Advertisement

Twin Cities women chefs, restaurateurs demand fair play in media

Four local women address the challenges of the culinary world - and they are not talking about the kitchen.

April 21, 2015 at 9:14PM
Carrie Summer of Smack Shack (Jay Boller/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Advertisement

The March magazine cover of Mpls.St. Paul Magazine, where no women were included in its "Best Restaurants" photo, prompted local women chefs and restaurateurs to respond in unprecedented ways that included a letter to the public, as well as a film to be presented this weekend at the Women Chefs & Restaurateurs conference in New York City.

Filmmaker Joanna Kohler talked with four Minneapolis chef/restaurateurs to create "Women Chefs of the North": Kim Bartmann, who owns eight restaurants, including the Third Bird and Tiny Diner; Brenda Langton of Spoonriver; and Carrie Summer and Lisa Carlson, both of Chef Shack in Bay City, Wis., and Chef Shack Ranch and the Chef Shack food trucks. The film, "Women Chefs of the North," offers these recommendations for the media and for other women in the industry to improve the lives of their peers in the restaurant business.

  1. A redefinition of what's called "best food," possibly to include an acknowledgement of different styles, ethnicities and price points.
    1. A change in the media's presentation of the restaurant community to reflect its breadth and diversity.
      1. The creation of a local network of women chefs and restaurateurs.
        1. The support of young female chefs through a fast-track program with other women in the restaurant business around the country.

          Find out more at Women Chefs and Restaurateurs of the Twin Cities. The Minneapolis women are proposing to bring the 2017 conference to the Twin Cities, says Lisa Carlson.

          about the writer

          about the writer

          Lee Svitak Dean

          Taste editor

          See Moreicon

          More from Minnesota Star Tribune

          See More
          card image
          Provided/Sahan Journal

          Family members and a lawyer say they have been blocked from access to the bedside of Bonfilia Sanchez Dominguez, while her husband was detained and shipped to Texas within 24 hours.

          card image
          Advertisement