Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Foraging, Transplanting Ramps, and Snail Farming with Clark Barlowe

Foraging, Transplanting Ramps, and Snail Farming with Clark Barlowe

FromChefs Without Restaurants


Foraging, Transplanting Ramps, and Snail Farming with Clark Barlowe

FromChefs Without Restaurants

ratings:
Length:
48 minutes
Released:
Oct 19, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Clark Barlowe is a seventh-generation North Carolinian. Growing up learning how to hunt ginseng with his grandfather, Clark learned to look at the plants around him for the potential nutrients and delicious ingredients that they held while respecting their limitations and responsible foraging. He was formally trained as a chef at Johnson and Wales University. After stages at The French Laundry and El Bulli, followed by positions at Chez Pascal and Clyde’s Restaurant Group, Clark refined his expertise for preparing and respecting ingredients. While chef-owner of Heirloom Restaurant in Charlotte, NC from 2014-2019, Clark supported over 70 small businesses and producers throughout North Carolina, while supplying the restaurant with only NC-based ingredients. After selling Heirloom in December 2019, and moving to his new home in Oregon, Clark is carrying this vision forward as he works to increase knowledge about how to bring the beautiful work of mother nature to your table, while respecting every potential part of each ingredient.On the show, we discuss foraging, cultivating mushrooms, transplanting ramps, and snail farming. Clark is currently attending law school and we talk about how he might potentially combine the two fields such as in food and farming policy. He also discusses foraging for, and preparing some items that contain toxins, such as pokeberries. Clark is trained in this area. If prepared incorrectly, you could become very ill, or in some cases die. Please do not take this as an endorsement to try cooking and eating pokeweed, pokeberries, or mushrooms without being properly trained in that area.CLARK BARLOWE Clark’s Website Potential Pantry Clark's InstagramSaveur article on Poke"What is a Chef?" episodeCHEFS WITHOUT RESTAURANTSIf you enjoy the show, and would like to support it financially, check out our Patreon, or you can donate through Venmo or Buy Me a Coffee. Get the Chefs Without Restaurants NewsletterVisit Our Amazon Store (we get paid when you buy stuff)Private Facebook groupChefs Without Restaurants InstagramFounder Chris Spear’s personal chef business Perfect Little Bites Sponsor- The United States Personal Chef AssociationOver the past 30 years, the world of the personal chef has grown in importance to fulfill those dining needs. While the pandemic certainly upended the restaurant experience, it allowed personal chefs to close that dining gap.  Central to all of that is the United States Personal Chef Association. USPCA provides a strategic backbone for those chefs that includes liability insurance, training, communications, certification, and more. It’s a reassurance to consumers that the chef coming into their home is prepared to offer them an experience with their meal. Call Angela today at 800-995-2138 ext 705 or email her at aprather@uspca.com for membership and partner info.
Released:
Oct 19, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Here's a podcast about food and beverage entrepreneurs and people in the culinary world who took a different route. Chris Spear has been working in the hospitality industry for more than 25 years, mostly outside of traditional restaurant settings. In 2010 he started a personal chef business called Perfect Little Bites. Wanting to help other culinary entrepreneurs build and grow their businesses, he created the Chefs Without Restaurants community. On the podcast of the same name, he has conversations with people in the food and beverage industry who also took the road less traveled. They’re caterers, research chefs, personal chefs, cookbook authors, food truck operators, farmers, and all sorts of culinary renegades.