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    chez panisse

    Explore " chez panisse" with insightful episodes like "Meet Alice Waters", "Dan Barber on How Seeds Will Revolutionize Our Food System", "The Recipe Alice Waters Can't Live Without | Niloufer Ichaporia King", "25 Years of Edible Education" and "Memories of Pizza at Chez Panisse with Fanny Singer and Alice Waters" from podcasts like ""Inside Julia's Kitchen", "Time Sensitive", "The Genius Recipe Tapes", "The Farm Report" and "My Family Recipe"" and more!

    Episodes (24)

    Meet Alice Waters

    Meet Alice Waters

    This week on Inside Julia’s Kitchen, Todd Schulkin welcomes food world legend Alice Waters. They discuss the Edible Schoolyard Project and the Alice Waters Institute for Edible Education, a collaboration with the University of California, Davis. Alice shares her radical thinking about today's food world, diving into the connections between our foodways, climate change, and the future of how we eat. Plus, as always, Alice shares a Julia Moment.

    Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Inside Julia's Kitchen by becoming a member!

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    Dan Barber on How Seeds Will Revolutionize Our Food System

    Dan Barber on How Seeds Will Revolutionize Our Food System

    Dan Barber is on a mission to quite literally plant seeds for a better future. Around a decade ago, after learning that the nation’s largest food companies rarely breed food for flavor—and instead select for self-serving characteristics, such as the ability to produce high yields or endure long-distance travel—Barber, a chef and the co-owner of the restaurants Blue Hill in Manhattan and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, New York, turned his attention to seeds. From there, he collaborated with a vegetable breeder to make the honeynut squash, a sweeter, healthier version of the butternut variety, and has since used his cooking to raise awareness about the vital roles seeds can play in our food system. A co-founder of the seed company Row 7, he is not only concerned with the beneficial impacts seeds can have on taste buds, but also on communities and the planet.

    Rethinking what people eat has played a constant role in Barber’s practice. His cooking style, honed at restaurants including Alice Waters’s Chez Panisse, favors minimal ingredients as a way of celebrating their distinctive tastes. His upstate restaurant sits on a property shared with the Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture, a nonprofit operation that includes a regenerative farm and robust educational programming; there, his Blue Hill kitchen staff works with the Stone Barns teams to develop new ideas around food and farming. Barber regularly hosts educational programs, too, such as WastED, a 2015 pop-up that served delicious dishes made from ingredients most of us would consider trash.

    On this episode, Barber talks with Andrew about the distinctive role that restaurants can play in supporting social movements, food scraps as part of a chef’s DNA, and why producing more food won’t solve food insecurity.

    Special thanks to our Season 5 sponsor, L’ÉCOLE, School of Jewelry Arts.

    Show notes:

    The Recipe Alice Waters Can't Live Without | Niloufer Ichaporia King

    The Recipe Alice Waters Can't Live Without | Niloufer Ichaporia King

    Referenced in this episode:

    Genius-Hunter Extra Credit:

    Special thanks to listeners Numra (@empressmarket), Vlada (@mat.vlada), and Nilufar (@kayhanikitchen) for sharing your favorite cardamom-centric recipes!

    Is there a recipe that's stayed with you throughout your life? Tell me all about it at genius@food52.com.

    25 Years of Edible Education

    25 Years of Edible Education

    When Alice Waters opened her trailblazing California restaurant Chez Panisse in 1971, she launched what would become a movement around truly seasonal cooking and eating that could support farmers, communities, and the environment. In 1995, Waters also started the Edible Schoolyard Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to teaching children about food and transforming the public education system. To mark the Edible Schoolyard Project’s 25th anniversary, in this episode, host Lisa Held talks to executive director Angela McKee-Brown about the organization’s history and original school garden, how it has grown its programming to reach thousands of schools around the world, and what the future of edible education looks like.

    Photo Courtesy of The Edible Schoolyard Project.

    Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support The Farm Report by becoming a member!

    The Farm Report is Powered by Simplecast.

    Memories of Pizza at Chez Panisse with Fanny Singer and Alice Waters

    Memories of Pizza at Chez Panisse with Fanny Singer and Alice Waters

    Fanny Singer shares memories from her unconventional childhood, growing up in the revered Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California alongside her mother, legendary chef Alice Waters. She describes how the restaurant’s staff became an extended family (often referred to as “La Famille Panisse”), talks about the sophisticated palate she developed from a young age (think: salmon roe), and discusses how her work today marries her past and present (collaborations between her company, Permanent Collection, and Chez Panisse). In the show’s second half, Alice Waters joins the conversation to reminisce about time spent cooking for and with her daughter, reading Fanny’s memoir, and cultivating a sense of family at her restaurant. 

    Read Fannys original My Family Recipe essay. 

    My Family Recipe is created by the Food52 Podcast Network and Heritage Radio Network, inspired by the eponymous Food52 column.

    Alice Waters and Fanny Singer on Slow Food and Family Ties

    Alice Waters and Fanny Singer on Slow Food and Family Ties

    Slow down, says Alice Waters, the food-world force behind the legendary Chez Panisse restaurant and the Edible Schoolyard organization. As Alice explains in her latest book, "We Are What We Eat: A Slow Food Manifesto," the world of fast food and disposable everything is not the way forward for mankind or the planet. Alice joins us from her home in Berkeley, California, to share her point of view, reminisce about the 50th anniversary of Chez Panisse, and reveal a few details about the restaurant project she’s working on in Los Angeles. It’s not Chez 2.0, she stresses. Fanny Singer, Alice’s daughter, author of the memoir "Always Home," and co-founder of the design brand Permanent Collection, joins host Kerry Diamond for the second part of the show. Fanny talks about her lovingly written book and the project she’s curated for Absolut Art that celebrates her favorite room in any house—the kitchen.

    Thank you to AIX Rosé for supporting this episode! 

    Ep.4 Alice Waters: Slow Food Activist

    Ep.4 Alice Waters: Slow Food Activist

    Listen in to the second half of Franco's conversation with Alice Waters: chef and founder of Chez Panisse, pioneer of The Edible Schoolyard and slow food activist.  They cover how the schoolyard project has evolved as it's expanded nationwide, why we need to cook with our children and why now's the time for fast food to have its reckoning. 

    We Are What We Eat is available to pre-order now. 

    Ep.3 Alice Waters: An Edible Education

    Ep.3 Alice Waters: An Edible Education

    This week it's a titan of the slow food movement: Alice Waters. From dinners for friends at Chez Panisse to taking activism to the classroom with The Edible Schoolyard, her living legacy's making serious dents in the food system. Covering too much ground for one episode, we're taking it across two. Now, we're going back 50 years to when Alice's flavour enlightenment in France convinced her to open the doors of Chez Panisse back home in Berkeley, California. 

    The Recipe Alice Waters Can't Live Without

    The Recipe Alice Waters Can't Live Without

    Referenced in this episode:

    Genius-Hunter Extra Credit:

    Special thanks to listeners Numra (@empressmarket), Vlada (@mat.vlada), and Nilufar (@kayhanikitchen) for sharing your favorite cardamom-centric recipes!

    Is there a recipe that's stayed with you throughout your life? Tell me all about it at genius@food52.com.

    The Sweet Life of David Lebovitz

    The Sweet Life of David Lebovitz

    Cookbook author and blogger David Lebovitz shares his journey to becoming the beloved food personality he is today. We cover his entire career beginning with how he got a job at Chez Panisse as a savory cook and ended up as their pastry chef. From there, we break down his first cookbook and the comparisons in process to what that looks like now as he has just come out with his ninth. And of course, we discuss his move to Paris which has influenced so much of his work and his advice after food blogging for over two decades.

    Want to stay up to date on the latest The Feedfeed episodes? To hear more conversations with Jake Cohen, Julie & Dan Resnick and their guests innovating and disrupting Food Media, subscribe to The Feedfeed (it’s free!) on iTunes or Stitcher. If you like what you hear, please take a moment to rate + review us on Apple’s Podcast Store and follow The Feedfeed on thefeedfeed.com and Instagram @thefeedfeed. Thanks for tuning in!

    Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support The Feedfeed by becoming a member!

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    Tastemakers: Alice Waters

    Tastemakers: Alice Waters

    Every weekday, listeners explore the trials, tragedies, and triumphs of groundbreaking women throughout history who have dramatically shaped the world around us. In each 5 minute episode, we’ll dive into the story behind one woman listeners may or may not know -- but definitely should. These diverse women from across space and time are grouped into easily accessible and engaging monthly themes like Pioneers, Dreamers, Villainesses, STEMinists, Warriors & Social Justice Warriors, and many more. Encyclopedia Womannica is hosted by WMN co-founder and award-winning journalist Jenny Kaplan. The bite-sized episodes pack painstakingly researched content into fun, entertaining, and addictive daily adventures.

    Encyclopedia Womannica was created by Liz Kaplan and Jenny Kaplan, executive produced by Jenny Kaplan, and produced by Liz Smith, Cinthia Pimentel, and Grace Lynch. Special thanks to Shira Atkins and Edie Allard. Theme music by Andi Kristins.

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Alice Waters & Elliott Bisnow | Building Communities and Movements from Summit to Chez Panisse (LIVE from Summit LA19!)

    Alice Waters & Elliott Bisnow | Building Communities and Movements from Summit to Chez Panisse (LIVE from Summit LA19!)

    This week, The Founder Hour is coming to you LIVE from Summit LA19, Summit’s flagship event and the world’s preeminent ideas festival, which went down on November 8-11 in DTLA’s historic Broadway Theatre District!

    Pat and Posh start off the episode by doing a quick recap of the weekend’s festivities followed by an insightful conversation with Summit co-founder, Elliott Bisnow, and legendary chef Alice Waters, founder of Chez Panisse and the farm-to-table movement in America.

    Summit, founded in 2008, is a global community of today’s brightest leaders. Through a series of invitation-only events, Summit fosters a global community of entrepreneurs, academics, athletes, artists, astronauts, authors, chefs, engineers, explorers, philanthropists, spiritual leaders, scientists, and beyond.

    Chez Panisse, founded in 1971 by Alice Waters, is a neighborhood restaurant in Berkeley, CA, famous for its organic, locally grown ingredients and for pioneering California cuisine. Alice, known as the founder of the farm-to-table and slow food movement in America, also started The Edible Schoolyard Project in 1995 which has led the national movement to transform the health and academic experience of students in America and advocated for a sustainable, delicious, free lunch for every student.

    In this episode, we cover everything from the vision behind Summit as well as Chez Panisse, building communities and widespread movements, fast food vs. slow food, and what can shape the next generation of food consumption.

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    Alice Waters, Kristen Essig and Krista Roberts at Slow Food Nations 2019

    Alice Waters, Kristen Essig and Krista Roberts at Slow Food Nations 2019

    HRN’s Caity Moseman Wadler was lucky enough to sit down with Krista Roberts, the director of Slow Food Denver; Kristen Essig, the Chef and owner of NOLA’s Coquette; and Alice Waters, the Chef, author, food activist, and owner of Berkeley California’s Chez Panisse. Together, they discussed the value that Slow Food Nations presents, confronting the climate crisis with food and how we can combat our fast food culture in schools, restaurants and at home.

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    Episode 67: Top Chef Junior Rahanna Bisseret Martinez on the Next Generation of Chefs

    Episode 67: Top Chef Junior Rahanna Bisseret Martinez on the Next Generation of Chefs

    Today’s guest is Rahanna Bisseret Martinez, a talented fifteen-year-old chef and finalist on Top Chef Junior. Rahanna has been featured on the Today Show and has cooked in some of the best kitchens in the world including Alice Waters’ Chez Panisse in Berkley California, Nina Compton’s Compere Lapin and Emeril Lagasse’s self named restaurant in New Orleans.

    It's HRN's annual summer fund drive, this is when we turn to our listeners and ask that you make a donation to help ensure a bright future for food radio. Help us keep broadcasting the most thought provoking, entertaining, and educational conversations happening in the world of food and beverage. Become a member today! To celebrate our 10th anniversary, we have brand new member gifts available. So snag your favorite new pizza - themed tee shirt or enamel pin today and show the world how much you love HRN, just go to heritageradionetwork.org/donate

    Photo courtesy of Top Chef Junior.

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    Counter Culture and Soul Food

    Counter Culture and Soul Food

    This week on Meat + Three, meet four of our Hall of Fame inductees. They’re chefs that have changed the way we see, taste, and experience food. We begin with Alice Waters, a counter culture chef who has planted a seed of deliciousness in schoolyards across the country. Todd Richards shares the impact that family has on his cookbooks, kitchens, and food philosophy. Julia Turshen inspires us with her work "Feeding the Resistance," and Tunde Wey tackles racial and wealth disparity with hot chicken pop ups and his powerful brand of activism. See our full Hall of Fame at heritageradionetwork.org/halloffame.

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    This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

    It’s All About Timing with Mona Talbott and Kate Arding

    It’s All About Timing with Mona Talbott and Kate Arding

    Mona Talbott and Kate Arding are the forces behind Talbott & Arding, a cheese and provisions shop, in Hudson, New York. Mona and Kate approach their food, shop, and community with intention and love. They sat down with Julia to talk about what their lives were like before they opened their business, how they navigate running it together as a couple, and more.

    Mona has over 25 years experience in the culinary industry. She began her cooking career as a camp cook in remote logging camps in her native Canada, formalizing her training at the Western Culinary Institute in Portland, Oregon where, in 1993, Talbott graduated with highest honors. She was a cook at Chez Panisse for five years before she launched Mona Talbott Catering and began cooking exclusively for “A” list private clients and catering events both in the United States and Europe working within the fine arts, media and entertainment industry. Her ongoing collaboration on special culinary projects with Alice Waters eventually led her to Italy, where, from 2006-2011, she was the founding Executive Chef at the Rome Sustainable Food Project at the American Academy in Rome. She has written and published two cookbooks: Biscotti and Zuppe: Recipes from the Kitchen of the American Academy in Rome, and contributed to over ten cookbooks authored by notable chefs. In 2010, Talbott was included in COCO, 10 World-Leading Masters Choose 100 Contemporary Chefs and, most recently, contributed 50 recipes to Amy Goldman’s forthcoming book, Heirloom Peppers. Mona has published recipes and written articles for the New York Times, Saveur, Bon Appetit, and Organic Cooking.

    Kate is an internationally recognized authority on cheese with over 20 years of experience in the farmhouse cheese industry. Her work encompasses cheesemongering, sales and marketing, infrastructure management for small-scale cheese businesses, affinage (cheese maturation), publishing and teaching. She is a keynote speaker at regional and national conferences. Kate’s cheese career began at Neal’s Yard Dairy, London, UK in 1993 where she developed a thorough understanding of what it takes for cheesemakers and retailers to create and sustain profitable businesses. In 1997, Kate was recruited by Cowgirl Creamery & Tomales Bay Foods, the award winning cheese retailer and cheesemaker, to be their Head Cheesemonger and Cheese Buyer at their newly formed company in Marin County, California. In 2008, Kate co-founded the ground-breaking consumer print and online cheese magazine Culture: The Word on Cheese.

    Kate’s consulting work has influenced agricultural agencies, cheese producers and retailers around the globe, working in places as diverse as Uganda, Ecuador, the Netherlands and Macedonia. A member of the Board of Directors for the American Cheese Society (ACS), and Co-Chair of the ACS’s Regulatory and Academic Committee, Kate also regularly judges at many U.S. and international competitions. In 2011, she was inducted into the Guilde Internationale des Fromagers, where she was especially recognized for her work within the artisanal cheese industry, both in the U.S and overseas. Kate is an area editor of the Oxford Companion to Cheese (Oxford University Press, 2015). As an industry spokesperson and sought-after expert, Kate has appeared on The Martha Stewart Living Show, Heritage Radio Network and has been regularly featured in national and international press, including the San Francisco Chronicle, The LA Times, The Times (UK). As a contributing writer, editor and photographer, Kate’s work on cheesemakers and the cheesemaking process has been published in media outlets worldwide.

    Follow-up links from the episode:

    • Julia will be signing copies of Now & Again at Talbott and Arding (323 Warren Street in Hudson, NY) on Saturday May 4, 2019 from 2p - 3p. Come say hi!
    • For more about Talbott and Arding, head here.
    • For the quinoa recipe (Charoset Quinoa) from Now & Again that Julia mentioned, head here.
    • For the red lentil recipe (Curried Red Lentils with Coconut Milk) from Small Victories that Juila mentioned, head here.
    • For Julia's Red Lentil Soup with Coconut and Cilantro from Feed the Resistance, head here.
    • For more about Rolling Grocer 19, head here.
    • For more about Kinderhook Farm, head here.
    • For more about Julia, head here.

    Episode 292: History and Evolution of the American Restaurant Chef

    Episode 292: History and Evolution of the American Restaurant Chef

    In his book Chefs, Drugs and Rock & Roll, Andrew Friedman takes us back in time to witness the remarkable changes in the American dining scene and evolution of the American restaurant chef in the 1970s and '80s. Using oral histories told primarily in the words of the people who lived it Friedman writes about the pioneers behind Chez Panisse, Spago, River Cafe and other landmarks as well as many of the the young cooks like Jonathan Waxman, Tom Colicchio, and Mario Batali who went on to become household names. Friedman shares those stories with Linda on this informative episode.

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    Episode 334: "Market Cooking" with David Tanis

    Episode 334: "Market Cooking" with David Tanis

    On today's episode of THE FOOD SEEN, David Tanis, ex-Chez Panisse chef, and author of the seminal classics "A Platter of Figs" "Heart of an Artichoke" and "One Good Dish", releases his most recent opus "Market Cooking", derived from the French term, "la cuisine du marche". It's a philosophy and style, such in the way that Tanis approaches each ingredient; first with Alliums, then Vegetables, followed by Spices. If you've ever wondered how to build flavors, as well as your repertoire, this is the book for you!

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    Episode 86: Alice Waters: Coming To My Senses

    Episode 86: Alice Waters: Coming To My Senses

    Don’t miss this interview with Alice Waters, culinary trailblazer, prolific author, founder of Edible Schoolyard and Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, and decorated hero of the good food movement. Alice joins HRN Executive Director Caity Moseman Wadler live in the HRN studio to discuss her newest book, Coming to My Senses: The Making of a Counterculture Cook, her work with Edible Schoolyard, and other stories from her life.

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