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                                      | Executive 
                                          Chef Alice WatersChez Panisse, Berkeley, CA
 |    Alice 
                                    Waters Cooks A DreamBy Wendy Musk
 Photos by Alan Bartl & Maren Caruso
 A 
                                    COPPER CAULDRON SIMMERS WITH A SUFFUSION OF 
                                    AROMATIC HERBS AND. THE EARTHY ESSENCE OF AUTUMN VEGETABLES HARVESTED 
                                    IN RIPE PERFECTION.
 A GLOW IN THE BALSAMIC CALM OF THE NORTHERN 
                                    CALIFORNIA SUN, ALICE WATERSS
 TEACHES REVERENCE FOR LIFE. THE EVENT IS THE 
                                    ROBERT MONDAVI
 GREAT CHEFS 2000 SERIES. AND SHE IS COOKING 
                                    A DREAM.
 Waters 
                                    is a visionary, the acknowledged forerunner 
                                    of the organic food movement, who would invite 
                                    the world to dine, extended family all, were 
                                    there a farm table long enough and organic 
                                    produce plentiful enough within an hour's 
                                    drive of her beloved restaurant, Chez Panisse. 
                                    On October 16th, however, it was a select 
                                    few, supporters, admirers and colleagues, 
                                    who gathered amid the simple elegance of the 
                                    Mondavi vineyards to share the gentle pleasure 
                                    of her expertise, and wisdom. 
                                     
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                                          on Images for Captions |  The 
                                    scene is a pastoral one; Alice Waters and 
                                    staff quietly chopping vegetables for the 
                                    afternoon meal. Congregated around the Cutting 
                                    board, participants share thoughts along with 
                                    recipes for homemade vinegars. Hostess 
                                    Margrit Mondavi, an accomplished chef herself, 
                                    chimes in with her favorites from her perch 
                                    upon a countertop. The chopping complete, 
                                    all migrate to the patio for the grand event, 
                                    creating fish soup in a copper cauldron on 
                                    an open wood fire. The 
                                    ingredients look too beautiful to cook as 
                                    they slide into the heated olive oil releasing 
                                    a fragrance that draws all into a circle around 
                                    the kettle. Ever enthusiastic, Robert Mondavi 
                                    returns again and again to peer into the cauldron 
                                    and inhale the delicate aroma, much to the 
                                    group's amusement. Nourish 
                                    the Body. Nourish the Earth. Nourish the Soul. 
                                    This is the message Alice Waters imparts through 
                                    the metaphor of fresh ingredients. To cultivate 
                                    the art of living one must live in reciprocity 
                                    with the living earth. To serve a garden salad 
                                    a la Alice Waters, one must cultivate not 
                                    only a garden, but also a community of growers 
                                    and providers with like-minded integrity. 
                                    And that is exactly what she has done. Waters 
                                    explains, "When the cafe opened, we had 
                                    a limited choice of produce suppliers. Like 
                                    most restaurants, we got our fruits and vegetables 
                                    at the cornmercial produce terminal and a 
                                    few local markets. We desperately wanted better 
                                    raw materials, but for years we thought the 
                                    only way we could get them was by starting 
                                    a farm ourselves, or by having a farmer grow 
                                    things just for us. Only gradually have we 
                                    learned that it takes a network of suppliers, 
                                    some forty in all. whom we have discovered 
                                    over the years. This network has become indispensable 
                                    to us. It is not just a list of purveyors, 
                                    but a community of people who share our goals 
                                    of providing fresh, perfectly grown food while 
                                    promoting a sustainable agriculture that takes 
                                    care of the earth." Waters 
                                    judges freshness not by the day but by the 
                                    hour. Like her mentor, revered French master 
                                    chef, Alain Chapel, she is committed to a 
                                    menu dictated by the pick of the day. "All 
                                    the ingredients arrive at the kitchen hours 
                                    after they have been harvested." To that 
                                    end Waters employs a full time Forager, whose 
                                    responsibilities entail locating organic farms 
                                    and establishing sustainable relationships 
                                    with both land and farmers. Waters own father 
                                    was the original Forager-in-Chief at Chez 
                                    Panisse. He discovered eccentric biodynamic 
                                    farmer, Bob Cannard, cultivating 35 acres 
                                    on a wooded hillside above the floor of the 
                                    Sonoma Valley. "Bob grows a great variety 
                                    of produce, from tiny watercress and tender 
                                    baby lettuce to spicy rocket, pungent herbs, 
                                    earthy potatoes and succulent apricots, peaches, 
                                    figs, and raspberries. In the spring he forages 
                                    for miner's lettuce. In winter he grows enchanting 
                                    radicchios, including the pale yellow~green, 
                                    maroon-spotted Castelfranco variety." 
                                    Waters' staff drives to Cannard's farm everyday 
                                    in summer and every other day in winter, selecting 
                                    the freshest fare and dropping off the restaurant's 
                                    fruit and vegetable scraps for the farm's 
                                    compost. It is a mutually creative cycle. Alice 
                                    Waters was born in the spring season of 1944 
                                    in Chatham, New Jersey. A graduate of University 
                                    of California at Berkeley in 1967 with a degree 
                                    in French Cultural Studies, she pursued a 
                                    teaching degree at the Montessori School in 
                                    London, followed by a year of travel throughout 
                                    France. She returned to California inspired 
                                    and with a group of friends opened Chez Panisse, 
                                    in 1971, in a cozy two-story house in Berkeley. 
                                    Their signs and matchbooks read, "Cafe 
                                    and Restaurant." Waters explains, "I 
                                    believed that our new establishment could 
                                    be all things to all people. Chez Panisse, 
                                    I thought, could have a flower-bedecked dining 
                                    room with white linen and candlelight and 
                                    soigne cuisine and at the very same time it 
                                    could be a bustling neighborhood bistro, with 
                                    butcher paper on the tables and old-fashioned 
                                    straight-ahead fare where you could get as 
                                    much or as little as you wanted. I must have 
                                    known at some level that these were irreconcilable 
                                    fantasies, but that didn't stop me." 
                                    The restaurant was open seven days a week 
                                    from seven-thirty to two in the morning. The 
                                    daytime chalkboard menu offered simple dishes 
                                    a la carte, and the bohemian clientele was 
                                    encouraged to linger. At dinnertime lights 
                                    were dimmed, the checkered oil cloth table 
                                    toppers were replaced with fine linens tO 
                                    accompany the ambitious prix-fxed four and 
                                    five course dinners. When the satisfied patrons 
                                    departed, the formal restaurant metamorphosed 
                                    back into a cafe. "It never quite worked."Waters 
                                    explained. "The 
                                    restautant was such a huge success that people 
                                    started making reservations weeks in advance 
                                    and we didn't have enough tables." To 
                                    appease the cafe regulars, many of whom were 
                                    students, without suffiencient pocket change 
                                    to afford the prix-fixed menu, Chez Panisse 
                                    opened for coffee and croissants in the early 
                                    morning. Frustrations mounted. Clearly, expansion 
                                    was the solution. A 
                                    trip to Italy with colleagues and friends 
                                    inspired and defined the concept behind Chez 
                                    Panisse Cafe. "We ended up in Torino 
                                    one freezing November night, outside a little 
                                    restaurant. We could see a fire burning inside 
                                    and it pulled us in. And there I had my first 
                                    pizza out of a wood-burning oven. We all thought 
                                    it was the best thing we had eaten on the 
                                    whole trip. We shared several pizzas and a 
                                    few bottles of wine and by the time we left 
                                    we had it all figured out. We would turn upstairs 
                                    at Chez Panisse into a cafe, open day and 
                                    night, with an exposed kitchen, a grill and 
                                    a big brick wood-burning pizza oven, and downstairs 
                                    would remain a restaurant with a single carefulIy 
                                    composed, fixed-price menu." The 
                                    concept of service evolved too. To provide 
                                    the freshest fare, Waters reasoned, one must 
                                    have the freshest staff. Hence, a dynamic 
                                    correction to the grueling yet commonly accepted 
                                    business practice of working chefs seven days 
                                    a week on twelve hour stints was initiated. 
                                    The Cafe would maintain two chefs on a rotating 
                                    schedule of three days on, three days off. 
                                    The innovation impacted not only quality and 
                                    creative variety, but also the Cafe's ambience. 
                                    The alignment of business practice with Waters' 
                                    holistic philosophy inspired new levels of 
                                    hospitality and community. "I think this 
                                    is one of the best organizational moves we 
                                    ever made. The line cooks, prep cooks, and 
                                    interns who work under the chefs learn twice 
                                    as much, and the food is twice as good and 
                                    always different." Alice 
                                    Waters brings a woman's attention to the experience 
                                    of others. One suspects that had she not become 
                                    one of the world's most acclaimed executive 
                                    chefs she would have been a painter. Mounting 
                                    the stairs at Chez Pannisse Cafe the customer 
                                    is drawn into aesthetic communion. "Every 
                                    day, a designated cook decides what produce 
                                    looks the most beautiful and the most nearly 
                                    as if it had been picked that very morning, 
                                    and arranges it for display on the counter 
                                    in front of the salad-making station." 
                                    It is a palette for the palette, evoking a 
                                    glorious seventeenth century Spanish still 
                                    life painting. Composition is all. Waters 
                                    describes it best, "a basket of tiny 
                                    spiny purple artichokes or purple striped 
                                    eggplants; a few untrimmed bulbs of fennel 
                                    with their feathery green tops; an enormous 
                                    cardoon plant looking like a giant swollen 
                                    head of celery, a rainbow cornucopia of multicolored 
                                    glowing tomatoes, some still on the branch; 
                                    a few huge tumescent boletus mushrooms or 
                                    a pile of perfect morels, smelling faintly 
                                    of the woods." The colors and textures 
                                    of the still life are meant to be a hint, 
                                    enticing the senses and highlighting the ingredients 
                                    of the day. NOURISH 
                                    THE BODY. NOURISH THE EARTH. NOURISH THE SOUL. 
                                    THIS IS THE MESSAGE ALICE WATERS IMPARTS THROUGH 
                                    THE METAPHOR OF FRESH INGREDIENTS. TO CULTIVATE 
                                    THE ART OF LIVING, ONE MUST LIVE IN RECIPROCITY 
                                    WITH THE LIVING EARTH. Watets 
                                    approaches her art with the patience of a 
                                    gardener and the heart of a teacher. That 
                                    is why, in 1993, in collaboration with the 
                                    principal of Martin Luther King jr. Middle 
                                    School in Berkeky she ilutiated the Edibk 
                                    Schoolyard Project, [now the largest grantee 
                                    of the Chez Panicce Foundation], to teach 
                                    children abouc paticnce, susuinability, and 
                                    the principles of ecology. An 
                                    abandoned lot adjacent to the school was selected 
                                    as the garden site. Asphalt was removed in 
                                    December of 1995. It took two years for the 
                                    soil-enriching cover crop to prepare the former 
                                    parking lot for planting. Now, on an given 
                                    day, thirty students participate in the lessons 
                                    of nature's bounty, transforming the daily 
                                    harvest into a sit-down rneal. "The shape 
                                    of the garden continues to evolve as crops 
                                    are rotamd and beds are reconfigured. Eventually, 
                                    we hope to edibly landscape the entire school 
                                    campus, creating a beautiful school with in 
                                    a garden." This is how Waters nurtures 
                                    the future, with a replicable program that 
                                    feeds the child, mind, body and soul. Waters 
                                    is the author of several books, induding The 
                                    Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook, Fanny at Chez 
                                    Panisse, a storybook and cookbook for children 
                                    [dedicated to her 17 year old daughter, Fanny], 
                                    Chez Panisse Vegetables, and most recendy 
                                    the inspiring, Chez Panisse Cafe Cookbook. 
                                    The recipient of numerous prestigious awards, 
                                    Waters was named one of the world's ten best 
                                    chefs by the magazine Cuisine et Vins du France, 
                                    Best Chef in America and Best Restaurant in 
                                    America by the James Beard Foundation. She 
                                    is also a supporter of the Convivia Slow Foods 
                                    Movement whose thoughtful members question 
                                    the virulent spread of fast food venues and 
                                    their effect on the health and wellbeing of 
                                    the world's people. ROBERT 
                                    MONDAVI TAPS HIS TEASPOON AGAINST THE PERFECT 
                                    CURVE OF HIS WINE GLASS. HE AND MARGRIT RISE TO 
                                    PROPOSE A TOAST.
 “TO ALICE WATERS." HE TURNS TOWARD 
                                    HER WITH A WIDE SMILE.
 THE MOST WONDERFUL THINGS AT THE TABLE TRULY 
                                    HAVE
 THEIR ROOTS IN SIMPLICITY.
 At 
                                    the Mondavi Vineyard, dinner is served. The 
                                    dining hall is suffused with a Rembrandtian 
                                    inner light. The depth and warmth of Alice 
                                    Waters' sharing has created another extended 
                                    family gathered at table. Fall Vegeable Bagna 
                                    Cauda is prepared with attention to every 
                                    detail. The raw vegeables are picture-perfect 
                                    and straight from the garden, sliced thin 
                                    and sprinkled with sea salt. A warm anchovy 
                                    sauce is offered for dipping or spooning at 
                                    the diner's discretion. La familia di Robet 
                                    Mondavi Pinot Grigio 1999 accompanies this 
                                    engagingly light appetizer. Next, the centerpiece 
                                    of the meal, Fish Soup Chez Panisse cooked 
                                    outdoors in a copper cauldron over a Wood 
                                    Fire. It is the symbolic synergy of the day's 
                                    teachings, the congenial exchange of ideas, 
                                    the autumnal palette of green, gold and orange, 
                                    and exquisite ingredients. Robert Mondavi 
                                    Napa Vailey Sags Leap Saugivnon Blanc 1998 
                                    and a Garden Salad with shailot Vinaigrette 
                                    counterpoint. The 
                                    ending of the event, like the meal, is poignant, 
                                    pure and sweet, Galcrte Amandine and Caramel 
                                    Pear Ice Cream with Mondavi's Napa Valley 
                                    Moscato d'Oro 1999, is accompanied by a deep 
                                    and abiding sense of satisfaction and nurturance. 
                                    There is gratitude in the air. Robert Mondavi 
                                    aps his teaspoon against the perfeact curve 
                                    of his wine glass. He and Margrit rise to 
                                    propose a toast. "To Alice Waters." 
                                    He turns toward her with a wide smile. "The 
                                    most wonderful things at the table truly have 
                                    their roots in simplicity." Chef's 
                                    Recipes and Other Related Links:Caramel 
                                    Pear Ice Cream
 Fish 
                                    Soup Cooked over the Wood Fire
 Fish 
                                    Soup Chez Panisse
 Galette 
                                    Amandine with Caramel Pear Ice Cream
 Garden 
                                    Salad with Shallot a Vinaigrette
 Peking 
                                    Duck Breast Grilled over Vine Branches
 Straw 
                                    Potato Cake
 Fall 
                                    Vegetable, Bagna Cauda
 Fall 
                                    Vegetable Ragout with Mushrooms
 
 Other 
                                    Related Links:Alice 
                                    Waters - Bio
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