Buck A Shuck!

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Buck A Shuck!

The Carriage Inn & Saloon Whiskey Bar
North Kingstown, RI
Friday, April 24
4-6 PM
Come learn about oysters at the raw bar over a local brew or fine whiskey!
Hosted by:
Sarina Lyon & Aly Pitts
URI Department of Marine Affairs

Slow Fish Workshop

Shared on behalf of Spencer C Montgomery of Slow Food USA,

Students host a ‘Slow Fish Workshop’ at the University of Rhode Island To explore the seasonality and biodiversity of RI seafood

KINGSTON, R.I. – On Thursday, April 23rd, a group of twenty undergraduate students will host a sustainable seafood workshop at the University of Rhode Island. Students aim to increase their community’s appetite for locally-abundant, underutilized and invasive species of seafood. The event is open for public viewing and is set to take place from 4:00 to 6:00 pm in Ranger Hall (Rm 107).

Students will gain hands-on experience filleting whole fish and using leftover heads and bones to
make culinary stocks to incorporate into various dishes.

This Slow Fish Workshop – organized by students from Slow Food URI – functions to bridge the gap between young adults and their local fishing community. Up until now, Slow Food URI has been involved mainly in terrestrial food system planning – coordinating a farmers’ market on campus, among other projects.

“It’s my hope that this workshop will spark interest in getting RI-caught seafood into our dining halls at URI” says Kayleigh Hill, Nutrition major and student organizer for the event. “Fishermen could really benefit from new local markets for various bycatch species”

With two final semesters ahead of her at URI, Hill is dedicating her Honors Project to building new models that can support local producers and shift purchasing on campus.

Hill was inspired by a study abroad trip to Naples, Italy where she spent a day catching and cooking fish with a local fisherman. She was joined by her professor, Rosaria Pisa, who is helping students plan recipes for the upcoming Slow Fish Workshop at URI.

Students are working with Sarah Schumann, a RI commercial shellfishermen, to source invasive green crabs for the event – just one of the many unique species to be showcased. Schumann is also the President of Eating with the Ecosystem, a local nonprofit whose mission is to bring about a place-based approach to sustainable seafood.

“The diversity of species in the ocean is abbreviated into a short list of items that the American consumer considers to be their seafood choices” explains Schumann, who commends the students for actively expanding their palates. “Selective choice may be the wrong value to emphasize if we want to achieve the resilience of our marine ecosystems and the permanence of our fishing industry.”

Schumann continues, “A fishermen’s economic success depends on the area of overlap between what the sea supplies and what the market demands – and there’s always some degree of mismatch between those two things.”

Students are also getting help from Tom LaFazia of Narragansett Bay Lobster, located in Point Judith, RI. LaFazia is working with local fishermen to donate other lesser-known, under-marketed species to the Slow Fish Workshop at URI.

“At this point in the season, students could expect to get their hands on some scup, skate, mackerel, silver hake, and monkfish.” LaFazia explains, “We’ll see other underutilized species such as dogfish and sea robins later in the season.”

In the past two years, similar workshops have been organized by students at the University of New Hampshire and Northeastern University in Boston. At UNH, student, Spencer Montgomery, organized a Slow Fish Workshop that later served as leverage for Slow Food UNH to shift dining hall purchasing on his campus.

“We invited everyone to the table” explains Montgomery, “Following a series of meetings between UNH Dining Services, students, chefs, local fishermen and seafood processors, we were able to get 2,000 pounds of local seafood into our dining hall within one semester!”

Montgomery, now a part-time fisherman himself, works to engage youth in fisheries across New England through the Slow Fish campaign.

“I’m very interested to see how the Slow Fish program plays out at the University of Rhode Island” says Jennifer McCann from RI Sea Grant “This may inspire other organizations to look towards food policy agenda that could help support our local fleet.”

For information about the international Slow Fish campaign, please visit

www.slowfood.com/slowfish

2015 Rhode Island Seafood Cook-off

High school culinary students to compete in

2015 Rhode Island Seafood Cook-off

Seafood Cook-off May 6: Come, Taste & Vote

NOTE: RSVP required

RICHMOND, R.I.—Local high school culinary students will be competing in the 2015 Rhode Island Seafood Cook-off, hosted by the Chariho Area Career & Technical Center, on Wednesday, May 6, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., and the public is invited to attend.

Student teams from the Chariho Area Career & Technical Center, the Warwick Area Career & Technical Center, the Cranston Career & Technical Center, and William M. Davies, Jr. Career & Technical High School will be serving up their own original recipes for Rhode Island’s state appetizer, calamari. The audience will vote for their favorite dish, and the winning team will have their recipe featured as an appetizer at the Mariner Grille, 142 Point Judith Road, Narragansett. They will also receive seafood cookbooks and a gift certificate for lunch at the Capital Grille restaurant. The event will also include a speaker from the R.I. Department of Environmental Management who will discuss the importance of Rhode Island-landed seafood in the local food economy.

“We think this is a great opportunity not only for our students to show what they can do, but to work under pressure, create an original seafood recipe that appeals to consumers, and to learn from other students from around the state,” said Linda Musch, chef instructor, Chariho Culinary Arts, “And we look forward to inviting the public in to see what our programs have to offer.”

“Seafood offers a number of health benefits, but people aren’t always sure how to prepare it,” said Lori Pivarnik of the University of Rhode Island Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences and Rhode Island Sea Grant, “This cook-off gives students the chance to come up with new preparations for a locally caught seafood that’s economically important to Rhode Island, and we hope it will give the audience some new ideas for making calamari at home.”

The event is free to attend, but RSVPs are required. Please call Rhode Island Sea Grant at (401) 874-6800 or email studentrisg@gmail.com. The Chariho Area Career & Technical Center is located at 459 Switch Road, Wood River Junction in Richmond, R.I.

The calamari for this event is being donated by The Town Dock, Narragansett. Town Dock is the largest supplier of calamari in the U.S.

Sponsors of the 2015 Rhode Island Seafood Cook-off are the Chariho Area Career & Technical Center, Rhode Island Sea Grant, the URI Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, and the URI Graduate School of Oceanography.

 

Notice of Public Meeting 10-29-14

Shared on behalf of Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management Division of Agriculture

Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management
Division of Agriculture
Notice of Public Meeting – Wednesday, October 29, 2014, 3:30 PM

Notice is hereby given that a public hearing regarding the Local Agriculture and Seafood Act (LASA) Small Grants and Technical Assistance Program will be held in Room 300 of the RI Department of Environmental Management, at 235 Promenade Street, Providence, Rhode Island.

The purpose of this hearing is to accomplish the purposes of RIGL 2-25-8 which requires the Department to annually schedule and conduct one or more public meetings to solicit input from the general public on whether the program is meeting its intended purposes, and to solicit recommendations for modifying the program.

AGENDA:

  • General overview of the program (Ken Ayars, DEM)
  • Grant round #1 overview (Leo Pollock, RI Food Policy Council)
  • Group breakouts:
  1. Discussion relative to 2015 round #2 priorities
  2. Discussion relative to outreach strategy for 2015 round #2
  • Wrap up & next steps (Ken Ayars & Leo Pollock)

Written comments are welcome and may be emailed to LASA@dem.ri.gov or mailed to/dropped off at the Division of Agriculture office at 235 Promenade Street, Providence, RI 02908 until Wednesday, November 12th at 4:00 pm. Email submissions are strongly preferred. All oral and written comments will be considered in the same manner.

NOTES: If you have questions or need additional information, please contact Ken Ayars, Chief, Division of Agriculture, 222-2781 ext. 4500, ken.ayars@dem.ri.gov, or Nicole Pollock, Assistant to the Director, 222-4700 ext. 2038, nicole.pollock@dem.ri.gov.

The meeting location is accessible to handicapped persons. If you require interpreter services for the hearing impaired, please request by contacting TDD number 222-1205 or #711 (R.I. Relay), at least 3 days in advance of the meeting.

RSVP for Chart Chats–Informing Rhode Island Use Maps Meeting on June 13th

Chart Chats: Informing ‘User Maps’ with Your Activities on the Water

Thursday, June 13th, 2013, 5pm to 7pm
Warwick Public Library, 600 Sandy Lane. Warwick, RI 02889

Click here for Chart Chats Meeting Information in PDF format.

Please join team members of the Rhode Island Shellfish Management Plan (SMP) during the Warwick Public Library’s Second Annual Quahoggers Jamboree. The SMP team will have an informal display of user maps. These maps were created in coordination with stakeholders through a series of public meetings over the past several months with the goal of illustrating the many different uses of our bays and ponds to minimize user conflict. Here’s your chance to view these maps, suggest changes or additions, and guide the next phase of the effort.

WHEN: Thursday, June 13th, 5pm-7pm (Open house–please drop in at any time!)
WHERE: Warwick Public Library, Small Meeting Room
Please RSVP to smp@etal.uri.edu and include the meeting date.

This meeting coincides with Warwick’s Second Annual Quahoggers Jamboree. The Jamboree, which is also at the Warwick Public Library on Thursday, June 13th, 2013 will run from 6:00pm to 8:00pm. You must register online for this event at http://www.warwicklibrary.org/.

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