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Archive for the ‘chef’ Category

Miami Herald food writer Nancy Ancrum has fallen in love with Robert Barnum’s lavender vichyssoise. (Those of you who attended the Potato Pandemonium last year may remember its pale purple color and delicate taste.) She has written about it — and gives an advance preview of the Earth Dinner on Saturday night.

Spuds star

By Nancy Ancrum

Potatoes aren’t the first crop that comes to mind when you think of the Redland. They probably don’t even come in second or third — or ninth or tenth.But Robert Barnum, a South Miami-Dade farmer and entrepreneur, gathers a bumper crop of spuds each season from a plot of ground up the road from his 40-acre property. And they will play a delicious role on Saturday when he opens his home to 45 diners who have made reservations for his multi-course — and belated — Earth Day dinner.“The state of Maine, every year, grows about 200 different varieties of potatoes that they have available for seed,” Barnum says.“They have to grow them to determine there’s no virus in the seed – they call it ‘virus indexing.’ And when they finish growing the crop out back of me in the glade, about a quarter mile away, they plow them under.”

Barnum has permission to pick them back out. “I get a terrific variety of colors, shapes, sizes, flavors, textures, chemistry.”

Saturday’s locally focused menu will include boar from the Lake Okeechobee area, grass-fed beef from Destin and sea salt from the Keys.

Barnum will use purple and blue potatoes, among others, to make lavender vichyssoise, which he will serve with multicolored potato chips.

Read the rest of the article here.

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Easter Brunch in Paradise

Come celebrate Easter at Paradise Farms! Join Farmer Gabriele Marewski on her farm for a Healthy Easter Egg Hunt, a leisurely farm tour led by Gabriele, followed by a delicious brunch by Chef Kira Volz.

The brunch features: fresh mango and orange juices, mimosas, homemade organic yogurt with local berries, herb roasted potatoes, marinated heirloom tomatoes, Paradise Farms organic salad greens, malabar spinach and caramelized onion breakfast strada, and finishing with spiced coconut cake for dessert.

Farm tour begins at 11 am with brunch at 11:30.  Visit Paradise Farms to make your reservation. Price $43 plus tax and Google fee. Children under 12 for $15. Babies free.

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Brunch in Paradise

Dinner, Lunch and now Brunch! Paradise Farms will be starting a beautiful Brunch In Paradise on Sunday, February 6th with renowned Chef Kira Volz. Farm tour is at 10:30 am and brunch at 11:00 am.

Chef Kira is an artist in the kitchen, and expresses her talent with cuisine in the most beautiful and delicious ways. Enjoy fresh greens, and other local organic goods along with mimosas and fresh eggs! Have fun creating your own parfait at the parfait bar with fresh seasonal fruit and homemade organic yogurt.

Visit Paradise Farms to purchase tickets online.  Price $43 plus tax and Google fee.  Children under 12 for $15.  Children under 2 are free.

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The new season of the legendary Dinner in Paradise series opens Sunday, Dec 12th.  Each dinner features hors d’oeuvres, a sunset tour of Paradise Farm, and a five-course menu prepared by an all-star line up of some of the best chefs in town.

The first dinner features the talents of four chefs — Chef Timon Balloo from Sugarcane, Chef David Bracha from The River Seafood and Oyster Bar, Chef Jason Prevatt from the Loews Hotel, and Chef Frederic Delaire from several Michelin rated French restaurants. World class wines will be paired by Sommelier Shari Gherman.

A portion of the proceeds this season will be donated to the non-profit organization Urban Oasis Project. Members and volunteers plant food gardens in underprivileged neighborhoods, and operate the brand new Liberty City Farmers Market.

To purchase Dinner tickets online, go to the Paradise Farms site.

To make donations to the Urban Oasis Project, click here.

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Robert just loves some jakfruit.

Last week was the start of a new CSA season, and to kick things off, The Cantankerous Chef AKA Robert Barnum invited Farmer Margie and her crew of interns, apprentices and volunteers to come over for dinner at his Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery. Every CSA season, Margie has a different group of people picking and packing all the goodies you get in your share box. This year’s helpers are Jane, Liberty, Helene, Tomas, Eric and Lauren. They have come from as near as Florida and as far as Michigan and Europe to work at Bee Heaven for the season.

The group arrived at Possum Trot just as the sun was starting to set. Robert offered an abbreviated tour of his 40-acre grove before dinner. We strolled down a grassy path and paused from time to time as he pointed out various trees. (This is by no means a complete list of what grows at Possum Trot.) He has: osceola tangerine, macadamia (squirrels pillage the nuts), grumichama (which has a cherry-like fruit), jaboticaba, pithacyillobium (its sawdust will stain your skin blue, really!), a giant brassus palm killed by last winter’s freeze and still standing, mamoncillo, Central American walnut, several jakfruit loaded with fruit, sugar palm, oil palm, and Orinoco banana. Over in the lychee section, golden orb weaver spiders had spun their webs overhead, and appeared to float against the darkening sky. As we walked and listened to Robert’s spiel about his trees, the twilight grew deeper and an almost-full moon rose over the tree tops. It was getting too dark to see, so we headed back to the farm house where we were greeted by the mouthwatering aroma of bread baking.

The Crunchy Bunch: Liberty, Helene, Robert, David, Eric, Lauren, Jane, Tomas. Not seen: Margie, Marian.

The menu was curried pork with local organic green beans (which were still crisp and crunchy), white rice, avocado salad, a mixed organic greens salad made by Margie’s crew, and bread still warm from the oven. We had a lively discussion on how we liked our beans cooked. It was determined that that there are two kinds of people when it comes to beans — those who like them crunchy, and those who prefer them soft. Everyone at the table agreed that they preferred crunchy green beans, then somebody suggested that we were the Crunchy Bunch…

Mamey-pineapple-banana ice cream, with a dab of cas guava ice cream at the bottom.

I didn’t realize how hungry I was until I started eating, and forgot to photograph my plate before it was devoured. I guess that means it was good! Robert scooped up homemade mamey-pineapple-banana ice cream, which was outrageously smooth and creamy. Banana mellowed mamey, but pineapple was a bit shy.

After dinner, we broke out the wine. Robert’s friend David Weingast, who had joined us for dinner, brought a California organic petite sirah. (David’s Organic Company ships Robert’s fruit.) Robert produced two bottles of his home brewed bignay wine. One tasted much like a merlot, and the other was a sweet dessert wine made with champagne yeast. The Crunchy Bunch sipped and sampled and picked their favorites. The dessert bignay got a lot of votes. It was a pleasant end to a delicious meal, and the Bunch enjoyed their last easy night before the frenzy of the CSA season began.

For lunch or dinner reservations, trees, fruit and/or a tour of Possum Trot, contact Robert Barnum at 305-235-1768 or possumplentious@yahoo.com.

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