Eagle Dining - Ƶ Tue, 22 Mar 2022 17:34:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 Georgia Southern chef to participate in ‘Taste of College’ series in Thomas County Schools /2022/03/22/georgia-southern-chef-to-participate-in-taste-of-college-series-in-thomas-county-schools Tue, 22 Mar 2022 17:34:03 +0000 https://ww2.georgiasouthern.edu/news/?p=20085 The recipes of executive chef Clay Culpepper will be featured in Georgia’s Thomas County School System for its “Taste of College” series April 25-29. For the event, chefs from five Georgia colleges and universities were invited to submit recipes to try on students. 

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Georgia Southern chef to participate in ‘Taste of College’ series in Thomas County Schools

A Ƶ chef is hoping to turn his cooking talents into a recruitment tool for his university. 

The recipes of executive chef Clay Culpepper will be featured in Georgia’s Thomas County School System for its “Taste of College” series April 25-29. For the event, chefs from five Georgia colleges and universities were invited to submit recipes to try on students. 

Culpepper won’t be cooking for the school. Rather, he was asked to send his recipes for the school staff to follow. His menu includes blackened chicken, slow roasted beef brisket, mashed potatoes, honey balsamic glazed baby carrots, steamed broccoli and apple salad.

He said he chose items that stood apart from traditional menu items like chicken fingers, and also made his selections “user friendly” for the staff who will have to follow his instructions.

Even though it adds a little bit more stress to the middle of the semester, Culpepper said he’s looking forward to making an impact. 

“It’s a nice feeling to be asked to participate in something and to get our name out there and in with high school students that may potentially want to come to school here,” said Culpepper. “That’s really what it comes down to.”

Culpepper is the executive chef in the Lakeside Dining Commons, and has a bit of a reputation with Thomas County. Eagle Dining Services’ Honey Balsamic Glazed Baby Carrots were recently featured in the Thomas County Schools Monthly Newsletter. Carrots are the Harvest of the Month, which is the Georgia Department of Education School Nutrition Program’s farm to school initiative that highlights an item each month that can be sourced locally and served in Georgia’s school meals.

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Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options /2020/01/24/armstrong-campus-southern-cafe-aquaponics-farm-to-table-partnership-offers-sustainable-healthy-food-options Fri, 24 Jan 2020 15:01:09 +0000 https://ww2.georgiasouthern.edu/news/?p=17088 The newest restaurant on the Ƶ Armstrong Campus offers diners comfort in knowing that some of the ingredients were grown just a few hundred yards away in the campus' aquaponics farm in the Sustainable Aquaponics Research Center (SARC).

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Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options

The newest restaurant on the Ƶ Armstrong Campus offers diners comfort in knowing that some of the ingredients were grown just a few hundred yards away in the campus’ aquaponics farm in the Sustainable Aquaponics Research Center (SARC).

The agriculture and food industry is one of the largest users of water and producers of greenhouse gas emissions, but growing food by using aquaponics, a system of growing produce by using water fertilized by fish, cuts down on both significantly.

“SARC produce only travels a quarter mile from where it’s grown,” SARC curator Brigette Brinton said. “Locally grown food offers large advantages in terms of increased sustainability and freshness, and SARC produce is grown organically and using sound ecological principles that minimize water consumption.”

Brinton said minimizing emissions and water use does not diminish the quality or taste of the produce. To the contrary, it makes the food taste better because aquaponics produce often has higher concentrations of various compounds that give the foods their flavor, and they are grown in more ideal environments.

Although the dining hall on the Armstrong Campus has been using vegetables and produce from SARC since 2018, Southern Cafe will feature the products as a centerpiece of the restaurant. Availability of aquaponics produce, however, will depend on what is in season.

“President Marrero’s strategic plan directly speaks about sustainability, and we’re able to do that through our relationship with the aquaponics farm,” Ryan Brzycki, Assistant Director of Eagle Dining services, said. “After hearing feedback from the students, we’ve also tried to position Southern Cafe as a leader on campus in regards to using eco-friendly products for all of our containers and disposables, so that’s another huge impact we can make on this campus.”

The restaurant, which is located in the University Court area of the Memorial College Center, will have counter service and serve classic, southern dishes, such as Brunswick stew and chicken pot pie, as well as soups, salads, paninis and desserts. Brzycki said the Southern Cafe will focus on two other strategic pillars, teaching and research and community engagement, in addition to sustainability.

“Students and faculty are actively involved in research at that facility, and you can take a tour of it,” Brzycki said. “As people find out about Southern Cafe’s partnership with the aquaponics farm, we can further engagement by teaching people about what aquaponics is and how it can be used.”

Brzycki said Eagle Dining wants to expand on using ultra-local, fresh produce and vegetables, as a part of the partnership with the aquaponics farm.

“When we consider redesigns of existing or new dining locations on the Armstrong Campus in the future, we want to see how we can incorporate these same principles,” he said. “But for now, Southern Cafe is the flagship unit for the aquaponics partnership, as well as sustainability and healthy eating, of Eagle Dining.”

Brinton said she hopes the Southern Cafe will inspire the students, faculty and staff who eat there to make healthier and more sustainable choices in other areas of their lives.

“Showcasing local, sustainable produce increases students’ awareness that there are better options, and Georgia Southern is going the extra mile to show them how to start making better choices,” she said. “Each time students see they made a sustainable choice at the Southern Cafe, they’re more likely to choose sustainable options on their own.”

The post Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options first appeared on Ƶ.

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Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options /2020/01/24/armstrong-campus-southern-cafe-aquaponics-farm-to-table-partnership-offers-sustainable-healthy-food-options Fri, 24 Jan 2020 15:01:09 +0000 https://ww2.georgiasouthern.edu/news/?p=17088 The newest restaurant on the Ƶ Armstrong Campus offers diners comfort in knowing that some of the ingredients were grown just a few hundred yards away in the campus' aquaponics farm in the Sustainable Aquaponics Research Center (SARC).

The post Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options first appeared on Ƶ.

]]>

Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options

The newest restaurant on the Ƶ Armstrong Campus offers diners comfort in knowing that some of the ingredients were grown just a few hundred yards away in the campus’ aquaponics farm in the Sustainable Aquaponics Research Center (SARC).

The agriculture and food industry is one of the largest users of water and producers of greenhouse gas emissions, but growing food by using aquaponics, a system of growing produce by using water fertilized by fish, cuts down on both significantly.

“SARC produce only travels a quarter mile from where it’s grown,” SARC curator Brigette Brinton said. “Locally grown food offers large advantages in terms of increased sustainability and freshness, and SARC produce is grown organically and using sound ecological principles that minimize water consumption.”

Brinton said minimizing emissions and water use does not diminish the quality or taste of the produce. To the contrary, it makes the food taste better because aquaponics produce often has higher concentrations of various compounds that give the foods their flavor, and they are grown in more ideal environments.

Although the dining hall on the Armstrong Campus has been using vegetables and produce from SARC since 2018, Southern Cafe will feature the products as a centerpiece of the restaurant. Availability of aquaponics produce, however, will depend on what is in season.

“President Marrero’s strategic plan directly speaks about sustainability, and we’re able to do that through our relationship with the aquaponics farm,” Ryan Brzycki, Assistant Director of Eagle Dining services, said. “After hearing feedback from the students, we’ve also tried to position Southern Cafe as a leader on campus in regards to using eco-friendly products for all of our containers and disposables, so that’s another huge impact we can make on this campus.”

The restaurant, which is located in the University Court area of the Memorial College Center, will have counter service and serve classic, southern dishes, such as Brunswick stew and chicken pot pie, as well as soups, salads, paninis and desserts. Brzycki said the Southern Cafe will focus on two other strategic pillars, teaching and research and community engagement, in addition to sustainability.

“Students and faculty are actively involved in research at that facility, and you can take a tour of it,” Brzycki said. “As people find out about Southern Cafe’s partnership with the aquaponics farm, we can further engagement by teaching people about what aquaponics is and how it can be used.”

Brzycki said Eagle Dining wants to expand on using ultra-local, fresh produce and vegetables, as a part of the partnership with the aquaponics farm.

“When we consider redesigns of existing or new dining locations on the Armstrong Campus in the future, we want to see how we can incorporate these same principles,” he said. “But for now, Southern Cafe is the flagship unit for the aquaponics partnership, as well as sustainability and healthy eating, of Eagle Dining.”

Brinton said she hopes the Southern Cafe will inspire the students, faculty and staff who eat there to make healthier and more sustainable choices in other areas of their lives.

“Showcasing local, sustainable produce increases students’ awareness that there are better options, and Georgia Southern is going the extra mile to show them how to start making better choices,” she said. “Each time students see they made a sustainable choice at the Southern Cafe, they’re more likely to choose sustainable options on their own.”

The post Armstrong Campus’ Southern Cafe, aquaponics farm-to-table partnership offers sustainable, healthy food options first appeared on Ƶ.

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