Tucked away on the second floor is a cooking school that I have known about for years. Reaching 21st Street and being able to introduce myself to the people at Natural Gourmet was a highlight of walking this side street. And, perhaps, even more exciting was the welcoming and positive response that our team received when we shared our Manhattan Sideways story. In turn, we learned about the wonderful history behind Natural Gourmet. Annemarie Colbin came to New York in the early 1960s to "become a movie star." After being cast as one of the hundreds of young, female extras in George Sidney’s 1963 film, Bye Bye Birdie, however, Annemarie decided that she preferred to pursue a career in the culinary arts. She explained to us that while growing up in Argentina, her mother took the family to a vegetarian health spa, to help heal her ailing father, and instill in her siblings the knowledge and wisdom that what you put into your body directly affects your well-being. “It seemed so obvious to me, even at age eleven, but I was living in Argentina, the land of meat....And then when I came to America, I immediately realized that no one thought about food and health.” Annemarie taught herself how to properly cook vegetarian cuisine, and put herself through culinary school. Quite the intellectual, and an extraordinary student, she went on, years later, to write her Ph.D. dissertation on Food and Physics. With her movie dreams behind her, Annemarie Colbin taught cooking classes out of her Upper West Side apartment for a decade, until she was kicked out for, essentially, running a business in a residential building. In 1977, Annemarie officially established The Natural Gourmet Institute on 21st Street. Thirty-six years later, the school continues its unique mission to teach cooking and food theory as it relates to bodily health. Susan Baldassano, director of the Chef’s Training Program, and a 1987 graduate of the Apprenticeship program, commented “back then we were looked at as the vegetarian weirdos." Although the Institute has never been completely vegan, it has always placed great emphasis on vegetarian and macrobiotic cooking. Today, Annemarie is thrilled to see the tremendous legacies of her former students, and the current mainstream food trends towards organic, local and sustainable food practices. She has written four books, The Book of Whole Meals, Food and Healing, The Natural Gourmet, and The Whole-Food Guide to Strong Bones, all of which have been selling for over two decades, and have been translated into six languages. Her students have gone on to write prominent cookbooks, start their own businesses, work with food-related charities and serve as executive chefs at top-tier restaurants around the country. The Institute strives in every way to teach within the framework of healthy and natural. Not only do they educate the next generation of organic chefs through their professional Chef’s Training Program, but they also offer extensive programs for people who want to expand their knowledge of cooking and food by taking one course at a time. A tradition that has been taking place for many years is the Friday night dinners prepared by the students and delivered in a relaxed, community-style banquet. I relished this experience a year or so ago when I dined here with friends. What fun not only to taste the food that the students prepared, but also to be able to engage in conversation with several of them. All the people we met who are connected with Natural Gourmet were visibly excited and passionate about their work, the skills they teach, and the mindsets they instill in their students. Rich LaMarita, a chef who was instructing a group of students on how to make authentic Indian dosas stuffed with spiced potatoes, told us “I have the best job ever. I love food and I love my students - in one way or another, they all to want to change the world.” Perhaps, initially, Annemarie was ahead of her time, but now New York has definitely caught up, as organic and vegan have become some of the most popular food words in city dining.