Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

talking food at the ICA

Tonight is quite the line-up of events at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the Maine College of Art as part of 'Consumption,' a week of programming that explores our relationship to food. Today's schedule includes talks by the folks behind Rabelais, Sara Kanabey from (other) Portland's Farmer General, and a butchering demonstration by Rosemont Market's Jarrod Spangler. These guests are amongst film screenings, children's programs and culminating in a pop-up Filipino restaurant tomorrow evening. See the full schedule here.



Wednesday, February 8, 2012

winter cheese

A primary component of last night's dinner was cheese.  I thought about titling this post Winter Cheese/Winter Pounds but then that would suggest that I don't indulge in this with the frequency that I do. Anyhow, I had stopped in The Cheese Iron, a terrific shop just a few minutes south of Portland, where I got in a healthy dose of cheese-talk which apparently I require from time to time. Instead of becoming overwhelmed by their well-curated selection, we discussed the ones that only come along, or are at their peak, this time of year. Seasonality isn't something a lot of people associate with cheese, but between the cycle of milk production and the aging process, this is certainly the case.

I ended up carrying away two cows' milk styles from Vermont that I had heard of, but never tried.  Winnimere popped out at me right away.  From Jasper Hill in Greensboro, it's a farmstead, raw milk washed-rind cheese that was specifically developed to take advantage of the high fat and protein of their Ayrshire cow's winter milk. Aged at just three to six weeks, it becomes available in February then only for five months. There are so many beautiful components to this cheese: it is wrapped in cambium from the spruce trees located on the farm and better yet, it involves a partnership with Hill Farmstead Brewery down the road which supplies the beer that the cheese is washed with. In fact, the cheese and beer ferment side by side, sharing bacteria and resulting in a moderately stinky, buttery paste that is just as easily eaten with a spoon.


The Cellars at Jasper Hill is known for its cooperative aging caves, but that's a longer post for another time...hopefully, after an upcoming visit.

The second is Tarentaise from Spring Brook Farm in Reading. While this cheese is made year round, its alpine style benefits from grassy spring milk and once aged the standard ten months, this time of winter is prime time for enjoyment. It is also a raw milk, farmstead cheese produced from the farm's forty Jersey cows.  It is named for the region in France that inspired it and made in a traditional European method, although the - okay, I'll use the word - terroir make it unique to Vermont. It's a semi-hard cheese - my wedge at least not being all that dry - but complex and 'prickly' as described by Murray's. Delicious.


(Interestingly, Spring Brook Farm also hosts a program called Farm for City Kids which treats the farm like an outdoor classroom to which academics are applied and character building encouraged...what an unexpected and admirable facet to the operation.)

Rounded out with a bottle of Malbec and smoky chipotle 72% dark chocolate from Byrne & Carlson in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, The Cheese Iron delivered last night.  I made a cous cous dish too, but whatever.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

education at urban farm fermentory


The folks down at Urban Farm Fermentory have had a full class schedule this winter, which continues into the spring. Probably best know for their hard ciders found in restaurants and bars around Maine, UFF's industrial space in the East Bayside neighborhood of Portland has been transformed into a laboratory for the production and fermentation of food and drink, ranging from aquaponics to an apiary. I've enjoyed two permaculture classes with David Homa and am looking forward to mushroom cultivation coming up again March. See the calendar here.

Friday, October 7, 2011

meet your cheese maker


This Sunday, October 9th, is the Maine Cheese Guild’s annual Open Creamery Day, which provides the opportunity for touring and tasting with fifteen participating cheese makers across the state.  As they recommend, the perfect day to pepper in stops at orchards and breweries (and for some of us, flea markets and thrift stores).  See their website for a map and details.


Saturday, October 1, 2011

time/bank: time/food in new york

One of many events and installations involved in Creative Time's exhibition, Living as Form, a survey of socially engaged art which is currently located around and about the Lower East Side.

Published: September 23, 2011
Now serving at a pop-up restaurant, downtown: free lunches, of dishes designed by a long list of very accomplished visual artists.

An alternative currency for Time/Bank, designed by Lawrence Weiner.

Julieta ArandaAn alternative currency for Time/Bank, designed by Lawrence Weiner.


Wednesday, September 21, 2011

kennebec cheesery at koons farm - sidney, maine

My introduction to Kennebec Cheesery was by way of Portland’s Wednesday farmers market in Monument Square. A farmstead producer, owner Jean Koons, specializes in chevre. Recently, the Koons were kind enough to host friend/photographer, Natalie Conn, and myself to a visit at their farm and facility in Sidney, ME.


We arrived after a little over an hour’s drive north from Portland - where slowly the landscape changes over to wide expanses of rolling hills - and were greeted by Jean and her husband, Peter, who were heading out to pasture to tend to their ten kids, just born in April. We felt welcome from the start, even the little goats anxiously vocalizing their pleasure to see us. It was time to move the fencing back so that the kids could feed on fresh, tall grass and wildflowers. Jean is a native of New Zealand, where this method of rotational grazing has its roots.


She noted how Queen Anne’s lace and clover are favorites while Peter pointed out that their tastes seem to change, one day drawn to a particular plant and the next, not having a taste for it at all. They began the operation six years ago, located on Peter's family farm, and this is the relationship these folks have with their animals… a scale of farming and production where they not only monitor the details of their goats’ behavior, but even name each one. 

After just a year, the kids will begin producing milk. Milking starts in early spring and lasts until December or January, each goat producing slightly less than a gallon per day, leaving Jean with 14-16 gallons to work with. In November, on the verge of ‘drying off’ for the winter, they eat hay that comes from the farm, living in the hoop house that sits next to the milking parlor.


The milking parlor, cheesemaking room and aging room are housed in the same building which was built in 2006 with the help of friends, family and a grant from Farms for the Future, using recycled materials and lumber primarily sourced from their land.


Here, the mature goats grazed in a separate pasture from the kids.  We observed the herd mentality of their movements.  This includes a natural pecking order, which Jean said can be seen by how they organize themselves as they enter the milking parlor. Based on seniority, the goats file through a short set of railings from pasture to parlor.



Milking is accomplished with a simple pumping system that draws the milk into buckets in an adjacent room.  From there, we each stepped into a pair of white rubber boots (brought from New Zealand) as we entered the production space.  


The process of making her chevre ‘Cobbles’ (a staple in our home) takes five days and rotates throughout the week, three times a week. Simply put, the process goes like this: 1-innoculate, 2-scoop, 3-flip, 4-salt, and 5-roll and package.


Jean dishes the curd from the vat into cylindrical moulds and allows the whey to thoroughly drain into the tray below before filling them a second and final time. The moulds are covered until the next day when they are flipped, and on the fourth day, are removed from the moulds and salted.


On the last day, she sets out three plates (made by each of her three children – the laminated marker drawings we all made in school), each holding the ingredients for rolling: dill, cracked peppercorns, and herb de provence.








Jean was also working with inoculated Jersey milk that comes from a farm seven miles down the road – contrasting greatly from the goat milk with its rich yellow hue – dishing it into pyramid shaped moulds for her Cow Cobble cheese. This cheese came about when one of her distributors asked about a product she might be able to carry on throughout the winter (cow’s drying off period is much shorter than goat’s). The finished product is stored in olive oil, additional ingredients including basil/garlic/pine nut and roasted tomato/chili pepper.

She is experimenting with aged cheeses and in particular, shared with us her Caerphally project: Welsh hard, crumbly cows' milk wheels. These are stored in the aging room between two and three months alongside shelves lined with the Cobbles and jars of her cows' milk yogurt. As we spoke, Jean was brushing the wheels with a cream wax to seal in moisture and protect the rind.



As Jean continued to work, as to be expected, our conversation drifted to regulatory issues. For one, the matter of using raw milk for cheese production. Regulated by the FDA, raw milk cannot be used for cheese aged under 60 days. The state of Maine has made it easier for small producers by allowing 'heat-treated' (reaching 150 degrees for a half-hour) milk opposed to pasteurization...a middle ground that saves hundreds-of-thousands of dollars in equipment that simply isn't viable for facilities of this scale.

But the question of exactly how much regulation isn't a simple one. In New Zealand, for instance, she explained that regulations are the same no matter the size of the producer and a move in that direction might not be a bad thing. The worry is that people can get into it producing something like cheese not realizing the potential dangers involved and as she says, "One bad experience will destroy it for all of us."

Jean was one of the founders of the Maine Cheese Guild, which has worked with the state government to help shape regulations. She described it as 'very supportive and helpful,' providing classes and workshops at all levels.  The recent re-posting on the website of their position on local food ordinances reiterates Jean's point in that it "believes that the best way for professional cheese makers to guarantee the quality of their product is being appropriately licensed...".




The amount of work Jean puts into Kennebec Cheesery is impressive.  Besides the day-to-day production and tending to the herd (which also includes Kahtadin sheep for lamb meat), this is a business and running a business also means marketing.

She began selling at farmers' markets and at local stores, Uncle Dean’s Good Groceries and Barrels Community Market in Waterville, and has since expanded to restaurants. She expressed both her gratitude and hopefulness for farmers’ markets as they have continued to grow over recent years.  Selling in Augusta, Waterville and Portland markets, she recognizes the value of such a direct method of marketing, allowing farmers and producers to think more creatively about their product due to the immediacy of the feedback they receive.


Kennebec Cheesery at Koons' Farm is a place where living and making cannot be separated. I encourage you Mainers to seek out their product, one in which they have a hand in every step, drawing a direct line from what goes into the goats' belly to what goes into ours. Elsewhere, find and support your local cheesemakers...people like the Koons whose diligence makes our lives just a little better.  

Many thanks to Natalie for collaborating on this project, the first of more to come. Visit www.natalieconnphotography.com for a full slideshow of her photographs.




Thursday, July 7, 2011

a july harvest ice cream

Ever since I bought the attachment for my KitchenAid this past winter, I’ve loved experimenting with ice cream. The perfect opportunity to make a long overdue batch presented itself this week during a cherished visit from my folks.

Among the many beautiful days we spent together, Saturday was a leisurely South Portland-Cape Elizabeth-beachy-lighthouse day.  
While on the Cape, we decided to check out Maxwell’s Farm for strawberry picking. Although I could have continued hopping from row to row for the rest of the afternoon, with our tray overflowing and our clothes increasingly red-stained, we carried away thirteen pounds of these little gems. Without too much of a plan, between the three of us, we quickly processed them that night.
The thought of making preserves was scratched only for lack of preparation, sterilization of jars and such. Instead, eight quart-size bags full – some juicy halves, some whole – await us in the freezer. And then the ice cream: a raw milk strawberry basil.
This time, I stuck with Mark Bitman’s simple six-egg to three-cup liquid formula. Here, the strawberry puree accounted for one part and I used raw milk as that’s what I had on hand.  Having just brought home a few more plants, including basil, from the farmers' market that morning, it seemed like a good idea to infuse the milk for a twist on the recipe. I only slightly miss the full-fat creaminess of using part heavy cream, but after a week of vacation-eating, I think it’s better this way.