ROZALIE’S RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DINING ON CAMPUS 3/10

Rozalie Czesana '18, your guide to the best of dining on campus.

Rozalie Czesana ’18, your guide to the best of dining on campus.

Lunch

Herbed Roast Beef Sandwich; Vegetable Bibimbap @FORBES

Eggplant Rollatini; Greek Stuffed Peppers @ROCKY/MATHEY

Sesame Tofu* Salad; Southwest Beef Lasagna @WHITMAN

Dinner

Tri-Color Quinoa with Apples & Craisins; New Castle Ale & Cheddar Soup; Basa** Florentine @BUTLER/WILSON

Vegan Paella; Broccoli Almondine @CJL

Creole Shrimp** in Cheesy Grits @FORBES

Seafood** & Mushroom Risotto Station @GRAD COLLEGE

*House Foods organic, non-GMO, OU, kosher tofu made of American-grown soy

**Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program; nearly 80% of total seafood purchases are categorized as sustainable in accordance with Seafood Watch’s principles.

****spotlight: grits

 

ROZALIE’S RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DINING ON CAMPUS 3/9

Rozalie Czesana '18, your  guide to the best of dining on campus.

Rozalie Czesana ’18, your guide to the best of dining on campus.

Lunch

Peruvian Chilies & Chickpeas; Mashed Butternut Squash @BUTLER/WILSON

Tomato Chowder; Mixed Greens with Berries & Dried Fruit @FORBES

Penne & Wild Mushrooms @ROCKY/MATHEY

Baked Potato & Cheddar Soup; Cajun BBQ Burger @WHITMAN

Dinner

Stuffed Pork** Loin with Apples & Bacon @BUTLER/WILSON

Hearty Vegetable Cholent @CJL

Chicken* Dijonaise; Baba Ghanoush; Stuffed Grape Leaves @GRAD COLLEGE

Asian Sesame Ginger Quinoa Salad; Miso Glazed Tilapia*** @WHITMAN

*Bell & Evans organic, air-chilled chicken, no antibiotics, no growth hormones, from Pennsylvania Dutch country

**Leidy’s® pork products: American Humane Association Free Farmed certified because of the humane and special care given to their animals

***Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program; nearly 80% of total seafood purchases are categorized as sustainable in accordance with Seafood Watch’s principles.

 

****spotlight: dolmades: stuffed grape leaves

 

ROZALIE’S RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DINING ON CAMPUS 3/8

Rozalie Czesana '18, your  guide to the best of dining on campus.

Rozalie Czesana ’18, your guide to the best of dining on campus.

Lunch

Rustic Chicken* Panini; Spinach Salad with Raspberry Orange Vinaigrette @FORBES

Shrimp*** Pad Thai; Apple & Walnut Tossed Salad @ROCKY/MATHEY

Sesame Chicken*; Pear & Arugula Salad with Pecans & Parmesan; Sticky Rice @WHITMAN

Dinner

Organic Tofu** Vegetable Lasagna; Honey & Lavender Roasted Chicken* Breast @BUTLER/WILSON

Pan Broiled Cod*** with Lentils; Sautéed Zucchini with Squash & Mushrooms @CJL

Szechuan Tempeh with Cashews @FORBES

*Bell & Evans organic, air-chilled chicken, no antibiotics, no growth hormones, from Pennsylvania Dutch country

**House Foods organic, non-GMO, OU, kosher tofu made of American-grown soy

***Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program; nearly 80% of total seafood purchases are categorized as sustainable in accordance with Seafood Watch’s principles.

 

****spotlight: lavender

 

ROZALIE’S RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DINING ON CAMPUS 3/07

Rozalie Czesana '18, your  guide to the best of dining on campus.

Rozalie Czesana ’18, your guide to the best of dining on campus.

Lunch

Vegan Vegetable Gumbo; BLT Chopped Salad @FORBES

Seafood*** & Grain Burger; Sautéed Green Kale @RCKY/MATHEY

Cream of Asparagus Soup; Roasted Beet, Potato, Walnut**** & Goat Cheese Salad; Indian Curry Lamb @WHITMAN

Dinner

Grilled Tofu** with Pico di Gallo; Pork Chop Anchiote; Split Pea Soup @BUTLER/WILSON

Classic Chipotle Steak; Balsamic Roasted Vegetables @CJL

Farro, Roasted Vegetables & Fontina @ROCKY/MATHEY

Ecuadorian Vegetable Soup; Cuban Roast Chicken* @GRAD COLLEGE

*Bell & Evans organic, air-chilled chicken, no antibiotics, no growth hormones, from Pennsylvania Dutch country

**House Foods organic, non-GMO, OU, kosher tofu made of American-grown soy

***Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program; nearly 80% of total seafood purchases are categorized as sustainable in accordance with Seafood Watch’s principles.

****A CLOSER LOOK: English walnuts

 

Campus – and beyond – as lab

There are abundant opportunities to use the physical campus as a laboratory, as evidenced by this link from Sustainability at Princeton, and this link, also there, suggesting research questions. Among them, and inspired by them:

How can we use the arts and the humanities to build community of the table? In turn, how can the community of the table drive the science crucial to the future of humanity and Earth?

If the humanities offer insights into people’s motives—why different people do what they do and think what they think—then how might we put history, for example, to work to understand the embrace or rejection of (or indifference to) Princeton’s initiatives on food, energy, waste, transportation – and the intersection of those complex systems?

What populations of pollinators and other beneficial insects exist in the vicinity and what are their relative impacts on plant populations?

What’s the best mode of transportation for students from campus to agricultural projects under consideration for development along Washington Road?

Looking first at Dining Services, the most immediate connection: How can the university effectively encourage sustainable food choices? What knowledge, what principles, what basic understanding, what decision-making framework, what attention to detail must be in place, individually and in society, to make those food choices the default?

What factors cause wasted food on campus?

How can your dining hall or eating club achieve zero waste?

Why are there leftovers in sufficient quantities to demand donation?

Then there are opportunities to partner with businesses around town for research during off-peak hours.

In the NJ food shed, several artisan practitioners are exploring the possibility of research projects and/or internships, including

• Scott Anderson, owner of Elements and Mistral and protege of James Beard Award Winner and Science, Society & Dinner lecturer Craig Shelton;
• Jim Nawn, owner of Great Road Farm and three farm-to-table restaurants in Princeton – two in partnership with the university;
• Jon and Robin McConaughy of Brick Farm, with agriculture, market and restaurants – they want to create a closed-loop system with an institution in town and their enterprises;
• Jonathan and Nina White of Bobolink Dairy & Bakehouse, where students can intern and learn how to build carbon in the soil, make award-winning cheeses and breads with locally grown heirloom grains;
• Liz Lempert, mayor of Princeton, is leading a Bloomberg Mayor’s grant in an effort to divert residents’ food waste to a compost program rather than the landfill; and,
• Adrian Hyde, executive director of the Northeast Organic Farming Association in New Jersey, a nonprofit that nurtures food-centered entrepreneurship.