Feeding the front lines, one duck confit at a time

In this Friday, March 27, 2020, photo, patient care technician Matt Phillips, left, and nurse practitioner Sydney Gressel wheel in dinner boxes delivered to them by Nightbird Restaurant chef and owner Kim Alter at University of California at San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital in San Francisco. A group of tech-savvy, entrepreneurial San Francisco friends wanted to help two groups devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. They came up with a plan that involved soliciting donations, tapping friends in the restaurant world and getting San Francisco hospitals to accept free food cooked up by some of the city’s top chefs. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

In this Friday, March 27, 2020, photo, Nightbird Restaurant general manager Ron Boyd, from left, pastry chef Hope Waggoner, chef and owner Kim Alter and sous chef Bailey Walton pack dinner boxes into Alter’s car that were delivered to hospital workers in San Francisco. A group of tech-savvy, entrepreneurial San Francisco friends wanted to help two groups devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. They came up with a plan that involved soliciting donations, tapping friends in the restaurant world and getting San Francisco hospitals to accept free food cooked up by some of the city’s top chefs. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

SAN FRANCISCO — On a break from the front lines, nurse practitioner Gabe Westhemier tucked into a plate of duck confit, the work of one of the city’s celebrity chefs. (“It was wonderful.”)