Gilmores Give Back
Chefs Jack and Bryce Gilmore celebrate those who make farm-to-table a reality
Fantastic. Marvelous. Unbelievable: words guests used to describe a late afternoon feast at Jack Allen’s Kitchen on Saturday as myriad farmers and local purveyors took over the back patio of the restaurant for a celebratory lunch in their honor. For a second year, Jack Allen’s chef/owner Jack Gilmore along with his son, Bryce Gilmore of Barley Swine and the Odd Duck Farm To Trailer, hosted a special lunch to offer a special thank you to all the farmers and purveyors whose foods appear regularly on the Gilmores’ restaurant menus.
“It’s just unbelievable that they do this for us,” says Hersh Kendall of Indian Hills Farms in Smithville, a local farm cultivating grass-fed beef as well as seasonal vegetables such as heirloom tomatoes that frequent the Jack Allen’s menu. “It’s been such a hard year for farming and it’s great to see when people really appreciate what we do.”
For the Gilmores, the lunch was a perfect way to complete the farm-to-table circle to which they’ve made such an unwavering commitment.
“We did this for a simple reason. We really believe in taking care of the people who take care of us,” says Jack Gilmore. “When we need certain types of food, these guys always provide. Every day they wake up and deal with whatever Mother Nature throws their way to get great food to people like us. Throwing them a party is the very least we can do to thank them for their hard work.”
More than 120 farmers and their families helped themselves to a delectable buffet complete with apple, beet and fresh greens salad, fall greens simmered in Richardson Farms bacon, squash succotash, spicy baked beans, mac and cheese and grandma-style meatloaf. Almost everything served included something from the very soil the farmers work on a daily basis.
“A party like this is just beyond belief to me,” says Larry Smith, who manages Harvest Time Farm Stand in Canyon Lake that sells produce to the Gilmores. “These guys buy from the farmers and give back to us using our own food; it’s double-double! They truly walk the walk when it comes to sourcing local foods. And their food is so amazing. I have eaten things at Barley Swine that I never would have eaten if Bryce hadn’t just put it in front of me. Stuff like duck liver pâté. But eating his food is truly an experience I’ll never forget. The way he does things is special. And it’s really cool to be a part of that in some way.”
The Smiths, like most of the other guests present (including Rusty and Susan Staub of Amador Farms and a whole crew from Richardson Farms) had just packed up from a morning of work at Austin-area farmers markets and were looking forward to a chance to enjoy each others company with a plate of good food as well. “We rarely get to see a lot of these people where we can all catch up and this is the perfect place for us to do that,” says Susan Staub.
As heaping trays of soulful Jack Allen’s food dwindled into the afternoon, guests with full stomachs and cheerful smiles slowly began to say their goodbyes and head back home, all of them looking forward to the next great farmers’ appreciation lunch from the Gilmores.