Rancho el Rincon

OITF visited Rancho el Rincon, just south of Santa Barbara, for the first time last year, and we knew we’d be back. The view of the sparkling Pacific was stunning, and we set the table under trees burgeoning with ripe citrus. Host Jehanne Brown raised her son Nick here. A sixth-generation Carpinteria farmer with a deep love for this land, Farmer Nick tends acres of pesticide-free tropical fruit trees—citrus, guava, avocado, pomegranate, passion fruit, cherimoya. Rancho el Rincon is all about small-scale, labor-intensive farming that delivers hand-picked fruit at the peak of freshness and flavor with minimal intervention. Nick will walk us around and tell us how he does it all. Then The Dutchess team will take over. Opened just last year, The Dutchess took Ojai by storm with Kelsey Brito’s luscious pastries and Chef Saw Naing’s fabulous Burmese-Indian cuisine. Using the harvest from our friends at Tehachapi Heritage Grain and produce from 50/50 Farm—established a few years ago when The Dutchess owners Zoe Nathan and Josh Loeb, who still operate the famed Rustic Canyon and other L.A. faves, moved out to Ojai to start farming—The Dutchess exemplifies the locavore ethic, interpreted through a Burmese-Indian lens. Think tea leaf salad, braised beef masala, tandoori-style chicken and kabocha squash curry.

Flying Disc Ranch

Farmer Robert Lower’s date garden is a magical place. Robert dreamed this place up in 1979, then set about to literally create it from scratch, interplanting rows of date palms and citrus in the desert of the Coachella Valley. Today, this oasis of softly rustling palm fronds and fragrant citrus blossoms is a beautiful setting for our long table. And Farmer Robert definitely knows how to have a good time; he’s been a regular at our Coachella Music Festival appearances for years. Chef Brian Redzikowski of Kettner Exchange will join us in the desert kitchen; this is his eleventh time as an Outstanding guest chef. Together, farmer and chef will make magic happen in the garden.

Kualoa Ranch

Wow. We pinch ourselves every time we get the chance to return to Kualoa Ranch. This spectacular slice of land on the windward coast of O’ahu was once a place of refuge for Hawaiian kings. Now it’s home to a 4,000-acre nature reserve and working farm that occasionally doubles as a Hollywood film set (an impressive list of movies and TV series were filmed here, including Jurassic Park). When it comes to table views, this is just about as beautiful as it gets. Majestic mountains and verdant valleys are surrounded by secret beaches, tropical fruit orchards and ancient aquaculture ponds brimming with oysters and shrimp. Not to mention herds of happy grazing cows, heritage pigs and a plethora of fresh vegetable beds—all part of Kualoa’s diversified agricultural program, which offers responsibly raised food to the local O’ahu community. We’ll get a taste of all that goodness with our meal from guest chef Ed Kenney. Ed’s helmed the field kitchen quite a few times since we first started coming to O’ahu back in 2012. He’s also a regular James Beard semifinalist for Best Chef: West. Born on the island and hugely passionate about his local food and farming community, Ed runs each of his celebrated O’ahu restaurants on the premise of “local first, organic whenever possible, with aloha always.” That’s our kind of chef. 

BigDaddy’s Farm

Rex Clonts is a fifth-generation farmer who grew up here in Oviedo, a charming town populated by chickens that freely roam the streets. Rex’s grand-dad was the original Big Daddy, who moved his young family to central Florida in 1923 and started out with a plot of celery planted in the rich Black Hammock soil of Seminole County. Today Rex and his wife Denise still grow celery for their neighbors, selling it along with a vast variety of other vegetable crops, from choi sum to purple-topped turnips. Committed to organic agriculture, BigDaddy’s re-certifies their farm every year and regularly tests the soil to monitor fertility, using carefully selected cover crops and no-till farming to rebuild the fields as a vital living ecosystem. Summer is downtime for Florida farmers, but in January, the place will be bustling with energy, and burgeoning fields will give Chef Bruno plenty to work with. Brazilian-born Bruno has lots of experience with improvising, having worked in high-end spots like Normans, taught at Le Cordon Bleu, operated a food truck and captivated central Florida tastebuds with his roving, after-hours Foreigner Experience pop-ups. Now he’s settled into his own brick-and-mortar place, and he’ll bring his omakase menu to BigDaddy’s field.

Sweetwater Organic Community Farm

Chris Kenrick’s six-acre farm in Tampa is beaming with life and overflowing with all sorts of organically grown vegetables and herbs. It’s also home to the area’s oldest-running CSA program and farmer’s market, providing hundreds of Tampa Bay residents with fresh-as-it-gets produce year-round. Chris is a champion of local foodsheds and sustainable agriculture and believes in growing community from the ground up. His community-driven ethos includes farmer apprenticeship programs, hands-on educational workshops, farm tours and events for both children and adults. We’ll celebrate this inspiring work with a feast in their beautiful fields along Sweetwater Creek. Guest chef Eric McHugh spent more than twenty years in Tampa Bay area restaurants, including Hew Parlor at The Fenway Hotel, before helming the pans at Hotel Haya’s famed Flor Fina. He’ll bring us a taste of the restaurant’s unique menu inspired by the Cuban and Latin roots of Tampa’s Ybor City neighborhood. Think coconut clam chowder, calamansi ceviche and wood-fired brick chicken with plantains.

Anna Maria Island

This 7-mile stretch of white sand beaches and turquoise waters is spectacularly beautiful and beaming with Old Florida charm. You’ll feel your shoulders relax the moment you arrive here, and once you dig your toes into the silky sand, you may never want to leave. The island’s laid-back lifestyle is one of the reasons we keep coming back. The other is the plethora of fresh seafood and locally grown produce we’re lucky to feast on at the table. And then there’s the views of swimming dolphins and manatees paired with glorious sunsets over the Gulf. This year we are thrilled to welcome Ed Chiles—owner of the Anna Maria restaurant, Sandbar—and his team to the beach kitchen for the third time. Ed’s restaurant Sandbar is known for its seasonal seafood-centric menu sourced from nearby waters and nearby Florida farms. He’ll be joined by four other star chefs from the Chiles Group including Ted Louloudes & Helena Vavrikova of Anna Maria Bake House, Thomas Villetto of Beach House Waterfront Restaurant, and Aaron Kulzer of Mar Vista Dockside Restaurant. Host fisherman Brian Lacey is a good friend of the Chiles restaurant group, supplying them with everything from stone crab to Spanish mackerel to mullet. And farmers Zack Rasmussen & Natasha Ahuja of Gamble Creek Farms provide the vegetables. The three of them will join us at the table to tell us the story of what’s on our plates, while we toast to their hard work with a few glasses of crisp wine on the beach.

Holman’s Harvest

An abundance of organic salad greens, tropical fruit trees and pastured hens pecking through lush green fields. This family-run farm provides ample places to dine and an inspiring story to boot. Farmers Marty and Liza Holman use permaculture practices to keep their soil healthy, their crops nutritious, and their ecosystem thriving—which means farming without synthetic herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers, and using permanent bed systems to protect the delicate fungal networks and root systems underground. We’ll learn all about their impressive farming system on the farm tour before sitting down at the long table for a delectable four-course feast from guest chef Jason Weiner. This will be our 16th (!) event with Jason, an OITF celebrity known for his hearty seasonal meals and friendly demeanor in the field kitchen. 

In 2020, he opened a Palm Beach outpost of his highly acclaimed New York restaurant Almond, quickly linking up with local farmers like the Holmans. Jason joined us at the Holmans’ last winter and cooked up a particularly delicious dessert with Liza and Marty’s star fruit, hibiscus and pink peppercorns. We can’t wait to see what he does for his sweet 16th! 

Lighthouse Beach on Paradise Island

We will be setting the table at Lighthouse Beach on Paradise Island in Nassau, a gorgeous spit of green grasses and white-gold sand jutting out into the variegated turquoise and blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean. Currently, the the island’s lighthouse and keeper’s quarters are being restored to their former glory as the Paradise Island Beach Club, paired with a tree planting initiative to populate the landscape with palm trees and indigenous flora. We’re also hosting one of the region’s very best chefs in the beach kitchen. Chef Simeon Hall Jr. is a Bahamian celebrity and a self-proclaimed “culinary griot” who’s equally passionate about storytelling as he is locally sourced cuisine. Simeon was born and raised on the island of New Providence and draws inspiration from his Bahamian and Gullah Geechee heritage, along with his wealth of culinary experience on the islands and beyond. In the last few years, Simeon’s cooked at the famed Charleston Wine & Food Festival, written for Bon Appetit, co-starred in a National Geographic culinary show, and drafted a cookbook. Needless to say he’s been busy, and we are delighted that he’s chosen to spend the evening with us on the beach. You can expect a colorful and fragrant feast featuring fresh catch from our host fisherwoman Shacara Lightbourne and all sorts of local delicacies from the surrounding lands and sea. Conch is sure to make an appearance, along with the islands’ bounty of tropical fruits. Come hungry!

Secret Sea Cave

This dinner promises to be a delightful mix of mystery and familiarity. We’re no strangers to a secret beach setting, but as the name of this event suggests, we’re setting the table in a special spot this time around. With a soundtrack of crashing waves and echoing gulls, and views of the setting sun on the distant horizon, this special secret sea cave is worthy of the uncertainty you may feel entering coordinates into your map to get there. We promise you’ll be well taken care of by our old friend and field kitchen veteran, Matt Millea. Matt has spent time in many celebrated restaurants, including Big Sur Bakery and Post Ranch Inn, as well as touring the world with OITF as expeditor and chef. He promises to delight you with his take on H&H’s fresh caught fish while our favorite fisherman, Hans Havemen himself, delights you with stories of his catch at the table. Some secrets are better kept, while others are best shared with friends. We can’t wait to share this one with you.

Pie Ranch

It wouldn’t be a complete Outstanding in the Field season without our annual last-dinner-of-the-year foraging feast at the iconic Pie Ranch in Pescadero. Stomping around the woods this time of year can uncover some truly incredible secrets of the forest. Our host forager and king of mushrooms Todd Spanier will lead us on a treasure hunt through the moss-covered redwoods, and give some valuable insider knowledge on the forests of Northern California. We’ll also hear from Pie Ranch host farmers Nancy Vail and Jered Lawson, who have been operating their 14-acre farm in the shape of a slice of pie since 2005. Guest chef Brad Briske is deeply dedicated to sourcing from small-scale Bay Area farms like Pie Ranch. He’s cooked a few events for us over the years and each of his menus is uniquely inspired by whatever’s freshest and best at the time. At his Soquel restaurant Home, he’s known for hyperlocal California cuisine featuring everything from house-cured wild game to handmade pastas to fresh-caught Monterey Bay fish. Expect a feast full of foraged mushrooms (this is the height of porcini season!) and fall vegetables paired with earthy autumn wines.