Friday, July 24, 2009


Secret Suppers

BY SANDY LANG | APRIL/MAY 2009 | FEATURES

Secret Suppers

A growing number of daring chefs and adventurous foodies have reignited the old Southern tradition of secret supper clubs. Eating out may never be the same

Supper Club History
The South, though, has a tradition of secret supper clubs, of gathering around food for food’s sake. At clandestine gatherings of the Hot and Hot Fish Club in the early 1800s, some thirty to forty landowners (and at least one South Carolina governor) would meet on fishing ground hummocks around Pawleys Island and Murrells Inlet. The story goes that the men would fish all morning and then cook the catch for a dinner of at least two courses, the second always better than the first—making it hot and hot. The club was “dedicated to epicurean pursuits,” and besides fish, everyone was required to bring champagne and brandy to share. I often heard of this fish and drink lore while growing up near Murrells Inlet, and I thought of it again while going to a granddaddy of today’s supper clubs, this one held at John Henry Whitmire’s house on the Waccamaw River, a few miles inland of Pawleys Island. Organized by Outstanding in the Field and chef Jim Denevan—who since 1999 has hosted dinners all over the country, with fans following along as if it’s a band tour—the event was sold-out four months before the exact location was announced. And once there, more than 150 guests passed platters of local-caught wahoo along a looping line of tables at the edge of the old tidal rice impoundments.

These onetime dinners keep popping up in the South. In Athens, Georgia, there’s a group of guys in their late twenties to mid-thirties—and now one woman—who cook together most Saturday nights in a century-old house downtown, with space to invite a couple dozen people to dinner. So they do. The supper club operates fairly underground; it started back in the spring of 2007 when four friends got together one Sunday to cook a four-course dinner. (Two of the men say they “aren’t chefs at all, but love food…to talk about it and cook it,” and two had already worked in kitchens of some of Athens’ best restaurants like Farm 255, the Grit, and the Five and Ten.) From that beginning, the Four Coursemen have filled their table several nights a month by inviting friends, and friends of friends. It’s been a pretty popular gig, and to help, the group of mostly University of Georgia grads have added a wine expert and another experienced chef, and have started collecting a donation of forty-five dollars or more. (At first they’d had “a loose donation system” and were left with lots of out-of-pocket expenses.) One of the Four Coursemen founders is a Web site designer in “real life” and has started a simple site for the club that lists no location address (that’s given once you’re invited to attend), and only the organizers’ and chefs’ first names, along with menus that are deep with food experimentation and local ingredients…celery root soup, crisped pork belly, beet gnocchi with boar sausage, boiled peanut ice cream. Every menu is for one night only, and not repeated. One of the founders explains, “This is about trusting the chef…it’s not like at a restaurant where you go in and say, ‘Here’s what I want.’ All we do is say, ‘This is what we’re cooking this week. Would you like to come over?’”

Similarly, in Charleston, South Carolina, a group called Guerrilla Cuisine has coordinated “experiments in collaborative dining” since the fall of 2007—in private homes downtown and on neighboring islands, in empty warehouses, and at the local muscadine vineyard. There’s always art and music at the dinners, even a between-course skit one night that involved penciled-in mustaches and canned sardines. The founder, who goes by Jimihatt (a Guerrilla alias), is in his late thirties and has worked in some of Charleston’s top kitchens. “We want to create one-night restaurants in places where there has never been one, and never would be,” Jimihatt says. “People who eat with us are adventurous…they want to try something new and maybe be taken out of their comfort zone.” To get there, an ever-changing lineup of Charleston chefs and sous-chefs cook for Guerrilla Cuisine, preparing everything from seafood and game, to a macrobiotic menu (one of the few dinners that didn’t sell out immediately), to eight courses of Spam recipes. “This is the South,” he says. “So of course, pork is a huge part of what we do.”

And in the supper club hotbed of Austin, thirty-two-year-old Hannah Calvert founded Supper Underground back in 2006. Over cocktails she explained how the club started, that she’s a corporate consultant who’s “obsessed with food” and put on the first two dinners herself—serving more than twenty guests—before she invited her friend Tasso Ziebarth to help out. (Also in his early thirties, Ziebarth has worked in the Austin restaurant scene for years.) Since then, more than seven hundred people have signed up to receive Supper Underground’s e-mail notices about the dinner parties, which are held on porches, in backyards, and in dining rooms around Austin. The monthly four-course meals are announced online on the Monday before a Saturday night event. People have twenty-four hours to accept, and from the responses, Calvert and Ziebarth create a thirty-person guest list. I mentioned to Calvert about meeting a woman who said she’d been trying to reserve a seat with Supper Underground for five months. “Yes,” Calvert said, smiling knowingly. “It can be tough for people to get in.”

Budget Travel

(Budget Travel) -- Last October, more than 40 people followed signs depicting a skull and crossbones, with a knife and fork in place of the bones, to a secluded Bavarian-style hunting lodge 30 minutes north of St. Louis.

An Entre dinner party was hosted in a Missouri hunting lodge.

An Entre dinner party was hosted in a Missouri hunting lodge.

The attendees didn't have any idea where they were headed or what to expect. All they knew was that they were in for a five-course meal courtesy of John-Jack, an undercover chef who'd invited each of them via a top-secret e-mail to the latest of what he calls his Entre dinner parties.

Guests arrived to a bluegrass band jamming in a room decorated with deer antlers. As a fire crackled in the massive stone fireplace, they dined on wild-elk medallions, home-cured bacon, grapefruit confit, and butternut squash ice cream -- and toasted their good fortune with pumpkin ale from nearby microbrewery Schlafly.

Welcome to the world of underground supper clubs. Getting a reservation requires a little detective work, but once in, you may never go back to eating out the old-school way again. The idea behind these dinners is to let talented chefs work their whisks in an affordable, relaxed setting.

And since they're often operating out of their own kitchens, without a license to serve the public, these cooks have to keep the locales, and their own identities, under wraps. Budget Travel: The utterly random dinner party

"The trend started in food-centric cities like San Francisco, but in the last year, groups have been popping up across the country," says Jenn Garbee, author of "Secret Suppers," which spotlights some of the more than 80 clubs now up and running in the U.S.

One such is Guerrilla Cuisine, founded by an incognito cook in Charleston, South Carolina, who uses the alias Jimihatt and wears a ninja mask at his gatherings. As at many clubs, diners must submit their reservations weeks in advance on Jimihatt's Web site and then wait for an e-mail with directions to the hush-hush locale.

Don't Miss

Based on his track record, you won't be disappointed: The bearded Jimihatt and his rotating crew of sous-chefs have served secret, Southern-style suppers (andouille sausage gumbo, Cajun smoked chicken, chocolate beignets) in galleries, wineries, even a grocery store. Budget Travel: Haute diners

Jimihatt now has a little friendly competition from an Atlanta cook named Lady Rogue. Her RogueApron shindigs each have a different theme. At a recent event, a Great Depression-style repast in Lang-Carson Park, guests stood in a soup line for pancetta minestrone with porcini mushrooms, and lemongrass-spiked corn broth. Then they divided into teams for an impromptu game of Wiffle ball.

"Our goal," Lady Rogue says, "is to make dining more inclusive and to have strangers connect over food. What better way to meet people?"

For those hoping to break bread with their own buddies, there's 12B in Vancouver. To keep operations simple, its mastermind, Chef Todd, hosts the six-course dinners in his own apartment, hence the name. And unlike most supper clubs, 12B cooks only for groups of friends (up to 12 at a time). Budget Travel: Pay-what-you-like restaurants

"Even after working 16-hour days, I would sit at home and think, 'I've got to find a way to feed more people,'" Chef Todd says. Money isn't the incentive. His minimum-donation fee of $50 just covers costs for a feast (stuffed artichoke hearts, five-mushroom ravioli, butter-poached scallops served with BBQ pulled pork) that would average twice as much in a restaurant.

But as Chef Todd will attest, these clubs are less about saving and more about spending a night eating exceptionally well in the unlikeliest of places, whether a cozy lodge straight out of a fairy tale or a humble living room.

When cuisine goes guerilla

Mon, Jun 29, 2009

American Theater, Fish, Inspiration

Jimi, Nico, Jodie & Randall get guerilla

Jimi, Nico, Jodie & Randall get guerilla

Had a blast at The American Theater last night for the latest and greatest version of what I think of as the “traveling Charleston dinner party” AKA Guerilla Cuisine.

Our own Nico Romo was the featured chef, and he and the entire Fish put together an innovative, delicious 6 course dinner that absolutely astounded everyone. Bold flavors, flawless execution and utter fun and creativity in choices.

We had the supreme pleasure of being guests this time around, and I can tell you that it was an honor to be there. Not just to eat wonderful food but to have great conversations, have the opportunity to peruse and purchase fantastic local art: metal work by Chad Haselden and t-shirts and posters by John Pundt. And, talk to the artists themselves.

These fantastic evenings are put together by Jimi Hatt (who you may have seen drop trou’ at The American Theater at a past Pecha Kucha Night.) It’s his passion and hard work that brings an ever changing group of people together to hunker down and thoroughly enjoy themselves over fantastic local food, art and music.

Thanks to everyone for such an incredible evening

BY ANGEL POWELL
Special to The Post and Courier
Thursday, January 29, 2009


The most recent Guerrilla Cuisine event was last week at the Vue at Ripley Point. The location was announced hours before the event started, and featured food by chef Nate Alton of Pearlz.

Christina Bailey

The most recent Guerrilla Cuisine event was last week at the Vue at Ripley Point. The location was announced hours before the event started, and featured food by chef Nate Alton of Pearlz.

Jimihatt (right) and his mother, Mimi Hatt.

Jimihatt (right) and his mother, Mimi Hatt.

For more information on Guerrilla Cuisine and its upcoming events, visit www.guerrillacuisine.com.

On a January rainy night, dozens of people made a trek to a destination that had been revealed only a few hours before. People hurriedly checked MapQuest to figure out where they were going and set out in search of a new experience.

Arriving at a stunning location overlooking the Charleston Harbor, the participants were ushered into a room bustling with excitement and camaraderie. They have not come here for a wedding or a party; this was Guerrilla Cuisine, Charleston's only underground supper club.

More than just food

Though the focus of Guerrilla Cuisine is on food, it is about so much more than just a dinner. It is an experience that crosses genres to bring the audience live music and visual art.

The ringleader of this organization is known simply as "jimihatt." A moniker that was coined in the kitchen of a Charleston restaurant, it suits the elusive nature of a Guerrilla Cuisine dinner.

The lack of capitalization is intentional on his part; it signifies a humility that he is determined to keep, no matter how many try to make him a rock star of Charleston's underground.

He surrounds himself with a tight-knit group of chefs, musicians and artists who make these events possible.

Consisting of such talented individuals as John Pundt, Carl Janes, Ishmael, Graham Worley and Andy Allen, this group has formed a coalition that continues to wow the diners.

All of these people contribute to the idea that the events are underground; these are artists who are mainly on the fringe of Charleston. It is almost guaranteed that you will never find a marsh painting or a cover band at a Guerrilla dinner; it just would not fit.

According to Ishmael, a Charleston-based artist, the members of the collaborative sees themselves as "messengers ... influencing young artists and creative people."

How it happens

The process of a dinner goes like this: It is announced electronically, you buy your tickets knowing only the featured chef, type of cuisine and date of the dinner. Then you wait.

Twenty-four hours before the event, the buyer receives an e-mail announcing the location. This gives an air of exclusivity and excitement to the dinner; one feels as if he is in on the secret when a location is finally revealed.

It's been just over a year since the first dinner was held, and in that time, there have been few changes to the formula but definite changes in how the operation runs.

"The collaboration is getting easier. We now know what to expect from each other, as a team, and from each event, and that makes things run a lot smoother," says jimihatt,

He also thinks that, despite the street credibility that comes from being underground, some publicity is a good thing. With each interview, Web site hit and discussion, Guerrilla Cuisine becomes more of a prominent fixture in the community.

As a friend of his likes to say, "His stock is on the rise."

'Wonderful experience'

The most recent dinner, which featured Nate Alton of Pearlz, was held at the Vue at Ripley Point.

The venue was stunning and the view provided the first awe-inspired gasps of the evening.

Throughout the event, diners were treated not only to fabulous food, music and art, but also an amazing view of the city. As the sun went down on Charleston, the party geared up.

The thing that is most striking about the Guerrilla Cuisine dinner was the sense of togetherness.

Wine was shared, along with laughs and companionship, as each course was served. Alton's vision brought to the dinner a spread of fresh shellfish and local vegetables from Thackery Farm on Wadmalaw Island.

It began with "Naked Cubed," a trifecta of fresh oysters served without accompaniment in order to highlight the taste and variation in each variety.

When asked his thoughts after the event, Alton described it as "a wonderful experience that I wouldn't have been able to do without the servers, the people in the kitchen and jimihatt. More than anything, he gave me the confidence to be able to pull this off."

jimihatt's baby

The process of putting together an event is time consuming and detail oriented, but jimihatt manages to deal with all the challenges without any visible stress, handling each setback as if it were no big deal.

With a week to go before the most recent dinner, there was still no location and no definite lineup of artists and musicians, just some talk of what might happen. He thrives on making it all come together at the last minute.

In his own words, jimihatt describes Guerrilla Cuisine as "Food for the people. People in this day and age eat what is convenient, so with the trusted help and know-how of the cooks and chefs, I'm lucky enough to have made friends with, we can make a difference!"

He lives by the principle of what he calls culinary responsibility. Believing in using ingredients that are fresh and local whenever possible, it is important to him to turn people on to this type of dining, he says.

Though his main focus is on culinary responsibility, he says he also feels a social responsibility that he takes very seriously. Because much of a Guerrilla Cuisine dinner relies on donations, he is able to donate a portion of the proceeds from each dinner to charity. Instead of receiving a paycheck for participation in a dinner, the chef chooses a charity to receive the funds.

Though jimihatt says he feels he would be nothing without those with whom he surrounds himself, there is no doubt that he is running this show.

He has a hand in every decision that is made and ultimately is responsible for each guest's happiness. When asked if he ever sits back and feels accomplished, he has a rare moment of self-satisfaction, leans forward with a smile and says, "Every time."

It is apparent to all who know him that he takes great pride in Guerrilla Cuisine, an organization that he fondly refers to as his baby.

Though satisfied with the events of the past year, he is determined to push the dinners to new and exciting places.


Wednesday, April 29, 2009

dinner

5/17 Jacques Larson dinner will sell out fast!!!



GO GO GO GET 'EM

http://guerrillacuisine21.eventbrite.com

Thursday, April 2, 2009