Inland Northwest Farm to Table: Austin Conklin and Tarawyn Waters

That Stings with Stinging Nettle Sorbet at Inland Pacific Kitchen
 
 

Inland Northwest Farm to Table: Austin Conklin and Tarawyn Waters

BY JAMIE AQUINO

What started out as just a first job at age 16 quickly became a passion for Chef Austin Conklin, head chef at Inland Pacific Kitchen in Spokane’s historic Washington Cracker Co. Building. After harvesting nettles at Vinegar Flats Farm, Conklin returns to the kitchen to whip up an avant garde dessert.

What started out as just a first job at age 16 quickly became a passion for Chef Austin Conklin, head chef at Inland Pacific Kitchen in Spokane’s historic Washington Cracker Co. Building. He fell in love with scratch cooking as he began to explore simple recipes, playing with flavors and elevating common foods.

Stinging Nettles at Vinegar Flats Farm

On a calm Monday morning in May, Conklin started his day in a corner nettle patch at Vinegar Flats Farm, formerly Urban Eden Farm, located less than 3 miles from Inland Pacific Kitchen. Tarawyn Waters, operations manager of this small piece of historical farmland, graciously provided bins, shears, gloves and even a farmhand for his little expedition. Conklin quickly made himself at home harvesting nettles while answering questions.

Asked which seasonal ingredient started it all, Conklin answered, “I was working at Art of the Table in Seattle, when the head chef handed me squash blossoms, freshly picked that morning”.

It’d be the first of many seasonal dishes Conklin would go on to make.

Conklin’s inspiration to create innovative cuisine comes from many places, but one of the most interesting is the convenience store. From horchata, to a cookie from a popular chain that sells signature slushies, Conklin takes ordinary flavors and turns them into elevated, artistic and out-of-the-box cuisine.

With the nettles harvested, he headed into the farm’s cold storage with Tarawyn. They conversed like old friends, gushing over nettles and talking produce when Tarawyn walked over to the cooler and brought out beautiful red and white sunchokes, which Conklin excitedly added to his haul. The young chef has found the farm a fantastic resource for the restaurant’s fare, and a quick call or trip has allowed him to source ingredients like currants, purslane, and sunchokes for his seasonal menus.

Nettle Sorbet at Inland Pacific Kitchen

Back at the kitchen, Conklin made an assembly line of ingredients while casually explaining this artistic and complex dessert. Aptly, and jokingly named “That Stings”, stinging nettle sorbet is only one of 13 components.

Sprinkling the plate with carrot dust before adding ginger financiers as the base, Conklin continued to construct the dessert with apple slices poached in champagne, scoops of buttery apple curd, chewy honeycomb, and nutty oat tuiles. The star of the dish came next, stinging nettle sorbet carefully placed in the center, all garnished with Meyer lemon gel, sugar cookie crumble, shaved rhubarb, fennel fronds, Nasturtium flowers, coarse flake salt, and drops of locally sourced honey.

The completed dish delivers a unique experience from the first bite to the last. Each bite contains different textures and flavors that are unexpected but pleasantly refreshing.

About Inland Pacific Kitchen

INLAND PACIFIC KITCHEN
ipkspokane.com
509.464.6541
304 West Pacific Avenue
Spokane, WA 99201

About Vinegar Flats Farm

VINEGAR FLATS FARM
vinegarflatsfarm.com
509.953.7863
2121 S Cherry St
Spokane, WA 99224
 

Related Stories

 
Previous
Previous

Meet K2 Greens: Dishing out Microgreens in Spokane

Next
Next

Idaho Teff is on Display at Spokane's Queen of Sheba Ethiopian