



Ferments & Forages: Wèi Collective x Zoe Yang
What is “living” and “dead” food? What can Sichuan teach us about the impacts of U.S. food access? And how can fermentation help us function in relationship with the land?
This workshop will explore these questions, and more. Participants will learn traditional Sichuan lactofermentation techniques with practical tips for creative home (and garden!) application, taste unique urban ferments, and take home their own 泡菜 (pàocài) jar crafted with specialty farm/artisan ingredients sourced from Sichuan.
Local organic produce, upstate well salt, and premium huajiao supplied in collaboration with Choy Division, Syracuse Salt Co, and 50Hertz Tingly Foods.
telos.haus is hosting Wèi Collective's debut programming workshop in NYC! This is part one of their yearlong series introducing Sichuan foodways and life lessons from a gastronomic motherland rooted in the deep earth.
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Wèi 味 Collective (味·集社) is on a mission to amplify Sichuan’s ancestral and contemporary foodways.
We are the first cross-cultural, Sichuan-run central platform bridging the province’s mainland and diasporic producers, businesses, writers, restaurateurs, and especially farmers, growers, and foragers—the heart of Sichuan’s agricultural heritage.
Launched in August 2025 by Kathy Yuan, Wèi Collective’s community building initiatives will include online resource mapping & knowledge shares; bilingual career development opportunities & internships for Sichuan students; in-person programming & small biz partnerships in collaboration with @thinkchinatown (NYC); land-to-table/mountain-to-basin tours (Sichuan); and more to come.
味 (wèi) is a Chinese character for taste, aroma, flavor. Wèi 味 Collective was founded to create a community centering Sichuan voices: our tastemakers, especially from the mainland. In the West, Sichuan food has never been more popular or reductive. We want the world to know there’s more.
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Zoe Yang: Nanjing-bred culinary brazenness. Radical forager. Transforming consciousness & ancestral/local ecologies in the home kitchen, often via the pickle jar.
