The Farmer's Daughter
![Healthy Dining: Wholesome, healthful, fresh foods, made with local and/or organic ingredients. May serve only vegetarian or vegan foods (no animal products whatsoever). Meat and dairy products are raised to minimize environmental and health impacts without additives, genetic modifications or factory farm practices. Endangered fish are not served. "Slow Food" sites can be included, as can traditional or special local cuisines. Healthy Dining](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_1.gif)
![Farmers/Local Market: Sells fresh locally grown produce. May be organic or traditional foods, and may sell flowers, craft items, bread, wine, wool, and even regional cookbooks. Supports small family farms, local economies and a greener countryside. Farmers/Local Market](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_0.gif)
![Organic/Local Food: Food grown close to where it is consumed, reducing shipping impacts and increasing freshness. Organic food is grown without pesticides (biocides), genetic modification or synthetic fertilizers. Minimally processed, with no chemicals or waxes added after harvesting. May include fair trade or direct trade practices. Organic/Local Food](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_3.gif)
![Artisan/Art Studio: Traditional aesthetics, techniques and materials used in high quality crafts, art and locally made goods. May be a shop, showroom or studio. Artisan/Art Studio](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/artisan.gif)
![Child Friendly Site: An environmentally-engaging area that is safe and welcoming to children. May include playgrounds and other indoor and outdoor areas. Child Friendly Site](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/child_friendly.gif)
![Senior Friendly Site: An area where people who may have walking difficulties can enjoy nature and green living. May include areas where one can chat or relax, related organizations and resources, including senior centers and eco-meeting points. Senior Friendly Site](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/senior_friendly.gif)
Overview
"Feeding the KZN Midlands with all the Midlands has to offer."
Jen wants to feed everyone, so her restaurant in Tweedie – aptly called The Farmer’s Daughter – gives her an opportunity to do just that. Here she has created a truly happy place with gumboots on the garden steps, staff that grin incessantly, where local ingredients are treated with respect and birds feast on the crumbs and loose leaf teves are served in a real teapot. The red velvet cupcakes are decorated with a spotted gumboot - Jen doesn’t do ordinary.
There are couches for bored housewives to dream in, cappuccinos to savour, and sweetie jars for the kids.
She grew up in Dargle, wearing gumboots to splash in the streams and hang with the Herefords. “I’m Dargle bedonnered.” she says with a grin!
Since she was tiny, she was quite determined to be a chef. One of her first experiments (aged 4) in using local products was inspired by the original Dr Dolittle movie. “I collected lots of garden snails, mashed them with a little soil and leaves, picked my mom’s prettiest Tupperware and baked them in her new oven.” Oops, the resulting melted mess completely destroyed the oven and needless to say, no one offered to try her creation. Nowadays, her pear tart has a lot more takers.
By the time she was six, she was starting to complain about her mother’s cooking. “That noodle pie was an abomination,” she recalls, so she whipped up a Neopolitana sauce with the abundant tomato harvest from the veggie patch and they served it with everything for days. Her spot as a champion of local produce was sealed.
“I remember being so disappointed that the mielies I picked in the fields absolutely refused to be turned into caramel popcorn.” Jen has since learnt (at chef school and various jobs in the catering world) that you can’t pop any old corn but is still adamant about celebrating our astonishing Midlands produce. She uses only her dad’s chicken, eggs and beef; cheese, yoghurt and milk from her neighbours; giant garlic grown just up the road, and many of the salad ingredients and other greens are picked outside her kitchen door.
While the veggie beds are flourishing already, Jen dreams of using only produce from a big garden filled with absolutely everything she needs – from figs and fennel to goats and granadillas.
Find The Farmer’s Daughter at Patchwood Elephant on the R103 between the Everything Store and the Mandela Monument.
(Written by Nikki Brighton)
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- Central Drakensberg
- Howick
- Lidgetton
- Howick
- Dargle
- Nottingham Road
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The Farmer's Daughter
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