• 27Apr

    In my inbox.

    -JAY

    ———————

    The Prince of Wales to Deliver Keynote at “The Future of Food” Conference hosted by Washington Post Live:

    Authors Wendell Berry and Eric Schlosser; White House Chef Sam Kass;

    and key executives from Stonyfield Farms, General Mills, Applegate Farms, and Bon Appetit

    convene to discuss the future of food production
    Washington, D.C.—April 26, 2011—The Prince of Wales will give the keynote address at “The Future of Food” conference, hosted by Washington Post Live at Georgetown University, May 4. The conference will bring together top corporate executives, community leaders, and government officials in the sustainability movement.  The discussion will focus on how to make the world’s food system more resilient, reduce its harmful impact on the environment, and ensure that healthy food becomes available to everyone.
    Among those attending will be Wendell Berry, the novelist, poet and pioneer of the organic movement; Eric Schlosser, author of “Fast Food Nation”; Sam Kass, White House Chef; U.S. Senator Jon Tester; Michael Taylor, Deputy Commissioner, FDA; Gary Hirschberg, the CEO of Stonyfield Farms; Dan Barber, the chef at Blue Hill; Will Allen, the founder of Growing Power; Susan Crockett, vice president and senior technology officer for health and nutrition at General Mills; and many other leading figures in the food and sustainability movement.

    “The Future of Food conference brings together an incredible group of leaders to discuss an issue that affects everyone. We’re delighted to be hosting another forum that invites thoughtful conversation about an important global issue,” said Mary Jordan, Editor, Washington Post Live.

    His Royal Highness is a long-time advocate of local, organic, and sustainable food production. As the keynote speaker, he will address the issue of long-term agricultural sustainability and the importance of promoting ecosystem resilience.

    Patrick Holden, Chief Executive of the Sustainable Food Trust, who will be speaking at the conference and who worked closely with Prince Charles during Mr. Holden’s term as Director of the U.K. Soil Association said, “The Prince of Wales has rightly emerged as the leading global authority on this theme through his vision and leadership in consistently highlighting the importance of sustainable agriculture over more than 25 years. It is so timely that this conference is taking place at the very moment when there is an emerging global consensus about the need for fundamental changes to our food systems. There could be no better person to highlight the need for increased food security and resilience against a background of climate change, resource depletion and population growth.”

    The conference will be live-streamed on washingtonpostlive.com/conferences/food from Georgetown University’s Gaston Hall. An agenda will also be listed on the site the week of the conference. Following the conference, video highlights will be available online.

  • 28Mar

    Arlington Library has some good food-related events coming up.  Below is an Arlington County announcement:

    -JAY

    ———————

    Arlington Reads 2010: Literary Legend, Farmer Wendell Berry

    • “The Memory of Old Jack” is featured title
    • Berry, urban farmer Novella Carpenter to speak
    • Book club kits available

    (Note: In an earlier version of this release, the date for Mr. Berry’s appearance was incorrectly listed as May 3. The correct date is Tuesday, May 4, 2010.)

    ARLINGTON, Va. — Our food takes center plate this spring as Arlington Reads 2010 looks at the movement away from industrial mass production back to safer, healthier meals grown through local, sustainable means.

    Arlington Reads is Arlington Public Library’s annual one-book, one-community initiative to promote discussion and the joy of reading throughout the County. It is made possible through the generous support of the Friends of the Arlington Public Library.

    This year’s featured Arlington Reads author—literary legend, essayist, poet and Kentucky farmer Wendell Berry, who declared that “eating is an agricultural act,” — is widely credited with inspiring the “food movement.” Making a rare public appearance, Berry will discuss his life’s work and vision of people honoring and reconnecting with the soil at 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 4 at Central Library, 1015 N. Quincy St., Arlington. This special event is free and open to the public.

    “Wendell Berry actually began the national conversation about food, agriculture, the environment and health decades ago,” Library Director Diane Kresh said. “Without him, we probably wouldn’t have a vegetable garden on the White House lawn or Wal-Mart selling organic produce.”

    This year’s Arlington Reads celebrates not only Berry’s “remarkable career as a writer of more than 30 novels, essays and collections of poetry, but his prescience in encouraging readers to ‘think globally and eat locally,’’ Kresh said.

    Join the Discussion

    Berry’s classic novel “The Memory of Old Jack” is this year’s featured Arlington Reads title. The book finds truth and integrity in the land through the eyes of an aging farmer in 1952 rural Kentucky. It will be the subject of a community discussion in Central Library Auditorium at 7 p.m. April 19. Leading the exchange will be Professor Patrick Deneen, director of Georgetown University’s Tocqueville Forum on the Roots of American Democracy.

    The Library has “The Memory of Old Jack” available in a variety of formats. Copies also have been made available to Library-sponsored book groups.

    Novella Carpenter to speak at Central Library

    Arlington Reads will feature an appearance by urban farmer and author Novella Carpenter at Central Library at 7 p.m. April 29. Carpenter has re-staged the American agrarian dream in an abandoned Oakland, California lot, raising fruits, vegetables, bees and even pigs and goats in a neighborhood known as “GhostTown.” Her critically acclaimed “Farm City”—featured on “best book lists” from Oprah to the New York Times—spreads the gospel of home-grown food and the empowerment it brings.

    While in Arlington, Carpenter also plans to meet with high school students and explore some of the County’s farmers markets and community gardens.

    Central Library in April is also the site of a month-long juried art exhibition, “The Art of Food.”

    Information on all Arlington Reads 2010 events and offerings including book club kits can be found at www.arlingtonreads2010.wordpress.com. Contact Library spokesman Peter Golkin to arrange interviews with Berry or Carpenter.

    Other Arlington Reads events

    April 7

    Screening of the critically acclaimed documentary “Food, Inc.” 3 p.m. Shirlington Branch Library, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington.

    April 11

    Panel discussion on “Eating Local.” Area farmers and naturalists will look at simple ways to eat foods that are safer, healthier and geared to the bounty of each season. 3 p.m. Shirlington Branch Library.

    April 14

    Screening of the ensemble drama “Fast Food Nation,” based on the Eric Schlosser best-seller. 6:30 p.m. Shirlington Branch Library.

    April 17

    “Work-in-progress” screening of the documentary “A Community of Gardeners,” produced by local filmmaker Cintia Cabib. The film explores the vital role of seven community gardens in Washington, D.C., not only as sources of nutritious food, but as outdoor classrooms, centers of social interaction and oases of beauty and calm in inner-city neighborhoods. The screening will be followed by a Q-and-A session with Cabib. 2 p.m. Central Library Auditorium.

    All programs are free and no reservations are necessary.

    April 28

    Wednesday, April 28, 6:30 p.m.
    Arlington Reads Film Screening: “How to Cook Your Life” [2009]
    Shirlington Branch Library
    A documentary look at how Espe Brown, a San Francisco Zen priest/cookbook author, uses Zen Buddhism and cooking to relate to everyday existence.

    April 29

    Thursday, April 29, 7 p.m.
    Arlington Reads Author Talk: Novella Carpenter, “Farm City: The Education of An Urban Farmer”
    Arlington Central Library Auditorium
    Novella Carpenter has restaged the American agrarian dream in an abandoned Oakland, California lot, raising fruits, vegetables, bees and even pigs and goats in a neighborhood known as “GhostTown.” Her critically acclaimed “Farm City”?featured on “best book lists” from Oprah to the New York Times?spreads the gospel of home-grown food and the empowerment it brings.

    April 1-April 30

    Arlington Reads Juried Art Exhibition: The Art of Food
    Arlington Central Library, 1015 N. Quincy St.

    May 2

    Sunday, May 2, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
    Flower and Herb Sale
    Glencarlyn Branch Library, 300 S. Kensington St.
    Just a week before Mother’s Day: Native plants, herbs, perennials, flowering shrubs, tropicals and annuals–hundreds of plants. Sale takes place rain or shine. Cash or check only.For more information, call 703-379-9619.The Glencarlyn Branch Library Community Garden is maintained by Master Gardeners of Northern Virginia and affiliated with the Virginia Cooperative Extension. Proceeds from the sale will go to the care and maintenance of the garden.

Categories

Archives