What's New
Chefs honor heirloom ingredients
News Feed
Special Dining Event: May 20, 2013 - May 20, 2013
Big Jones to host Trash Fish Dinner with Chefs Collaborative, featuring the best seafood you’ve never tried
On Monday, May 20, executive chef Paul Fehribach in conjunction with Chefs Collaborative will be joined by nine of Chicago’s premier chefs to present a Trash Fish Dinner at Big Jones. The event benefits Chefs Collaborative, a national network of chefs working to make sustainable practices second nature in restaurant kitchens. The dinner will begin with a cocktail reception at 6 p.m. followed by an eight-course, family-style dinner at 7 p.m. Seafood for the evening will be provided by event sponsor Fortune Fish and Gourmet. The cost of the dinner is $125 per person, inclusive of tax, gratuity and alcohol. Tickets are required and can be purchased by calling 617-236-5200 or online at chefscollaborative.org/events.
The featured chefs will showcase lesser-known fish species in each course, like dogfish, smelt, speckled trout and triggerfish. These sustainable fish, often known as “trash fish,” have traditionally been left off the menu by chefs, discarded by fishermen as bycatch, and are virtually unknown to the general public.
The Trash Fish Dinner chef lineup is as follows:
Hosted by chef Paul Fehribach – Big Jones
Erling Wu-Bower – Avec
Paul Kahan - Blackbird
Bruce Sherman - North Pond
Sarah Stegner and George Bumbaris - Prairie Grass Café
Laura Piper - Trattoria No. 10
Michael and Patrick Sheerin - Trenchermen
Paul Virant – Vie; Perennial Virant
The Trash Fish Dinner sponsors are as follows:
American Harvest Organic Spirit
Big Jones
Environmental Defense Fund
Fortune Fish and Gourmet
Monterey Bay Aquarium and Seafood Watch
http://chefscollaborative.org/events/
Posted 04/22/13 - Share this entry


Executive Chef/Owner
Big Jones
Chicago, IL
If we consider the future of our food security as a world knitted out of a fabric of communities, saving seed and preserving our heirloom and heritage crops and livestock breeds is the single most important thing we have to do. The seed is the key to life, to food, to having enough to eat. Over the last generation, a handful of nefarious transnational corporations have acquired and consolidated control of the seed supply and have also managed to get patented, genetically modified seeds into the dominant market position. This means these companies control the key to our food supply. Our lifeline against the profit motives and greed of these multinational corporations is open-pollinated, heirloom seeds and heritage livestock breeds that are not patented, and owned by all of us as our collective heritage. Over the generations of seed saving by communities and farmers around the world, many cultures and microclimates developed their own unique varieties that suited their terrain, land, and water supply, and before industrial agriculture, most seeds were selected for taste and nutrition in addition to productivity, and uniformity (a condition required by industrial harvesters and processors) was not a concern. There's better flavor and nutrition, not to mention fantastic variety, to be had from traditional heirloom crops. Additionally, the genetic diversity has to be preserved for safety against famine, drought, and disease. If we lose our diversity of heirloom crops, in a crisis we are left to go to multinational "life science" companies for quick fixes in GMO's and we are at the mercy of their profit motives, not to mention the many unanswered questions about the safety and environmental impacts of GMO's, and the warning signs are many. There's not space here to discuss all the issues. As far as our use of heritage crops goes, starting with grains, we use on a weekly basis: Henry Moore corn, Carolina Gourdseed white corn, Carolina gold rice, Charleston gold rice, purple hull peas, sea island benne, bennecake flour, red fife wheat, sonoran red wheat, peelcorn oats, sea island peas, white navy peas, sobakoh buckwheat, and abruzzi rye. These are the foundation of our pantry and define the "field" portion of our flavor palette. Other grains come and go as chosen seasonally. At the market over the growing season, I am always looking for heirloom vegetables, and will always pick an heirloom over a modern variety. This shows itself particularly during the apple harvest, when every year we work with two dozen or so apple varieties for different purposes - calville blanc di' hiver, eposus spitzenberger, tolman sweetings, Arkansas black, Blenheim's orange, Wolf River, and on. Some are used for salads, some for baking, others for apple butter, and still others for chutney. To me, the most important mission is to work to preserve seed biodiversity, but the fun part comes in learning the story behind all of these seeds and discovering their properties in order to coax the best flavor, texture, and aromas out of them. We can all help save our heritage by eating it every day, and it's delicious, with a new discovery available nearly every day.