Homegrown Food Retreat features indigenous chef, workshops

Homegrown Food Retreat features indigenous chef, workshops

Annual Homegrown Food Retreat includes workshops, speakers including founder of Taste of Native Cuisine
Chef M. Karlos Baca cups juniper berries in his hands and is surrounded by other ingredients used in a meal for the 2013 Taste of Native Cuisine and Culture Expo at the Southern Ute Cultural Center and Museum in Ignacio.
Chef M. Karlos Baca, right and Anthony Hamlin coat bear berries with cane sugar for a cranberry and habanero dish they created for the Taste of Native Cuisine and Culture Expo in 2013.
Brandon Francis, one of four presenters at the 2017 Homegrown Food Retreat, will discuss soil quality and the healing of the Animas River.

Homegrown Food Retreat features indigenous chef, workshops

Chef M. Karlos Baca cups juniper berries in his hands and is surrounded by other ingredients used in a meal for the 2013 Taste of Native Cuisine and Culture Expo at the Southern Ute Cultural Center and Museum in Ignacio.
Chef M. Karlos Baca, right and Anthony Hamlin coat bear berries with cane sugar for a cranberry and habanero dish they created for the Taste of Native Cuisine and Culture Expo in 2013.
Brandon Francis, one of four presenters at the 2017 Homegrown Food Retreat, will discuss soil quality and the healing of the Animas River.
If you go

Growing Partners of Southwest Colorado’s 2017 Homegrown Food Retreat will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on April 8 at the ELHI Community Center at 115 Ute Drive in Ignacio.
There is a suggested donation of $20. Coffee and lunch will be provided.
Register before March 31 at http://www.growingpartners.org/2017-food-retreat-registration.html or contact Program Manager Gretchen Groenke at (509) 830-4380.

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