Hear the Buzz? UC Davis Celebration of Mead and Honey Coming Feb. 11

Feb 1, 2017

Hear the buzz? It's almost time to celebrate A, B, C (almonds, bees and crop pollination).

But did you know that there's another celebration bee-ing hosted on Saturday, Feb. 11? And that you and your honey are invited? It's an event often billed as "the" Valentine's Day present.

For the fourth consecutive year, the UC Davis Honey and Pollination Center will host “The Feast: A Celebration with Mead and Honey," a five-course fundraiser set from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Sensory Building Foyer, Robert Mondavi Institute of Wine and Food Science, Old Davis Road.

Amina Harris, director of the Honey and Pollination Center, said this year the center will be partnering with Good Life Garden and the UC Davis Arboretum and Public Garden. "Together, we hope to create a re-envisioned 'kitchen garden' that includes pollinator-friendly plantings, irrigation concepts, educational signage and the installation of a Good Life Garden beehive," she said.

Ann Evans, co-author of the Davis Farmer Market Cookbook and former mayor of Davis, has created a seasonally inspired menu, to be served amid a candlelight and musical ambience. The evening begins at 6 with hors d'oeuvres and honey stingers, featuring ginger mead from Schramm's Mead, Michigan.  Mead, a fermented blend of honey, water and often fruits, yeast, or spices, dates back to 7000 BCE.

Then comes The Feast! Each course will be paired with select wines, honey lemonade or sparkling mead. Guests will dine on a rich tomato aspic salad, followed by chicken with plumped dried figs and apricots. The main course? Roasted musquée de province squash with couscous. A cheese interlude will accompany a dessert mead flight led by legendary Darrell Corti.  The dessert? Show me the honey? Yes.  It's a dessert of pears with blue cheese, walnuts, and honey. What's a feast without honey?

Proceeds from the dinner will be used to support the outreach and education programs of the Honey and Pollination Center--its mission is “to make UC Davis a leading authority on bee health, pollination and honey quality," Harris said. Funds are earmarked for stipends for UC Davis graduate students, ongoing development of the Master Beekeeper Program at the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee Research Facility at UC Davis, and sponsorship of the third annual UC Davis Bee Symposium, "Keeping Bees Healthy," set Sunday, May 7. 

There's still time to register. Tickets are $150 per person and registration is underway at https://registration.ucdavis.edu/Item/Details/264. For more information, contact Amina Harris at aharris@ucdavis.edu.

One more thing: when you walk into RMI for The Feast, odds are that honey bees will be foraging and feasting in the newly renovated Good Life Garden, just outside the front door.