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3,000
Miles & 3 Days: How an "über foodie"
from California spends three days on the Cape
t’s
a difficult, strenuous, fattening, and often, greasy
job, but someone must do it…and that lucky someone
is moi! My fearless editor, Tracey Ryder, and our new
partners in Edible Communities, Doug & Dianne Langeland,
asked me to leave Ojai, California and visit Cape Cod
to write for the premiere issue of Edible Cape Cod.
My assignment: seek out, consume, and enjoy every bit
of local food that I could get my claws on in three
days’ time…Impossible to cover it all, but
we tried…
DAY
1
Started early with a cup of Wellfleet Blend from Beanstock
Coffee Roasters. Great way to ignite… I’m
a java junkie, and was initially suspicious that local
beans wouldn’t be up to snuff with my beloved
Peet’s from Berkeley - but no! We roared out the
driveway at 8:00AM, grinding our teeth en route to…
JACK’S
OUT BACK, 161 Main St., (Rte. 6A), Yarmouthport.
On the way in I knew I would love this place - an enormous
American Flag hanging out front alongside a carved wooden
bear, and some leftover plastic Easter eggs scattered
on the lawn. We were the only non-locals in the place,
which meant we had to study the signage on how to order,
how to yell "OVER HERE" after (the 10th time)
they called our name, how to bus and wipe our table,
and then pay - with a reminder not to forget the widows
and orphans, complete with Edward Gorey’s exquisite
illustration hovering above the tip bowl. (Gorey apparently
ate breakfast and lunch here every day.) I was so star
struck that I almost wasn’t able to consume the
divine Fondo di Toscano omeletto with tomato, garlic,
and basil, the short stack of perfect blooberry pancakes,
the crispy bacon, and the scrambled eggs we’d
ordered…but then I regained my senses and devoured
everything in sight. Unfortunately, this fabulous breakfast
and lunch spot will soon be gone, as the building is
being sold.
Quite
content, we strolled over to Hallet’s
Drug Store, established in 1889, at 139 Rte.
6A. This place is picture perfect - the décor
hasn’t been touched since they opened 115 years
ago. The Hallets have owned it for three generations—they
offer breakfast, lunch, ice cream, soda fountain treats,
and bottled sodas. We purchased a four-pack of Raspberry
Lime Rickey, Old Fashioned Sarsaparilla, Old Fashioned
Birch Beer, and Vanilla Cream Soda… I’ll
be shipping several cases of the Raspberry Lime Rickey
home, as I can’t live through another hot summer
without this nectar nearby… Enjoy a virtual visit
at www.hallets.com.
Shopping
genes warmed, we proceeded to Ring Bros. Marketplace,
485 Rt. 134 (Harney’s Plaza), South Dennis. This
exquisite market has been open for just two years…amazing.
There’s an enormous selection of gourmet goodies
under one roof - we had to contain ourselves to not
spend thousands of dollars in 15 minutes. Chatham Fish
& Lobster, Montilio’s Bakery, Nata’s
Noodles, Dark Horse Beef & deli, Spinners Pizza
& Burritos, Harney’s Liquors, and Ring Bros.’
gorgeous displays of groceries, liquors, and produce
exist in perfect harmony, offering volumes of delectable
choices. I’m relocating to South Dennis - it’s
worth the move to shop at Ring Bros. daily. Had a nice
chat with Ed Ring, who’s pretty darn modest (if
you ask me) about his produce business that has been
operating since 1925. We
enjoyed Franz, who owns Nata’s Noodles (Renata
returned to Italy), and Monitilio’s Bakery. Franz
tantalized us with his offerings, including grilled
panini sandwiches, homemade pastas (linguine, angel
hair, raviolis, etc.), pasta sauces including basil
pesto, red pepper pesto, vodka, and marinara, plus prepared
foods: sheperd’s pie, chicken pot pie, veal parmesana,
and chicken marsala were some of the offerings winking
at me… Montilio’s carries Bindi pastries
from Milan, Italy, and Connecticut’s "Better
Than a Bakery" breads: onion dill, Parmesan, garlic,
wheat, and orange honey…We restrained ourselves
and only purchased: Hogan Bros. Strange Brew coffee,
fresh mozzarella, and the most beautiful pasta—Tradizioni
di Puglia, pasta ribbons, with vertical orange, yellow,
white, and green stripes running through—too pretty
to cook! Head to Ring Bros. for fantastic food shopping,
or visit: www.ringbrosmarketplace.com.
Ravished
from shopping, lunch was in order… At the Langeland’s
suggestion we chose the Naked Oyster Bistro
& Raw Bar at 20 Independence Dr. in Hyannis.
Owners Rick & Angela Angelini operate a miraculous
restaurant - cushy dark booths, wood floors, and fabulous
full bar, ending in a glass display case featuring clams
and oysters. Chef David Kelley needs to relocate to
Ojai, Calif. for me to continue living happily - truly
one of the best meals I’ve ever inhaled. We drooled
over the Dressed Oyster Sampler: Oysters Rockefeller,
Oishi, Barbecued Bleu, Mediterranean, Casino, and Bienville.
The Bienville (baked-stuffed with garlic, chopped mushrooms,
onions, and shrimp, and topped with bacon) and the Oishi
(pickled ginger, wasabi, tamari soy, and bread crumbs)
were my faves… Difficult to share with others…We
inhaled the Baked Clams Casino, Tuna Tartare Salad,
and Cobb Salad. I might kill to obtain quantities of
the Tuna Tartare (jail would be worth it)…a mound
of fresh yellowfin tuna drizzled with wasabi, on top
of field greens and bok choy, tossed with honey-soy
ginger vinaigrette. All of the baked seafood samplings
were cooked perfectly, with delicate crunchy breadcrumbs
complimenting the inventive vegetables and seasonings.
Wednesday night is sushi night. Lunch is served Monday
through Friday, and dinner every night. If you can’t
get to Hyannis today, you can visit them online and
drool for yourself at www.nakedoyster.com.
At
around 1:30 PM it became clear we were in need of an
afternoon snack, so we headed to Cape Cod Potato
Chip Factory, 100 Breed’s Hill Rd. (off
Independence Dr.), Hyannis. This place makes Willy Wonka’s
factory look like an Erector set - it’s so exciting
to observe the World’s Best Potato Chips being
made right before your eyes. The process is clearly
explained on signs as you proceed down a long hallway
that has windows enabling you to view the chip-making
process. Cape Cod Potato Chip uses about 28 million
pounds of potatoes a year - it takes approximately four
pounds of potatoes to make one pound of chips (a potato
is mostly water), and they buy their potatoes directly
from the farmers to ensure a steady supply of high quality
spuds. Since fresh potatoes are a seasonal crop, they
buy from small farmers from Maine to Florida in order
to ensure peak freshness. Cape Cod Potato Chips are
all natural and contain no preservatives. The plant
is capable of producing up to 150,000 bags a day but
they have not and will not change their unique cooking
method: "kettle cooked, one small batch at a time."
There is a retail gift store at the end of the tour,
which offers two free samples of chips per visitor.
I snagged a bag of their brand new flavor, NANTUCKET
SPICE, a blend of imported cracked pepper with spices
and sea salt, and a bag of sea salt and vinegar chips…but
the unexpected thrill was their Firecracker barbecued
chips - finally a chip that is SPICY with fantastic
BBQ seasoning taste! If you can’t tour and taste
soon, you can visit Cape Cod Potato Chips on the web
at www.capecodchips.com
or call 1-888-881-CHIP.
Next
stop: Pain d’Avignon - "a
different kind of bakery" at 192 Airport Rd., Hyannis,
is enough to bring tears to my eyes just remembering
the numerous breads beautifully displayed and described.
Their breads include focaccia, sourdough, raisin pecan,
ciabatta, pugliese, kalamata olive, cheese bread, pumpernickle,
marble rye, brioche, and numerous buns. They also have
a fantastic array of cheeses, salame, pate, and foie
gras. Pies can be special ordered. Four Yugoslavian
pals started this biz in NYC in 1992, making their early
deliveries in a Volkswagen Golf. Twelve years later,
they have over 400 accounts from New York to Provincetown,
and have expanded their business to a second location
on Long Island. Although I am a devoted fan of Acme
Bread in Berkeley, Calif, Pain d’Avignon has proved
to me that it’s safe to travel east, if I can’t
live without my daily bread.
Dinner
was at Abbicci, 43 Main St. (Rte. 6A),
in Yarmouthport. We sampled the dry-aged sirloin carpaccio
with baby arugula, shaved parmesan, capers, lemon &
truffle oil; the jumbo lump crab with fennel; a baked
artichoke "Roman style" with herb seasoned
breadcrumbs; and a chunky chickpea soup with fresh vegetables
mixed in home-made stock. We bravely forged on to grilled
beef tenderloin with Cabernet demi-glace, black truffle
butter & potato pave with sautéed asparagus
& baby carrots; strozzapreti pasta with native littlenecks
& romesco sauce, topped with spinach & cherry
tomatoes; and grilled diver sea scallops with frisee
& lemon-roasted red pepper vinaigrette, served with
rock shrimp-fava bean flan, grilled squash, vine ripened
tomato & toasted almonds. By now we should’ve
been rushed to the local ER to have our stomachs pumped.
But, no, we’ll keep eating ‘til the rooster
crows, given the opportunity! Excellent food, informative,
attentive service, and a 2001 Ojai Vineyard Syrah kept
us going. Loved the carpaccio - nothing like fabulous,
ultra-lean, and tasty beef to perk a gal right up after
a rigorous day of eating! Fava-bean flan was divine,
and I’ll sink my fangs into their beef tenderloin
anytime…And this was only day one…to be
continued.
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