Having overseen events catering for as many as 2,500 people in one day, Elizabeth Mullen has learned to roll with the punches. But nothing could have prepared her for the boar's blood.
Mullen, the executive chef for Chowgirls Killer Catering, is one of the organizers behind Minnesota Central Kitchen, a new program that puts furloughed restaurant chefs to work making hot meals for those facing hunger as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
Inspired by the work of humanitarian and chef José Andrés, Minnesota Central Kitchen is leveraging the talent and resources of restaurants to provide hunger relief in the midst of a crisis. The program kicked off the same week last month that Gov. Tim Walz ordered Minnesota restaurants to close for on-premise dining.
It's a collaboration of Chowgirls, the Bachelor Farmer and Alma restaurants, regional food-shelf supplier Second Harvest Heartland, Loaves and Fishes meal distribution sites and the food hub Good Acre.
Minnesota Central Kitchen was launched to employ chefs, rescue food before it becomes waste and feed the hungry.
A key component at the time was to utilize fully stocked pantries from restaurant kitchens that were no longer operating. It was up to Mullen's staff to make something out of whatever ingredients were coming in from some of the Twin Cities' finest restaurants. But boar's blood?
"We were like, 'What are we going to do with that?' It was kind of like, 'Ehhh,' " she said, wrinkling her nose.
Most of the restaurants' unusual ingredients have since been depleted as the project has grown. The core team started out making 2,000 meals per week. Three weeks later, the program is on track to producing 15 times that amount.