Alice Waters became passionate about good food when she studied
abroad in France during the 1960s. She implemented the concept of
locally sourced and carefully prepared food at her restaurant, Chez
Panisse, in Berkeley, California. Finding the ingredients proved
challenging at first, but her persistence helped set a standard that
remains at the heart of slow-food, farm-to-fork, and locavore movements.
California cuisine was born through her efforts to find the ingredients
and create the beauty of a delicious and healthy meal. Expanding on
her work at the restaurant, Waters also drew attention to the need to
create healthier options in school lunch programs and to engage children
in growing the ingredients that they needed to prepare healthy meals.
She installed the first Edible Schoolyard Project site at the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Middle School in Berkeley, California, in 1995. Waters
spreads her message beyond Chez Panisse and the Edible Schoolyard by
sharing her ideas through bestsellers including The Art of Simple Food I and II, and The Edible Schoolyard: A Universal Idea.