Posted on

Lettuce Eat — The 3rd Annual Local Farmer Dinner

The Venue From the Past Farm Dinner by Lettuce Be Local.

 

On July 24th, Lettuce Be Local will be offering their 3rd Annual Local Farmer Dinner at Lilac Hedge Farm

The night begins at Lettuce Be Local's annual Farmer Dinner.Lettuce Be Local, based in Sterling, MA, is considered among the industry as the “food hub” committed to strengthening the community through healthy eating direct from local farms. In 2014, they created their first Local Farmer Dinner, which is now hosted several times each year. The purpose? To provide an opportunity for area farmers to meet the chefs that use their produce while enjoying the fruits of their labor.

While many restaurants and chefs practice (or claim to practice) “Farm To Table” cooking, what co-founder Lynn Stromberg wanted to create with the Local Farmer Dinners, was a unique dining experience where guests could enjoy a locally sourced, fresh from the vine, farm to table meal—literally on the earth where produce came from. “When we began, we had little indication the dinners would be so well received despite each dinner being very different, depending on the farm location, guest chef(s), time of year and, of course, weather,” says Stromberg. With two years of dinners under their belt, a theme has begun to emerge: “dinner with friends” with the community vested in the local agriculture.

And today, tickets are available for what will be the biggest dinner yet, as it will include access to Farmstalk2016. “The four hour Farmstalk festival is the prelude to our multicourse local farmer dinner, with tastings from the chefs who buy local, 100% traceable ingredients, craft beer tastings, live music and a huge farmers’ market to encourage relationships with local farmers and the chefs who truly support local agriculture,” continued Stromberg.

Confirmed chefs include Katie Quinn of Mullahy’s Artisan Cheeses & Specialty Foods, Brian Treitman of B.T.’s Smokehouse, and Damian Evangelous of Armsby Abbey.

Order your tickets today »

Farmers, Chefs, and Friends all enjoying the Annual Farmer Dinner by Lettuce Be Local.

Posted on

Test Kitchen Pays Homage To El Morocco

Test Kitchen's El Morocco Event on Friday, May 20th 2016

Editor’s Note: The first El Morocco Tribute Dinner on May 20th has been sold out. A second date has been announced: Thursday, May 19th!

In a year that saw both the El Morocco building demolished and the Park Avenue Lebanese eatery Shiraz close, it is only fitting that Niche Hospitality’s Test Kitchen pay homage to the ethnic flavors that once represented the city of Worcester.

On May 20th, the Test Kitchen will present a five course event that will be reminiscent of the El Morocco. Executive Chef De Cuisine, Neil Rogers, will be serving traditional favorites including three different types of hummus, grape leaves, baba ghanouj, kafta, fatayer, haloumi, kibbeh naya, lamb shoulder, and more. “With all of the growth the region has seen with relation to restaurants, it’s nice to preserve a sense of the past, the history of the city; where the city started and what is has become,” says Rogers. And while Rogers wasn’t able to borrow “secret recipes” he spent time doing research at the Worcester Historical Museum and listening to personal “stories from old patrons, told with a twinkle of nostalgia in their eye.”

Tickets are now on sale and can be purchased through Niche Hospitality Group.

Keskoon!

El Morocco Dinner Event menu