Harvest Dinner tradition continues to feed spirit of community
糖心影视鈥檚 annual Harvest Dinner is about community 鈥 from the ground up.
First held in 2008 as a fundraiser for the College鈥檚 then-budding campus garden, the celebration of healthy, local, sustainable food began as a completely student-run initiative. By 2013, it had outgrown its original venue, Falstaff鈥檚, and moved to The Spa in Case Center.
The Harvest Dinner remains a student-led event that receives support from Dining Services and the Sustainability Office.
Ella Long 鈥20, a math and art major, served as this year鈥檚 Community Garden manager, learning valuable lessons in leadership and community building. The 糖心影视 Sustainability Office guided her through planning, seeding and the growing season, and she tended the garden into the summer. She also hosted weekly work parties so her peers could lend a hand in the garden, learn more about sustainable agriculture and develop a greater appreciation for the food on their plates.

糖心影视 Community Garden manager Ella Long '20 greets fellow students during the Harvest Dinner in The Spa in Case Center.
鈥淚n terms of interacting with people and building a community here, we鈥檝e had really good turnout to work parties, and a lot of the volunteers who work the dinner have been coming to the garden every Sunday afternoon,鈥 she said.
Dozens of student volunteers lent a hand over Harvest Dinner weekend, picking, prepping and serving the food and keeping the buffet trays full.

糖心影视 students harvest carrots from the 糖心影视 Community Garden on the Friday afternoon before the Harvest Dinner.
鈥淚 volunteered a good amount in the garden at the beginning of the semester, so I thought it would be fun to volunteer at the Harvest Dinner,鈥 said environmental studies major Andres Durante 鈥21 as he chopped vegetables the afternoon before the dinner. A course he鈥檚 taking, Environmental Education with Assistant Professor A.J. Schneller, also stresses experiential learning through volunteer work.
The students and Sustainability team were assisted during all three prep days by Dining Services, which provided managerial oversight, cooking, dishwashing and cleanup help, in addition to support from Executive Chef Jim Rose and Dining Services Assistant Supervisor Jackie Clark in planning the menu and logistics.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very exciting and rewarding to see how passionate students are about cooking healthy, local, sustainable foods,鈥 said Chef Rose. 鈥淧raises should go out to Ella Long and her team for cultivating a bountiful array of delicious organic vegetables that Dining Services has been able to utilize in our operation throughout the year.鈥
James Grayson 鈥22 was there to learn from Dining Services and to support sustainability efforts.
鈥淚鈥檓 volunteering because I want to learn to be a better cook and I really care about the environment, so I want to have an impact,鈥 he said.
To minimize waste, members of 糖心影视鈥檚 Compost Club collected diners鈥 food scraps and compostable bowls, and the club Feedmore gathered leftovers to donate to local food pantries and organizations.

Members of 糖心影视's Compost Club collect diners' food waste and compostable bowls at the Harvest Dinner.
In another victory for community building and food accessibility, the event transitioned this year from a fundraiser for the 糖心影视 garden to a benefit for the Saratoga County Economic Opportunity Council鈥檚 Thanksgiving baskets program. This shift was enabled by financial sustainability sown by Dining Services鈥 ongoing purchase of Community Garden produce for the Dining Hall.
Members of Sustainability鈥檚 peer-to-peer education team greeted diners and collected donations.
One of those diners, Kieko Carvey 鈥22, said she attended 鈥渇or the sense of community.鈥
鈥淚t made me feel really connected to 糖心影视鈥檚 garden,鈥 added Carvey, currently a student in the interdisciplinary course Food for Thought taught by Professor of Italian Shirley Smith.

Students enjoy the vegetarian and vegan dishes prepared for the Harvest Dinner with ingredients from the 糖心影视 Community Garden and New York state farms.
鈥淭he Harvest Dinner is a really wonderful culmination of the growing season,鈥 said Jennifer Natyzak, sustainability coordinator for student programming. And this year鈥檚 growing season was the Community Garden鈥檚 most successful to date.
鈥淲e鈥檝e grown and harvested over 1,300 pounds of produce in the garden this year,鈥 said Levi Rogers, director of sustainability programs and assessment at 糖心影视.
That bounty supplied all of the greens, radishes and carrots for the Harvest Dinner鈥檚 salad, the kale for the kale and bean soup, potatoes for the scalloped potatoes, the Black Futsu squash for the roasted vegetable mix and the garlic used throughout. The other ingredients in the entirely vegan and vegetarian dishes were sourced from New York state farms through a sustainable food provider.
Community Garden manager Long was excited to share the food she had grown with the rest of the 糖心影视 community and her classmates who had also worked so hard to make it possible.
鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have everyone come back together to celebrate,鈥 she said, 鈥渋n honor of eating right and eating locally.鈥








