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Food Chain

Food Chain

In Central Florida, the path from farm-to-fork is being cut by Knights.

Fall 2014

The notion of eating local isn鈥檛 new; there used to be no other option. People ate what was available, either from their own gardens or from a nearby farm. The idea of a fresh strawberry in winter was absurd.聽As consumers become more concerned about the integrity of the food they eat and the impact its production has on the environment, local food growers and the people who support them are more in demand. And all along this alternative supply chain, you can find 激情快播 alumni fostering change.

Planting the Seed

Food_Winfrey

For Jonathan Winfrey, 鈥10, a seed is not just a seed 鈥 it has a history.

Winfrey is the owner and operator of Organic Sanctuary, a farm in Geneva, Florida, which specializes in heirloom seeds. On a restaurant menu, the term 鈥渉eirloom鈥 is often associated with tomatoes or other produce, but it doesn鈥檛 mean that it has been in the chef 鈥檚 family for generations. It signifies that the produce has been grown from seeds with an organic heritage. Though there isn鈥檛 a standard definition for heirloom, 鈥淚 would say … it鈥檚 been bred true to parent variety for at least a hundred years,鈥 says Winfrey, who majored in environmental science.

Winfrey鈥檚 business resembles less a commercial farm than a house with several large garden plots. There are carambola and Key lime trees, sunflowers, tomato plants and Seminole pumpkins that were a staple of the Native Americans who once lived in the area. He eats some of what he grows in his 鈥渇ood forest,鈥 but the real value is the bounty of seeds that he carefully harvests from each plant. 鈥淚t can take up to several weeks to get a good seed ready,鈥 he says. Each must go through a drying process that requires daily attention.

When they鈥檙e ready, the seeds are packaged by hand and sold through the Organic Sanctuary website or in specialty stores.


鈥淚t can take up to several weeks to get a good seed ready.鈥


Delivering the Goods

Food_ReisMiller

As a distributor, Rebecca Reis-Miller, 鈥06, helped restaurants interested in serving fresh, local ingredients find the people who grow them.

Reis-Miller, who has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in political science and a master鈥檚 degree in public administration, helped lead Slow Food Orlando, a grassroots organization chapter that promotes environmentally friendly food production. With her co-leader Trish Strawn, she created Growing Synergy, a food distribution company in Central Florida that works with local farmers and artisans.

鈥淲hen we started our company,鈥 Reis-Miller says, 鈥渨e wanted to focus on supporting small farmers who use grass-fed production methods.鈥 Then several large hotels sought out Growing Synergy for their access to fresh, local products that include poultry, beef, fruits and vegetables. 鈥淎 lot of the hotels don鈥檛 want their guests going off-site to dine,鈥 she says, 鈥渟o they鈥檙e really improving the quality of the products they have in-house.鈥

Reis-Miller recently left Growing Synergy and has joined her husband, Charles Miller, 鈥03, in his business, Lake Nona Deli and Market. She continues to advocate for local food purveyors, including Growing Synergy, and offers locally produced goods that include bread, coffee, produce and eggs.


鈥淲hen we started our company, we wanted to focus on supporting small farmers who use grass-fed production methods.鈥


Growing a Community

Julie Norris

When Dandelion Communitea Cafe opened as a counter-service establishment in Orlando鈥檚 Mills 50 district, owner Julie Norris, 鈥01, worried about the long lines of people waiting to order her vegan and vegetarian dishes. She converted to full service with staffers taking tableside orders. 鈥淚t was the worst thing we ever did, because I didn鈥檛 realize how much actual community engagement happened in that line.鈥 As a result, she switched back to counter service.

For Norris, food fosters connection. 鈥淚 like to talk about our relationships with our food,鈥 she says. 鈥淒o I know the person that鈥檚 making this, growing this, repackaging it?鈥 Norris feels it鈥檚 important for her to have firsthand knowledge that her providers are following best practices, so even if their products aren鈥檛 certified as organic, she鈥檚 certain that they鈥檙e of equal integrity.

鈥淭he best relation I can have with my food is the food that鈥檚 growing in my backyard,鈥 says Norris, 鈥渂ut I can鈥檛 get everything from my backyard.鈥 So next she might look to her neighbor鈥檚 backyard, then to a local farmer. But she doesn鈥檛 feel the need to procure food within a certain mile range. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not so much about local in your ZIP code as localized.鈥

Norris, whose degree is in business administration, believes that the awareness local food producers bring through their growing practices is key to Florida鈥檚 future. 鈥淭he farm-to-table movement is critical to rounding out our sense of place.鈥

Fertilizing a Movement

Gabby Lothrop

鈥淎 lot can happen across the table over a meal,鈥 says Gabby Lothrop, 鈥05, who grew up in a large family in Panama. 鈥淚鈥檝e always had strong opinions about food.鈥

When her family moved to the U.S., she was surprised by how much fast food people ate. 鈥淪o much of our life happened around meals,鈥 she says of her formative years, 鈥渁nd I just didn鈥檛 understand why food wasn鈥檛 as important here.鈥

In 2009 Lothrop offered to assist a friend who was starting a community market in Orlando鈥檚 Audubon Park neighborhood. 鈥淪he said, 鈥楪reat, you can be the director,鈥 鈥 Lothrop says with a laugh. 鈥淲e opened with about five vendors, and it was kind of a sad little operation.鈥 Thanks to her leadership, the market flourished and currently hosts more than 30 vendors. Lothrop has since become the managing director of East End Market in Orlando.

Lothrop, who graduated with a degree in political science, was recently named a regional governor for Slow Food USA, whose mission is 鈥済ood, clean and fair food for all.鈥 That relationship began when she heard about the Orlando chapter and sought them out for guidance 鈥 and connections to local farmers. Now she鈥檚 working with other chapters to find unified projects that meet Slow Food USA鈥檚 mission, while promoting the pleasures of enjoying delicious food.


鈥淪o much of our life happened around meals, and I just didn鈥檛 understand why food wasn鈥檛 as important here.鈥


Building a Hub

John Rife

John Rife, 鈥10, was born into a real estate family 鈥 one that developed, among other projects, The Mall at Millenia in Orlando. In college, he was intent on going into film. Both of those fields led him to where he is today as the owner of Orlando鈥檚 East End Market, a nexus of artisan food purveyors, a restaurant and an urban garden.

Rife, who earned a master鈥檚 degree in digital media, wanted to produce a series of videos about gathering Thanksgiving meal ingredients at local farms. But when he realized it wasn鈥檛 feasible, he opted to bring the farmers and purveyors together so people could purchase goods for their own Thanksgiving meals. He approached Lothrop, and the pair organized the highly successful Winter Park Harvest Festival. 鈥淲e had tears in our eyes and were hugging each other and saying, 鈥榃ow, people really are interested in this stuff.鈥 鈥

Rife went on to use his knowledge of real estate development, remodeling a former church in Orlando to create East End Market. The two-story building houses local merchants selling items such as artisanal cheeses, produce, sauces, breads and organic juices; a demonstration kitchen; meeting spaces and a full-service restaurant.

And in keeping with Rife鈥檚 vision, the entrance to the market is landscaped with a large garden, where produce is grown for use by market tenants.

Reaping the Benefits

Alexia Gawlak

Alexia Gawlak, 鈥05, traces her interest in local food sourcing to a chef at culinary school who, in her words, 鈥渨as a little nuts.鈥 Subscribing to conspiracy theories, the chef was so particular about edibility that 鈥渉e even made his own cat food,鈥 says Gawlak, who graduated from the Rosen College of Hospitality Management with a B.S. in restaurant and foodservice management.

While she didn鈥檛 buy into the chef 鈥檚 theories, he did prompt her to consider using reliable local food sources. That notion was emphasized when she went to work at Primo at the JW Marriott Orlando Grande Lakes hotel for chefs Melissa Kelly and Kathleen Blake. 鈥淭hey taught me the importance of knowing the farmer,鈥 Gawlak says. 鈥淚 already knew from cooking local food that it tastes better, it鈥檚 fresher and it鈥檚 more interesting.鈥

Gawlak was recently named chef de cuisine at Siro Urban Italian Kitchen at the Orlando World Center Marriott. 鈥淢arriott is very committed to this, and that is the reason why I signed up,鈥 she says. At Siro, Gawlak is using local meats and poultry, and, of course, Florida seafood. She has introduced a fritto misto, or mixed platter, with Apalachicola oysters, Florida grouper and Key West pink shrimp. She uses a lot of Florida produce too, but 鈥渢hat slows down a lot for the summer season.鈥

But seasonal availability is part of what inspires Gawlak about local sourcing. She says it makes her job as a chef easier. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e letting what鈥檚 in season drive your menu, you don鈥檛 have to think as hard 鈥 you already know what鈥檚 there.鈥


鈥淭hey taught me the importance of knowing the farmer.鈥


Completing the Cycle

Alex Stringellow

Alex Stringfellow, 鈥12, wants unused foods 鈥 peels, rinds and leftovers 鈥 to convert into organic compost for farmers and gardeners to use to repeat the growing cycle.

Stringfellow, who has a B.S. in psychology, became interested in composting while managing the edible garden at the 激情快播 Arboretum. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a whole facet of ecological value of being able to take food from when it鈥檚 grown and use it as a resource for our own energy, and then reuse it,鈥 he says.

The initiative, Compost Orlando, which he developed with Kathleen Shannon, 鈥05, has begun as a residential program but will eventually expand to include restaurants.

The Fresh Market and Publix grocery store chains have donated food-grade buckets for reuse as compost bins. For a monthly fee, participants leave their scrap-filled bins out for pickup by the composters, who use bicycles with trailers to retrieve them, minimizing the company鈥檚 carbon footprint.

Currently, the team is serving the Audubon Park, Baldwin Park and Colonialtown neighborhoods in Orlando. They also provide opportunities for customers to drop off their food waste at several locations in the same areas. But no matter how the raw materials come to them, it all ends up in the same place.

鈥淭he food comes to us, we process it, and it goes back out to different gardening initiatives.鈥

Farm-to-Student

Since 2009, the 激情快播 Arboretum has been supplying free fresh produce to students through the Knights Helping Knights Pantry, a campus resource that provides food, toiletries and other necessities to those in need. Seasonal fruits, vegetables and herbs from the arboretum鈥檚 volunteer-run organic community garden are donated twice a week to the pantry, which offers up to five food items per day to students.
鈥淭he garden fosters a sense of community, and donating to the pantry is a big part of that,鈥 says arboretum coordinator Jennifer Elliott, 鈥04. 鈥淚f what you eat is grown close by, it鈥檚 healthier for you and the environment.鈥

Harvest Time

100 lbs. per month donated by the arboretum during the spring harvest (January鈥揂pril)

激情快播 Arboretum Garden Variety

Fruits and Vegetables

Broccoli Carrots Cauliflower 贰驳驳辫濒补苍迟听 碍补濒别听 Mulberries 翱办谤补听 笔别补肠丑别蝉听 笔别辫辫别谤蝉听 笔辞迟补迟辞别蝉听 搁补诲颈蝉丑别蝉听 厂辩耻补蝉丑听 厂迟谤补飞产别谤谤颈别蝉听 Sweet 笔辞迟补迟辞别蝉听 罢辞尘补迟辞别蝉听 Turnips

Herbs

叠补蝉颈濒听 尝别尘辞苍驳谤补蝉蝉听 Mint Rosemary