INSIGHT Magazine April 2016 | Page 24

farmer’s markets in Oxford, Anniston and Jacksonville. talking gourmet to go recently, and let him try the food. The farm grew from six acres to eight to meet popular demand, taking on their “PondeRosie’s Farm” moniker, in honor of grandma Rosie. The family made some unusual choices that kept public interest high (growing purple green beans is a highlight) and started forming relationships with other vendors and local restaurants. “I give him the pudding, and he says, ‘Tell her to come talk to us,’” said Hardy. Chef Katrina Watson, then working in the Cheaha Brewing Company kitchen, regularly bought produce from PondeRosie for herself and the brewery. She’d previously discussed her idea for a “gourmet to go” restaurant with the couple, though the Hardys weren’t interested in running an eatery. Watson eventually approached the two formally; not with a business proposition, but a bowl of banana pudding. “She goes home, prepares a meal for us without me saying I want her to, makes this banana pudding and tells me, ‘I have something ready, come meet me and pick it up,’” recalled Hardy. The dinner came with roasted turkey breast parmesan, roasted asparagus, salad and the banana pudding. Stacey told Rick that Watson had been 24 In only a few months, the restaurant went from concept to reality. The family handled construction themselves, remodeling the inside of a Golden Springs shopping center location that sat empty for years. The completed interior is spacious, with a comfortable gray and white color scheme for the floor and walls, a big dining area, glass cases around the register where bread and products from area vendors will be sold and an area cordoned off for racks of vegetables from local farmers. Most every ingredient at Rosie’s comes from local producers, from vegetables and bread to meats and honey, with special care on managing food costs coming from Hardy, who sorted out the prices of individual components in all the dishes to understand where food costs would come from, and how that translates to the consumer. “Being that careful with it, you can still provide quality ingredients and foods without it being astronomical,” said Lowery Combs. April 2016 INSIGHT