Events

Local, Sustainable, Delicious: A Seasonal Celebration

Featuring Boston’s Best Chefs

Sunday, September 28, 2008 at 6:00 PM

at

Persephone Restaurant
283 Summer Street
Boston, MA 02210

Join Chefs Collaborative and eight of Boston’s leading chefs for a cocktail reception featuring local,

sustainable, and delicious food. Enjoy seasonal specialties prepared by chefs:

Michael Leviton, Lumière and Persephone Restaurants

Jamie Bissonnette, KO Prime

Ed Doyle, Real Food

Will Gilson, Garden at the Cellar

Carolyn Johnson, Rialto

Jacqueline Kelly, Bravo Restaurant

Tony Maws, Craigie Street Bistrot

Peter McCarthy, EVOO

Proceeds from the event will benefit Chefs Collaborative. Space is limited. Tickets are $100 and can be purchased online by clicking here. There is a small service charge for online purchasing. If you prefer to purchase your ticket over the phone please call our offices at 617-236-5200 and we will assist you. For information on becoming a sponsor, please call 617-236-5200. Sponsors of $250 and above will be recognized in the evening’s program.

Event Sponsors:

Kunde Wines

Food Should Taste Good

Cervena Natural Tender Venison


2008 Chef’s Guide

To download a copy of Seafood Solutions: A Chef’s Guide to Sourcing Sustainable Seafood, please fill out the form below and hit “submit.”

Contact Us
  1. (required)
  2. (valid email required)
 

cforms contact form by delicious:days

Press Releases

Chefs Collaborative Names Three New Board Members (April 14, 2008)

Earth Dinner 2008

Earth Dinner Logo 2008

Chefs Collaborative has been working with Organic Valley on their Earth Dinner initiative for five years. Earth Dinners are a celebration of our connection to food, the earth, and one another. The dinners are not only a time to enjoy delicious local, sustainable and organic food, but also to connect with friends and family.

This year’s dinners will be held on Tuesday, April 22nd in restaurants around the country. Here is a list of Chefs Collaborative members participating in the dinners. While most of these dinners are open to the public, we encourage you to call the restaurant in advance to make reservations.

Art of the Table
6:30 pm Reception, 7:00 pm Dinner

1054 N. 39th St.

Seattle, WA 98103

206-686-0942

Reservations required

Biga on the Banks
Dinner: 5:30 pm-10:00 pm

203 South Saint Mary’s Street, Suite 100

San Antonio, TX 75208

210-225-0722

Open to public

Border Grill Las Vegas
11:30 am-close

Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino

3950 Las Vegas Blvd South

Las Vegas, NV 89119

Open to public

Andaluca
5:00 pm-close

405 Olive Way

Seattle, WA 98106

206-623-8700

Open to public

Kingfisher Dining Lodge at Sleeping Lady Mountain Retreat
6:00 pm

7375 Icicle Road

Leavenworth, WA 98226

800-574-2123

Reservations required

Union Square Cafe
5:30 pm-10:00 pm

21 East 16th Street

New York, NY

212-989-3527

Open to public

Garden at the Cellar
5:00 pm-11:00 pm

991 Massachusetts Avenue

Cambridge, MA 02138

617-230-5880

Open to public

The Beehive
5:00 pm-close

541 Tremont Street

Boston, MA 02116

617-423-0069

Open to public

Dressing Room, a Homegrown Restaurant
7:00 pm

27 Powers Court

Westport, CT 06880

206-226-1114

RSVP only

Diane’s Market Kitchen
6:00 pm-9:00 pm

1101 Post Alley

Seattle, WA 98101

206-624-6114

Reservations required

Border Grill Santa Monica
11:30 am-close

1445 4th Street

Santa Monica, CA 90401

310-451-1655

Open to public

Claire’s Corner Copia
6:30 pm

1000 Chapel Street

New Haven, CT 06510

203-562-3888

Open to public

Poste Moderne Brasserie
6:oo pm

555 8th Street NW

Washington, DC

202-449-7026

Open to public

Gigi Market

227 Pitcher Lane

Red Hook, NY

845-758-1999

Call for more information

Gigi Trattoria

6422 Montgomery St. #1

Rhinebeck, NY 12572

845-758-0880

Call for more information

Q’s Restaurant

2115 13th St.

Boulder, CO 80302

303-442-4880

Bryce Canyon Lodge

63 Bryce Canyon National Pk

Bryce Canyon, UT

435-834-5361

Beets in a Row

In the news

Our national network of chefs and members of the greater culinary community are a newsworthy bunch. From Chefs Collaborative’s projects that deal with sustainable seafood and agricultural biodiversity, to the daily efforts of our member chefs in pursuit of a more sustainable food supply, our organization and our members are often featured in national and local press.

Most recently, The Renewing America’s Food Traditions coalition released a comprehensive book, edited by RAFT founder and facilitator Gary Nabhan, in late April. Soon after, The New York Times ran this story on our work.

And included a multimedia map of the United States, seen through a filter of foodsheds. Cool stuff.

Chefs Collaborative members in the press:

CC member Chris Blobaum at the Wilshire restaurant in Santa Monica, CA, was recently featured in the LA Times. Read about the “eco-frenzy” in LA-area restaurants here.

CC member restaurant Incanto was interviewed by Marian Burros for this NY Times article on the environmental impacts of bottled water. Read more in Fighting the Tide.

Our board member Loretta Oden is an Emmy award-winner! Read about her in the Sante Magazine.

CC member Barton Seaver of Hook restaurant in Washington D.C. was recently interviewed by CNN Money about the importance of sourcing sustainable seafood in the restaurant.

CC member Alison Negrin was recently recognized for her work at the John Muir Health Center in Concord, California in an article called “Not Your Mother’s Hospital Cooking”. A former chef at Chez Panisse, Negrin is bringing sustainable food to California patients.

Newsroom

If you are a member of the press looking for further information about Chefs Collaborative, our members, or our projects and partnerships, please contact Executive Director Melissa Kogut. She can be reached at melissa@chefscollaborative.org or at 617-236-5286.

*June 2008: Chefs Collaborative has released our latest version of Seafood Solutions: A Chef’s Guide to Sourcing Sustainable Seafood. Get your copy!

To see an archive of our recent press releases, go here.

To see recent news stories where Chefs Collaborative members and projects were featured, visit this page.

Thank you for your interest in Chefs Collaborative.

Producer Profile

Steve Ballard cooks the Idaho Greek Grillin\' Cheese

Producer Profiles are a benefit for Chefs Collaborative’s “Small Producer” members. Click here to learn how you can become a member today!

Company: Ballard Family Dairy & Cheese
Founder: Steve, Stacie, and Travis Ballard
In Business Since: 2004
Products: Farmstead cheeses
Contact Info: 5208-934-4972, ballardcheese@msn.com Website: www.ballardcheese.com

Photo: Steve Ballard cooks the Idaho Gold Greek Grillin’ Cheese.

Chefs Collaborative: How did you get involved in raising cows?

Stacie Ballard: My husband Steve always wanted a dairy. Neither of us had prior farming experience, but Steve’s uncle ran a dairy farm. Before we started farming, I was working at a school part-time and Steve was working as a diesel mechanic. We decided to move from San Diego to Idaho in order to start a dairy and to get the kids out of the city. Currently we have 60 Jersey cows that produce the milk for our cheese. It’s very hard to make money as a dairy farmer selling milk. You can’t compete with the large dairies. We were encouraged from the beginning to look into value added products and decided that cheese made the most sense as it has a longer shelf life. We went to a cheese making conference in California and got started after that.

We have a variety of cheeses that we’re selling direct to retailers, chefs, and consumers. We also sell our cheese curd to other cheese makers.

CC: How would you describe your cheeses? What makes them unique?

SB: Our Jersey cows produce very high quality milk, which is the base of our cheese. We feel blessed to have such healthy animals. My husband is immersed in good animal husbandry and is ensures that our cows are happy and healthy. He’s instilled this ethic into my children. As a family we understand that the quality of the product is directly linked to the health and life of the animal.

CC: You mentioned that you’re selling direct to chefs. Is it working well? How are they using your products?

SB: We work with a number of chefs from Boise and a few chefs in Coeur d’Alene and even California. We’ve really enjoyed working with the chefs and have found that if you’re a reliable producer and can give them what they want, they are willing to pay a little bit extra for the product. Our halloumi-style “grillin’ cheese’ has really taken off in the chef community. We also produce a variety of cheddars. Chef Jon Mortimer of Mortimer’s in Boise serves our cheddar with farm peach chutney, and pineapple sage oil. Chef Dustan Bristol of of Brick 29 Bistro uses our Danish Pearl cheddar to top his French onion soup.

CC: What do you see as the challenges in producing and marketing your cheese?

SB: Location! We’re really far out in the country and it’s really touch. We drive 100 miles each way twice a week to get to the Boise farmers market. Also, it’s difficult to decide what cheese you are going to market. When we began this business, there really was a learning curve. It takes patience, but you can make it work.

CC: How do you make that work with the current gas prices averaging over $4.00 a gallon?

SB: We’ve been able to make it work. We recently bought a Mini Cooper and have begun parking our truck at the farmers market for the day. We use the Mini Cooper for making deliveries to restaurants and retail outlets. You should see our little Mini Cooper filled to the brim with cheese! It’s quite the sight. So far we haven’t had to raise the price of cheese for our restaurant customers. The packaging for our retail products is what is most expensive and unfortunately, we’ve had to raise the prices as a result.

CC: This sounds like a lot of driving. Have you thought about working with a distributor?

SB: We’re really not interested in working with a distributor. We like being in control of our own product. Our current operation allows us to know exactly when the cheese is made, shipped, and when it arrives. We’re able to taste each batch of cheese before it’s shipped. It’s all hands on deck, but we like it that way.

CC: When is your product available for purchase? Is it seasonal?

SB: Our products are available year round. When the farmers market season is over, we still make deliveries to Boise a couple times a week. We do ship our cheese to out-of-state customers.

CC: You also offer cheese making classes at your farm?

SB: We offer cheese making classes at our farm throughout the year. They are geared towards folks who are thinking about making cheese for a living. I think it’s important for people to understand the complete operation, from the milking to the cheese preparation and the lifestyle. Most programs don’t offer that. It’s so interesting how much the local food movement has flourished. People are actually interested again in artisan products and in knowing where their food comes from. We have more and more customers who are visiting us on the farm. We’re actually in the very preliminary stages of creating a business plan for a building a store and a visitor center on the farm.

Communiques

Chefs Collaborative communiques are one-page papers that focus on one topic relating to sustainable food. We interview chefs and experts in the field to help synthesize multiple perspectives and present information in ways that our members find valuable. Our communiques cover a range of topics, including seafood sourcing, grass-fed meats, organic certification, and more. Members receive communiques about 4 times a year.

Blog


Local food search


Renewing America’s Food Traditions

The RAFT coalition to Renew America’s Food Traditions was founded in 2005 to restore America’s agricultural biodiversity and to develop a public understanding of place-based foods. Chefs Collaborative is proud to be part of this multidisciplinary project.

As part of the work to document, restore, and celebrate America’s food and agricultural traditions, Chefs Collaborative is planning for a 2009 Grow-Out of heirloom vegetables regionally adapted to New England. We are cultivating networks of growers and chefs in and around Portsmouth, NH; Boston, MA; and Providence, RI to get involved in our project for the 2009 growing season.

We plan to recruit at least five growers each in Portsmouth, Boston, and Providence to pair with five chefs from each respective city. Farmers will receive vegetable seeds provided by RAFT partners Seed Savers Exchange and other seed providers, then grow-out the vegetables for chefs who have agreed to purchase the heirloom produce and feature it on their menus.

We invite farmers throughout the Northeast to contact our office if you’re interested in receiving heirloom seeds for the 2009 growing season.

Spread the word! If you know any farmers or chefs in the areas we’ve mentioned, please direct them to our site or tell them to get in touch with Chefs Collaborative.

For more on other RAFT initiatives, visit the RAFT section of the Slow Food website.

Our RAFT work brings together our commitment to sustainable cuisine, collaboration, and community. Together, the RAFT partners and participants are working towards the conservation and restoration of place-based foods and foodways, and we look forward to a day when we can all raise a glass to America’s unique food traditions, renewed!

photo: Seattle RAFT picnickers, September 23, 2007. Photo by Robert Galvin.

Meat of the Matter

Having trouble deciphering your meat labels? Whether you’re a chef or a consumer, meat labels can be very confusing. Chefs Collaborative has put together a Meat Lover’s Glossary to help chefs and consumers make healthier, more sustainable purchasing decisions.

Contact Us

Chefs Collaborative

89 South St., lower level

Boston, MA 02111

p: 617-236-5200

f: 617-236-5272

email: ChefsCollaborative@chefscollaborative.org

Chapters

Chefs Collaborative currently has two active chapters in Seattle, Washington and Portland, Oregon. Click on the links below to see what’s happening!

Seattle Chapter of Chefs Collaborative

Portland Chapter of Chefs Collaborative

Friends & Sponsors

Chefs Collaborative thanks the following partners and corporations for their generous support. To learn more about becoming a sponsor of Chefs Collaborative please contact us at 617-236-5200 or by email at ChefsCollaborative@chefscollaborative.org.

Benefactor Level Sponsors

Gallo Family Vineyards Organic Valley

Champion Level Sponsors


Sante Logo

Bonterra Vineyards

Cervena Natural Tender Venison

Real Food Consulting

Steward Level Sponsor

Xanterra Parks & Resorts

Leader Level Sponsors

Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute

Blue Horizon Organic Seafood

Bon Appetit Management Company

Caffe Vita Coffee Roasting

CleanFish

Dole & Bailey

EcoFish

Food Should Taste Good

Grasspoint Farms

Lindblad Expeditions

Niman Ranch

NUMI Tea

Stonyfield Farm

The Catfish Institute

Willamette Valley Vineyards

Wolfgang Puck Catering

Friends and Major Donors

The David & Lucile Packard Foundation * American Grassfed Association * Central Coast Vineyard Team * Culinary School of the Rockies * Husbandry Institute * Inland NW Culinary Academy * Kendall College * Kim Larson & Gary E. Knell * Marr Barr Communications * New England Culinary Institute * Oregon Culinary Institute * Pacific Shellfish Growers Association * Odessa K. Piper * Lundberg Family Farms * Right Stuff Enterprises * Seattle Culinary Academy * Spokane Community College * The Fresh Ideas Group * Institute of Culinary Education * TransFair USA * University of Minnesota * University of New Hampshire * Volunteers of America * Montalvo Arts Organization * Western Culinary Institute * Yale Appliance * Bob Perry * Kelly Xuan Hay * Sustainable Table * Charles Drabkin & Michael Herzfeld * Fortune Fish Company * Ross Morris *Tim Crosby * Edible Rhody * Tacoma Farmers Markets * John Muir Health Systems * South Carolina Aquarium * The French Culinary Institute * Ivy West Insurance Agency


Board of Overseers

Click here for a full list of Board biographies.

Officers:

Eric Stenberg, Chair

Chef, The Resort at Spanish Peaks

Big Sky, Montana

Robin Schemmp, Vice Chair

Owner, Right Stuff Enterprises

Waterbury, Vermont

Bruce Sherman, Clerk

Chef/Owner, North Pond Restaurant

Chicago, Illionois

Amy Bodiker, Treasurer

Development Director, Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture

Pocantico Hills, New York

Directors:

Carrie Balkcom

Executive Director, American Grassfed Association

Denver, Colorado

Peter Hoffman

Chef/Owner, Savoy & Back Forty Restaurants

New York, New York

Michael Leviton

Chef/Owner, Lumiere & Executive Chef of Persephone

Boston, Massachusetts

Joe McGarry

Executive Chef, Bon Appetit Management Company

Portland, Oregon

Nicolette Hahn Niman

Attorney, Cattle Rancher, Niman Ranch

Bolinas, California

Loretta Oden

Native American Chef, Corn Dance Enterprises

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Bob Perry

Chef & Food Systems Coordinator, University of Kentucky College of Agriculture

Lexington, Kentucky

Tim Stein, RD

Director of Operations, Levy Restaurants

Denver, Colorado

Megan Westmeyer

Sustainable Seafood Coordinator, South Carolina Aquarium

Charleston, South Carolina

Staff

Melissa KogutMelissa

Melissa Kogut became Executive Director of Chefs Collaborative in August of 2007. She previously served as executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts, a state-wide organization that advocates for women’s reproductive freedom. She has a long history of effective advocacy, program development and fundraising. In 2006, Melissa received the Abigail Adams Award from the Massachusetts Women’s Political Caucus, which recognizes and honors outstanding women leaders.

Having worked in the restaurant industry, Melissa has always been interested in the sustainable food movement. “This is a critical moment in the growth of Chefs Collaborative. The public is becoming much more aware of the problems in our food supply, sparking greater interest in the sustainable food movement. Chefs Collaborative has a unique opportunity to reach and engage chefs, who in turn are respected by the public as credible spokespeople about the value of local food and sustainable practices.”

Melissa is an avid hiker and loves cooking for friends and family. She grew up in Southern California and prides herself on knowing how to pick the perfect avocado.

Leigh Belangerlb-resized.jpg

Leigh is the program and communications manager for Chefs Collaborative. Her background in the culinary arts as well as journalism and food history is a great match for the work Leigh does on the RAFT and Seafood Solutions projects. She also researches, edits, and writes the Collaborative’s publications.

A Massachusetts native, Leigh is a fan of the New England coast, hard apple cider, and the Red Sox. She studies gastronomy at Boston University and writes about food and restaurants for a few local publications including the Globe. Leigh is a lapsed community gardener and uses only butter in her pie crusts.

Elizabeth Kennedy

Elizabeth is the Development Associate at Chefs Collaborative. She spends her time recruiting new members and sponsors for the organization. She also serves as the liaison to the Chefs Collaborative chapters. Having worked in restaurants, Elizabeth has an appreciation for the hard work that goes into running a successful business and bringing delicious food to the table. She is the author of Chefs Collaborative’s monthly e-newsletter FreshNet and handles the day to day operations of the national office.

A French and Philosophy major at Connecticut College, Elizabeth had the opportunity to spend a semester in Paris where she sampled regional foods, visited wineries, and frequented the local markets. Elizabeth loves to dine out-especially at CC member restaurants. On the weekends, you can find Elizabeth cooking for family and friends, at the beach, or rooting for her hometown team the Boston Red Sox.

Membership Benefits

All members receive:

  • A one year subscription to Chefs Collaborative’s bi-annual newsletter, 6 informative public affairs communiqués, and FreshNet, Chefs Collaborative’s monthly e-newsletter
  • Invitations to all local and national events
  • Opportunity to share sustainability minded events and announcements through FreshNet
  • The satisfaction of joining others to celebrate local, artisanal and sustainable food.

Sustainer: $500

  • Invitations to quarterly CHECKS* calls
  • 4 additional individual memberships to share with friends or colleagues
  • Online visibility in our Guide to Restaurants, Businesses, and Products
  • A special gift and business window decal

Preserver: $250

  • Invitations to quarterly CHECKS* calls
  • 2 additional individual memberships to share with friends or colleagues
  • Online visibility in our Guide to Restaurants, Businesses, and Products
  • A special gift & business window decal

Supporter: $100

  • Chefs Collaborative business window decal

Basic Membership: $50

  • A general subscription for Chefs Collaborative materials.

Special Level Memberships:

Small Producer: $50 Available to any producer with less than $500,000 in yearly gross sales

  • Includes all benefits of Supporter membership
  • Plus online visibility in our Guide to Restaurants, Businesses, and Products
  • Plus a Producer Profile in CC’s FreshNet

Student: $50 Available to any currently enrolled student with an interest in sustainable food, especially those in culinary education or environmental studies programs.

  • Includes all benefits of Supporter membership
  • Plus invitations to quarterly CHECKS* calls

*Collaborative Hosted Education Calls for Kitchen Sustainability

We like to make things easy… Sign up online!

DonateNow

or download the Membership Brochure and mail to:

Chefs Collaborative
89 South Street, LL
Boston, MA 02111

Seafood Solutions

Since 2000, our Seafood Solutions program has worked to educate chefs about the sustainability of the seafood they purchase and serve. With our partners at aquariums and other marine conservation organizations, we’ve been able to sort through the complicated issues of marine ecology and fisheries regulations. And we’ve determined steps that restaurants can take in their efforts to purchase and serve sustainably sourced finfish and shellfish.

Through our publications, panel discussions, hands-on educational programs, tasting workshops, and dinners, we educate chefs on the best ways to practice seafood sustainability in their restaurants. Our recent work on Seafood Solutions includes:

A newly revised edition of the Chefs Guide to Responsible Seafood Sourcing, due out in Spring 2008.

Continued participation in Chefs in Raingear, a partnership with Lummi Island Wild, a reef-net fishing cooperative off the coast of Bellingham, Washington. This year, we’ll send our third delegation of Chefs Collaborative members to participate in the hands-on learning program that has chefs participate in reef-net salmon fishing on Lummi Island, Washington.

A partnership with the Blue Ocean Institute to develop an on-line sustainable seafood educational tool for use in culinary schools and professional development.

 

Join Us

At Chefs Collaborative, we believe in changing our food supply one meal at a time. Whether you’re a professional chef at a five-star restaurant, a Midwestern produce farmer, a Gulf Coast fisherman, a culinary school instructor, an owner of a casual café, or a frequent diner, we need your support!

Become a member or make a contribution today by clicking the button below, or click here to learn more about membership levels and benefits.

DonateNow

Farm to Chef

Chefs Collaborative works to educate our national network of chefs and culinary professionals about the benefits of working closely with farmers and food producers. The quality and freshness of local foods might be the first thing to motivate chefs, but partnerships based on respect and reciprocity can also help strengthen local communities and local economies.

Restaurants can be good sources of revenue for food producers while supporting biodiversity and conservation efforts, helping to conserve open space, and lightening their carbon footprint by shortening the distance from farm to table.

Through our educational publications, panel discussions, and hands-on workshops, Chefs Collaborative works to link food systems with ecosystems and demonstrate ways that chefs and farmers can build mutually beneficial partnerships. Recently we’ve:

Worked with the Wild Farm Alliance on a poster and accompanying white paper demonstrating the links between food systems and ecosystems.

Partnered with Slow Food USA, Gary Nabhan, the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy and four other non-profit conservation groups on the Renewing America’s Food Traditions project to raise awareness about the benefits of agricultural biodiversity.

Planned a workshop for Boston-area chefs to learn how to break down a whole hog–an important skill for chefs interested in sourcing their meats locally.

Home

At Chefs Collaborative, our growing community of chefs, farmers, fishers, educators, and food lovers is dedicated to promoting sustainable cuisine. Join Us!

About

Founded in 1993, Chefs Collaborative is the leading culinary organization that provides its members with tools for running economically healthy, sustainable food service businesses. The non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization has more than 1,000 active and passionate food community professionals as members, 70% of whom are chefs. This impressive nationwide network represents independent and corporate establishments. Other members represent a broad range of food-related professions, from culinary school instructors and managers of large food service operations to distributors, owners of specialty stores, and farmers, fishermen, and ranchers.

Together, we share a common concern about the sources of the food we eat. We work collectively to promote the highest-quality, best-tasting local ingredients; products we know are better for the environment, our communities, and the nation’s tables.

Mission:

Chefs Collaborative works with chefs and the greater food community to celebrate local foods and foster a more sustainable food supply. The Collaborative inspires action by translating information about our food into tools for making knowledgeable purchasing decisions. Through these actions, our members embrace seasonality, preserve diversity and traditional practices, and support local economies.

Statement of Principles:

  1. Food is fundamental to life, nourishing us in body and soul. The preparation of food strengthens our connection to nature. And the sharing of food immeasurably enriches our sense of community.
  2. Good food begins with unpolluted air, land, and water, environmentally sustainable farming and fishing, and humane animal husbandry.
  3. Food choices that emphasize delicious, locally grown, seasonally fresh, and whole or minimally processed ingredients are good for us, for local farming communities, and for the planet.
  4. Cultural and biological diversity are essential for the health of the earth and its inhabitants. Preserving and revitalizing sustainable food, fishing, and agricultural traditions strengthen that diversity.
  5. By continually educating themselves about sustainable choices, chefs can serve as models to the culinary community and the general public through their purchases of seasonal, sustainable ingredients and their transformation of these ingredients into delicious food.
  6. The greater culinary community can be a catalyst for positive change by creating a market for good food and helping preserve local farming and fishing communities.

Our vision: As a result of our work, sustainable practices will be second nature for every chef in the United States.

Privacy Policy

This site is owned and operated by Chefs Collaborative, a non-profit 50c(3) organization.
Chefs Collaborative accepts credit card contributions through a secure on-line service. In addition to your name, mailing address and email address, we make note of your telephone number if you choose to provide it.

Chefs Collaborative may exchange or rent our list of contributors’ names and mailing addresses to other organizations. You may opt-out of such exchanges by indicating so on the donor form.
We may use the information you provide us when you contribute on-line or by mail to contact you for other purposes or to solicit you for additional contributions. You may remove your name from our donor or activist lists at any time by emailing a request to info@chefscollaborative.org

You may remove your name from our email newsletter list at any time by emailing a request to info@chefscollaborative.org.