Walking in Paris years ago, Theresa McCulla ’04 suddenly came face-to-face with small macarons (sandwich cookies), displayed on velvet cloth and dramatically lit from above in the shop window of pastry chef Pierre Hermé. “They were presented like jewelry,” she recalls. Since 2007, McCulla, an admitted “foodie,” has brought her reverence for food—nurtured in her own family’s kitchen, in professional venues, and during her college semester at the Sorbonne—to her job: coordinating the Harvard University Dining Services’ Food Literacy Project (FLP), which began in 2005. The FLP aims to educate the Harvard populace about food preparation, nutrition, agriculture, and community: it runs a farmers’ market; encourages local, seasonal eating; and conducts special events like a vegan baking workshop, a field trip to cranberry bogs, and a chance for students to roll their own truffles from a 15-pound batch of ganache. In college, McCulla studied French, Spanish, and Italian: “Some semesters I had no classes in English!—which I loved.” Her polyglot talents led to a job with the Central Intelligence Agency, where for three years she translated and analyzed European media. Yet food beckoned: evenings, McCulla volunteered as a line cook at a steak house, worked for a pastry chef, and did research for a food writer—activities respectively “chaotic, precise, and academic.” She baked the wedding cake for her marriage to Brian Goldstein ’04, a Harvard graduate student. They cook together nightly, and McCulla takes professional chef’s training at the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts. “My days and nights,” she says, “are filled with food.”
Theresa McCulla runs Harvard Dining Services’ Food Literacy Project
Theresa McCulla runs Harvard Dining Services’ Food Literacy Project
Meet the director of Harvard Dining Services’ Food Literacy Project.
You might also like
Mount Vernon, Historic Preservation, and American Politics
Anne Neal Petri promotes George Washington and historic literacy.
Landscape Architect Julie Bargmann Transforming Forgotten Urban Sites
Julie Bargmann and her D.I.R.T. Studio give new life to abandoned mines, car plants, and more.
Preserving the History of Jim Crow Era Safe Havens
Architectural historian Catherine Zipf is building a database of Green Book sites.
Most popular
Explore More From Current Issue
Getting to Mars (for Real)
Humans have been dreaming of living on the Red Planet for decades. Harvard researchers are on the case.
This TikTok Artist Combines Monsters and Mental Heath
Ava Jinying Salzman’s artwork helps people process difficult feelings.
Novelist Lev Grossman on Why Fantasy Isn’t About Escapism
The Magicians author discusses his influences, from Harvard to King Arthur to Tolkien.