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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Up, Up! Farm Film Festival

Tonight various outgrowths of the local farm movement are interfacing to present the second film in a series called the Up, Up! Farm Film Festival, which presents independent films that focus on food systems. The festival was created by the Greenhorns, a nonprofit based out of Essex, New York, made up of young farmers and supporters who promote farming in younger generations.

The showing tonight, To Make a Farm, which documents five young, small-scale farmers and presents a hopeful future for agriculture, gets going at 6 at the Trolley Stop Market, 704 Madison, in the Edge district.

Christian Brothers University food justice professor Emily Holmes was approached last year by local farmer Brandon Pugh, of Delta Sol Farm in Proctor, Arkansas, about cosponsoring the festival, and later the Cooper-Young Community Farmers Market got on board to bring the series to the Mid-South.

The first showing was held Jan. 19th at CBU and included The Sharecroppers, a short documentary covering the challenges of chicken farming in Arkansas and Louisiana, and American Meat, documenting both traditional confinement methods as well as the sustainable, pasture-raised method of raising animals in the meat industry.

The festival will present five more showings through the months of February, March, and April, wrapping up the series on April 19th at CBU during Earth Week with two shorts, including Sourlands, which covers the ecological challenges farmers in Sourlands, New Jersey, are facing.

A complete list of showings can be found at https://www.facebook.com/UpUpFarmFilmFestival/.

Up, Up! Farm Film Festival


“The festival is a series of independent films that explore sustainable farming, land access, and the relationship of people to place,” Holmes said. “The primary goal is to raise awareness of the value of our local farmers and their important contributions to our economy, our landscape, our culture, and of course, our meals. We should all know where our food comes from and what kind of labor goes into its production.

“Farming isn’t easy, especially when it’s done in a labor-intensive, environmentally sustainable way. So one goal of the festival is educational, while another is to encourage support of our local farmers. One way of doing that directly is by shopping at a local farmers market, such as the CYCFM,” Holmes said.

All films are free and open to the public.

For more information about the Greenhorns, visit thegreenhorns.net.

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Food & Drink Food Reviews

Ryan Trimm takes the Farmers Market Challenge.

“Man, these farmers are so green,” mutters Ryan Trimm, “you’d think they’d use paper bags, right?”

Moments later, he smiles and accepts a plastic bag full of plump Tennessee lady peas from Yang Farms in Toone, Tennessee. It’s Saturday morning, and we’re up bright and early, shopping for lunch at the Cooper-Young Community Farmers Market. Trimm’s daughter, 3-year-old Emma Kate, has gallantly agreed to come along and help.

“What do you want to eat, baby?” asks Trimm, boosting her up into his arms.

But Emma Kate is suddenly feeling a little shy. She blinks her glacier-blue eyes and buries her head in her father’s neck.

In addition to his many other appealing qualities, Trimm also happens to be very brave. The executive chef at Southward Fare & Libations, Sweet Grass, and Next Door, he’s agreed to be my guinea pig for the Flyer‘s very first Farmers Market Challenge. That’s where I team up with a local chef, we go shopping at the farmers market, and the chef cooks a delicious meal with what we bought.

I know, right? It’s a tough job, but somebody’s gotta eat all that delicious food.

John Minervini

Chef Ryan Trimm and daughter Emma Kate shop for peppers at the Cooper-Young Farmers Market.

Today, Trimm is taken with the peppers from Tubby Creek Farm in Ashland, Mississippi. And no wonder, these peppers are works of art. The lipstick pimentos are little rainbows, grading in color from lime green to vermilion. And the Italian sweet peppers are downright sexy, long and plump with a taut, red skin. Trimm buys a pint of each.

Before we go, we stock up on tomatoes, okra, Texas sweet onions, herbs, and a butterscotch melon. The melon — from Hanna Farms, in Osceola, Arkansas — is like a cantaloupe, but smaller, about the size of a bocce ball. It’s got a delicious caramel flavor, with a scent of gardenia.

“Smell that,” says Trimm, holding up the melon. “You just can’t find that in the grocery store.”

food Feature By John Klyce Minervini

Chef Ryan Trimm eats lunch with son Thomas and daughter Emma Kate at their home in East Memphis.

Trimm lives with his wife and two children in a spacious, two-story Georgian Revival near Park and Ridgeway. When we get to the house, Trimm’s wife Sarah is trying to soothe 3-month-old Thomas, who has been sick this morning. Sarah, who teaches first grade at St. Mary’s, says she met Ryan in high school, when she was a junior at St. Agnes and he was a senior at Christian Brothers.

“At this point, I’ve known him for over half my life,” she says, burping baby Thomas. “I still can’t get over how weird that is.”

Everybody’s getting hungry, so Trimm slices the melon, serving it with feta cheese and a bit of lemon verbena. It’s an inspired combination. The cheese is just piquant enough to balance the melon’s honeysuckle sweetness, and the citrusy lemon verbena puts an exclamation mark at the end of the sentence, so to speak.

Meanwhile, Trimm gets to work on the main course, what he playfully calls a “cornless succotash.” Succotash — from the Narragansett word for “broken corn” — is a dish that New England colonists learned from Native Americans back in the 17th century. In its simplest form, it consists of corn and lima beans, prepared with cream or butter.

Today, we’re cutting out the corn in favor of those scrumptious-looking lady peas. First, Trimm blanches the peas in boiling water. Then he fires up the sauté pan, and it’s go time. One by one, veggies start to sizzle as they hit the hot oil: pimento peppers, okra, lady peas, and herbs. Trimm cuts the heat before tossing the mixture with butter and tomatoes. (Get the full recipe at memphisflyer.com).

Finally it’s time to eat. We take our lunch in the sunroom, an airy space with a view of the family swimming pool. Alongside the succotash, Trimm serves the Italian sweet peppers, pan-roasted with parsley and garlic, and a crudité of tomatoes and onions.

“All right guys,” says Trimm, rounding up the family. “Time for lunch.”

It’s an embarrassment of culinary riches. The tomatoes — Brandywines and Cherokee Purples from Lazy Dog Farms in Bethel Springs, Tennessee — are a meal unto themselves, tangy and sweet with a perfect texture. They go well with the Italian sweet peppers, which are smoky and savory, with a hint of sweetness.

But the okra in the succotash definitely steals the show. The taste is both unforgettable and hard to describe, somewhere between eggplant and asparagus. On my way out the door, I confess that this is the first time I’ve had okra that wasn’t pickled or fried, and Trimm offers some tips for selecting okra at the farmers market.

“You really don’t want it to be any bigger than that,” he says, holding up his little finger. “Once you go bigger, the insides start to hollow out, and you get less meat for your bite.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Ryan Trimm’s Cornless Succotash Recipe

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This week’s Flyer unveiled its very first Farmers Market Challenge. That’s where we team up with a local chef, go shopping at a farmers market, and make a delicious meal with what we bought.

To christen the series, I met up with Ryan Trimm, of Southward and Sweet Grass, who whipped up a delicious cornless succotash. And ladies and gentleman, it was delicious: crisp and fresh, like sticking your fork in a summer garden.

Then I started thinking. I was like, you know what? I could do that. All right, yes, it takes a culinary rockstar like Ryan Trimm to come up with the recipe. But once you’ve got instructions, it’s really not that difficult to make.

So below, for your delectation, is the recipe for Ryan Trimm’s Cornless Succotash.

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Ryan Trimm’s Cornless Succotash
40 minutes
4 servings

Ingredients:

½ tbsp. olive oil
½ tbsp. vegetable oil
1 cup Tennessee lady peas
6 lipstick pimento peppers, halved and seeded
12-15 okra, halved lengthwise
½ shallot or Texas sweet onion, sliced thin
1 cup grape tomatoes, halved
1 tbsp. fresh chives, minced
1 tbsp. fresh parsley, minced
1 tbsp. butter
salt and pepper to taste.

In a small pot, bring 1 quart of lightly salted water to boil. Boil lady peas for 1-2 minutes, until just tender. Drain. In a large pan, bring olive oil / vegetable oil mixture to medium-high heat. Add peppers. Sauté until skin blisters, appx. 1½ minutes, stirring constantly. Add okra; sauté for an additional 1½ minutes. Add shallots; sauté for an additional 30 seconds. Add peas; sauté for an additional 1½ minutes. Remove pan from heat. Add tomatoes, herbs and butter. Toss until butter has melted. Salt and pepper to taste. Serve immediately with fresh fish—or enjoy it by itself!

As always, we recommend sourcing your veggies locally. But in case you can’t find lipstick pimento peppers—or just don’t have time—here are a few substitutions. Tennessee lady peas can be swapped with purple hull peas. Lipstick pimentos can be swapped with two cups of any sweet peppers, sliced thick. Texas sweet onions can be swapped for shallots.