Preparing Meals at Seyon Lodge State Park
By Tiffany Soukup
Tiffany Soukup spent last summer working as an innkeeper and cook at Seyon Lodge State Park in Groton, Vermont. She shared some of her experiences harvesting and serving locally-sourced food to guests with us:
Tiffany Soukup spent last summer working as an innkeeper and cook at Seyon Lodge State Park in Groton, Vermont. She shared some of her experiences harvesting and serving locally-sourced food to guests with us:
Living in the Pilbara, about 2000
kms north of Perth in Western Australia I worked as a barista and my husband
Chris in the kitchen of an old train car called the Silver Star.
Little did I know my choices over the past year to live remotely in the dusty
mining town of Port Hedland, Australia would help prepare me for my role in
Vermont State Parks this season as the Inn Keeper at Seyon Lodge State Park.
Now I live (perhaps not quite as
remotely) at the end of a dirt road, nestled next to Noyes Pond in the 27,000
acres of Groton State Forest. Just as my head cook used to call out to me if I
grabbed a plate too quickly to get back in the kitchen, our team members have
stopped dead in their tracks hearing me yell, "Wait! Get back in here!
That plate doesn't have parsley or pepper on it!" I would quickly grab a
sprig of parsley to strategically place next to the entree and crack fresh
ground pepper around the edge of the plate. I didn't think much about the cook
fussing over the plates at the time, but now as managers, cooks and Inn Keepers
at Seyon Lodge I am keenly aware of how each plate looks before we serve it to
our guest.
In my role I've had a chance to
learn more about organizations like Vermont Fresh Networks, Black RiverProduce, our own organic garden and shopping practices. Seyon has worked hard
over the years to show case high quality Vermont products exemplifing healthy,
local, organic foods as much as possible to our guests. People have come to
know, appreciate, respect and seek out the menu choices we offer.
Here is an inside look at
gathering and serving food at Seyon this season:
The ability to both
purchase and make healthy food is not to be taken for granted nor exist
everywhere in the world. One of the reasons I love living in Vermont is because
of organizations like Vermont Fresh Food Networks that are so strong and help
make it easy for me as a consumer to feel my dollars are going to businesses I
want to support. Throw in that Vermont has this amazing gem of an Inn and there
is so much support to showcase the food we purchase. When it comes down to the
food I try to both eat and serve there are really two questions: 1.) Do I know
the farmer, and, 2.) Does it have fresh cracked pepper on it?
Which farmer are you
going to support for your next meal?
To learn more about Tiffany’s adventures, visit her blog, Vagabond Way.
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