged phone numbers, promising to call or visit. It’s a scene familiar to Kathy Stephenson of Old Lyme, who attended a dinner this summer and was so smitten that she became a volunteer member of the kitchen staff. “There’s a glow under the tent, it’s great food, people are happy,” she said as she chopped squid to top a pizza appetizer. “They’re drinking wine and they’re eating great food and I think they know they’re part of something really special. It’s really magical.” July 27, 2008 connecticut media July 26, 2007 July 26, 2007 July 5, 2007 CONNECTICUT MAGAZINE | August 2007 August 9, 2007 CONNECTICUT COTTAGES & GARDENS | August 2007 INK | August 2007 INK | August 2007, continued EDIBLE NUTMEG | Summer 2007 EDIBLE NUTMEG | Spring 2008 EDIBLE NUTMEG | Spring 2008 continued EDIBLE NUTMEG | Spring 2008 continued July 13, 2007 May 10, 2007 May 21, 2008 July 13, 2007 November 30, 2007 July 4, 2008 September 6, 2008 July 5, 2007 Dinners at the Farm Celebrate Local Food By: JULIE ANNE RANCOURT, Special to The Press CHESTER—The idea grew out of a passion for cooking, the joy of being outdoors and a desire to give back to local farmers and charities. When chefs Jonathan Rapp and Drew McLachlan met and became friends, they started talking about cooking dinners for people outside in a natural setting. They thought they’d do it once or twice a summer. They’re now in their second season of “Dinners at the Farm” and hosting 12 dates this season. Last year, they donated more than $17,000 to local non-pro t organizations and purchased more than $30,000 worth of local farm produce. The pair recently hosted three dinners to bene t the Shoreline Soup Kitchens & Pantries at the garden behind Grace Church on Main Street in Old Saybrook. SSK&P served more than 500,000 meals last year and distributed food through four pantries in area churches. The garden where the dinner was held has produced an average of 10,000 pounds of produce each season it’s been grown. And although the need for SSK&P ser vices normally increases about 12 percent each year, this year’s tough economic times drove it up 43 percent. Through Dinners at the Farm, Rapp and McLachlan donated $3,000 to SSK&P which will translate to 12,000 meals for the food-dependent. As well as offering a beautiful setting for the evening’s dinner, the SSK&P garden also provided some of the items on the menu, including purslane—a “naturally occurring vegetable product,” as Patty Dowling, direc tor of the SSK&P, described it. “It’s a weed,” Claudia Van Nes, SSK&P volunteer and board member retorted. Van Nes started the garden six years ago and explained that it is tended by volunteers and has expanded to more than twice the size since its inception. The purslane was used in the recipe Seared Scallop With Purslane Molé And Corn Salsa. The dinner featured seven courses as well as appetizers and wine selections to compliment the meal and not all the ingre dients were as pedestrian as the purslane. Dinners at the Farm takes dining al fres co to a new level. According to its Web site, “Guests are seated under a twilight sky to a long white, linen-draped table adorned with stunning wild owers, antique reproduction copper lanterns (which are handmade in Ivoryton), white porcelain table settings and silverware.” The menu for Dinners at the Farm is spontaneous, based on what’s available and fresh off the docks. Diners are encour aged to come hungry and enjoy a “truly magical and delicious dining experience.” The gourmet feast began with Cool Summer Squash Soup with Clams and Pesto before moving on to the scallop course. Much of the seafood was purchased on the docks of Stonington. McLachlan said, “The Connecticut shing industry is on its last leg,” but anyone can walk up to the docks and purchase the catch of the day, getting the freshest catch possible and supporting local shermen. Then there was Gnocchetti With Summer Vegetable Guanciale and Herbs, followed by Pan-Seared Striped Bass With Squash, Tomato and Onion Ragout. And the meat courses consisted of Chicken Braised With Wild Mushrooms, Carrots, Onions and Tomatoes and Grilled Paillard of Beef With Lettuces and Corn On The Cob. The evening was topped off with a light summer Fruit Tri e for dessert. In welcoming their guests, Rapp, owner of River Tavern in Chester, and McLachlan, owner of the Deep River Feast Market, ex plained why these dinners were so impor tant to them. All ingredients were purchased locally in an effort to bring business to local farmers and shermen and to raise awareness of what they have to offer. “One of the main points of this exercise is to showcase the incredible bounty that exists in New England, especially in Connecticut,” Rapp told the crowd. “Everything that you’re going to eat to night was harvested within 20 or 30 miles, most of it more local than that,” Rapp con tinued. “The our for the tempura came from that little patch right there,” Rapp told the diners as they applauded the appetizer that they had just enjoyed. Dowling thought it tied in nicely with the effort to help SSK&P. “It’s such a nice con nection with the local food and farming. The more local food we have, the cheaper it’ll be and more easily available,” Dowling said. Other than the food, the star of the evening was the 1955 candy-apple red Ford F-600 pick-up truck, which serves as a mobile kitchen. The atbed of the truck has been retro tted with a six-burner stove, a grill top, sink, refrigerator as well as a food prep area. The truck was purchased as a practical mat ter to make the series of dinners mobile, but it adds a tting pastoral centerpiece for the evening. Tickets are $130. Dinners at the Farm draws people from as far away as Penn sylvania and has been featured in Time magazine. Some diners came for the experience of eating outdoors. Some came for the gourmet menu. And all applauded Rapp and McLachlan’s efforts to help out those less fortunate. Dinners at the Farm will next be at White Gate Farm in East Lyme Aug. 15 to 17; and at Humdinger Farm, Hamden, Sept. 12 to 14. For information, see www.dinnersat thefarm.comor call (860) 526-9417. RIVER & SHORE | Summer 2008 August 6, 2008 While many restaurants grow stale over time, not this one. Last year Jonathan headed up the wildly successful “Dinners at the Farm” with his longtime friend Drew McLachlan. Local, seasonal, farm-fresh fare is the star at these dinners. The series raised $17,000 for various charities and this year these movable feasts will take place throughout the summer at different picturesque locales. June 6, 2007 June 6, 2007 May 10, 2007 July 26, 2008 Jonathan Rapp and Drew McLachlan have volunteered their time and shared their understanding of good foods with our communities. Their commitment to the bene ts of utilizing local food systems has been an integral part in the education of our children. May 10, 2007 December 27, 2007 September 27, 2007 May 15, 2008 June 14, 2007 television, radio, and online media Dinners at the Farm By Dorie Greenspan They’re being called Dinners at the Farm, but the y might just as well be called a community revolution, since these summer meals could change everything about the way the people in our little stretch of Con necticut think about what they eat and whom they eat it with. From now through early October, there will be ten dinners, each held on a farm, each bene ting a lo cal non-pro t organization and each serving only the foods sold at the Lyme Farmers Market - translation: foods from within about a 30-mile radius of dinner. The series is the brainchild of Chip Dahlke, own er of Ashlawn Farm and host of the Farmers Mar ket; the gifted Jonathan Rapp, chef/owner of River Tavern in Chester, Drew and Claudine McLachlan, who own Feast Gourmet Market in Deep River, and, of course, the farmers. Friday night, under a sky that was alternately threatening, wet and gorgeous - we had a ray or two of sun, a couple of downpours, a rainbow, black clouds, then stars and a peek-a-boo moon - there was a kick-off dinner for the farmers and winemak ers whose products we would be savoring all sum mer, organizers from the groups that will receive donations from the dinners, and local press. We all ate at one very long table and it was mag ical to look in either direction and see people eat ing and drinking fresh, beautifully prepared food, laughing, talking and marveling at the setting. The menu was put together late in the afternoon, only after Jonathan knew what ingredients he’d have in hand, and everything was prepared on Riv er Tavern’s “chuckwagon,” a red 1953 Ford atbed out tted with a commercial range, a smoker a nd some racks and counters. The food was both simple and amazing for its goodness, quality and perfect preparation: warm squid (see below), a mixed seafood salad with scallops, lob ster, Stonington red shrimp and bass on a bed of pris tine greens, a porchetta with roasted tomatoes and a strawberry crostata with whipped cream. Every bite of food came from a farmer or producer who was seat ed at the table and we drank wine from local Chamard Vineyards with the winemakers right there. Everything was served family style and it was lovely to be passing the food among us and serving one another. There was a lot of table-hopping (if you can call jumping up to talk to people who are all at the same table table-hopping) and even truck-hopping - yes, that’s Jacques Pepin up there with Jonathan, who’s on the right. In fact, Jacques will be cooking at one of the summer dinners and Jonathan asked me if I’d do desserts for a couple of them. Yes, yes, of course, I said “yes!” It was an inspired evening and I left ing if such evenings would be possible at Farmers Markets around the country. The effort is huge and it’s not every chef who wants to cook for a crowd when he doesn’t have a clue about what will turn up in the larder, but the rewards for a community are tremendous. wonder For me, it was extraordinary to be able to share the food of our region with the people who grow and produce it. It was another lesson in the power of food and one I wish everyone could have. Can we start a movement? Is there already a movement? doriegreenspan.com Sunday, 24 June 2007 Down on the Farm By Colin McEnroe August 17, 2008 You may have heard of Dinners at the Farm, a Con necticut program in which food enthusiasts actu ally go to to a farm where much of the ingredients are produced. Some of the proceeds go to a related charity. Last night, in perfect, gentle summer tem peratures and under a breathaking full moon, we ate at White Gate Farm in Lyme. Seven courses, us ing meat, sh, cheese, fruits, wines and vegetables drawn from all over the state. Drew McLachlan and Jonathan Rapp were our chefs. The bene ciary was Working Lands Alliance a project of American Farmland Trust. It was one of those rare dinners that remind you of what food really is—something sacred, emotional, beauitful, integral. But the fabulous Michelle Paulson pictures tell it better. And our chefs for the evening, who cooked all of the meals from the back of an ingeniously equipped truck. media placement - 2 0 0 7 public relations & marketing communications consultant media placement for 2 0 0 8 Dinners at the Farm public relations & marketing communications consultant National Conde Nast Traveler, February 2008 TIME MAGAZINE June 30, 2008 “A Moveable Feast” New York Times July 30, 2008 “Feasting on the Farm for Charity” Orlando Sentinel April 2008 “Savor Farm-fresh Flavor from Coast to Coast” BusinessWeek - Small Business Feature, November 24, 2008 Media placement for 2007 include: Chester Elementary Lunch Hartford Courant Town section Chester Elementary school lunch ½ page article and photo Valley Courier Front page photo with full page article inside New Haven Register News and notes section Dinners at the Farm Hartford Courant Cal section Dorrie Greenspan Blog, Food Writer & Cookbook Author WTIC 1080 Ray and Diane Show phone interview WTNH Channel 8 Nine minute studio interview with cooking demo Shore View Local paper one ½ page article and two weeks later full-page story front page of Living Section Shore Publishing - Valley Courier ¼ page teaser front section w/full-page front page of Living section plus ¼ page continuation of article complete with photos Lyme Times New Haven Register Manchester Journal Inquirer Providence Journal Food Notes section Event listing on Saveur website August issue of CT Magazine Summer issue of Edible Nutmeg August issue of INK Magazine Hartford Courant FLAVOR Section front-page New Haven Advocate Story Associated Press Story with a known pick-up of over 30 publications across the country including AP created full-color video clip complete with recorded audio narration from client Food & Wine: Dinners at the Farm story included on their Blog, describing Hay House Farm dinner FarmAid2007 NYC Hartford Courant Cal section MSNBC Farm Story (related to FarmAid Event) - Interview with Nunzio Fox 61 New York interview as part of station’s coverage of Homegrown festival Holiday Farm Dinner - Hale Hill Farm Hartford Courant Cal section Shore View Valley Courier Radio Interview (10 minutes) on the Kal London “CT’s Secret Treasures” WMRD/WMMR Connecticut Media Valley Courier, May 22, 2008 “Getting Back to the Farm - Dinners at the Farm 2008” Valley Courier, July 2008 “Sherwood Nursery School Kids Get Back to Nature” Hartford Courant June 5, 2008 Dining Section “A Farmers Showcase: Dinners Feature the Best Ingredients, And It’s for a Good Cause” Hartford Courant CAL Section, Best Bets, June 5, 2008 Hartford Courant, July 17, 2008 “Learning & Lunch Fresh Picked” Hartford Courant, July 26, 2008 “A Good Meal on the Go” ShoreView, July 3, 2008, “A Feast in the Fields” Middletown Press August 6, 2008 TASTE Feature “Fresh, Locally-grown Food Focus of Dinners” Edible Nutmeg Magazine-Summer “From a Moveable Feast” Including three recipes New Haven Register, July 7, 2008 Front page feature of LIFE section with photos New England Wine Gazette, September 2008 Television & Radio WFSB Channel 3 CT Grown/Dinners at the Farm Cooking Demo May 31, 2008 WFSB Channel 3 “Better Connecticut” September 11, 2008 WTNH Channel 8 Farm Dinner Cooking Demo “Live” outside studio with Truck NBC-30 Farm Dinner/Soup Kitchen specially produced piece aired July 10 th NBC-30 6:00 News, Lead News Story Live from Soup Kitchen Garden July 13, 2008 WTICColin McEnroe “Drive Time” Show May 6, 2008 - Jonathan Live interview WTIC- Colin McEnroe “Drive Time” Show July 25, 2008 (MP dressed as a Cucumber) WTIC- Colin McEnroe “Drive Time” Show August 18, 2008 Colin Talks up Dinners WDRC-1080 The Phil Miken Show, July 8, 2008 (MP interviewed) WDRC-1080 The Phil Miken Show, July 22, 2008 Jonathan & Nunzio WLIS/WMRD June 26, 2008 WLIS/WMRD July 1, 2008 WLIS/WMRD July 8, 2008 On-line Metromix Connecticut “Dinner at the Farm” PeterGreenberg.com “Eat Like a Local Even if You’re Not One” Colin McEnroe Radio Personality - Blog GreenScene.com Chow.com Blog Special Mentions Department of Agriculture’s Farm-to-Chef Program January, February & March Newsletters Department of Agriculture’s 1 st Annual Farm-to-Chef Meeting - Jonathan Rapp, keynote speaker and panelist, MP meeting moderator Connecticut Public Television’s Farm-to-Table Fundraising dinner, Jonathan and Drew keynote speakers along with Faith Middleton Radio Host Special Awards Pathfinder Award - Recognized as outstanding educational leader by Working Lands Alliance a project of American Farmland Trust, nominated by SlowFood CT Chapter Earth Charter Award michelle paulson, public relations email: mpsolutions@comcast.net phone: 860.391.1606 michelle paulson, PR, email: mpsolutions@comcast.net phone: 860.391.1606 Design by Nancy Freeborn Photography by Michelle Parr Paulson Dinners at the Farm Logo design & Corn Illustration by Cummings & Good River Tavern Restaurant 23 Main Street Chester CT Feast Gourmet Market 159 Main Street, Deep River CT