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2008 Press Releases

April 20, 2008
NEW ANALYSIS OF AT-RISK FOODS IN NORTH AMERICA
The Renewing America’s Food Traditions (RAFT) Alliance announces the first continent-wide analysis of at-risk food species and varieties in North America. More than 1,000 unique seeds, breeds, fruits, nuts, fish and game are currently threatened or endangered across the continent. The RAFT Alliance has not only identified which foods are vulnerable, but is calling for the restoration of regional food networks, farms, wildlands and waters to prevent such extinctions.  

2007 Press Releases

November 19, 2007
SLOW FOOD NOMINATES YOUNG VICE PRESIDENT
An international delegation of youth attended Slow Food’s International Congress in Puebla Mexico and presented a six-point proposal that establishes opportunities for leadership by, investment in, and engagement of youth in the Slow Food movement and organization. Their presentation was met with enthusiasm by Slow Food leaders, culminating in the nomination of 20 year-old Kenyan student John Kariuki Mwangi as one of three International Vice Presidents of Slow Food.

November 2, 2007
YOUTH FOOD MOVEMENT
New York City, NY: In order to highlight the work being accomplished by youth around the country, and to inspire international Slow Food leaders to bring these models for youth engagement back to their home countries, Slow Food USA and Slow Food International are sponsoring a delegation of Youth Food Movement representatives to attend the Slow Food Leaders Congress in Mexico this coming week.

August 30, 2007
THE SLOW FOOD USA ARK OF TASTE SETS SAIL ON THE WISCONSIN STATE CAPITOL STEPS
On September 15th, 2007, rare American heirloom fruit, vegetables and livestock such as the Native Wisconsin Cranberry, the Mississippi Cotton Patch Goose, the Florida Wilson Popenoe Avocado and the Inland Empire Old-Grove Navel Orange from California will be welcomed onto the Slow Food USA Ark of Taste.

August 10, 2007
SLOW FOOD MOVEMENT BECKONS AMERICA’S YOUTH
Slow Food USA is pleased to announce the expansion of their Slow Food membership chapters to college and university campuses across the country.  In response to demand from college aged students eager to get involved in the national conversation about food and the environment, Slow Food USA and its program Slow Food in Schools, will bring together a diverse group of students who are passionate about food and sustainability issues.  

July 20, 2007
ARK TO DOCK IN BLACK HILLS OF SOUTH DAKOTA
Slow Food USA to Board Bison onto the ‘Ark of Taste’ Next Week -- Erika Lesser, executive director of Slow Food USA, is expected to make the formal announcement of the bison addition to the Ark of Taste when she addresses the International Bison Conference in Rapid City,
South Dakota.

May 10, 2007
SAVE THE DATE! SLOW FOOD NATION 2008
On May 1 – 4, 2008, Slow Food USA will hold an unprecedented public event, Slow Food Nation, at Fort Mason Center in San Francisco.

May 9 , 2007
SLOW FOOD SF'S GOLDEN GLASS EVENT COMING THIS JUNE
Top Italian indigenous & regional wines complemented by gastronomic delights from leading Bay Area restaurateurs and food producers

April 19 , 2007
Native Foods Celebration at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe
Renewing America’s Food Traditions (RAFT) and the Institute of
American Indian Arts (IAIA) are bringing together over two dozen farmers, ranchers, gatherers,
historians, cooks and food activists for a Native Food Producers’ Retreat at IAIA in Santa Fe, NM. To
complement this retreat, a free public celebration will be held on Sunday May 20 from 10:00am to
4:00pm on the IAIA campus.

2006 Press Releases

September 21, 2006
SLOW FOOD REVOLUTION: Carlo Petrini in Conversation with Gigi Padovani
Can food be political?  The question might seem frivolous, but to Carlo Petrini, the founder of Slow Food, and to the more than eighty thousand worldwide members of the movement, the question is vital, and the answer is yes, absolutely. 

September 8, 2006
Terra Madre 2006: October 26-30 in Turin, Italy
Largest International Gathering of Small-Scale Farmers and Food Producers, Including 500 from the U.S. Chefs and Universities Will Also Attend  

August 26, 2006
Slow Food USA holds its first Sustainable Seafood Gala
On September 25, 2006, Slow Food USA will hold its first Sustainable Seafood Gala at Agraria Restaurant in Washington, DC, to highlight the importance of responsible fishing practices, sustainable food systems and ocean conservation.

May 9, 2006
Ragya—Tibetan Plateau’s First Yak Cheese Export
The Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity and the Trace Foundation announce the advent of Ragya Yak Cheese, a unique and aromatic creation from the high-altitude land of Tibet.

March 14, 2006
Slow Food's Terra Madre Katrina Relief Fund awards grants to 12 Gulf Region producers and restaurant owners in an effort to help rebuild the local food system
New Orleans, Crescent City Farmers Market, March 21st, 2006, 10am: Slow Food USA will distribute $30,000 to twelve local food producers and restaurant owners who have been heavily affected by Hurricane Katrina.

January 19, 2006
The Slow Food Guide to San Francisco
When people around the world think of the San Francisco Bay Area, they immediately think of delicious food. Its restaurants, farms, vineyards and specialty food producers are at the epicenter of cutting edge food in America.

2004-2005 Press Release Archive

2001-2003 Press Release Archive

Slow Food in the Press Archive

 

Press

Slow Food movement has global outreach
Farmers, producers share knowledge at Italy convention

Carol Ness, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, October 30, 2006

(10-30) 04:00 PST Turin, Italy -- Americans who think of Slow Food as an elite supper club for snobby food purists would be stunned by the scene unfolding inside the former Olympic speed skating arena here over the past four days.

Senegalese cereal farmers in purple satin and matching headdresses trade packaging tips with Peruvian potato growers in traditional red embroidered garb. Goat cheese makers and Hmong long-bean growers from California find common ground with their Italian and Eastern European counterparts. Israeli and Palestinian farmers, along with Iraqi and American food producers, share space and the excited chat that food never fails to stimulate.

This is Terra Madre, a gathering that is the Olympics of the international movement to deindustrialize food production. That means putting taste back at the heart of food, saving heirloom fruits, vegetables and animals, keeping small farmers in business and in local communities, and pushing farming back on sound environmental ground.

Mingling with the farmers are prominent Bay Area names in the sustainable food movement -- Chez Panisse founder Alice Waters, UC Berkeley journalism professor and "The Omnivore's Dilemma'' author Michael Pollan, Full Belly Farm's Judith Redmond, Boulevard Restaurant's Nancy Oakes, Incanto's Chris Cosentino, Mourad Lahlou of Aziza and the entire A16 restaurant team, just to name a few.

Invited to cook next door at the Salone del Gusto, the giant artisanal food fair that showcases some of Terra Madre producers, were hot Spanish chef Ferran Adria of El Bulli and renowned Piedmont chef Cesare Giaccone.

More than 5,000 small farmers and foodmakers from 130 countries, plus 1,000 chefs -- including more than a dozen from the Bay Area -- are in Turin to eat, network and build what Waters called "a global counterculture" in her address to the opening session.

It's the second such gathering organized by Slow Food International, which is based in the nearby town of Bra. The first Terra Madre, in 2004, generated an astounding force field around the ideas of Slow Food, which started 20 years ago as a way of saving inexpensive Italian restaurants serving tagliarini with butter and sage and other traditional foods from the wave of nouvelle cuisine that put salmon with dill on plates around the world.

Now, Slow Food has grown into an international movement, with 80,000 members in 50 countries, including 12,000 in the United States.

About 500 Americans were invited as delegates and observers, more than a quarter of them Californians, including a contingent of organic farmers from the Capay Valley in Yolo County who are familiar faces at San Francisco's Ferry Plaza and Berkeley farmers' markets.

Health problems like obesity and diabetes, widening economic disparities across the world and environmental issues like global warming show that the current system "defined by speed, abundance and waste" can no longer sustain itself, Slow Food founder Carlo Petrini told the conference, which concludes today.

The time is ripe, he said, to bring food economies back to their local roots.

For a group of Hmong, Latino and African American farmers from the Central Valley of California brought to Terra Madre with help from the Davis-based Community Alliance With Family Farmers, that meant connecting with farmers from around the world.

Ali Shabazz, an African American herb farmer from Fresno, helped a Tanzanian farmer who wanted technical advice on equipment. Va Moua, who says many of the Hmong farmers in the Central Valley use lots of fertilizer, talked to farmers who don't.

"Now we'll find out if we can do it naturally," he said.

The point, said Blong Lee, a representative of the Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission, is to get Central Valley farmers thinking about ways they can distinguish themselves and their crops, and to get their products into the local economy instead of the global one.

At one point, the California farmers found themselves dubiously eyeing a plate of cured meat called capocolla from the southern Italian town of Martina Franca.

Its maker, Costantini Angelo, had ideas for the California farmers, most of whom grow just one crop, sell into the wholesale market, but fail to make enough to gain a real foothold in the Central Valley economy. Angelo feeds his pigs only acorns from his home region, so his meat has the unique taste of its soil. That's a value-added intangible that helps him sell directly to stores and obtain the price he wants.

Moua and Cindy Mai Xiong, farmers who grow jujube -- a kind of fruit -- on 4 acres near Fresno, touched the acorns and heard the advice -- but they were distracted by their growling stomachs. This was their third day in Italy and amid all this beautiful Parmigiana Reggiano and prosciutto di Parma, they were starving.

"We went to a fancy restaurant last night," said Lee of the Fresno commission. "We tried to order pizza with pepperoni and they didn't have it, and lasagna and spaghetti and meatballs, but they didn't have it. It's not the type of Italian food we expected."

The chefs, meanwhile, reveled in the Italian Italian food. Incanto chef Cosentino ate his way through all the lardo -- a cured meat made from pig fat -- and prosciutto he could find and sought esoteric ingredients like tuna heart.

Jackie Martine, chef-owner of the Seaweed Cafe in Bodega Bay, who tries to source all of her ingredients locally, made a connection with an African grower of vanilla beans -- something she knows she can never find in Northern California -- from whom she may buy directly. And from a Mauritanian's bottarga di mugine, a salted mullet roe, she was inspired to create a similar product using her native halibut roe "which is usually thrown away."

On a trip through a local farmers' market, though, she was stunned to see that most of the apples were Granny Smith, red delicious and golden delicious, the same ones that dominate American supermarkets. "It's the effect of globalization," she said.

San Franciscan Cosentino, who participated in a panel on meats, said he felt a divide between affluent chefs like himself and struggling farmers from poorer regions -- a divide that Slow Food has yet to bridge.

"I complain because we can't get lungs," he said of federal laws that ban what for some is a delicacy. In contrast, a Kenyan livestock farmer on the same panel described how water shortages and power failures decimate his cattle before he can get them to slaughter, threatening his entire livelihood.

"There's this disconnect," Cosentino said of the enormous disparity in resources among participants in the conference.

In the United States, Slow Food leaders are well aware that there's a similar disconnect between the political ideals forged at Terra Madre and consumers' perceptions of Slow Food.

"The media still regards Slow Food as a dining club; they still don't perceive the political content," Pollan told a meeting of the U.S. delegation.

To try to bridge that gap, to take the ideas of Terra Madre home, Slow Food USA is planning an unprecedented gathering of regional artisanal food producers in San Francisco in May 2008, Waters said. The idea, dubbed Slow Food Nation, could be replicated all over the country, she added.

"It's clear there is a political movement growing around food,'' Pollan said. "And it's about a lot more than food -- it's about health, the health of local economies, the energy crisis.

"People are ready to hear this movement. It seems the important work now is to show that San Francisco is at the center of this movement."

E-mail Carol Ness at cness@sfchronicle.com .

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