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So slow, we challenge you to detect any motion at all in this photo: Daryl Lupretta rolls out a top layer of dough for ravioli at Lupretta's Deli in Saratoga.
Slow Motion
Get more out of your food by discovering the Slow Food movement in the South Bay and beyond
By Leith Steel
SLOWLY BUT SURELY, the snail is encircling the earth. Not just any snail, but the Slow Food snail, the logo and mascot for the international Slow Food movement. Slow Food has been active in Silicon Valley since 1997, when David Eastis founded the Silicon Valley chapter (called a "convivium" in Slow Food parlance) of the international organization. What began as a group of only a few people, and one of the first such groups in the nation, has since grown into a network of more than 500 Silicon Valley residents. Now the snail is leaving its footprint on the entire region with the newly released Slow Food Guide to San Francisco and the Bay Area.
Slow Food's now legendary inception can be traced to Carlo Petrini, an Italian journalist, who was incensed when a McDonald's opened across from the Pantheon in Rome. He saw quality of life sacrificed for modern-day convenience and speed, the juxtaposition of ancient culture, beauty and art against efficiency and contemporary corporations. In an effort to mobilize people against this invasive corporate dominance, Petrini founded the group that was to become Slow Food in 1986.
"We are enslaved by speed and have succumbed to the same insidious virus: fast life, which disrupts our habits, pervades the privacy of our homes and forces us to eat fast foods." Such is the theory behind Slow Food as stated in the Slow Food Manifesto. The mission of Slow Food is to preserve these foods, to educate consumers about healthy and good food choices, to preserve a more enjoyable way of life, to link consumers with growers and producers, and most importantly, to take pleasure in everyday life.
In the introduction to the new guide, Slow Food USA states that its mission is to "create a community of people who believe in a better food system. We take action by teaching the value of good food, preserving our endangered food and traditions, and connecting people at all points along the food chain." This last part is the purpose of the new guide, to help Bay Area residents find these valuable producers of traditional foods.
Take It Slow
The guide is organized first by restaurantswhich are arranged according to cuisine, from Afghan to Vietnameseand then by bars and nightlife, specialty foods and shops and a section for the outlying areas. Handsome black and white photographs help break up the text, and informative boxes profiling specific businesses add a personal touch to the book.
Informative and easy to use, the guide is a reference to the Bay Area restaurant scene, but it only scratches the surface. It would be impossible to compile a comprehensive list of all the places that deserve mention in the guide. The sheer wealth of locations to choose from alone is daunting. Not to mention the added complexity that restaurants come and go like teeny-bopper boy bands; already at least one of the restaurants in the guide has inevitably closed its doors.
Unsurprisingly, San Francisco is much better represented than Silicon Valley. While a number of Korean restaurants in San Francisco are included in the book, none of the many places in the tofu town strip of El Camino Real running through Santa Clara littered with Korean restaurants are mentioned.
What the guide does best is highlight restaurants and shops particularly noteworthy for their dedication to pure ingredients and old traditions. Red snail icons pinpoint these honorable institutions. It is unfortunate that many of these places are very expensive; at some points it reads more like a guide to luxury dining than to finding traditional or sustainable foods. I also question the appearance of a restaurant where they say the chef is so enthusiastic about some of his fish that he photographs them; apparently this particular chef is so enthusiastic about Chilean sea bass that he is helping to contribute to its extermination by overfishing by serving it on his menu. His food is great, but his choices and his style of cooking have nothing "slow" about them.
Most of the selections, though, are well chosen. While the guide can't pretend to represent all of the options in the Bay Area, it does present a number of interesting and deserving ones. Lou's Living Donut Museum received the special snail icon because it contributes to the special fabric of the Bay Area food scene. Duarte's Tavern, another recipient of the snail, is a throwback to another era and well worth the time it takes to drive out to Pescadero for its famous cream of artichoke soup and olallieberry pie. For adventurous and avid eaters, the guide is a resource, especially as a source for ethnic eats. I just wish they had highlighted more shops and producers.
Although the guide is dedicated to the farmers of Northern California, they are barely mentioned in the book. A brief listing of some of the favored farmers who sell at the local farmers markets appears, but that is it. It seems as if such an integral piece of the Slow Food foundation would have better representation. As for the farmers markets, those of Silicon Valley are ignored, and only a select few in San Francisco and the East Bay are mentioned, although each of those earned a snail.
Slow Food is about much more than restaurants. Personality profiles and case studies interspersed throughout the book help to put a face on the movement, and to remind us of its depth, I only wish they had gone further in this direction. There are so many places that deserve to be in the book, so while I can understand that not every place can make it in and that this is only the first edition, I am including here a few places that I hope make it into the next edition.
C.J. Olson Cherries, 348 W. El Camino Real, Sunnyvale, 800.738.BING
Happy Quail Farms, East Palo Alto
Hodo Soy Beanery, San Jose; products available at the Palo Alto Farmers Market
Lucy's Tamale Factory, 233C White Road, San Jose, 408.729.1846
Lupretta's Deli, 14480 Big Basin Way, Saratoga, 408.484.0004
Phipps Country Store, 2700 Pescadero Road, Pescadero, 650.879.9787
Treat Ice Cream, San Jose; sold at Lunardi's under their private label
Webb Ranch, 2720 Alpine Road, Portola Valley, 650.854.5417
'Slow' Restaurants
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