Friday, September 5, 2008

Homage to Stone's Throw Garden


The highlight of my week in the summer is pick up day at Stone's Throw Garden and I don't mean that I live for a sleazy rural outdoor singles event. We joined this local CSA when we moved to the area years ago, having belonged to others in Morristown, Long Valley and Flemington over the years. I love this one best of all because it suits me somehow in a way that they didn't and elicits a deeper connection. It is about two miles from our house, hidden in a development of large, tasteful new homes. Nora and Mark live in the original old farmhouse on the former farm. The vegetable garden surrounds the house and takes up much of the property. The first things you see as you arrive at the end of the cul de sac are towering 10' sunflowers. Nora usually appears next in one of her practical yet somehow cool, big floppy hats, cut-off overalls, listening to an ipod. She is an amazing gardner, and smart, saavy, and incredibly warm.

The week's picks are stowed in a small stone spring house. Yesterday's selection included Italian parsley, basil, scallions, a choice of greens, five varieties of eggplant, at least six varieties of tomatoes, three kinds of peppers, green and yellow string beans and a choice from the "item bucket" of gigantic beets, and red or green cabbage. How does she do it?! Each week additional items are designated as "pick your own." After I filled my bag with our share of veggies inside, I headed to the garden for beautiful yellow and orange cherry tomatoes and cilantro. Then I made my way to the rows of flowers in the back.



Many things contribute to making this a special place. The first is Nora herself and the incredible bounty that she is able to somehow pull from the earth. The earth! The second is that Stone's Throw is a secret Garden of Eden for the left-leaning in a town and a county where most lean the other way. But for me, it is the "pick your own" option that makes it even more special. Am I ever happier than when I am picking flowers and literally rubbing shoulders and sharing the busy air space with all manner of bees and butterflies?


September is when the weekly pick up is the most generous but in the background is the nagging, bittersweet knowledge that there will be an end to this. That is all the more reason to revel in the precious minutes when time falls away and nothing exists beyond that moment in the garden.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Labor Day Weekend at Home and Away

It could have been a big party. The weather was perfect; both hot and dry with a great breeze in the woods. Throughout the week I kept thinking of more people to include but as the day neared, the list still hadn’t grown beyond its original and ideal occupants – Liz and John and Joe. We started with fresh cream of tomato soup (is there anything better?) and then ate our fill of grilled citrus-marinated chicken on skewers, Japanese eggplant, summer squash and pizza dough with rosemary and sea salt all prepared over a hardwood fire on our old workhorse Weber. Additional flames leapt from the fire pit and sparklers amused the kids. It was a great night to be outside and a melancholy end to summer.




All in all it was a mellow long weekend where time actually seemed to stretch a bit further than usual with an underlying theme of friends and fires. We enjoyed an evening beer with Rachel and Gardner and many girls around a roaring hibachi in Asbury and two kinds of pulled pork with corn on the cob cooked over a hand-built outdoor fireplace with Nancy, Dan, Andy and friends at home in Lebanon Township.

We left local comforts behind for a Sunday evening in the City with my wonderful, crazy-in-a-good-way friend Karen, husband Fran and kids, Annie and Jake, who were visiting from London. After roaming the Village from their hotel on St. Mark’s Place and through SoHo to the west side, we ended up at an old haunt and one of few still standing, the Ear Inn. We sipped wine on the sidewalk with a motley crew on folding chairs and enjoyed the wind off of the Hudson River before heading inside for burgers. The kids loved the seedy place, the tattooed and the pierced and found it “very New York.” Having been forewarned about the potential for conversation to turn to the earth’s demise in 2012, they also loved Karen. Thibault even declared her “cool” when we got in the car that night for the journey home.












It has been suggested that I include some simple recipes with my posts. I can do that, but please know that the measurements are loose and if I have to tighten them up I'll lose interest in this part of the blog entirely.

Marinated Chicken on Skewers adapted from Anna Pump's "Summer on a Plate"
  • 4 lbs. boneless chicken thighs (I am way into chicken thighs right now) cut into large chunks
  • 1 cup orange juice
  • 1/2 cup lime juice
  • 2 cloves mashed or minced garlic
  • 2 Tbs. dark brown sugar
  • 1 tsp. harissa or other hot sauce
  • 1 tsp. sea salt

Mix all ingredients together for the marinade and pour over skewered chicken 15 mins. before grilling. Once the skewers are on the grill, reduce the marinade by 2/3. Drizzle this sauce over the chicken before serving. Don't ask me about the temperature or cooking time. My use of a grill is pretty intuitive. You'll know when they're done and if they're cooking too fast.


http://earinn.c0m/


http://www.jibjab.com/view/164564

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

The Official Ice Cream Survey Part III: The Hamptons



The Candy Kitchen has been around since before forever, in fact I don’t remember a time without it. That’s because it opened in 1925, long before my time in the Hamptons began in 1961! If any improvements have been made since then, they have been subtle ones. Anything more would certainly elicit an angry outcry from the community. In an area that has seen such dramatic change over the years, it is reassuring to have a spot where time stands still.

Fortunately for our judges, what the Candy Kitchen does best is ice cream. They make their own from a few basic ingredients; cream, whole milk, egg yolks, sugar and natural flavoring. They offer about twelve flavors at a time with classics like vanilla, mint chocolate chip, coffee chip and rum raisin as well as coconut and fresh fruit in season. Everyone has a favorite - Dad always orders Rum Raisin, Jamie is stuck on Coconut and Sylvain on Coffee.




The Ice Cream Survery Part III required that our judges make multiple trips to the Candy Kitchen for a thorough product evaluation. In fact, Maeve and Nora each made three trips over the course of the week and only one of them together! Maeve sampled Mint Chocolate Chip, Chocolate Chocolate Chip and Chocolate. When recently reached for comment she exclaimed, "It was awesome!" Nora had Cookie Dough twice and Chocolate Chocolate Chip on her last visit. Huston sampled Chocolate Choclate Chip at least twice to my knowledge.



What kind of survey only tests ice cream from one location you may ask. We truly intended to compare the Bridgehampton Carvel, two spots in Sag Harbor and maybe even a gelato shop in Southampton but we kept being drawn back to the Candy Kitchen. For us it really is the only place to get ice cream. Other places may make ice cream that hits the spot, but surely none will endure for generations or ever hold a place in anyone's heart.


Peach Ice Cream from the Candy Kitchen
1 dozen peaches
5 egg yolks
2 lbs. sugar
3 cups heavy cream
1-1/2 cups milk
inch of salt

Put peaches in hot water to loosen skins and peel them easily. Peel, slice, pit and combine peaches with sugar. Mix and mash until thoroughly blended. Combine all ingredients in a crank freezer and mix in the general method used for making ice cream.


I'm guessing that if you halve the recipe, it will fit in a smaller home ice cream maker.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

A Week in Bridgehampton

We spent a great week at the shore with family enjoying blue skies and incredible cloud formations, hot days and cool nights, and a warm ocean. Days were filled with biking, swimming, sunning, and reading followed by outdoor showers and great meals! I even squeezed in a couple of naps.

Since I believe in getting things off my chest quickly and moving on, I'll start with one of our two meals out.

I thought that it would be a good idea to head to World Pie on a Monday night in Bridgehampton. We had picked up Thibault on Saturday on East End Avenue near Gracie Mansion and had driven directly to the shore for a week’s vacation but still hadn’t quite regrouped as a family of four after his 8 weeks North. I thought that it would be quiet on a Monday. No one told me that it was Moms-take-as-many-children-under-six-as-you-can-gather and-their-nannies-out-for-dinner night. Mothers and young daughters alike had long tangled hair, sun dresses and metallic sandals. The nannies were not as flashy but enjoyed wine at the table with the crew, dealing with their young charges while the Moms busied themselves with their iPhones. Did I mention that the kids were a combination of terribly spoiled, over-dressed in designer kiddie apparel and frighteningly sophisticated? There were very few men in the crowd and oddly, the children were overwhelmingly girls. I took Nora to the restroom which was also overrun with them, two to a stall! More were roaming unattended through the outdoor dining space, including a child named “Gracie” who crawled under our chairs a few times to access the back yard area where she climbed onto another chair and pounded her little entitled fists on the window of the dining room. One or two times an adult appeared and sighed, “Gracie,” only to disappear again.

I almost forgot! World Pie is a restaurant. It was so distracting that I almost neglected to mention the food which is okay, and the pizza, which is pretty darn good. It was really far better than that. And our long-suffering Lithuanian waiter was top notch and made me laugh when he caught my eye and said that usually he needs at least two martinis before coming work.




We had three salads to start with. Nora had fresh mozzarella with tomatoes and pesto dressing, something she was recently turned onto. Thibault had the Caesar Salad and Sylvain opted for radicchio, endive and arugula. I nibbled here and there. Nora adored hers but I thought that they were all just okay. When you are used to eating only local produce all summer, the mass-produced stuff trucked in from afar just doesn't cut it. With the explosion of small farms on the East End now and a great organic movement, there just isn’t any excuse to serve anything else!

For main courses we ordered three small thin crust pizzas – one plain, one Puttanesca and one shrimp with roasted red peppers. All were excellent, especially my choice of Puttanesca. Remember that Pasta Puttanesca is supposedly “whore’s pasta,” made quickly in the ten minutes or so between clients - chopped anchovies, black olives, capers, garlic and parsley. It translated well to pizza and the proportions were just right and enhanced the pie and rather than overwhelmed it. Yum!



We devoured our wonderful pies, paid our substantial Hamptons bill and got the heck out of there. We’ll come back for the food and the service but I’m afraid we’ll have to wait until it is off-season.

We had much better luck on our second night out, as I knew we would, at La Fondita, a family favorite. The food is excellent, the setting is fun and unpretentious. Food is ordered at the counter and then taken to picnic tables scattered across the lawn near a neighboring garden center. The grounds are fun to roam while waiting for food and kids love exploring the forest of giant bamboo.

I tried the pollo tostada, a corn tortilla filled with shredded chicken, refried beans, lettuce, pico de gallo, queso fresco and crema, and the elote con mayonesa y queso, corn on the cob slathered with mayo and coated with fresh cheese and chili powder. Both were excellent washed down with an icy Negra Modelo! Sylvain reveled in his tongue taco appetizer. I still am not sure if he orders it because he actually likes it or to see people's reactions. It's probably a bit of both.


When we go to Bridgehampton for summer vacation each year with extended family, more often than not the best meals are those we make at home. They are pure and uncomplicated and usually feature grilled meat or fish accompanied by grilled vegetables, corn on the cob and various salads. Over the course of the week we enjoyed t-bone steak, Griggstown Farm chicken sausages, monkfish, tuna and lemon-marinated chicken on the grill.

Side dishes included heirloom tomato salad, tomato and mozzarella salad, mixed greens with sesame dressing, grilled summer squash and eggplant, and an amazing salad that Thibault cooked up of artichoke hearts, beans, red peppers and zucchini!

In spite of the intense development of the Hamptons and in fierce defiance of it (or perhaps because of the demands of the people behind it), a growing movement of local farmers growing organic produce, making artisanal cheeses and raising livestock has been steadily growing over the years. As a result, there are some great area farm stands. Our local favorites are the Pike Farm and the Mecox Bay Dairy stands. Also, the Saturday morning Sag Harbor Farmer's Market has small but broad selection. We picked up a bag of beautiful Satur Farm mesclun with bright orange nastursium blossoms and a box of miniature Japanese lemon cucumbers the size of olives at their stand. We also bought some tiny yellow pleurotus grown in Bridgehampton by David Falkowski and a wedge of local cheddar from Arthur Ludlow of Mecox Bay Dairy. An amazing lunch resulted! Of course prices are high but so is the cost of farming on the East End.

One morning Dad, Thibault and I set out early to beat the crowds at Loaves and Fishes. I had read in Edible East End that Anna Pump, my former boss, had a new cookbook out and anyway, we needed some pies.

The simple white-washed space was unchanged since my long ago summers working there and some of the classic original salads remained joined now by more recent additions. Pies were just being pulled steaming from the ovens and set on the sill behind the counter. A clever idea as Dad observed. We selected a blueberry and a peach-blackberry. We also bought a couple of baguettes, also still warm from the oven, and three copies of “Summer on a Plate” which Anna graciously signed for us. One of the baguettes made it home, the other we finished off in the car between the three of us. That night many of us agreed that the pies were the best we had ever sampled.


Seeing Anna and revisiting my culinary past reminded me of her role in the direction my life later took. Even though she was a no-nonsense boss and I didn’t much like her at the time, I loved the hours I spent working in her kitchen for the summers of 1981 and 1982. I appreciate now what I learned from Anna about food, cooking, dealing with difficult customers and running a business. Now that I think of it, after my mother she was the first in a long line of women who instructed me in “cuisine de femme.” Another was the infamous Martine who I worked for in Corsica and oddly enough had run into at the Sag Harbor Farmer's Market in July.

I biked to work those summers to start the day at 7 a.m. Thursday to Monday. In spite of the early start to the day, I was out most nights and would get a ride to the beach for a swim during my lunch hour. I’d head again to the beach after work. I had a job, a great social life, and was living completely independently at the beach. If I had complaints, they are forgotten! The pleasures I get from time spent in Bridgehampton have clearly evolved over the years since my childhood and young adulthood, but it will always hold a special place in my heart. The trick is focusing on what is still wonderful and valued and blocking out the distracting noise of Maseratis, Lamborghinis and Ferraris.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Official Ice Cream Survey Part II: Maine



Nora has returned from a rainy but ice cream-filled week in the Deering section of Portland, Maine and the moment has come to post the results of Part II. Thanks go to Clara for her detailed notes, to Nora for her documentary photographs and Maeve for her dedication to finding the perfect cone. The girl's first stop was Jet Video, the local post office, video store and ice cream parlor that features Gifford's ice cream. Couldn't we all use a place like that? The girls both went for a flavor called Mississippi Mud (coffee ice cream with a fudge swirl and crumbled chocolate cookies) with Maeve adding some chocolate moose tracks to hers (a Maine favorite with chocolate ice cream, Reese's cups and fudge). According to Clara, Jet Video has the biggest, cheapest "kiddie cone" around. This stuff got the highest rating of "marvelous" for creaminess and "great" marks for cone, texture, and sweetness (no toppings were needed) for an average of 1.8.


Next in line was Maple's Organics, the local gelato maker (again, I think we need a "local gelato maker" in Lebanon Township). This was so good that they actually got it twice - this first time at Whole Foods. The girls loved the creaminess of the gelato (marvelous apparently). Nora had chocolate and Maeve had chocolate plus some raspberry sorbet. Creaminess was again "marvelous" and marks were in the "great" range for everything else for an average of 1.75. For the second tasting, they went to the company store where Nora had vanilla chocolate fudge caramel swirl (whew!) and Maeve had the same with a scoop of milk chocolate orange thrown in - what a combo. The creaminess this time dropped off a bit to a still-respectable 1.5, but the cone was merely "good" (Clara says that they have home-made cones that really taste like waffles but thinks we're all too used to the mass-produced kind). "Marvelous" marks for texture brought the average score to a "great" 2. Final comnined score from two tastings: 1.8

The last stop on this leg of the Official Survey to sample the Smiling Hill Farm product. Clara says that this is fabulous ice cream produced by a local dairy. They bought some at a stand next to the local pizza place, Sian's, where everyone got their own pizzas and watched a kid being trained to make them. Nora ordered a dish of rainbow sherbet and Maeve got a chocolate cone. The creaminess was a 1.5 and everything else rated "great" across the boards for an overall score of 1.8.

The results of the Official Ice Cream Survey Part II? Wait just a minute. How can it be?! Is a three-way even tie possible?! Has someone tampered with the results?! Is all Maine ice cream approaching truly marvelous?! Apparently it is. The experts have spoken.

Next stop: The Hamptons

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Friday in Frenchtown

Since there was only one slim day before our week alone was to end, we decided that it was time to finally take off from work to take advantage of the situation! We headed south to Frenchtown to do some wandering, eat a bite of lunch and spend the afternoon tubing down the Delaware. Our first stop was Two Buttons, a warehouse hidden away in a former industrial zone beyond "no trespassing" and "private property" signs, on the edge of town. The shop is owned by Elizabeth Gilbert, author of "Eat, Pray, Love," and her husband Jose. Yes, they get married in the end and open up an import business in Frenchtown, N.J. It is a wonderful bazaar of mostly Asian imports. We left with many ideas but only one purchase - a $5 back scratcher for Thibault.

For lunch we decided not to do the Bridge Cafe. We've been there many times over the years and it was quite full. Sylvain wasn't interested in Mexican at Cocina del Sol (though I was) so I suggested the "diner." It looked very inviting and there were a couple of empty tables so we went in.




Why haven't we ever eaten here?! It was very charming (in spite of a tattered seat in our booth -file that under pet peeves), the service was great and diner-speedy and the food was wonderful. I had the Cajun Tilapia Po' Boy special served with roasted garlic and basil mayonnaise, sliced tomatoes and mixed greens on a Kaiser roll with fries and an enormous glass of lemonade. So good! Sylvain enjoyed a chicken and artichoke sandwich on thick sesame semolina bread with an equally enormous iced tea. The menu was a crowd-pleasing combination of diner classics and more sophisticated fare all reasonably priced. I usually feel that diners should stick to what they know - usually it is a big mistake when they try to get fancy - but the Frenchtown Cafe is clearly not in over their heads when they move beyond omelets and Greek salad. We'll be back there soon.



Afterwards, perhaps in response to the magnetic effect of the word "chocolate" painted on the window, we were drawn across the street to a place called Minette's Candies. We sampled Creme Brulee and Tiramisu truffles and picked up some retro candy items like flying saucers filled with sour powder and my beloved Zotz for the kids.

The clouds were starting to look a bit ominous so we took our goody bag and drove over to the tubing outpost in Point Pleasant, PA. and spent the rest of the afternoon floating down the Delaware in inner tubes.

http://www.elizabethgilbert.com/eatpraylove.htm

http://www.twobuttons.com/

http://www.frenchtown.com/

http://www.rivercountry.net/

Monday, August 4, 2008

Seventeen Hours in Maine!

My stiff back tells me that it really did happen. We left Saturday a.m. for Maine, delivered Nora, and were home again by mid afternoon on Sunday. What is the matter with us?! The answer may be better suited to a blog on another subject: "My Issues?" I'll try to stick closely to food.

The drive was extremely boring, so much so that I threatened to fine Nora $1 for each time she uttered the b-word. In fact, apparently it was the number one most boring day of her entire life. To break the monotony and to get off the highway after a painful passage through the New Hampshire tolls, we exited at Portsmouth. Plus it was time for lunch! I had gone online an had retrieved the names of a couple of seafood shack-type establishments but neglected to print-out phone numbers or directions. Somehow I figured that they would be easy to find in the small coastal towns. Well they weren't. We loved the narrow lanes of historic Portsmouth but ended up having panini sandwiches at the Chef's Cove Cafe on Wallingford Square in nearby Kittery. We all enjoyed our selections; mine had mozzarella, tomato and pesto, Sylvain's ham, cheese and tomato and Nora's was just plain cheese. We left well-sated, a bit less bored, and ready to continue on our way.

After our arrival and settling in, we all headed downtown to wander around a bit but mostly to pick up the lobsters for dinner at the famous Harbor Fish Market. What an emporium of beautiful, glistening fresh fish and shellfish! This place has been around for 40 years and does a brisk business. Our lobsters were steamed and ready to eat, packed in a special insulated box. We happily devoured them back at the house with green beans, garlic cheese bread and potato chips (some kind of fancy New England tradition) accompanied by nice cold beers! By the time we had finished we had completely forgotten the long drive.


Dessert was brownies and whoopie pies from the Big Sky Bakery down the hill. Those whoopie pies put the ones from the Flemington Amish Market to shame (sorry). Then again, I don't think I've ever had them from anywhere else until now. All in all, it was great to be with Clara and Dan, even for such a brief moment. Next time we'll plan ahead, stay longer and have more great meals to talk about.