Corby Kummer

13.1K posts

Corby Kummer

Corby Kummer

@CKummer

Executive Director of @AspenFood. LinkedIn: @Corby-Kummer, Threads and IG @cskummer, https://t.co/pPuqhxuYmk.

Katılım Ocak 2009
854 Takip Edilen23.3K Takipçiler
Corby Kummer
Corby Kummer@CKummer·
More people to memorialize on a day of remembrance. Last week we also lost Aglaia Kremezi, who wanted to bring Greek food to every curious cook in the country. The emphasis is on curiosity. She wanted to know the technique and recipe for every eggplant, egg, artichoke, lamb, and gigandes bean recipe she found on one island or one mountain village, and compare it to another. She wanted to document the history and culture associated with a recipe, and make the dish accessible to any home cook--and, unusually, she knew American home kitchens and ingredients. And she wanted to make everything look beautiful--something she had been trained to do at art school in London after her Athens childhood in an intellectual, politically connected, complicated family. When I launched @TheAtlantic's Food Channel, I asked Aglaia to write a regular column from the cooking school she'd opened on Kea, the island closest by ferry to Athens, where she and her husband, Costas Moraitis, rebuilt and expanded a family house to provide a paradisal setting for spirited, hands-on lessons. The biography she supplied us has her typical tang, and you can hear her voice especially in the last line: "Aglaia Kremezi has changed her life and her profession many times over. She currently writes about food in Greek, European and American magazines, publishes books about Greek and Mediterranean cooking in the US and in Greece, and teaches cooking to small groups of travelers who visit Kea. Before that she was a journalist and editor, writing about everything except politics. She has been the editor in chief and the creator of news, women's, and life-style magazines, her last disastrous venture being a 'TV guide for thinking people,' a contradiction in terms, at least in her country." But you can't hear her voice trilling the R in "That would be grrrreeat," or the excited, breathless squeal of "Yes it's wonnderful" or the staccato dismissal of "It's terrrible terrible." Aglaia loved discovery, and sharing her enthusiasm. Her energy was constant--in the @Substack newsletter she and Costas wrote and photographed, in her reading, and in her travels. A trip to a new country with her--I took many, thanks to @OldwaysPT, whose @sarabaersinnott posted a wonderful tribute to Aglaia, and thanks to @SlowFoodHQ's conferences we often met in Turin--was an exercise in near-exhaustion. She wanted to go to every museum and gallery and stop at every antiquarian bookstore, every public market, every flea market. Again, curiosity and wanting to understand everything drove her. She was an invaluable part of the annual @Oxfordsymposium, and wrote a thorough report of its first post-pandemic meeting in 2022, dedicated to "Food Away from the Table," which @elisabethluard, a main organizer, remembers as still the best symposium summary. She was vehement in her likes and dislikes. But when she liked you, nothing was too much. She and Costas were wildly generous to the groups that would visit Kea for several days of cooking lessons, frequently followed by educational and of course food-centric excursions they organized to other part of Greece. In the spring of 2024 our friends Jamie and Nina, also friends of Aglaia, came with us to Kea and then Thessaloniki, and rolled dolmas and pide pastry under the grape arbor that dappled daily sunlight. At our first dinner Aglaia and Costas, knowing of our love of wild greens and my embarrassingly insatiable sweet tooth, made an elegant and emerald-green soup to start and a cassata-style ricotta cake with Greece's gem-colored "spoon sweets," extremely sweet but powerfully flavored candied fruit. And they arranged scholarly guides for our own excursion to Thessaloniki and the stunning, relatively new, archaeological museums at Vergina dedicated to the family of Alexander the Great. Do look at the Atlantic archive of pieces Aglaia wrote, and the wonderfully appealing Substack Aglaia and Costas posted even as she was being treated for the aggressive cancer diagnosed only a year ago. And find a copy of The Foods of the Greek Islands, my favorite of Aglaia's books. Every page has a recipe I want to make, as I remembered when I opened my copy--along with a typically loving inscription from Aglaia. As @chefjoseandres has given so many gifts to the world, most especially his example as a tireless and fearless humanitarian, his wonderfully popular @zaytinya restaurants lastingly give diners the gift of Aglaia's inspiration and also recipes at every meal. Andres called Aglaia “a teacher, a cook, a master storyteller, and a friend,” and never failed to give her credit as being a guiding force for the restaurant; he asked her to write the foreword to the Zaytinya cookbook, which you should also buy. We take any and every excuse to dine at Zaytinya. We'll toast Aglaia's memory many, many times over the next weeks and months. aegeanislandkitchen.com theatlantic.com/author/aglaia-… oxfordsymposium.org.uk/symposium/2022/ bookshop.org/p/books/the-fo… bookshop.org/p/books/zaytin… oxfordsymposium.org.uk/symposium/2022/
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Corby Kummer
Corby Kummer@CKummer·
My tribute, from the same day: If you love food and care as much about the health of the people who grew and raised it and of the soil and air it was grown in, chances are strong you encountered the ideas of Carlo Petrini, who died today at 76 at his home in Bra, Italy--his birthplace and the birthplace of @SlowFoodHQ , the movement he founded in 1986. Petrini went beyond uniting people who wanted to find and eat the best of a region’s and country’s produce and cuisine. He showed them that they couldn’t fully enjoy that without recognizing the dignity and well-being of the people who make food, the importance of tradition and human contact, and social and environmental justice. Chapters of Slow Food opened around the world. Those chapters, the dozens of books and guides Slow Food published, and @UNISG , the university he founded near Bra, in the region of Piedmont, changed lives and careers. And changed mine. He turned my concerns and priorities upside down when I went to my first Slow Food meeting in Italy in the fall of 1998. Skeptical, I went for the food but stayed for the values. Stayed for good: my @TheAtlantic piece about the movement led to my book The Pleasures of Slow Food. For several wonderful years Carlo and I did a double act when he lectured in America and England, and he would pretend to get mad at me because my translation wasn't word for word. But the spirit was true. And no one was more spirited on stage. He was mesmerizing and passionate. A few clips and videos below, and a fond retrospective interview he recently gave to an Italian newspaper. His spirit animates every choice of @AspenFood 's Food Leaders Fellowship, and I had the chance to tell him on our yearly visits just why he would fall in love with all 72 (and about to be 90!). How proud he would be of what he inspired. 📷theatlantic.com/magazine/archi… 📷unisg.it/lintervista-a-… 📷vimeo.com/29441810 📷dailymotion.com/video/xgjlwm
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
@UNISG students singing outside Carlo Petrini's house the day after he died at home, in the town he transformed.
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
If I look ridiculously happy onstage with Carlo, it's because I was.
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
Huge thanks to the Cleveland Park Library and everyone who came out for our Tuesday Talk on Food is Medicine and @aspenfood Leaders Fellowship. The questions were sharp, curiosity and expertise real, and the energy in the room everything a speaker could hope for—plus some celebrities in the room, including @freshfarmdc’s wonderful new director, Cat Oakar, and a wonderful new fellow we’ll be announcing soon!
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Corby Kummer
Corby Kummer@CKummer·
If you love food and care as much about the health of the people who grew and raised it and of the soil and air it was grown in, chances are strong you encountered the ideas of Carlo Petrini, who died today at 76 at his home in Bra, Italy--his birthplace and the birthplace of @SlowFoodHQ, the movement he founded in 1986. Petrini went beyond uniting people who wanted to find and eat the best of a region’s and country’s produce and cuisine. He showed them that they couldn’t fully enjoy that without recognizing the dignity and well-being of the people who make food, the importance of tradition and human contact, and social and environmental justice. Chapters of Slow Food opened around the world. Those chapters, the dozens of books and guides Slow Food published, and @UNISG, the university he founded near Bra, in the region of Piedmont, changed lives and careers. And changed mine. He turned my concerns and priorities upside down when I went to my first Slow Food meeting in Italy in the fall of 1998. Skeptical, I went for the food but stayed for the values. Stayed for good: my @TheAtlantic piece about the movement led to my book The Pleasures of Slow Food. For several wonderful years Carlo and I did a double act when he lectured in America and England, and he would pretend to get mad at me because my translation wasn't word for word. But the spirit was true. And no one was more spirited on stage. He was mesmerizing and passionate. A few clips and videos below, and a fond retrospective interview he recently gave to an Italian newspaper. His spirit animates every choice of @AspenFood's Food Leaders Fellowship, and I had the chance to tell him on our yearly visits just why he would fall in love with all 72 (and about to be 90!). How proud he would be of what he inspired. theatlantic.com/magazine/archi… unisg.it/lintervista-a-… vimeo.com/29441810 dailymotion.com/video/xgjlwm
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May is Older Americans Month and this year, we're starting a conversation that's long overdue. Nutrition is one of the most important drivers of health, independence, and quality of life as we age. Yet for millions of older adults, access to the right nutrition support remains out of reach. We're proud to partner with @NANASP for a free webinar on May 29: Nourishing Aging: Nutrition Interventions and the Future of Older Adult Health. Featuring @RobertBlancato, @PatrickStover, and @KathleenGraim — register free: [LINK] #OlderAmericansMonth #HealthyAging #NutritionInterventions #AgingPolicy #FoodIsMedicine #SeniorNutrition
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What actually happens when SNAP restrictions hit the ground — in stores, in communities, in real people's lives? We're bringing that conversation to you. 🗓 May 27, 1pm ET — free webinar with practitioners who work inside these realities. Register → aspeninstitute.zoom.us/webinar/regist…
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
I joined Jim Braude and Margery Eagan on @wgbh Boston Public Radio to talk about the extraordinary pressure on American farmers right now. Tariffs, climate disruption, and now a conflict that's cut off a significant share of the world's fertilizer supply, right at planting season. One farmer put it plainly: "If somebody stole a hundred dollars from me, gave me back $20, and said they were still my friend...I really don't think they would be." Worth a listen: aspenfood.org/2026/05/07/foo… #foodpolicy #argiculture #farmers
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SNAP restrictions sound like policy. But what do they look like on the ground in a corner store, a food bank, a community health program? I can't wait for Part II of our Conversations on Food Justice series brings the conversation to the people living it every day: independent grocers, frontline workers, and community organizers navigating rules they rarely helped write. May 27 · 1pm ET · Free & open to all Panelists include Celia Cole (@FeedingTexas), Justin King (@ThePropelApp), and Rachel Newman (@RestoreOKC). Co-produced by @aspenfood and Global Food Institute at the George Washington University. Register to join live or receive the recording 👇 aspeninstitute.zoom.us/webinar/regist… #FoodJustice #SNAP #FoodPolicy #FoodSecurity #PublicHealth
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"What the Farm Bill (an apparently hopeless cause at the moment) needs to do is two things: promote regenerative farming that will protect soil, mitigate climate change, and repopulate the Midwest,and make sure those farmers make an adequate living." @marionnestle: foodpolitics.com/2026/05/28473
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
There's a name for the constant mental chatter urging you toward the cake: "Food noise." Turns out the GLP-1 drugs (Ozempic, Wegovy) quiet it dramatically and researchers aren't entirely sure why. The mystery is part of what makes this moment in nutrition science so fascinating. We also asked: what does “food is medicine” actually mean? It means using food to prevent and treat chronic illness: keeping people out of hospitals, out of doctors' offices, and getting it covered by healthcare systems and government programs. 13 states now have Medicaid waivers doing exactly this. Massachusetts has one of the longest-running and is doing some of the most rigorous research on how it reduces healthcare costs. Caught up with @bospublicradio: aspenfood.org/2026/05/07/foo… #FoodAsMedicine #FoodNoise #GLP1 #NutritionPolicy #CommunityServings #AspenInstitute #TuftsNutrition #PublicHealth
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Corby Kummer@CKummer·
"If the administration truly believes in 'Eat Real Food,' it should make real food more affordable. That means protecting programs that help families buy groceries, giving schools the ability to serve healthy meals to all children, and making sure parents are never priced out of the real food aisle at the grocery store." Strong piece from @DrRichBesser: foxnews.com/opinion/govern…
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Heartbreaking, beautifully reported and written story by @elisaslow about generations of fathers and sons who wanted to do nothing but care for and milk their dairy cows. Post-Iran fertilizer and fuel prices ended their long struggle to survive. nytimes.com/2026/05/03/us/…
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