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If you've got inquiries or would like to discuss story ideas, upcoming events, or the movement in general, please contact Kate Evanishyn at kate@slowfoodusa.org or 718.260.8000.

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

CONTACT
Jenny Trotter
Slow Food USA
718/260-8075
jenny@slowfoodusa.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, April 19, 2007

Native Foods Celebration at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe

Sunday, May 20, 2007
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO – 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.

The Native Foods Celebration will highlight diverse native food products through cooking demonstrations and exhibition booths. There will be many local food producers and various types of local food products on display, with opportunities to learn about and sample delicious native foods:

  • Chef Walter Whitewater of the Diné (Navajo) Nation will prepare a marinated grilled quail with a New Mexican Red Chile honey glaze
  • Chef John Sharpe of The Turquoise Room in Winslow, Arizona will grill marinated Navajo Churro Lamb for fresh tacos
  • Chef Loretta Barrett Oden (Potawatomi) will do a twist on rice and beans using hand-harvested wild rice and the full-flavored tepary bean, the most drought-adapted legume in the world
  • Chef Lois Ellen Frank (Kiowa) will serve samples of a chocolate piñon torte with local peach honey and hand-gathered prickly pear syrup, a recipe from her James Beard Award winning cookbook
  • Chef Richard Hetzler of Mitsitam Native Foods Café at the National Museum of the American Indian will not only lead a cooking demonstration, but will also seek new native foods to incorporate into his café
  • Jonette Sam of Picuris Pueblo will ladle out piping hot buffalo chile stew with meat from the Pueblo’s Bison Program. For those with a whetted appetite, their buffalo meat products will also be available for sale.

Famed author & chef, Deborah Madison, will be signing copies of her book, Local Flavors, along with other local authors.

The Santa Fe public premiere of Loretta Barrett Oden's PBS series, Seasoned with Spirit, will screen throughout the day. The Seasoned with Spirit series is a culinary celebration of America’s bounty combining Native American history and culture with delicious, healthy recipes inspired by indigenous foods.

Slow Food USA
Also at the event, RAFT partner, The Cultural Conservancy, will be documenting the food traditions of Native American communities by conducting audio interviews with people who are preserving, reintroducing and revitalizing Native American foods and food traditions. This event is made possible through the generous support of the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) and Renewing America’s Food Traditions (RAFT) Project partners.

The closed-session Native Food Producers’ Retreat the next day, Monday, May 21, will convene a small cross-section of leaders in the US native foods movement to exchange community strategies for strengthening native foods within regional food systems, and to build momentum for a cooperative movement to revitalize these systems. Over the course of the day, native food producers, chefs, community activists and RAFT partner organizations will explore practices for marketing and sourcing native foods within native communities, as well as explore the challenges and benefits of working with non-native as well as native retailers, chefs, activists and eaters. These facilitated conversations will also focus on strategies recently used by native communities to develop public policy to safeguard native seeds and foster sustainable production of native foods on tribal lands.

RAFT brings seven of the country’s most prominent education, conservation and food organizations together to document and restore America’s agricultural biodiversity. RAFT initiatives bring food producers, chefs and consumers together to develop and promote conservation strategies, sustainable food production and awareness of the endangered foods and food traditions of the United States. Partner organizations include: American Livestock Breeds Conservancy, Center for Sustainable Environments at Northern Arizona University, Chefs Collaborative, The Cultural Conservancy, Native Seeds/SEARCH, Seed Savers Exchange and Slow Food USA.

IAIA is a four-year Tribal Arts and Land Grant College in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Through its Native Foods in Culinary Arts Project, IAIA is focused on revitalizing the cultural knowledge and methods of growing and preparing food integral to Native American life. The partnership with RAFT and exposure to leaders in the native foods movement at this event is a natural fit with the aspirations the college has for its native culinary program.

Native Foods Celebration at IAIA
Sunday, May 20, 2007
10:00am - 4:00pm
Institute of American Indian Arts
83 Avan Nu Po Road, Santa Fe, NM

Directions can be found at: http://www.iaia.edu/map.php
*This event is free and open to the public

For information about RAFT: http://www.slowfoodusa.org/raft/

For information about IAIA: http://www.iaia.edu

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