A Taste of Honey--and Mead....and That's Not All...

Jan 3, 2014

It's not just the taste of honey.

It's the taste of honey AND mead--coupled with a gourmet dinner on the UC Davis campus.

The UC Davis Honey and Pollination Center is sponsoring the Mid-Winter Beekeepers Feast: A Taste of Mead and Honey on Saturday, Feb. 8 from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the foyer of the Sensory Building, Robert Mondavi Institute of Food and Science, 392 Old Davis Road.

It's like "Bee My Valentine."

"The air will be redolent with the sweet smells of roasting lamb and flavored honey," said executive director Amina Harris. 

It's billed as a Valentine's Day event and a celebratory meal benefitting the Honey and Pollination Center.

The main course features roasted lamb shank with rosemary infused sage honey, polenta squares with mushroom ragout,  oven-roasted brussel sprouts with thyme butter, and Musqee de Provence with walnuts and a lavender honey glaze

The guests will start with these appetizers: Cracked Dungeness crab on Belgian endive and shitake mushroom soup shots. And the drinks, of course, will feature mead from Heidrun Meadery, along with sparkling water and a wine selected for each course. Salad is next: navel and blood oranges over winter greens with a tupelo honey vinaigrette.

Following the main course, a cheese course with honey comb will be served. For dessert: Häagen-Dazs Honey vanilla ice cream with old-fashioned butter cookies.

And then, a mead flight with three meads.

Harris says the printed menu will be something folks will want to take home.   Vicki Wojcik, a member of the Honey and Pollination Center Advisory Committee and the research director at Pollinator Partnership, will add pollinator notes to the printed menu--indicating which foods are pollinated by bees.

The dinner, designed by Ann Evans and Mani Niall, will be catered by the Buckhorn, Winters. Evans is the founder of the Yolo County Slow Food, the Davis Farmers' Market and the Davis Farm-to-School Program. Niall is the author of numerous cookbooks including "Covered in Honey" and "Sweet." He describes himself as the "chief cupcake froster" at his newly opened Sweet Bar Bakery in Oakland.

Darrell Corti, an international wind judge, will lead the mead flight tasting.

Also planned: music and a silent auction. "Prizes are still coming in," said Harris, who can be reached at aharris@ucdavis.edu. Tickets for the one-of-a-kind event are $125 per person, or a table for eight for a $1250 sponsorship.

It sounds like a bee-utiful evening, made possible by the bees!