The Slow Money gathering aims to fix the economy from the ground up, one small food enterprise at a time. At a time when the big business in town is a struggling stock market, disgraced investment bankers, and a market overrun with poisonous factory-farm produce – the Slow Money Gathering is bringing to bear a new kind of investing. They call it natural capital, farmer capital, social capital, local capital, nurture capital & cheese capital (why not?).
In the last two years, the gathering has hosted more than 1000 people form 24 states, and more than $4.25 million dollars have been invested in 16 of the presenting small food enterprises. The event has also given rise to local chapters, who have begun investing around the country.
My name is Andrew, I’m a brand new employee at Cafe Gratitude’s central office, and I want to share some inspiration with you. What inspires me is compassionate food--food that’s kind to the soil it’s planted in, the people who prepare it, and the hungry bodies that make it part of them. This inspiration has lead me to work with Cafe Gratitude, and also with another organization re-imagining good food, and one I’ll talk about today: the Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive, or CoFED, which empowers college students to launch food cooperatives.
The baby chicks are here
Vegans, omnivores, and cordial companion animals agree: Gracias Madre is heating up the mission with its delightfully fresh Mexican fare. Cafe Gratitude's new Vegan Taqueria may have little precedent, but, "good eating is, after all, good eating and Gracias Madre, with reasonable prices, organic ingredients, and its way with the Mexican pantry, is deservedly packed and adored."