Dan Barber

Dan Barber

Chef, Blue Hill

DAN BARBER is the Chef of Blue Hill, a restaurant in Manhattan's West Village, and Blue Hill at Stone Barns, located within the nonprofit farm and education center, Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture. His opinions on food and agricultural policy have appeared in the New York Times, along with many other publications. Barber has received multiple James Beard awards including Best Chef: New York City (2006) and the country's Outstanding Chef (2009). In 2009 he was named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world.

To expand on his philosophy of cooking with sustainably grown, local ingredients, Dan has been working with such organizations as the Kellogg Foundation, Slow Food USA and Earth Pledge to minimize the political and intellectual rhetoric around agricultural policies and to instead maximize the appreciation of eating good food. Focusing on the issues of pleasure, taste and regional bounty-and how these imperatives are threatened-Dan helped create the philosophical and practical framework for Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture and continues to help guide it in its mission to create a consciousness about the effects of everyday food choices.

He is author of the book The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food.

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That's right... giant parsnip steak. Sound appetizing? In this video, chef Dan Barber explains why it's important to cook your food using a diverse array of natural ingredients from your local environment.
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National cuisines tend to be defined by historical precedent influenced by agricultural limitations. As the United States is a young country with rich soil, its own quintessential cuisine never developed.
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Barber is watching some young chefs out in California.
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There’s a reason everyone loves holes-in-the-wall, Barber says.
Dan Barber likes something casual.
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A great meal supersedes all expectations, Barber says.
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A great playwright knows the play is greater than the scene.
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Its the last thing Barber would do, despite the methane and deforestation that cattle farms create.
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The drive for ethanol has direct effect on everything that’s going on on the farm, Barber says.
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There’s nothing wrong with enjoying a Turkish fig, Barber says.
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When a good story adds that extra bit of flavor.
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Barber tells the surprising story of a native American polenta.