The Allotment Project

The Allotment Project Collaborative dinners, debates and research exploring social systems through the politics of food twitter

The Allotment project explores social systems and how we are socialised through food. Food is a fundamental building block through which social systems, cultures and societies are formed. This project creates interactive events, dinners and discussions to enable a discovering of ourselves through food. The project is a collaboration between artists, chefs, researchers, designers, curators, psychol

ogists and the audience. Allotment started as a year-long programme of dinners, interactive experiences, talks and discussions initiated by artist Evy Jokhova exploring the values and politics of eating together as a community, understanding and experiencing food. The project encompasses dinner discussions, research, activities, installations and performances around the history, production, distribution, consumption, ethics and politics of food. Parts 1 and 2 of the programme featured events exploring six themes: Breaking Bread, Hidden/Foraging, Hierarchy, Land/Body, Revolution, Building. Each theme informed events setting the framework for research, discussion, menu and interactive activities. Research articles, films and images compiled and made as part of The Allotment Project are published on this blog. Allotment is a project passionate about food and discussion, understanding social structures, sources and resources, the economic and social implications of food production and distribution, the value of being part of a community, sharing and learning, and we hope we can share this with you.

Thank you for joining us at the Griffin Gallery for the Allotment  #10! The film programme is now online: wp.me/p4iobQ-7...
24/09/2015

Thank you for joining us at the Griffin Gallery for the Allotment #10! The film programme is now online: wp.me/p4iobQ-75

12,000 mangoes are eaten every year at the Notting Hill Carnival. If you don't like mangoes, here is another option: pin...
22/09/2015

12,000 mangoes are eaten every year at the Notting Hill Carnival. If you don't like mangoes, here is another option: pineapple kebabs with lime crème fraîche and toasted coconut.

It’s that time of year again when West London wafts out those lovely aromas of jerk chicken, fried plantains and litres of rum punch. Yes, we’re talking about the Notting Hill Carnival.

A view from inside the Trellick Tower lift. Getting ready for Allotment  #10 https://www.facebook.com/events/56823359332...
17/09/2015

A view from inside the Trellick Tower lift.
Getting ready for Allotment #10 https://www.facebook.com/events/568233593324535/

Dir: Marc Isaacs / UK / 2001 Filmmaker Marc Isaacs sets himself up in a London tower block lift. The residents come to trust him and reveal the things that m...

"Hot Grey Pease, and a suck of Bacon" - this is the call from Victorian street food vendors.Our journey in the Notting H...
16/09/2015

"Hot Grey Pease, and a suck of Bacon" - this is the call from Victorian street food vendors.
Our journey in the Notting Hill food history for Allotment #10 starts with the London Particular - a pea soup getting its name from the thick yellowish smog which was particular to London.
It was sold by the pint from stalls and taverns when Portobello Road Market was first opened in 1865. Have you ever tried it?

[quote]”Pease porridge hot, pease porridge cold, Pease porridge in the pot, nine days old. Some like it hot, some like it cold, Some like it in the pot – nine days old.” – Mother Goose[/quote] Well, I liked it hot. I didn’t like it cold. And it definitely did not last nine days. Pease porridge, …

Getting ready for   - how was Golborne Road in the fifties? Some local primary school kids asked this question to the lo...
15/09/2015

Getting ready for - how was Golborne Road in the fifties? Some local primary school kids asked this question to the local residents - here is their answer.

Golborne, West London, bordered by Ladbroke Grove, The Westway and the Grand Union Canal. An area that from the 1950s saw a unique struggle against poverty, greedy…

15/09/2015
  will explore the food history of Notting Hill and the surrounding area. Imagine a long table set as a timeline from 18...
15/09/2015

will explore the food history of Notting Hill and the surrounding area. Imagine a long table set as a timeline from 1865 to 2015. From Victorian soups to Spanish and Caribbean flavours, where would you sit?

Tickets are available here: http://bit.ly/1Oci58O

18/08/2015

If there's anything you read – or share – let this be it. The content of this article has potential to radically shift the world in a variety of positive ways. And as Monsanto would love for this article to not go viral, all we can ask is that you share, share, share the information being presented

Last night's   at the Florence Trust. A big thank you to all of our guests for taking part!
15/07/2015

Last night's at the Florence Trust. A big thank you to all of our guests for taking part!

Here is our brand new blog!We've spent the last few days moving furniture across the room... now it's finally ready. Fee...
11/07/2015

Here is our brand new blog!
We've spent the last few days moving furniture across the room... now it's finally ready. Feel free to explore and let us know what you think.

a series of collaborative dinners and debates

  cities on food (routes). An inspirational talk on how food shapes our cities./// The next Allotment dinner is all abou...
02/07/2015

cities on food (routes).
An inspirational talk on how food shapes our cities.

/// The next Allotment dinner is all about BUILDING ///
on.fb.me/1GE8YLu

Every day, in a city the size of London, 30 million meals are served. But where does all the food come from? Architect Carolyn Steel discusses the daily miracle of feeding a city, and shows how ancient food routes shaped the modern world.

  power and national identity: the Japanese tea ceremony./// Tickets for the next Allotment Dinner/BUILDING are almost s...
24/06/2015

power and national identity: the Japanese tea ceremony.

/// Tickets for the next Allotment Dinner/BUILDING are almost sold out ///
on.fb.me/1GE8YLu

The ritual drinking of this ancient beverage — often thought of as the epitome of Japanese restraint and formality — has long been entwined with issues of power and national identity.

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