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Entries associated with the tag "Mike Gebert":

November 18th - 2:17 p.m.

"Whether you uproot a carrot and bite into it, or slaughter a deer and cut it into steaks, it should be remembered that each effort to procure food is inherently tinged with violence: it is the passage from life to death, and back again towards life." --Martin Picard

Part two of Mike Gebert's Sky Full of Bacon video podcast, "There Will Be Pork," the partner to my Whole Hog Project story, has been posted right here. Be forewarned: a good deal of this part takes place in the slaughterhouse. 

The collected Whole Hog Project.

November 7th - 10:52 a.m.

Mike Gebert just completed a trailer for the upcoming Sky Full of Bacon documentary on how our mulefoots got from the farm to Blackbird. That'll go up in tandem with my feature next Thursday in the Reader's food issue, and of course at SFoB. Here 'tis.


Trailer for Sky Full of Bacon 05 from Michael Gebert on Vimeo.

 

The Whole Hog Project

October 20th - 2:51 p.m.

It was a six-act pork circus last night at Blackbird.

I'll probably be accused of some bias when I say our multicourse mulefoot aporkalypse was spectacular, but I was surrounded by exacting, discriminating eaters. After months and months of me telling them that this was a special pig--something you've never tasted before, really, you gotta believe me--70-some folks, friends and strangers, took the bait and put their money down for Slow Food Chicago. All I had to do was look around the room as they took their first bites of Jason Hammel's braised belly to know I wasn't crazy.

It certainly didn't hurt that Paul Kahan had assembled a formidable array of talented chefs to work on these animals. Most work directly for him (or had in the past), and as Mike Gebert and I followed them around over the last week, a palpable sense of family surrounded them. I couldn't have dreamed a better team, and I couldn't be more grateful to them for allowing us to stick our cameras over their shoulders and pester them with endless questions.

I'm going to save description of the prep work of these dishes for later, and let the attached photos of the talented Ron Kaplan do the talking for now. But I have to let you know that Valerie Weihman-Rock raised some incredible animals, who produced more meat than was needed. So if you wanted a seat at the table but missed out, you have a few chances to try some yourself. Brian Huston of The Publican has an extra porchetta he'll be running as a special tonight, along with a surplus of skin for chicharrones. Justin Large, whose head cheese whole-grain mustard ravioli en brodo was my favorite course, has two extra quarts of the filling he'll be using at Avec sometime during the next three days. And Mike Sheerin is going to be curing one of the hams--you'll have to wait about six months for that one, but I'll track its progress.

One of the objectives of the Whole Hog Project (it goes on!) is to take a good look at what it takes to produce real food. Does anything in these photos resemble a living, breathing animal? Of course not. But just five days ago three mulefoots were roaming wide open, green pasture, eating quackgrass, chicken eggs, corn, oats, alfalfa, goat's milk, and Swiss chard. On November 13, in our food issue, I'm going to write about exactly what happened on the way from the farm, to the slaughterhouse, to Blackbird's basement, and finally to the dining room. The chefs have promised to contribute recipes based on their courses, and at this moment Gebert is toiling away with hours of footage he shot for an accompanying Sky Full of Bacon video podcast.

You really need to see Mike Sheerin break down a pig. He's a surgeon.

October 3rd - 1:34 p.m.

Earlier this week I mentioned that Mike Gebert of Sky Full of Bacon was going to be videotaping the events on the farm, in the slaughterhouse, and in the kitchen leading up to our mulefoot dinner at Blackbird. You can get a taste of what some of that footage might be like right now, as he and Rob Gardner take a pig head to Mado and watch Rob Levitt turn it into testa . . . aka headcheese.

Special cameo by My Secret Girlfriend.

July 8th - 3:02 p.m.

Reader contributor and vegetarian provocateur Mike Gebert's snazzy new food video podcast series Sky Full of Bacon has the local food blogosphere all atwitter, but he says his focus isn't strictly on Chicago. In addition to an upcoming episode on Sun Wah BBQ, he'll be filing from central Texas hill country, where he visited with the legendary 84-year-old Vencil Mares of Taylor Cafe.

Reports Gebert, "I missed getting on tape the coolest thing I saw at Taylor Cafe--Mr. Mares wrestling with whole briskets with a fork clamped in his arthritic hand. To get to his bar he had to use a walker, but there was no question of him not handling those briskets himself. Unfortunately, it was right as I arrived, I hadn't even introduced myself, and I was afraid if I aimed a camera at him without southern pleasantries, next I'd find my camera and a couple of teeth in the dusty gravel outside the place."




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