Archive for the ‘events’ Category

Trace and Trust Southern California at Sea Fare 2011

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

 

We are so excited to debut Trace and Trust™ Southern California at the Aquarium’s 8th annual Sea Fare fundraising event this Saturday, October 15, 2011!

 

Trace and Trust™ is a network of fishermen, distributors, processors, and restaurants committed to providing full seafood supply transparency by telling consumers exactly who caught their seafood, as well as when, where, and how it was caught. The concept was first tested in Rhode Island, where local fishermen and chefs regularly use Trace and Trust.  As Chef Beau Vestal of New Rivers Bistro explained in The Providence Journal,

 

“It has kind of made me wonder, what have I been buying all these years? The advantages as far as quality goes are night and day. Before, I had no sense of when and where it was caught and stored…(Now)…I [am] cutting fish that was in the water eight hours ago. You just kind of pinch yourself. I always tell my young cooks, remember this. There’s no way you’re going to get better quality.”

 

Chef Michael Poompan of Renaissance Long Beach & SIP Lounge

 

Chef Michael Poompan of SIP at the Renaissance in Long Beach will be serving fresh caught Uni, supplied by Santa Barbara Fisherwoman Stephanie Mutz, with Anson Mills grits from organic heirloom grains and fresh herbs. The Trace and Trust site featuring Stephanie’s vessel and landing information will be on display at the SIP booth along with the QR code that is also linked to Stephanie’s information on the site.

 

Trace and Trust was created as a pilot program in 2010 by the Cap Log Group, a small consulting company based in Davis, CA, after many meetings with experienced fishermen and dedicated chefs about how to help the fishermen benefit from the tremendous care and pride they take in landing their products.

 

Seafood for the Future learned about the program and its great success in Rhode Island and wanted to bring that high quality to chefs, transparency to consumers, and success to the fishermen in Southern California. We feel that this program can reward fishermen with a higher price return, chefs with a fresh, higher quality product, and the consumer for choosing local, sustainable seafood by showing them the men and women their choice is directly supporting.  

 

“I am involved in the Trace and Trust project so I can connect directly with my community.  We need to get back to having a relationship with your food harvesters to know where you food comes from and how it is harvested.  It also makes me, as a fisherman, more accountable for my product so I consistently get quality product. Knowing first hand how my seafood was prepared and enjoyed, and knowing none of it went to waste is important to me,” agreed fisherwoman Stephanie Mutz, owner of Sea Stephanie Fish and President of her local fishermen’s association Commerical Fishermen of Santa Barbara.

 

Fisherwoman Stephanie Mutz with her freshly caught Sea Urchin in Santa Barbara

 

Join us at Sea Fare this weekend to share in the debut of this fantastic program and support our local fishermen!

 

 

 

Sea Fare is the Aquarium of the Pacific’s largest annual fundraising event. Guests enjoy live music, silent and live auctions, the ever-popular “Go Fish” opportunity game, and experience the cuisines of more than 30 restaurants including 11 Seafood for the Future partners. Tickets are $100 and all proceeds benefit the Aquarium and its inhabitants. For tickets to Sea Fare 2011 to: aquariumofpacific.org/seafare

Recent Developments

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

Hello fellow sustainable seafood advocates!

Seafood for the Future has undergone a great deal of changes in the last few months! Los Angeles Magazine recently named our program the best “Earth Changer” in L.A. for our efforts in helping Southern California businesses become more environmentally sound. We’ve participated in events like the Aquarium’s Urban Ocean Festival and Top Fish Long Beach, have been called upon by one of the largest distributors in America to help them build a sustainable seafood program, and have been fostering relationships between our communities’ fishermen and Southern California end-users to encourage transparency and traceability in our local market.

Our continual goal is to provide you with the most up to date information on seafood recommendations, providing a new level of transparency that highlights our partnership with FishWatch, and continually adding new partners where you can enjoy well-managed seafood or pick up some fresh seafood to use with one of our new recipes.

Now for the news:

Andrew Gruel, former Program Manager of Seafood for the Future, has gone on to open his own sustainable seafood restaurant concept SlapFish. You may have seen his food truck making waves across Southern California and we are very proud to count SlapFish among our partner restaurants where you can chow down guilt- and worry-free. Even with his new responsibilities, Andrew is committed to remaining active within the Seafood for the Future program. Learn more about Andrew’s new venture here: SlapfishSoCal.com

I, Melissa Carrasquillo (just call me Mel), have been bestowed the honor of taking up Andrew Gruel’s post here at Seafood for the Future. You can learn more about my experience advocating for the use of responsibly sourced seafood in our Team Profile section of the website. In short, I’m a lover of factual information, sustainable fishing communities, and delicious, well-managed food, just like you! I am so excited to have this incredible opportunity to converse with all of you who take the time to consider where your seafood comes from and the impact the choices you make have on our world’s oceans.

Andrew Gruel & Dave Anderson have built an incredible foundation for us to build upon here at Seafood for the Future! Here are some of the improvements you can find on the site today:

More seafood species have been added to our recommendations page. In light of recent data, fisheries like the Pacific Common Thresher Shark have rebounded in terms of their biomass (the amount of fish in the fishery) and are now being harvested at sustainable levels.

We’ve also added management details to each of our recommendations, where relevant, to highlight our partnership with FishWatch and the great strides effective fishery management can make in rebounding fisheries and keeping them sustainable! Simply click on the picture of the fish or the species name and you will be redirected to the corresponding FishWatch profile of that fishery.

We’ve added over 20 new partners to the Seafood for the Future program! Check out our newest restaurants like Royal Hawaiian, Scott’s Restaurant, and K’ya Bistro, partner distributors like Santa Monica Seafood, and brand partners like PureFish! In the month of July alone, over 3,400 guests experienced the Aquarium of the Pacific for FREE just by visiting one of our partner restaurants and ordering a sustainable seafood dish!

We’ve updated our recipes to include our newest recommendations! Try Chef David Keller of Kavikas’ dangerously irresistible Thresher Shark Skewers.

We’re also working on a number of new initiatives and will be sure to update the blog often as they progress. Most of all, we know it isn’t easy being green, so send us your questions and we’ll answer them here. My email is MCarrasquillo@lbaop.org (sorry I know it’s terribly long!). I look forward to hearing from you, learning from you, and helping Southern California become more environmentally conscious of their choices with respect to our oceans with your help!

All my best,

Mel

The Peace Garden

Monday, August 30th, 2010

On the anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech, celebrations all over the country sought to reconnect with King’s message of peace and equality. But at one end of Long Beach, California, one unassuming ceremony outshined them all.


The Saturday ceremony celebrated the opening of the Peace Garden in the Long Beach park named for Dr. King. In attendance were the various groups that have not only backed the Peace Garden project, but also who comprise the heart and soul of efforts to improve Long Beach from within: local councilman Dee Andrews, the Long Beach Department of Health, and the police department.


The Garden itself was built by teens participating in the Weed and Seed Program, which is housed in a King Park building that opens onto the Garden. A propos of its name, the Weed and Seed program simultaneously focuses on preventing crime and on fostering young community members through education, outreach, and mentoring. The Peace Garden is a refuge where Weed and Seed teens can contemplate both personal and vegetable growth, by working in the soil and contributing to the garden.


The morning ceremony drew representatives from the various groups involved, as well as families. After the speeches, a funk band fired up Michael Jackson tunes and community members danced on the gravel path at the Garden’s entrance.

The Garden path meanders between a series of redwood garden planters, each representing one of the ethnic groups in Long Beach , and displaying culturally distinctive artwork and plants. Words of inspiration can be found tucked into unobtrusive corners on rocks and signs, leaving visitors the pleasure of finding tidbits of encouragement on their own.
The Garden path starts at a hand-painted sign displaying the Weed and Seed principles next to a well-stocked bookshelf (I spied Melville’s Moby Dick on top of the pile). At the far end, past the planters, a table displays painted brick artwork created by Weed and Seed teens, each one a tribute to the creativity and dedication of the individuals involved. The brightly colored bricks bring to mind another famous speech that pinpoints the key to turning the Dream into reality: “…brick by brick, rail by rail, calloused hand by calloused hand.” (Obama, 2005)
What does a Peace Garden have to do with food? Everything. Weed and Seed’s directors recognize the importance of nutrition education in restoring balance within a community. The garden itself will be a part of a network of gardens in Long Beach , a “green belt” that connect the small community gardens with the larger urban farms. Each month, the Weed and Seed center plans to host a workshop on nutrition and cooking, empowering the community with the ability to make healthy decisions in the grocery store and at home. These workshops will culminate in the March 2011 nutrition festival, where families can learn how easy it can be to choose and prepare healthy and nutritious foods. If you’re in the area, I hope that you, too, will visit the Peace Garden and be inspired to get involved.

Four Fish Dinner at Ammo – Sustainable Tastes Better

Monday, August 9th, 2010


What does it take to get people interested in eating responsible seafood? Sustainability is confusing. Certainly it doesn’t help when the word is loosely tossed around in social and business settings as if it were the next political movement. Is the answer to blanket people with scientific reports, possibly scaring them towards more responsible seafood? There is biology indicating that we could be harming our oceans by fishing in environmentally unfriendly manners, yet at the same time, there is a significant amount of science showing that we need to eat more seafood. So how is it possible to achieve this balance?

Fortunately for groups like Seafood for the Future, Paul Greenberg, author of Four Fish- The future of the last wild food, recently introduced an effective strategy which is already involving people in making more conscious decisions about the food they eat. In one condensed effort he put aside all the calculated seafood talk and told a story. Actually he told many stories, covering four different species of fish and the voices of fisherman and fish farmers all over the globe. At the heart of his story is the relationship between a once abundant food source and the people that live on its survival. To make this story even more relevant, and actually follow through with a call to action such as “eat more sustainable seafood,” Paul Greenberg himself, the man,the myth, and the soon-to-be legend, co-hosted a dinner in Hollywood at AMMO restaurant last night (Sunday, August 8th) featuring only sustainable seafood.

If the goal of AMMO chef Daniel Mattern (formerly of Lucques, AOC and Clarklewis in Portland) was to make the diner think “wow sustainable tastes better!” than he succeeded 100%. Arctic Char, Carlsbad Oysters, Mussels, Clams, and Barramundi were all prepared with both simplicity and perfection. Chef’s skill was seamlessly laced through each dish, not in an arrogant manner, but instead as brief but bold brushstrokes, making each dish that much more flawless and further exemplifying our mission here at SFF that “seafood should be approachable.” Textures were certainly not forgotten either, something that can easily magnify any fish dining experience. The crisp celery in the hot smoked arctic char salad was an unexpected but impeccable addition and certainly a playful crunch. The fennel amongst the clams and mussels added essential tooth, and the innovative use of flat leaf Italian parsley within the grilled Barramundi dish played brilliantly against the richness of the fish. For those people whose number one seafood choice is the “bad boy” Chilean sea bass, chef’s grilled Barramundi should quickly jettison this new fish to the top spot as he has mastered the art of making barramundi as rich as fried rocky road ice cream.

Interestingly, every item on the menu was farmed. And while Greenberg doesn’t explicitly state that he wholeheartedly supports all fish farming in his book, his positive and encouraging statements were certainly a breath of fresh air in the world of Anti-Fish Farming campaigns.

Here are three condensed lessons to be learned:

1. Sustainability is more than numbers, it is about a story and the interrelated nature of the story’s elements. By not eating fish all together, communities reliant on the economies created through this trade will be destroyed. On the same note, however, by overfishing species, many communities are in peril as they no longer have a product to support their profession. Every story about this paradox is a springboard towards awareness and eventually mobilizing people to act through compromise and improvement.

2. Four Fish is a must read and a great gateway novel into the world of sustainability

3. If you haven’t been to AMMO restaurant, go ASAP- you won’t regret it

Ammo’s Sustainable Seafood Menu:

“Four Fish”

Carlsbad oysters on the half-shell with shallot mignonette & fresh horseradish

Hot-smoked Arctic char with marinated beets, chopped egg & celery seed vinaigrette

Pan-roasted mussels & clams with summer shell beans, pickled chili, and fennel pollen

Grilled barramundu with eggplant caponata, basil & aioli

Roasted figs with honey ice cream

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AMMO Restaurant
1155 N. Highland Ave.
Los Angeles, CA

323.467.3293

Surf, Music, Baja Fish Tacos~ Join Us!

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Most people think that Dave and I just examine seafood all day long, cramped up in cubicles surrounded by fish heads; Dave with his microscope and me with my knife kit. Finally we can show you that isn’t the case. Fish Tacos anyone???

We are teaming up with The Orange County Chapter of the American Institute of Wine and Food (AIWF) to put a healthy and sustainable twist on Baja fish tacos with a Sustainable Summer Event on Saturday, August 7 at Shelter Surf Shop on Fourth Street in Long Beach. We are going to be featuring some of the freshest fish tacos with seafood provided by Status Seafood. We will of course be educating our happy guests on what seafood to eat, how to buy it, and where to buy it.

Why Come?

Music- Featuring the folksy surf music of Seth Pettersen, guests will feel like they’ve just stepped off the beach; a perfect backdrop for Baja-style beach cuisine

Cerveza- Why not wash down a bit a fresh, crisp and slightly spicy seafood delight with a cool refreshing beer?

Education- What does sustainable even mean? Learn how to de-mystify the fish menu.

Great Food- Lightly spiced Mahi fish tacos with hand made salsa and chipotle cream, scallop ceviche with grill citrus, and more!

More Details

The event will take place from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday, August 7, 2010 at Shelter Surf Shop, 2148 E. 4th Street, Long Beach, CA 90814. A $10 donation will be requested in exchange for food and beer. This event is for the 21 and older crowd.

The American Institute of Wine and Food is a nonprofit organization and public charity dedicated to promoting health and well-being through the enjoyment of good food, drink, and fellowship that comes from dining together around the table. Known for its signature program Days of Taste where chefs and farmers teach fourth and fifth graders how food moves from farm to table, the AIWF has 27 chapters with more than 4,000 members nationwide.