Santa Barbara County’s Kernel King
Chef Conrad Gonzales’s Corn-Growing Project Flexes New Farm-to-Table Muscles
by Matt Kettmann | Published November 14, 2019
T
he phrase “farm-to-table” is used as ubiquitously in modern restaurants as forks and knives. Despite the prevalence of those three words, however, the reality is often exaggerated — perhaps referring to an ingredient or a couple of dishes on an otherwise expansive menu. (And their constant utterance is becoming grating to the ears of restaurant regulars and food writers like me.)
But the widespread movement — in which chefs aspire to deliver fresh, regionally grown, often organic produce, meats, and more to their diners’ plates — continues to have primarily positive effects: Small farms now thrive as once-invisible growers approach celebrity status; everyday diners care more about the food chain than ever before, increasingly rejecting environmentally questionable, corporate-scale farming; and, when in the hands of capable chefs, the resulting meals are reliably delicious.
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