Food & Drink

Sacramento couple creates traveling pop-up restaurants to serve unique food at microbreweries

A passion for trivia night at Sacramento microbreweries led Angelika Feldman and Christoper Lee to create their traveling pop-up restaurant.

Feldman said playing trivia was fun, but the typical fried food-truck fare provided at the microbreweries didn’t always play nice with their digestive tracts.

“Every time we would go to trivia, it would either be tacos, pizza or some kind of over-the-top fried crazy food that would just make you feel sick to your stomach after,“ said Feldman. “It was good at the time, but not so good after.”

Buster Lee, 10, whose father Christopher Lee owns Flora & Fauna Provisions with partner Angelika Feldman, runs an order to a table at the pop-up eatery set up for the evening outside Nitty’s Cider in Sacramento in July. “They told us that it was really refreshing to have something so different at these food pop-ups,” Feldman said about a business where they had recently set up outside. “They were just very, very inspired to have something more light and airy and easier to eat that wasn’t so filling and fatty.”
Buster Lee, 10, whose father Christopher Lee owns Flora & Fauna Provisions with partner Angelika Feldman, runs an order to a table at the pop-up eatery set up for the evening outside Nitty’s Cider in Sacramento in July. “They told us that it was really refreshing to have something so different at these food pop-ups,” Feldman said about a business where they had recently set up outside. “They were just very, very inspired to have something more light and airy and easier to eat that wasn’t so filling and fatty.” Xavier Mascareñas xmascarenas@sacbee.com

Feldman, 30, and Lee, 35, met in May 2020 and soon after started selling pasta, crackers and dried pastas at farmers markets. Their business Flora & Fauna Provisions — think plants and animals in a broad sense — evolved to include selling jams, beer nuts and mustard.

They received their catering license in March of this year, enabling them to cater private parties, weddings, graduations and other events.

On June 28, they held their first microbrewery pop-up restaurant event. Two months later, they have become regulars at a rotating set of microbreweries.

A good response

At a recent pop-up dinner at Nitty’s Cider in Sacramento, Feldman and Lee brought their pots and pans, a portable grill and a fryer, running their whole kitchen under a small tent.

The demand was strong for the menu items. They included house-cured pork-belly sliders with bacon, fried eggs aioli, farmers market tomatoes and butter lettuce on a brioche bun, a cucumber melon salad with feta cheese and bratwurst on a pretzel bun with a choice of housemade toppings.

Angelika Feldman, left, who owns Flora & Fauna Provisions with partner Christopher Lee, takes an order from Julia Lund, center, and Carly Goldstein, both of Sacramento, at the pop-up set up for the evening outside Nitty’s Cider in July. The two ended up ordering one of everything for their table of friends. “I would probably bet money that they were locally sourced,” Lund said of the tomatoes in their order. “Essentially all of our produce comes directly from farmers, almost rarely from purveyors,” Feldman said, “we’re always making what’s fresh and seasonal.”
Angelika Feldman, left, who owns Flora & Fauna Provisions with partner Christopher Lee, takes an order from Julia Lund, center, and Carly Goldstein, both of Sacramento, at the pop-up set up for the evening outside Nitty’s Cider in July. The two ended up ordering one of everything for their table of friends. “I would probably bet money that they were locally sourced,” Lund said of the tomatoes in their order. “Essentially all of our produce comes directly from farmers, almost rarely from purveyors,” Feldman said, “we’re always making what’s fresh and seasonal.” Xavier Mascareñas xmascarenas@sacbee.com

“We had everything on the menu because it all sounded so amazing and we were really hungry,” said Katrina Lund, a social worker, who dined with her sister and two friends at the pop-up restaurant. “And I think collectively our favorite was the sliders. They were simple in the best way. Every ingredient on the sliders had so much flavor.”

Others eating at the pop-up restaurants were fans of the sausage sandwich.

And probably for good reason. Lee’s day job is as a sausage maker at V. Miller Meats, a Sacramento butcher shop.

Respect to local farmers

A point of passion for Feldman is that all the vegetables served are from Sacramento area farms, adding to the freshness of the dishes.

She said even though Sacramento has been dubbed the farm-to-fork capital of the U.S., the farmers are still in the background.

“Everyone celebrates all these chefs,” she said, “but no one is celebrating the farmer. We wouldn’t have food without the farmer.”

When customers complimented Feldman and Lee about the food at the Nitty’s Cider event, the couple were quick to speak about the local farms contributing to the food experience.

Feldman said she will soon be adding a shout-out board listing the farmers at future events.

On any given week, the Flora and Fauna Provisions pop-up goes to several different microbreweries.

Smoked peach chipotle chicken lollipops wait to be served at the pop-up Flora & Fauna Provisions outside Nitty’s Cider in July.
Smoked peach chipotle chicken lollipops wait to be served at the pop-up Flora & Fauna Provisions outside Nitty’s Cider in July. Xavier Mascareñas xmascarenas@sacbee.com

A career in food

She said she fell in love with food as a little girl, watching the food network more than cartoons.

Her first job was working at a doughnut shop and deli, and by the time she was 16, she was employed at Nugget Markets, the Sacramento area supermarket chain. By 18, she was working at the market’s specialty cheese department as a cheesemonger.

Her training included visiting dairies and cheese makers, to become an expert in cheese and charcuterie.

Feldman left the food industry in 2017, only to fall in love again with her original passion, when she met Lee in 2020.

Food has been a major love for Lee too.

He started in the culinary world at age 20. He attended the Le Cordon Bleu cooking school in Natomas and did an externship for several months in Northern Spain. His Spain experience included working as a line cook in a rural restaurant.

Although the pair’s immediate goal is to grow their pop-up restaurant business, Feldman and Lee do have a long-term vision.

They want to open, like many chefs, their own brick and mortar restaurant, finding a permanent home for their food.

“Food is a love language all its own,” Lee said, “and once you have fallen in love with food, there is no going back.”

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This story was originally published September 1, 2022 at 9:54 AM.

RD
Randy Diamond
The Sacramento Bee
Randy Diamond is a former reporter for The Sacramento Bee.
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