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BerkShares Business of the Month: Prairie Whale

ā€œI’m trying to recreate what an American tavern would have been like when it was built back in the old days.ā€ -- Mark Firth, owner of the Prairie Whale

ā€œIt’s nice to shed the shackles of a set menu,ā€ says Mark Firth, owner of the Prairie Whale, a restaurant on the north end of Main Street in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. The restaurant, which will celebrate its fifth anniversary in October, has a menu that changes daily. Chef Steve Browning explains that he orders according to what local farms have available, and from there ā€œWe just make it work.ā€

Browning, who started working in kitchens as a teenager, studied at the Culinary Institute of America before moving to New York City, where he became a part of the burgeoning ā€œfarm-to-tableā€ movement. That’s where he started working for Firth, who had already opened locavore restaurants Diner and Marlow & Sons in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. ā€œWorking at Mark’s restaurants was the first time I had seen seasonal cooking taken to such an extreme, and it sparked something in me,ā€ Browning says.

Firth remembers the genesis of their current partnership: ā€œIt was New Year’s Eve 2010, in Brooklyn, and the head chef told me ā€˜if you ever open a restaurant upstate, Steve’s your man’.ā€ Browning had grown up in rural New Jersey, and when he came up to visit the farm that Firth had purchased in Monterey he thought, ā€œI’d totally be down with this.ā€

Before long, Firth was renovating, room by room, a big old Greek Revival house on Main Street in Great Barrington. With handmade tables, lots of bead-board and local cherry wood, the result is cozy comfort, augmented by the woodstove that roars during cold weather. ā€œI’m trying to recreate what an American tavern would have been like when it was built back in the old days,ā€ explains Firth. ā€œObviously, the food is really important. But ambiance and care are also so essential. You’re building a set, really.ā€

With that comment, Firth demonstrates how deeply he understands the central role that a restaurant can play in a community: as a meeting place, a venue for relaxation, and — in the case of the Prairie Whale — a place where people can enjoy a delicious and satisfying connection to the products that come from local farms. Often, that connection is very immediate. Says Firth, ā€œIt comes in the door and it’s on the plate in an hour.ā€

Firth and Browning face a widely recognized battle: trying to buy locally but keep prices reasonable. Firth explains, ā€œI don’t want to have an expensive restaurant. I want you to be able to eat there every day. At the same time, we want to keep the money local so that everybody can benefit.ā€ Reflecting on his customers, his suppliers, and his adopted community, he adds, ā€œThere’s no point in sending your money 150 miles away.ā€

It is no surprise when Firth says, ā€œI think BerkShares make perfect sense for the Berkshires.ā€ In fact, the Whale accepted the local currency the first night it was open. Firth admits that at first he did not know what they were. ā€œBut then I went to Bizalion’s and they took them, so I thought, ā€˜these are great!’ ā€ He adds wryly, ā€œDollars are going to be obsolete soon, anyway.ā€

All right, so if you want to go eat at the Prairie Whale what does it look like from the outside? Well, with a Ping-pong table, corn hole, outdoor dining, and the all-important ā€œfence to keep in the toddlers,ā€ Browning and Firth answer that question simultaneously, and without hesitation: ā€œIt looks like a party!ā€

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