Eating well: How Michelle La Fata nourishes Columbians with fresh Italian food | Local



Michelle La Fata, left, and Malaika Kamau hand squeeze sauteed greens for their garlic and greens ravioli.

Michelle La Fata, left, and Malaika Kamau hand squeeze sauteed greens for their garlic and greens ravioli. Pasta La Fata, Michelle’s Italian cuisine company, started when she did pop-up shops featuring toasted ravioli.



Michelle La Fata is all about keeping it simple, both in her life and in her cooking.

She values her family, good friends and great local food — a philosophy that has been passed down by her Sicilian ancestors.

La Fata shares her love of local flavor with the Columbia community through her fresh Italian cooking. It’s all about making sure her customers are eating seasonal and local diets, or as she says, eating well.

“Shelly” La Fata, 34, is the owner of Pasta La Fata, an Italian food company in Columbia. She and her small staff spend their days in the back kitchen of Café Berlin, making pasta, sauce, soup, cookies and more from scratch.



Michelle La Fata dumps liquid shortening into a deep fryer

Michelle La Fata dumps liquid shortening into a deep fryer at the Columbia Farmers Market. The fryer is used to prepare “panzerotti” — deep-fried calzone.



On any given day, they may be putting together pesto, spicy tomato sauce, fresh ravioli, soup with local vegetables or specials such as holiday lasagna.

La Fata then sells these dishes at the Columbia Farmers Market and through online orders that she delivers.



Top: A sign saying “Grandma La Fata’s Cookies” is bathed in morning light at Pasta La Fata’s booth

Top: A sign saying “Grandma La Fata’s Cookies” is bathed in morning light at Pasta La Fata’s booth at the Columbia Farmers Market. Michelle La Fata’s grandmother was an avid baker for many years, and her cookies are family and customer favorites. “[My grandmother] was so meticulous,” La Fata said. “That went into writing her recipes. She made all kinds of food, but her specialty was cookies.”

Bottom: A scan of a recipe card for an eggplant-based dip sits on Michelle La Fata’s kitchen counter in her home in Columbia. Her grandmother wrote the recipe, along with others her family still cherishes. Her cookie recipes are with La Fata’s father — precious family heirlooms that are loved and protected.



Her food philosophy runs in the family. Eating local food is a large part of life in Italy, where the La Fatas’ lineage began.

Her grandparents also ate locally after they moved to St. Louis, where Michelle grew up and learned to experiment with provincial cuisine.

Her grandfather tended to a garden on a plot of land next to his house, and her grandmother spent much of her time making beautiful food for the family.



Berry thumbprint cookies sit on parchment paper

Berry thumbprint cookies sit on parchment paper before being boxed and loaded into the U-Haul Michelle La Fata uses to transport her food to the Columbia Farmers Market. Other cookies she makes include glazed almond cookies, “cherry luxardo” cookies and chocolate-dipped butter cookies.



Her grandmother never stopped making the fresh food or famous berry thumbprint and glazed almond cookies that Michelle La Fata makes and sells to this day.

The kind of devotion that her grandmother applied to her cooking has been a part of the business in Columbia since its beginning.

“I am obsessed with local food because it’s the most beautiful food I have access to,” La Fata said.



Left: Leafy greens shine under kitchen lights before being squeezed and wrapped in pasta dough.

Left: Leafy greens shine under kitchen lights before being squeezed and wrapped in pasta dough. Pasta La Fata makes many types of pasta including spaghetti, bucatini, lasagna, and cannelloni.

Right: Raw chicken bathes in olive oil, onion, garlic and fresh herbs before being confited in Café Berlin’s back kitchen. Michelle La Fata sources a majority of ingredients from neighbors, friends and other farmers market vendors, including the meat she uses in her recipes. Her neighbor gifted her this chicken, usually raised for its eggs rather than its meat.



“That’s a huge thing in Italy, too, because each little village, each grandma and each mountain has their own thing, based on what they have access to.”



Michelle La Fata sautés local acorn squash, cabbage and apples in a cast iron skillet

Michelle La Fata sautés local acorn squash, cabbage and apples in a cast iron skillet at home in Columbia. She topped her meal with local goat cheese and a balsamic reduction.



La Fata received her culinary education at the Natural Epicurean Academy of Culinary Arts in Austin, Texas, but moved back to Missouri because she cherished the food scene in Columbia.

She became acquainted with Columbia when she studied at MU, majoring in peace studies. Although she took a different path in her career, she said her peace studies education has had a big influence on her passion for food and ability to regulate the stress and intensity that comes with running a small business.

“I like hard work. I think I’m mentally more prepared for stress than most,” La Fata said. “I think my peace studies major and meditation helps a lot with that. I can feel myself sometimes getting so intense and working so hard, and I am able to take a step back and let go of things.”



Michelle La Fata works on a puzzle

Michelle La Fata works on a puzzle at in Columbia. The table was littered with small puzzle pieces, something she works on when she feels a need to slow down from her fast-paced work days. “It’s important for me to remember that I love [my job], and not let it stress me out,” La Fata said.



The work is hard. It means early mornings, late nights, piping hot pans and lots of heavy lifting. Her brain and her body are always being pushed, but the work she does is worth it, she said, because she knows she is nourishing her community.

She said she loves everyone in her life like family and she wants to feed them like family, too.

“I think about my family and my parents and what I want them to eat. I want people to feel good, and I think eating well is directly related to that,” La Fata said. “The more I love people, the more I want them to eat well.”

On the hard days, when the stress becomes overwhelming, she reminds herself that she is fortunate to have the relationships she does with local farmers and her customers, as well as easy access to fresh ingredients.



Michelle La Fata loads freshly made bucatini into the front seat of a U-Haul

Michelle La Fata loads freshly made bucatini into the front seat of a U-Haul in the early hours of Dec. 5 before heading to the Columbia Farmers Market. She usually begins loading everything at around 5 a.m.



And she remembers that it’s OK to take a step back and prioritize mindful rest and relaxation.



Michelle La Fata sits on her bed

Michelle La Fata sits on her bed at home in Columbia in early December. La Fata is a Missouri native with Sicilian roots.



“I am building something people are proud of. Strangers are proud of me,” La Fata said. “It’s a connection that I am making with people in this town that I never expected.

“It feels like my destiny.”



Michelle La Fata dumps roasted potatoes in a bin

Michelle La Fata dumps roasted potatoes in a bin to cool in the chilly December air in Columbia. La Fata spends most of her Thursday and Friday evenings prepping specials and staples to sell at the Columbia Farmers Market on Saturday mornings. The long hours are physically and emotionally taxing, but La Fata said it’s worth it because she knows the people that eat her products are eating well.



Liz Goodwin wrote and photographed this story as a student in Picture Story and Photographic Essay, taught by Associate Professor Jackie Bell.

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