[Ccpg] January 29-30, Hotel Mar Monte, Santa Barbara/Edible Communities presents Edible Institute

Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network lakinroe at silcom.com
Fri Dec 10 07:36:21 PST 2010


Edible Institute 2011

http://www.ediblecommunities.com/content/edible-institute/edible-institute-2011.htm
November 10, 2011
Edible Communities presents Edible Institute - a weekend of talks, 
presentations, workshops, and local food & wine tastings - by some of 
the local food movement's most influential thinkers, writers, and 
producers. January 29-30, Hotel Mar Monte, Santa Barbara, CA.
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE TICKETS TO EDIBLE INSTITUTE DAY ONE, January 29, 2011.
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE TICKETS TO EDIBLE INSTITUTE DAY TWO, January 30, 2011.

EDIBLE INSTITUTE DAY ONE: Saturday, January 29, 2011

KEYNOTE: Joan Gussow Nutrition and education professor at Columbia
University, a member of the National Organic Standards Board, and a
board member at the Jessie Noyes Smith Foundation. Gussow is also on
the Center for Food Safety's Advisory Board and the Board of Overseers
of the Chefs Collaborative.

FEATURED PANELS:
The Future of Food Writing, Recipes and Cookbooks. > Molly Watson moderator.
Molly Watson is a writer and recipe developer, teacher and speaker. 
She is the guide to Local Foods for About.com. Her work has appeared 
in numerous other places, including Sunset magazine (where she was 
the staff food writer from 2005 to 2008), the New York Times, Edible 
San Francisco, and the San Francisco Chronicle.
PANELISTS:
Molly O'Neill: Former food columnist for the New York Times Magazine 
and the host of the PBS series Great Food. Author of four cookbooks, 
including One Big Table.

Russ Parsons: Food editor and columnist Los Angeles Times, author of 
How to Read a French Fry: And Other Stories of Intriguing Kitchen 
Science, and How to Pick a Peach: The Search for Flavor from Farm to 
Table.

Dianne Jacob: Dianne Jacob is the author of Will Write for Food: The 
Complete Guide to Writing Cookbooks, Blogs, Reviews, Memoir, and 
More. Previously a newspaper, magazine, and publishing company 
editor-in-chief, Dianne has been self employed since 1996 as a 
writing coach, author, and freelance editor.

Terry Walters: Terry Walters first book, CLEAN FOOD, caused a
sensation and fueled a nationwide movement about nourishment and clean
food that been embraced all the way to the White House. CLEAN FOOD 
taught us the benefits of eating locally grown, seasonal, and fresh.

=============================

Will Urban Ag Change the Way We Eat? > Kerry Trueman moderator.
Kerry Trueman is the co-founder of EatingLiberally.org, a netroots 
website & organization that advocates sustainable agriculture, 
progressive politics and a less-consumption driven way of life. She 
blogs regularly at Eating Liberally, Huffington Post, and Civil Eats.

PANELISTS
Annie Novak: Founder and director of Growing Chefs, field-to-fork food
education program; the children gardening program coordinator for
the New York Botanical Gardens, and co-founder and farmer of Eagle
Street Rooftop Farm in Greenpoint. Annie has worked with the CENYC
Greenmarket, Slow Food, and Just Food advocating and growing urban
agriculture throughout NYC.  Her work in agriculture has been featured
in New York Magazine, Edible Brooklyn and the Martha Stewart Show
among other press.

David Cleveland: Professor, Environmental Studies Program University
of California Santa Barbara. Recent work: Tradeoffs between
Agriculture, Open Space, and Urbanization. The
value of land: Agriculture, food and urbanization in the Goleta
Valley, California.

Ashley Atkinson: Director of Project Development and Urban Agriculture
- Greening of Detroit Ashley Atkinson gardens with passion and is
growing a new economy in her community that could change the way
Detroit uses its open spaces. As the Director of Project Development
and Urban Agriculture for the Greening of Detroit, Atkinson is
developing Detroit's premier market farm from a 30-acre city park
filled with sewer pipes; all on a budget of $40 per week.

===============================
Journalists Talk Strategies for Writing About Industrial 
Agriculture. > Jane Black moderator.
Jane Black is a food writer who covers food politics, trends and 
sustainability issues. Her  reporting examines how politics, culture 
and business affect what ends up on our plates - and how that is 
dramatically changing. Jane was, until recently, a staff writer at 
the Washington Post. She now writes for the Post, as well as the New 
York Times, Food & Wine magazine and others. She also has a regular 
podcast on Edible Radio, Smart Food.
PANELISTS:
Philip Brasher: Correspondent for The Des Moines Register, focusing on
agriculture, food, energy and climate issues.

Barry Estabrook: Former contributing editor at Gourmet magazine. He
now serves on the advisory board of Gastronomica, The Journal of Food
and Culture, and writes for the the New York Times, the Washington
Post, The Atlantic.com, and Saveur.

Bryan Walsh: Time magazine energy and climate writer.

================================

Activists and Advocacy: SOLE Food's Message for Change. > Tom 
Philpott moderator.
Grist food editor Tom Philpott farms and cooks at Maverick Farms, a 
sustainable-agriculture nonprofit and small farm in the Blue Ridge 
Mountains of North Carolina.
PANELISTS:
Ralph Loglisci: Project Director for the Johns Hopkins Healthy Monday
Project. Before joining the Center for a Livable Future, Ralph served
as the Communications Director for the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute
of Bioethics. However, it was his work as the Communications Director
for the Pew Commission on Industrial Farm Animal Production that Ralph
became aware of the intricate connections between food systems, the
environment and public health.

Debra Eschmeyer: Marketing & Media Manager of the National Farm to
School Network and the Center for Food & Justice. She works from a
fifth-generation family farm in Ohio, where she continues her passion
for organic farming raising heirloom fruits and vegetables. Prior to
joining CFJ, Debra was the Project Director at the National Family
Farm Coalition in Washington, DC where she focused on U.S.
agricultural policy and food sovereignty initiatives among grassroots
domestic and international rural advocacy and other social justice
networks.

Dan Imhoff: Co-founder of Watershed Media, a researcher, author, and
independent publisher who has concentrated for nearly 20 years on
issues related to farming, the environment, and design. He is the
author of numerous articles, essays, and books including Food Fight:
The Citizen's Guide to a Food and Farm Bill, Paper or Plastic:
Searching for Solutions to an Overpackaged World; Farming with the
Wild: Enhancing Biodiversity on Farms and Ranches; and Building with
Vision: Optimizing and Finding Alternatives to Wood.

=======================================




EDIBLE INSTITUTE FOOD & DRINK GALA! Please join us immediately 
following the panel discussions at the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum 
for a celebration of local food & drink (admission is included in the 
ticket price). Featuring New West, Hitching Post, Delish Nutrish, 
Montecito Country Kitchen, Organic Soup Kitchen, Here's the Scoop, 
Telegraph Brewing Co., Qupe, Riverbench Winery, Zaca Mesa Winery, 
Alma Rosa Wines, Buttonwood Winery, Margerum Wine Company, Roblar 
Winery, Los Olivos Cafe, Ojai Vineyard, and many others!

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE TICKETS TO EDIBLE INSTITUTE Day Two, January 30, 2011.

EDIBLE INSTITUTE DAY TWO: Sunday, January 30, 2011
Opening Panel: High-quality, artisanal products and their role in 
the local food world: St-Germain Liqueur, Equal Exchange Coffees & 
Teas, Margerum Wine Company, Ojai Pixie Tangerines and VerTerra 
Dinnerware.

Panel 2: Rancho Gordo founder Steve Sando will share his journey 
from frustrated home cook to "agri-preneur", running a company 
dedicated to presenting indigenous New World food to his fellow 
Americans. With a focus on beans, from growing to marketing, in both 
the US and in Mexico, Sando will show off his collection and share 
the story of the Rancho Gordo-Xoxoc Project, which is encouraging 
Mexican farmers to grow their own heritage beans (and corn) for 
Rancho Gordo instead of bland hybrids for an elusive and mostly 
disappointing international market.
Panel 3: Mighty Wines - Small Family Producers Using Traditional 
Winemaking Methods (A Focus on Santa Barbara County with Tasting). > 
Tracey Ryder moderator Tracey Ryder is the President and CEO of 
Edible Communities, Inc., publishers of over 60 regional food 
magazines in the US and Canada. PANELISTS: Adam Tolmach Ojai 
Vineyards Karen Steinwachs Buttonwood Winery Richard Sanford Alma 
Rosa Winery Doug Margerum Margerum Wine Company Bob Wesley Winehound 
Store 
Included in the ticket price is admission to two workshops of your 
choice. Workshop registration is on a first-come, first-serve basis. 
Will will contact you by email for confirmation upon receipt of your 
ticket sale.
Workshop session 1
Workshop Option #1: Writing the Perfect Recipe with Elissa Altman and 
Terry Walters
Workshop Option #2: Fine Tuning Your Food Blog with Dianne Jacob 
Workshop Option #3: Rooftop Gardens: a guide to green roofs, 
seeds, and soil with Annie Novak 
Workshop session 2
Workshop Option #1: Food writing with Molly Watson 
Workshop Option #2: How to connect regional food buyers and 
sellers with Deborah Kane 
Workshop Option #3: Lisa Ekus and Virginia Willis on building your 
own brand as a food writer and how to market yourself.
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE TICKETS TO EDIBLE INSTITUTE DAY TWO, January 30, 2011.
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