CIM NEWS MAGAZINE Issue 8 2016 | Page 12

“ideal setting” for major events. “The city can accommodate fans from around the world, but remains accessible and compact enough to be swept up in the excitement that big events bring. We all know and love the madness of February and March – when annual celebrations like the Adelaide Fringe, WOMADelaide and Adelaide Festival take place – but events in South Australia go far beyond that. They take place throughout the year, and they’re run by people who love what they do and are committed to enhancing their communities, promoting their regions and offering entertainment for locals and visitors alike.” Adelaide Fringe received a nod as a Finalist in the Australian Event Awards in 2009, while Adelaide Writers Week, part of Adelaide Festival, won Coates Hire Best Community Event in 2015 and WOMADelaide won EVENTelec Best Cultural, Arts or Music Event in 2015 and was a Finalist in the same category in 2016, recognition that both validates the “artistic” label Adelaide deservedly receives and demonstrates how the State has managed to come out on top for two consecutive years as the outstanding events destination. Alongside the Santos Tour Down Under, Events South Australia also owns and manages several other events including Tasting Australia, which celebrates premium food and wine in Adelaide and provides another opportunity for those in the events industry to demonstrate their capability. One of those players is renown Adelaide caterer Blanco Food and Events, who hosted a lunch in the Adelaide Botanic Gardens as part of Tasting Australia, highlighting not only the quality of their offsite catering skills but the philosophy of the Botanic Gardens Restaurant, one of a number of their food ventures. The restaurant provides a fine dining culinary experience of the Botanic Gardens – as far as they’re aware, no other Botanic Gardens in the world offers an experience quite like it – in which approximately 80 different ingredients used in their kitchen throughout the year come from the Botanic Gardens itself. “There’s just a whole mix and range of produce – some stuff you can’t find anywhere, some stuff that they actually don’t have the strands and species any more…just unusual things,” says Steve Blanco, co-owner of Blanco, on the kind of edible delights which come out of the gardens. He says it can be “a bit haphazard” for the restaurant’s head chef Paul Baker, because produce deliveries are at the whim of the seasons in the Garden. “That’s why the creativity part of it is probably more important because [Paul] needs to make use of everything that’s ready and available,” he says. Baker agrees, describing it sometimes as “feast and famine”. “Sometimes we’ve got a lot of stuff and we have to get really creative,” he says, citing 12   Convention & Incentive Marketing, Issue 8, 2016    www.cimmagazine.com a recent example when they had 40kg of onions just dropped on the doorstep. Joining the restaurant in 2014, Baker is the first chef that’s used the Garden’s produce to its full extent, according to Blanco. “We’ve pretty much unlocked most of the edible plants that we can find in that garden over the two and half years I’ve been there,” says Baker. “I work really closely with the horticulture staff – work out what we can eat, can’t eat, and there’s a number of things that they didn’t even know were edible that we’ve researched and found that we can actually use. The gardens change every day. “A season in the garden doesn’t run for three months – sometimes winter comes a month earlier so we’ve got winter produce a month or two earlier than everyone else. Some things we can sort of pick from as we go over the weeks and some things once they’re ready we take them out and make use of them. Other times we have something quite unique and we’ll only get one tree of it – we have our own lemon aspen tree – and the lemon aspen was there for two weeks then it was gone.” Baker doesn’t try to influence what the Garden staff plant and enjoys the unpredictability of the offerings which are delivered to them. He is also quite happy to let the Garden dictate what the restaurant serves. “Things like liquorice root which we use on one of our beef dishes – the liquorice is actually the core part of that dish – if we don’t have the liquorice root any more, then