From one meal to one sick friend to 3 million New Yorkers fed last year. Photo: God’s Love We Deliver
In 1985, as a volunteer at Cabrini Hospice, Ganga Stone delivered a bag of groceries to Richard Sale, a man living with AIDS.. Upon receiving the bag, he threw it on the floor in frustration. Sale could barely stand — how was he supposed to turn a bag of ingredients into his supper?
The next day, Stone brought Sale a deli-bought meal. The day after that, she personally prepared a meal that was tailored to his ailing body’s dietary needs.
As she walked to Sale’s to drop off the meal, Stone was stopped on the street by a minister, who asked where she was going and what she was doing. Stone told him she was delivering food to a sick friend, to which he replied, “you’re not just delivering food… you’re delivering God’s love.”
Within the year, Ganga Stone and her friend Jane Best founded God’s Love We Deliver, a secular New York charity that cooks and home-delivers nutritious, medically-tailored meals to people too sick to shop or cook for themselves. At the time, they worked in collaboration with a local restaurant and delivered — mostly by bike — 50 meals a day to those living with AIDS in Manhattan. They grew rapidly to meet the speed and ferocity of the AIDS epidemic.
Almost 40 years later, God’s Love operates out of a gigantic kitchen on Avenue of the Americas, where hundreds of volunteers gather everyday to prepare 13,000 meals for New Yorkers in need. Last year, they served 3 million meals to those who are too sick to do so for themselves.
The volunteers move like a team of professional chefs when Emmett Findley, Director of Communications at God’s Love, takes me on a whirlwind tour of the bustling kitchen. The unstoppable assembly line of huge-hearted New Yorkers have each volunteered their Sunday afternoons to slice, dice, press and pack little parcels of nutritious, delicious love.
“Our chefs are doing the cooking, our volunteers are prepping and assembling… when you put it all together, it’s like the hum of an orchestra,” says Findley.
Sunday is prep day: one team is on ground chicken for Wednesday’s spicy meatball dish, another are grating carrots for a slaw, while pairs lug crates of chickpeas across the 10,000 square-foot kitchen.
The week’s menu sits on a whiteboard on the wall — roasted pesto salmon, kale burgers, black lentil salad, braised beef with cherries — this is gourmet cuisine, with detailed recipes scribbled alongside: 1 gallon of red wine, 3 oz fresh thyme, 1lt lemon juice and 16 oz smoked paprika.
“It’s that precision and planning that makes us run so well,” says Findley. “We are constantly thinking, how can I make this simpler for the next person in the next day?”