farm-to-table

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There are so many things to remember these days, so many things to juggle. We are eager to dismiss those tasks that seem overly laborious, and in recent years dinner has been the unsuspecting victim. Luckily for us, there are chefs like Linton Hopkins of Restaurant Eugene and David Tanis of Chez Panisse fame who would like to remind us of the importance of food. Tanis’ newest cookbook, The Heart of the Artichoke and Other Kitchen Journeys ($35, Artisan), teaches that quality food and thoughtful preparation deserve our respect and our time.

We recently had the opportunity share a meal with Tanis, who offered his thoughts across a colorful spread of simple ingredients, thoughtfully crafted by Hopkins in preparation for Restaurant Eugene’s recurring author dinner series. We began with crab deviled eggs, duck terrine and pickled okra, followed by a fresh mixture of locally grown baby carrots, cauliflower and cipollini onions, then a beet salad with a surprising citrus tang and radish crunch. But this was just an introduction to the real showcase: roasted chicken with sage, bacon infused peas and cabbage with apples.

“Dining together (and not in restaurants) is so important to establishing culture,” Tanis reminds us. “Children need exposure to this.” Seems like a challenging assignment, doesn’t it? Not for Tanis, who still prepares dinner every evening after leaving the restaurant near 11 p.m. Tanis has made it easy for us, though; his recipes and insightful musings, seasonally arranged, emphasize the excellence of simplicity.

You’ll have no trouble gathering your brood around the table when you introduce them to Chef Tanis’ modern re-invention of classic Southern ingredients:

Molasses Pecan Squares

8 tablespoons butter, softened

1 cup dark brown sugar

2 eggs, separated

2 tablespoons molasses

½ teaspoon vanilla

½ cup all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon salt

½ cup chopped pecans, plus a handful of whole pecans for topping

1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Grease and flour a 9-inch square baking dish.

2. Cream the butter and sugar in a mixing bowl. Add the egg yolks, molasses and vanilla, and beat well.

3. Sift the flour with the baking power and salt, and add to the mixing bowl, stirring well. Stir in the chopped pecans.

4. In another bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff. Gently fold them into the batter.

5. Spread the batter in the dish and sprinkle the whole pecans over the top. Bake 35-40 minutes, or until a knife inserted in the center comes out dry. Cool in pan and cut into 3-inch squares. (Makes 9)

From The Heart of the Artichoke and Other Kitchen Journeys

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Editor’s note: There’s an increasing awareness of the power of locally-grown foods—even the White House has launched its own organic garden. In turn, the slow food and the farm-to-table movements have gained momentum in recent years. As a result, we’ve asked Jenny Levison, a star on the local culinary scene with her restaurant, Souper Jenny, to keep a journal of her seasonal garden. Throughout the summer, she’ll be sharing her triumphs and tribulations of home gardening. We hope it inspires you to partake of summer’s organic bounty…or try your hand at growing your own

Oy, I am three weeks into my new 100 percent organic vegetable garden and my five-year-old and I are on the same page. What are we doing?! I am a first-time, novice gardener and laugh every day when I walk around my newly raised beds, wondering if I have killed anything yet! Lo and behold, Farmer D, the local organic farming expert who stopped by to help me on my quest, was right! All it takes is water and a snip here and there and these things actually grow!

Farmer D gives me the rundown on what it takes to grow a successful organic garden.

Farmer D gives me the rundown on what it takes to grow a successful organic garden.

I allowed Farmer D to choose what would grow best so we have three plots full of all different kinds of tomatoes, zucchini, squash, eggplant, beans, watermelon, peppers from poblano to Jalapeno, radishes, beets and a huge variety of herbs. After three weeks and all this rain it’s been a snap!

Farmer D and I get to work, surrounging each small planting with soft earth.

The two of us get to work, surrounding each small planting with soft earth.

Me getting the hang of it. It's easy!

Me getting the hang of it. It's easy!

The crops from seeds are sprouting and starting to look like something and the tomato plants are growing on their trellis. I do confess that I have called Farmer D and bribed him with dinner if he will come by and make sure everything looks OK and give us a little gardening 101. I think he is wondering why I don’t know anything about this, but then again, can he make My Dad’s Turkey Chili?

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