Fresh Reads, PLAY, Food & Drink Michele Griffin Fresh Reads, PLAY, Food & Drink Michele Griffin

PLATES A PLENTY

In its most ambitious festival yet, Flavours of Plenty continues to champion the freshest and finest of the Bay. From daring flavour pairings to blind cocktail tastings, this year is shaping up to be a standout.

In its most ambitious festival yet, Flavours of Plenty continues to champion the freshest and finest of the Bay. From daring flavour pairings to blind cocktail tastings, this year is shaping up to be a standout. WORDS SUE HOFFART

Coastal Bay of Plenty chefs are pushing culinary boundaries with such gusto, they have ensured the biggest Flavours of Plenty Festival yet. Festival director Rae Baker says this year’s eating extravaganza will bring almost 60 food events to the region, beginning in mid-April and running over 18 days. “It’s almost quadrupled in size since we started f ive years ago,” Rae says. “That’s partly because we have all these stunning food products and growers and producers here of course, but it’s our restaurants and cafes and chefs who have really driven the numbers up. So many of them have stepped aside from their everyday offerings and conjured all these exciting new ways to feed us.” Rae says festival events will include contests and workshops, food tours and market days. Some will happen in intriguing venues like a cinema or an art gallery, a community garden, a sculpture park or a marae. However, more than half will unfold inside established eateries and hospitality venues between Ōhope and Waihī Beach. “We just couldn’t do this without our heroic hospo people. Plenty of them have been through tough times in recent years and yet here they are with all this energy and enthusiasm, making edible magic for us.” She says restaurateurs have taken this year’s ‘pushing the palate’ theme to heart and devised experiences that challenge or thrill. Like the Sip Tease offering that invites diners on a blindfolded cocktail adventure in Tauriko. Or the Wings of Fire contest that teams spicy chicken wings with music and a tattoo artist who will create fiery designs.


GNAM (YUM) CHA AT THE TRADING POST, PAENGAROA

An eight-dish yum cha-style lunch will carry diners from Taiwan to Tuscany.

Italian owner-chef Simone and his international kitchen crew have devised a menu that melds European flavours from his home country with Taiwanese and Singaporean flavours. If Eastern dumplings and Western ravioli had a love affair, it would taste like this, Simone says. He is also promising salads that flirt with spice and an experience that is “deliciously messy in the best way”.


FINE DINING, DONE DIRTY AT SALTWATER, MOUNT MAUNGANUI

Oysters with attitude and cocktails with character are on the menu during this determinedly unpretentious seven-course lunch. High end food and top-shelf Eurovintage drops will be teamed with a “deliciously unfancy fine-dining vibe”. Palate-pushing? Yes. But also cheeky and playful; indulgence without the ego.

Saltwater restaurant will also host the festival’s madly popular Battle of the Snack competition, where hotshot chefs are paired with rising talent to create imaginative canapés. This one always sells out quickly.


POLARISING PLATES WITH NEIL SAPITULA AT SOLERA, MOUNT MAUNGANUI

The restaurant’s award-winning former head chef Neil Sapitula is asking diners to be brave when he returns to Solera for one night only. Neil’s daring five-course dinner is built around his favourite polarising ingredients and techniques. No menu will be revealed until the end, and no dishes will be explained, encouraging diners to approach each plate without bias or expectation. Embrace the unexpected, he advises guests. Optional wine matches feature natural and minimal-intervention wines, equally bold in character. Solera is hosting two other events. A second five-course dinner, Melting Point, stars savoury ice cream in every dish. Shaken by the Sea, Stirred by the Land pairs cocktails with seafood.


PLANTISSIMO AT GRATITUDE EATERY, MOUNT MAUNGANUI

Beloved for its delicious whole food menu and diverse dietary offerings, Gratitude is inviting guests to rethink the classic Italian feast. The usual kitchen team is handing over to Lombardy-born Stefano Raimondi, from Autentico, to offer a six-course vegan experience that will prove “flavour doesn’t need meat, cheese or wine to shine”. The plant-based, alcoholfree dinner will include handmade pasta though, and plenty of Italian-style warmth, generosity and soul. “It will make you rethink what’s truly essential for a happy table,” Stefano says.


FIVE GO WILD WITH FOOD AT ST AMAND, DOWNTOWN TAURANGA

Five fabulous chefs will each take charge of a course to showcase both their signature style and the region’s best produce. The degustation dinner will also star items chosen from the festival’s Plates of Plenty Challenge box, which challenges eateries to utilise a selection of locally-made artisan products or produce. Naturally, each course will be matched with a small-batch New Zealand wine.


FIVE BY FIFE AT FIFE LANE KITCHEN AND BAR, MOUNT MAUNGANUI

Five courses, each focussed on a single hero ingredient. Fife Lane will of course utilise the f ire-driven style that fills its tables every week but this event is especially intent on delivering bold flavour combinations, elegant presentation, and a dining experience that celebrates craftsmanship at every level. Seating is communal, creativity is a given.

The restaurant will also host guest speakers at a Fuelling Our Future lunch to fundraise for the Kura Kai charity that feeds families in need.


NOSE TO TAIL BBQ FEAST AT THE SMOKIN' GOOSE, AWAKERI

A sociable long-table banquet featuring both premium and adventurous cuts of beef, from ox tongue and beef cheeks to osso buco and bone marrow. Expect bold BBQ flavours, nibbles on arrival, a three-course feast and a surprise dessert to push your palate. The rustic Western vibe spills over into live music and guests are invited to dust off their boots and dress to impress.


SMOKE ON THE WATER AT FISHERMAN’S WHARF, ŌHOPE Gregarious chef Paul Patterson will start his event early, cranking up custom-made wood-fired barbecues from 8am. He will utilise local fruit trees and native wood to cook and smoke a selection of beef, venison and pork in front of his harbourside restaurant. Ticketholders will be able to watch the process during the day, then return in the evening for a four-course meal featuring big flavours, bourbon and blues music. Each course will be paired with either small batch bourbon or red wine. FLAVOURSOFPLENTYFESTIVAL.COM

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Fresh Reads, PLAY Michele Griffin Fresh Reads, PLAY Michele Griffin

Moveable feast

Resident foodie Stacey Jones takes a big, juicy bite out of the Flavours of Plenty Festival.

Resident foodie Stacey Jones takes a big, juicy bite
out of the Flavours of Plenty Festival.

Words Stacey Jones

Picture this: it's a lazy Sunday. You're dining on the beach,  digging into some of the most delicious kai you've ever eaten, full of local flavours. The sun is shining. The prosecco is flowing. A celebrity chef is cooking you a plethora of dishes from their latest cookbook, while her 52k fans on Insta are getting some serious #FOMO. Sounds like a bit of you? Well, you’re in luck. 

This year sees the return of Flavours of Plenty Festival and the event described above (and no, we're not spilling many more beans) is just one of 30-plus food activations across our region from March 24 to April 2. Now in its second year, the festival is back, bigger and better and ready to take its rightful place in the ever-growing New Zealand foodscape. 

Last year's inaugural event happened on the cusp of going from a red traffic light setting to orange. Not ideal circumstances, but the success was a true testament to our local foodies grit and determination. Festival director Rae Baker explains, “It was important for us to show support for the foodie community at that time, and what we saw was amazing results for producers, event hosts and attendees alike.”

The festival reinforces our regional food story by showcasing the plentiful produce and culinary talent we have here in the coastal Bay of Plenty.  It creates real, tangible benefits for our community, such as a direct link from produce to plate, new revenue streams for our event partners, the opportunity to test new products and attract visitors from outside the region. 

Now, we can't give too much more away, but what I can tell you is this year the team behind the festival at Tourism Bay of Plenty are cooking up something even more mouthwatering.  A sneak peek of the programme promises Meet the Maker events, degustations, market workshops, panel events, wild food challenges, celebrity chefs and plenty of other opportunities to get your hands dirty and your bellies full. There will also be the Plates of Plenty Challenge where local eateries will design plentiful creations  from our Bay produce to be crowned The People's Choice winner. 

Chef Ian Harrison of Sugo and Kitchen Takeover was just one of the many restaurants to take part in the event. Ian treated guests to a multi-course plant based degustation using local ingredients. “It was the best Sunday in the restaurant we’ve ever had, we had so much amazing feedback. It was also a great opportunity to try new things, attract new customers and pull together our community of culinary talent. Bring on this year’s event!” 

The programme of events will be released alongside  tickets on February 1, 2023. I’d say get in quick or you might be left with an empty stomach. 

flavoursofplentyfestival.com

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