Harvest to Flame

Food shaped by fire. Evenings shaped by presence.

The fire is not a backdrop

It is where the evening begins and where it returns.

We cook in real time, allowing heat, season, and rhythm to shape the meal.

The fire sets the pace. We follow.

The gathering is the form.

Guests are invited to arrive, move, and return throughout the evening, following the natural rhythm of the fire rather than a fixed sequence.

Food is offered in waves—shared bites, heartier elements, moments of pause—creating space for conversation, connection, and unhurried presence.

A central table anchors the experience, not as a line to pass through, but as a place to return.

Group of people sitting at a long picnic table outdoors at night, surrounded by small campfires, with a cloudy sky and mountains in the background.

The offerings

Each Harvest to Flame experience is shaped by fire, season, and the people gathered around it. What follows are distinct forms of gathering — not tiers — each defined by a different rhythm of presence.

The gathering

A communal, fire-centered experience where guests arrive, move, and return throughout the evening. Food is offered in waves rather than courses, creating a natural rhythm of tasting, conversation, and connection around a shared table.

A stone fire pit containing burning logs, with vegetable skewer and roasted potatoes nearby, outdoors with gravel ground and some chairs around.

The Hosted meal

A seated, three-course meal prepared over open fire and served with thoughtful pacing. This experience offers a clear arc to the evening while preserving the elemental nature of cooking in real time.

A cast iron skillet with food inside, placed on a grill over an open flame with orange and yellow fire.

The hosted table

An extended table experience that introduces intentional beverage pairing and additional service support. The meal remains rooted in fire and season, while hospitality and flow are shaped more deliberately throughout the evening.

Outdoor backyard scene with three portable grills on a stone patio, one with skewered chicken, another with firewood and hanging vegetables, and a person tending to the grill. There are several black Adirondack chairs, a woodpile against a building, and string lights overhead. In the background, there is a grassy area with trees and a house.

How we begin

Every Harvest to Flame gathering begins with a conversation.

We take time to understand the occasion, the people involved, and the rhythm you’re hoping to create. From there, we shape the experience together — guided by season, setting, and fire.

We work deliberately and take on a limited number of gatherings so each one can be held with care.

If this feels aligned, we’d be glad to hear from you.

Begin the conversation

If you’re considering a Harvest to Flame gathering, we invite you to reach out and begin the conversation. We’ll talk through the occasion, explore what’s possible, and determine together whether it’s the right fit.