Showing posts with label Slow Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slow Food. Show all posts

Monday, April 11, 2011

One Hundred Miles of F.O.O.D.


Pinch me. I must be dreaming. Here, in the heart of regional NSW, the land of kelpies and white Toyota utes, I find myself in a scene similar to one I once stumbled upon (literally) down a midnight alley in Rome – family, friends, eating, drinking, dancing, laughing, under strings of festoon lights.
I’m in Canowindra for the annual 100 Mile Dinner – a highlight of the very popular Orange F.O.O.D Week festival held every April. Long communal tables are set for 340 guests, running the length of Canowindra’s historic crooked main street. Diners are bussed in 56 kilometres from Orange for this event, and tickets sell out on day one. Brightly coloured lanterns zigzag over head against a starry autumn night sky. The scene is quite delightful.

This year, F.O.O.D (Food of the Orange District) is celebrating its 20th anniversary. Over the past two decades it has become one of Australia’s most successful and authentic regional food events, never losing sight of its core philosophy to promote and support regional produce and producers, and in so doing, support the local economy and regional tourism. Considering the International Slow Food movement was founded only three years earlier in 1989, Orange’s F.O.O.D group could justifiably be described as a pioneer of the modern regional food movement in Australia.

The degustation100 Mile dinner represents the very best Central NSW produce prepared by the best Central NSW chefs and cooks. It takes its name from an experiment in local eating which turned into a best selling book called “The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating” by Canadians Alisa Smith and JB Mackinnon, published in 2005.

One hundred miles is roughly 160 kilometres – but the “160km Dinner” just doesn’t have the same ring. The 100 Mile Diet’s motto is “Local Eating for Global Change” – it’s all about food miles, carbon footprints, how far food travels from paddock to plate and supporting local farmers.

Edwena Mitchell is a member of the F.O.O.D Executive Committee and the co-ordinator of the 100 Mile Dinner in Canowindra. She is also a cook and caterer of formidable reputation. A typical no-nonsense country woman, Edwena runs her own successful catering business, is on every committee under the sun, works the family farm and shuttles children from one sporting event to the next. I asked Edwena if the 100 Mile concept – eating seasonally and regionally and supporting local economies – could ultimately save the world?

“Not all at once!” she laughs. “But it is the trickle down effect – you have to start somewhere!”

At face value the 100 Mile dinner is an excellent tourism and promotional event for regional food and wine. But beneath the fun and frivolity lies a serious and worthy cause. Edwina says it’s all about sustainability and conservation .

“Many farmers and producers would laugh at being called conservationists, but in reality we all are,” she says. “Around our area, after eight years of drought, conserving moisture and pasture and still managing to produce was the only way to scrape an income. And then there are “food miles” to consider. Why are we importing apples and other vegetables from China when we produce our own?”

But for one night at least, economic and political pressures are swept to one side as people enjoy all that is good and delicious about fresh, seasonal, local food.

Braised duck with kipfler potatoes and beetroot relish from Lindl Taylor and Josie Chapman in Orange is simply mouth-watering.
I want to go back for seconds, but there are other things to try. Bathurst lays on a fantastic slow braised venison osso bucco with baby carrots, Tuscan kale, Dutch cream potatoes and gremolata. Canowindra cooks bring it home with an incredible dessert of organic honey panna cotta with poached organic figs and hazelnut bread. What makes the menu special, is that almost all of the produce has been sourced from within the region. Think of Orange as ground zero and the region radiating out over 160 kilometres. The pork came from Trunkey Creek Pork near Blayney, the duck from Dutton Park Ducks in Young, and the goat from Meadows Prime Chevon in Lyndhurst. Fruit, vegetables, cheeses, nuts, honey, oil, bread and wines are all sourced locally too.

Close to midnight, a conga-line appears out of nowhere and I am swept away.
A middle aged man, who looks like he should know better, grabs me by the waist and laughs “Let’s Conga!” Not usually a team player, I surprise myself and join in the festivities. A group of local musicians are playing on the sidewalk in front of the old bank building. It’s cold, but no-one seems to notice. There is a real atmosphere of carnivale.

Then, as quickly as it began, it’s over. Like a flash mob, one minute people of all shapes and sizes are dancing and laughing in the street, the next they have picked up their belongings, boarded a bus and are gone.

By midnight the hard working committee and local volunteers are stacking tables and sweeping the street. Like Cinderella, Canowindra has turned back into its normal, reliable, unadorned yet lovely self. The ball is over. By 8am the following morning it’s business as usual. A young bloke in a big hat parks his hotted-up ute and races in to the bakery for a pie, the local publican receives kegs from the daily beer truck, and the shop owners of Canowindra open their doors for another day.

If you want a seat at next year's 100 Mile Dinner (April 16th 2012), be ready to purchase tickets in February 2012 at www.orangefoodweek.com.au

Friday, August 6, 2010

An evening of "real food"

My mother in-law, who is a fantastic cook, commented this morning that if she could have only one cook book she would probably choose Matthew Evans' "The Real Food Companion".  Today, I am basking in the after-glow of an intimate dinner for 75 with the Gourmet Farmer himself. Held last night at the wonderful Old Convent in Borenore, the dinner was part of Orange's annual Frost Fest. Matthew Evans is a former food critic for The Sydney Morning Herald who saw the light and moved to Cygnet in Tasmania to live a "real" life, grow his own organic produce, milk his own cows and eat his own animals. The entire move was documented in a great series called the Gourmet Farmer shown on SBS here in Australia.
Last night's meal  - featuring recipes from The Real Food Companion - was prepared by one of my favourite chef's in the region, Josie Chapman. It began with a simple wooden bread-board offering fresh Labna (yoghurt curd cheese), creamy, nutty hummus, wild olives and fresh bread, moved on to melt-in-your-mouth lamb shoulder braised with tomato and green olives (and served in rustic terracotta dishes by a local potter) and ended with "ye olde appley cakey" served with an old fashioned cornflour custard and hand made treacle ice cream. Wines were by local wine maker and former Australian Wine Maker of the Year, Philip Shaw. The atmosphere was magical - long communal tables set up in the old chapel, candle light reflecting sparkles onto the rough walls from an incongruous but delightful  mirror ball suspended from the vaulted ceiling, a fire blazing, and the whisper of almost-snow outside. Conversation was loud, opinionated and entertaining - just as Julia Child would have liked it! 
Matthew was on hand to talk about his philosophy on food - that it should be as organic, fresh, cruelty-free, seasonal and local as possible. He spoke about the "standardisation" of milk  - that the milk we think of as pure and fresh has not only been homogenised and pasteurised,  but it has also been put through an "ultra-filtration" process which pulls the milk apart into its various components before putting it back together again as...well... milk. He spoke about the irony of creating products such as mass produced cheeses that are so lacking in nutritional value that even bacteria cannot survive on them! He also spoke of the joys and frustrations of rearing his own animals on the farm in Tasmania. Turkeys, he said, were horrible animals to deal with, but "so good dead!". With apologies vegetarians, I think that would make a great title for his next book - "So Good Dead".
So, with my new copy of Matthew's book in hand, I am preparing a simple Lamb Shank and Pearl Barley Soup for dinner, served with fresh bread from Racine (Friday is bread day!). I also have a muslin lined sieve in the sink draining the whey from 1kg of full fat Greek-style yoghurt as I attempt to recreate his wonderful tangy Labna. I love having a new food hero!



Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Gearing up for the 100 Mile Diet Dinner

It's a big week. My Style deadline looms (Style is a fantastic independent lifestyle magazine for regional NSW) and I have three stories left to complete this week. As soon as the stories have been submitted, I will hit the ground running with preparations for the 100 Mile Diet Dinner to be held in our historic main street this Monday night 12th April... and for our smaller local "Twilight Tasting" in Memorial Park on Saturday night, for which I have to make fifty dark chocolate and cardamom mousses (note to self - must post recipe).
Canowindra's historic main street all dressed up for last year's 100 Mile Diet Dinner
The inaugural 100 Mile Diet Dinner was held last year - 300 people seated at long tables down our main street feasting on amazing food and wine all sourced from within a 100 mile radius. The concept hails from the Slow Food Movement in Canada - the idea that locally grown and consumed organic produce is better for your health, better for local economies and better for the planet. The event is part of the Orange FOOD Week celebrations (Orange, a major regional centre, is about 40 minutes from Canowindra) and was such a huge success last year that tickets for this year's dinner sold out faster than an AC/DC concert!
The dinner is subtitled "Dinner with the Neighbours" because it features courses provided from the surrounding towns and regions of Bathurst, Cowra, Mudgee and Orange.
Tonight, the committee meets at Margaret Wallington's wonderful straw bale winery to fold napkins, string together menus and tickets and discuss any last minute jobs. I just recieved a draft menu - there will, of course, be small last minute changes - but it will go something like this...
On arrival - Rosnay organic olives, Nashdale radish served with local garlic aioli and a selection of 100 mile locally made breads and olive oils.
Entree from the producers of Canowindra - Asian duck broth with caramelised leek and corn wontons, bok choy and seared duck breast.
From the producers of Bathurst - Pot Roast of rolled Capretto, fig jam and Jannai goat's curd; Bramble Liqueur Panna Cotta & Walnut Biscotti.
From the producers of Cowra - Lamb rump in a lemon, cumin and coriander marinade with eggplant, potato and baby spinach; Hazelnut Whitie with rhubarb and raspberry compote.
From the producers of Mudgee - Beef, bacon and chive pie with tomato relish, turnip and kale; Blackberry and Apple shortcake with honey custard.
From the producers of Orange - Twice cooked pork belly with apple, fennel and parsley salad and verjuice dressing; Strawberry jelly, mousse and fresh strawberries with hazelnut toffee shards.