Category: Food

The Tree Cafe in Stockholm – Now Serving Tea and Cookies

The Tree Cafe in Stockholm – Now Serving Tea and Cookies

Ever have a picnic under a tree?  What about in a tree? Byggstudio, a creative design company, has created a mobile café that is made to be installed in and around trees in Stockholm, Sweden.  The café, which is called the Trädkafé or The Tree Caf is  part of an exhibition called Sommarland that is part of the  Arkitekturmuseets Projektrum.

The café is comprised of modular componants that ianlucd wood seats and ladders that are hung in a tree, and provide a place for people to sit in or under a tree.  The menu at the café is nature inspired, and includes fir tea with maple syrup, bread with chestnut cream, and tree stem cookies.

The café itself is made of fir and oak, and provide a fun, simple experience to have some food in a natural setting.

More information and pictures of the café can be seen on the byggstudio website.

 

Images:

http://www.byggstudio.com

 

Links:

http://www.byggstudio.com

Eating and Design:  The Work of  Marije Vogelzang

Eating and Design: The Work of Marije Vogelzang

As Marije Vogelzang  writes on her website about food, “It’s all about humans. Food is simply used as a tool to interact, explore, engage and enjoy.”  For many years Vogeizang, who has a background in design has created work both for clients and on her own that explores the relationship of design and food.

One project she did for Droog Design in the Netherlands was a holiday dinner, where she created an “intervention” experience.

To create a new experience, she used a table with a tablecloth, but the cloth was suspended in the air with slits in it. Participants had to sit with their heads inside the space and their bodies outside.  The setup suggests being inside of a tent or under a blanket, which creates an intimate setting.

Due to the setup, the dinner guests were actually physically connected.  If someone moved or pulled on the cloth, the person next to them would feel it also. The visitors did not know each other beforehand, but the experience worked to connect them and feel as though they were in something together.

At the event, the food was served in pairs in order to to support sharing.  For example, one person was served a two slices of melon on a plate while the person accross was given slices of ham on a similar plate. The participants without direction began to share their food.

The project was recreated in Tokyo in 2008, and the visitors to this dinner also engaged in the experience.  For this setup, everyone was given a scissors so that they could cut themselves out of the design at anytime if they wanted.

Some of Vogelzang’s other projects involve large conveyer belts of food on tables, and the relationship of storytelling and food.    More of Vogelzang’s projects can be seen on her website.

Image Source:
http://www.marijevogelzang.nl

Links:

http://www.marijevogelzang.nl

 

 

Love With Food:  Eat Treats and Donate a Meal to a Hungry Child

Love With Food: Eat Treats and Donate a Meal to a Hungry Child

Recently there have been lots of businesses popping up that are linking consumer purchasing to making a donation when purchasing something.

Love For Food is taking on the prevalent issue of hunger with a monthly membership of gourmet and nutritional products.  Each month, The Love with Food Group puts together boxes of gourmet treats that you can buy, and proceeds from the purchase go to donate a meal to a hungry child.

To sign up, you donate $10 a month and get 8 or more gourmet foods that might include tea, olive oil, cookies, jelly, and other specialty foods.  For each box you get – a meal is donated to a hungry child in the U.S.

From what I can see from pictures, the food in the box looks like items that would cost at least $5 a piece –  so it is a deal for the purchaser and you also can help a child who is hungry.

To date, there have been 50,220 meals donated.  I don’t eat a lot of specialty prepared foods – but I know of people that would love getting this box of food and also knowing that they are helping feed a child.  You can check out more about Love For Food on their website, and also see more pictures of the food at lovewithfood.com.

Image Source:
lovewithfood.com

Links:

lovewithfood.com

“Dinner, Not Art” – A Macaroni Art and Food Donation App

“Dinner, Not Art” – A Macaroni Art and Food Donation App

Today I downloaded and tried out the “Dinner, Not Art” iPad application made by Kraft foods where you can create digital macaroni art, and also donate noodles to those who need food.  The app is promoted with the phrase, “Make macaroni masterpieces without wasting a noodle.” For each noodle you use in your piece, 10 real noodles are donated to the nonprofit Feeding America.  As of today, according to the application, over 16,325,050 noodles have been donated to Feeding America, a non-profit that helps those who are hungry and in need of food.

After you download and open the application,  you get to create a virtual piece of art by gluing virtual noodles, adding paint, erasing, and choosing a background You can then submit your piece to be chosen to be in the Dinner, Not Art gallery and on Facebook.

I created a simple piece on a red background and when I was done I named it, saved it, and posted it on my “virtual fridge.” By making the piece, I helped donate 50 noodles to Feeding America.

Want to make a macaroni piece? Check out the Youtube movie and application page to get started.

Image Source:
https://itunes.apple.com/app/id541385824

Links:

https://itunes.apple.com/app/id541385824

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=SWgSUpkl2IQ

 

Food as Art:  Caroline Hobkinson and Experimental Dining

Food as Art: Caroline Hobkinson and Experimental Dining

Caroline Hobkinson creates experimental dining experiences in both gallery, public and private spaces. She works with food as an artistic medium and explores both the ritual and spectacle of eating.  In her projects, she orchestrates fully immersive multisensory dining experiences and food performances where the diners cease to be diners but become performers in a culinary ritual.

In her works smell, culinary instruments, flavors and textures, and manners that we use are all used to create unique experiences.  On her site she writes, “How we eat- the context and emotion has the strongest impact on how we perceive taste. Whether its suspended from the ceiling or whether we eat with alternative dining instruments like spearing our food with a tree branch, the long prepared Christmas feast, the birthday cake…  Eating food is the most intimate way to interact with our environment.”

Her projects are one time events, and have been done in gallery, public, and private spaces.  She uses food as an artistic medium, and with food as performance and social commentary.  Some of her favorite “ingredients” include fishing wire, helium, and liquid nitrogen.  She had created experimental feasts for the Royal Academy, Salone Milano, the Barbican, Gwangju Biennale, and other places.

On her site, Stirring with Knives, you can check out some of her projects.  One recent project called LOOK. LISTEN.  SMELL. TOUCH.  EAT! was a fully immersive sensory dining experience done by Hobkinson in collaboration with experimental psychologist Professor Charles Spence.

the feast consisted of various courses and activities which included a dish of eating warm caramelized goats cheese while blindfolded. At the same time, the scent of roast peppers and rosemary was released so diners would taste and smell pepper and rosemary.  For another course, people would eat super crunchy bread rolls while wearing earplugs, thus “internalizing” the crunch.

For another course, called Dialing the Taste, diners were given a number and were asked to press 1 for sweet, 2 for bitter. Specially composed sound frequencies were played to alter the taste experience..

The diners were given a menu that also had directions for the event.  This is printed on the website, and gives a full overview of the event and the courses.

The menu reads:

LOOK. LISTEN. SMELL. TOUCH. EAT!
AMUSE BOUCHE

Insert your earplugs
Devour the freshly baked Bread roll without the use of your hands
Neuroscience has revealed a deep ‘cross modal’ connection, sounds can actually
change how we perceive food experiences.
Can you hear the taste?
***
SIGHT
Blindfold yourself
Your waiter will describe the dish to you
A Cracker bread is placed in front of you
The Smell of Roast Peppers and Fresh Rosemary is distributed
Remove your blindfold
Can you see the taste?
***
SMELL
Salmon Sashimi accompanied by a Syringe filled with Ardbeg Ten Years Old.
Revered as the peatiest and smokiest Single Malt.
Inject the Salmon with the Whisky and eat it
Reconstruct the taste of Smoked Salmon with the Smokey Scent
Taste sensations are picked up chemically by our tongue.
The sensation of flavour is a combination of taste and smell. Most of flavour is smell.
Can you smell the taste?
***
TOUCH
Palate cleanser
HENDRICK’S Gin infused Cucumber Granita
Slurp with texture treated spoons with
Rose Water Crystals and Maldon Sea Salt
TOUCH
Main
Saddle of Venison with foraged Prunes, Chanterelles and Wild Cherries
Grab the hand carved long tree branch and spear it
Can you feel the taste?
***
SOUND
In collaboration with Condiment Junkie
Sonic cake pop
Please take your phone
Dial 0845 680 2419
Research at Oxford University proved that by changing a sound alone we can change a taste from Bitter to Sweet.
A low note brings out the Bitter, a high pitched sound brings out the Sweet flavour.
Can you dial a taste?

Images and updates of her projects can be seen on her website, Stirring with Knives.

Image Source:
http://www.stirringwithknives.com

 

Links:

http://www.stirringwithknives.com