Food Philosophy « Yoga For Foodies

How Yoga for Foodies Came to Be

June 9th, 2010

Carlos Petrini, Founder of the Slow Food Movement

There’s nothing I love more than a double double with cheese, grilled onions, ketchup and mustard. But my love is on the rocks. After watching the movie Food Inc last summer, I realized I’d been completely and totally ignorant about what really goes on behind the scenes in the food world. In other words, where is that double double with cheese really coming from? Food Inc. exposes the horrible conditions the animals endure, the corruption of the food corporations and federal government, and the impact on the consumer’s health. After that movie, I took an interest in the Slow Food movement which was started by Carlos Petrini in 1986. Petrini heard that McDonald’s was opening in a sacred place in Italy and he was, to say the least, pissed off. He saw that “fast food” was overtaking the world and to counter, he started “slow food.” It’s a movement about supporting local farmers, treating animals with compassion, and most importantly: slowing down.

Petrini says, “Some experiences which are crucial to our maturity cannot be speeded up, and are only possible if they occur slowly.”  So much of our modern society is about speed, convenience, and efficiency. Do you remember what you did a week ago Wednesday? What about 2 weeks ago Monday? It’s all a big blur. And when we get lost in that blur, we lose touch with not just the subtle flavors in food but also the subtleties in our soul that define our character. So…having been deeply moved by Food Inc and having spent the past 5 years traveling the country teaching Yoga + Chocolate and Yoga + Wine workshops, I embarked upon a new journey in January of this year: Yoga for Foodies.

Throughout 2010, I’ve been collaborating with chefs around the nation who support the “farm-to-table” Slow Food movement. From James Beard Award winner Dean Fearing in Dallas to one of America’s top vegan chefs, Joy Pierson, in New York City, we have co-created these Yoga for Foodies experiences to share how when we slow down and live in the moment, we realize that fresh, whole foods from local farms are satiating to every level of our being. Yoga for Foodies begins with a 1 hour gentle flowing yoga class which quiets the mind, engages the senses and delivers the participant to a different state. In this state, we don’t necessarily crave the buzzing stimuli from our cell phone. In this state, we remember how life was before we got our first cell phone and first email address in the mid 1990’s. Back then, we had more time to talk, to listen, to daydream, to indulge in a spare moment rather than use it to sift through tweets, status updates, voicemails, and texts.

In many ways, Yoga for Foodies is so simple: creating and enjoying a spare moment. Here’s how it works: practice yoga for an hour, then eat dinner in a communal setting with your fellow yogis.   But eating dinner and enjoying conversation with complete strangers is so old school. In today’s fast-paced, convenient, efficient, connected world, who has time to converse while eating? Who has time to eat slowly, enjoying each bite? Who has time to listen to the chef share the story of the ingredients, the farms in which they originate, the inspiration for the recipes?

The yogi Iyengar said, “We confuse speed and movement with all there is in life.” There’s no doubt that speed, movement, efficiency and results are important. But when we move in a frenzied way through the day, we don’t eat… we “feed.” This high-velocity lifestyle diminishes the flavor and essence of life. In the process, we’ve grown accustomed to eating on the run often being “nourished” by a bag of chips and a sandwich to go.  Our palates have evolved to enjoy tastes that are invented in factories by food scientists. Even the most delicious and auspicious meals are interrupted by buzzing cell phones and overstimulated minds.

Overstimulated has become the norm and the norm is, in my opinion, F.U.B.A.R. I don’t know about you but I feel completely overwhelmed with the amount of information coming at me each day. And the gadgets are only getting smaller, the information is only getting more plentiful and arriving with more velocity. It’s time to push back against technology, to take a deep breath, to eat a meal in peace and quiet. Because unless we learn to protect our moments with the same vigor that we are applying to protect our environment, we’re gonna be in for a big surprise when we have very little by which to remember our lives.

Consider that there are only a few moments we remember in a day. I tend to think they are moments associated with beauty, laughter, or sensory delight. In my book, I have a mantra: each day, be sure to have one beautiful moment, one funny moment, and one delicious moment. Stop to check out the street musician on your way to work, if only because you have to check off your beautiful moment of the day. Remember to laugh at something that might otherwise stress you out. As goes the quote, “A person without a sense of humor is like a wagon without springs, jolted by every pebble in the road.” And most fun of all, take the time in your day to indulge in something delicious: a piece of chocolate, a sip of wine, a juicy bite of a summer fruit.

When you look back on your life, the things we remember are not based on speed or efficiency, they are based on color, sound, tears, and tastes. We don’t remember entire vacations or relationships, let alone days or weeks.  We only remember moments. As Robin Sharma said, “Life is just a series of moments. If you miss the moments, you miss your life.”


Author of the bestselling book Yeah Dave’s Guide to Livin’ the Moment, David Romanelli is collaborating with renown New York City based cookbook author and chef Pamela Morgan to present Yoga for Foodies at Exhale in Bridgehampton on Saturday, July 10.

Yoga for Foodies…Phoenix

May 1st, 2010

Yoga for Foodies…Phoenix
April 30, 2010
at At One Yoga with Patty Emmert, Director of Slow Food Phoenix

I finished watching the movie Food INC and felt like an ignorant fool. Food INC exposes what goes on behind the scenes in the food industry…cruel treatment of animals, corporate corruption, and the endangerment of the consumer. It’s easy to turn a blind eye but this movie makes you want to wake up.

It makes you realize that we put so much emphasis on speed, efficiency, and convenience and so little emphasis on slowing down and savoring life. The Slow Food movement is all about restoring a slower pace, treating animals fairly, and supporting local farmers to return to a time when a good meal was a chance to commune, relax, and live in the moment.  Last Friday’s Yoga for Foodies event was a collaboration with the Director of Slow Food’s Phoenix chapter, Patty Emmert.    Patty’s primary push has been to launch the Phoenix Public Market which is a showcase for local producers.

The day prior to the event, Patty took me to Maya’s Farm run by local legend Maya Dailey. We picked veggies from the farm, brought them back to the Phoenix Public Market,  and Patty prepared a feast including chilled Hungarian cucumber soup, an organic red quinoa salad, and Vanilla Panna Cotta with roasted local strawberries. And best of all to top things off were Blackgird vegan cocoa nib truffles made by local Phoenicians Alexandra and Andrea Maw and Anthony Anderson.

After some yoga at my home studio At One Yoga, we indulged, drank wine, conversed, and were in no hurry at to leave to go anywhere. As one of my favorite yoga teachers always says, “Nowhere to go, no one to be, nothing to do.”

Here’s the menu from Yoga for Foodies Phoenix:

Yoga for Foodies in Washington Post Express

April 29th, 2010

Yoga for Foodies…Dallas with James Beard award winner Dean Fearing

April 13th, 2010

Yoga for Foodies…Dallas
April 12, 2010
at Tsada Yoga with Dean Fearing

Fearing’s favorite ingredients:

Jalapenos:  “I can’t live and cook without ‘em.”

First press, ripe green olive oil: “Great for finishing salad or grilled fish or sauteed veggies.”

Brittany salts from Northern France: “I prefer flaked salts to put on finished items, sea salt for cooking, fine salt for a salad.”

“Where the spirit does not work with the hand there is no art” Leonardo Da Vinci

One second with Dean Fearing and you feel like you’re hangin with an old buddy with whom you’ve spent many a late night into the early dawn. It’s hard to remember he’s a James Beard award winning chef with a world renown restaurant, Fearings at the Ritz-Carlton Dallas.

Why? Of course because he’s talented. But more so is the fact that Dean is a wonderful person. Sounds cheesy but there’s no better way to describe him. Everyone I met in Dallas seemed to have a story about Dean. Take landscape architect Gary Raith who recounted the time that he pulled up to Dean’s driveway, his car’s hood ajar, battery dead, and late for a meeting. Dean told Gary, “Just playin’ the mandolin and stayin calm.  Got yoga. Gotta get yoga.”

Thanks to this longtime passion, it wasn’t too much of a stretch for Dean to jump in. The event, produced by Living Yoga Dallas,  took place at Tsada Yoga located on the top of a building in a loft overlooking Dallas. After the yoga, Dean had a very unique approach to infusing the room not just with the scent of Char-Corn and Avocado Two-Bite Tacos with Mexican Coteja Cheese, and Shrimp Curry over Jasmine Rice and Coriander Chutney…BUT ALSO with an incredible, friendly, loving spirit.

As Dean said, “You can taste love in food, you can taste people caring for the food…” And that was exactly how Dean orchestrated the Foodies part of the evening. I don’t recall him focusing much on the ingredients so much as the people.  A wise one said, “Beginning today, treat everyone you meet as if they were going to be dead by midnight.  Extend to them all the care, kindness and understanding you can muster, and do it with no thought of any reward.  Your life will never be the same again.”

Truly that is how Dean Fearing operates. As Gary Raith said in his deep Texax drawl, “Dean is true…true to his boots.” (See photo below)

See below for the menu from Yoga for Foodies in Dallas:

Yoga for Foodies…Cleveland

February 17th, 2010

Yoga for Foodies…Cleveland
February 16-17,  2010
at Greenhouse Tavern with Jonothon Sawyer

Favorite Ingredients:

Maple Water: this is the run off after the boiling of maple syrup,     but it has no residual sugar and is very good for you)

Fish Sauce: just a great thing to have in any kitchen

Black Garlic or Fermented Garlic:  we make an amazing black garlic rouille with this


Cleveland is a town consumed by the emergence of the world’s premier athlete, hometown star LeBron James. But just a few blocks away from the arena James built is another guy who’s very quietly becoming a superstar, albeit in an entirely different world: chef Jonathon Sawyer.  The second stop of the Yoga for Foodies tour took place at the restaurant Sawyer opened with his partner Amelia:  The Greenhouse Tavern.

It’s the kind of place you’d want to hang at before a basketball game, with big TV screens, and a sorta, kinda, barely  rough-around-the edge vibe. But these type of places usually have crappy food. To drink beer and watch sports while eating food prepared by one of Food & Wine Magazine’s Best New Chefs made this something very close, for a sport-loving aspiring foodie like me, to a dream come true.  Granted, we were not watching sports but rather doing yoga in a special loft usually reserved for private events. And there was a very prevalent buzz (please note “buzz” is different from “noise” which has a bad connotation) that could have been distracting but I’m guessing the 12 participants would tell you was somewhat uplifting. That’s the vibe of Greenhouse Tavern.  Crazy, Edgy, Young, Fun, kinda like an MTV show with a ridiculously talented chef who gets to live his dream, work with his wife, hire his friends, and create his ideal restaurant.

Inspired by his years working closely with Michael Symon, Sawyer shared the main lesson learned: “The people that you have working for you help your success so treat them fair. You want to keep good people working for you, so give credit where credit is due. He <Micheal Symon> always created more of a family environment and I try to do the same.”

Such is the lasting lesson I’ve learned so far on my Yoga for Foodies travels. While the chefs I’ve worked with are some of the best in the nation, it’s more the atmosphere, vibration, and bonds they create that truly makes an impact. Not to say Sawyer’s food was anything less than incredible (ie the Side Salad w/ pickled red onions, croutons and Lake Erie Creamery goat cheese and the Coq au Vin w/ button mushrooms, braised Ohio bacon, chestnuts and pearl onions). But there’s one dish for which he’s famous: Duck Fat Fries which were recently featured on The Best Thing I Ever Ate.

To put this experience into one final sentence, Sawyer’s favorite album at the time I wrote this. Freakshow. There’s a touch of that in The Greenhouse Tavern. And that’s what separates foodie from food snob.

The menu from Yoga for Foodies in Cleveland:

Yoga for Foodies…New York City with Joy Pierson of Candle 79 Restaurant

January 22nd, 2010

Yoga for Foodies…New York City
January 22, 2010
At Exhale Spa with Joy Pierson of Candle 79

Joy’s favorite ingredients:

Organic Hemp Seeds sprinkled over salads, entrees or used to crust tofu, seitan or tempeh:  “Love these and keep them as a condiment on the table.”

Umeboshi plum paste – Eden Foods.  “Love to use in nori rolls, on corn on the cob, in salad dressing, or a pinch on the tongue to alkalize your system.  I also love to use umeboshi vinegar.”

Eldeberry based elixirs rich in vitamin C.  Tart and tangy.  “This wildcrafted tonic can be combined with a variety of other antioxidents like acai and mangosteen to make powerful potions.”


“Providence has nothing good or high in store for one who does not resolutely aim at something high or good. A purpose is the eternal condition of success.”  Thornton Wilder

I’ve never met someone who has won the lottery once let alone twice. On August 13 – which was a Friday the 13th of 1993 –   Joy Pierson and her partner Bart Potenza won $53,000 in the NY State lottery. Joy said, “Our mission was so clear we manifested that and all the money needed to build and design a beautiful restaurant [NYC's beloved vegan spot called Candle Cafe].” And then…they won another lottery for $29,000 in 2005. We needed funding for renovation and we were again clear  in our intention for making the world a more benevolent place. I think there’s a little more than coincidence at work here. Let’s just say Joy is something more than powerful. I won my own little jackpot by getting Joy to collaborate with me on the debut of Yoga for Foodies. And thanks to Joy’s positive juju, another stroke of luck came our way when the the NY Times wrote a big story on the evening.

After a flowing yoga class at Exhale on Madison Avenue, we indulged in Joy’s Butternut Squash & Wild Mushroom-Spinach Ravioli with cashew ricotta, garlic cashew cream, truffle oil, sautéed broccoli raab and crispy capers while Joy drove home her all-important message: you can eat vegan and you can eat damn well!

Ironically, the NY Times article was pitting meat-eating yogis against vegetarian yogis and while I do sometimes eat meat, I will admit that since meating Joy (no pun intended), I’ve cut back dramatically. Joy mentioned to me her defining moment in becoming vegan…when she and her partner put lobsters in a boiling pot to cook for her mom’s birthday. Joy says she could hear the lobsters start to cry. That along with having recently watched Food Inc and reading Eating Animals, and it’s clear that so many of us make a choice to be ignorant of the pain that lies at the root of so much of what we eat.

This is not the case with Candle 79 and it’s creators Joy Pierson and Bart Potenza. With Joy comes great food, and with great food, comes Joy.

The menu from Yoga for Foodies in New York City:

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