Meet Chef and Author Abra Berens

How an award-winning chef and author from southwest Michigan rose to prominence.
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Abra Berens, a University of Michigan graduate, is the chef at Granor Farm and has penned three acclaimed cookbooks. // Photograph by EE Berger

When I chatted with chef in early December, the staff at was in the midst of a winter harvest, picking greens from the greenhouse, pulling celery roots, rutabagas, and purple-top turnips. The farm is in Three Oaks, a small southwest Michigan village 10 minutes from Indiana and just over an hour from Chicago. It鈥檚 a sleepy enclave with a charming old Midwestern-style downtown, slightly removed from the Lake Michigan beachfronts that attract Chicagoans and Hoosiers come summertime.

Every Friday and Saturday, typically, Berens prepares a unique eight-course meal for guests in a greenhouse dining room. Tickets go on sale months in advance for the dinners, which highlight Granor鈥檚 freshly picked produce and other ingredients from nearby suppliers. These dinners earned Berens semifinalist status at the James Beard Awards in 2023 and in 2020.

In 2020, she also received a nomination for her debut cookbook,. Many recipes were adapted from her Traverse City Record-Eagle food column, which she wrote while working a chef job in Chicago and co-running Bare Knuckle Farm in Northport, near the tip of the Leelanau Peninsula (Michigan鈥檚 pinkie).

The youngest of three girls, Berens grew up on a farm near Holland that sold cucumbers听to pickle companies. While she came from a lineage of farmers, her parents both worked as anesthesiologists and encouraged her to pursue higher education. They cautioned that farming was 鈥渘ot a romantic lifestyle,鈥 Berens says. 鈥淚 think they were a little concerned about me not utilizing some of the education that I had received at University of Michigan.鈥

While at U-M in the early 2000s, she was accepted into the Peace Corps and dreamed听of one day working for the United Nations or a nongovernmental organization. Then, a job behind the counter at changed everything. It鈥檚 where she met Jess Piskor, a fellow student who would one day be her business partner at Bare Knuckle Farm, and Zingerman鈥檚 co-founder Paul Saginaw, whom she considers a major mentor.

鈥淚 saw how much of a difference Zingerman鈥檚 made in its employees鈥 lives,鈥 Berens says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 when I started to think about being a small businessperson.鈥

She eventually began cooking under the direction of Zingerman鈥檚 Head Chef Rodger Bowser. In 2004, she graduated from college with a double bachelor鈥檚 in English and history. Then, with encouragement from Bowser, she enrolled at in Ireland, located on a 100-acre organic farm.

Situated in southwest Michigan, Granor Farm grows organic produce, which can be tasted at Berens鈥檚 greenhouse dinners. There鈥檚 also a farm store, a community-supported agriculture program, and even a children鈥檚 day camp. // Photograph by EE Berger

Since Ruffage (published in 2019), she鈥檚 rapidly penned two acclaimed follow-ups: in 2021, and , released last April. Besides providing a comprehensive guide to preparing dishes with seasonal produce the reader has on hand, the books zoom out to include less-discussed aspects of food and cooking. Namely, these comprise the social, economic, health, labor, and environmental factors that surround farming, as well as farmers themselves.

鈥淚 find vapid discussions glorifying food while ignoring the people who grow or process our food very, ahem, frustrating,鈥 writes Berens in the introduction to Pulp. 鈥淚t is trite but true: no farms = no food. We have to go beyond a superficial rah-rah-rah for growers.鈥 The chapters, divided by types of fruit, are regularly accompanied by profiles of Michigan fruit producers. She examines the state鈥檚 west-side 鈥渇ruit belt,鈥 which stretches north from around St. Joseph to Traverse City, and the issues that impact its growers.

鈥淲hen I hear people say, 鈥榃hy is fruit so expensive?,鈥 unfortunately 鈥 it鈥檚 very hard to earn a living on a raw product,鈥 Berens says. 鈥淚鈥檓 advocating for empathy 鈥 if people understand what goes into the production of food, they鈥檇 understand why those costs are what they are.鈥

For instance, many of the picturesque communities are hot spots for summer homes, which drives up the cost of farmlands. 鈥淧eople think, 鈥業 want to live in the rolling hills of cherry orchards, but I don鈥檛 want [farmers] to spray, I don鈥檛 want them to harvest at night,鈥 things like that. And it鈥檚 like, well, that鈥檚 what goes into it,鈥 Berens says.

After years of fast-paced production schedules that yielded three award-winning cookbooks, Berens says these days, she鈥檚 focusing her energy on the dinner program at Granor Farm and raising her 2-year-old son with her husband, Erik Hall, a musician she met at U-M. A common through line in her life鈥檚 work continues to be championing Michigan produce.

鈥淢ichigan is the second most agriculturally diverse state in the nation, second to California. It is no doubt in my mind that that is linked to our benefits of being a peninsula surrounded by one of the greatest freshwater resources in the entire world. It鈥檚 a really special place.鈥


This story is from the February 2024 issue of 黑料网 Detroit magazine. Read more in our digital edition.