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Farm to People Debuts its Kitchen

  • Writer: boxton9
    boxton9
  • Dec 15, 2022
  • 3 min read


ediblebrooklyn.com, June 17, 2022


By Julia Sexton


If you want to like a grocery delivery service, this is the one: their warehouse surplus goes into community fridges just outside the building.

Basically, it’s the Costco model: if you have the space, a café that serves prepared foods offers a great opportunity to showcase the products on your warehouse shelves. That way, shoppers pay to sample goods that, if you do your job right, they buy later. Farm to People, whose products are vastly better than those at Costco, is doing a warehouse café with style at its new Kitchen & Bar in Bushwick.


Farm to People, a grocery delivery service, is a greener alternative to Fresh Direct, Instacart, Peapod, Wholefoods, and other grocery delivery services. The company prioritizes regenerative and organic farms, and sources much of what it sells within 300 miles of New York City. Its packaging is also compostable, and Wholefoods could really take that note. On the sidewalk outside its shipping warehouse, formerly the Brooklyn Cider House, Farm to People stocks a free community fridge for people in need. It’s pretty hard to not get behind Farm to People.


Owing to a recently burned down structure on its property, Farm to People found itself with some newly gained outdoor space. They’ve installed gravel, tables, and fabric shades to make a lovely spot for winding down on weekends (NB: it’s open only Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays). Outside, there is cornhole for those who crave it, but the real story is the beverage list curated by Farm to People’s Marketing Director, Rachel Steinhauser. On one visit, we spotted beers on draft (all $8) from Hill Farmstead Brewery, KCBC and Greenpoint Beer & Ale Co., and picks in cans ($8/$9) from Equilibrium Brewery, Oxbow Brewing Companyand Talea Beer Co. Meanwhile, wines are equally seductive and affordable. Look for many organic and biodynamic picks that span white, red, orange, rosé, and sparkling offered at between &13 and $17 per glass—there’s a sake ($14) and an amaro ($10), too. A glass of I Cangianti by Stoppini Confine (a biodynamic Tuscan orange, $17) under the shade on a Saturday afternoon will ease your slide into a perfect weekend.


Manning the huge kitchen (a relic from Brooklyn Cider House) is Matthew Yee, who spent time at One White Street and currently part times at Victoria Blamey’s acclaimed SOHO spot, Mena. He’s likely the most accomplished person flipping burgers in Bushwick—Yee comes with a degree in food science and agriculture from UMass, with a special degree in sustainable food and farming. Yee has whipped together a taut—as in, 8 item—menu that offers drinker-friendly sharable plates that include Narragansett Creamery burrata with rhubarb pickles, Square Roots basil oil, toasted almonds, and She Wolf Bakery sourdough ($15). Look for a truly incredible Little Gem salad with Indian Neck Farm shaved asparagus, Hawthorne Valley Farm biodynamic buttermilk ranch, everything bagel-seasoned She Wolf sourdough crumble, and chive blossoms ($15). For bigger appetites, there is an Acua Kelp Burger ($17) joining a Happy Valley Meat Co. smash burger ($17). If the mission of this menu is to showcase what can be achieved with Farm to People’s raw ingredients, it does a fine job.


In future, Yee is looking to change the menu seasonally to fully exploit the changing bounty of Farm to People’s warehouse. The company is planning to add grab and go groceries and prepared foods to its roomy indoor dining space, which was once the cidery’s tasting room (and which doubles, Monday through Friday, as a loading stage for Farm to People trucks). Farm to People will soon be hosting pop-ups. “We’re the burger joint down the block,” says Yee, “and we can have a delicious, really bright and light burger, but also, we can be a cool destination for all the different audiences out there and all the other amazing chefs that exist in the City.” He continues, “What I'm trying to parlay here, is making the space very adaptable and learning from different pop-up chefs. We have this beautiful kitchen space and this huge outdoor space—being able to accommodate different chefs would be very cool.”


1100 Flushing Ave, Brooklyn


Hours

Friday 5 PM-12 AM

Saturday 12 PM-12 AM

Sunday 3 PM-10 PM




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About Me

I Was Supposed to Go to Grad School

Growing up in a large, loud family of 7, they use to call me “Pass Me The, Pass Me The” for the way that I’d try to doctor my dinner with whatever condiments were on hand. At about 8 or 9, I gave up on condiments and took control of dinner entirely, cooking out of a beat-up copy of The New York Times Cookbook that I still own, my little penciled-in annotations intact. I cooked for 7 people nightly, all throughout high school. By the time I was winding up college, I’d become a damn fine cook.

 

My father was a professor of American History. I figured I’d follow in those footsteps, teaching Dickens to 18-year-olds who were not at all interested. I gathered applications to doctorate programs, meanwhile, I took a job as a waiter in a busy catering company. The kitchen where I worked was perpetually understaffed—my cooking skills were quickly identified and I was press-ganged onto their crew. I LOVED it—the excitement, the creativity, the freedom, the trench humor, learning professional cooking techniques. There I stayed for several years while my graduate school applications gathered dust.

 

Cue me, later, a refugee from a crash-and-burn restaurant opening where I was not only the sous-chef, but also the loan application writer and babysitter for a chef/owner who had gone spectacularly off the rails. By then, I had a couple of herniated discs and no desire to stay in restaurants. I moved back to the world of words, and I’ve never looked back. 

 

Since then, I’ve been a restaurant critic, a national award-winning blogger, a food journalist, a travel writer, a columnist, a cookbook author, and the editor-in-chief of four Edible titles. I can’t wait to see what's next.

 

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