Event
FOOD+FARM: Bryant Terry
Bryant Terry is an eco chef, food justice activist, and author of Vegan Soul Kitchen (VSK): Fresh, Healthy, and Creative African-American Cuisine (Da Capo/Perseus March 2009). For the past nine years he has worked to build a more just and sustainable food system and has used cooking as a tool to illuminate the intersections between poverty, structural racism, and food insecurity. His interest in cooking, farming, and community health can be traced back to his childhood in Memphis, Tennessee, where his grandparents inspired him to grow, prepare, and appreciate good food.
Bryant is currently a fellow of the Food and Society Policy Fellows Program, a national project of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. He has garnered many honors and awards for his work including receiving the inaugural Natural Gourmet Institute Award for Excellence in Health-Supportive Food Education and being selected as one of the 2008 Hot 20 Under 40 in the San Francisco Bay Area magazine 77. Bryants first book (coauthored with Anna Lapp, foreword by Eric Schlosser), Grub: Ideas for an Urban Organic Kitchen (Tarcher/Penguin 2006), is a winner of a 2007 Nautilus Award for Social Change.
Since the publication of Grub, Bryant has traveled to dozens of cities, doing cooking demonstrations and speaking at public events as well as at universities and colleges. Bryant contributes essays and recipes to a number of online and print outlets, and his work has been featured in Gourmet, Food and Wine, The New York Times Magazine, The San Francisco Chronicle, Vibe, Domino, and many other publications. Bryant has a regular columnEco-Soul Kitchenon TheRoot.com. He has made dozens of national radio and television appearances (Fox, NBC, PBS, BET, and Sundance) including making a guest appearance on the eco-reality series Marios Green House and being a host on The Endless Feast, a 13-episode public television series that explores the connection between the earth and the food on our plates.
In 2002, Bryant founded b-healthy! (Build Healthy Eating and Lifestyles to Help Youth), a multi-year initiative designed to empower youth to be active in creating a more just and sustainable food system. Along with Ludie Minaya, Elizabeth Johnson, and Latham Thomas, Bryant helped elevate cooking as an important tool for organizing and base building in the food justice movement.
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LocationSPACE Gallery
538 Congress St.
Portland, ME 04101
United States
Categories
Kid Friendly: No |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: No |
Wheelchair Accessible: No |
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