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Sunset by the Bay Community Potluck

Sunday, July 15, 2018, 4 – 7pm
Celebrate Summer in a Spectacular Setting on Peconic Bay

Join Slow Food East End and friends for a mid-summer potluck at the stunning home of Judith Axelrod. Enjoy tasty, local, seasonal fare and your favorite beverage while being caressed with the warmth of the setting sun and gentle bay breezes.

Details

Event: Summer Sunset on the Bay Potluck Snail Supper
Date: Sunday, July 15, 2018
Time: 4PM – 7PM
Place: Home of Judith Axelrod
19 Clearview Drive, Sag Harbor, NY (Special Directions: Take Noyac Road to Dogwood Lane. Make right turn at end of the street on to Clearview Drive. Go one block to #19 on left.)
Cost: Slow Food Members: $15 per person; Non-Members: $20 per person.
Proceeds: Proceeds: The registration fee is a donation to Slow Food East End to help support our programs.
Reservations: This event is limited to 35 persons. The registration fee is a donation to Slow Food East End to help support our programs.

What to Bring

An appetizer, main course, side dish or dessert to share made with seasonal, local ingredients from the garden, CSA, or local farm stand or market. Variety will make this dinner more enjoyable. Each dish should serve 6-8 people. Please don’t forget to bring serving utensils and most importantly, your favorite beverage (local, if possible) to complement the dining experience and to share with friends.

Menu

Click here to use our Perfect Potluck website. You can see what other guests are bringing and tell us what you’ll prepare. The online site helps assure we have a great menu with a variety of delicious early summer dishes.

We are taking a break from the “Know Your Farmer” educational series since our farmers are busy planting, tending, and harvesting their fields. They will be joining us again once the season winds down. Please celebrate the fruits of their labor by supporting them throughout the growing season at our local Farmers’ Markets and Farm Stands.

A Summer’s Eve Community Potluck at Sylvester Manor Educational Farm

Saturday, June 30, 2018, 6:30 – 8:30pm

If you want to know more about Sylvester Manor and enjoy a shared meal with like-minded folk, Slow Food East End urges you to attend and invite a friend! Our Community Potlucks are open to all!

Slow Food East End’s “Know Your Farmer”
educational series continues…

Farm Manager Jocelyn Craig will speak about the fascinating history of Sylvester Manor. Over three centuries, Sylvester Manor has been transformed from a slave-holding provisioning plantation to an Enlightenment-era farm, then to a pioneering food industrialist’s estate and today to an organic educational farm.

Details

Event: Slow Food East End Community Potluck at Sylvester Manor Educational Farm
Date: Saturday, June 30, 2018 (rain or shine)
Time: 6:30PM – 8:30PM
Place: Sylvester Manor Farmstand
21 Manwaring Road, Shelter Island, NY
Cost: Slow Food Members: $15 per person; Non-Members: $20 per person.
Proceeds: Go towards Slow Food East End’s Agricultural Community Outreach Initiative which provides support to young farmers on the East End.

What to Bring

An appetizer, main course, side dish or dessert to share made with seasonal, local ingredients from the garden, CSA, or local farm stand or market. Variety will make this dinner more enjoyable. Each dish should serve 6-8 people. Please don’t forget to bring serving utensils and most importantly, your favorite beverage (local, if possible) to complement the dining experience and to share with friends.

Menu

Click here to use our Perfect Potluck website to see what other guests are bringing and to tell us what you’ll prepare. This online site helps assure we have a great menu with a variety of delicious early summer dishes.

About Sylvester Manor Educational Farm

Once a Native American hunting and fishing ground, since 1652 Sylvester Manor has been home to eleven generations of its original European settler family. It reflects a remarkably intact history of America’s evolving tastes, economies and landscapes with a mission to preserve, cultivate and ensure that food and the arts remain connected to community and the land, with a spirit of fairness and joy. Click here to learn more about Sylvester Manor.

Spring Spotlight: 8 Hands Farm Tour and Food Truck Tasting

Friday, June 8, 2018, 4:30
SOLD OUT!

The Ultimate Farm to Food Truck Experience!

Enjoy a late spring afternoon strolling the fields of 8 Hands Farm with owners, Carol Festa and her husband, Thomas Geppel who will discuss their philosophy of sustainability and animal welfare. Slow Food Members and Friends will have an opportunity to meet and greet the sheep, pigs and chickens of 8 Hands Farm and leave with a better understanding of how they are raised and cared for.

The farm tour will be followed by a fixed menu tasting from the 8 Hand Farm Food Truck run by chefs Carly and Jonathan Copeland. The menu will feature 8 Hands raised meats and fresh produce (depending of what’s in season) from the farm. Price includes seasonal menu tasting, a non-alcoholic beverage and 10% discount on purchases at the Farm Store (on the day of the event only).

Limited to 40 guests

Reserve your spot now!

  • Event: Spring Spotlight: 8 Hands Farm Tour and Food Truck Tasting
  • Date: Friday, June 8, 2018
  • Time: 4:30 pm
  • Location: 4735 Cox Lane, Cutchogue, NY 11935
  • Cost: Slow Food Members: $40 per person; Non-Members: $50 per person.
  • Deadline: Monday, June 4th.
  • Proceeds: will benefit Slow Food East End’s Educational Programs
8 hands farm logoCarol Festa and her husband, Tom Geppel began their livestock farming journey in 2010, raising Icelandic Sheep. They chose sheep since they are “multi-purpose” creatures that can be used for their meat, milk, and wool. After purchasing their current 28-acre property on Cox Lane in Cutchogue, Carol and Tom were able to expand their “flock” to include Tamworth Pigs, heritage breed chickens and vegetables too! They began selling their products to local restaurants, before constructing an on-site farm store, which now sells everything from meat, wool, vegetables, prepared foods and artisanal products from other local producers. In 2016, Carol and Tom unveiled a new butcher shop within the farm store that will carry a rotating selection of fresh, farm-raised meats. The food truck, which serves breakfast and lunch, was recently added in 2017…more

Sorry, this event is SOLD OUT!

Hayground Farmers Market Closes

Source: Dans Papers

After nearly a decade, the Hayground School has decided not to hold its popular farmers market this year. “We reached this extraordinarily tough conclusion in the face of a dwindling number of vendors attending our weekly Hayground Farmers Market,” Hayground School Treasurer Tony Hitchcock says, adding, “This decision was further reinforced by the departure of our Market Manager Ella Engel-Snow who, following several years of tremendous service, is leaving to pursue other interests.”

Originally founded in 2009 by Hayground School’s Jon Snow to create a venue for kids to sell produce and seedlings grown in the school’s garden, the idea was to develop a Friday afternoon market where folks would be more likely to linger and socialize while shopping for local food and products, Hayground explains in the announcement canceling their market on Monday.

Once the concept came to fruition, Hayground reached out to like-minded fishermen, farmers, vintners and other home-grown producers. Soon, the market became the “summer town square” of Bridgehampton on Fridays. Community groups were encouraged to have a presence and, on many weeks, the market included extra attractions such as live music, readings by local authors or a talk by a local resident.

“The Hayground Farmers Market began as a learning tool for our students, and grew into a weekly community gathering that embodied the familial and farm-to-table nature of our East End and Hayground communities,” Snow reflects. “We’re all so grateful to our vendors, regulars and kids for making the seed of a dream into such a fantastic reality.” Though their farmers market will no longer continue, the Hayground community is urging its loyal farmers market shoppers to continue to support local farm stands and visit the many East End farmers markets that continue to service the Twin Forks, including the markets in East Hampton, Springs, Sag Harbor, Montauk, Westhampton, Hampton Bays, Greenport and Shelter Island.

Hamptons Epicure: A Moveable Feast in Sag Harbor

Photo: The Levine family, Photo: Barbara Lassen
Source: Dan’s Papers

A farmer died. His dreams live on.

Many East Enders fondly remember Joshua Levine, namesake of the Joshua Levine Foundation. He was the smiling face at Amagansett’s Quail Hill Farm table at the Sag Harbor Farmers Market on Saturdays. Organic farming was Josh’s second career, after working in real estate with his father Myron Levine.

In 2010 Josh died in a tractor accident, at age 35, leaving behind his wife and two very young children. It was a shocking loss to the East End community. Josh’s funeral service at Temple Adas Israel in Sag Harbor had traffic piled up around the block.

Farming accidents are all too common—the fatality rate in agriculture is higher than in any other economic sector. In fact, a large percentage of all fatal workplace accidents occur on farms, though only a small segment of the workforce is employed in this business.

Josh wasn’t just dedicated to innovative farming and farm marketing strategies. As Quail Hill Farm Director Scott Chaskey says, “Josh always had new ideas about how to do things.”

Josh sacrificed his life for what he believed in—a local, organic food supply. His family is fulfilling his legacy through the Foundation, which has a stated mission “to identify and support charitable programs which promote good farming practices, healthy eating, education and a sustainable environment.”

On Sunday, March 25 the Foundation and Slow Food East End will hold its 8th annual Moveable Feast fundraiser in Sag Harbor to support its programming initiatives, including the Edible School Garden program.

According to Myron, “the East End of Long Island has grown into one of the largest, most successful school garden programs in the United States, 27 schools in all! From Montauk and Orient to Westhampton, our children benefit by working in the Edible School Gardens supported primarily by funds raised at the annual Moveable Feast. This program has lasting impact on our children’s health and their future. That’s why so many restaurants, chefs, farmers, vineyards, purveyors of food and beverage and others selflessly donate to make the Moveable Feast one of the most anticipated and affordable charity events of the year.”

This year’s participants include: Aldo Maiorana, Aldo’s Coffee Co.; Jason Weiner & Jeremy Blutstein, Almond; Cheryl Stair & Eric Householder, Art of Eating; Chef Arie Pavlou, Bistro Eté; Debbie Geppert, Bostwick’s Clambake & Catering; Bradley Thompson, Breadzilla; Brian Szostak, Bridgehampton Inn; Peter Ambrose, Events by Peter Ambrose; Abra Morawiec, Feisty Acres Farm; Jennilee Morris, Grace & Grit; Nadia Ernestus, Hampton Brine; Lauren Lombardi, Lombardi’s Love Lane Market; Carolyn Iannone & Cory Guastella, Love Lane Kitchen; Art Ludlow, Mecox Bay Dairy; Mike Doall & Mike Martinsen, Montauk Pearl Oysters; Joseph Realmuto & Rachel Flatley, Nick & Toni’s; Noah Schwartz, noah’s and Suffolk Theater; Jeri Woodhouse, North Fork Specialty Kitchen; Claudia Fleming & Stephan Bogardus, North Fork Table & Inn; David Falkowski, Open Minded Organics; Taylor Knapp, Paw Paw Pop Up; Matt Ketchum, Peconic Gold Oysters.

Myron continues, “Because our children are the beneficiaries, it’s important that parents, teachers and other residents of the East End participate. That’s why the ticket prices are kept as low as possible.”

They have a discount program available to members of Slow Food and a subsidy for teachers who would like to attend. There’s also a “subsidize a farmer” program to encourage residents who can afford it to purchase a ticket for a local farmer, fisher or forager. At this year’s event, some of the children who have participated in the program will discuss what their experiences in the garden have meant to them.

In addition to supporting this laudable program and enjoying some of the East End’s best local comestibles and a silent auction, you can meet food movement stars next Sunday. Chef Sam Kass is best known for his tenure in the Obama White House as Senior Policy Advisor for Nutrition and for his work with First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! campaign. He will be the keynote speaker and discuss Growing Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities and the Future of Food. The discussion will be moderated by Richard McCarthy, Executive Director of Slow Food USA.

Slow Food is a nonprofit, member-supported organization that advocates for healthy food produced with minimal damage to the environment. The East End Chapter, encompassing the North and South Forks, is part of the global Slow Food network of more than 100,000 members in more than 150 countries.

Through a vast volunteer network of local chapters, youth and food communities, they link the pleasures of the table with a commitment to protect the community, culture, knowledge and environment that make this pleasure possible. Their mission as an international grassroots membership organization is good, clean and fair food for all.

McCarthy has just returned from a trip to Venice where he was working with Slow Food’s founder Carlo Petrini and their international committee. This is what he’s thinking:

How are farmers markets central to eating right?
“These ancient mechanisms continue to outlast anyone’s expectations—in part because they are light and easily replicable but especially because they make public the experience of learning about food. Farmers learn how to navigate volatile consumer trends and we, as eaters, learn how to value scarcity and the harvest of plenty. There’s something profound in tasting yesterday’s fruit today, sold from the folks who grow it. With the competitive assembly of vendors, we as eaters gain choice that gives us power and connection to time, place and taste.”

Is being vegetarian “easier” than it used to be in this country?
“So much easier! At 15, when I was politicized by food and the horrors of industrial meat, my decision to become vegetarian placed me into such a strange, marginal minority. My parents suggested I learn to cook. I did. It was at this point that I began to fall in love with food in an entirely new way. Going out to eat— a rarity in 1980—I had to ‘warn’ the chef that I was coming with problems. Today, chefs have come to embrace the challenge and adventure of vegetable-forward cooking. Moreover, immigrant food has demonstrated that vegetables need not be a supporting cast of characters on a plate. Sadly, the one unfortunate indicator of our return to tribalism has been the carving out of the menu between disparate communities of vegans versus the bacon-on-everything eaters. Food should be a bridge. When it’s not, we lose. This would be the one element that has grown harder.”

When is eating a political act?
“Eating is integral to civilization. No matter how clever we think we’ve become, social peace is deeply dependent upon reliable access to food. And while the industrial food grid has achieved remarkable wonders, it has done so at tremendous costs (often hidden costs upon the people, land, water and animals). The potential of the revolution of everyday life is that the decisions we make to support the heavy and destructive forces of industrial food or the light and hopeful alternative. As eaters, we can vote with our forks.”

What is the most important thing to teach the next generation of diners?
“While technique matters, and cooking can be intimidating, it’s far more important to dive in, experiment and cook and eat together—even if only once a week.”

A Moveable Feast not only celebrates the legacy of Joshua Levine and supports Edible School Gardens, it’s the kick-off of the spring season, the waking of the earth. Funds raised from this event promote good farming practices, education, a sustainable environment and healthy eating for children and their families by providing stipends for three Master Farmers and grants to be used for the purchase of garden tools, supplies and materials.

Don’t you want to pitch in?

8th annual A Moveable Feast at Dodds & Eder Landscape Design Showroom, 11 Bridge Street, Sag Harbor; Sunday, March 25 4-7 p.m.. To purchase tickets or make a donation visit slowfoodeastend.org. Tickets $150, Slow Food members $100. slowfoodeastend.org. To bid in the silent auction without attending the event, email sagsue@aol.com.

You can read more of Dan’s Papers Senior Editor Stacy Dermont’s writing on DansPapers.com and stacydermont.com. Stacy is currently at work on a seasonal Hamptons cookbook with co-author Hillary Davis.