|
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| 4 |
CONTRIBUTORS |
| 5 |
GRIST
FOR THE MILL |
| 11 |
NOTABLE EDIBLES
Late
July Hand-dipped Organic Chocolate Sandwich
Cookies, Cape Cup, Cape Cod Cookery,
Beth's Special Teas Bakery & Cafe,
The Cape Cod Smokehouse, The Loft, Baker's
Dozen, Wellfleet Candy Company Truffles |
| 23 |
LOCAL
HERO AWARDS BALLOT |
| 24 |
COOKING FRESH |
| 39 |
SUBSCRIBE
TO EDIBLE CAPE COD |
| 40 |
OUR DISTRIBUTORS |
| 43 |
EDIBLE EVENTS
|
| 44 |
OUT OF HAND
The $2.00
Slider at The Island Merchant |
| |
COVER
Something
Brewing on the Cape
Photo by Elspeth Pierson |
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| 6 |
CAPE
COD LOBSTER CHRONICLES
Part I: An Overview
of the Lobster Industry |
| 17 |
THE
BEANS OF CAPE COD
Home to a Thriving
Roster of Local Coffee Roasters |
| 21 |
FARM
GIRL CONFIDENTIAL
A Day in the
Life of a Sustainable Grower
|
| 27 |
AT HOME
ON THE RANGE
Shared-use
Kitchen Offers Small Food Businesses a Place
to Get Started |
| 29 |
THE
LADIES OF CHICAMA |
| 31 |
THE
VINES THAT BIND
Palio Pizza's
Boss Paul Mazzeo Keeps a Tradition and for
All the Right Reasons |
| 34 |
POINT
NO-TALK
The How &
Why of Cape Cod Foraging |
| 36 |
THE
CAPE COD CHEF |
| 41 |
FARMERS'
MARKETS
Bringing Food
to the People |
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CAPE
COD LOBSTER CHRONICLES
PART ONE: AN OVER VIEW OF THE LOBSTER INDUSTRY
By Chelsea Vivian
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Let me get this out of the way, I'm a California
girl. For me lobster was that once-a-year, on
my birthday seafood delicacy. The usual $30-to-$40
plate consisted of a rubbery over-cooked tail
imported from Maine or Alaska, a cup of drawn
butter and suitable vegetable accompaniments;
the word fresh never ascribed. A few years ago,
snagged and dragged by a burgeoning fisherman
and Wellfleet native, I moved to Cape Cod. The
first few drives along Routes 6 and 6A from Orleans
to Provincetown resounded the plethora of lobster
options on Cape Cod; signs of all shape and size
beckon the hungry traveler. Not swayed by the
assurance I would eventually grow tired of the
seaborne bugs, my primary task upon initial arrival:
to at last savor a fresh, whole lobster. With
a plate, a bib, crackers and a gleam, Van Rennselaer's,
whom I now lovingly refer to as VR's, on Route
6 in Wellfleet, hosted me my first perfectly-steamed,
1.5-pound select. Three years later, I've devoured
lobster in all ways imaginable: steamed, fried,
stewed, grilled and stuffed, and I have yet to
decline out of fatigue.
The lobster industry dominates as one of the
top commercial fisheries in the Northeast. In
2006, it ranked as the number one most valuable
Atlantic Coast fishery, with approximately 92.5
million pounds landed worth $395 million, over
90% captured in waters off Maine and Massachusetts.
The productivity and vitality of the fishery are
paramount not only to the fishermen, but to the
many hands and mouths that follow, intrinsic to
the economy of Cape Cod.
The purpose of this series of articles is to
first present an overview of the history and current
status of the lobster industry, go hands on through
the lobster trail from fisherman to distributor
to the dinner table and finally analyze the impact
and importance of ongoing research and regulatory
measures to the health of the fishery. The following
paragraphs provide a look at how the industry
developed on Cape Cod and the lifecycle of the
North Atlantic lobster. Next spring we'll go on
board with local lobstermen in Provincetown for
an in-depth look at how they prepare for the coming
year, how to trap a bug and the impact of the
winter season and climate on the landings. In
the summer we'll jump to land and follow a seafood
distributor to market and provide tips on selecting
for and preparing the perfect in-home lobster
feast. The fall heralds the red tape segment;
we'll meet the players who participate in the
role of protecting and enhancing both the fishery
and the fishermen. Hopefully, after all this,
you will have a thorough behind-the-scenes understanding
of the breadth of the industry and learn some
interesting bits along the way.
FROM PAUPER TO PRINCE
There is no question the homebase of the American
or Atlantic Lobster iconically resides with Maine.
However, the roots of the lobster in American
history begin on Cape Cod with the earliest Pilgrim
settlers. As with so many other fisheries, the
abundance of lobster at that time could topple
the current revenue ten fold or more. At low tide,
the teeming shoreline provided hand-plucked bucket
loads. Accounts from Miles Standish chronicle
the Pilgrims early encounter with profound hordes
in Barnstable and Nauset Harbor, and the natives
who sought them for sustenance. The potential
dietary possibilities apparent to early settlers
however remained unincorporated in their daily
regime; they viewed lobster as pauper food, much
as they did the smaller European relative, the
spiny lobster. Fit only for servants, slaves,
prisoners, livestock and children, much of the
lobster catch turned to field fertilizer and bait.
As the colonies
grew, so did their palate for lobster, primarily
inhibited by the issue of shipping. Dead lobsters
grow poisonous after a day or two as toxins from
their exoskeleton slowly seep into the meat. Not
until the mid 1800s did live shipping with built-in
tanks spread the Cape Cod resource to other ports,
and as live inland pools developed, lobster drifted
inward to urban markets. The advent of canneries
provided yet one more avenue to push the meat
further inland providing sustenance to union troops
during the Civil War. As over-fishing impacted
Massachusetts waters, the whole of New England
turned to Maine and Canada for their supply.
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Since about the 1940s, regulation and documented
research has tracked the development of the industry
across the Eastern seaboard. With a few downward
blips on the curve, the annual landings have steadily
increased from a 25 pound average in the 1940s
and 1950s to more than double over 50 years to
57 pounds in 1993. In the last decade, that total
annual recorded catch has increased by a staggering
65 percent and at this rate could double again
in one-third the time. By and large, most of the
fisheries have remained sustainably managed, however,
for the region encompassing Southern Massachusetts
to Long Island a combination of over-fishing,
disease and warmer waters have caused a decline
in the population and landings: a problem slowly
creeping northward. As the price of lobster sways
based on supply and demand, it has significantly
increased from two or three cents a head in the
1600s to $5.50 on upwards a pound for the fisherman,
making lobster a valuable resource to protect.
Further restrictions are evolving to better manage
impacted areas and next year we'll take a look
at how those are implemented.
THE AMERICAN LOBSTER LIFE CYCLE
The Homarus Americanus, of the Class Crusacea
and Phylum Anthropoda, spends most its lifespan
(anywhere from 10 to 50+ years) rummaging the
ocean floor hiding in rocky crevices and amongst
the fauna. An opportunistic feeder, its diet consists
of some dead material but primarily fish, clams,
crabs, sea urchin and even other lobsters. Multiple
times each year lobsters molt or shed their shells,
thereby absorbing water and expanding as the new
shell develops. It is during this soft-shell state
that the female mates, holding the sperm of the
male for often as long as a year. She carries
her eggs inside for nine to 12 months and then
externally for another nine to 12 months before
migrating closer to shore, to warmer water, where
the eggs hatch and float to the surface. An average
one-pound female carries approximately 8,000 eggs
and more mature females can carry in excess 100,000
eggs.
The larvae continue to float for four to six
weeks and those that settle to the bottom as baby
lobsters spend five to seven years molting and
scavenging for food until they reach legal size,
approximately one pound. It's estimated that two
in 50,000 larvae survive to that age. As they
get older lobsters tend to migrate in response
to temperature, salinity and food. The larger
they are, the further they go, some documented
at over 100 miles. Although adults seasonally
return to warmer waters, adolescents dominate
coastal areas. Through their size and presence
of eggs they are regulated within the state and
federal fisheries. A measure of the carpale-the
length from the rear of the eyes socket to the
rear of the main body shell-provides the primary
criterion. Any lobster greater than 3-1/4''with
no indication of eggs or egger markings may be
plucked from the trap. The success and sustainability
of the fishery depends on maintaining healthy
egging females and protecting the young from harvest.
Next year we'll follow along from trap to table,
regulation to recipe of this vast and valuable
resource.
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| LOBSTER
RISOTTO |
This
recipe is courtesy of Jay Coburn the
former Owner and Executive Chef of restaurant
Chester in Provincetown. Jay will soon
be opening Chester at Home a gourmet
catering firm that will create small
dinner parties and intimate events.
Find out more at www.chesterrestaurant.com.
Jay says that this dish is great for
a dinner party because it can be prepared
in advance, held and then quickly completed
just before service. (See tip in the
recipe).
The secret to this dish is the delicious
stock. You can make a simple version
by boiling the lobster bodies in water
to cover for 20 minutes, but Jay's
version is much better. We prepared
the lobsters by boiling them but at
the restaurant they kill the lobsters
first and then steam the bodies, claws
and tails separately. Our approach
works but the restaurant way yields
more flavorful meat although we know
that many home cooks are uncomfortable
doing it that way. Either way, keep
the meat a little under done so it
doesn't over cook when heated in the
risotto.
Serves 6 for a main course.
STOCK
Ingredients
3 1-1/2 pound lobsters
2 Tbsp plus 1/4 cup olive oil
8 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped
3 medium onions, peeled and roughly
chopped
3 medium carrots, peeled and roughly
chopped
1 small fennel bulb, cored and chopped
1 750-ml bottle dry white wine
10 cups water
3 celery stalks, chopped
1 28-oz can plum tomatoes
2 Tbsp whole black peppercorns
3/4 tsp dried red pepper flakes
2 bay leaves
4 sprigs fresh thyme
6 sprigs fresh tarragon
Kosher salt & fresh ground pepper
to taste
Method
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Bring large pot of water to a rolling
boil. Add lobsters, return to a boil
and cook for 4 minutes.
Remove lobsters and let cool.
Remove claws and tail and set aside.
Place lobster bodies in roasting
pan and drizzle with 2 Tbsp olive
oil. Put in oven and roast for 45
minutes until slightly charred.
Meanwhile remove meat from claws
and tail. Chop meat and reserve in
the refrigerator. Discard shells from
claws and tail.
Heat 1/4 cup olive oil in large,
heavy stockpot over medium heat until
shimmering. Add garlic, onions, carrots
and fennel, and sauté, stirring
frequently for 5 minutes. Add wine,
bring to a boil and reduce by half.
Add roasted lobster bodies, water
and all remaining ingredients. Bring
to a boil, reduce heat to low and
gently simmer for 1-1/2 to 2 hours.
Let cool and strain through a fine
mesh strainer.
Strain again through a cheesecloth
for a more refined stock (optional).
Hold stock for use in the risotto
or chill or freeze for future use.
RISOTTO
Ingredients
2 quarts reserved lobster stock
3 Tbsp olive oil
1 small onion, finely chopped
2 cups Carnaroli or Arborio rice
1 cup dry white wine
Salt & freshly ground black pepper
to taste
Reserved meat from claws and tails
of 3 1-1/2 pound lobsters, slightly
undercooked
4 oz. grated Parmesan, Pecorino or
Asiago cheese
2 oz. unsalted butter, cold
Method
In a stockpot bring lobster stock
to a low simmer.
Heat the olive oil over medium heat
in a large sauté pan. Add onion
and garlic and cook, stirring often,
until glossy, about 5 minutes. Stir
in rice and cook, stirring, until
kernels are slightly translucent,
about 3 minutes.
Add wine and cook, stirring constantly,
until evaporated.
Add one cup of simmering stock and
stir constantly until absorbed by
the rice. Add another cup of stock
and stir until absorbed. Repeat process
of adding stock, stirring and reducing.
In 10 minutes, begin tasting rice.
You want it to be tender but with
a hint of crunch; it could take 20
minutes or more.
(Tip: Hold risotto at this point
by spreading it on a sheet pan and
refrigerating. Then reheat and finish
just before you are ready to serve.)
Add lobster meat to hot rice and
stir for a minute to heat lobster
through. And half of the grated cheese
and the butter and stir vigorously
to incorporate.
Taste and adjust seasoning. Remove
from heat and serve garnished with
the remaining cheese.
Tracy's Wine Recommendation:
Enjoy a "big" style Chardonnay
with this dish, it highlights the
rich flavors of the lobster beautifully.
Make sure you don't serve it too cold
though, as it will contrast too much
with the warm and soothing feel of
the risotto (Dianne gives some good
general advice: 15 minutes before
you are ready to eat, take the white
out of the fridge and put the red
in!). Try: Benziger Chardonnay (Carneros/Napa,
California) $16.99...Not only yummy,
but also happens to be an organic/biodynamic
wine.
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THE
BEANS OF CAPE COD
HOME TO A THRIVING ROSTER OF LOCAL COFFEE ROASTERS
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If you think Cape Cod coffee is a bit of an oxymoron, think again. No, Beanstock’s Black Fish Creek blend doesn’t get its dark flavor from the salt marsh, and Jim’s Organic Ethiopian beans were not ripened under the Cape Cod sun. But while the beans are grown elsewhere, the abundance of local roasters have without a doubt made the finished product our own.
Foodsheds have long traded for “luxury items” they cannot produce themselves. Monsoon winds carried pepper, cinnamon and saffron west; the trade winds carried sugar, molasses and rum north. Coffee is no exception; monks have been trading and transporting it since the beans were discovered in Ethiopia in the 9th century.
Coffee, in fact, along with tea and sugar, has long driven the global food economy. It is no coincidence that the first Fair Trade Federation goods were coffee and tea; they have historically been the most valuable on the global market and thus the most susceptive to corruption. Slavery and coffee have been connected since Brazil turned the liquid of the elite into a drink for the masses in the 1800s.
But hold the boycott. Thanks to local roasters, Cape Codders have another choice: to support local entrepreneurs with sound social and environmental buying practices. While coffee beans will never be grown on the Cape, buying your breakfast blend from a local roaster allows you to get the scoop on how the beans were produced and the ethos behind the coffee. With three roasters scattered across the peninsula, there are plenty of philosophies to choose from. While the operations range from hyper-local one-town distributors to nationally recognized names, they all have one thing in common: a love of coffee and a dedication to quality.
John Simonian and Jonathan Kelly of The Beanstock in Wellfleet have a visible love of all things coffee. Their “plant”, a big storage unit behind Sam’s Deli in Eastham, is stuffed to the gills with beans, roasters—both functional and not, packaging paraphernalia and mountains of papers. A stray couch and its two armchair sidekicks appear to be an oasis free of coffee clutter, but of course these too are there for the love of beans; they are the perfect spot for a coffee break.
The two acquired The Beanstock several years after its birth in 1996. The coffee shop tucked into the Inn at Duck Creek in Wellfleet met with more success than its founders, Kyle Oliver and Polli Moryl, had bargained or hoped for, and so they sold the shop and kept the roasting rights. Their foray into wholesale roasting—much to their chagrin—again met with great success, and so they passed the operation on to the energetic Beanstock duo of today.
Under the Johns, The Beanstock has retained its Fleetian spirit. Of course Wellfleet has offered quite a bit of help; as Jonathan points out, “So much is based on people believing, and we have been so embraced by local businesses.” To that end, they insist for freshness’ sake on taking business orders weekly, and offer to deliver any of their 20 plus blends to any home in Wellfleet. They believe in dark roasts, small batches and frequent roasting.They tend towards organic, Fair Trade beans, and they’re somewhat wary of decaf. They’ve even created a Slack Tide Blend—my personal favorite—of half regular half decaf in an attempt to create the perfect low-buzz full flavor cup.
Justin Scott of The Art of Roasting is on the same page when it comes to decaffeinated beans. “Decaf,” he proclaims, “is not coffee.” Although The Art of Roasting does sell decaf, its founders Justin and Jeff Harris aren’t drinking it. As their mantra goes, “Life is too short to drink bad coffee.”
Jeff and Justin, both school teachers in Hyannis, had spent too much time doing just that when Justin spotted a small old-fashioned drum roaster in a Disneyland bakery on a family vacation and decided to buy his own. His father-in-law, Jeff, offered to bankroll the operation, and The Art of Roasting was born.
As teachers, the two were quick studies and are now well seasoned at explaining the art. They take turns firing up the roaster once a week. According to Justin, a typical batch takes 9-17 minutes to roast, but the process from start to finish takes a bit longer. For starters, the roaster takes about a half hour to heat up to its target temperature, which is a little over 400 degrees Fahrenheit. The green beans get tossed in a few minutes before that, and when they hit between 384 and 394, a low-pitched crackle fills the room. This is the “first crack”, as Justin explains; the “second crack” sounds higher pitched and is when most roasters consider the beans done (roasting further into the second crack yields a darker roast, lighter batches are pulled out sooner). Every few minutes when he’s roasting, Justin pulls out a few beans and gives them a good sniff. “Dry hay on a hot summer’s day,” he’ll pronounce. “Later on it’ll be popcorn.” By the time the beans are done, the room is blistering hot and the air is laden with the heavy scent of fresh coffee.
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While most of the beans that the Art of Roasting blends are organic and/or Fair Trade, you won’t see those words on the label just yet. “Most of what we do,” as Justin puts it, “is paperwork.” Jeff and Justin buy beans from an importer in New Jersey, and although some are Fair Trade and certified organic, the two do not yet have their certification to sell and roast organic beans. “The farm gets certified,” explains Justin, “and the importer gets certified, and now we have to get certified. I’m buried in paperwork.”
Walking through The Art of Roasting storage unit in Chatham, you wouldn’t know it. The space is a measure in contrast compared to that of The Beanstock; a lone roaster sits towards the back of the room, accompanied only by several bags of green beans, a row of empty containers with labels like “Kenya AA,” “Sumatra Mandheling” and “Guatemala Antigua Azotea” (Justin’s favorite blend, with a bit of nut, a touch of spice and chocolate undertones) and a dining room table made desk with one neat stack of papers and a few pens.
But as Justin points out, as two full-time teachers producing only five blends, he and Jeff spend a lot less time alongside the roaster. “The big difference between us and Beanstock,” he explains, “is that they make a living off of roasting. Right now, it’s a side thing for us. I’m pretty happy teaching right now, although someday I might want to do this full time.”
Jim Cannell made the decision to become a full-time roaster 15 years ago when he left his job on Wall Street to start Jim’s Organic, the nation’s first all-organic coffee company based out of Wareham. What started in 1992 as a one-man roasting operation with a passion for organic has now blossomed into a mainstream company offering almost 30 blends and wholesaling on a national level, with retail locations from Maine to Florida.
When Jim began roasting he was the first all-organic coffee roaster in a much smaller, unindustrialized organic movement. And while the larger organic market has headed in a somewhat different direction (think Whole Foods), Jim’s Organic is still focused on high quality beans from small farms. “There are larger more industrialized farms out there producing organic coffee,” explains Jim, “but those farms don’t have the flora and fauna that we think of as organic.” In other words, “big organic” looks a lot like the rest of the industrial farm world—row upon row of monoculture crops with a fairly obvious indifference to the natural rhythm of things.
He hasn’t compromised on quality either. As his theory goes, “The organic market is great because of the environmental benefits, but none of that is of any value unless the coffee meets the quality specifications.” Jim’s focus on “cup quality” has led him to roast more slowly than most in an effort to deliver what he considers the ultimate: a clean yet full cup of Joe. And the best of Jim’s cups in my opinion? Jo-Jo’s Java, the blend he named for his wife. The full-bodied blend is full of grace, smooth and not the least bit bitter.
It is clear that the fuel behind the success of these three companies is coffee—and not in the “America Runs on Dunkin” sense—but rather because of a simple, abiding love of the stuff. Cape Codders’ thirst for coffee has built a thriving roster of local roasters—roasters whose product reflects the values of the community that supports them. So as it turns out, Cape Cod coffee is no oxymoron: roasting locally is all about the Cape. It is about Cape Cod demand, Cape Cod values and Cape Cod taste, and it doesn’t get much better than that.
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HOW
THE ROASTERS
DRINK COFFEE |
|
1. Use a French press; you get a
richer cup of coffee that tastes the
way the roaster intended it to taste.
2. Use a kitchen scale to measure
3.5 ounces of coffee for 64 fluid
ounces of water.
3. Grind the coffee fresh for each
pot you brew. Using a burr mill (see
photo at right) creates an even grind.
4. Grind the coffee correctly for
the brewing method; coffee should
be quite coarse for a French press.
5. Use good water; tap water usually
has some kind of extra flavor, such
as chlorine.
6. Use hot but not boiling water (between
198 and 203 degrees F). Don't over
fill pot. (It's very nice to pour
hot water in your coffee mug at this
time to heat it before filling with
coffee.)
7. After a minute or two, stir contents
of pot.
8. Resist the temptation to drink
it while it's scalding; it will taste
very different if it cools a bit.
It sounds like a lot of work, but
once you get a routine down, you won't
want to go back!
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THE
LADIES OF CHICAMA
By Tracy K. Anderson
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As the story goes, Martha's Vineyard was discovered
in the early 1600s by English sea captain Bartholomew
Gosnold. At the time, the island was covered with
wild grapes, and both Gosnold's infant daughter
and mother-in-law (who reportedly helped pay for
his sea expeditions) were named Martha-thus the
island's now famous name. Although there is but
one working vineyard on the island today, Martha's
Vineyard has its history in grapes.
Chicama Vineyards was founded by Catherine and
George Mathiesen in 1971 and is still operated
today by three generations of the same family.
Catherine and her San Francisco-based family used
to vacation on Martha's Vineyard in the summertime,
and by their third pilgrimage they decided they
would stay. Growing up near Napa Valley, the Mathiesen's
were no strangers to wine country. "Napa
was too crowded," says Catherine. "We
came here with every intention of starting a winery,
but there was a lot of work to do."
Now that's an understatement. In addition to
"uprooting" (pardon the pun) six children,
there was a forest of trees to clear and acres
of vines to plant. What started as about 10 acres
of unfarmed land has grown over the years, and
now expands to a whopping 50 acres under the family's
care.
The three generations that run the business today
are Catherine (the matriarch), her daughter Lynn
Hoeft, who is the current winemaker, and her granddaughter
Rosemary Hoeft, who has just re-joined the winery
and in my observation, is the budding apprentice.
Rosemary attended Napa College in California for
two years, and came back last spring to join her
mom and grandmother. She told me that she is certainly
interested in working in the wine business, but
for her, it's just as much about being with family.
Lynn's background includes working with wine
in both New York and California, including a stint
at Domaine Chandon in Napa Valley. But that seems
worlds ago-since she's been at Chicama full time
since 1978. Lynn's words echo her daughter's:
"My favorite thing about being here is being
part of a family business," she says. "It's
becoming increasingly rare."
One of the things that honestly surprised me
a bit is to learn (and see) that Chicama is truly
a working winery. For wine consumers, we tend
to picture winemakers sniffing and swirling, tasting
barrel samples and doing somewhat esoteric things
to assure the final product is a true expression
of their craft. And while the ultimate goal of
the winemaker is to produce something worthy of
savoring, there is some serious down and dirty
work that goes on before a bottle is ready to
uncork. On this particular day, Lynn, Rosemary
and their small staff spent the afternoon cleaning
the tanks, which as Lynn describes, is "cold,
wet and dirty...not exactly romantic." Although
wine does conjure romantic images, these ladies
seemed just as content to be dressed in their
fleece vests and rubber boots-with some authentic
"terroir" underneath their nails.
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Chicama grows
a fair amount of their own grapes, but the family
understands the limitations of growing certain
varietals in a climate as cool as New England.
They tried Cabernet Sauvignon, for example, but
it's too late ripening for the area as frost can
come early on the Vineyard. They have been very
successful with Chardonnay, Riesling and Viognier,
however, and even some heartier reds such as Malbec
and Shiraz. The grapes they buy come mainly from
California, although they also source Cabernet
Franc from the North Fork of Long Island. Next
year, they have plans to plant Pinot Blanc and
Pinot Gris from new rootstocks grown especially
for sandy soils. I thought this was especially
exciting-the ability to match the proper clones
to the climate and soil is a special skill that
comes only from years of experience.
Last year, Chicama Vineyards made about 60,000
bottles, which still puts them comfortably into
the "microwinery" category. Lynn says
they are just about at capacity and not really
looking to expand much more. In the summer months,
visitors are lined up daily inside the small retail
shop and tasting room. Now, toward the end of
the season, they have sold out of most of their
wines, including their proprietary sparkling that
they actually "riddle" (continually
rotate the bottles) by hand!
Of their current releases, we sampled four that
were out for tasting that day. First was "Oceanus,"
their smooth and tasty top-of-the-line red which
is a blend of Cabernet, Merlot and Shiraz ($24).
Next we tasted their proprietary Viognier ($18),
made in a full-bodied style, and one of their
most popular. The Chenin Blanc ($15) was light
and slightly off dry, surely another popular choice
for summer sippers. Finally, we tried the "Cranberry
Satin" ($15), a very aromatic dessert wine
that can be enjoyed alone, or as Rosemary suggests,
drizzled over strawberries or peaches.
The ladies also make wine vinegars in the "Orleans
method," where they age wine in oak specifically
for the purpose of turning it into vinegar. They
infuse many of them with fresh herbs, also grown
on the property. Some of their wine vinegar selections
include Raspberry, Cape Cod Cranberry, Anise Hyssop
and Triple Mint, all priced at $7.50 each. There
is also an assortment of homemade mustards, jellies,
chutneys and dessert sauces to tempt you.
I left Chicama Vineyards with a warm, satisfied
feeling-and not just because I had a little wine
"glow" from tasting. I felt good because
it was so wonderful to see three generations of
women working in harmony, embracing family and
making a sustainable living for themselves. And
just as I was about to step into the car, Brian-a
gentleman who was working in the tasting room
that day and had actually just completed his last
shift of the season-stopped me. "I forgot
to tell you..." he said, "They are a
great family to work for. They're just awesome."
Now that made me leave with an even bigger warm
fuzzy.
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CHICAMA VINEYARDS
Stoney Hill Road, West Tisbury
www.chicamavineyards.com
508-693-0309
The shop and tasting room is open
year round, although limited to Saturdays
January to mid-May. In the height
of the season the winery is open daily,
with free tours 7 days a week at 2
and 4 p.m.
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THE
VINES THAT BIND
PALIO PIZZA'S BOSS PAUL MAZZEO KEEPS A TRADITION
AND FOR ALL THE RIGHT REASONS
By Tom Dott
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The message from the Edible Cape Cod office went
something like this: "Paul Mazzeo of Palio
Pizzeria is making his wine again. If you want
to see the process, get to Kandy Korner on Main
Street in Hyannis. Be there Saturday at 10:00
a.m."
Now who could refuse an invitation like that?
Paul-whom I had met briefly only once before-was
making wine…at a candy store…on a Saturday
morning??? The cryptic invitation held enormous
intrigue, and enjoying the tone of espionage,
I responded with something to the affect of "The
red raven flies at dawn," which I assumed
they understood as "I'll be there".
Arriving at Kandy Korner on a rainy September
morning, I was escorted to the side alley and
down a steep wooden staircase leading into a Cape
Cod cellar, where Paul Mazzeo was holding court-albeit
in a tiny, musty, stone-walled court. He introduced
his two cousins Bob and Pat, who had driven over
from Monroe, Connecticut to witness Paul's once-a-year
tradition. Fellow cellar dwellers Dianne and Doug
Langeland from Edible Cape Cod were also present
with camera in hand. Paul announced that it would
be about an hour until his brother, Robert, arrived
with the goods: 720 pounds of juicy, sun-kissed
Cabernet Sauvignon grapes from Lodi, California.
Robert had picked them up from the shipping destination,
not far from his home in Easton, Connecticut.
I was pleased to hear there would be a wait, as
I still was not exactly sure why we were in a
cellar…under a candy store…on a Saturday
morning, but it gave me time to get to know the
"man behind the cask".
In spite of his modest interjections like "I
hope I'm not boring you," Paul's career time
line is an interesting one. Here's a guy that
arrived from Bridgeport, Connecticut in 1978 and
bought a candy store on Cape Cod simply because,
as he explains, "I worked at a Friendly's
restaurant, observed how a business is run and
I liked working with people." When asked
about the inception of his highly respected Palio
Pizzeria across the street in 2005, his answer
is just as unaffected, "I make a great pizza-and
the area needed a great pizza."
The keys to Paul's successes are as straight
forward as his reasoning. One key is quality control.
His ice cream and fudge, which are made in house,
as well as the pizza ingredients at Palio, are
made from high quality ingredients. "When
a purveyor wants to sell me a product because
it's cheaper and can increase my profit margin
I just want to…" He stops, and is obviously
a bit annoyed by this concept. "Well I just
want to tell them this!" (I won't mention
what hand gesture Paul makes, but we've all seen
it before…and know what it means.) The other
key to success is to not get too comfortable-keep
things fresh, and keep people interested. Recent
examples involve the future plans for cheese making
classes at the restaurant, as well as the recently
launched "Palio pizza dough-to-go"-a
way for customers to pick up the raw key ingredient
to one of the Cape's best pizzas. Take home a
large or small size pizza dough, roll it out,
slap on some sauce, load on the cheese and fuhgeddaboudit
you've turned your kitchen into a pizza parlor.
With pizza dough-to-go the possibilities are endless…freeze
the dough for a rainy day, host a build-your-own-pizza
party, wow your buddies with oven fresh pizza
for the Pat's game, and, forget about oysters
guys-you make her oven fresh pizza? And sprinkle
on her favorite toppings??? Now that's an aphrodisiac!
Eventually the conversation turned from dough
(and aphrodisiacs), to wine making.
In keeping with his business approach of I want
to do it, so I'll do it, Paul wanted to create
wine like his Italian ancestors did and not from
a kit bought online. He looked to his friend Eddie
Giavannone, who learned the trade from his father,
Tony. Both Tony and Eddie took Paul under their
wings and taught him the proper way to make wine,
the way Tony's father and grandfather taught him.
As Paul begins describing the process of wine
making, the squeal of pickup truck brakes echo
above us in the driveway. The grapes have arrived
and the hands-on part of our lesson is about to
begin!
Climbing to the top of the steep staircase we
find ourselves under a worn out and frayed pop-up
tent, which wasn't there when we arrived-obviously
Paul's soldiers had been busy setting up camp
while we were chatting below. Paul's long-time
friend (fellow Friendly's alum and owner of Cook's
Seafood) Frank Whelan, seems to know the drill
and has everything needed to crush grapes underneath
the dripping tent. Brother Robert is there, as
are friends Paulo and Thiago who arrive to help
(note: the next time you are leaving Kandy Korner
with fresh ice cream and delicious homemade fudge
smeared all over your face, thank Paulo-he's the
guy in the window-making it). Before we begin,
Paul takes a vine from the crate and offers us
a taste. The Lodi region boasts itself to be the
"Zinfandel capital of the world", but
the Cabernet grapes we sample are exquisite. We
are told that these 720 pounds of grapes will
yield about 56 gallons of wine-or as Paul affectionately
calls it "Vino Della Casa Mazzeo".
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One by one, crates are carefully turned over
into a contraption to be juiced, and I am charmed
by the simplicity of the science of wine making.
"What do you
call the thing that crushes the grapes?"
I ask Paul.
"It's called a crusher."
"What do you call the thing under it that
separates the stems?"
"That's a de-stemmer."
I didn't have to ask what the juice and grape
skins were collecting in. I knew the answer…a
garbage can.
As the first crate of grapes are split open and
the sweet smell of fruit permeates the chilly
air, Jeff Anderson of The Wine List in Hyannis
trots down the driveway (this was predictable-sniffing
out grapes is Jeff's sixth sense). As the grapes
continue to be dropped into the crusher-which
doesn't so much "crush" them as splits
them open-someone takes a spin at turning the
crank, while another pushes the grapes down towards
the crushing mechanism. This is done by use of
yet another sophisticated wine making piece of
paraphernalia called a 2 x 4.
The juice is then poured into a fermenting barrel
in the cellar, along with the skins and 25 percent
of the vines, which increase the tannins in the
wine. Heaters are set up in the cellar to ensure
the proper temperature-between 70 and 85 degrees
Fahrenheit-and the wine will now be left to ferment
(the technicalities of this is explained to me
later in the week…painfully).
As the last drop of juice is poured in, Paul
set up an impromptu celebration: a table of hot
pizzas, gourmet olives, cheese and San Daniella
Prosciutto. Accompanying our back alley banquet
were a couple of bottles of his latest Vino Della
Casa Mazzeo.
At first sip it's obvious that this wine is bold…very
bold. Much heartier and complex than your usual
home-made vino (which can be overly fruity) and
the tannins are balanced nicely. Not withstanding
back alleys, basements, garbage cans and a basically
airy approach to wine making, the final product
is complex and delicious. The company is terrific
as well, and we all enjoyed entertaining stories
and some laughter. I returned home with a bottle
of 2003 vintage, and when this special bottle
is eventually uncorked, I hope that Paul is at
my table (Paul if you're reading this, that's
an invitation).
A few days later I'm invited back to "hear"
the fermentation process. "The crackle and
pop coming out of the barrel is terrific,"
Paul explains, "It's like having children
in the house!" When I arrived I was led back
to the cellar by Paul's long-time manager Nancy
Magnuson. The sweet smells of the grapes and strong
scent of alcohol met us at the top of the stairs.
We descended and opened the top of the barrel.
You could hear the fermentation, but at this stage
the sound was soft and dulcet-like the sound of
simmering rice.
A couple of weeks later I returned once again
for the pressing of the grapes. Newly familiar
faces huddled around the grape press (another
highly technical name), but now there were two
new guys chipping in-Paul's mentors, Eddie and
Tony.
Now understand, the act of pressing grapes holds
all of the excitement of being a rower at the
bottom of a Viking ship. You grab the press handle
and walk around…and around…and around
the press until every last remaining drop of juice
is salvaged and added to the barrel. Tony is extremely
knowledgeable, and while pressing, explains the
science behind fermentation, with things having
to do with malolactic fermentation and malic and
lactic acid conversion (getting a grade D- in
chemistry I then decided the details should end
with the 2 x 4). But a lot more is learned, more
interesting stories are shared and more friends
are made in an alley, by a candy store, off of
Main Street.
It's true what oenophile Ralph Steadman wrote
in his book The Grapes of Ralph, "Nice people
make great wines".
It has been said that the best things in life
are worth the wait, but sometimes it's the wait
that can be the best part of life (it's why the
gods created tailgate parties).
The pizzeria's namesake, Il Palio, is a horse
race held twice every year in Siena, Italy. Preparations
for the race go on all year and 25,000 people
attend and dine outside at enormous banquet tables.
There are horse blessings, parades and celebrations
for days on end. And how long does the race last?
About a minute and a half.
It finally dawned on me why I was in a cellar…under
a candy store…on that Saturday morning. It's
the same reason why people plan a year in advance
for a one minute horse race. And why the Mazzeos
and the Giavannones take the time to do wine right.
It's not as much about the horse that wins the
race, or the wine that ends up in the bottle.
It's about community. The horse race ends in the
blink of an eye, just as the wine bottle gets
emptied in a sitting. But the cultivation of friendships
and good times shared during the process can forever
simmer in your memory-like the soft sound of fermenting
grapes.
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| PALIO
PIZZERIA'S CAPE COD CALZONE |
We're
big fans of this calzone and the good
folks at Palio Pizza were kind enough
to share their recipe with us. Although
we used their dough-to-go, they told
us that results at home would not as
good as theirs because home ovens can't
match the high, even heat of their brick
ovens. After trying both versions we
agree but don't let that stop you from
trying it yourself. The key is to stretch
the dough as thin as possible.
Ingredients
Corn meal and flour for dusting work
surfaces
1/2 of a large package Palio Pizza
dough-to-go
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 cup mozzarella cheese, finely diced
10 oz peeled shrimp, roughly chopped
and very cold
1/2 cup chopped clams
2 Tbsp garlic minced
Squirt or two of fresh lemon juice
Method
Place pizza stone in oven and pre-heat
to 500 degrees for at least 30 minutes.
Sprinkle corn meal and a little flour
on a pizza peel and set aside.
Roll dough with a rolling pin out
to a disk roughly 8 inches in diameter.
Using your hands (put your fists
in the center of the disk and work
outward), gently stretch the dough
until it is very, very thin. Gently
lay dough on pizza peel.
Drizzle olive oil on one half of
dough.
Spread 3/4 cups of cheese on the
half of dough with olive oil.
Add shrimp, clams and garlic on top
of cheese.
Fold uncovered half of dough on top
of the half with the shrimp mixture.
Press edges of calzone together lightly
and sprinkle top of calzone with remaining
cheese.
Slide calzone onto hot pizza stone.
Bake for 12-15 minutes until cheese
starts to get brown spots.
Squeeze lemon on calzone and serve.
Tracy's Wine Recommendation: Dianne
and Doug actually went back to the
restaurant after our recipe tasting
to try the wine and the calzone together
again-Palio's brick oven lends a special
something to the way the crust comes
out and they wanted to be sure it
was as it should be (tough job, huh?).
The right wine for the job turned
out to be a white blend from Sicily.
The wine worked wonders for both the
yeasty flavors of the dough and the
delicate flavors of the shrimp and
clams.
Try: Cusumano Angimbe Chardonnay/Insolia
(Sicily, Italy) $16.99.
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FARM
GIRL CONFIDENTIAL
A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A SUSTAINABLE GROWER
By Veronica Worthington
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Ahh, December! Soon there will be time to enjoy
the rewards of a long and arduous growing season.
Since late summer, during every free moment I
could find, I've been spinning up my sheep's fleeces
into yarn preparing for the first blizzard. I
hope to get a pair of socks and a sweater knit
before spring. Maybe, too, I can finally clean
the house-I've had a peacock living in the bathroom
for three months!
The demand for locally grown, organic produce
on Cape Cod brought me to my knees this past summer,
so in anticipation of next year I had to shut
down early and tend to the soil and animals.
First, it was necessary to renovate the barn
and chicken house and make a hayloft to store
premium first and second cut hay, to have a place
to dry herbs and a home for the animals during
the winter months. My sheep and chickens are not
just my hobby, but also a big link in the growing
cycle of sustainable agriculture. The quality
of the food that they eat is directly linked to
the quality of the foods that we eat. The grasses
that they graze on, the soil that those grasses
grew on and the stress-free lives that they live
are an intricate part of the organic food growing
cycle. You feed the animals highly nutritional
foodstuffs like fresh young grasses and herbs
in spring and you buy the best early cuts of hay
to store for winter. You also must invest in highly
nitrogenous grains, grown on organic soils, to
supplement their diet in winter. All those nutrients
eventually end up in the compost pile and that
compost pile is how you feed the soil for the
next growing season. That reminds me, maybe I
better not get too comfortable just yet. I forgot
to cover the mulch piles and the forecast predicts
rain; I wouldn't want all my time and effort to
leach out and be lost!
Keeping that growing cycle in good order and
intact is a very important, very arduous, year
long endeavor. That's how slow food evolves. So,
equally important as the hayloft for storing quality
feed, was the turning of compost, which had gone
beyond a pitchfork, and now required a tractor.
I had to find more field space for the lettuce,
so while the tractor was here we did a Chinese
fire drill with the herb gardens.
Next, the gardens needed a good series of crop
rotations, for the health of the soil and natural
control of insect pests. I fed the remaining lettuce
to the animals and cover-cropped the field quite
early with a variety of grasses (which store nutrients
otherwise lost to leaching in winter rains), mustards
(which kill certain bad nematodes) and clovers
(which make nitrogen available). All to be tilled
back into the soil in early spring.
The compost and manure applied to plants contain
many elements indispensable to vegetable nutrition.
But it is not the fertilization of the plants
that concerns me but rather "feeding the
soil". That should be one's number one objective
in the process of growing anything. By "feeding
the soil" I mean feeding the billions of
bacteria, protozoa, beneficial nematodes, fungi,
centipedes, millipedes, worms and ants that live
in the soil. It is their life functions and interactions
that make nutrients available to plants. The waste
products that microorganisms produce become soil
organic matter. Give them the right materials,
and they'll turn garbage into gold. What most
people don't realize is that the above ground
system wouldn't exist without the belowground
system in place and functioning. Keeping these
microorganisms well fed and comfortable requires
constant attention. Fresh layers of compost are
required many times during the year. They eat
a lot and fast! The nutritional value of food
is only as good as the soil it grows on. Flavorful
food is an added bonus, so keep that compost coming!
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Another priority
on the urgency list was our 14-room Greek-Revival
home in need of new roof. You've got to house
the farmer! But the list didn't end there, the
greenhouse had to be cleaned out for a group of
university students that had asked to conduct
an experiment in the greenhouse. I frantically
tore out old tomato plants, then had to change
the compost in a 3' deep pit which was half the
size of the 40' greenhouse. And all of this while
seeding, potting up, planting, weeding and harvesting!
So in early September I closed up shop.
Everyone arrived on the same day to begin the
work: the carpenter for the barn, the roofers,
the tractor for the compost and gardens and the
Penn State graduates. The farm was so full of
trucks, equipment, people, lumber and compost
piles that it was tough to navigate the property-we
ourselves had to park down the street-and all
this activity went on for well over a month!
The animals had to wander around with no roof
over their heads. The peacock, which was still
quite young, ended up living in the house. I don't
know how much lettuce the marauding chickens plundered
during those weeks, but they certainly had a good
time. The ram went into rut and began trying to
knock down anything in his way, including the
workmen and the new barn. So in the midst of everything
I had to figure out a way to transport him to
Caprilands Herb Farm in Coventry, Connecticut
where he spent a month's vacation as the new Caprilands
Black-face Scottish herd sire.
Regarding the experiment evolving Penn State,
well, I'm not quite sure what it is all about,
but I'm learning. Broadly speaking it is a form
of "radionics" combined with something
about magnetism and its effects on living systems.
Much research was done on the subject during the
early 1900s, but since then little has been carried
out. Low voltage lightning is being created over
the lettuce, and inaudible sounds are being directed
towards it, extracting nutrients for the plants
from the atmosphere. Wind power to generate the
energy used is an ultimate goal and all in the
quest for sustainable farming. The trials will
prove beneficial, hopefully. I know the neighbors
think we've lost our minds.
It's been a long year trying to attain the goal
of providing every thing a lettuce needs to grow!
But as I sit now and reflect, it was well worth
it. I have renewed hopes for next season, a beautifully
renovated barn, a roof over my head, a mountain
of aging compost, happy hens with golden eggs,
plenty of sheep's wool and a lighting storm in
the greenhouse. In a few more months the whole
growing cycle starts all over again. I'd better
hurry up and start knitting!
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