Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo
Artwork

Content provided by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

How To Organize A Farm To Table Event - EP 1089

41:37
 
Share
 

Manage episode 514074247 series 1048970
Content provided by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Today, we talk about what it takes to organize a real Farm to Table Dinner, as well as cover our usual Monday segments.

Featured Event

Chainsaw Milling Demo and PotluckSunday at 1 PMBasecamp Lodge, Lancaster, TN Join us for a hands-on chainsaw milling demonstration and community potluck! Bring a dish to share and see how we turn logs into lumber right here at the Holler. Event Details

Sponsors Community Highlight

LFTN Stocking Exchange Time is running out to sign up! We’ll assign your Secret Stocking Santa on November 1, so don’t miss out on this fun community tradition. Sign Up Here

Tales from the Prepper Pantry
  • Convenience meals this week: crockpot lamb ribs.
  • Drying the last round of fall herbs — mint, oregano, and holy basil.
  • Getting ready to fill the freezers with meat now that it’s almost cold enough to butcher.
  • Hoping for a venison this year.
  • Ground meat base for winter meals: beef, pork, and more pork.
Weekly Shopping Report
  • No shopping trip this week.
Frugality Tip

Did you know that if you put something in your online cart at Amazon (and some other online stores), when the price changes they notify you via email. So if you are looking to buy something but it is a little out of your budget, throw it in the cart and you just might be notified when it goes on sale.

Also, when looking around on eBay, go ahead and click that heart, a lot of sellers will send you a discounted offer just for liking an item.

So have a little patience and wait and see if you can save a few dollars on your next online purchase.

Happy savings y'all ~Margo

Operation Independence

We opened up the Basecamp Airbnb — and one hour later it rented for four days! That single booking covered baseline expenses for the property (though not the mortgage). Still, a solid win toward independence.

Main Topic: Organizing a Real Farm to Table Dinner
  1. Why We’re Doing One We wanted to show what real farm-to-table actually means — not marketing, not a photo op. A community meal built from what local farmers are actually harvesting right now, cooked by people who understand those ingredients.
  2. Why It’s Harder Than a Typical Event This isn’t catered convenience food.
  • The chef has to process everything from raw ingredients, not pre-trimmed or par-cooked product.
  • Every ingredient is sourced directly from farms, not distributors.
  • Timing is critical — you plan the menu around what’s in season, not what’s available year-round from a big box store.

This is NOT your typical farm-to-table experience. We’re not highlighting one or two local dishes and then filling the rest from Costco. Every ingredient — except the pepper and the coffee (which I roast) — comes from right here in Tennessee. No shortcuts.

  1. What Other Farm to Table Events Get Wrong Most are “farm to table” in name only — a token nod to local producers while relying heavily on imported or processed foods. They miss the deeper connection between local abundance, timing, and community.
  2. Steps to Organizing One
  • Source the food: Build relationships with local growers and producers.
  • Find a venue: Needs to be accessible, scenic, and functional for cooking and serving.
  • Create a semi-flexible menu: Base it on what farmers actually have that week.
  • Explore legalities: Health codes, insurance, and any required permits.
  • Add extras: Things like a wild edible walk turn the dinner into an experience.
  • Sell the tickets: Clear messaging — you’re selling an authentic experience, not a restaurant meal.
  • Handle logistics the day of: Setup, cooking flow, seating, lighting, cleanup.

Customer Experience

  • How do you keep the night flowing smoothly and still make it feel personal?
  • How do you balance talking about the farms with letting guests simply enjoy the meal?

Scaling the Concept

  • Could this become a recurring or seasonal event?
  • What lessons are you already learning for next time?

Make It A Great Week.

  continue reading

1005 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 514074247 series 1048970
Content provided by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by S. Nicole Williams and Nicole Sauce or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Today, we talk about what it takes to organize a real Farm to Table Dinner, as well as cover our usual Monday segments.

Featured Event

Chainsaw Milling Demo and PotluckSunday at 1 PMBasecamp Lodge, Lancaster, TN Join us for a hands-on chainsaw milling demonstration and community potluck! Bring a dish to share and see how we turn logs into lumber right here at the Holler. Event Details

Sponsors Community Highlight

LFTN Stocking Exchange Time is running out to sign up! We’ll assign your Secret Stocking Santa on November 1, so don’t miss out on this fun community tradition. Sign Up Here

Tales from the Prepper Pantry
  • Convenience meals this week: crockpot lamb ribs.
  • Drying the last round of fall herbs — mint, oregano, and holy basil.
  • Getting ready to fill the freezers with meat now that it’s almost cold enough to butcher.
  • Hoping for a venison this year.
  • Ground meat base for winter meals: beef, pork, and more pork.
Weekly Shopping Report
  • No shopping trip this week.
Frugality Tip

Did you know that if you put something in your online cart at Amazon (and some other online stores), when the price changes they notify you via email. So if you are looking to buy something but it is a little out of your budget, throw it in the cart and you just might be notified when it goes on sale.

Also, when looking around on eBay, go ahead and click that heart, a lot of sellers will send you a discounted offer just for liking an item.

So have a little patience and wait and see if you can save a few dollars on your next online purchase.

Happy savings y'all ~Margo

Operation Independence

We opened up the Basecamp Airbnb — and one hour later it rented for four days! That single booking covered baseline expenses for the property (though not the mortgage). Still, a solid win toward independence.

Main Topic: Organizing a Real Farm to Table Dinner
  1. Why We’re Doing One We wanted to show what real farm-to-table actually means — not marketing, not a photo op. A community meal built from what local farmers are actually harvesting right now, cooked by people who understand those ingredients.
  2. Why It’s Harder Than a Typical Event This isn’t catered convenience food.
  • The chef has to process everything from raw ingredients, not pre-trimmed or par-cooked product.
  • Every ingredient is sourced directly from farms, not distributors.
  • Timing is critical — you plan the menu around what’s in season, not what’s available year-round from a big box store.

This is NOT your typical farm-to-table experience. We’re not highlighting one or two local dishes and then filling the rest from Costco. Every ingredient — except the pepper and the coffee (which I roast) — comes from right here in Tennessee. No shortcuts.

  1. What Other Farm to Table Events Get Wrong Most are “farm to table” in name only — a token nod to local producers while relying heavily on imported or processed foods. They miss the deeper connection between local abundance, timing, and community.
  2. Steps to Organizing One
  • Source the food: Build relationships with local growers and producers.
  • Find a venue: Needs to be accessible, scenic, and functional for cooking and serving.
  • Create a semi-flexible menu: Base it on what farmers actually have that week.
  • Explore legalities: Health codes, insurance, and any required permits.
  • Add extras: Things like a wild edible walk turn the dinner into an experience.
  • Sell the tickets: Clear messaging — you’re selling an authentic experience, not a restaurant meal.
  • Handle logistics the day of: Setup, cooking flow, seating, lighting, cleanup.

Customer Experience

  • How do you keep the night flowing smoothly and still make it feel personal?
  • How do you balance talking about the farms with letting guests simply enjoy the meal?

Scaling the Concept

  • Could this become a recurring or seasonal event?
  • What lessons are you already learning for next time?

Make It A Great Week.

  continue reading

1005 episodes

Все серии

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Copyright 2025 | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | | Copyright
Listen to this show while you explore
Play