Ricciuti’s Restaurant in Olney, MD, has been serving farm to table produce since opening in 1992 – long before it was in style. |
“We’ve been doing kind of the farm to table thing for our
whole existence before it was really fashionable, but we never labeled
ourselves as that kind of restaurant back in the '90s,” said James Ricciuti,
the restaurant’s owner and former chef.
Ricciuti’s is located in the 200-year-old Olney house on one
acre of land in the center of town. It is just outside the Montgomery County
Agricultural Reserve, so there are many small farms located within a 10-mile
radius of the Italian restaurant. It is a prime location both for the
townspeople and for attaining fresh produce.
“That gives us access to actually a lot of very local
farms,” Ricciuti said.
Outside the front of the restaurant, there are three 4-by-16
feet beds planted with a variety of seasonal produce and herbs.
“We decided since we had land available it’d be nice just to
build some gardens here and there so we could show what farm to table is all
about to our customers,” Ricciuti said. “So they see us walking out there and
bringing in baskets of tomatoes and squash and peppers and whatever’s in
season.”
Right now, the beds are filled with “the usual suspects:
tomatoes, peppers, summer squash, lots of different herbs – basil, parsley,
lavender, rosemary,” Ricciuti said. In the fall they plant more root
vegetables, such as carrots and beets. As it gets colder, they will switch to
more greens: Swiss chard, lettuces, and kale.
The produce from the garden is used in all facets of the
restaurant. Ricciuti said they will incorporate tomatoes, squash, and peppers
into many summer dinner entrees, while herbs such as lavender and basil are
used behind the bar. The fresh ingredients are also used on their wood-fire
oven pizzas.
“We’ve been doing it so long, it’s definitely second nature
to us,” Ricciuti said. “We’re always trying to use the freshest possible
product, and when we have something this fresh and this local, we want that to
be the star of any dish we’re doing.”
Ricciuti mentioned their traditional Caprese salad with
mozzarella, tomatoes, and basil, as an example of how they use the produce “in
its freshest and simplest form when possible” by not manipulating it.
While absolutely everything that comes out of the garden is
used, the small beds simply cannot supply all of the restaurant’s needs.
“It’s more or less of a little showcase garden for the
restaurant,” Ricciuti said. “So the beds themselves don’t provide nearly enough
produce for us, but they do provide some.”
For additional produce, Ricciuti’s turns to nearby farms in
Montgomery County, such as Blueberry Gardens, the Farm at Our House, and
several smaller locations. Ricciuti said he also grows some produce at home on
his three acres of land. Besides produce, the restaurant also receives fresh
local eggs, lamb, and pork.
“So we have a lot available just in Montgomery County,”
Ricciuti said. “It’s really wonderful.”
From partnering with many local farms, to embracing the
Olney House’s longstanding history in the town, Ricciuti’s is a proponent of
working for, and with, its community.
“We are an independent restaurant,” Ricciuti said. “We’re
very community oriented. We’re staffed with a lot of local kids – high school
and college kids. We do a lot of work within the community, and we try to
promote the whole gardening thing to everybody – that’s why they come out here.
So we’re an advocate of the farm to table lifestyle.”
Newly appointed chef Wilder Martinez shared this recipe for Ricciuti’s Gazpacho using fresh tomatoes and peppers.
Chef Wilder Martinez and owner James Ricciuti |
2 lbs heirloom tomatoes
2 lbs zebra tomatoes
1 lb sweet red peppers
1 whole jalapeño pepper
1 cup celery
1 lb red onion
3 lbs cucumbers
2 cloves garlic
2 oz extra virgin olive oil
Directions:
Wash all the ingredients. Peel the cucumbers and remove the seeds, then cut them into small dices. Chop the onion and the jalapeño pepper. Put the rest of the ingredients into the food processor until they are very fine and juiced. Lastly, combine everything in the same container and add the olive oil, salt, and pepper.
"Chef Gardens" is a weekly blog series featuring local restaurants with gardens in the greater Washington, DC area.
About the Author:
Ana Hurler, a senior multi-platform journalism major at the University of Maryland, College Park. Ana is interning with us this summer.
No comments:
Post a Comment