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Former SJSU volleyball star opens up on living with trans teammate without knowing athlete’s biological sex

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Former SJSU volleyball star opens up on living with trans teammate without knowing athlete’s biological sex

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Brooke Slusser remembers the day she moved into “the villa.”

It was a four-bedroom apartment in San Jose, California with white walls and no decorations. Her mom and dad drove her and all of her things there, all the way from Texas. 

She was the first tenant to show up that semester. 

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Slusser was about to begin her junior year, as a transfer from Alabama, to play her 2023 college volleyball season for SJSU and head coach Todd Kress. 

Slusser alleged Kress is the one who encouraged her to live in that apartment. At the time, there were two apartments filled with SJSU volleyball players that were looking for one more tenant on the lease, she claims. 

But Kress allegedly told Slusser to move into “the villa” because he thought she would “get along better” with the women in that unit, she claimed. 

Slusser lived in the blank-white-walled apartment by herself for her first two days in San Jose. She experienced her first up-close exposure to a homeless man, and witnessed a convention of cosplayers wearing animal costumes, called “furries.” 

On day three, Blaire Fleming walked in. 

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“He was the first person I met when I got on campus, and we were together, just the two of us, I want to say for the first day or two, after he got there until any of my other roommates showed up,” Slusser told Fox News Digital. 

At the time, Slusser had no idea Fleming was transgender. She had no idea they would eventually end up on opposite sides of a national culture war. 

Brooke Slusser #10 and Blaire Fleming #3 of the San Jose State Spartans call a play during the first set against the Air Force Falcons on Oct. 19, 2024, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

Over the course of that school year in “the villa,” Slusser shared many things with Fleming. They shared laughs, parties, food, germs, gossip and even secrets. Slusser, now regretfully, said she shared her deep personal family trauma with Fleming in moments of vulnerability. 

And Slusser said she still hasn’t even mentally processed one of the most regretful things she shared with Fleming back then. 

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“You find out you’re just chilling in a bed with a man that you have no idea about… I [was] unknowingly sharing a bed at that time with a man,” she said. 

“It’s hard to process. I don’t even know if I can say I’ve fully processed it to this day. It’s just, you’re told something for so long, you think something for so long and you act very normally about a situation, and then come to find out it’s all a lie.” 

Sometimes, the other teammates living in the house would all climb into bed with them, to watch movies or just talk, Slusser said. But other times Slusser said it was just her and Fleming. 

“Watching movies snuggled up in bed, like, all the normal things you’d think girls do in an apartment, like, my bathroom is across the hall from my bedroom and I’m going back and forth and everyone’s out doing their thing, and I probably would have covered up more,” Slusser said. 

“I would have changed everything about what I was doing in that apartment if I would have known that it was a man. So it’s just hard to fully say I can grasp all of that when it was almost two years of me living with this situation.”

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About two months living together, Slusser said she began to share personal secrets with Fleming and the other teammates in the apartment. 

“There was a time when one of our roommates was kind of struggling with something, and I just opened up with all of us in the living room talking about what I’ve been through with my family, and how there’s a better side to things, and it gets better, and I’ve probably only told only two people in my life about what had happened back home in Texas, so opening up about that was just very vulnerable,” Slusser said.

With Fleming around for that conversation, Slusser said she put sensitive information in the hands of someone who she wished she hadn’t shared it with. 

Slusser said the person she holds most responsible for causing it to happen is Kress, for allegedly suggesting she live in “the villa” with Fleming, all while there was another house of volleyball players she could have lived with. 

“Todd Kress, knowing this person was a man, and saying that I’m going to ‘fit in better’ with these girls on my volleyball team, couldn’t have been further from the truth,” she said. 

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“We were all in the same class, so if all of us are there next year it’s not like we’d have to find another roommate, so he thought it would be nice that I was with all of the girls that are in my class so we could spend a full two years together.” 

One of Fleming’s teammates joined several other female athletes in suing the NCAA for Title IX violations. (San Jose State University)

Fox News Digital reached out to Kress and Fleming for comment, but did not hear back at time of publication.

Fox News Digital also reached out to SJSU for comment. 

In response, the university provided President Cynthia Teniente-Matson’s announcement that the SJSU and California University (CSU) system are suing the “federal government” in response to a U.S. Department of Education investigation that determined SJSU violated Title IX in its handling of Fleming, Slusser and the other players, adding, “We have no further comment.”

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Teniente-Matson announced Saturday that the school was going on the legal offensive. 

The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) offered a set of compliance points for SJSU to resolve the alleged Title IX violations involving the trans athlete. Teniente-Matson claimed the OCR’s findings “aren’t grounded in facts.” 

“Because we believe OCR’s findings aren’t grounded in the facts or the law, SJSU and the CSU filed a lawsuit today against the federal government to challenge those findings and prevent the federal government from taking punitive action against the university, including the potential withholding of critical federal funding,” Teniente-Matson said Friday.

Teniente-Matson also affirmed the school’s allegiance to the LGBTQ community in the announcement. 

“Our support for the LGBTQ members of our community, who have experienced threats and harms over the last several years, remains unwavering. We know the attention the university has received around this issue and the investigative process that followed have been unsettling for many in our community,” the president said. 

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“We’ve heard the fear and anxiety that it has created and recognize that waiting for the university’s response has been difficult at a time already filled with uncertainty.” 

Slusser said she cried tears of joy when she initially learned the news that President Donald Trump’s administration determined her former school violated Title IX. 

“I didn’t think it would hit me that way, but just seeing that finally something, even if it’s not really affecting me much and what I went through, but something was being done,” she said. “So that feeling brought tears to my eyes… everything I’m doing isn’t for nothing.” 

Then, when she learned the news that instead of complying with OCR, the school was fighting back, she was so frustrated that she went on X and made her first original post since October. 

“It makes me so mad that SJSU still refuses to see that everything they did is wrong. I think they’re just too scared to admit it and face the repercussions of their actions!” Slusser told Fox News Digital immediately after learning the news. 

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Now, a new legal precedent related to Trump’s authority to enforce Title IX for the rest of his presidency potentially hangs in the balance. 

And the conflict behind it all dates back to a regretful college recruitment and housing decision.

Slusser and Fleming did end up playing two full seasons together, just as planned

As Slusser alleges, Kress lobbied for her, Fleming and the two other roommates to live in “the villa” for the 2023 and 2024 seasons, since they were all set to be returning players in 2024. 

Beyond “the villa,” Kress allegedly also put Slusser and Fleming in the same hotel rooms during trips for away games, according to former SJSU assistant volleyball coach Melissa Batie-Smoose. 

“Blaire wanted to room with Brooke Slusser, and that’s who Blaire felt comfortable, so Blaire gets what Blaire wants,” Batie-Smoose previously told Fox News Digital. 

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Batie-Smoose is currently suing SJSU for wrongful termination. 

In their first season together in 2023, SJSU went 13-18. 

Slusser led the team in assists with a whopping 753, which was over 436 more than the team’s second-place leader in assists. 

Fleming led the team in kills-per-spike with 3.57, which was 1.84 more than the second-place leader in that stat. 

Slusser previously told Fox News Digital in December 2024 that at one point in that 2023 season, Fleming spiked a ball at her thigh, and she had to nurse dark bruises on her thigh for an entire week after that.

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Slusser had just assumed Fleming was just a very strong and talented biological female at that time. 

The team fell well short of qualifying for the Mountain West Tournament, but there was momentum going into the following season with a strong core of returning players, headlined by Slusser and Fleming. 

And a lot of them were already living together in the same apartment, partying with the school’s other sports stars, living the California dream. 

The apartment became a regular destination for not only the volleyball players, but all of San Jose State’s sports teams, Slusser said. She said their door was regularly left open for the school’s athletes to hang out and sometimes party. 

“It was an open-door policy,” Slusser said. 

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The women living there would cook dinner together, Slusser said, and she even organized a group trip to a local HomeGoods to get decorations for the apartment’s blank white walls. 

“We were really close, we would do everything together,” Slusser said. 

Through it all, Fleming earned a special reputation with Slusser, when she thought Fleming was just another girl. But it ended up being a cruel irony after Slusser learned of Fleming’s birth sex.

“One of the things I loved most about Blaire as a friend was that I knew he would always tell me the truth, no matter what I asked. That’s something he was known for on the team, when you ask him something be ready for the truth,” Slusser said. 

One day. when Slusser asked other teammates how she looked, they told her, “You look amazing.” But when she asked Fleming, Fleming responded by telling Slusser she needed to put on more bronzer, she said. 

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Then one day, Slusser learned that transparency was an illusion.

That day came in the 2024 spring semester. 

“I got home and all the doors were shut, which, like I said, is very odd, because we were very much an open-door, always hanging out type apartment,” she said. 

A news article had come out earlier in the day. Slusser had not seen it yet. 

“Blaire and my other roommate had asked if I wanted to get Chick-Fil-A, because I had a car and they didn’t. So I ended up taking them there and it was kind of quiet, again, which is weird. And I remember we were parked and they were eating, and Blaire just looked at my roommate and said ‘I don’t know how to tell her.’” 

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Slusser said her other roommate told Fleming to show her “the article.” 

The article, published by the independent women-owned media outlet “Reduxx” reported that Fleming was transgender. 

“I read it, sat there in silence reading it in front of them,” Slusser said, before turning to Fleming and saying, “I hope you’re doing OK. I know you’re apparently getting bashed all over online and I don’t really want that for anyone. But I think you know my opinion on this situation.” 

Nothing happened right away. They continued to live together, go to class and prepare for the 2024 volleyball season. 

Once fall rolled around, Slusser made a decision that would change her and Fleming’s life. 

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“If I had a daughter one day, that was in my position and I never did anything about it and could have, then I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself,” she said. “Having kids is literally my biggest dream in life.” 

The rest is history

Slusser joined Riley Gaines’ lawsuit against the NCAA at the onset of the 2024 season. Other volleyball teams began to forfeit. The team was an epicenter for regular national news coverage during an election-season media cycle. And police protection had to be assigned to the team on a regular basis. 

At one point, throughout the chaos, Slusser posted a video on her Snapchat, with her and other roommates celebrating Fleming moving out of the apartment. 

Then Slusser took legal action, just days before the 2024 election. This time, she was leading her own lawsuit with other players in the Mountain West against the conference and representatives of SJSU and CSU. 

Slusser and her co-plaintiffs tried to end Fleming’s season prematurely, when they filed a request for preliminary injunction which would have ruled the trans athlete ineligible. 

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After weeks, then months of legal conflict and nonstop media coverage, all while navigating classes and the rigors of a Division I volleyball season, Slusser fell ill. 

She developed an eating disorder and began to turn anorexic, she claims. 

Fleming, as a former roommate, previously addressed those claims.

“She’s been anorexic and struggled with food since I’ve known her[,] aka since 2023. She literally would weigh herself 2-3x a day and keep track of it on her whiteboard in her room…. So I really don’t care or feel bad for her,” Fleming previously told Fox News Digital of Slusser’s eating disorder revelation.

Slusser disputed those claims. 

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“These statements are just not true. I have always lived a very healthy lifestyle. Before these events took place[,] I was very disciplined in fueling myself for athletics and [kept] track to make sure I was where I need to be[,] to be the best athlete. It wasn’t until all the craziness started that my healthy lifestyle turned very unhealthy into not eating the amount I should,” Slusser previously told Fox News Digital. 

Through it all, she still showed up to practice every day and took her spot next to Fleming on the court. They continued to travel together for games. They traveled all the way to Las Vegas for the conference tournament, where they finished with the second-best record in the Mountain West, assisted by six games forfeited. 

Then they advanced to the Mountain West final without even having to touch the court in Vegas. Boise State forfeited in the semifinal round, marking the Broncos’ third forfeit to the Spartans that season. 

It all ended in a championship loss to Colorado State. Fleming and Slusser’s volleyball careers were over.

But their post-career controversy-ridden lives had only begun. 

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And for Slusser, born and raised as a Christian in Texas, just a year and a half living in Northern California had taken a frightening toll. 

The stress, depression, anxiety and exhaustion caused her to temporarily suffer the fear of losing the very thing she was fighting for. 

She faced fear for her very fertility, losing her menstrual cycle for nine months. 

“I want to have the dream future for that I envision for myself of having kids in the future, I want as many as possible, and I think if that weren’t able to happen, that would break my heart,” she said, adding it “100%” caused her to feel panic and worry that it could impact her in a permanent way.

“That was probably one of the biggest factors of why I need to keep myself healthy.” 

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With her family’s help, and regular prayer, Slusser recovered from her eating disorder, and everything went back to normal, physically, her father Paul previously told Fox News Digital. 

But even the fear from that experience isn’t keeping Slusser out of the fight now. She continues to take an active role in the legal conflict related to the SJSU scandal, and even beyond that. 

In January, Slusser spoke outside the U.S. Supreme Court during oral arguments for the two cases related to state laws prohibiting trans athletes in women’s sports. 

And just last week, she found out the outcome of those cases could play a consequential role in her own lawsuit.

Colorado District Judge Kato Crews dismissed all the plaintiffs’ charges against the Mountain West Conference, but did not dismiss charges of Title IX violations against the California State University (CSU) system. 

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Crews deferred his ruling on whether to dismiss those charges to after the decision in the ongoing B.P.J. v West Virginia Supreme Court case, which is expected to come in June.

The CSU provided a statement to Fox News Digital in response to Crews’ ruling. 

“CSU is pleased with the court’s ruling. SJSU has complied with Title IX and all applicable law, and it will continue to do so,” the statement read.

But Slusser’s lawyer, Bill Bock, is optimistic his side will prevail in those charges. 

“We’re looking forward to the case going forward,” Bock told Fox News Digital. 

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“I believe that the court is going to find that Title IX operates on the basis of biological sex, without regard to an assumed or professed gender, and so just like the Congress and the members of Congress that passed Title IX in 1972, allowed this specifically provided for in the regulations that there had to be separate men’s and women’s teams based on biological sex, I think the court is going to see that is the original meaning of the statute and apply it in that way, and I think it’s going to be a big win in women’s sports.”

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SJSU is fighting a legal war on multiple fronts, suing the federal government and awaiting a landmark Supreme Court ruling regarding Slusser’s lawsuit, all while Batie-Smoose is waging her wrongful termination suit. 

The outcomes of those cases could impact the future of women’s sports in America, forever.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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San Francisco, CA

Serving up a slice of Palestine at Old Jerusalem in the Mission District

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Serving up a slice of Palestine at Old Jerusalem in the Mission District


Ahmed Ali Mazen can’t remember the last time he missed the call to prayer.

Five times a day, he heads out the back of his restaurant, Old Jerusalem at 25th and Mission streets, and climbs the stairs to his rooftop, which overlooks the Mission and Bernal Heights.

He always concludes the routine with a Marlboro Gold and a scorching-hot cup of tea with fresh mint. 

It’s a lifetime away from the farm where Mazen, now age 58, was raised, one of 11 children, in a small village named Saffa in Ramallah, Palestine. His family grew cucumbers, tomatoes, watermelon and, on the village’s mountaintop, olives. 

The Mazen family raised cows, sheep and goats. Mazen had his own pet donkey, which he said he loved dearly.

“Donkeys were for those who couldn’t afford horses,” he said. “Those who couldn’t afford donkeys walked.”

Mazen’s donkey was his most prized possession. He would use it to plow the family’s land and carry produce back from the top of the mountain. 

He looks back on his childhood fondly, remembering the village’s ceremonial olive harvest and the fiercely competitive soccer matches. 

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He and his friends would wait outside the nearby girls’ school in the afternoons, each picking who they said they would one day marry.

“Of course, we never had the guts to go up to them and introduce ourselves. It was just fun to love from afar. That’s what kids do.” 

Mazen was 19 during the first intifada in 1987, a political uprising against Israel in which more than 1,100 Palestinians, many of them children, were killed.

“Nothing was ever the same,” he says.  

He was still in his teens when he left to start a new life in the United States. In San Francisco, he worked all sorts of odd jobs: Bagging groceries at Mike’s on Mission Street, tow-truck driver, and endless kitchen gigs. 

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Next came an arranged marriage. “She had seen a photo of me beforehand, I didn’t, but I didn’t really care,” he recalled. “I just wanted to get married.”

His bride was another Palestinian from Ramallah, possibly one of the girls he’d admired from afar during his school days. 

He said falling in love and wanting to raise a family motivated him to be self-sufficient by starting his own business. Mazen felt there was a gap to be filled, that existing Middle Eastern restaurants weren’t serving “true” Palestinian food. 

One day, Mazen noticed a new “for sale” sign in a window on his commute home. The asking price was far above his price range, but with loans from a bank, family and friends, he cobbled together enough money to buy it. 

Old Jerusalem Restaurant opened in 2005. At first, business was so slow that he had to borrow another $40,000 loan from a friend, but eventually it picked up. 

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Now, 21 years later, Old Jerusalem offers authentic Palestinian dishes like pistachio-crusted lamb chops and Nablusi kunefe, a dessert made of crispy, shredded phyllo, layered with melted cheese and soaked in sweet, fragrant syrup.

“We serve the food I ate growing up, no compromises,” Mazen said. 

On its face, Mazen’s story is one of the many successful stories of Palestinian immigrants. He has a wife and three kids, all of whom went to college, and a longstanding business.

He has friends in the Palestinian community here, like Sami Rami, who owns the nearby Middle Eastern market. These days he goes to countless weddings for his friends’ grown children. And he has come to love this sanctuary city.

“This place has everything you need to love it,” he said. “There is so much diversity here: Arab, Chinese, Black, you name it. If you want to get to work in this country, there’s also the money for it.”

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Yet Mazen longs for the life he left behind. The annual olive harvest has become nearly impossible due to the current conflict, he says, but he still visits home about once a year to check in on his mother. 

“Do you want me to tell you what is good for the story, or do you want me to be honest?” he asked. “I’m so grateful for what God has given me, but if I could go back 20 years from now, I would have never left.” 

“The biggest mistake anyone can make is to leave their country,” he said.

“Money doesn’t fix anything. It doesn’t fix that feeling of comfort hearing the mosque’s call to prayer, or seeing your children gather with your nephews, and grow up alongside their cousins. No matter how much money you make, you’ll never be able to get what you once had at home.” 





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Denver, CO

This Boulder farm dinner serves up midsummer Slavic vibes with James Beard-worthy fare

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This Boulder farm dinner serves up midsummer Slavic vibes with James Beard-worthy fare


If you were a single Slavic pagan in ancient times, the path to finding true love was fairly straightforward and considerably more exciting than going on a blind date. All you had to do was weave a garland of wildflowers, grab your intended by the hand, hurl yourselves over the roaring flames of a bonfire, and plunge nude into the nearest body of water.

In other words, ancient midsummer festivals of romance were fairly high stakes.

While you likely won’t find anyone risking third-degree burns or stripping nude in Boulder this weekend, chef Bo Porytko is reviving similar energy for a sprawling 10-course fine-dining experience where feast-goers can party like it’s 900 A.D.

The Midsummer Farm Dinner takes place on Sunday at Esoterra Culinary Garden, 8985 Valmont Road, Boulder. The event will bring together a collective of 10 chefs from some of Denver’s buzziest restaurants  — including Molotov, Somebody People, Hearth, Odell’s Bagel, Petit Chelou, Margot, Bear Leek, La Diabla and Rougarou — for a collaborative, long-table meal built around Esoterra’s summer produce. The outdoor feast will begin with arrivals at 5 p.m., followed by dinner at 6 p.m. Tickets start at $260.

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Porytko, the chef behind Denver’s Molotov restaurant, said the dinner series was inspired by his heritage.

“In Ukrainian culture, we have something called Ivana Kupala, which dates back to ancient times,” Porytko said. “Basically, it’s their midsummer festivities that also act as a mating holiday.”

Don’t worry, coupling up is not required for this event.

“Midsummer is just kind of a fun time,” Porytko said. “It was a good way to harness these weird, culty vibes that kind of suit the farm setting.”

The ancient East Slavic festival of Kupala was celebrated on the evening of June 23-24.

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For guests wondering how that ancient atmosphere translates to a modern dinner on a 100-acre Boulder property, the evening starts on a hospitable note. Guests arrive for James Beard-recognized cocktails mixed by the team from Denver’s Yacht Club. From there, diners have time to explore the farm.

“The way the actual event begins is people come to the farm and get about an hour with welcome cocktails,” Porytko said. “Then you’re supposed to wander, check out the space, take in the farm, and there’s a little bit of education too.”

Attendees are asked to arrive dressed entirely in white. An LED flower wreath will be placed at each setting around a massive table built for 100 people. A maypole will be erected nearby, and a live DJ will guide the evening’s soundtrack. The music will begin to vibe with standard dinner fare before veering into unexpected territory.

Diners sit at a long table under tents during last year’s Midsummer Farm Dinner at Esoterra Culinary Garden in Boulder. The dinner returns Sunday with a menu built around produce grown at the farm. (Jeff Fierberg/Courtesy photo)

“The DJ will play normal music, but then take, for example, a Kelly Clarkson song and turn down the beats per minute so she sounds like she’s speaking in Viking tones,” Porytko said, adding that the DJ will also mix in random Gregorian chants to fit the scene.

As the wine flows, the initial formality of the long table quickly disappears. Porytko said guests naturally start getting up, making friends and moving around the property after a few courses.

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“After 10 courses and eight glasses of wine, people just kind of take it in whatever direction they want,” Porytko said.

A vegetable dish is plated during last year's Midsummer Farm Dinner at Esoterra Culinary Garden in Boulder. (Jeff Fierberg/Courtesy photo)
A vegetable dish is plated during last year’s Midsummer Farm Dinner at Esoterra Culinary Garden in Boulder. (Jeff Fierberg/Courtesy photo)

To translate those festive vibes into an actual 10-course meal, the participating chefs rely on a highly democratic planning process. Justin Freeman, the executive chef of Somebody People in Denver, will help coordinate the logistics, beginning with a digital inventory of whatever Esoterra is currently pulling from the soil.

“There’s a Google Doc that we all use,” Freeman said. “We just ask the owner of Esoterra — Mark DeRespinis — what he’s growing, and then everyone signs up for what ingredients they want to cook with. We really just try to showcase what Mark has.”

Chefs look over the active list, claim the specific vegetables they want to work with and design a dish around them. Freeman then steps in to help arrange the final layout of the courses. He said the event has become an ongoing annual collaboration to give a little praise to the people who are doing all the hard work — the farmers.

The resulting menu leans heavily into hyper-seasonal creativity, starting with Porytko’s own intricate contribution.

“The idea is to highlight items from the farm,” Porytko said. “For me, I’m highlighting their beets, their Badger Flame beets.”

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Porytko is preparing a guinea hen roulade cured in the juice of the Badger Flame beets and stuffed with a chocolate mint mousseline. The dish will be served with a beet mole, a gummied Badger Flame beet and traditional roasted beets.

The rest of the collective will showcase the farm’s harvest through a variety of distinct culinary styles. Freeman is serving grilled fennel with a creamy pistachio sauce, pickled celtuce and seasoned breadcrumbs. Andrew Van Stee of Hearth is contributing Moroccan pistachio carrot rolls, while Miles Odell of Odell’s Bagel is pairing dry-aged ocean trout with a coconut pea puree. Justin Fulton of Margot is preparing charred cucumbers with agretti, coconut broth and yuzu kosho, and Rema Maaliki and Harrison Porter of Bear Leek are bringing braised leeks with leek soubise, albufera and crispy leeks. The lineup also features plates from James Beard chef finalist José Avila of La Diabla, JohnDavid Wright of Rougarou and pastry work by Ali Spahr of Hearth .

Skewers cook over hot coals during last year's Midsummer Farm Dinner at Esoterra Culinary Garden. (Jeff Fierberg/Courtesy photo)
Skewers cook over hot coals during last year’s Midsummer Farm Dinner at Esoterra Culinary Garden. (Jeff Fierberg/Courtesy photo)

The actual preparation happens entirely outdoors. The chefs arrive early in the morning to set up tables, tents and their own Japanese konro grills packed with binchotan charcoal.

“It all happens out in the field, in the middle of Mark’s gardens,” Freeman said. “We set up that morning. We’ll set up the tables, the tents, everything. Then we do all the cooking in front of everyone.”

Diners can stand right by the workspace and watch the dishes come together. For the chefs, the open-air format offers a rare chance to step away from their respective restaurant kitchens and collaborate directly with their fellows.

“For us, as chefs, we just don’t get to see each other very often, so it’s really fun and special when we do,” Porytko said. “We definitely have our own little hangout in the kitchen area with all the chefs, you know — all the weirdos in the corner.”

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Freeman echoed the sentiment, noting the benefit of the format for the guests as well.

“With this one, you’re getting 10 different chefs with 10 different views all coming together under one roof,” Freeman said.

Cooking in an open field does, however, mean operating at the whim of Colorado’s summer elements. Freeman recalled a previous year when a sudden onset of mountain weather forced the culinary crew to quickly shift from grilling to structural defense.

“The first year we had a little bit of rain at the start of it,” Freeman said. “Then the wind was crazy, where we all had to come and grab the tent so it didn’t blow away.”

Hopefully, on Sunday, the weather will remain tame, but guests should prepare for whatever Mother Nature has to throw at them, just in case.

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The event takes place on Sunday, with arrival at 5 p.m. and dinner at 6 p.m. The location is Esoterra Culinary Garden, 8985 Valmont Road, Boulder. Tickets start at $260 and are available through Tock.





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Seattle, WA

Seattle Pride weekend to bring parade, festivals and World Cup crowds

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Seattle Pride weekend to bring parade, festivals and World Cup crowds


Seattle is preparing for one of its busiest weekends of the year as Pride celebrations and the FIFA World Cup converge across the city.

Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to attend parades, festivals, concerts, and sporting events Friday through Sunday, with city officials encouraging people to plan ahead for street closures and use public transportation.

Pride weekend begins Friday with the FIFA World Cup Group G match between Egypt and Iran at Seattle Stadium.

ALSO SEE | Seattle Pride festivities to kick off with ‘Seattle Pride in the Park’ at Volunteer Park

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Local organizers have designated the game as the tournament’s Pride Match Day, with community celebrations planned throughout the day. The designation has drawn objections from the Egyptian Football Association and the Iranian Football Federation, but local organizers say Pride events will move forward as planned.

Saturday’s events include Trans Pride Seattle at Volunteer Park, one of the nation’s largest transgender Pride celebrations, along with PrideFest Capitol Hill, which will transform Broadway and Cal Anderson Park into a daylong street festival featuring live music, food vendors, artists, and community organizations.

The ticketed Queer/Pride Festival will also continue throughout the weekend on Capitol Hill.

RELATED | FIFA to allow rainbow flags at Egypt-Iran World Cup ‘Pride Match’ in Seattle

The weekend culminates on Sunday with the Seattle Pride Parade, which begins at 11 a.m. along Fourth Avenue in downtown Seattle before ending near Seattle Center. Following the parade, PrideFest Seattle Center will feature live entertainment, food vendors, beer gardens, and community exhibitors through the afternoon and evening.

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Seattle Pride traces its roots to 1974 and has grown into one of the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ celebrations, drawing hundreds of thousands of people each year.

Officials are urging attendees to expect heavy crowds and traffic throughout downtown and Capitol Hill, particularly on Sunday.

Organizers recommend using the Link light rail, buses, or other forms of public transportation whenever possible.



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