Newsletter
Blend Your Own Cup of Tea
A cup of hot tea can soothe or energize, and it’s even better when you blend it yourself. In this online class, you’ll blend herbs into teas that can benefit your health as you learn more about herbs and why some can serve as powerful medicine. Have some tea bags and loose herbs from…
Read MorePick Up Tips on Seed Saving and Gardening
Ruby Blume, founder of the Institute of Urban Homesteading, offers classes to improve your garden know-how. Join her this Sunday for a refresher on soil care and what to do in the garden from now through December followed on Monday by an overview of seed-saving techniques along with guidance on which are the easiest…
Read MoreCook at Home with Chef Tony Adams
Celebrate National Farmers Market Week at this virtual cooking class as Agricultural Institute of Marin (AIM) presents Chef Tony Adams, a cookbook author and director of the Cavallo Point Lodge Cooking School in Sausalito. To take part, choose your meal, shop for ingredients at your local farmers’ market, and then cook alongside Chef Tony.…
Read MoreHow Does a Food Bank Get its Food?
As an individual citizen, perhaps you have recently tried to donate food to a food bank. You most likely learned that your monetary donation will be graciously accepted,. With the pandemic now creating far larger populations facing food insecurity than have been seen in nearly a century, food banks are looking to commercial food businesses…
Read MoreMeet Kanchan Dawn Hunter of Spiral Gardens
This week’s virtual gathering at Real Food, Real Stories features Kanchan Dawn Hunter, co-director of South Berkeley’s Spiral Gardens Food Security Project. Hear her story, and take part in a lively Q & A session. Kanchan co-manages Spiral Garden’s Community Nursery and Farm and also co-founded Soil Sistahs, a gathering of BIPOC women that meets…
Read MoreWhat’s at Your Farmers Market This Week?
What’s in Season writer Barbara Kobsar went to Brentwood to pick Suncrest peaches. Mint & Stone Fruit Herbal Shrub Recipe and photo by Anna Marie Beauchemin | East Bay Herbals The shrub is a traditional beverage made with fresh fruit, honey (or sugar), and vinegar, which combine to create a uniquely zippy drink to…
Read MoreFarms to Food Banks
How are government programs working with farmers to feed more people and minimize food waste? In recent months, the USDA and state agencies have supported the purchase of food from farmers as a way to feed those who are unemployed and to reduce food waste. Even before the pandemic, some food banks were buying…
Read MoreChef Tanya Holland Launches A New Podcast
Chef and restaurateur Tanya Holland of Brown Sugar Kitchen brings her talents to a new podcast, Tanya’s Table. Tune in to hear Holland connect in conversation with leading innovators and tastemakers Samin Nosrat, Alice Waters, Questlove, Danny Meyer, and many others. Begins Tuesday July 28, with one of 14 episodes airing every Tuesday through…
Read MoreWhat’s at Your Farmers’ Market this Week?
From Helen Krayenhoff’s 12 Simple Seasonal Vegetable Recipe Ideas
Read MoreImagine Your Post-Pandemic, Plastic-Free Life
Sheltering in place has unfortunately resulted in an alarming rise in single-use plastic disposables. There’s also been rising demand for plastic-based personal protective equipment and a huge increase in plastic related to online shopping and takeout food. At this Zoom class, Denaya Shorter, director of community engagement for Berkeley’s Ecology Center helps us understand…
Read MoreLearn to Save Seeds
Most of us rely on getting seeds or starts from a nursery, but that recently became a lot harder to do. You can become more self-sufficient by making seed saving part of your practice. Learn how to save seeds and grow your own resiliency in this class offered by Richmond Grows and the Richmond…
Read MoreWalnut Creek Farmers’ Market Makes Food Good to Go
Pre-packed food boxes for contact-less pickup or delivery have been in great demand with housebound farmers’ market shoppers, but it’s been a new concept that each market has had to invent from scratch. Staci DeShasier, executive director for Contra Costa Farmers’ Markets Inc., was trying to make this happen at the Walnut Creek…
Read MoreWill Restaurants Survive?
The Bay Area Book Festival presents a timely conversation on the uncertain future of the restaurant industry. Join in as experts discuss the devastating new reality that Covid-19 has caused for restaurants and restaurant workers. How can we support these workers, many of whom are minorities, people of color, and women? Speakers include local…
Read MoreSocial Distancing Moves the Summer Picnic to the Front Yard
We’ve become a walking people since the plague began. We walk through our own neighborhoods and sometimes off into other people’s neighborhoods. We make new friends as we linger and talk from a distance, and as the plague stretches on, we gingerly make plans to spend a little time with old friends, sitting…
Read MoreReady, Set, Bake Against Racism!
East Bay Bakers This group of about 20 professional East Bay bakers is donating to Black Organizing Project and Anti Police-Terror Project. They have two types of boxes for $40 each plus an assortment of à la carte items, coffee, and tisane. You need to preorder at www.eastbaybakers.com for pick up on Saturday, June…
Read MoreBryant Terry Chops it Up on Juneteenth
On June 19 from 3 to 4 pm, join Bryant Terry, Chef-in-Residence at San Francisco’s Museum of the African Diaspora, for “Choppin’ It Up with MoAD.” In this chapter of a weekly Instagram live series, Terry talks with noted farmers, chefs, authors, activists, and entrepreneurs of African descent about how they have been navigating…
Read MoreCelebrating Black Voices and the Fight for Justice in Our Food System: a Juneteenth Broadcast
This live daylong broadcast begins as Chieftess Queen Quet of the GullahGeeche Nation gives a “drum call for justice and a stand for land,” says presenting organization, A Growing Culture. Following throughout the day is a series of presentations and dialogues featuring East New York Farms, Sylvanaqua Farms, Soul Fire Farms, and others. The…
Read MoreAt the Table: Color. Cannabis. Food.
This Friday, June 19 at 3pm, join San Leandro–based Crop to Kitchen and Kitchen Toke Magazine for a conversation surrounding the intersectionality of race, food, and cannabis. Tune in for some of the leading voices in the culinary cannabis community in a discussion about how we can create equity, inclusive spaces, and opportunities for BIPOC chefs and…
Read MoreYou Made What with Those Pickles?
Edible East Bay editor and layout designer Cheryl Angelina Koehler has been having a wildly good time creating e-books with her new friend/collaborator, photographer Judy Doherty. In the early days of the shelter in place, they found themselves bouncing off each other’s enthusiasm as they worked on the books with an aim toward drawing new…
Read MorePlant an Avocado Tree!
Gardener’s Notebook by Joshua Burman Thayer Did you know you can grow productive avocado trees here in the San Francisco Bay Area? We are close to the northern edge of where avocados will thrive, but with some planning and care, you can achieve long-lasting avocado success. Years ago, I had a great opportunity to learn…
Read MoreBoost Your Self-Sufficiency During the Pandemic
The recent increase in people who want to grow food, raise chickens or bees, and learn DIY skills is keeping Institute of Urban Homesteading founder Ruby Blume busy. Her Brave New World series of workshops and farm talks covers topics from compost tea and backyard chickens to food preservation and folk medicine. All…
Read MoreBlack Business Owners on Their Favorite Black-Owned Businesses
“Voting will not save us from harm, but silence will surely damn us all.” —Stacey Abrams November is still a while off, but for now, one way we can vote is with our forks. Edible East Bay decided to gather recommendations for local Black-owned food businesses to support by reaching out to other Black business…
Read MoreMore Favorite Food Boxes
Pre-packed food boxes for contactless pickup/delivery are trending all over—even with the USDA! Nearly every restaurant with takeout is looking into adding a pantry that includes a box of produce assembled to help support their farmer-vendors as well as to keep their own workers busy. We’re also seeing plenty of ways to add a donation…
Read MoreSummer Issue Back on Track!
Fifteen years in publishing, and this is the first time we have missed getting an issue out on time. Like so many small businesses, Edible East Bay has been deeply impacted by the cascade of Covid-19 disruptions. It’s affected our stories, our advertisers, our contributors and staff, and also our whole distribution model. The uncertainties…
Read MoreFrom Food Service to Food Justice, Monifa Dayo Makes It Work
Story and photos by Annelies Zijderveld Monifa Dayo is not new to pivoting. In 2016, the chef realized she had grown weary of the steep physical demands and endless manual labor of commercial restaurant work. Stepping away, she opened Sur Place, a work space inside a private residence, where she could host events like…
Read MoreSpinach Salad with Raspberry Walnut Vinaigrette
“A delicious paella arriving at your doorstep is always a treat,” says Eduardo Balaguer, owner and head chef at Venga Paella. During the extended shelter-in-place order, his company has been providing donated paellas for Building Futures, a local organization that helps victims of domestic violence. They have also have also been pleased to continue providing…
Read MoreEcology Center Webinar: Covid-19 and Reusables
The COVID-19 pandemic is also taking a toll on the environment through an alarming increase in single-use plastics. Join an expert panel to find out how the virus is affecting the future of reusables and how the plastics industry is taking advantage of the crisis to promote fear about reusables. Panel members include Professor Kate…
Read MoreGet Twisted!
Unwind with a free pretzel-making class. Photos courtesy of Squabisch. Learn to make your own German-style pretzels from the pretzel pros at Squabisch. This free class is being held on Thursday May 28 from 5–5:40pm. Go here right before it starts and use Meeting ID: 633 296 3447, and password: 6t7XBi, or look for…
Read MoreIt’s Easy to Grow Medicinal Herbs
Many common kitchen herbs and spices are medicinal powerhouses and are also easy to grow. In this online class you’ll learn about herbal tea gardens, first-aid gardens, and herbs that attract pollinators. Find out which herbs to choose, how they can be used, and which are suitable for pots and containers. Planning Your Medicinal Herb…
Read MoreNutrition in the Virtual Kitchen
Lisa Miller, co-owner of Berkeley’s Kitchen on Fire, says that in mid-March, as every business in town was suddenly faced with discovering how to continue through a lockdown of uncertain duration, she and her team jumped in with their own variation on making and packing meals for no-contact curbside pickup/delivery. But Miller was…
Read MoreMasks for Farm Workers
A group of volunteers in North Berkeley has been collecting masks for farm workers south of Half Moon Bay. They’ve already delivered 100 masks to the organization ALAS: Ayudando Latinos A Soñar, a Latino cultural arts and social services program supporting youth and families, but more masks and cash donations for the group’s…
Read MoreGot Gott’s?
In our imaginations, we’re all tooling around the Bay Area looking at the scenery, visiting shops, and stopping at roadside eateries to enjoy some casual-classic California cuisine featuring local ingredients . . . you know … a burger with a fried egg, bacon, and balsamic onions, some ahi poke crispy tacos, or a chicken…
Read MoreA Few of Our Favorite Food Boxes
Jimmy Bear resides on Carlotta near Monterey Market, but now that he’s sheltering at home, he loves getting food boxes delivered to his porch. Follow him on Instagram at #jimmybearberkeley. As the lockdown began in mid-March, the appeal of signing up with a local farm for a community-supported agriculture (CSA) subscription suddenly soared. Here at…
Read MoreIt’s Cherry-Picking Time in Brentwood!
Brentwood is perhaps the only East Bay community that still has tracts with side-by-side farms producing abundant food. Some of these beloved East Contra Costa County farms have now opened to the public for those interested in keeping up their annual u-pick tradition. Read up here and watch the very helpful video on COVID…
Read MoreReel In a David Lance Goines Poster with Your Salmon
When you add a poster by David Lance Goines to your art collection, you’ll be helping Monterey Fish Market help their employees during the COVID-19 pandemic furloughs. The prints were published by St. Hieronymus Press of Berkeley on January 22, 2020, and 25 have been signed by the artist. Cost: $175 (signed)…
Read MoreBecome a Home Composter
Healthy soil leads to a happy garden! Learn to fortify your soil through home composting with help from the Planting Justice Transform Your Yard team. Find out what’s needed for various compost systems and how to identify which will work best for your home garden. Topics include which materials to compost, how to…
Read MoreMarket Hall Foods’ Bacon, Mushroom, & Kale Frittata
Recipe by Executive Chef Scott Miller | Food Styling and photo by Marshka Kiera, courtesy of Market Hall Foods An ideal Mother’s Day brunch or simple supper, this frittata is a comforting dish that is easy to adapt with ingredients you have on hand. For a spring seasonal twist, substitute the onion for spring onion or…
Read MoreEmergency Food Production Grants Now Available for Local Restaurants and Food Vendors
Restaurants in San Leandro, Hayward, Castro Valley, San Lorenzo, and the unincorporated areas of Ashland, Cherryland, and Fairview may apply for $15,000 to cover costs associated with preparing meals for distribution to home-bound seniors, medically vulnerable patients, and families experiencing food insecurity and hunger as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Food businesses…
Read MoreAbsolute Beginner’s Gardening Class Rides Again!
Seed saving advocate Rebecca Newburn of Richmond Grows Seed Lending Library has tapped members of the Contra Costa Master Gardeners program to lead newbie gardeners in this online session. Learn about what to grow and when to grow it, sunlight requirements for different plants, how to start plants from seeds, how to build…
Read MoreUpcycle Your Brownie Game!
The process of upcycling works its magic in two ways: first, it makes use of something that would otherwise be wasted, and second, it transforms that item into something of higher quality. The idea of making a valuable upcycled product was percolating back in 2012–2014 when Claire Schlemme was in Boston, running an organic juice…
Read MoreBest Earth Day Birthday Cakes
Butterflies hover over this prinsesstårta from Crispian Bakery in Alameda. A tradition from Sweden, this torte consists of alternating layers of sponge cake, jam (typically raspberry), pastry cream, and whipped cream topped by a shell of marzipan. Visit Crispian’s online shop for pickup and delivery. Pastry Chef David Benton started his Sugarsweet Cookie…
Read More04:25:2020 08:00am Breakfast
Good breakfast grub will fuel you up for a day full of gardening, cooking, reading, and three virtual events. Make your own earth-friendly vegan lox and gluten-free bagels with this recipe by Mackenzie Feldman, whose environmental advocacy work was featured in our Summer 2019 issue. That story also included Mackenzie’s splendid vegan and gluten-free…
Read More04:25:2020 10:00am: Food Forest Zoom Talk & Tour
Join in from the comfort of your living room as Sustainable Solano hosts a three-part Zoom event with leading permaculture expert, John Valenzuela. The introduction is followed by a video tour through several demonstration food forests in Solano County. The event concludes with a Q&A that delves into the exciting subject of home and…
Read More04:25:2020 12:00pm Lunch
Up for some cooking? Try this gratin by Chef Christian Reynoso from our Spring 2020 issue. Want someone else to do the cooking? Cafe Umami serves hearty bowls filled with brown rice, veggies, and meat or fish. And you can stock up on Chef Marie’s krauts! If you’ve been a regular at most any East…
Read More04:25:2020 01:00pm Absolute Beginner’s Gardening
Seed saving advocate Rebecca Newburn of Richmond Grows Seed Lending Library has tapped members of the Contra Costa Master Gardeners program to lead newbie gardeners in this online session. Learn about what to grow and when to grow it, sunlight requirements for different plants, how to start plants from seeds, how to build…
Read More04:25:2020 06:00pm Plastic-Free Pizza Dinner and a Show
Here’s your chance to watch The Story of Plastic, a riveting new documentary, at a digital party and panel discussion as Berkeley’s Ecology Center and Zero Waste Youth USA host a virtual screening of this searing expose. The hour-and-a-half-long documentary uncovers the ugly truth behind plastic pollution and the false solution of plastic recycling. The panel…
Read MoreSmoked Vegan Lox and Gluten-Free Bagels
This recipe comes from Mackenzie Feldman, a Bay Area–based environmental activist who we profiled in our Summer 2019 issue. When we asked how her Herbicide-Free Campus initiative is doing a year after our article came out, Mackenzie says, “It’s going great! We are now in 15 schools across nine states!” Mackenzie, who is also…
Read MoreSpring Fava Bean Greens Pesto
A quick and easy pesto to serve over pasta or on bread. Yields approximately 2 1/2 cups. 2 cups fava bean greens, washed and spun dry. 2 tablespoons green garlic minced, 1/2 cup toasted pine nuts 3/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese Kosher salt to taste Juice of 1 Meyer lemon Extra virgin olive…
Read MorePortraits of Our Community During Covid-19
COVID: A collection of images taken of those directly affected by Covid-19 or its economic repercussions On April 2 in her series of portraits, photographer Clara Rice visited Oakland’s Sequoia Diner. “Sequoia Diner has become a new-ish staple of the Laurel District in East Oakland, a big part due to the hard work and…
Read MoreGrow Your Own Medicinal Herbs
Many common kitchen herbs and spices are not just medicinal powerhouses, but also easy-to-grow choices for your garden. In this online class, you’ll learn about herbal medicine, the basics of planning a pollinator-friendly herb garden, and preservation methods for harvesting and collecting herbs for later use. Get recommendations on where to purchase herbs and learn…
Read MoreAre You Zooming Your Spring Holiday Gathering?
When you can’t hop to the store for last-minute provisions, a seder plate can get a bit inventive! Here we have chips as matzo, kimchi as horseradish (maror), and a deconstructed charoset. All considered, not bad! So much of life is happening these days on Zoom, and you might be among those who are holding…
Read MoreDates for Ramadan
In her book Feast: Food of the Islamic World, author Anissa Helou writes extensively about the date “. . . the most important fruit in Islam.” She call it “the first food people [Gulf Arabs] eat when they break the long day’s fast during the month of Ramadan . . . “… the tradition…
Read MoreRussian Easter Bread
Russian Easter Bread Кулич Reprinted with permission from Beyond the North Wind: Russia in Recipes and Lore by Darra Goldstein, copyright © 2020. Photography credit: Stefan Wettainen © 2020. Published by Ten Speed Press, an imprint of Penguin Random House. The tall domed loaf known as kulich is always paired with the pyramidal…
Read MoreNiles Pie Leek & Goat Cheese Quiche
Niles Pie Co., a worker-owned bakery in Union City, California, is up and running during shelter-at-home, filling orders for pick up and delivery. Founder Carolyn Berke shared this recipe. Makes 1 9- or 10-inch pie 4 large eggs 1 cup heavy cream 1 cup milk Several shavings fresh nutmeg ½ teaspoon salt ¼ teaspoon…
Read MoreGary Handman on Lockdown
Artist Gary Handman doesn’t have an exclusive on suffering through the Shelter at Home order, but his new Journal of the Plague Year, now unfolding on Instagram @ghandman, is a good place to laugh as you commiserate. If you’re interested in more entertainment from the pen of Gary Handman, his story on his hardbound food…
Read MoreDeadline for StopWaste.Org Grants Extended
Due to the impacts of the coronavirus, public agency StopWaste has extended the application deadline for their Waste Reduction Grants program to April 3 at 5pm. Grants up to $20K are available to businesses and nonprofits for innovative projects that reduce waste in Alameda County. Grant categories include Repair & Reuse, Food Waste Prevention,…
Read MoreMeals for Kids Offered To Go at Some Local Schools
For meal information on school districts not listed here, check the district website or call for updates. Alameda Unified Berkeley Unified Hayward Unified Oakland Unified Mt. Diablo Unified West Contra Costa Unified Pleasanton Unified School District Child Nutrition Services Continues Meal Service During School Dismissal: PUSD is committed to continuing to feed…
Read MoreLooking for More Good Reading?
Check out these recent articles: The great lengths some will go for a better flour tortilla. An interview with the founder and attendees of Resistance Served, a symposium that centers the experience of Black and African Americans in the hospitality industry. From our friends at Edible Ojai & Ventura County, a story on the road…
Read MoreEating Local During Covid-19
Looking for safer ways to get healthy food? Your nearby farmers’ market is a good option, and it’s likely to be open! We’ve been checking in with the markets to learn about evolving decisions on closures and find that most are staying open. However, it’s a good idea to check via market websites and…
Read MoreRaise a Glass to Whitewater Rapids
For adventure-loving food and wine enthusiasts, Retzlaff Vineyards announces a summer river rafting trip with Far and Away Adventures. It’s a rare chance to experience the thrill and beauty of Idaho’s Middle Fork Salmon River with the luxury of comfortable tents and camp chairs, gourmet food, and outstanding wine. On the river, guests can be part of a paddle-boat team helping to steer a top-flight whitewater raft. Beyond the thrill of the rapids,…
Read MoreGet Savvy about H2O
Want to better manage and conserve water in your garden? Come learn about irrigation design, installation, repair, and assessment with urban farming irrigation specialist Lori Palmquist. The workshop takes place at Alameda Point Collaborative’s urban farm, a two-acre site that produces fruits, vegetables, raw honey, and flowers. Cost: $10 at the door,…
Read MorePain, Glory, and a Good Dinner
Enhance your film night with a four-course dinner at Babette Café in the company of fellow film-goers. There are three films to choose from, and each is followed by an equally memorable meal. Film lineup features Pain and Glory, I Hate Mondays, and Coup 53. Dinner cost: $95 includes food, wine, tax, and tip. Info…
Read MoreRussian Recipes and Lore
Purchase this book. Award-winning author and food scholar Darra Goldstein will be signing copies of her new book, Beyond the North Wind: Russia in Recipes and Lore, at this Market Hall event, where you’ll also get to taste two of the recipes: Beet Salad and Steamed Buckwheat with Sauteéd Mushrooms & Onions. The book explores the heart…
Read MoreBlack Farmers in Film
Honor Black History Month with a dive into the history and legacy of Black farming in the United States and globally. Films include Forgotten Farmers: African-American Land Loss, The Young Black Farmers Defying a Legacy of Discrimination, and broadcast journalist Edward R Murrow’s 1960 documentary Harvest of Shame. You’ll also enjoy music by the Black…
Read MoreHigh-Flying Chocolatiers
Karen Urbanek of flying noir hand paints her chocolates using natural colors mixed with cocoa butter. She adds sparkle with mica, a naturally occurring mineral. Photo and video by Jon Milavec. Meet chocolate makers, chocolatiers, cookbook authors, and pastry chefs at two upcoming chocolate gatherings in San Francisco. Among the makers is Karen Urbanek of flying…
Read MoreRaise a Glass to Black Wineries and Diverse Art
This winter wine-tasting highlights Black vintners and winemakers as well as Black artists and musicians. Founded in 2011 by Berkeley native and Silicon Valley technology professional Fern A. Stroud, Black Vines® hosts this annual celebration of culture, art, and wine education. Cost: $70 includes gourmet hors d’oeuvres, tastings from featured wineries, and a keepsake glass. Proceeds are donated to a local nonprofit. Info and tickets: here Black Vines…
Read MoreRescue Your Citrus Peels!
Learn how to turn orange, lime, and other citrus peels into scrumptious candies in this hands-on class, which explores the principles of candy making and infusing flavors using flowers and herbs. Students take home a jar of candied peel and are treated to light refreshments and a 10% discount on purchases. No experience needed. Cost: $150. Please bring…
Read MoreBe Nourished by Food and Conversation
Slow Food East Bay welcomes chefs from Bhutan and Burma, who offer a sampling of their cooking with dishes like wild mushroom curry, fish noodle soup, sel roti, and more. Hear their stories, which describe the experience of being driven away from one’s homeland due to ethnicity and the ways in which that experience breaks connections to the past. The evening’s beneficiary is Oakland Bloom, a…
Read MoreBlack Joy Cocktail Crawl
In partnership with The Black Joy Parade, this cocktail crawl visits favorite Oakland spots owned by people of color. Enjoy Hennessy cocktails and food, with all proceeds supporting this year’s Black Joy Parade, held on February 23. Transportation between cocktail crawl venues is included. Cost: $65. Ages 21+ only. Info and tickets: here The Black Joy Cocktail Crawl Friday…
Read MoreExplore Ideas on Conscious Eating
Come learn from experts in the areas of animal rights, animal advocacy, and veganism. Speakers investigate the ways that different forms of oppression prop one another up and how best to create supportive alliances. An Animal Rights Herstory Panel details the struggle for animal rights since the 1980s. Cost: $25 in advance, $35 at the door,…
Read MoreEdible East Bay Maps by Margo Rivera-Weiss at OMCA
A new exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California features two maps from past issues of Edible East Bay by staff illustrator Margo Rivera-Weiss, who recently passed away. The show displays a diversity of maps from Oakland, the Bay Area, and California, including Margo’s renderings of Favorite Fish Tacos and Worker Cooperatives. Come explore new perspectives on familiar places and…
Read MoreChock Full of Chocolate
Set the mood for Valentine’s Day with chocolate tastings, pairings, and one-stop shopping at Market Hall Foods. Meet chocolatiers from The Xocolate Bar, Dick Taylor, Charles Chocolates, Jade Chocolates, and Lonohana Hawaiian Estate Chocolate. Sample Valentine’s specialties, heart-shaped cheese, and duck mole, and enter your name to win a chocolate-lovers basket. No charge…
Read MoreJulie’s Dinner of Comfort & Love
In honor of the month of love, Julie’s Coffee & Tea offers a fragrant, luscious five-course tasting menu designed to wake up the senses and warm hearts. In addition to sparkling cava with a hibiscus flower, enjoy dates stuffed with goat cheese, wrapped in bacon, and drizzled with local honey; an arugula salad…
Read MoreCooking Up Valentine’s Fun
What better way could there be to celebrate Valentine’s Day than with a fun-filled night of hands-on cooking and eating under the direction of a master chef? These events at Kitchen on Fire can make great Valentine’s Day fun for anyone: lovers, vegetarians, friends and family, and even singles, and everyone is sure to…
Read MoreVisual Treats at the Stained Glass Garden
From hot peppers to hamburgers (the UFO variety), this show in stained glass will be a treat. Join in for sweet deals, snacks, and art that looks good enough to eat. Info: here “Edible” Group Show Sunday February 9, 2–5pm Stained Glass Garden 1800 Fourth St, Berkeley
Read MoreWhat do Salame Tosano and Cacao Fruit Jam have in common? A Good Food Award!
Our hats are off to this year’s East Bay Good Food Award winners. We can’t wait to taste the winning pasta, salame, fish sauce, cacao fruit jam, and other outstanding products. Almanac Beer Co Alameda Winning Product: Apricot Sournova California Fish Sauce Pleasanton Winning Product: Koji Fish Sauce Cleophus Quealy Beer Company…
Read MoreHerbalism at Home
Join herbalist and educator Anna Marie Beauchemin of East Bay Herbals for a four-week course on incorporating herbalism into your everyday life. Learn the basics of herbal medicine, natural remedies for common ailments, and ways to begin using herbs in your home and kitchen. The class includes lessons on simple medicine making, giving…
Read MoreTry Your Hand at Grafting
A scion is a young shoot or twig of a plant, especially one cut for grafting or rooting. At the 32nd Annual Fruitwood Scion Exchange, you’ll find the best varieties for growing your own fruit. Discover local favorites and near-forgotten heirlooms as you peruse hundreds of varieties you might want to graft onto your…
Read MoreFarming While Black
CUESA welcomes farmer Leah Penniman for an exploration of food, economic equity, systemic racism, and climate. Penniman is the author of Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm’s Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land and co-executive director of Soul Fire Farm, a project that works toward food and land justice. Come learn about Penniman’s work…
Read MoreExpanding the Reach of Permaculture
Join in for a full-day event to explore ways to bring permaculture into the world beyond gardens and farms. City Repair has helped people in urban neighborhoods reclaim public spaces with art and celebration. Social Forestry connects villages and communities to their forested water catchment basin. Be part of a conversation about how…
Read MoreStart Your Year with Yoga . . . Plus a Little Local Wine
Yoga and wine enthusiasts of all levels can enjoy this one-hour vinyasa class followed by a flight of six wines. Côte West produces single-varietal California wines including Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Rosé of Counoise, Grenache, Pinot Noir, and Cabernet Sauvignon. Cost: $25. Info and registration: here Read up on Côte West and other East…
Read MoreBe of Service on an Organic Farm
Cloverfield Farm, the first certified organic farm in El Sobrante, grows a variety of fruits, vegetables, herbs, flowers, and potted plants. People of all ages and abilities who want to help out with winter farm chores are invited to the farm for a volunteer workshop. If you have your own gardening gloves and pruners (for…
Read MoreEcoFarm Rises to Meet the Moment
The 41st EcoFarm Conference goes virtual on January 20-23, 2021, offering meaningful opportunities for anyone who cares about growing a healthy food system and world. The event is well known as an essential networking and educational hub for ecologically-minded farmers and ranchers, and also attracts a wide range of sponsors, exhibitors, speakers, volunteers, and…
Read MoreTry this Three Apple Slaw
Start the year with this recipe from Market Hall Foods. Three Apple Slaw Recipe courtesy of Executive Chef Scott Miller, Market Hall Foods Our version of this simple dish has proven to be one of our most sought-after salads. It’s a welcome addition to any table and a refreshing foil for rich holiday…
Read MoreStudy Up on Small-Scale Urban Farming
Want to learn more about sustainable farming and urban food systems? A new certificate program at Merritt College can put you on a career path related to small-scale farms, nonprofits, food policy, and food science. Come learn how to plan and design small farms as well as gardens for home, school, and community. Start…
Read MoreTaste Flavors of Senegal with Slow Food East Bay
Come enjoy cuisine from Senegal with Chef Nafy Flatley of Teranga. Kingston 11 Cuisine hosts as Chef Flatley cooks up maafe, fonio, yams, and more. She’ll be in conversation with Willow Blish of Slow Food East Bay about raising first-generation Americans and keeping them connected to their cultural foodways. Cost: Sliding scale $45–$85. Info…
Read MoreFood Tours, Dinners, and a Scavenger Hunt
Explore new eateries and revisit old favorites as Oakland and Alameda offer dining deals and special events during January restaurant weeks. Celebrate the history of Oakland cuisine on food tours, at dinners, and with a scavenger hunt. At the Alameda kickoff event, sample craft cocktails and vote for Master Mixologist 2020. Enjoy prix fixe…
Read MoreA Festive, Flavorful Holiday Dish
Gingery Wild & Basmati Rice Salad with Apricots Recipe courtesy of Prepared Foods Director Sandy Sonnenfelt, Market Hall Foods This salad is festive, easy to make, oh-so-pretty, and full of flavor—an ideal contribution to any holiday table. During festive feasting, try topping this dish with duck confit, which has been crisped in a pan and…
Read MoreVeggie Forward 2020
Learn to use more seasonal vegetables in 2020 with Fremont LEAF’s new series of cooking classes. Taught by Niles Pie co-owner Hali Clizer, these sessions offer the chance to learn about, prepare, and enjoy dishes using produce from the farmers’ market. Come make winter pot pies, carrot muffins, nutritious salads, and two kinds of…
Read MoreJoy of Cooking’s Vegan Eggnog and Latkes
VEGAN EGGNOG from Joy of Cooking This recipe is excerpted from Joy of Cooking by John Becker and Megan Scott. Copyright © 2019. Reprinted by permission of Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Photo by Heidi’s Bridge. Makes about eight 6-ounce servings. This eggnog is quite boozy, which is how we like it,…
Read MoreTaste, Learn, and Shop Local
Taste handcrafted products and stock up on small-batch goodies at prices much lower than offered at retail shops. Choose from among handcrafted jams, mustards, salsas, vinegars, mead, honey, soaps, tinctures, and more. At 1pm and 3pm on both days, Institute of Urban Homesteading founder Ruby Blume offers short talks. Come learn about moving…
Read MoreHoliday Recipes from Barbara Kobsar’s Cottage Kitchen
Barbara Kobsar has been writing Edible East Bay’s What’s in Season column almost since we started publishing in 2005, but her main gig is making jams from farmers’ market produce and selling them each week at the Walnut Creek and San Ramon farmers’ markets. Following are several recipes she created to enhance our holiday…
Read MoreEver Wonder How Zines and Comix are Made?
Bring your creative spirit to this mini zinefest /comix fest showcasing new and emerging East Bay artists. See zines, art, and comics and meet creators striving to build a more diverse, holistic community. The event gives space to traditionally underrepresented voices and seeks to make people feel welcome, understood, and uplifted. Reserve your space…
Read MoreIt’s Spawning Season for Salmon
This winter, take advantage of the chance to watch endangered coho salmon returning from the ocean to spawn. Through January 25, the Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (SPAWN) offers Coho Salmon Creekwalk Tours of the Lagunitas Creek Watershed. Led by naturalists, tour participants observe endangered coho salmon at the peak of their…
Read MoreUpgrade Your Olive Oil Smarts
Join local experts for a lively, informational olive oil workshop and tasting. Olive oil specialists Nancy Ash of Strictly Olive Oil and Kathryn Tomajan of Fat Gold (with assistance from Roberta Klugman) guide participants through a series of new harvest oils with accompanying foods. Learn about the production of olive oil from tree to bottle and…
Read MoreWarm Olives with Preserved Lemon
Stone Edge Farm Kitchen Larder Cookbook By John McReynolds, Mike Emanuel, and Fiorella Butron Recipes reprinted with permission from © Stone Edge Farm Kitchen Larder Cookbook by Rizzoli, 2019. Images: © Leslie Sophia Lindell WARM OLIVES WITH PRESERVED LEMON Serves 6 Cold olives right out of the refrigerator pale in comparison to…
Read MoreCrafts at the Farmers’ Market
Finding holiday gifts is a joy when you shop for hand-crafted items at the farmers’ market. The Winter Crafts Fair at the Downtown Berkeley Farmers’ Market highlights Bay Area artists and artisans and serves as an annual benefit for the Ecology Center. Come peruse jewelry, kitchenware, glassware, wooden bowls, wool clothing, and much…
Read MoreShrubs go Festive this Season
When you visit Dafna Kory’s Emeryville kitchen at 1307 61st Street, you can sample shrubs, jams, and ginger snacks during special holiday hours and take advantage of gift wrapping during the month of December. Take home a bottle of quince shrub and relax with this cocktail at the end of the day. Ask a…
Read MoreHandcrafted Holiday Goods
Printmaker and Edible East Bay contributor Gary Crandall is among the artists displaying his wares at the Handcrafted Holiday Sale in Walnut Creek. Crandall is offering linocut prints, including 20 versions of five designs from his Farm Hands series. The sale also features glass, jewelry, ceramics, photography, fiber arts and more, all crafted by…
Read MoreA Handmade Winter Salon
Peruse handcrafted goods and sample June Taylor’s organic preserves, syrups, and confections at this salon offering chocolates, textiles, linens, apparel, ceramics, jewelry, collage, stationary, and more. Info: here June Taylor works directly with small family farms, seeking out heirloom and forgotten fruits. Following traditional methods of preserving, she hand cuts fruit and cooks it…
Read MoreGet More Out of Your Holiday Meal with Bone Broth
After preparing a big holiday meal, most of us crave a break from hours in the kitchen and from the rich food we may have over indulged in. The good news is that we may already have all the ingredients for an easy, delicious, and super healthy meal for the next day—bone broth, made…
Read MoreFood Shift Celebrates Community Impact and a Change in Leadership
Food Shift serves up a vegetarian feast to celebrate its powerful impact in the community. The nonprofit rescues food that would otherwise be thrown away and uses it to feed people and to provide jobs and job training. Come enjoy a meal prepared by Chef Tu David Phu and the Food Shift Kitchen, and…
Read MoreFeast on Tapas, Learn Spanish
Learn some basic Spanish as you indulge in Spanish-influenced Californian tapas at this monthly event. Esther leads guests in simple Spanish conversation as she shares her family’s traditional dishes from Valencia. It’s a project of the culinary collective Made2Gather, founded by Chef Lee Davidson with the goal of connecting people to their communities, cultures, and…
Read MoreExplore a Seasonal Crafts Marketplace
Peruse a variety of handmade wares as the Bedford Gallery holds it 12th annual craft fest. Local makers display artisanal foods, cookware, jewelry, art, apparel, ceramics, home décor, and more. Find gifts for food lovers from Farm Fresh to You, the Xocolate Bar, Hosffi Chocolates, and Kindred Cooks. Enjoy the art too—the gallery show is…
Read MoreKeep Foods Fresh Without Plastic Wrap
Want to ban plastic wrap from your kitchen? Come make a reusable cloth food wrap using beeswax. The wraps offer an easy solution for keeping bread, vegetables, and cheese fresh or for covering containers in the fridge. Learn about materials used in this wrap and take home your own handmade creation. They make great gifts…
Read MoreSolar Power Happy Hour
Come learn about clean energy sources and their role in disaster relief at the (non-alcoholic) Solar Power Happy Hour. Biofuel Oasis is raising awareness about twin solar projects, Footprint Project and Rent.Solar, by showcasing their rentable solar-power trailer in the store parking lot. This trailer was recently deployed to Donaldson Way Elementary School in Napa County, where…
Read MoreMake Your Own Tamales
Join Zeida Flores for a hands-on workshop in making tamales. Learn about the meaning of the tamal in Mexican culture and go through each step of making black bean and vegetable tamales using organic masa. Zeida Flores is from Jalisco, Mexico, and is currently a student of culinary arts at Laney College. Cost: $50–$75.…
Read MoreMexican Food and Nourishing Conversation
Photo courtesy of Slow Food East Bay Mexican food is featured as Slow Food East Bay hosts the next dinner in its Cultural Food Traditions series. Join in for a memorable evening with chefs from El Huarache Azteca and La Oaxaquena. Hear their stories and discuss pre-Hispanic food traditions, the variety found in Mexican foods, and…
Read MoreRise Up and Read
Pull out a favorite book and head to the Lake Merritt Sailboat House for an event that features reading, great food, and a silent auction. Meet poet and host Ryan Nicole along with guest author Justina Ireland. Support the work of Acta Non Verba’s Youth Urban Farm Project, a creative outdoor space in East…
Read MoreFirst Season Gathering at the MESA Farm
Celebrate the first season of farming and offer gratitude to the land with a day of activities and an ancestral feast at the MESA Farm, a center for urban agroecology in El Sobrante. Come dressed as one of your ancestors, whether in the traditional clothing of your lineage or quite literally as your great…
Read MoreBig Book Weekend at Rockridge Market Hall
November 2: Pastry chef, author and Tartine Bakery co-founder Elisabeth Prueitt signs copies of Tartine: A Classic Revisited. The book has been updated and expanded with 67 new recipes, including the most-requested recipe in Tartine history: the Tartine Morning Bun. Have your books signed and enjoy tastings of Cranberry Upside-Down Cake and Gougères (choux pastries…
Read MoreUrban Farmer Fall Gathering
Join other urban farmers* at Urban Adamah for a dinner conversation about resource sharing, network strengthening, and improved collaboration. Share in a big pot of vegetarian soup, salad, plus beer and wine, and bring a dish to share if you feel inspired. Please arrive promptly at 6pm for the meeting. *This gathering is for those…
Read MorePizza in Community
Come take part in an outdoor community pizza party, Peralta Rancho-style, to inaugurate the new adobe oven. Make your own pizza and find out how adobe ovens have been used over time for cooking and community gatherings. Adobe artisan Miguel Elliott talks about building the oven. Free. Info: here Adobe Oven Inauguration &…
Read MoreDon’t Toss It – Learn to Fix It!
Broken furniture, appliances, clothing, and more can get a second life at the Repair Café. Hosted by Transition Berkeley & Cal Zero Waste, this is a gathering where community members help one another to fix what’s broken. Toys, electronics, and bicycles needing repair are welcome too. If you’re handy and want to help, please come…
Read MoreBuild a Hoop Greenhouse
Join in for a class on how to build a hoop greenhouse for plant propagation. It’s a DIY project with PVC conduit and wood framing and polyethylene plastic covering. With the help of expert Chuck Carpenter, the approximately 20 x 48 foot greenhouse can be completed in one day. Students also learn how to build…
Read MoreThe Thrill of the Olive Crush
Come celebrate the start of the olive harvest with a visit to the Séka Hills Olive Mill. Watch the mill in action and taste olio nuovo (early-harvest, unfiltered extra-virgin olive oil) as well as treats from local food artisans and vendors. Owned and run by Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, the tasting room offers an…
Read MoreChocolate, Coffee, and Some Berkeley History
Artisanal chocolate and custom-roasted coffee are plentiful at this kickoff fundraiser for the Julia Morgan Berkeley City Club building. Sample an array of products from local chocolatiers and coffee roasters and enjoy cooking demos, mini-lectures, live music, a silent auction, and synchronized swimming in the historic indoor pool. Known as the “Little Castle,” the…
Read MorePitch In to Get the Chores Done
Dress in your garden grubbies to help out with autumn chores on an organic farm. Try your hand at planting garlic and fruit trees, seeding cover crops, orchard fertilizing, and sheet mulching. Projects for people of all ages and abilities are available in the organic vegetable garden, fruit orchard, and small plant nursery.…
Read MoreSharing Our Stories at Gill Tract Community Farm
Organizers at Gill Tract Community Farm invite the community to gather and celebrate the bounty of the land and its stories as we honor the ancestors and original stewards of Huichin, the Lisjan Ohlone. Enjoy a lunch made from black beans, butternut squash, greens, and onions grown on the farm. Join in song,…
Read MoreHarvest Happenings at City Slicker Farms
Join City Slicker Farms at the West Oakland Farm Park for a family-friendly celebration of the organization’s 18-years-strong fight for food justice. Enjoy gardening demos and a Farm Park tour as you learn about the park’s garden program. Stop by the Alameda County Public Health Department wellness table. Entertainment by the Black Excellence Band…
Read MoreHead West Offers Local Goods, Food, and Arts
With marketplaces in Berkeley, Oakland, and Alameda, Head West offers space for local makers, crafters, and entrepreneurs to share their goods. Markets feature creative handmade clothing, jewelry, and body care products as well as art installations, local nonprofits, and food and drink. At the upcoming Alameda marketplace, vendors include (among others) Lucia’s Pizza Truck,…
Read MoreWant to Farm in the City?
Come find out how some local urban farmers and gardeners grow food and raise animals on this year’s East Bay Urban Farm Tours. Hosted by the Institute of Urban Homesteading, the tours showcase eight sites of different sizes that employ various farming styles. Find out how these folks create and maintain productive veggie, pollinator,…
Read MoreArts Time in Emeryville
A gala public reception with the artists kicks off this popular yearly event, which features works by 115 Emeryville-based artists and craftspeople. Come enjoy the variety of works, including paintings, sculpture, photographs, prints, textiles, ceramics, furniture, glass works, and poetry. “I found that the work submitted for this year’s show reflects the artists’ concerns…
Read MoreGoats and Gourds at Orchard Nursery
Celebrate the harvest season with a fun mix of activities each October weekend at Orchard Nursery. Visit the Maker’s Market for foods and crafts made by local vendors, and meet the friendly farm animals. Enjoy live music, plenty of pumpkins, kids’ activities, and more. Events vary each weekend day. Free. Info: here Orchard…
Read MoreBeyond Eye Candy
There’s plenty to feast on at this joyful, funny, and poignant celebration of culinary desire. The exhibit features renowned artists such as Salvador Dalí and Wayne Thiebaud along with rising talents. View a range of works, from hyper-real still lives to larger-than-life fabric sculpture, depicting food to address issues of family, nutrition, politics, and famine.…
Read MoreBeeFriend Our Pollinators
Celebrate bees and other pollinators at this annual event presented by a group of concerned citizens. Learn why bees are vital to our health and how you can support the bee population by planting pollinator–friendly gardens and creating safe shelters/habitats. Enjoy activities and education for kids of all ages along with a marketplace featuring…
Read MoreSalute End-of-Summer Foods
Mark the end of summer with a festive dinner party at Julie’s. Here are the five courses you can look forward to: First… Ajo Blanco Marcona almonds, roasted grapes, extra virgin olive oil Second…Crab & Early Girl Tomato Buttered Dungeness crab, tomato confit, tomato-cucumber jelly, basil, toasted brioche Third… Stuffed Local Squid Preserved…
Read MoreApples & Honey for a Sweet New Year
Apple Honey Upside-Down Cake Recipe by Chef Scott Miller Food styling and photography by Gina Iannitelli, courtesy of Market Hall Foods Scott Miller, executive chef at Market Hall Foods, started making upside-down cakes as a way to use his backyard fruit harvest. But his recipe is especially welcome as Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, the…
Read MoreFull Belly Farm’s Hoes Down Happenings
When the farmers put down their hoes, it’s time to celebrate farm life at Full Belly Farm‘s lively annual festival. Learn about sustainable rural living and agricultural arts through tastings, tours, food and drink, live music, a farmers’ market, crafts, silent auction, and a children’s area. Learn new skills at workshops on organic…
Read MoreWorld Barbecue, All Welcome!
No Immigrants No Spice welcomes the community to an event featuring Bay Area immigrant chefs and barbecue from Indonesia, Northern Iran, and Mexico. Enjoy dance performances, live music, an art installation, and an auction. The evening also features a reel of Comedy Central shorts and on-the-spot interactive education about how immigrants impact the Bay Area.…
Read MoreGive Your Garden a Fall Boost
Two upcoming sales offer a huge and diverse selection of plants plus opportunities to get expert gardening advice. The Botanical Garden’s fall event features Mediterranean climate plants including California natives and plants from South Africa, Australia, and South America. Info: here At the Merritt College fall plant fair and sale, offerings include diverse heirloom…
Read MoreLocal Love for the Olive
Don’t miss the chance to visit the Wagner Ranch Nature Area, a historic site and nature preserve that’s open only twice a year to the public. Taste a variety of olives, olive oils, and products from olive growers; attend cooking demos and nature tours through the historic ranch and olive grove. Enjoy nature-based arts…
Read MoreWine Walk on the Waterfront
Amble along the waterfront at Jack London Square as you taste wines from more than 20 Northern California wineries. Located in the heart of the Urban Wine Trail, Jack London Square’s Ferry Lawn setting is just the place to sip, stroll, dine, and enjoy vendors and live music. Wineries taking part include Dashe Cellars,…
Read MoreTaste Your Way through Eat Real
Arrive hungry to this bustling street-food festival, where you’ll find scrumptious and affordable food, craft beer, and local wine from more than 50 regional food trucks and vendors. Taste a range of savory and sweet dishes, from curry, cheesesteaks, and dumplings to frozen “khustard” and ice cream tacos. Watch live food demos by local chefs…
Read MoreTomato-Tasting Heaven
Sample the variety of luscious tomatoes grown at MariLark Farms, and also feel free to bring and share the bounty from your own garden. Enjoy a seed saving demo, a raffle, and a seed swap. Please RSVP: Charlie(at)marilark.com or here Read our story about Charlie Costello and his generous practice of giving tomato plants…
Read MoreFilms by Les Blank Come Back to the Bay Area
Two classic documentaries by legendary Berkeley filmmaker Les Blank have been restored and will screen in the Bay Area. Argot Pictures presents Chulas Fronteras (Beautiful Borders), a film about the music and culture of immigrant farmworkers on the Texas-Mexico border, and Del Mero Corazón (Straight From the Heart), which illuminates love songs in the…
Read MoreCocktails Take Center Stage in Oakland
Celebrate Oakland’s unique cocktail heritage and community and enjoy special drinks crafted just for the week. Find $10 cocktails inspired by Oakland and explore a lineup of festive events and tours that connect cocktail fans with spirits makers and business owners. A portion of event proceeds benefits the nonprofit Oakland Indie Alliance. Info: here …
Read MoreStrozzapreti or Rotini?
Don’t miss the chance to enjoy pasta with Allison Arevalo, former owner of Oakland’s Homeroom, and the creator of Pasta Friday, a meal she put on 52 times for a large group of friends and family. Allison’s new book, The Pasta Friday Cookbook, offers pasta and salad recipes for each week of the year along…
Read MoreInspired by Nature
Eight local artists, Dorothy Abuan, Elissa Callen, Lorrie Fink, Shari Arai DeBoer, Leah Jean, Helen Krayenhoff, Katie McCann, and Junko Stickney, display and sell their work at this lively community event. Plants and garden wares are also for sale, and live music is by the country duo Mo B. and Dick. Snacks include made-to-order…
Read MoreWomen Entrepreneurs Speak on Abundance and Collaboration
Enjoy an inspiring afternoon of conversation at Soul Food Farm. Speakers include Sallie Calhoun, co-owner of Paicines Ranch; Abbey Kingdon Smith, co-founder of the Jefferson Center for Holistic Management; Sibella Kraus, founder of Sustainable Agriculture Education – SAGE; artist N’gina Kavookjian, founder of South; and Judith Redmond, co-owner of Full Belly Farm. Naomi Starkman,…
Read MoreA Vineyard Feast
Celebrate the Wine Country harvest with a Provençal-inspired Grand Aioli—a multi-course feast of grilled meats, seafood, and garden-fresh produce paired with the finest Robert Mondavi wines. Meet artisan food purveyors French Corner Crèpes and Fabrique Délices and enjoy dinner and live music as the sun sets over the vineyards. Top off your late-summer evening…
Read MoreRide Electric!
What’s happening locally with electric vehicles and clean energy? Come learn the latest about electric vehicles, including home and public charging, rebates and incentives, and special programs for lower income drivers. Get resources to make your living space a clean-energy home. Presented by the Ecology Center, City of Berkeley, 350 Bay Area, and the Berkeley…
Read MoreMeet Local Makers and Crafters
Come explore O2AA, a West Oakland eco-industrial park where artisans work together to develop environmentally progressive projects. O2AA tenants practice sustainable methods as they share space, resources, tools, and machinery. The group welcomes the public to its fourth annual festival, a chance to visit artisans’ studios, shop for crafts, enjoy a variety of street…
Read MoreTreat Yourself to Barbecue and Soul Food
Join Slow Food East Bay for Black America, the latest meal in their ongoing Cultural Food Traditions Project. Come taste outstanding barbecue and soul food prepared by Fernay McPherson of Minnie Bell’s Soul Movement and Rashad Armstead of Crave BBQ and Grammie’s. Fernay recently expanded her spot in the Emeryville Market and Rashad won…
Read MorePeach Pleasures at Community Foods Market
Celebrate summer as Community Foods Market hosts Peach Day, featuring tastings, a peach pie bakeoff, and a kids’ peach-themed poster contest. The bakeoff winner will have their pie featured on the menu of the markets’ Front Porch Cafe. Want to be more peach savvy? Join Bill Fujimoto, former manager of Monterey Market, for a…
Read MoreCome On Up to the Roof!
Kitchen Table Advisors partners with farmer and floral designer Joanna Letz for an evening tour of Bluma Farms rooftop garden. Come see the vibrant seasonal blooms set against a backdrop of the San Francisco Bay. Following the tour, Joanna leads a bouquet-making demonstration and invites guests to create their own hand-held bouquets of fresh-picked flowers. Berkeley-based…
Read MoreCelebrate Local Makers
Côte West Winery invites the community to a celebration of local artisans and small businesses. Join in for a fun afternoon of food, art, jewelry, and woodwork. Wine tasting offered for $15/flight (fee waived with bottle purchase). Kids & dogs welcome. Free. Info: here Made in Oakland Saturday August 24, 2–6pm Côte West Winery…
Read MoreGet Grubby at Cloverfield Farm
Want to help out in an organic vegetable garden, fruit orchard, and small plant nursery? Cloverfield Farm’s summer workshop is an opportunity for volunteers to lend a hand with farm chores. Wear old clothes and a sun hat and bring gardening gloves if you have them. No experience is needed, and people of…
Read MoreArtisanal Drinks and Food Highlight Women Crafters
Pour Your HeART Out showcases female stars in the worlds of hand-crafted wine, beer, food, spirits, and music. Presented by Alameda-based Rhythmix, the event benefits the organization’s free youth arts programing provided to over 2,500 East Bay students annually. Come enjoy artisanal wines, hand-crafted brews, small-batch spirits, tantalizing treats, live music, a wine raffle, and…
Read MoreStep into Salsa!
Bring your dancing feet to the farmers’ market, as the Ecology Center hosts its annual Salsa Festival. It’s a day filled with dance and music, featuring Grammy award–winning percussionist Christian Pepin y Su Orquesta Bembé as well as salsa demos and lessons. Special fun for kids and families includes dancing on the plaza and…
Read MoreA Reader Writes …
Here’s a letter we were thrilled to receive from reader Richard Hasbrouck in response to Nikki Goddard’s story on Retzlaff Vineyards in our Summer 2019 issue: Editor: Please compliment Nikki Goddard on her excellent heartfelt article about Retzlaff Vinyards, and Gloria Retzlaff Taylor in particular. Bob Taylor and my wife were long-time…
Read MoreAnd the Winners Are …
Even if you weren’t one of the lucky attendees at Taste Our Terroir, you can still enjoy the winning wines and foods. At the popular Livermore Valley event, Judges Ethan Fletcher of Diablo Magazine, wine and travel writer Jill Robinson, and Mike Dunne of Dunne on Wine tasted 16 gourmet food and wine pairings and…
Read MoreMochi Donuts Pop Up
Here’s a chance to taste mochi donuts in a delicious variety of flavors! Mochi teacher Kaori Becker offers a pop-up at Eon Coffee with donuts in matcha, black sesame, strawberry, kinako (roasted soybean powder), mulberry, Earl Grey, and chocolate flavors. For those who want to make their own mochi, Kaori teaches classes in preparing…
Read MorePersian Food and a Chef’s Stories
Experience Persian food as you hear Chef Hanif Sadr’s stories of Iran’s culinary traditions. Learn about the similarities between the ecosystems of Northern Iran and those of Northern California. This event is part of Slow Food East Bay’s Cultural Food Traditions project, a series that celebrates migration and diverse traditions. Bauman College hosts the…
Read MoreTake a Wine Walk on the Waterfront
Stroll along the waterfront at Jack London Square as you taste wines from more than 20 Northern California wineries and enjoy live music, vendors, and dining. Participating wineries include Dashe Cellars, Rosenblum Cellars, Wente Vineyards, and Wachira Wines. A portion of ticket proceeds will benefit the Alameda County Community Food Bank. Cost: $40 general…
Read MoreLend Your Words to a Richmond Public Art Project
Bay Area artist Christy Chan invites locals to be part of a new public art project, Inside Out. This endeavor turns written autobiographical phrases into large-scale, luminous night-time video projections on the walls of the Richmond Civic Center. Chan explains it this way: “At a time when the word wall is being used to…
Read MoreFour Days of Food and Wine in Livermore Valley
Livermore Valley shows off the best of its food and wine with four days of tasty and information-packed events. The excitement begins on Thursday evening with the popular pairing competition at Casa Real, when 17 Livermore Valley winemakers partner with Bay Area chefs to compete for honors. Guests join in by tasting the pairings and…
Read MorePast vs Future: A Cooking Competition
How do ancient cooking techniques stack up against future-minded innovations? Come watch a cook-off between competing teams inspired by past versus future. Team Traditional Wisdom relies on traditional methods like fermentation, ayurveda, and herbalism. Team Future of Food works with science and innovation, using cultured meat, cricket powder, and CBD infusions. Judges score the…
Read MoreArt Under the Oaks
Come enjoy local arts and Livermore Valley wine under majestic oak trees at Alden Lane Nursery. Meet local artists, who exhibit and sell paintings, pottery and ceramics, photography, jewelry, and more. An assortment of local wine and foods as well as live music and prize drawings add to the festivities. Free. Info: here or 925.447.0280…
Read MoreDoors are Open at the Town Kitchen
Join the Town Kitchen for an open house at its new site in East Oakland. The Town Kitchen employs and trains underserved local youth, who prepare and deliver chef-crafted meals to corporate clients. Come meet community leaders and enjoy appetizers prepared by Town Kitchen staff. A panel discussion will focus on corporate social responsibility and its…
Read MoreBring French Cooking into Your Kitchen
Savory Summer Squash & Comté Galette Recipe, food styling and photography by Asha Loupy, courtesy of Market Hall Foods One bite of this savory fromage-filled galette and you’ll be transported to a boulangerie in the French countryside. The addition of semolina flour gives the crust a flaky, rustic texture, while nutty Comté…
Read MoreFrench Food, C’est Bon!
Market Hall’s annual Bastille Day bash highlights French foods with tastings, special menus, and prize giveaways. Enjoy cheese and charcuterie tastings, munch on moules-frites, discover French pantry ingredients, and learn how to make boudin blanc sausage. Like Independence Day in the United States, Bastille Day honors the political revolution that ended a monarchy in favor…
Read More“Fill Good” at a Pop-up Refill Station
Plastic-free July is a worldwide movement aimed at easing the global crisis of plastic pollution. In partnership with the Ecology Center, local business Fillgood.co is offering pop-up refill stations during the month of July and beyond. Bring your clean jars and fill up on household goods like dish soap, laundry detergent, shampoo, and conditioner, all…
Read MoreUsing Food to Fight Climate Change
Learn about efforts to combat climate change from activists working at the intersection of food and climate justice. Food is responsible for up to one third of all greenhouse gases, but impacts can be reversed through regenerative farming, agroecology, and biodiversity. Find out how soil can sequester carbon and how individuals can help create…
Read MoreFun With Fermentation
Links to the recipes are found below. Click on the first slide to open the slideshow and scroll through at your own pace. Recipe: Jalapeño Pineapple Kraut Recipe: Pineapple Tepache
Read MoreGot Puns About Milk?
Punny billboards featuring Clo the Cow have kept Californians smiling for generations. This summer, in celebration of Clo’s 50th birthday, Clover Sonoma is running a billboard contest to hear your mooost clever ideas. Can you come up with a new ad to join favorites like “Wholly Cow,” “Dairy Godmother,” and “CLOVER: the only milk…
Read MoreBay Area Chefs Celebrate Greens’ Anniversary
It’s always a treat to dine at Greens, where guests can count on outstanding vegetarian food and stunning views of the Golden Gate Bridge. To celebrate its 40th anniversary, the beloved Fort Mason restaurant is partnering with six renowned Bay Area chefs. Each will design a four-course vegetarian prix-fixe meal inspired by historic menus…
Read MoreGooey, Cheesy Fun at Homeroom
It’s a big week for mac and cheese lovers everywhere. But at Oakland’s Homeroom, a restaurant devoted to the stuff, they are celebrating with music, games, macaroni art, a photo booth, and lots of mac to eat. On Sunday, you can enter your best macaroni creation in the recipe contest for a chance to…
Read MoreBay Area Printmakers Show Their Style
A diverse group of Bay Area printmakers display their works in a new exhibit at the Compound Gallery. Don’t miss the stunning pieces by Edible East Bay cover artist Susan Tibbon and over 100 other printmakers whose works are on view and for sale. Place your vote for the audience favorite award, a cash…
Read MoreTry Your Hand at Indian Dal and Flatbread
Two workshops in the Three Stone Hearth kitchen help you put Indian dishes on your home menu. In the first, learn to make four delicious regional Indian dals, plus a lentil chutney. Enjoy the chance to work with spices common in Indian cuisine such as asafoetida, Kashmiri chili powder, curry leaves, and mustard seeds. Dal…
Read MoreEnjoy an Indigenous Dinner on a Rooftop Garden
Slow Food East Bay continues its Cultural Food Traditions project with Indigenous America, a dinner held on a beautiful rooftop garden in Berkeley. Taste Native American cuisine prepared by Wahpepah’s Kitchen and be part of a conversation on land sovereignty and history. The evening features Crystal Wahpepah of the Kickapoo Nation and women from…
Read MoreTake a Peek at “Hello Stranger”
A few months back, we wrote about “Everybody Eats Lunch,” a local art project that brought strangers together to share a meal, and quite a few of our readers signed up to participate. Now Berkeley’s Kala Art Institute presents “Hello Stranger,” an expansive multimedia installation with 220 posters, each representing a statement by one of…
Read MorePeach Perfect
Peach season has arrived, and that reminds us of our 2018 story about how East Bay chefs Eric Tucker, Phil Gelb, Romney Steele, and Tina Ferguson-Riffe like to prepare their hand-picked organic peaches from Masumoto Family Farm. Gelb says, “The first cases of spring lady peaches and rose diamond nectarines have arrived from the…
Read MoreFlipping the Table on Food and Farming
The podcast series Flipping the Table from Roots of Change offers powerful conversations about food and farming. Their latest release features noted author and activist Anna Lappé, daughter of author Frances Moore Lappé and author, toxicologist, and bioethicist Marc Lappé. Anna is the founder of Real Food Media and received the James Beard Leadership…
Read MoreCocktails for Change
Gather Restaurant has been giving back with a Cocktails for Change program. This week, profits from the program are donated to the Insight Garden Program (IGP). Come to Happy Hour on June 10, enjoy a drink, and help people in prison learn vocational gardening skills and landscaping. The IGP model helps to end cycles…
Read MoreCommunity in a Cup
Join Farley’s East for outstanding coffee, tea, and community-based fun. After recently marking its 30th anniversary in San Francisco, Farley’s celebrates its upcoming 10th anniversary in Oakland. Enjoy a special food and drink menu and an art show celebrating many of the artists who have joined Farley’s over the years. Friends from Shut-Up…
Read MoreSummertime Brings Thirsty Third Thursdays
Quench your thirst at the Ecology Center’s North Berkeley Farmers’ Market this summer. Enjoy beer hosted by Ocean View Brew Works, live music from 5 to 7pm, and tasting samples from local farmers. Bring a reusable mug, pint glass, mason jar, or other vessel. Proceeds support the Ecology Center. Info: here Thirsty Third…
Read MoreExplore Our East Bay Food Maps
Dip back into our spring fish tacos map . . . Check out our new Favorite Scoops of Summer map . . . And by all means,…
Read More#GiveBeesAChance, June 6 Dinner
Enjoy outstanding dishes prepared by Bay Area chefs Melissa King and Tu David Phu at a fundraiser to support pollinators and beehive grants for schools. Whole Kids Foundation celebrates National Pollinator Month through its #GiveBeesAChance campaign, which is raising funds to bring 50 new educational beehives to schools and nonprofits across the nation. Dinner…
Read MoreJust Fix It!
Don’t toss it, mend it! At Transition Berkeley’s Repair Café, community members help each other fix household items like lamps, clothing, toys, furniture, electronics, appliances, bikes, and more. Bring one item per person and work with other community members to repair it. Free, but please register for one of these activities: 1. Help with…
Read MoreSip, Taste and Tour
Celebrate the arrival of summer in the Sonoma redwoods at this exciting event, where you’ll enjoy winery-exclusive wines and seasonal dishes. Take a tour of the SIMI cellars, and join Janet Fletcher, author of Wine Country Table, for a wine and cheese pairing presentation. Support Sonoma County artisans like Valley Ford Cheese & Creamery,…
Read MoreEarly-bird Discount for Sample the Sierra
It’s snowing in Tahoe this week, but it’s not too soon to think about enjoying a late-summer food and beverage festival in the mountains. Sample local food, brews, and wines as this annual farm-to-fork event celebrates its 10th anniversary. Festival booths pair a winery, distillery, or brewery with a restaurant that features local produce…
Read MorePlay. Dance. Eat. Create.
The Berkeley Ecology Center’s free annual festival is all about healthy family fun. Enjoy hula hooping, drumming, dance classes, art-making, and a bouncy house. Visit the creative reuse booth, petting zoo, and a pediatric information table hosted by Kaiser Permanente. The Fest takes place right next to the Saturday farmers’ market, where you can…
Read MoreGood Reads with Good Eats
If you’d rather not choose between a great book and a great meal, check out the new book club series at Oakland’s Flora Restaurant and Bar. The Flora family has chosen some favorite reads, starting with selected works from The Portable Dorothy Parker. Executive Chef Rebecca Boice leads the first gathering on May 15. Meet…
Read MoreA Cut Above
Help celebrate at Bernal Cutlery as the knife shop and sharpening service marks its 14th year in San Francisco and its first anniversary in Oakland. Both shops are offering 20% off all knives and sharpening supplies during the parties as well as free tiny knife tattoos. Info: here Read our story on Bernal Cutlery: here…
Read MoreSassy, Grassy Fun
Devote a day to the appreciation of grassland culture at the Transhumance Festival. Transhumance, from the Latin trans (across) and humus (ground) is a seasonal movement of livestock between fixed summer and winter pastures. Come celebrate the work of shepherds, farmers, and ranchers, and learn about the connections between what we eat and our land,…
Read MoreBoost Your Gardening Skills at Flowerland
Increase your garden savvy with classes led by Malibu Compost Biodynamic at Flowerland. Learn about creating healthy organic soil, making use of good bugs in your garden, and bringing your skills indoors to help houseplants thrive. Free, but space is limited. Info and registration: for Healthy Soil and Organic Houseplants Healthy Soil, Happy Garden Sunday…
Read MoreTour Edible Gardens in Benicia and Vallejo
This tour brings you to 10 demonstration edible gardens (nine public and one private) in Benicia and Vallejo. It’s a great opportunity to learn simple techniques to create a food-producing ecosystem that uses water wisely. Ask questions, enjoy the gardens, and go home with ideas about how to incorporate sustainable design into your own…
Read MoreCelebrate Earth Day with the Folks at Stasher
Stasher welcomes the community to an Earth Day block party fundraiser at its new Emeryville site. Stashers are nifty storage bags made of platinum silicone, which is derived primarily from sand and is plastic free. All proceeds from ticket sales will be donated to 1% For the Planet, which connects businesses with environmental nonprofits.…
Read MoreWest Contra Costa High Schoolers: Apply Now for a Plant-to-Plate Internship
Students can now apply for Plant to Plate, a unique internship program for Richmond-area high schoolers. The program starts in October and provides hands-on learning about gardening and cooking, as well as other life skills. Sessions are led by garden educator Kelli Barram and chef Arnon Oren, owner of Anaviv Catering and Events. Applicants should…
Read MoreFarm Fun for Cinco de Mayo
Bring the whole family to this festive farm celebration complete with authentic Mexican cuisine, local wines and beers, and other treats from area businesses. Harvest fresh veggies from the fields and taste pesto made with local olive oil. Features live music and dancing, soccer, piñata games, tractor tram rides, and more. Campers welcome, but…
Read MoreSweet on Honey
Immerse yourself in all things honey at this year’s California Honey Festival. Sixteen farms offer goodies from honeycomb and bee pollen to honey soaps and skin care products. Learn about the importance of bees and pollination, taste honey and honey-inspired products, and watch cooking demos. Info: here Third Annual California Honey Festival Saturday May…
Read MoreTake a Tea-tasting Journey
Come learn the fundamentals of gongfu cha, known as the connoisseur’s preferred method for brewing Chinese tea. In Chinese, “gongfu” (kungfu) means “skills and effort.” In this workshop, Annie Chen, founder of Teaphile, demonstrates gongfu cha using the appropriate tea vessels and explains how this method differs from other brewing styles. Cost: $20.…
Read MoreEaster and Passover Recipes from Market Hall Foods
Market Hall is the East Bay place to go for food inspiration any time of year, but when you’re laying out a holiday spread, it can be an especially helpful place to stop. Market Hall chefs offer a full menu of prepared foods for each holiday, and they also generously share recipes like these for…
Read MoreJuicy Brews Hits the West Coast
Join the folks from New York–based Hop Culture Magazine for Juicy Brews WestFest, an afternoon of fun and beer. Held at Drake’s Dealership, this craft beer festival benefits City Slicker Farms and offers unlimited pours from some of the country’s best breweries. Chat with the brewers, meet artist Killer Acid, and enjoy a variety of foods…
Read MoreCo-op Curious?
Interested in going co-op? Don’t miss the California Center for Cooperative Development’s 10th annual co-op conference. Learn how to strengthen a co-op or start a new one. Learn about cooperative housing, worker groups, and consumer stores like food co-ops, and hear about the role co-ops play in the creation of jobs and housing. Workshops cover…
Read MoreFood, Wine, & Music, Italian Style
Anaviv’s Table and celebrated Italian author and chef Roberto Forretti invite you to a sensory experience of food, wine, and music highlighting Italy’s Le Marche region. Come savor a four-course meal accompanied by fine regional wines, a guided olive oil tasting, a pasta-making demo, and an opera performance by tenor Carlo Assogna featuring songs from…
Read MoreGet Planting!
Gardeners and aspiring gardeners: Come out to Rodgers Ranch, where you’ll find a wide array of locally grown plants for sale. Enjoy family fun, artisan vendors, and free classes on soil, fertilizer, foraging, and more. Local food offerings include slow-cooked BBQ and vegan options. Rain or shine. Info: here or 925.890.7289 6th Annual Rodgers Ranch…
Read MoreBe the Community in CSA
Those who subscribe to a CSA (community-supported agriculture) program enjoy fresh seasonal produce as they pay in advance to help stabilize their selected farm’s income. Along with the fresh fruits and veggies, many farms offer items like flowers, eggs, meat, seafood, and honey. For a close look at some local CSA programs, read our…
Read MoreMade in Oakland
Come explore local art, crafts, wine, and food as Côte West Winery celebrates local makers. The winery is opening its production space for participants to display and sell their wares, develop community, and bring awareness to some of the great things happening in Oakland. The tasting room, adjoining the production area, will be open…
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