“The pandemic has shown that the connection between farm and table can be broken.”
For restaurateurs like Dan Barber, the vanguard chef behind Blue Hill at Stone Barns,
who earned two Michelin stars as he championed the farm-to-table movement in New
York State, that means rethinking everything.
Barber shut the doors of Blue Hill in Westchester County and a second location in New
York City in mid-March. His first thought was that the employees were going to be really
hurt. Then, just as quickly, came the realization of what this was going to do to the entire
restaurant industry and all the small, independent farmers and producers that rely on
restaurants in the farm-to-table movement.
“I believe restaurants have a cultural imprint on what it means to be alive. Restaurants
are this place of connection and community and excitement and decadence that is very
powerful,” Barber says. “To have them shuttered now, and then shackled when they
come out of it, I think it will be very difficult to bring that back.”
Before the pandemic, “The world of processed Big Food was about to fall apart. There
was a new era that was much less centralized and much more regional,” says Barber.
“Now everyone is staying home. There’s a return to efficient food, food that you can eat
without thinking about it. Big Food is saying, ‘We’re back, and we’re not going to lose it
this time.’ That, to me, is a disaster.”
Before all this happened, Barber says that he had gotten into relationships with some of
the farmers, and “we were sort of building the business with them, through Blue Hill as
an exclusive. That network is shattered.”
He says he watched as the farmers ended up being the first to be exposed. “The
pandemic has been unsparing in showing weakness in any kind of supply chain, and
that supply chain, as exciting and important as it was, was really weak. Having that
direct, singular connection with farmers, without them having any other opportunities,
proved to be disastrous.”
There is one thing, however, that gives Barber hope going forward...the possibility of
“designing a whole new regional food system that can withstand these shocks and others
that will come along. That,” he says, “could be very exciting!”
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