“The quality of the food that you guys offer is amazing… It’s been a godsend,” Todd Dickinson told us one Monday after selecting groceries at the Tenderloin Pop-up Pantry, a collaboration between the Food Bank and St. Anthony’s in San Francisco. A sweet-natured pit bull named le Roi sat beside him, accepting pets from friends and passersby.
Looking through his grocery bag, Todd rattled off dinner ideas: “We’ve got cauliflower.… I’m going to drop that in a pot and make a bisque — a nice creamy, cauliflower soup. The radishes I slice really thin and put into posole.”
A longtime chef, Todd helped open five restaurants over the course of his career. But like thousands of workers in the food service industry, Todd lost his job at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Several years of housing instability followed. As Todd struggled to secure a permanent dwelling, groceries from the Tenderloin Pop-up Pantry helped take one stressor off his plate.
During this period, he rescued le Roi — emaciated and severely abused — from the streets. Nursing le Roi back to health became his mission. “I put him on a high protein, high caloric, high fat diet,” Todd said. With the money the pantry saved him on groceries, he was able to buy quality dog food. Fully recovered, le Roi now “picks up his own leash and walks himself. He plays basketball and body surfs,” Todd beamed.
Although Todd has retired from his work as a chef, he still shares his talents for caring and nourishing others by volunteering at City Hope. This community center and Food Bank partner offers Tenderloin neighbors a community center and restaurant-style meals as well as transitional housing for people in recovery.
Earlier this year, Todd achieved a major accomplishment: with help from St. Anthony’s, he secured an apartment for him and le Roi, with a kitchen all his own. “I’m so blessed,” he said, smiling ear to ear.
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