Evening in the Garden UD-Food Bank fund-raiser coming in September

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University of Delaware photo
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University of Delaware photo
University of Delaware photo

The Food Bank of Delaware and the University of Delaware’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR) will again work together to raise money to alleviate hunger in the First State with their seventh annual Evening in the Garden on Thursday, September 10 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

The menu includes garden-fresh foods straight from the university’s Garden for the Community. Students and chefs from The Culinary School at the Food Bank of Delaware will serve stout braised local lamb, black garlic mashed potatoes with crispy shaved shallots, sweet corn and edamame succotash, pigtail shrimp, finished with an optional drizzle of chili oil and squash blossom goat cheese taco with jalapeño toasted almond pesto and pickled red onion and more in food stations.

The UDairy Creamery will offer  ice cream.

The evening will also feature wine and beer tastings from Dogfish Head Beer, Mispillion River Brewing , 3rd Wave Brewing Co., Twin Lakes Brewing Company, Painted Stave Distilling, 16 Mile and 2SP Brewing Company, live entertainment from The Ellen Lebowitz Quartet, a four-piece jgazz group with piano, drums, bass and voice and tours of the Garden of the Community.

“I am proud of our partnership with the University of Delaware College of Agriculture and Natural Re-sources,” said Food Bank of Delaware President and CEO Patricia Beebe. “This annual event gives our culinary students real-world experience working a catered fundraising event. In addition, we are able to celebrate the harvest of the Garden for the Community with the community, while showing off the newly-developed skills of our students. These skills ultimately help them acquire sustainable employment  in the food service industry.”

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“UD’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources is very proud of its long-standing partnership with the Food Bank,” said Mark Rieger, dean, UD’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources. “This is the seventh year that the greater Delaware community has been welcomed to campus to feast on the bounty grown by its students in UD’s Garden for the Community. I can’t think of a more rewarding event than one that helps raise money to provide food for those who need it most and, at the same time, provides our students with an experiential learning project that is connected directly to the everyday  lives of people living in our own community.”

Tickets for the event are $40 per person. The price includes dinner , wine, beer and entertainment. Attendees  are asked to RSVP by August 31. If tickets are available after the RSVP deadline,  the price increases by $10.

To purchase tickets, please contact Kim Turner at (302) 444-8074.  Online registration is also available at http://www.fbd.org/an-evening-in-the-garden/. Attendees are also asked to bring a bag of canned goods for the food bank’s hunger-relief efforts.

Easter Seals Delaware & Maryland’s Eastern Shore received $1,970 from the 34th annual Friendly’s Ice Cream, LLC ‘Cones for Kids’ campaign which will help support camps for children with disabilities like Easter Seals Camp Fairlee in Chestertown, MD.

The Middletown Friendly’s deserves special recognition for raising the most in Delaware in this year’s campaign.

“I am proud to be a part of a community that makes raising critically needed funds for people with disabilities a priority,” Kenan J. Sklenar, Easter Seals Delaware & Maryland’s Eastern Shore President/CEO, said. “The funds raised in this campaign go directly to support children with disabilities and their families in our local area.”

Funds raised will support Easter Seals Camp Friendly’s programs, like Camp Fairlee. Easter Seals Camp Friendly’s provides an opportunity for kids with disabilities, like 10-year-old Andrew, who has Down Syndrome, to be included in regular camp activities like, boating, canoeing, swimming, archery, ropes courses, horseback riding, hiking, basketball and fishing. Andrew’s mom, Katrina, said that she has seen great changes in Andrew since he started going to Camp Fairlee.

 

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