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August 12, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011 Winner: Russ James

Winnah_5309Russ James accepts his First Place Awards from contest emcee Louise MacLellan

Retired policeman Russ James from Plainville, CT, took top honors in this year’s Maine Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest. His recipe for “Pan Seared Sea Scallops & Lobster Medallions with Lemon Butter Sauce” wowed judges and audience members alike with its delicious taste and artful presentation.

Russ_5087Russ cooks up his lemon-butter sauce for his scallop and lobster medallions.

“I came up last year to the Lobster Festival and I was in the audience of the cooking contest. Coming to Maine and the festival is a wonderful way to spend a vacation. I enjoy cooking at home, and my wife encouraged me to enter the contest. She tried my recipe and said it was ‘the best thing I ever made,’ so I knew this was the recipe I’d make. I packed a cooler and brought all my ingredients with me and here I am.

LobsterTails_5183Lobster tails and…

Scallops_5200Scallops were the main ingredients in this contest winning dish.

“This is an easy, original recipe that is also very pretty. I enjoy trying out different reduction sauces at home. The reduction sauce for this recipe delicately enhances the seafood. It has a rich, mellow flavor. It is great on cod, scallops, lobster, and other white fish.”

Russ says this recipe is fun to plate and present. He is currently an artist, and spends time doing paintings in oil and drawings in pencil. One of his favorite subjects is lighthouses. He also works designing web pages. His finished dish is an artistic inspiration in its own right: it appears the lobster is offering up the bounty of the sea.

LobsterHeads_5152Russ used lobster heads in an artistic presentation of scallop and lobster dish.

“I would play with that lobster carapace and think of how to best use it on the plate. I saw the creative possibilities in my mind and envisioned the artistic presentation of that meal long before it got to the plate.”

JudgeTastes_5241It appears the lobster is offering up the bounty of the sea.

Upon learning he had won 1st place, Russ said, “I can’t believe it! Everyone was so busy dicing, mincing, and chopping all around me. Each finalist’s dish was amazing and I had very tough competition. But I had made this recipe about 50 times in the past few weeks to perfect it,” he laughs. “I could literally make it blindfolded at this point!”

Table_5135

Russ’s table was set with striped placemats and sun napkin holders, sunflowers, and shells. And here is his recipe for you to create and plate at your table.

Pan Seared Sea Scallops & Lobster Medallions With Lemon Butter Sauce
Russ James, Plainville, CT

This fantastic Maine seafood combination is hard to beat. Can be served as an elegant appetizer or as a main entrée at your backyard picnic. It’s fun to make and is easy to serve. A great way to introduce inlanders to the classic rich flavor of our New England Ocean without the mess of nutcrackers and lobster bibs!

4 Maine Lobsters, (chix) 1-¼ pounds each
1-½ pounds of large sea scallops, fresh
1 bunch of fresh broccolini (small heads of broccoli will due)
Sea salt (in a small cup for pinching) & fresh crushed black pepper in another cup
1 Tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
½ pound of butter

Put lobsters in large covered pot. Add 2 inches of water, just enough to steam them. When steam comes out, cook for 20 minutes and remove from heat. Spill lobsters out into sink and spray with cold water, removing white yogurt looking stuff (lobster blood). Set them aside for cooling.

While lobsters are cooking, spread out a 5-sheet length of paper towels. Lay sea scallops atop the towels. Lay another 5-sheet length atop the scallops and lightly press down to dry the scallops, top and bottom. Get them as dry as possible. Dust the tops and bottoms with salt and black pepper.

Pre-heat large saucepan until the edge is too hot to touch with the side of your hand. Add olive oil and one small cube of butter until melted. One by one place scallops into pan. Do not overcrowd pan! It may take several separate pan cookings to do them all. Flip them around with tongs as they become brown. When they’re done remove, set aside, and sear the next batch. You may have to add more oil and butter to the pan should it become dry.

Don’t overcook the scallops! Here’s how to tell when done: Make a tight fist with your left hand. Use the index finger on your right hand to poke the soft meaty part of your left hand, just below the thumb. Tap the scallops with the tong. If they feel like that soft part of your hand, THEY’RE DONE! Remember, they will continue cooking for a short time after being removed from the heat. Set all cooked scallops in a covered bowl to stay warm and moist.

In the meantime, place a small steamer pot on to boil. Cover and steam your broccolini. Lobsters will now be cool to handle. Remove claws and pull lobsters breastplate out. Pick the meat out of small legs and thoracic shell pockets. Use a spoon to scrape the tomalley (green stuff) and red roe out of lobster. Set the tomalley and roe aside in separate dish. Crack open claw and remove meat, also set this aside.

Twist the tail section from the body. Use kitchen scissors to cut along the length of the underside of tail shell, front to back. Press down on shell edges and it will crack open. Pull chunk of tail meat out and set out on cutting board. Make a shallow slice down the bottom center of tail meat. Remove and discard the dark strand, especially where it thickens at the tip of the tail. Press tail meat flat on cutting board and slice it into crosswise pieces, making thin round medallions, about ¼ of an inch thick.

Use kitchen scissors to cut each of the 4 carapace shells. Trim along the edges to make a wider opening and trim the bottom so that it sits nicely upon the plate!

Plating:
Intermingle scallops and lobster medallions piled high in center of plate. Crumble tomalley atop the pyramids. If you were lucky enough to have found red roe, use this as the crowning glory on each mound of succulent seafood. Place the carapace, standing, as if to be offering its bounty. Stuff one broccolini stalk into the carapace that delicately flowers out atop seafood, looking like a spray of sea kelp. Lastly, drizzle lemon butter sauce (see separate instructions) over the entire seafood medley, until it makes a golden pool of deliciousness in the plate!

Serves 4.

I made a delicate white butter sauce from some common things found around the kitchen. It starts with white Riesling wine and shallots, and ends with cream sherry, lemon, and butter. Once you try it you’ll find it easy to make, and delicious with any seafood. You’ll be pleasantly surprised with the rich mellow flavor. One word of warning: This delicious topping has a “one time only” shelf life. In other words, this ambrosia cannot be refrigerated. After that, it separates and does not taste the same. While it’s warm try it on cod, scallops, lobster or other white fish to add the air of eloquence to any party.

Lemon-Butter Sauce
1 cup Riesling wine
¼ cup finely chopped shallots
¼ teaspoon white pepper
1 teaspoon white sugar
¼ cup cream sherry
½ fresh lemon, squeezed and juiced
2 Tablespoons heavy cream
8 ounces (2 sticks) cold butter cut into small ¼ inch cubes

Pre-heat large saucepan and add wine, lemon juice, and shallots.

Use medium heat to bring mixture to mildly bubbling simmer. Stir occasionally until mix reduces to about 75% of original liquid.

Turn heat to lowest setting available on your stove. After mix reduces, use a whisk to mix the heavy cream into the reduction. Add 4 or 5 small cubes of butter to the pan and gently “rub” them into mix with whisk. After they’ve slowly melted into the hot reduction, add another 4 or 5 cubes and repeat the process until all the butter is melted. The cold butter is used to flavor and cool the mix.

Turn off the heat and add remaining ingredients: White pepper, sugar, and cream sherry. Gently whisk the mixture until it takes on a pure ivory white color.

Let sit for 2 or 3 minutes, and then ladle the reduction atop any seafood.

Serves 4.

JudgesTable_5245The judges sample Russ James’ dish as the audience lines up for a taste.

August 11, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011: Finalist Sue Jobes

Return finalist Sue Jobes of Davie, FL, says it’s always great coming to Maine, any time of year. She and her husband, Bob, had planned a vacation around this time of year, and her entry for “Lobster and Crab Galette” brought her back to Rockland and the Maine Lobster Festival when she learned she had become a finalist again this year. “The pressure’s still there, but it’s so much fun, too,” she adds. “I’m glad to be back!”

Interview_5093Multi-tasking: Sue Jobes prepares her Galettes while being interviewed.

Last year Sue’s recipe for “Maine Lobstah Puff” won her top honors.

This year’s recipe earned Sue runner-up honors. “This dish is easy to make, a kind of free-form pie. I tested it with salmon, and it was delicious that way, too. I decided to use Maine lobster and crab as the filling for my contest entry. When I make this dish, it is so fragrant. You just inhale the local ingredients when you’re cooking. The sauce, the seasonings, the Maine seafood… it’s wonderful!”

CookieCutter_5095

Shaping_5097

Before-After_5214Before and after finishing in the oven.

Some of Sue’s meal is prepared on the stove, like the sauce with the seasonings and sherry, and the rest is finished off in the oven. “This recipe comes together very nicely. I recommend serving it with your favorite salad or vegetable. My husband loved it when he tried it and had already declared it a winner before I even got here!”

Trio_5264Plated up, and ready for the Judges to sample.

Sue’s “Lobster and Crab Galette” utilizes ingredients from local purveyors. Olive oils from Rockland’s Fiore, herbs from Fresh Off the Farm, and Maine lobster and crabmeat from Michael Salmon of the Hartstone Inn. Wine from Cellar Door completed her meal.

A table setting inspired from the sea included blue crab and red lobster decorations, red napkins, and a seafood themed tablecloth.

Judge_5268Sue Jobes’ Galette on the table and being sampled by a contest judge.

You’ll want to make Sue Jobe’s savory recipe for “Lobster and Crab Galette” at home. Here’s how!

Lobster and Crab Galette
Sue Jobes, Davie, FL

8 ounces fresh Maine lobster meat
8 ounces Maine crabmeat
1 box prepared pie dough
2 eggs (1 egg for seafood mixture and 1 egg yolk for the dough)
3 Tablespoons mayonnaise
½ teaspoon seafood seasoning (such as Old Bay seasoning)
2-3 dashes of hot sauce (such as Tabasco)
¼ cup finely diced celery
¼ finely diced shallot
¼ cup unsalted crackers, smashed
¼ cup grated Gruyere cheese
1 large (or 2 small) anchovy fillets
2 Tablespoons finely chopped parsley
2 Tablespoons finely chopped basil
1 large clove garlic, minced
1-2 Tablespoons olive oil
1-2 Tablespoons sherry (or chicken stock)
1 Tablespoon water (for dough)
1 lemon (for garnish)
Salt and pepper
Topping: Combine the following items and spread a small dollop on top of seafood before placing in oven.
2 Tablespoons mayonnaise
¼ teaspoon seafood seasoning
1-2 Tablespoons cream
¼ teaspoon paprika

Preheat oven to 375˚.

Chop celery and shallot and set aside. Chop garlic and set aside. Chop parsley and basil. Set aside.

Heat olive oil in a skillet. Add the celery and anchovy fillets and sauté for about 2 minutes. Add the shallots and lightly sprinkle with salt and pepper. Sauté until translucent. Add the chopped garlic. When you smell the garlic fragrance, pour in the sherry. Let the sherry reduce until almost dry. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the herbs. Set aside and let ingredients cool.

Chop lobster into ¼-inch to ½-inch pieces.

Combine 1 egg and mayonnaise. Whisk until smooth. Add the seafood seasoning, cheese, and cracker crumbs. Stir until combined.

Mix seafood (lobster and crab) and egg mixture. Toss gently to combine. Add the cooked vegetables/her mixture and combine. Set aside.

Unroll the pie dough. Roll out the dough to half the thickness. Using a bowl (or round pastry cutter), make 4 circles of dough, 5-6 inches in diameter.

Place ¼ of the seafood mixture in the center of each dough circle. Bring the pie dough up and pleat around the seafood mixture.

Whisk one egg yolk with 1 teaspoon water. Using a pastry brush, brush dough with egg. Spread a dollop of the topping on top of seafood.

Bake for 20 minutes at 375˚. Remove from oven and let cool for 10-15 minutes.

Serves 4.

Award_5302Sue receives her award as a finalist and runner-up in the Seafood Cooking Contest.

August 10, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011: Finalist Michael Sciacchetano

Seafood Cooking contestant Michael Sciacchetano, from Atlanta, GA, says he came to Maine to beat the oppressive heat wave in the south. He’d been to Bar Harbor and Camden in the past and thought he’d spend some time vacationing in Rockland during this Maine visit. He found out about the Maine Lobster Festival and decided to enter this year’s cooking contest. His recipe entry, Lobster Étouffée, has a Cajun flair.

Michael_5275Michael Sciacchetano with his plated up Maine Lobster Étouffée.

“This dish, usually made with crawfish, was an inspiration. I decided that the texture and flavor of Maine lobster would lend itself nicely. I think this recipe is unique,” says Michael.

StirRue_5116Stirring and stirring, making the roux blend properly is the key to this dish.

Michael also says he likes the fun of the “trial and error” aspect of cooking. “I moved from New Orleans to Atlanta and those big, bold flavors I was missing in the real Cajun food prompted my first experiments in the kitchen. Because I couldn’t get those flavors, I had to make them at home if I wanted them.

Dish'n'Beers_5285A New Orleans beer is the proper accompaniment to this Cajun inspired dish.

“This étouffée is not complicated, you just need to spend a little time with it. The roux needs your attention at the stove. You start with flour, oil, or butter, then you add your vegetables: onion, celery, and bell pepper. Next you season with some hot sauce, pepper, and Cajun spice and you pay attention to stirring it for desired color and consistency. Gotta love the hot sauce!” says Michael.

JudgeSamples_5290Diggin’ in to Michael’s Lobster Étouffée.

After making this for the first time, Michael says he knew this was “it,” the recipe he wanted to enter into the contest. He plated it up for judges at the contest along with some New Orleans Dixie Beer. His table had a Mardi Gras theme, complete with purple, green, and gold beads and masks as the centerpiece decorations.

JudgesAtTable_5293The judges enjoy the New Orleans party at Michael’s table.

Michael Schiacchetano, when not entering Seafood Cooking Contests far from home, is the President of ML Healthcare.

Make Michael’s delicious Lobster Étouffée for yourself. We have the recipe here!

Lobster Étouffée
Michael Sciacchetano, Atlanta, GA

3  1½-pound Maine lobsters cut into small bite size pieces
Cajun trinity (onion, red bell pepper, celery)
2 teaspoons mixed spices (typically these spices are made in bulk for the year)
1 can stewed tomatoes (optional)
2 Tablespoons minced garlic
½ cup light brown roux (or use equal parts melted butter/flour)
2 cups chicken stock
½ teaspoon dried basil
1 teaspoon red chili pepper
1 teaspoon celery salt

Finely chop the vegetables. Boil lobsters 7-9 minutes, or until bright red.

Melt 1 stick of butter and 2 cups flour until roux is light brown…usually about 15 minutes; constant stir or will burn.

Cook vegetables in 3 Tablespoons butter for 5 minutes. Add Cajun spices, celery salt, basil, and chili pepper. Cook 2-3 minutes more.

Add vegetables and chicken stock to the roux. Cook for 20 minutes on low heat. Stir occasionally. Add lobster and finely chopped green onions; cook for 3-4 minutes.

Serve over steamed rice.

Serves 4-6.

Award_5299Michael receives his reward as a finalist in the Seafood Cooking Contest.

August 9, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011: Finalist Tyrrell Hunter

Tyrrell Hunter of Brunswick, ME, says she has done a lot of event cooking and cooking for gourmet church suppers. “I’ve spent many years cooking! I saw the call for entrants for this contest in one of our local papers in Brunswick and I came up with a couple recipes which I tested. My “Salmon with Maine Lobster “Moose” was the one I decided to make. It is quick, easy, and delicious. It looks elegant and makes an impressive plate.”

Tyrrell-Hunter_5035Tyrrell Hunter prepares her recipe for the Seafood Cooking Contest

This was Tyrell’s first visit to the Maine Lobster Festival, but she says she cooks lobster at home at least 4 times a summer. “This recipe idea came about because I had leftover corn and lobster. I only made this recipe once, and everyone loved it. I enjoy testing out a lot of original recipes at home.”

SalmonPrep_5215Salmon fillets with a generous helping of Lobster “Moose” ready for tasting.

The combination of shallots, tarragon, garlic, Maine lobster meat, Maine corn, and cheddar cheese give this “moose” mixture a special flavor. Tyrrell recommends spreading this mixture over some nice broiled salmon fillets for a very special seafood dinner. A salad with fresh peas and croutons along with a tarragon vinaigrette complement the meal.

PlatedUp_5254Salmon with Lobster “Moose” plated up and ready for the judges.

Tyrrell’s plated up her “Salmon with Maine Lobster Moose” with nasturtium flowers. Her table was decorated with red gladiolas, lilies, and green and pink flowered placemats and matching napkins.

Table_5063Tyrrell’s table setting, ready to serve the judges.

When she’s not busy in the kitchen, Tyrrell is the manager of a medical equipment store.

Try making her “Salmon with Maine Lobster Moose” at home. You’ll love it!

Salmon with Maine Lobster “Moose”
Tyrrell Hunter, Brunswick, ME

3 Tablespoons unsalted butter
2 Tablespoons shallots, minced
2 teaspoons garlic, finely chopped
1 teaspoon lemon zest, grated (plus some lemon slices for garnish)
2 teaspoons fresh tarragon, chopped (plus some fresh tarragon for garnish)
1¼ pound Maine lobster meat, cooked and roughly chopped
¼ teaspoon Tabasco sauce
¾ cup mild cheddar cheese–Cabots!
1½ cup mayonnaise
¾ cup Maine corn on the cob, cooked and cut off the cob
Salt and pepper
6  6-ounce salmon fillets, skinned

In a frying pan on medium/low heat, sauté shallots in melted butter until translucent (2-4 minutes); add garlic, lemon zest, tarragon, and sauté another minute. Add 1 pound of the cooked lobster meat, preferably the tails, and the Tabasco sauce. Sauté for another minute to blend flavors. Let the “moose” mixture cool for 10 minutes.

In a food processor, add the mayo, the lobster mixture, and the cheese and blend until smooth. Chop the remaining ¼ pound of lobster meat into smaller pieces (pea-sized) and stir it into the blended mixture. Stir in the corn and add salt and pepper to taste.

Use aluminum foil on a broiler and broil the salmon fillets 2-4 minutes on both sides (depending on the fillet thickness). Spread “moose” mixture over each fillet and broil for another 1-2 minutes, until lightly golden. Garnish with lemon slice and chopped tarragon and serve immediately.

Serves 6.

_MJudges_5258The judges sample Tyrrell’s contest recipe meal.

August 8, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011: Finalist Carol Bachofner

Rockland, Maine, native Carol Bachofner says a visit to last year’s Maine Lobster Festival prompted her entry into this year’s cooking contest. “I just love food, and I checked out the cooking contest last year and thought, ‘Why don’t I enter?’ ” With a lot of support from friends who lined the front row of this year’s audience, Carol made a fine showing with her recipe for “Maineuh’s Breezy Lobster Curry Mac ‘n’ Cheese with Crispy Crab Topping.”

Carol_5148Carol Bachofner with her Maine Lobster Mac ‘n’ Cheese creation.

“I love to cook, and I tend to get creative and inventive in the kitchen. And I believe in lobster two times a week, whether you need it or not! When I pick my lobster, there is absolutely nothing left, just the shells,” Carol emphasizes. “I thought that Maine lobster and Maine cheeses would be delicious together, and they certainly are.”

Carol’s Maine ingredients were locally sourced: cheese from State of Maine Cheese Company in Rockport (Sharp Cheddar, Jack, Jarlsberg, and Parmesan), Kate’s Homemade Butter, and Maine lobster and crab from Jess’s Market in Rockland. “It’s very important to me to support our local resources,” Carol says, “and they are some of the finest available anywhere.”

LobsterMac_5252Carol’s Maine Lobster Mac ‘n’ Cheese ready for the judges to sample!

Carol, who is a poet, created handmade books with original lobster poems inside as place settings for her judges’ table. The judges got to take those home with them. “People who come to events like these like to have something to take away with them as a momento, a memory,” she states. Her table was complete with shells, lovely mermaid sculptures, ocean blue place mats and lime green napkins.

PoetryBook_5139A handmade poetry book was included with each dish for the judges.

Served with her lobster mac and cheese for judges was an accompanying salad with her own homemade vinaigrette. Carol grows purple basil in her garden which she uses to make her dressing. A refreshing blueberry wine spritzer made with chilled Maine blueberry wine, Polar seltzer, and lemon finished her meal.

Table_5067Carol’s table was a work of art on its own.

Try Carol’s Lobster Curry Mac ‘n’ Cheese with Crispy Crab Topping at home. It’s sure to become a family favorite!

Maineuh’s Breezy Lobster Curry Mac ‘n’ Cheese with Crispy Crab Topping
Carol Bachofner, Rockland, ME

2 16 ounce packages Dreamfield’s Rotini, cooked al dente, drained
½ pound each: sharp white cheddar, Jarlsberg, and Jack cheeses, sliced
2  1¼ pound lobsters, steamed and picked
2 Tablespoons butter
1 Tablespoon dry sherry
1 teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon dry mustard
12 ounces evaporated milk

Preheat oven to 375˚ (raise to 400˚ for final 10 minutes of cooking time). Prepare pasta to al dente texture. Butter a 2-quart glass or ceramic baking dish.

In a large glass mixing bowl, combine cooked pasta with chunks of steamed, cooled lobster meat. Beginning with macaroni, layer baking dish with macaroni and each cheese in turn: Jarlsberg first, followed by white cheddar, ending with Jack.

In a glass mixing bowl, combine evaporated milk with sherry, curry, butter, and dry mustard. Pour this mixture evenly over the top of the mac/cheese layers, cover with foil and bake at 375˚ for 30 minutes or until bubbly.

Remove from oven and top with pre-made crispy crab topping (made while casserole is in its first cooking time to preserve freshness.)

Crispy Crab Topping
8 ounces fresh Maine crabmeat, crumbled
1 cup coarse bread crumbs
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
2 Tablespoons butter, melted

Combine all the dry ingredients first, then toss with melted butter and spread over the casserole. Return uncovered casserole to oven and bake for 10 minutes at 400˚ (or until topping crisps).

Pair with Berry Wonderful Salad (mixed greens, dried cranberries, dried blueberries, and walnut pieces) and Purple Basil Balsamic Vinegar and olive oil dressing (or any homemade or purchased balsamic vinaigrette).

Serves 6.

Award_5301Carol receives her award as a finalist in the 2011 Seafood Cooking Contest.

July 15, 2011

The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook

Ok, so I received The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook: From Muggles to Magic by Gina Meyers in the mail last week. The timing was impeccable, with the last installment of the movie franchise hitting theaters this weekend. My son, Jacob, is eagerly awaiting the grand finale of his favorite childhood series to be brought to life on the big screen, and is already anticipating some serious withdrawal. He has spent the last few weeks rereading the series to reboot his memory for the last hurrah. It is a bittersweet time in my home. But I digress.

Gina Meyers’ cookbook arrival to the rescue! She has conjured up a continued love of all things Harry Potter in an unlikely place: the kitchen.

The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook: From Muggles to Magic is an especially fun book for those with young children, and entire meals, parties, and special events can be made with its wacky, fun recipes like Frog’s Eye Salad, Harry’s Tea and Get Out of a Jam Cookies, Dumbledore’s Delightful Dumplings, Hagrid’s Hearty Potatoes au Gratin, Potter Stew, Ron’s Love Spell Cookies, and more.

Jacob and I will, I’m sure, try out several of these recipes. Potter Stew with Dumbledore’s Delightful Dumplings may just be our first Post-Traumatic-Potter-Withdrawal-Meal.

So, kudos to you, Gina. And to Jacob, enjoy the film and keep the magic of childhood alive!

Harry Potter cookbook

Potter Stew
Gina Meyers, The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook: From Muggles to Magic

2½ cups water
1½ pounds lamb cooked lamb, diced
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
2 small onions, sliced
1 turnip, diced
2 medium sized carrots, diced
1 celery stalk, diced
2 cups cubed potatoes

Place enough water to cover meat in a pot; add onions, turnip, carrots, celery, and potatoes and cook for 35-40 minutes. Thicken liquid with flour if necessary and serve stew with dumplings (recipe follows).

Dumbledore’s Delightful Dumplings
Gina Meyers, The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook: From Muggles to Magic

2 cups sifted flour
1¼ teaspoons baking powder
¾ teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon butter
⅔ cup milk

Sift dry ingredients together. Cut in butter. Add milk to make soft dough. Roll ½ inch thick on a floured board. Cut into squares, drop in hot oil, and cook for 20 minutes.

Makes 10 dumplings.

July 7, 2011

Summer Soups Roundup

Now that the hot weather is upon us, we’ve had several requests for cold and chilled soup recipes. Not surprising! Who wants to slave away in the kitchen over a hot stove this time of year? These soups are unique in that they allow you to savor the summer garden’s harvest in some truly refreshing ways.

Here is a link to the chillin’ hits from blogs past to cool you off:

CHILLED SUMMER SOUPS

(And to learn more about our featured restaurants, check out the links below.)

The White Barn Inn, Kennebunkport: Chef Jonathan Cartwright’s Chilled Pea Soup

Local 188, Portland: Chef Jay Villani’s Melon Gazpacho

Thomaston Café: Chef Brian Beckett (pictured below) with his Chilled Berry Soup

brian-3934
image by Jim Bazin

Hartstone Inn: Chef Michael Salmon’s Chilled Summer Gazpacho (pictured below)
PeekytoeCrabGazpacho_4417
image by Jim Bazin

June 22, 2011

Uproot Pie Co.

Last Thursday I made my first visit of the season to the Rockland Farmers’ Market, and I have to say, it just keeps getting better every year. While I was comforted to see all my favorite local farms and businesses represented, I was also delighted by newcomer Jessica Shepard. Her new business, the Uproot Pie Co., offers freshly topped pizza pies and flatbreads from her mobile wood fired oven.

Jessica_4152
image by Jim Bazin © 2011

Last Thursday at the Market, Uproot had the following pizza offerings:

Appleton Creamery Mozzarella

Dandelion Spring Farm Spinach, Ricotta, Roasted Garlic, and a wee bit of bacon

Caramelized Sweet Curried Onion with Fresh Dandelion Spring Farm Arugula

4 Cheese (Fontina, Romano, Mozzarella, and Gorgonzola)

Cheese

Guini Ridge Farm Sausage

Jessica_4158
image by Jim Bazin © 2011

I had the Caramelized Sweet Curried Onion with Fresh Dandelion Spring Farm Arugula and it was absolutely scrumptious! The publisher tried the Spinach, Ricotta, Roasted Garlic, and Bacon and was equally impressed. We’re looking forward to our next visit!

March 10, 2011

Maine Maple Syrup Sunday

Maine Maple Sunday is coming to a sugarhouse near you on Sunday, March 27! This is the time when sugarmakers welcome visitors for open house and declare spring to be officially running in Maine. Never been? It’s a great experience to see (and taste) how it works. We had a great time at Froggy’s Sap Shack in Union a couple years ago.

Maine Maple Sunday is a wonderful opportunity to take a tour, meet the producers, and sample the syrup at one of the local businesses. The Maine Maple Producers Association has all the details! And speaking of details…

Did you know that it takes 40 gallons of clear sap to produce just one gallon of pure Maine maple syrup? Oh, the sticky sweet goodness!! And although it has great sweetening properties for your coffee, tea, on pancakes and waffles, maple syrup is equally tantalizing in more savory recipes like the one below.

Froggy at work Jim “Froggy” Freyenhagen at work in Froggy’s Sap Shack

Continue reading “Maine Maple Syrup Sunday” »

March 5, 2011

Pulled Pork Sandwich

As I’ve stated in the past, one of the many fun parts of my job involves receiving cookbooks for review. Some weeks I receive ten, and some weeks nearly one hundred. What appeals to me is the unusual. After all, there is only so much of the same thing one can handle.

Occasionally, I receive the book that I just have to share with you our readers. The following cookbook, Fart Without Fear by Wayne Chen and Gary Goss, struck me for its plethora of comfort food recipes and its frankly humorous discussion of…well…their outcomes. To quote the authors:

“There are thousands of food cookbooks that enshrine favorite recipes, traditions, culinary techniques, and folklore. But none attempt to mollify comfort food’s inevitable aftermath. So what is a comfort food chef to do?

“Find out what uptight politically correct chefs, nutritionists, and scientists have known for years but haven’t told you. Think fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, meatloaf, and Boston baked beans; this cookbook for everyone includes more than 70 low- to no-odor producing comfort food recipes.”

This cookbook reminded me how we often take many things in life far too seriously. Read on, try their great recipes, and learn how they “rate” their outcomes. Their Pulled Pork is delicious, and clearly “Better than Pulling Uncle Fred’s Finger.”

pulled-pork-sandwich-1
image: simplyrecipes.com

Continue reading “Pulled Pork Sandwich” »

February 28, 2011

Maine Shrimp Casserole

It may be the end of Maine Shrimp Season, but I am prepared. With 20 pounds hoarded away in my freezer, I’m looking forward to enjoying all my favorite recipes (and exploring some new ones) for weeks to come.

MaineShrimp-2138-333x500
photo by Jim Bazin

Continue reading “Maine Shrimp Casserole” »

February 26, 2011

Academy Award Best Picture Recipes

I’m excited to sit down with my son, Jacob, and watch the Oscars. This is one of the first years we’ve seen nearly every best picture nominated film. It was certainly a great year for movies. I’m still rooting for The Fighter. It had guts, grit, heart, and strength. I left the theater saying, “Now that was acting.” And most of all, I left inspired.

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Maybe that’s the key to a worthy film in my book. Inspiration: that spark of hope a film leaves you with at the end, and the feeling of overcoming obstacles and rising above what could so easily keep you down. Jacob gives his nod to The King’s Speech, another truly winning film and the front runner to take home the statue. What was your favorite Academy Award nominated film of 2010?

I came across a fun Oscar food site, dedicated to each Best Picture Nominee. Each film has a fun and appropriate corresponding dish, such as The Social Network’s Chocolate Billionaires, True Grit’s Red Rooster, and Black Swan’s Easy Pavlova. Check out allrecipes.com for more winning recipes, and enjoy the show!

February 24, 2011

Maine James Beard Semifinalists

It’s that time again. Time to be thinking about the upcoming James Beard Awards. The semi-finalist list has been released, and some of our Maine favorites are (back) on it. And the semi-finalists are:

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Best New RestaurantShepherd’s Pie, Rockport

Outstanding ChefSam Hayward, Fore Street, Portland; Melissa Kelly, Primo, Rockland

Outstanding Restaurant
Fore Street, Portland

Best Chef Northeast — Krista Kern Desjarlais, Bresca, Portland; Demos Regas, Emilitsa, Portland; Brian Hill, Francine, Camden; and Megan Chase, Penelle Chase, Phoebe Chase, and Ted LaFage, Chase’s Daily, Belfast

The final list of nominees will be announced on March 21. Congratulations and best wishes to all!

February 21, 2011

Natalie’s Executive Chef Geoffroy Deconinck vies for Award

We at Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine wish to congratulate Natalie’s Restaurant Executive Chef Geoffroy Deconinck on his recent nomination for The 2011 People’s Best New Chef Award! Deconinck is the only nominee from Maine to compete for this New England regional title.

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image: Irvin Serrano

This is a new award created by Food & Wine magazine in parternship with CNN’s Eatocracy. The premise is to highlight and honor 100 talented innovators who have been running their own kitchens for no more than five years. Restaurant patrons determine the winner of this national award through online voting.

Chef Deconinck, born and raised in Belgium, has been labeled “amazing because he uses his traditional Belgian pedigree to modernize French food.” His background includes an education at CERIA Culinary Academy in Brussels and work with such fine establishments as Café Boulud, Daniel, Bouley (New York City); Alain Ducasse au Plaza Athénée (Paris); L’Epicerie (Belgium).

Natalie’s Restaurant, the vital culinary heart of the Camden Harbour Inn, is run by Raymond Brunyanszki and Oscar Verest. From their website about their AAA four diamond award-winning restaurant, they have this to say about their Executive Chef:

“Our Award-winning Executive Chef Geoffroy Deconinck seeks out the harvest of Maine fishing boats, farms, and gardens and transforms these honest, unsullied ingredients into distinctively new presentations that reflect his imaginative interpretation of classic French cuisine with a modern twist.”

We are proud to support Chef Deconinck and encourage EVERYONE to scroll to the bottom of the following page link to VOTE NOW FOR CHEF GEOFF!

Congratulations to Raymond, Oscar, and Geoffroy on your well deserved achievements and honors!!

January 3, 2011

Curried Maine Shrimp with Coconut Rice

Does anything taste better than Maine shrimp? Precious little comes to my mind at the moment…I wait patiently (ok, impatiently!) for the season to roll around, and before I blink, it’s over. I glut myself on a few shrimp boils and always vow that next year I’ll get a little more creative, purchase more, and store them in the freezer to tide me over for another year. Though the food purist in me knows these perfect little gems of the sea need little adornment, here is a rather exotic way to showcase this Maine seafood favorite. Call my friends at Port Clyde Fresh Catch to place your order today!!

Introduce this Creamy Curried Maine Shrimp With Coconut Rice to your yearning taste buds, and they’ll never ask for anything else for a long time to come. This recipe can be prepared in about 5 minutes. Use the freshest coconut available.

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photograph by Jim Bazin

Continue reading “Curried Maine Shrimp with Coconut Rice” »

December 21, 2010

Holiday Subscription Offer

It’s not to late to order that last minute gift for the person on your list who has everything. Give them the gift of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, a gift that will continue giving all year long with great recipes, local chef profiles, in-depth articles, and stunning photography.

VegWreath-7727(485px)Happy Holidays!

Give the gift of Maine’s only food magazine, and make someone smile this holiday season. We’ll include a gift letter stating this gift is from you, along with the recipient’s copy of the current issue to start them on their way.

Happy Holidays to you, your family, and your friends!

Melanie Hyatt & Jim Bazin

November 1, 2010

Chef Brian Hill’s Bluefin Tuna Poke

In the new issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, Chef Brian Hill of Francine Bistro and Shepherd’s Pie talks about Hawaii, Maine bluefin tuna, and cooking for Sam Hayward in his early days at Francine.

Brian is a notorious local food talent, rock star, and surfer. He graciously gave me his Bluefin Tuna Poke (pronounced POH-kay) recipe, along with a generous portion. All I can say is…WOW! Jim was fortunate to have gotten this shot before it disappeared.

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Tuna Poke, prepared by Chef Brian Hill of Francine Bistro and Shepherd’s Pie

For Brian Hill’s recipe, see page 12 of Issue 12, available now! Subscribe today for Maine’s great food stories, local recipes, and mouth-watering photography!

October 27, 2010

The Edge: Not Your Mother’s Boiled Dinner

Chef Bryan Dame of The Edge in Lincolnville offers up one of my favorite traditional meals in the latest issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine. But this is not your mamma’s boiled dinner.

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Chef Bryan Dame’s New England Boiled Dinner. image © Jim Bazin 2010

Dame works to preserve traditional area cuisine like corned beef and cabbage, injecting it with new creative life. His emphasis on locally sourced ingredients also make his dishes as authentic as they can get. I got to chow down on this gorgeous creation soon after it was plated, and I have to say it was incredible. A work of art.

For Bryan’s “Not Your Mother’s Boiled Dinner” recipe, pick up a copy of Maine Food & Lifestyle issue 12. Subscribe today!

October 23, 2010

Evangeline restaurant: Maine Chicken and Lobster

In the new issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, Portland Chef/Proprietor Erik Desjarlais of Evangeline restaurant talks about the Grateful Dead, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, GQ, and oh yes, some cooking!

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Mitra’s Clabber-fed Chicken & Maine Lobster, prepared by Chef Erik Desjarlais

Read about his intriguing story, his start in the business, and get the recipe for his fantastic featured dish, “Mitra’s Clabber-fed Chicken and Maine Lobster.” Maine made, Maine inspired, all in issue 12 of Maine Food & Lifestyle!

October 13, 2010

Wine ‘n’ Dine: Peekytoe Crab

Maine has its own special type of crab, and its name is peekytoe. But do you know where the name originated? Browne Trading’s Jen Flock does, and she’s sharing her intimate knowledge, along with a real Maine recipe for Peekytoe Crab Linguine with Fresh Tomato and Herbs. Scrumptious.

PeekyToe_8189Image © Jim Bazin, 2010.

And as always, Jen offers us several wine pairing selections to enhance our dining experience.

Subscribe to Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine now!