While a resident at the cooperative living Crafts House on the campus at Tufts University,
Maximus Thaler started cooking for large groups of people. His creative efforts there were recently the subject of a limerick on NPR’s “Wait, Wait Don’t tell me.” He’s spent summers cooking for the Bread and Puppet Theatre, a radical puppet theatre in northern Vermont where he fed 100 people on approximately $1 per person per day. This is where Maximus learned how to cook large quantities of high quality food at almost no cost. In January 2013 Maximus started the process of opening The Gleaners’ Kitchen. The Kickstarter campaign has raised over $3,000. The project has been featured in Time Magazine, The Boston Globe, The Huffington Post, Boston Public Radio and many other news publications and blogs.
http://www.thegleanerskitchen.org/
Dayna Safferstein is an illustrator and silkscreen artist, soon to graduate from The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Tufts University. Dayna has a special affinity for drawing food, vegetables in particular. Her work has been featured in numerous Boston shows, as well as in Vermont and California. Among her recent freelance clients are the Balagan Film Series, Salad Magazine, and Carlson Media Coaching. She is currently collaborating with author Helen Jonsen (author of Kangaroo's Comments and Wallaby's Words) to produce a children's e-book.
Cargocollective.com/daynasafferstein