Hi.
I'm Jim Breton,
Executive Chef and Director of Food and Beverage Operations at Stonebridge.
I'd like to welcome you to the first issue of "In The Kitchen With
Chef Jim." I've created this newsletter to share information with
you about our food and beverage operation - information that I think will be of
particular interest in light of the many changes that will accompany the
opening of the new club house. My current plan is to publish a new issue
monthly and then somewhat more frequently after the club house opens and
everything is in tiptop shape. It's my hope that you will find the
information presented here both useful and entertaining!
Many times things take
so much longer to finish or complete than originally planned. While
traveling in Cali Colombia this past September I visited Parque del Café
in Salento Colombia. Touring the acres of Juan Valdez coffee plants, I
could not resist taking some of the fresh ripe red beans (cherries) from
a few trees. I was fascinated by the whole idea of the steep hills packed
with a variety of Arabica Trees bursting with flower buds at different stages
of bean growth. The gondola took us from one end of the property to the
other. I witnessed the production of coffee beans from conception to the
delicious cup of coffee I had in the Dolce Café at the end of the day. I
carefully stored these beans on my carry on until I returned to Florida, where I
promised myself I would grow these into mature trees that produced useful
coffee beans. The beans were soaked until the husks fermented away and I
dried them in the warm Florida sun for a week. I brought them into golf
maintenance where a combination of Coquina, bunker sand and a little potting
soil was blended in the hopes I was duplicating the soil I studied in Juan
Valdez’s gardens. Recycling old plastic pots the beans where
pressed into the soil and watered, that was October 3th 2013.
The entire Stonebridge landscaping crew wanted to know what the heck I was
doing. Days and weeks followed,
nothing happened. Sunlight and shade where monitored while moisture
content was studied. Weeks became months. What is going on?
Why aren't you growing or sprouting.
On May 9, 2014, the
plant was still an infant. The pictures attached show an eight month
growth. Mark Metzger said he will show them a little love and plant them
when matured. It seems like it’s taking an awful long time. Perhaps
when the tour guide in Parque del Café explained the lengthy growth cycle of
the plants, it was lost in translation. It does not matter to me, I’m in
for the long haul.
I am lucky to have been stationed in the golf maintenance building where friendly relationships have developed that would not have, had the renovation project not been conceived. I guess that is taking a long time too. However it will blossom into one of the premiere clubs in Naples. Touring the kitchen, restaurants and facilities generates a level of excitement for all of the team members of Stonebridge. It has been a major transformation that will be fruitful for all of us. Our team is a group of dedicated individuals that truly feel, “Members first”.