Earth Day “Supper Club”

by Carolyn on April 17, 2012

This coming Sunday, April 22, is Earth Day.  There will be celebrations all week, including a Santa Cruz community gathering on Saturday.  How will Charlie Hong Kong honor the occasion?  Being present for the original first Earth Day, was a moving event for me.  What seems to have become a big party, though I’m not against celebrating, I felt Charlie Hong Kong needed a larger personal context for this Earth Day.

So when Sarah Wood from Edible Monterey, called to ask, if Charlie Hong Kong would like to do a “Popup Supper Club” the wheels of my mind stared turning.  This after I said, Supper Club, we’re not that kind of restaurant. Edible Monterey’s mission for the “popup supper clubs” is to nurture our local conscious food community.   Well, Charlie Hong Kong, is a Certified Green restaurant.  We’re committed to using organic produce grown right here on the central coast.  Charlie Hong Kong is alignment with this mission. Thus our Earth Day celebration started to take shape.

But I felt it had to be more then just Charlie Hong Kong serving our Signature vegan bowls.  Then the obvious struck me; the UCSC Farm and Garden, bring them into the equation. Here is this amazing program right in our neighborhood.  Their Apprenticeship Program is educating a new generation of organic farmers.  This gives hope, for that critical mass to shift away from convention argro-business to sustainable, organic farming.  This resource is available to gardeners and our entire community.  I wanted to pay respect to this amazing endeavor.  This is what Earth Day is about.

A number of e-mails and phone calls and UCSC Farm was on board.  The plan: a private tour of the farm, with Liz Milazzo, field production manager, generously offering to be our guide.  It will be very exciting since it’s planting season and she’s the expert.  Then rendezvous at Charlie Hong Kong, for a private tasting from our Signature Vegan Bowls and other menu items.

Yes, this feels like the way to honor Earth Day!  Gratitude, respect, kindness and generosity, the founding principals of Charlie Hong Kong.   The same expression we want to express towards our magnificent earth.

Details: Edible Monterey blog April Supper club

Cost: $20.00-($5.00 goes to UCSC Farm & Garden)

Time: 3 pm meet at Farm then Charlie Hong Kong

Limited space

Sorry Restaurant will be closed during this special event 4:30-5:30

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Story Of Our Wheat Noodles

by admin on March 28, 2012

Five or six years ago, we received the news, the company that made our noodles was going out of business.  This noodle is called a Hong Kong style noodle or chow mein (which means noodle) noodle.  It’s eggless and made from wheat.  So here was the opportunity: find a new noodle for the favorite Spicy Dan’s Peanut Delight and Charlie’s Chow Mein and improve the quality.  Lucky for us, Rudy, my business partner and husband, is the most amazing investigator, so I put him on the job.  Sleuthing around through the internet and many phone calls later, Rudy locates a professor at a “Noodle College” (yes, there is a noodle college) in LA, who is an expert in noodles and noodle manufacturing.  Rudy gives him a call in hopes that he may know a local noodle distributor.  After first receiving a thorough noodle education, different types, styles and what makes an excellent quality noodle, he’s given the name of a company in Oakland that makes a high quality fresh noodle. Fresh noodles, high quality, this was music to my ears.  We drive to Oakland to check them out.

There is a warehouse district next to downtown Oakland, off highway 880.  Numerous small food distribution and business warehouses are tucked in an area I didn’t know existed. We locate the noodle makers in the maze of unmarked buildings and enter into a large warehouse.  Stacked shelves line down the middle, with a window on the right, into a side room, where we can view an enormous machine making fresh noodles.  After we find someone who speaks English, this is a Chinese operation, we introduce ourselves; explain who we are and about our noodle mission.  A long term business partnership begins. They agree to make a noodle specifically for Charlie Hong Kong.  It is a longer more robust noodle.  The quality is superior to the previous noodle.  The noodles are made from scratch, then immediately hung over racks in a special room to dry.  The noodles are boxed and delivery to us the second or third day after being made.  We buy noodles by the pallet to keep prices down and receive deliveries every  2 1/2 to 3 weeks.  Noodles eaten at Charlie Hong are are that fresh.

Our “noodle people” have visited Charlie Hong Kong to taste their product first hand.  It’s a lovely family run business, father and sons, with high integrity. We recently made a trip to visit their new warehouse.  We were graciously welcomed and walked through the entire process, from arrival of the flour to the freshly dried noodle.  What I can say is; the plant is immaculate with state of the art equipment.  Everyone working there smiled at us and seemed happy.  Quality really matters to them like it does to us.  Now we’re cooking up a new noodle idea. I’ll keep you posted!

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Take a Stand: No Plastic To-Go Bags

January 12, 2012

I know it’s not easy to change.  I know to change a habit can be inconvenient but sometime the effects the habit causes can be enough to propel a change.  When it came to protecting our precious environment, saying no to plastic bags became a habit I chose to break and in the process took [...]

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Does Seasonal Organic Produce Matter?

December 13, 2011

I’m having this inner debate about my commitment to serving locally grown-in season-organic produce.  Recently we offered a special, Spicy Green Beans, made from locally grown organic BlueLake green beans.  The beans retained their snap and the sauce was just the right amount of spice and savory.  The season has ended and so has the [...]

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Charlie Hong Kong Featured In The Good Times

November 3, 2011

Charlie Hong Kong is a neighborhood eatery, offering noodle and rice bowls inspired by a fusion of Southeast Asian flavors with California organic sensibilities.  The vision: to offer healthy, affordable, “fast” food.  We call it Street Food because this food is intended to be eaten in community for people on the go.  Charlie Hong Kong [...]

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Eating Healthy- Easier Than Cooking At Home

October 4, 2011

Don’t feel like cooking?  Worried about getting your vitamins, minerals and proteins?  No worries-come into Charlie Hong Kong and you can be reassured you’re nourishing you body with healthy, tasty food that is served up quick! In Santa Cruz there is an organic farmers market almost everyday of the week.  It feels natural, to me, [...]

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From Farm to Asian Pesto

July 18, 2011

It’s full on summer.  Time to make Garlic Basil Noodles or Asian Pesto.  I’ve been waiting for the basil to come into season.  I make a trip to the Wednesday, farmer’s Market in downtown Santa Cruz, in search of basil.  The market is alive with activity.  Every stand is over flowing with gorgeous, vibrant, colorful [...]

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What’s “Organic Asian Street Food”

June 15, 2011

Why do we refer to our food as “Organic Asian Street Food”?  When traveling through Asia, we (both my husband and I) loved to eat at food stalls that dotted the alleys, markets and roads.  This food represented the region. It was inexpensive, prepared quickly, and very tasty.  Workers, businessmen and women shoppers would stand [...]

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Good-Bye Plastic To-Go Bags

April 15, 2011

We’ve finally made the decision and we’re sticking to it.  As of April 16th the Earth Day celebration in Santa Cruz, Charlie Hong Kong, Santa Cruz will no long use plastic to-go bags.  We’ve  been moving in this direction for the past year.  Then an article in the Good Times, with an accompanying photograph of [...]

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Trip to the Desert Reveals Food Desert

April 2, 2011

Recently my husband and I took a get away to Furnace Creek Ranch in Death Valley.  For years I wanted to see the desert wildflowers in March.  With all the late rain this year, I was sure the desert would be a blaze with yellow, blue, pink flowers.  We packed up the car, I loaded [...]

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