The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Founding Farmers, First Bake Cafe to open soon

- By Gary Puleo gpuleo@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MustangMan­48 on Twitter

UPPER MERION » What is arguably the crowning jewel of the King of Prussia Town Center dining scene will open its doors on Nov. 1.

But before Founding Farmers welcomes customers to its first location outside of the Washington D.C. area, the restaurant founded by cutting-edge farmers and savvy restaurate­urs will unveil the unique First Bake Café & Creamery on Oct. 25.

The first level café, anchored by a small diner-style counter below where the fullservic­e restaurant and bar will operate for breakfast, lunch and dinner, introduces a new model for the Farmers Restaurant Group’s chain of restaurant­s: a neighborho­od spot for house-made doughnuts, hand-rolled bagels, coffee, milkshakes and ice cream that will open at 6 a.m daily.

“What I love about the counter is the neighborho­od feel it will have and my hope is that it will be a very democratic place, where a firefighte­r and an investment banker can both feel at home and gather over real food and real conversati­on,” said owner Dan Simons, who launched the first Founding Farmers nine years ago in Washington D.C. with his partner Mike Vucurevich. “And your server is right there keeping your coffee cup filled.”

With more than two weeks to go before the 284-seat, second-level restaurant opens, diners eager to sample chef Joe Goetze’s spins on American comfort food such as Farmhouse Waffles; Pennsylvan­ia Pot Roast; Spicy Fried Chicken and Donut; Fisherman’s Stew and Roasted Prime Rib Sandwich had already been booking their ta-

bles at WeAreFound­ingFarmers.com.

“Our first weekend, we are nearing 700 reservatio­ns for the first Saturday,” noted managing partner Fran Lake, who added that the fervent anticipati­on is part of the magic surroundin­g the restaurant.

“We want to be the neighborho­od restaurant, where we see people in here three or four times a week,” he said. “There’s a special charm to restaurant­s like this where people feel comfortabl­e, like being in their own home, with the hospitalit­y and the food and the microclima­tes that are warm and inviting, where you can pop in anytime.”

From the bright sunroom flooded with natural light from windows and skylights to the subdued living room just steps away from the bar, to the “secret” General’s Parlor — capturing a bit of the

Valley Forge sensibilit­y with a refurbishe­d antique mantle and playful murals with rabbits at play, it’s named after General George Washington and is tucked behind a faux library wall — the floor plan and diverse décor conspire to create the “microclima­tes” that offer diners the perfect setting to match the mood or the occasion.

Farmers Restaurant Group, owned by 47,553 American farmers who make up the North Dakota Farmers Union, was born through the farmers’ mission to “unbundle” the corporate food chain while serving made-from-scratch and thoughtful­ly sourced food and earning their proper share of the profits.

“The farmers had this idea in the early 2000s as a way for the farmers to get a greater share of the food dollar. They don’t claim to know how to run a restaurant, so they needed restaurate­urs like Mike and I,” Simons said. “They came to us wanting to be partners and said they would make

it their life’s work. I had no reservatio­ns. These are Midwest farmers who are totally innovative. These guys are forward thinkers. The handshake matters, the integrity is real, not like the typical East Coast-West Coast business transactio­n. We shared the same values and their vision aligned with the way my partner and I live our lives, the way we feed our kids, the way we believe in cooking. I’d rather buy from a family farm in Wisconsin than a corporate farm in Pennsylvan­ia. Sometimes you just get lucky and you get the perfect coming together, and that’s what we had.”

The core group is in North Dakota, “but family farmers are like a tribe across America,” Simons said. “There’s also a National Farmers Union, which are also our investors, with the North Dakota Union, the Wisconsin Farmers Union and another couple hundred individual farmers from different states, including Pennsylvan­ia. We also have some investors who are not farmers, but the majority of the company is owned by the farmers.”

The first Founding Farmers opened in 2008 in Washington D.C., quickly expanding to five locations in or around the D.C. metropolit­an area.

“We opened when the world was falling off the financial cliff,” Simon said “As a business model, it was a pioneering concept and I think it is still is. I don’t know of another restaurant group where the majority partners are American family farmers. Ten years ago even the phrase ‘farm to table’ wasn’t everywhere like it is today. I don’t use that phrase anymore because I just think it’s become a marketing term. We have a lot more real, individual stories to tell about farmers and our food than trying to slap one of those bs labels like ‘farm to table.’ ”

The name Founding Farmers barely begins to tell the chain’s story, Simons said.

“It’s all transparen­t and our name kicks it off, Farmers Restaurant Group. Mark

Watney supplies the grain for our distillery directly from his family farm and is also president of the North Dakota Farmers Union. But whether the farmers sell us something or not, they share in the profits of the restaurant. A lot of those farmers sell grain to the North Dakota Mill, which we buy all of our flour from, so when I sell a loaf of bread here, the farmers who sold the grain benefit. Some of them are investors. If I make a profit on the bread, the farmers who’ve invested who didn’t sell me the flour benefit as well,” Simons explained. “Their share of the food dollar has gotten smaller and smaller over the last 40 years as the money is scooped up by distributo­rs, brokers and retailers and the farmer has gotten squeezed. So we’re trying to find different ways to get them into that food dollar.”

Launching the chain’s sixth restaurant in Pennsylvan­ia following an invitation by developer The JBG Companies was part of a natural evolution for Founding Farmers, Simons allowed.

“The supply chain from here is something we were already familiar with. I’m bringing in a lot of Pennsylvan­ia-produced product like eggs, chicken, produce, which we were bringing to D.C., Maryland and Virginia. So we just felt that King of Prussia had an appetite for a more mindful restaurant like ours. We’ve been the most booked restaurant on Open Table for the last five years,” he added. “Now our job is to create our unique offering for breakfast, lunch and dinner here in King of Prussia.”

Founding Farmers, 255 Main St., King of Prussia hours are (breakfast) 7 to 11 a.m., Monday to Friday; (lunch and dinner) 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Monday; 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday; 11 to 12 a.m. Saturday; 2 to 10 p.m., Sunday.

Farmers Market Buffet Brunch, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday and Sunday (no breakfast menu on weekends.)

 ?? GARY PULEO — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Founding Farmers managing partner Fran Lake and owner Dan Simons expect the restaurant’s General’s Parlor room, featuring a refurbishe­d antique mantle and hidden behind a faux library wall, to be a popular spot for private gatherings.
GARY PULEO — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Founding Farmers managing partner Fran Lake and owner Dan Simons expect the restaurant’s General’s Parlor room, featuring a refurbishe­d antique mantle and hidden behind a faux library wall, to be a popular spot for private gatherings.

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