The extravagant Gala commemorating the 40th anniversary of Chez Panisse at the Berkeley Art Museum on the 26th of August was fashionably elegant, and beautifully showcased the finished, polished product we have come to call, slow food.
The day after the
Grand Opening, on the 27th in the museum gardens, the nuts and bolts to bring that slow food to us was featured by over a dozen small businesses and educational food initiatives that produce it. This as well as other
events was sponsored by
OPENrestaurant and the
Chez Panisse Foundation.
I arrived early and got a chance to watch the producers set up. It was overcast at the beginning of the day but after a couple of hours the sun came out and it turned into a perfect, beautiful day.
I entered the gardens and the first thing I saw were the brightly colored bee hives of
The Mobile Bee Observatory. It is a honeybee ecology classroom on wheels. Rob Keller furnished a 28-foot Airstream trailer with a floor-to ceiling observation hive and a honey tasting station. Keller shares his knowledge of beekeeping and extolls the beauty and importance of the honeybee.
Keller shares his knowledge of beekeeping and
extolls the beauty and importance of the honeybee.
photo by Styrous®
The next thing I saw was the Digger's Bread Bakery. In the mid-60s the Diggers in San Francisco proposed a form of "community anarchism" in which they offered free food, medical care, and street performance. They also baked and gave away bread, and were rumored to have introduced whole-wheat flour into US hippie counterculture. Artist Chris Sollars and Steve Sullivan from Acme Bakery bake Digger bread in cans while David Simpson and Jane Lapiner recount stories from their experience as Diggers.
I tried to get a shot of the finished bread-in-can but
every time I went back it had been eaten up by the audience.
photo by Styrous®
They had a weird contraption I first thought was some sort
of exercise bicycle but I discovered it was used
to grind the wheat for the flour.
photo by Styrous®
A young man kindly demonstrated how the process was done.
Wandering down the path a bit I came across,
of all things, goats at
Goats Milk.
photo by Styrous®
Jeannie McKenzie raises goats in Oakland and teaches about urban homesteading. Jeannie is a circus artist, dancer, musician, and teacher. 72% of milk used in the world is goat's milk.!t is easier to digest for the majority of people who cannot digest cows milk.
McKenzie milked a goat . . .
. . . the kids were fascinated . . .
. . . and they made the most incredible candy from the milk.
On the lawn of the gardens were huge letters cut from corrugated cardboard. Alphabet Soup placed huge cut-out letters on the lawn as an invitation for people to rearrange the letters to form new words and redistribute them on the lawn.
About midway, I found
A Curious Radio. It was a week-long children's workshop
A Curious Summer conducted that explores the radio: its history as an instigator of change, its inner workings, and its unique ability to deliver stories directly to the theater of the mind. Inspired by this experience, young journalists operate an FM station at OPEN education, providing live coverage, conducting interviews, and curating the content of a freeform radio show. The transmission was picked up on receivers scattered throughout the Berkeley Art Museum, as well as online. This was a collaboration with OPENrestaurant and
Mutiny Radio.
Next to A Curious Radio, appropriately, was the
Free Speech Police Car. In 1964 the Free Speech Movement made world news when Mario Savio stood on top of a police car in Sproul Plaza in the midst of a crowd of student protesters. Now, the car is a stage for talks and conversations with educators, students, farmers, food activists, and eaters wrestling with the corporatization of our school systems and the industrialization of our food systems.
The side of the police car was used as a chalkboard list
of the day's speakers.
photo by Styrous®
One of the many fun & tasty stops, and perfect for the warm sunny day, was the Metas Lemonade Stand. Artist Alison Pebworth with students from METAS at Contra Costa College created custom sodas, lemonade, and aguas frescos with herbs, fruits, and honey from edible schoolyards. METAS students discussed do-it·yourself alternatives to mass-produced beverages. METAS is an enrichment program assisting latino students to achieve personal and higher education goals.
Behind them the Lettuce Daybed thrived in the sun. Earlier this year, Latino protesters gathered in the streets, reminding us that there is no future without dreams. In South Son Francisco, Brooke Budner and Caiyn Galloway run Lime City Gardens, a functioning urban farm. They often ask volunteers to lie down between the beds, offering a different kind of service to the farm. The lettuce daybed provides a place to lie down and dream while browsing a library of seeds and political literature. To-go seeds and compost are provided by Hayes Valley Farm, a community-run farm and urban agriculture education project created on the site of a San Francisco freeway ramp.
I found a curious set up with a pair of shoes smack
in the middle of all the food.
photo by Styrous®
The culprit:
Reheating Werner Herzog's Shoe. Werner Herzog made a bet with Errol Morris that Morris would never finish his first movie, promising to eat his shoe if he lost. For the premiere of "Gates of Heaven" in 1980, Alice Waters cooked Herzog's shoe with garlic, herbs, and duck fat for five hours. Herzog ate his shoe in front of an audience at the UC Theater, an event documented by Les Blank in the documentary "Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe."
Finally on the lawn level was the
Obugs Pickle Workshop. Since 1998 OBUGS (Oakland Based Urbon Gardensl has been building healthy communities through experiential learning programs offered to children, youth and families. Functioning as a network of school and neighborhood gardens, green spaces, and farmers markets, OBUGS offers in-school and after-school programs as well as summer camp each year.
Of course, Ms. Waters was there for the event.
On one of the upper terraces I found a stand
with the most incredible tamales . . .
photo by Styrous®
. . . and across from them was a stand with grilled corn
that was out of this world.
photo by Styrous®
Further down on the terrace was the Four Barrel Ojer Caibal School Kitchen. Four Barrel Coffee works with a small community of 300 families in Ojer Caibal, Guatemala to grow coffee in 61 tiny gardens. The exchange of getting a fair price for their beans provides cooking appliances, clean water, and waste management. Four Barrel adds an additional 25 cents per pound to the retail price of this coffee and funnels the surplus toward building a new kitchen for the school in Ojer Caiba!.
Across from Four Barrel was the La Cocina Salsa Kitchen: Salsa-making with the metaphorical harvest of the Three Sisters garden with Dilsa lugo from los Cilantros. Dilsa and Caleb Zigas discuss la Cocina, a business incubator designed to help entrepreneurs create successful small businesses.
In back of them was a mini-library with food-related books from the Chez Panisse Library and Moe’s bookstore plus a copy machine to make reproductions. There were books, periodicals and magazines for reading and there was paper, pencils, coloring materials and all kinds of fun things for kids to work on.
Of course, inside the museum the children
Not only was it a beautiful, sunny California day,
it was an educational one as well.
photo by Styrous®
I had a fantastic time thanks to all who participated in the event.