There is already a farm to table movement happening in restaurants across the country.Imagine it going a step further with chefs taking a vested interest as well as having a say about the seeds sown.It may sound a bit extreme but it's taking hold.Doing such though can add totime honored recipes . Yet , will the seed to table movement catch on?
The idea was debated and discussed in Wednesday's New York Times Dining section. Dining regular Jeff Gordonier explored it, writing about how it will change the way chefs will cook and create. What this means is that not only will fruits and vegetables be better tasting but so will grains. Chefs may ask growers to experiment, creating not only strawberries that may taste better or even veggie hybrids but also richer, more flavorful grains..It also means more nutrients will be added to these , creating super foods. A simple salad won't be simple.It will be chock full of vitamins. Even that complimentary basket of bread won't be just an appetite whetter, it will be chock full of all sorts of good for your nutrients.
Are all chefs behind this? The answer is yes. Even chefs Sam Kass and Bill Yosses from the White House are for this movement. International chefs from Spain(always a forefront in anything culinary) to France to even South America approve of the seed to table idea. New York cooks, including the famed baker David Bouley, is behind it. For him it would be a bonus, Imagine what his famed breads would taste like if they had been made with tastier flour. For all chefs it would create not only more healthful dishes from appetizers to desserts but also more flavorful ones.New hybrids would allow chefs too to create new dishes or spins on classic ones.
It may be in its' infancy but the seed to table movement will be picking up steam.It will add a different dimension to old and well used recipes.It will definitely usher in a new age of restaurant cooking.
Friday, September 27, 2013
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