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Roy Choi –Challenging Chefs Do Something Different and Make Food More Accessible

Roy Choi –Challenging Chefs Do Something Different and Make Food More Accessible

I recently heard about the MAD Symposium, an annual gathering of few hundred writers, chefs, scientists, historians and fermentation activists in Copenhagen which is dedicated to exploring and sharing new and forgotten food knowledge.   The third MAD, which took place on August 25-26th 2013, was dedicated to the topic of “guts.” With the theme, the organizers wanted to invoke a sense of courage and urgency in the speakers, enabling chefs and attendees to reflect on the stories and ideas that no one usually dares or gets an opportunity to tell, both literal and metaphorical. MAD was organized by chef René Redzepi and was co-curated by Momofuku chef and restaurateur David Chang and food magazine Lucky Peach.

At MAD, chefs from around the world gather and discuss the challenges and responsibilities that go beyond cooking.  Talks and discussions center on new questions to ask, and how to become more imaginative and inquisitive. One talk by Roy Choi, a chef who revolutionized food truck culture with his food trucks in L.A., was recently posted on MAD’s blog and has been getting lots of mentions on food and culture blogs.

Back in 2008, Choi and his partners, Mark Manguera and Caroline Shin-Manguera, launched a fleet of Korean-Mexican taco trucks, known as Kogi BBQ.   In his talk Choi talked about his restaurant practice, and challenged chefs to address the fact that they are mostly much only feeding privileged communities.

Choi started by talking about the 5 million people in California are hungry.  Where he lives, 65% of children live in poverty.  An additional 17% live in extreme poverty.  He went on to share stasistics about how in his neighborhood where he lives and works, low academic performance, unemployment, single parent homes are the norm, and up to 90% of residents have witnessed or been involved with violence.

He continued on to talk about food and about the unseen hunger crisis in Los Angeles.

“With so many paved roads, the nice weather, restaurants, farmer markets – it is hard to see that in many parts of the city food is supplied by liquor stores, and there are no chef-driven restaurants.  There are few supermarkets and little or no organics.  The stores that do exist have second rate or end of life produce. The restaurants that do exist are fast food.

In life, we all have an ability to make a choice.  Why can’t all these residents just drive over to the next town to get to Whole Foods and shop?  It is the fundamental belief that we all think we have these equal choices, and accessibility to have a great meal is a fallacy.  If all you see growing up is junk food processed meat, and fast food (and no vegetables and fruits), this becomes your normal food and way of eating.

Why am I saying this at a food conference with the best chefs in the world?  I believe that chefs can do anything.  We are not the richest people, but what we do and say, people follow.  We revel what makes up the super duper food world.  We are all connected of the food world, but what if there is a whole population of people right under your nose who can not eat?

We have the internet, and hyper awareness.  Things can be communicated quickly.  The food world has never been more active.  But has it changed?  Are we feeding the people who can’t afford it?  The audience has gotten younger.  We talk about food all the time more than ever.

Our prison systems have terrible food, and these are places to rehabilitate others. In 6th generations from now, the children are not even born yet will have the same division that exists.

Do we have the guts to do something different?    What if every chef also balanced that by making food more accessible? And not just feeding the hood, but also challenging fast food. Imagine every chef in every city was doing their restaurant but also creating a kiosk in a working-class neighborhood, working with the purveyors to bring the prices down—so, instead of fast food, there would be chef-driven fast food.”

Choi worked to create a cafe at Jefferson High School in L.A., selling fruit cups and fresh drinks.  Today the project has become a cafe, and he sees it as a start to making change in his neighborhood.   You can watch his talk on the MAD blog here.

 

Links and Image Sources:

Roy Choi MAD Talk

Roy Choi –Kogi BBQ

Roy Choi’s Upcoming Book – L.A. Son: My Life, My City, My Food

 

 

 

Flying Buffet: Sonja Alhaüser’s Fantastic Food Event

Flying Buffet: Sonja Alhaüser’s Fantastic Food Event

Feast: Radical Hospitality in Contemporary Art was an exhibition that focused on the act of sharing food and drink in order “to advance aesthetic goals and to foster critical engagement with the culture of their moment.”  The show premiered at the Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago, and presented more than 30 artists works that explored the shared meal as an artistic medium. Feast featured gallery works, and also many participatory projects, meals, and performances.  I recently read about the show again, since it recently traveled to The Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston.

One of the artists in the show includes German artist Sonja Sonja Alhaüser, who created a “catering performance” for the show when it was at the SMART Museum.  The piece, entitled Flying Buffet, had servers wearing silver outfits and wearing white wigs who moved through the space like a  “flying buffet”, serving food.  “The piece moved through the lobby and had lots of movement, like flying,” the artist says in the online video created by the Smart Museum.

The performers would carry trays of food that included skewers of fruit, cheese with Marzipan figures; small canopies with signature drawings posted on toothpicks, and large sculptural elements. On the trays, and also on tables were angels, animals such as fish and cows, and figures out created out of margarine, which gave the food a baroque look, and pushed the edge of buffet food.

The artist says about the piece, “All together it is a big picture, or a landscape of food.  All who want to come and eat are able to eat.  I wanted to have all kinds of foods:  meat, bread, cheese, fruit and others, so that all foods are in the buffet.”

Her planning for the process involved creating large recipe drawings, which were large wall-sized detailed sketches made in pencil and watercolor.  The drawings featured images of ingredients, and also sketches of the sculptural elements, and the overall piece.  The recipe drawings look fantastic, but when you see the video of the piece, you realize that the artist was able to realize her vision.  The flying buffet comes alive.

The video and images of the piece can be seen in the Flying Buffet Vimeo video.  Make sure you don’t want it hungry.

Image Source and Links:

Flying Buffet Vimeo video.

Feast Exhibition-  Smart Museum

Sonja alhaeuser – Website

 

Feast Exhibition at the  Blaffer Museum, Houston, TX 

 

Kbaumlier – Rooting and A Room of One’s Own

Kbaumlier – Rooting and A Room of One’s Own

Ok, I’ve started rooting.  It’s been what seems like a long journey to get here, but it is so worth it. This summer we relocated to Durham, North Carolina, and spent the summer looking for a new house, getting setup with new accounts, ids, etc; buying a new house, moving out of our summer apartment, moving into a new house, and finally unpacking a new house.  All of this went on while having to use a GPS and Google daily to find and navigate to new places.

I had read that moving is one of the most stressful life events, and is on the list with new baby, death of a loved one, losing a job, and getting a new job.  Now that  I can navigate on some days without using a GPS, am living with our furniture and our “stuff” again, and have had one full week break from unpacking boxes and sorting – I feel rooted.

Things are still new and take more energy than I am used to, and some things are in the works that take research and lots of paperwork to do, I feel ready to be in the studio again.

The studio itself is not done.  I am waiting for the shoe molding to get done on the new floor.  I have to touchup the painting I did on the top edge of the room.  But – I feel grounded and rested enough to jump back in to writing on my blog and developing Food Font.

The last few weeks when I was not posting, and not working on Food Font – I would often recall an essay that we read in graduate school, A Room of One’s Own, written by Virgina Woolf in 1929.  The essay focuses on the idea that, ‘a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.’  It also focuses on whether women have been free to create art, and gives a critical and historical account of many women writers.

The past few weeks, since we moved into the house, my studio was not setup, and I felt unable to do anything creative until the house felt “settled.”  I felt unable to just run to a coffee shop and work, and just as unable to work on creative things when there were 50 boxes in the room. I do not always work in my studio space, but is has always been a space that I setup where I can keep track of what I am working on , and also work in if a project demands it.

I love North Carolina, the new people I am meeting, and new places I go to.   These weekend is our first “vacation” from moving,” and we are heading to the beach, which is only 2.5 hours away.

But – the big news is that I am back, somewhat rested, and ready to go.

 

Make a Chair Out of a Washing Machine

Make a Chair Out of a Washing Machine

Clothes washers are about 65% percent steel, in addition to the motor, oils, electrical components, hoses and other materials.  Each year some 60,000,000 washing machines are sold around the world.   Usually the steel is recycled, but designer Tony Grigorian created a design to create one or more chairs out of a single washing machine.

Griogorian created some simple directions to follow, which starts with the first step of disassembling the washing machine and mapping the parts.  Using specific parts and some thick foam, you can assemble and cut the pieces to create a series of modern chairs for your house or studio.  The chairs have a space-age, futuristic feel, and if you like modern décor, these pieces would work well.

The project is called  “I Used to be a Washing Machine” and you can read more on Yanko Design or Tony Grigorian’s website.   You also can watch the “I used to be a washing machine music video,” where you can see a washing machine be disassembled.

Image Sources and Links:

Yanko Design – Washing Machine Furniture

Tony Grigorian Website

I used to be a washing machine video

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Baking for a Cause – The Depressed Cake Shop

Baking for a Cause – The Depressed Cake Shop

As I posted last week, Miss Cakehead, a freelance creative director and managing director of Cakehead Loves generates and executes  stunts, experiences and publicity campaigns that sometimes use food and drink in unusual ways.

This summer she is doing a charity project called The Depressed Cake Shop, which is a unique pop up cake shop where every single cake on sale will be grey, with color on the inside. The project will open in London on August 2-4, with other popup events taking place around England, and maybe even across the world.

The project is meant to bring awareness to depression and mental illness.  The project website reports that one in four people will suffer from mental illness at some point in their lives, and the project will raise funds for a mental health charity, while bringing awareness to this issue.  The project hopes to raise discussion about mental illness and to engage people with the issues that stems from this disease, and to talk about depression and mental health.

Just like how the symptoms of depression can vary widely, so will the cakes.   Since depression makes others feel sad, hopeless and lose interest in things you used to enjoy, the bakers contributing cakes and baked goods to the project will try to visually represent this.  Some of the cakes might be half decorated, be grey or dull in color, and provide visual ways to show the effects of depression.

Many of the bakers will be made by individuals who have personal experiences of depression, using baking as a way of expressing their struggles with, and experiences of, the illness.  The project also has been looking for sponsorship to help setup a series of baking therapy sessions around England, and set up a support network for those who use baking to help combat depression.

If you want to get involved, or create a pop-up shop of your own, you can get information from the Miss Cakehead website, or the project Facebook page.
Image Source and Links:

misscakehead.wordpress.com/

www.facebook.com/groups/