Brooklyn chef “Dante Fried Chicken” posted this cooking segment featuring New York Hip Hop artist Theophilus London in the kitchen making Chocolate Coconut Pumpkin Pie…. perfect for this time of year. Graffiti meets grub!
Brooklyn chef “Dante Fried Chicken” posted this cooking segment featuring New York Hip Hop artist Theophilus London in the kitchen making Chocolate Coconut Pumpkin Pie…. perfect for this time of year. Graffiti meets grub!
Vodpod videos no longer available.On a hot Chicago summer day, sometimes there is nothing sweeter than biting into a juicy peach or watermelon. Most of us can buy these summer-time treats at our neighborhood grocer – or, if we’re lucky – at one of the city’s many farmer’s markets.
But for residents living in some south and west side neighborhoods, grocery stores are few and far between. These food deserts deprive residents of nutritious food choices and healthy eating habits.
Earlier this year Mari Gallagher’s Research & Consulting Group in Chicago released a study on food deserts. The study identified over 600,000 Chicagoans living with distant or no grocery stores nearby. The report also stated that people living in these food deserts were more likely to suffer from diet related diseases and premature death.
But even at our favorite corner store, finding affordable, fresh produce can be difficult.
These obstacles drove some residents to create their own community gardens – such as Graffiti and Grub. Created by parent and activist La Donna Redmond, the organization is located between two food deserts in Washington Park and Englewood. Graffiti and Grub is one community-based solution to food deserts.
On this episode of Community Media and You, we’ll talk with La Donna and her partner Wil Seegars about Graffiti and Grub’s beginnings and other Chicago food deserts.”
–from CAN TV’s “Community, Media, & You”
LaDonna Redmond was recently profiled in Time Magazine as one of only 25 “Responsibility Pioneers” nationwide.
by Steven Gray
LaDonna Redmond considers opening an organic-food market on Chicago’s South Side the act of a freedom fighter. After 10 years of having to drive across town to find produce free of pesticides, the veteran community activist recently opened Graffiti and Grub, a for-profit market staffed by inner-city youth who also work on urban farms in an employment program run through the store. “There aren’t enough of these choices in the South Side,” she says, adding, “Everyone deserves healthy food.”
In the September 21st issue of The Nation (article also available online), LaDonna Redmond says that to change our food system and to engage a broader audience, food-justice activists need to change their language:
“There are many Americans who have the resources to buy healthy food and still are denied access to it. This denial of access has created “food deserts,” a term I despise but use for the sake of argument. The trouble with the term “food deserts” is that it describes lack in a way that indicates that the solution is outside of the community labeled a desert…”
for more of her essay, entitled “Food is Freedom”, click here.
Englewood and Washington Park get a Sustainable, Organic Grocery Store to call their own
CHICAGO — This Friday, August 28th marks the highly anticipated grand opening of Graffiti and Grub, a market ten years in the making. Serving the underserved South Side communities of Englewood and Washington Park, Graffiti and Grub began simply: a husband and wife embarked on a journey to find food that their son (allergic to eggs, shellfish, dairy and peanuts) could eat. In their West Side community, this proved to be nearly impossible. “You could find drugs in my community, you could find a gun in my community, but you couldn’t find a tomato,” LaDonna Redmond lamented. Born of this reality was Ms. Redmond’s life trajectory of working to solve food justice issues. She entered the realms of reclaiming vacant lots for urban farming, and ultimately, creating a store to serve communities starved for wholesome food options.
This Friday, Graffiti and Grub will open its doors, a culmination of many dreams. Profiled in the Chicago Tribune, on Chicago Public Radio, and CNN, the vision for the space is something fresh for the neighborhood: a grocer that not only offers healthy choices, but is in touch with the hip hop generation (two graffiti murals are in the works, and the staff is comprised of youth who also work on urban farming sites in an employment program run through the store).
Join Graffiti and Grub at its Grand Opening, Friday, August 28th from 3pm-7pm, and on Saturday and Sunday 8am-4pm. The store is located at 5923 S. Wentworth on Chicago’s South Side.
A sustainable, earth centered dinner experience for the hip hop generation