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CLICK HERE for a list of great locations to find Edible Cape Cod.
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| DEPARTMENTS |
| 3 |
GRIST
FOR THE MILL
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CONTRIBUTORS |
| 4 |
SUBSCRIBE TO EDIBLE CAPE COD |
| 11 |
NOTABLE EDIBLES
Gemini Caribbean
Mart, Coast, Chilmark's Original Toasted Sesame
Dressing, Amandine Patisserie Cafe, The Farm
at Main Street, Casa di Babbo, Main Street
Gourmet, Harvest Gallery |
| 22 |
COOKING FRESH |
| 24 |
LOCAL FARM STANDS |
| 31 |
EDIBLE NATION
Food Fight
2007: A Citizen's Guide |
| 43 |
OUR DISTRIBUTORS |
| 47 |
EDIBLE EVENTS |
| 48 |
OUT OF HAND |
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COVER
Jeff Sampson
and Eric Hesse unloading the Tenacious, by
Doug Langeland |
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FEATURES |
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6 |
CAPTAIN
TENACIOUS
The Tasty Tale of a Remarkable Relationship |
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14 |
THE
RAW DEAL
The Pleasure and "Perils"
of Drinking Raw Goat's Milk |
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19 |
SUSTAINABLE
AGRICULTURE
Mimicking Mother Nature |
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26 |
WHERE
FOODIES GO TO DRINK |
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34 |
SCENES
FROM A MARKET
Photos from the 2006 Mid-Cape Farmers'
Market |
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37 |
CAPE
COD WINERY, NATURALLY
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41 |
ALL
CAPE COOK'S SUPPLY
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44 |
PEACHTREE
CIRCLE FARM
A Labor of Love in Sippewissett |
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CAPTAIN
TENACIOUS
THE TASTY TALE OF A REMARKABLE RELATIONSHIP
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Anthony Bennett filleting a whole
fish in the kitchen of Naked |
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It took two dogs to start one of the best human
relationships on the Cape.
One night last spring, Rusty, an Airedale whose
owner Florence Lowell had recently purchased the
Naked Oyster, wandered into the neighbor's house
to get acquainted with Pumpkin, a Golden Retriever
owned by Eric Hesse, a local commercial fisherman.
As it turns out Florence had noticed the fish
totes piled behind Eric's house and was looking
for an opportunity to meet him. For Florence,
a native of Bordeaux, a port-city in the southwest
of France, the fish totes reminded her of the
fishermen's homes where she grew up. Florence
asked Eric if there was some way she and her executive
chef David Kelley could purchase some of Eric's
catch for the Naked Oyster. Although Eric told
her that most of his fish goes straight to auction
in Gloucester, Florence insisted that he and David
Kelley meet to see if they could work out an arrangement.
The rest, as they say, is history, and in this
case really good eating.
Eric Hesse and the FV Tenacious
Eric Hesse is part owner and captain of two vessels-the
34-ft FV Tenacious, harbored in Harwich, and the
30-ft FV Mattanza, berthed in Barnstable Harbor.
Eric uses one boat or the other, depending on
what he is trying to catch. He is one of the diminishing
number of commercial Cape Cod longline fishermen
who ply the waters on Georges Bank.
Although Eric has been fishing for more than 23
years and loves his work, he is not quite sure
how fishing got into his blood. His father, a
sales executive with Proctor and Gamble, would
occasionally bring his sons with him to Jamestown,
Rhode Island when he reported for service in the
naval reserves. This gave young Eric a chance
to check out "a lot of boats". But Eric's
most vivid memory was a visit aboard an anti-submarine
ship where the cook took a liking to him and gave
him as much ravioli as he could eat. With a belly
full of pasta Eric got so seasick that he was
gun-shy about boats for a "quite a while".
When he was a bit older he had a 16-foot sailboat
called the Bounty. He and his dad would go fishing,
but Eric says he "never caught a thing".
Still the call of the water persisted and Eric
started to ride his bike to Osterville to hang
out with the bridge keepers. By the time he was
a teenager, Eric was working at the Chester Crosby
& Son boat yard and soon he was hooked on
boats. Today Eric lives in West Barnstable with
his wife Lee Ann and two children, Zachary and
Cooper.
In 1984, when Eric started fishing commercially
in Cape Cod Bay, he primarily fished for tuna
using a hand-thrown harpoon. The late 1980s were
the heyday for tuna fishing, but then the catch
began to decline as the fish inexplicably shifted
northward to Canadian waters and became only occasionally
commercially viable on Cape Cod.
Today Eric fishes for cod and haddock using long
lines. To find fish, Eric and a crewmember, Jeff
Sampson, frequently have to travel overnight about
eight hours and 100 miles to Georges Bank. There,
they will put out their gear, known as "tubs"
among fishermen (hence the name tub-trawling for
the fishery). Each tub typically holds 250 to
300 hooks, with each hook set 5 feet to 6 feet
apart. Thus the total length of each tub is 1,500
to 1,800 feet. Eric and his crew generally combine
2 to 4 tubs together in each "string",
and set 5 to 7 strings total. (The total number
depends primarily on the tide; in stronger tides
they set less due to the possibility of getting
"hung down" on rocks and obstructions
as the tide runs harder.) So the total length
of each string is up to 1 mile or so, and on each
tide they will set between 4,500 to 7,500 hooks.
The lines are set as the tide approaches slack,
or about an hour or an hour and a half before
the turn. Georges Bank longliners prefer to set
the "south tide" or low tide. The fish
forage during the slack water since it is physiologically
less taxing for them. Eric and crew spend about
an hour or more setting the gear then begin hauling
it as soon as they are done setting, typically
starting with the string they set first. It will
take 4 to 6 hours to "haul back". According
to Eric, "The fish are just as lively and
vibrant after 6 hours as they are on the first-hauled
string. I have known fishermen that, having developed
mechanical difficulties after a couple of strings
and returning to port, come back the next day
to find the fish still lively and swimming strongly
on the gear."
As he pulls in his lines, Eric never knows for
sure what he will find. Some days the fishing
will be richly rewarding (a good metric for Eric
is 1/3 pound per hook). Many times very little
will be hooked. Most frustrating are the days
when a lot of fish are caught, but a predator
like dogfish feast on the fish on the hooks leaving
almost nothing to land on the Tenacious. The capacity
of the Tenacious is 8,000 pounds of fish, but
given the challenges of finding fish, it rarely
returns full. In a typical week Eric will catch
approximately 4,000 pounds of fish
In addition to cod and haddock, unanticipated
fish, called "bycatch", are hooked as
well. Eric says that "bycatch can be a dirty
word" among environmentalists because in
some fisheries it can include species that are
over fished or endangered. Eric stresses, however,
that longline fishing results in lower bycatch
mortality since so many that are thrown back swim
on unharmed. Some bycatch that is not endangered
such as Acadian Redfish or monkfish, however,
is VERY tasty. This fish Eric ices and sets aside
for the Naked Oyster.
Given that Eric travels 100 miles offshore on
a 34-foot boat, weather dictates how often he
goes out. In the summer he will typically be out
four days a week, while in winter it can be as
little as once a week. Eric says that while he
is used to the long voyages with little sleep
and the physical demands of commercial fishing,
he feels that fishing for a living is "actually
tougher mentally than physically". Eric never
knows what is going to happen when he heads out
to work. He smiles as he explains, "To succeed
you need to get up in the morning convinced you
are going to go out and be 'the man' and get a
big catch," but with a sigh he continues,
"even if you have had bad luck and have not
caught many during your last few trips."
Once he has caught what he can, Eric turns toward
home and motors for eight hours back to Cape Cod.
When he arrives in Harwich at Wychmere Harbor,
a truck meets him to take most of the fish to
the display auction in Gloucester. The display
auction, a relatively new innovation in New England,
is helpful to line fishermen like Eric because
all the fish to be auctioned are laid out for
buyers to examine before the bidding starts. Eric
explains, "This allows buyers to compare
quality, and that quality gets rewarded in the
price." Eric and the Tenacious are well known
in fish buying circles. Among others, Legal Sea
Foods, the freshness-obsessed Boston-based chain,
is familiar with his boat and keeps an eye out
for his fish.
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With his catch
iced in the holds on deck, Eric has time to talk
on his satellite phone on his way home. One of
the calls he looks forward to is with David Kelley.
He tells David what bycatch he has and what is
"on the top of the hold" and, as such,
the most fresh. Upon arriving back on the Cape,
Eric delivers the fish to the Naked Oyster where
it will be on diners' plates within hours.
For a busy restaurant like the Naked Oyster,
fish directly from a fisherman presents challenges.
The fish are delivered whole, which means someone
at the restaurant has to break them down into
serving portions. Filleting and portioning is
a skill that has become uncommon among restaurant
staff. Fortunately the solution to this problem
was right in the Naked Oyster kitchen; David Kelley
discovered that Anthony Bennett, one of his chefs,
was a fish cutter in his native Jamaica. Quickly
recruited into a new role, Anthony is "unbelievably"
quick at filleting fish, according to David.
A bigger challenge to overcome, however, is the
cost and unpredictability of buying fish from
one fisherman who has to work with the vagaries
of the sea. "Sometimes he catches a lot,
sometimes nothing. Other times he catches something
unexpected," Kelley said as he pointed to
a really large, really ugly whole monkfish perched
on ice on the Naked Oyster raw bar.
Eric and the Naked Oyster are flexible enough
to make it all work. First, both Florence and
David have a shared commitment to using the best
ingredients, even if finding them is more trouble
and costs a little more. The restaurant has to
be able to deal with "lots of fish today"
and then "no fish tomorrow" or "something
unexpected".
Frequently this means making changes to the menu
and in the kitchen at 4:00 p.m. just as dinner
service gets underway. David Kelley says it is
similar to the way he deals with the unpredictability
of working with farmers. "You need to be
prepared to think of a special on the spot when
something unexpected happens," he says. "But
there isn't much to it if you are willing to make
and get a few extra calls a week," he says
modestly.
Florence is more emphatic. Flexibility is worth
it because "Ingredients, and especially fish,
are where we don't cut corners." Florence
is known to roam far and wide to source ingredients.
For example when she wanted to use fresh, unfrozen
gulf shrimp in the shrimp cocktails at Naked Oyster,
she traveled to Louisiana to meet the suppliers
herself. Florence stresses that using Eric's fish
is part of trying to get things as fresh as possible.
She emphasizes, "You can't put stripes on
a donkey and call it a zebra."
From his perspective, Eric feels that Naked Oyster
has become a small but reliable customer. They
have purchased more than 3,500 pounds of fish
from him since May of 2006. But Eric values Florence
and David as customers more because of how much
they appreciate and emphasize the quality of his
work. This unique relationship between fisher
and restaurateur/chef is the envy of many restaurants
on the Cape that put a premium on local, fresh
ingredients. And it all started with the late
night visit between two dogs. No fish tale.
The Cape's longline fleet is supported by the
Cape Cod Commercial Hook Fishermen's Association,
a nationally recognized nonprofit organization
and winner of the U.S. Commerce Department's Environmental
Stewardship Award. For more information, visit
www.ccchfa.org.

Naked Oyster Executive Chef
David Kelley watching Eric and Jeff |
| Naked
Oyster Pan Seared Day Boat Haddock with Lobster
Sauce |
|
Serves 4
Ingredients:
4 6-7 oz portions of skinless day boat haddock
1 and 1/2 Tbsp Olive Oil
1 and 1/2 cups champagne beurre blanc
(recipe below)
1 1 and 1/2 lb lobster, steamed and meat
removed
2 ears of corn, cooked and removed from
cob
1/4 cup fresh peas
1/2 lb baby Yukon Gold potatoes, parboiled,
then sautéed in extra virgin olive
oil until golden brown
Method:
Preheat over to 400 degrees.
Over medium-high heat, sear the haddock
in the olive oil for about 2 minutes on
each side. Placed cooked fish on baking
sheet and bake 12-15 minutes, depending
on thickness.
While haddock is in oven, put beurre blanc
in saucepan and gently warm lobster meat,
corn and peas, being careful not to boil.
Assembly:
Place potatoes in center of each plate.
Arrange fish portion on top of potatoes
and spoon lobster sauce over fish.
Tracey's Wine Recommendation: The
is quite an impressive dish-especially the
decadent lobster sauce. Chardonnay is a
natural pair, but we were careful to go
for one that shows a little restraint on
the oak, letting the flavors of the food
shine through. Try: Solex Russian River
Chardonnay $19.99. We were also pleasantly
surprised with how well a red can work with
rich fish dishes. A California Merlot was
the winner, with soft tannins and a medium
body. Try: Clos la Chance Merlot $19.99.
CHAMPAGNE BEURRE BLANC
Ingredients:
2 tsp vegetable oil
2 shallots, diced
1/2 cup champagne (or white wine)
2 Tbsp champagne vinegar
2 Tbsp heavy cream
12 Tbsp (1-1/2 sticks) unsalted butter,
chilled and cut into small pieces
Method:
In a small saucepan, heat the oil. Add shallots
and cook over low heat for 3 minutes, or
until soft, but not brown. Add the wine
and vinegar and cook over moderate heat
until the liquid is reduced to 1-1/2 tablespoons.
Add the heavy cream and boil until the liquid
reduces by half.
Remove the pan from the heat. Whisk in
3 pieces of butter, one piece at a time.
Return the pan to low heat and continue
whisking in the butter, a few pieces at
a time, until all is melted. Remove the
pan from the heat.
Best to use immediately. If you need to
hold the beurre blanc, keep the saucepan
in a bowl of warm water. Do not let it get
too hot, or it will separate.
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THE
RAW DEAL
THE PLEASURE AND "PERILS" OF DRINKING
RAW GOAT'S MILK
By Jen Holloman
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Jen Holloman and kids
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"Okay Nosey,"
Meet Queen Nosey, aka Nosey Parker, aka Professor
Nosey Ann Parker.
"Here we go, up in the milk stand…let's
go!"
She climbs up; all it takes is the sound of the
metal scoop being moved in the grain barrel. She
stomps her foot, getting kicky, while she waits
to have her udder cleaned.
Queen Nosey becomes impatient when you're not
ready, nosing expensive grain onto the floor.
I fumble with the latch and udder cleaning solution
and, finally, in the funniest two-and-one-half-minute
comedy of errors involving a slow human and a
feisty goat, I start milking. I've trained myself
to milk quickly before the grain bowl becomes
empty. I focus on letting down her milk, and at
last Nosey, the queen of the Ocean Song Barnyard,
quiets, concentrates on her grain and goes through
our twice daily ritual.
"Okay sweetheart, down we go…"
Gracefully, Nosey glides back to her pen, gives
another goat a good headbutt on the way, and heads
straight for the hay manger satisfied that her
goat kingdom is in her orderly control. With her,
you must be ready when she is….or it's off
with your head.
What inspires us to go to the barn, twice a day,
in frigid temperatures, sheets of rain, and sit
there at night in the dark waiting for kid goats
to be born? We do this for the love of these beautiful
goats and for the love of their milk. We are new
to the goat herding business and know a few things
at this point: "A happy goat is a good goat";
you have to keep your barn cleaner than your house,
there is no savings on cheap hay…(That's
a joke for fellow farmers.)
Our main product for market is considered "potentially
hazardous". It's milk and furthermore, as
it comes from our girls, it's raw. (Screams of
terror in the background.) After a rather vigorous
round of research from a variety of sources for
and against raw milk I would say that it does
have its potential hazards, but so do talking
to strangers and running with gum in your mouth.
The odds are long, but both could kill you at
some point.
"Raw" milk is not pasteurized in any
way. Pasteurization is the process of bringing
raw milk to a temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit,
or 63 degrees Celsius, and holding it there for
30 minutes. In heat treating milk, the possible
bacteria that are "potentially hazardous"
to humans are destroyed, and it is a firmly held
belief by many raw milk enthusiasts that with
it are the positive health-promoting bacteria
and nutrients as well.
For the consumers of raw goat milk, I guess it
is the air of living dangerously that thrills
them, but drinking raw goat's milk is the dairy
equivalent of wearing sensible shoes. Goat's milk
naturally contains the following beneficial ingredients:
Vitamins A, C, B-6 and B-12, Thiamin, Riboflavin,
Niacin and Pantothenic Acid. It also contains
the following minerals: calcium, magnesium, phosphorous,
potassium, sodium, zinc, copper and selenium.
Raw goat milk contains amino acids, proteins
and monounsaturated fats. It is safe to say that
there are ingredients in raw milk that directly
benefit your health. For example, over time through
the consumption of raw goat's milk, the naturally
occurring presence of monounsaturated fats can
benefit the milk drinker by working with the body
to lower LDL (low-density lipoprotein) and promote
the creation of HDL (high-density lipoprotein),
which in turn will offer help to those trying
to improve their cholesterol levels. In an analysis
of one fluid cup of whole cow and goat milk, the
breakdown of beneficial ingredients in some cases
is greater in the goat milk than in the raw cow
milk. I will say for myself that there are few
beverages as luxurious as raw cow milk. The creamy,
rich texture makes it almost like drinking a cup
of dessert.
"I hate that 'goaty' taste of raw milk!"
Yes, I know, the notorious goat taste makes you
shiver. Well, we hate it too. The taste of goat
milk is influenced by several factors; one, the
general diet of the goats. Good, grassy hay and
whether or not sweet feed is involved are critical
factors. When we started, we had our girls on
a 'sweet feed' replete with molasses, and the
cheese we made from it tasted like Mascarpone
(a dessert cheese). We have heard that adding
garlic, leeks and onions to the goat diet will
cause the milk to be off flavor. I don't know
for sure about that one. I had great fun last
summer watching Nosey Parker devour a Vidalia
onion. It's good she sleeps alone. I didn't notice
the taste. Our goats' diet is supplemented with
fruits and vegetables from local health food stores
and we feed them what they will eat.
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Safe and sanitary
milk handling is what aids in making goat's milk
taste delicious and creamy. Immediately after
milking, the goat's milk must be stored in an
ice bath and maintained at a temperature not higher
than 40 degrees. After it is quickly and adequately
cooled, it may be transferred into a refrigerator
that holds the same temperature. This will eliminate
an overly 'goaty' taste and will make the cheese
you make delicious with a very mild, goat flavor.
If you plan on drinking it, the same rules apply.
We have made hot chocolate and cappuccino with
our milk. In a side -by-side taste test, as a
result of safe handling and cooling measures,
there was distinctly less 'goaty' flavor in the
milk. We had a person who was "forced"
to drink goat milk as a child participate in our
little experiment and she readily gave it thumbs
up! Cooling and sanitation make the difference.
Recently, I placed a notice in The Cape Cod Times
asking for Cape Codders who grew up drinking raw
milk to tell me their tales. Their reminiscences
of life on Cape Cod back in the day, and the benefits
of raw milk are fascinating. Most people drank
it because it was "just the way it was."
Some families on Cape Cod had small dairies and
actually delivered raw milk, keeping delivery
routes through Osterville and West Barnstable.
People drank raw milk because that's the way it
was, there wasn't thought of pasteurizing milk
because everyone drank it "raw" (that
is, unpasteurized). Many tell of being brought
"out to the shed" to drink milk straight
from the goat or cow as it came from the udder.
Raw milk on the small scale produced few health
concerns. It was often recommended by doctors
as a curative agent for frail children and to
prevent tuberculosis from developing. Of the respondents,
only one had contracted an illness as a result
of drinking raw milk. Most of the respondents,
who are in their seventies and eighties, were
very proud of their current health and attribute
it to their raw milk drinking.
The government became involved in the regulation
of milk to try to stem the tide and fears of tuberculosis
outbreaks, and to eradicate the unsanitary, overcrowded
conditions of some dairies that sold milk directly
to consumers. Author of Real Food Nina Planck
offers that: "In cities from New York to
Cincinnati, most milk came from crowded, urban
dairies where cows were confined indoors. Owners
put the dairies next to whisky distilleries in
order to feed cows a cheap, unhealthy diet of
spent mash called distillery slop. They were remarkably
efficient. In 1852, three quarters of the milk
drunk by the 700,000 residents of New York City
came from distillery dairies.
'Slop milk' was so poor it could not even be used
to make butter or cheese. Unscrupulous distillery
dairy owners sometimes added sugar, starch or
flour to give body to the pale, thin milk. Others
thinned it with water to make more money. Conditions
were unhygienic. Bovine tuberculosis and brucellosis
were common and cow mortality was high. The people
milking cows were often dirty or sick."1
In retrospect, considering these unethical farming
practices, pasteurization and intervention was
not such a bad thing. In these modern times with
state of the art milk parlors, the production
of raw milk is a lot safer. Regulations, both
federal and local, make it so farmers must produce
a safer product.
In the past, raw milk was a staple of the Cape
Cod homestead. Mariesther Love Robbins of Dennis
Port shares: "I was brought up drinking raw
milk from our cows, the last one I remember was
Molly, and when she died, we got our milk from
the man across the street. We had to drink raw
goat's milk when my sister and I developed a spot
(of TB) on our lungs. Most everyone in Dennisport
drank the milk from Mr. Linwood's cows. As strange
as it seems now, Mr. Linwood's farm was on Route
28 in Dennisport across from the Post Office.
I am 70 now and in fairly good health, so I guess
it didn't hurt me any. I don't ever remember having
anyone come to check our cow to see if she was
healthy. If she was standing up we figured she
was healthy."
Many Cape Codders from one end of the Cape to
the other commented that raw milk was the only
milk until the government became involved. There
was customarily a "family or neighborhood
cow" somewhere and that buying pasteurized
milk after drinking raw proved to be a taste failure
to them. Arguably, raw milk, goat or cow, is how
milk is intended to be used and enjoyed. Raw milk
is real milk-so go ahead, live on the edge.
If you are interested in knowing more about raw
milk, visit www.realmilk.com. The website of the
Weston
Price Foundation lists places in Massachusetts
where raw milk is readily available.
Nota bene:
The nutritional data was gathered from The Nutrient
Data Laboratory home page from the United
States Department of Agriculture Research Service.
1Planck, Nina. "How Raw Milk got a Bad Rap."
www.ninaplanck.com
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| OCEAN
SONG FARM GOAT CHEESE CHEESECAKE |

Jason Beetz, the author's husband,
milking Nosey aka Professor |
Ingredients:
Crust:
2 cups graham cracker crumbs
1/2 cup chopped roasted pecans
2/3 cup melted butter
Filling:
1 and 1/2 pounds cream cheese, at
room temperature
1/2 pound goat cheese, at room temperature
1 and 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup sour cream
3 eggs, at room temperature
1 Tablespoon cornstarch
1/4 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
Topping:
1/4 cup sour cream
1/4 cup goat cheese, at room temperature
3 Tablespoons honey
1/4 cup graham cracker crumbs
Method:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees
In a mixing bowl, combine the crumbs,
pecans and butter. Press into a 10-inch
springform pan.
In a food processor, combine the
cheeses, sugar and sour cream, and
blend until smooth. Add the eggs,
one at a time, until incorporated.
Dissolve the cornstarch in the cream
and add to the cream cheese mixture.
Fold in the vanilla.
Pour the filling into the springform
pan and bake for 1 hour, or until
the cake has set. Run knife around
edge of pan after removing cake from
oven to prevent top from cracking.
After cake has cooled completely,
combine topping ingredients and spread
evenly over top of cake.
Tracy's Wine Recommendation: The
goat cheese is barely detectable in
this absolutely awesome cheesecake,
so we tried a fruit beer just to experiment
a little. I think I accidentally discovered
a new favorite! Try: Lindemans Lambics
Peche (Peach) $5.69/bottle.
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| OCEAN
SONG FARM SUMMER CHEESE PLATTER |
On
a hot summer day, this cool and very
refreshing dish will satisfy as an appetizer
or small meal.
Ingredients:
2 baguettes
2 cloves garlic, peeled
Extra virgin olive oil
1/8 cup each of dill, parsley and
mint, finely chopped
2 lemons
Kosher or sea salt
Fresh cracked pepper
Fresh basil, stemmed, rinsed and dried
on paper towels
Arugula, rinsed carefully
16 ounces of fresh goat cheese
4 large vine-ripened tomatoes, sliced
1/8" thick
Kalamata olives
Method:
Slice baguettes and toast in 350 degree
oven until golden. Rub each piece
of bread on both sides with a peeled
garlic clove and drizzle with olive
oil, salt.
Using a mortar and pestle crush one
clove of the garlic, the dill, parsley
and mint, lemon, salt and pepper into
a rough paste.
Drizzle arugula with lemon and a
pinch of salt, and toss.
Assembly:
Place the cheese in the middle of
a big serving platter. Encircle with
sliced tomatoes, tossed arugula, basil
leaves, Kalamata olives and the herb
paste. Season all with salt and cracked
pepper. Drizzle very lightly with
olive oil. Enjoy with toasted bread.
Tracy's Wine Recommendation: The
creamy goat cheese combined with the
complex garlic and herb components
of this dish were a great match to
a zippy Spanish Albarino. The acid
balance was right on, finishing with
a creamy mouthfeel. Try: Aires de
Arosa Albarino $11.99. For those who
would rather a red, we also tried
the Donna Laura Alteo Chianti ($11.99).
It was yummy on its own and it certainly
worked with the cheese, but wasn't
as "magical" a pairing as
the white.
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PEACHTREE
CIRCLE FARM
A LABOR OF LOVE IN SIPPEWISSETT
By Dianne Langeland
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Peachtree Farm |
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"The dirty little secret around here is
that in summer we are just too tired to cook dinner,"
confides Heidi Walz. "By the time we get
done with our "9-5 jobs" and tend to
things on the farm, we are just as likely to pop
a frozen dinner in the microwave than to cook
up something we just harvested. In winter, we
feast on what we put up at the end of the season,
but in the height of summer, we just don't have
the energy."
Welcome to the real world life of a part-time
farmer. In 2004, Heidi Walz, who has B.A.s in
English, and Social Thought and Political Economy
and whose resume includes a 15-year stint as a
chef in such far-flung destinations as Australia,
found herself as co-caretaker along with her partner
Carrie Richter of Peachtree Circle Farm, a five-acre
patch of land just a hairpin turn off Route 28
going south.
The land was originally farmed by Hollis Lovell
in the 1930s as a source of fresh produce for
his restaurant, and is now part of the 210 acres
of conservation land in the town of Falmouth that
is owned and maintained by Salt Pond Areas Bird
Sanctuaries. When they approached the land trust
about leasing the property, Heidi and Carrie were
only looking for a place to offer children's gardening
classes. Teaching six consecutive classes one
day a week was lucrative, but by the end of the
first summer, their vision for what they wanted
to do with the property had evolved: even though
neither Heidi nor Carrie had a background in farming
they wanted to bring the land back to its former
glory.

Heidi Walz and Carrie Richter
preparing
to move some herbs |
Knowing anything they did on the farm would have
to take place outside of normal business hours,
the following spring they focused their attention
on the orchard, which, according to Heidi, had
not been mowed or pruned for years. After they
came home from their day jobs as landscapers,
they sprayed and pruned the 125 apple, pear, and
the peach trees on the property for which the
farm is named. In the way of most new farmers
they grew a little of everything to see what would
grow without chemicals. Since that first season
they have continued to farm organically.
In April 2006, Heidi was diagnosed with breast
cancer. As both her maternal grandmother and mother
had been through breast cancer, and considering
the higher than average rates of breast cancer
on the upper Cape, the diagnosis did not come
out of the blue. She had surgery in May and worked
through her chemo treatments. Despite experiencing
some physical weakness in the two or three days
immediately following her treatments every three
weeks, that summer Heidi continued to work, and
along with Carrie, planted 200 raspberry bushes
as well as blueberry bushes, apple and pear trees,
lettuce, tomatoes and herbs. They began selling
their produce at the weekly Woods Hole craft market
(held Saturday mornings), sold cut flowers to
Windfall Market, and signed up Roobar in Falmouth
as their first restaurant client. Rather than
pick all the berries themselves, they invited
friends to the farm to pick their own.
After a "semi-retirement period" in
the winter of 2007 during which she underwent
radiation treatment, Heidi and Carrie built a
greenhouse for starting their seeds, they expanded
their beds and crop space and they added two beehives
to propagate their fruit trees. Continuing in
their fashion of trying something new every year,
they have added peas, rhubarb, garlic, eggplant
and more varieties of heirloom tomatoes to their
repertoire.
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In the fall
they plan to put in asparagus beds and dig up
Chestnut Bottom, a section of land running along
the southside of the farm, which is at a slightly
lower elevation than the rest of the property.
Because of the different microclimate there, they
plan to experiment with a new vegetable, perhaps
pumpkins.
Although Carrie started gardening as a summer
job during college, she, like Heidi, is a self-taught
farmer. Heidi claims: "Carrie has a natural
affinity for plants. And she reads a lot."
April through November, before heading off to
a landscaping job, Carrie has already spent an
hour or so on the farm checking in on things.
From 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. both Carrie and
Heidi are landscaping at one of the 36 properties
in Falmouth that they maintain. After work they
are both back on the farm until the sun goes down,
mowing, weeding, watering, pruning, whatever the
season requires. They also spend their entire
weekends on the farm. No wonder they are too tired
to cook! Although at some point after the harvest,
they do spend considerable time canning, freezing
and preserving their produce.
They have two full-time and two part-time employees
at the landscaping business, but only two high
school teens helping on the farm. In addition
four people who used to work at Peachtree Farm
maintain their own patches of land.
In 2005, Heidi saw an advertisement placed by
the town asking for applicants to form the newly
chartered Falmouth Agricultural Commission (AgCom).
Heidi, who grew up in Falmouth, was concerned
about how much the rural character of her hometown
had yielded to suburban sprawl. So she put her
name up for consideration and soon found herself
as chair of the nascent organization. Other members
of the AgCom include a shellfish aquaculturist,
a sheep farmer, a cranberry grower, a horse stable
manager and a beekeeper, The AgCom's goals are
to serve as a local voice advocating for farmers,
work with the town board on issues facing farming
in the town, help mediate/resolve farm related
disputes and encourage agriculture-based businesses.
According to Heidi, "The most important investment
we can make in our community is to promote, maintain
and preserve our local farms and food production."
During its brief two years in existence, the
AgCom has created an inventory of productive farmland
in Falmouth and passed at Town Meeting the state's
"Right to Farm" bylaw, which encourages
the pursuit of agriculture, promotes agriculture-based
economic opportunities and protects farmlands
in Falmouth. Heidi is most proud of the great
strides the AgCom has made in integrating its
advisory role within the framework of other relevant
Town boards, committees and commissions.
When thinking big about the future, Heidi talks
about offering gardening and cooking classes that
emphasize the use of fresh, local ingredients
at hand. She envisions white-linen covered tables
set among the orchards illuminated by candles
and the moon, where culinary tourists (and locals)
enjoy a delicious meal. One day she would love
to have a fine dining establishment connected
to an organic farm. And she wants to get a cider
press and make value-added products from the farm's
signature peaches. Given what Heidi and Carrie
have already accomplished in the span of a few
years, we have no reason to doubt they'll succeed.
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