Cllctv Culture

Words to Live (and Eat) by

An interview with chef and cookbook author Del Sroufe by Nell Alk. Images 3-7 are from Sroufe’s new book, Forks Over Knives: The Cookbook, and were photographed by Cara Howe.

Chef Del SroufeColumbus-born, -bred, and -based Del Sroufe, author of Forks Over Knives: The Cookbook, has been a whiz in the kitchen since he was a wee one—eight years old, to be exact. “I’m self-taught,” he beams. A professional chef for 23 years, it wasn’t until he was hired at a vegetarian restaurant in 1989 that the Midwest man was first introduced to this less-than-conventional cuisine. “I fell in love,” he recalls. “I slowly became vegetarian and, by the time I opened my own bakery, I’d become vegan.”

Forks Over Knives: The CookbookHe’s referring to Wellness Forum Foods, which has offered  freshly prepared foods to shop visitors and shipped them frozen to customers across the country since 1997. “If you live in Ohio, you can come see me,” he grins, rattling off the amenities available to locals, which include classes, catering, and “…a deli case brimming with yummies.” Everything’s cruelty-free, of course.

Sroufe has always battled with his weight, which was a major motivation behind his initial adoption of a plant-based diet. Even while eschewing meat, dairy, and eggs, however, Sroufe packed on the pounds. The problem, he discovered, was processed and refined foods, devoid of nutritional value yet full of calories.

Thanks in part to the proximity between that discovery and the revelations advanced by breakout documentary Forks Over Knives—and of course to his own life-saving health overhaul, which he explains in greater detail below—Sroufe has come a long way since his slump. Now he’s on a roll with this book, in the midst of a four-week run on the New York Times Best Sellers list, and is justifiably optimistic about what’s to come. Read More…

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Dear John

An interview with menswear designer John Bartlett by Nell Alk. Photos 1-3 by Dan Lecca. Photo 4 by Nick Ugluizza.
John Bartlett

Designer John Bartlett

CFDA award-winning menswear designer John Bartlett returned to the fashion scene this week with his SS13 collection, a comfortably tailored, richly hued, linen-based line. While the visionary produced a nuanced presentation last winter, his first showcase in some time, this past Tuesday at noon the talent reestablished himself as a formidable figure within Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week. The last time his eponymous label rocked the runway in such a high-profile capacity, MBFW’s tents were erected in Bryant Park.

Bartlett’s resurgence is cause for celebration. A commitment to ethical fashion—rejecting animal-made materials and embracing the genuinely eco-conscious—sets him apart in the industry. In fact, I’m told Bartlett’s is the first show—ever—to stage at the official MBFW venue while explicitly foregoing the use of animals for clothes.

Of course, values in fashion can’t work without the “fashion” part, and Bartlett, as ever, delivers. This time around, his expert eye for playful luxurious style is lasered in, from head to toe, on long-underestimated linen. “Linen is the most sustainable fabric besides hemp. Even over cotton,” he explained to us onsite, minutes before 21 handsome men strutted their stuff for a room packed to capacity. Read More…

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The Tie Tailor

A profile of SKINNYFATTIES founder Joshua Brueckner. Written and photographed by Dan Mims.

Joshua Brueckner, founder of SKINNYFATTIESI’ve been saying “skinny fatties,” but I’m getting the feeling that, though acceptable, it’s not necessarily the preferred pronunciation. Joshua Brueckner, founder of SKINNYFATTIES, has been nice about letting me say it only my way up to this point, but now that I’m introducing him and his work to friends at Fontana’s in the LES, he offers an annotation. “You can also say it, ‘skinny fat ties,’” he states, before adding, “Either way!”

“Skinny fat ties” actually makes a little more sense—or at least delivers more descriptive precision. Under the SKINNYFATTIES label, Brueckner takes your old wide-load, 3.5-inch-plus neckties and converts them into the slimmer, more youthful cut preferred by today’s men-about-town. For those of us who have kept our ‘90s-chic wide ties until now, despite believing for the past several years that we’d never wear them again, Brueckner is our savior. Read More…

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Renaissance Woman

An interview with filmmaker and enterpriser Jennifer Clary by Nell Alk. Images #1 and #3 photographed by Marcel Indik. Image #4 photographed by Ashley H. Walker/Getty Images for GenArt.

Jennifer ClaryMeet Jennifer Clary. As a filmmaker, she’s the “Jen” in JenKev Productions, for which she wrote, directed, and co-produced new psychological thriller/dark comedy hybrid The Silent Thief. As an entrepreneur, she’s a co-founder of L.A.-based Gobble Green, a thriving vegan foods delivery service. The other executive half of each project—and in life—is her husband, Kevin Haberer, who also edited Thief.

Clary and Haberer were recently in New York to screen their new film—featuring young stars Toby Hemingway, Scout Taylor Compton, Josh Pence, and Cody Longo alongside silver screen stalwarts Kurt Fuller and Frances Fisher—during the 17th annual GenArt Film Festival at SVA Theater. At the celebratory after-party, Clary, wearing an animal-absent Rebecca Minkoff frock, spoke with us about The Silent Thief, life on set, and Gobble Green’s humble beginnings.

What about The Silent Thief appeals to you most as a storyteller?
I was really compelled by the idea that all of my characters had the capacity for great good and great evil. I find that entirely fascinating about mankind in general. Everybody has these moments where they’re at their best, but they’re so far and few between and there’s all this cunning that goes into everyday existence. I think this film highlights that in such a surreal way.

The Silent ThiefSuspense films often have a challenge executing the third act in a way that intensifies the suspense yet also keeps things realistic. Is that something you were wary of?
Yes. But I don’t feel that The Silent Thief is a traditional thriller. I approached it more as a character study. Characters are inherently thrilling. I think that, rather than trying to play into the genre, I really focused more on the development of this young man finding a place where he could belong.

Speaking of difficulty belonging, is that sort of what got you started on Gobble Green?
I was in Fort Worth visiting my in-laws who didn’t have anything for me to eat and I was starving and we started talking about it. There were no 100% vegan certified delivery services. I thought, Oh my god, that’s crazy. And so I told my husband, Oh my god, we have to start this, like, tomorrow. And he said, That sounds like a lot of work. And I said, Well, we have to do it. So we started it the next day. At the beginning, Kevin and I did everything. Now we have 28 employees. It’s done very well and I’m very proud. I think we’ve made a difference and we contribute to a lot of animal sanctuaries that we care about.

Jennifer ClaryWhen you met your husband, was he vegan, too?
I was vegetarian since I was three and my husband ate a more conventional diet. We had a bit of an issue because I wasn’t totally thrilled making out with someone who ate meat all the time. It just grossed me out. So, I kept encouraging him to go vegetarian. And, as he started reading the literature about it, he decided that for him personally, veganism was the more ethical thing to do. It was the right thing for him. So, I said, you know, let’s do it as a couple. And we just went all the way together.

That’s amazing. When was that?
Five years ago, I think.

Wait, I’m pretty sure I saw burgers and fishing in the film…
We had a fully vegan set. Gobble Green did the catering. I put into the film a lot of things about catch-and-release. There wasn’t any actual fishing; it was just a string. I would never fish—catch or release—but I felt my character would. That said, our turkey for Thanksgiving was made of seitan and all the burgers were vegan patties. Not one animal was injured in this movie at all. Period. It was a 100% vegan set. 100% animal-friendly. The dog was the most spoiled member of the team.

Was the dog vegan, too?
The dog was vegan on my set!

Cast and crew discuss The Silent Thief at GenArt 2012

So, if anyone wanted to consume animal products, they had to sneak off the set?
My take on it was, as long as I’m producing a project and it’s my money, I’m not going to financially support the unethical treatment of animals. I was very lucky to have a cast and crew who were very supportive of that. Kurt Fuller is actually vegan. And Frances is also largely vegan. They’re both really into treating animals with respect. I was lucky. It was just a fluke that I had a wonderful team of people with me.

You live in L.A., but you’ve surely tried some of the amazing vegan food NYC has to offer. When you come here, where do you like to eat?
TeaNY is great. I love Blossom. Wild Ginger. There are a few that are a must-hit. It’s a really great city for vegans—although, on this trip, I haven’t had much time to eat.

in sum
Jennifer Clary
Writer, Director, and Co-Producer of The Silent Thief.
Co-Founder of Gobble Green, a vegan food delivery business.
www.thesilentthiefmovie.com | www.gobblegreen.com
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Labor of LOVE

An interview with Organic Avenue founder Denise Mari by Nell Alk.

Denise Mari, founder of NYC-based healthy lifestyle company Organic Avenue

In 2000, Denise Mari started healthy lifestyle company Organic Avenue out of her home. As of two weeks ago, she’s opened OA’s tenth storefront, located on the northeast corner of 21st Street and 8th Avenue in trendy Chelsea. Known for an array of organic, raw vegan offerings (from juices and smoothies to kale chips to wraps to gluten-free chocolate tarts) and a grab-and-go M.O., this latest location—though it’s currently in “pop-up” stage—will soon be a sit-and-stay kind of place.

Mari, now 38, is what she eats. She follows the nutrition philosophy behind the nourishment she sells, summed up by OA mantra “LOVE,” a.k.a. the “Live (long i) Organic Vegan Experience.” With a slender frame, glowing skin, sparkling eyes, radiant hair, and a truly loving mindset, Mari’s got the traits to match the gait.

But can she also talk the talk? I stopped by the grand opening of OA’s latest location to find out.

First off, what’s in store for this new location?
This space is going to be home to our new expanded concept. We’re looking forward to incorporating more community interaction, more seating, more foods and juices in more than a grab-and-go format. We may have an elegant bar serving elixirs and smoothies. Come winter, you’ll be able to heat your soups. We have a full kitchen here, so we’ll start working with consciously cooked food—really clean, but allowing us to offer more than raw. I think a lot of people need that bridge between the two.

Walnut Dulse Wrap from Organic AvenueHow would you classify your own diet?
I’m vegan. I eat predominantly raw food, but not a hundred percent. Vegetarian 18-plus years, 13-plus years vegan/mostly raw.

What first inspired you to get there?
It began in childhood. I had a love for animals. When I was eight, I went fishing with my father and made the connection between fish and food. I didn’t feel like it was something I could consume, so I gave it up. Then came college. I met my first vegetarian and started asking myself, Why am I still eating meat when I love animals? If I could be healthy without it, then I wanted to explore it. So, I became a vegetarian and, about five years later, became interested in actually learning about what I was consuming. I visited PETA’s website and found out there’s an entire industry associated with the byproducts of animals. I felt very uncomfortable about this. Then, I learned about veganism and, luckily, raw foodism at the same time. I became more health-conscious and chose to eat more intelligently.

Aside from Organic Ave, what’s your favorite eating establishment in NYC?
If I’m sticking close to raw, you’ll find me at Pure Food & Wine. If I’m looking for comfort food, you’ll find me in one of the Blossoms. V-Note on the Upper East Side I tend to enjoy very much.

Cucumber Juice from Organic AvenueWhat motivates you to eat raw?
The more juicing I do and the less cooked food I eat, the better I look and feel. It’s motivation, because you see results right away. Go a couple days on cucumber and green juice and you’ll see the glow.

If someone’s not already juicing, why should they start?
If you feel great and think you’re getting younger, don’t. But, if you have any chronic symptoms, feel like your energy is low, or you’re aging faster than you should, I suggest trying an unprocessed raw vegan diet with lots of juicing. It really is a panacea for health, the planet, and animals.

What do you say if someone says Organic Avenue’s offerings are too expensive?
It’s true, they are expensive. The reason? We don’t skimp. We use only the highest quality ingredients. Organic certified. If people are eager to spend $12 on a cocktail at a bar, well, this $9 juice is an investment in your health and has long-term benefits.

Some of Organic Avenue's juice offerings.

Your costs go down in other ways, I think.
You reduce time out of work. Your energy’s up, so you’re exercising more than you were. Your clarity of purpose is there. Endless benefits. After going raw, I felt the best I’d ever felt. And spiritually, it tapped me into the idea of Organic Avenue and allowed me to discover my purpose—what I was going to do with my life.

Do you still exercise a lot?
Not as much as I’d like, but you know, the diet takes care of a lot. At one point I was 155 pounds. I was overweight, sluggish, fatigued. Not anymore. I think about a horse eating grass all day but being this extremely healthy, muscular animal. Many of the biggest mammals on the planet are raw vegans. It’s a choice we humans have. Do we want to live a lifestyle that supports more death, sickness, and disease? Or do we want to live a lifestyle of peace and nonviolence?

in sum
Organic Avenue
Live, organic, vegan foods and juices, including cleanses.
Newest location: 216 8th Avenue, at 21st Street (map)
Mon-Sun 8am-9pm | love@organicavenue.com
www.organicavenue.com
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Cooking with Class

Written by Nell Alk. Photo #1 by Nell Alk, photos #2-5 by Danielle Ricciardi.

Chef Daniel Strong affably instructs

There’s something about the folks at Haven’s Kitchen that we at Cllctv really appreciate. It isn’t that they’re entirely vegan (they’re not); it’s their recognition of the ever-growing community that is. Beyond their coffee counter, which caters to plant-powered people with soy and almond milks as well as scrumptious dairy- and egg-free chocolate chip cookies (more than can be said of most omni outposts, even in progressive NYC), they also offer cruelty-free cooking and baking classes in their spacious, well-equipped teaching kitchen.

Veggie Burgers and Vegan BeerChickpea & Olive, a young catering company comprised of cute couple Danielle Ricciardi and Daniel Strong (at top), hosted just such a class in mid-July. (Strong was previously sous chef at Dell’Anima, so he knows his slicing, dicing, and otherwise; Ricciardi currently tends bar and waits tables there, while handling operations for C&O.) The theme of the lesson? Veggie Burgers and Vegan Beer, which, on this occasion, was broadly compelling enough to attract more non-vegans than vegans. 

As about a dozen aproned, culinary-curious New Yorkers gathered ’round the island stovetop at HK, Strong started off with knife basics (including how to properly cut onions, which is more specialized than you’d think), then proceeded to show us how to prepare the various elements of the patty. Once put through a food processor but before being cooked, we sampled the delicious mix of black beans, hominy corn, and several other ingredients including ancho and guajillo chiles, which added both sweetness and kick. Read More…

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To the Rescue

An interview with Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary co-founder and The Lucky Ones author Jenny Brown by Nell Alk. Photos #2 and 4 by Derek Goodwin.

The Lucky Ones by Jenny Brown and Gretchen PrimackWoodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary’s sassy co-founder/director Jenny Brown can now add published author to her resume. The Lucky Ones: My Passionate Fight for Farm Animals came out five days ago and, with assistance from her co-writer and friend (“I couldn’t have done it without her!”) Gretchen Primack, the book offers an alternately tear-jerking, howl-inducing tracing of Brown’s courageous path to the present.

From losing a leg to bone cancer at just ten years of age to working as an undercover investigator at a Texas stockyard to creating one of the country’s premier safe havens for rescued farmed animals along with her husband, Doug Abel, Brown’s story is a remarkable one. Even so, we surmise that the stories of the animals saved and cared for by WFAS—individuals who thrive when respected and loved and who suffer greatly when marginalized and commodified—are the ones she most hopes people will take away from the book.

Personally, I took it all away, and it was a great pleasure to be able to chat with Brown about The Lucky Ones. (And you can chat with her yourself at MooShoes tonight for the NYC book release party.) Read More…

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A Breath of Fresh Air

A profile of Swanand Yoga by Nell Alk.

Swanand Yoga

In a city where real estate is as squeezed as Times Square on NYE, it’s not unusual to find weirdly disparate businesses next to, or on top of, each other. To get to Swanand Yoga, already situated amidst the general chaos of West 29th street near 7th Ave, you have to pass through the pungent smells and scenes, respectively, of a first-floor cigar shop and a second-floor tax preparer’s office straight out of a ’70s noir flick. Which, once you’re on the third floor, makes Swanand’s six-month-old space even more of a sight for sore eyes, a place to slow fast-walking feet and still racing mind.

Family-owned and -operated, Swanand—literally translating to “innate happiness”—welcomes with yellow accents, minimalist décor, and a warm, new-looking wood floor. Hatha-style (often conceptualized as traditional, back-to-basics) yoga is the specialty here, and from the first friendly welcome to the magic on the mat, from downward dog to shavasana, the aim is to help the stresses of metropolitan life melt away.

Downward Dog at Swanand YogaAt Swanand, breath is the trick. The instructor for the class I took devoted serious attention to the quality of our inhale-exhale, pushing us to let airflow drive our movements and poses as opposed to brute force or strained exertion. Zen settled in as I let go of the grind with each posture and breath, and I needed it because, in usual harried fashion, I had been running late.

Not only did the instructor wait for me, but he also waited for the girl who was still later than I. Then again, on a Tuesday evening, it was just we two and Alan Cook, our yogi guru guide. Interactions during the lesson were casual and tailored, Cook accommodating our respective comfort zones and challenging us when he felt we needed it. As someone who’d already been well initiated to yoga with vinyasa and bikram—all about working and sweating it out—Swanand’s drier, cooler, gentler atmosphere proved a refreshing change of pace.

Swanand Yoga | shrineAnd sometimes, a more relaxed, slower approach actually achieves better results anyway. Thanks to Cook’s calm tone of voice, tranquil disposition, and accommodating attitude, I came closer than ever to mastering an arm balance. Not having to forge through the high temps and fast tempo of my usual studio, I was granted time to try…and try again. It’s since instilled in me a confidence that, yes, I can conquer the poses (at least some of them!) that up until now had made me too nervous to try.

After all, even when doing something as mental chatter-dissolving as yoga, it’s tough to disengage from the feeling, conscious or subconscious, justified or not, that it’s just another proving-ground or competition. Especially given New York’s ambitious, go-getter culture, it’s not hard to imagine yoga becoming less about achieving inner peace and more about achieving ever-more-strenuous physical feats or impressing the cute guy or girl one up and two over. Swanand counters that feeling, encouraging individuals of all ages, shapes, sizes, and degrees of familiarity to find an elusive inner peace at the center of the greatest human maelstrom in the world.

in sum
Swanand Yoga
Hosting Hatha-style yoga classes and special events like Yoga for Foodies (100% vegetarian).
171 W. 29th Street, 3rd Floor (map)
(212) 502-4181 | info@swanandyoga.com
www.swanandyoga.com
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Gluten-Free Gluttony

A review of Park Slope eatery Sun In Bloom by Nell Alk.

The Bella Devine Salad at Sun In Bloom

They say good things are hard to find, but vegan, mostly gluten-free, raw-happy Park Slope gem Sun In Bloom is pretty easy. For this Chelsea-dweller, it’s just four travel directions: across the street, down the Brooklyn-bound 2-3 line, off the Bergen Street stop, down the block. Non-red-liners can take the 4, 5, B, D, N, R, or Q trains to Atlantic Ave, which means just a short five-minute stroll during the home stretch.

Then again, the relative convenience is almost irrelevant. As founder Aimee Follette noted during our visit, SIB is a destination restaurant; many of its loyal customers don’t live nearby, at least by NYC standards. After a recent lunch there, it’s easy to see why they’re willing to travel. Read More…

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Illustrating the Problem

A pictorial Q&A with artist and author Sue Coe by Nell Alk. Images courtesy of OR Books.

Cruel: Bearing Witness to Animal Exploitation

In her latest book, Cruel: Bearing Witness to Animal Exploitation, artist and author Sue Coe presents beautiful illustrations of the incredibly ugly brutalities of animal harvesting. Sketchpad in hand, Coe’s been granted access to places few industry outsiders have been, absorbing hellish scenes and putting them to paper. This is no small feat: animal exploiters generally try very hard to make their exploitations invisible, aided by consumers who try not to see. Tackling that problem from both ends, Cruel is as much a mirror as a chronicle, calmly but resolutely compelling readers to confront their own roles in the food system they’ve supported.

Observations and musings accompanying the visuals are as unflinching as the images themselves, and poignancy is in long supply. Coe’s portrayals demand an emotional response yet also ignite an intellectual one, with mostly grayscale (sometimes red-accented, sometimes beige-tinged) illustrations, handwritten notes, and sentences like these: “We have only partial glimpses of truth, as though illuminated by lightning only for a fraction of a second. If we could see what we have done to the earth, we would go mad with sorrow.” Read More…

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