Slow Food Ballarat are hosting a special spud dinner on Wednesday 26 March.
Farm Expo Twilight Dinner “Celebrating the International Year of the Potato”
Date: Wednesday 26 March 2008
Time: 5.30pm (to 8.30/9.00pm’ish!)
Venue: The Cattle Pavilion, Ballarat Showgrounds
Entry: cnr. Creswick Road & Howitt Street
Gates Open: from 5.15pm
Parking: Ample free parking outside Showgrounds
Speaker: Ross Brown, CEO Brown Brothers of Milawa
Bookings: All bookings to Easybudget Travel (03) 5333 3566
Tickets: General Admission $49 per person
Farm Expo Exhibitors $44 per person (must include name of Organisation exhibiting with booking)
Slow Food Members $44 per person (must include Slow Food membership number with booking)
No Concessions or Child prices
Menu: Starter Potato sour dough bread with Mt Zero olives and virgin olive oil
Entrée Potato and Meredith blue soufflé with buttered leeks, chard and veal jus
Main Slow roasted district 4-tooth mutton with gnocchi and Captains Creek organic greens
Dessert Potato pancakes with Meredith strawberries and lashings of cream
Finis Filtered coffee or loose leaf tea compliments Pyrenees Coffee Co.
Chef: Peter Ford Principal of Peter Ford Catering and Leader of Slow Food Ballarat
Wines: Featuring wines from the region and members of the Ballarat & District Vignerons Association
First sampler glass of wine provided Complimentary, then available for sale by the glass or bottle
Thursday, 28 February 2008
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
Spudhunters
Gary Thomas, chef and member of Slow Food Central Victoria, has created a fabulous educational tool to teach the young (of any age) about potatoes. Its first outing was last weekend as part of A Taste of Slow. Here's what Gary had to say:
The slow food education activity I set up for kids at fed square over the weekend ran so well that we had to beat a whole pile of adults off as well. Why didn't they just hang around the microbrewery tents, I wonder?
Most importantly, it's just a whole lot of fun to see the look on a kid's face as they dig up a spud for the first time ever and connect the dots on the food life cycle.
Gary's now looking for a cook, a teacher and a farmer to help out at the Ballarat Farm Expo at the end of March.
The slow food education activity I set up for kids at fed square over the weekend ran so well that we had to beat a whole pile of adults off as well. Why didn't they just hang around the microbrewery tents, I wonder?
Most importantly, it's just a whole lot of fun to see the look on a kid's face as they dig up a spud for the first time ever and connect the dots on the food life cycle.
Gary's now looking for a cook, a teacher and a farmer to help out at the Ballarat Farm Expo at the end of March.
Monday, 4 February 2008
The deluge
Here are some pics from Bruce Rolfe (Bullarto Primary School) taken just after the big rain in December - just before Christmas. The 3 inch (87mm) downpour of rain was welcome - but not on top of our seed potatoes, as it washed the potatoes out of their beds and in some cases into the dam. We had just had a trench dug to lay the irrigation and this concentrated the rain, causing the damage.
Not desirable!
Fiona
This shows the washing of the soil (and potatoes!) and the erosion which led to silting in the dam.
Look how well the seed potatoes were developing (germinating) before the deluge.
Fiona and a naked spud!
But all is not lost - if you go back to the previous post you'll see the fabulous growth
Not desirable!
Fiona
This shows the washing of the soil (and potatoes!) and the erosion which led to silting in the dam.
Look how well the seed potatoes were developing (germinating) before the deluge.
Fiona and a naked spud!
But all is not lost - if you go back to the previous post you'll see the fabulous growth
Saturday, 2 February 2008
News from Fiona - our potato minder
Hi everyone,
Here's a little update on the potato babies!
After a difficult start to their life, the first flowers have arrived.
As you can see in the background the potato seedlings are growing well and prolifically.
Unfortunately, some of the potatoes in the variety plots were washed away in
the heavy rain before Christmas. It was nice to have the rain...BUT!
Fiona
Here's a little update on the potato babies!
After a difficult start to their life, the first flowers have arrived.
As you can see in the background the potato seedlings are growing well and prolifically.
Unfortunately, some of the potatoes in the variety plots were washed away in
the heavy rain before Christmas. It was nice to have the rain...BUT!
We are also monitoring the moisture levels in the soil using tensiometers at
Fiona
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