Fairly Delicious

A look at some of the fair food classics

Theme of most fair foods is indulgence. Fair food is supposed to be deep-fried or covered in powdered sugar. Here’s a look at some of the dishes you might encounter on this season’s midways.

Apple Crisp

Pat’s Apple Crisp and Cider Donuts (patsapplecrisp.com)

Find them at this fair: Hopkinton State Fair, Deerfield Fair

Danielle Calkins’ family has been selling fair food for a long time.

“My dad and my mother started this business back in 1984,” she said. “We’ve been in business over 40 years. … They just started with the fair circuits like Topfield, Deerfield, Hopkinton, Rochester. Now, we do fall festivals and things like that, but we’re also now a mobile food truck business so we do private events as well. The cider doughnuts have been part of the operation for about 18 years out of those 40. My father passed away in 2010 and so my brother and I took over the business. My mom is still involved. She’s Pat.”

In classic fair food tradition Pat’s makes two foods, makes them extremely well, and tries to keep up with demand on fair weekends. Calkins said apple crisp is, for her, the quintessential New England fair food.

“I definitely think it’s just that feeling that New Englanders have at that turn of the fall season,” she said. “When we start to feel those leaves change and it starts to get a little cooler in the air, I just feel like people, New Englanders specifically, they just crave the sweaters and the scarves. You watch people at the fair, right? People are kind of bundled up in the evenings. It’s a little chilly. They want something hot and they want something that is homemade that they know.”

Calkins said while fresh hot doughnuts sell more at fairs, apple crisp has a special place in her heart.

“Just because it’s that mixture between French vanilla and when it melts a little bit into the crisp and the apples, it’s something special. I just think that everything kind of aligns for that Deerfield Fair weekend at the end of September. The apples are at peak, peak perfection at that time, just before October hits, and it’s probably about 50 degrees outside; it’s the best.”

Calkins and her family are traditionalists. They stick with McIntosh apples from one particular local orchard for their crisp.

”It’s completely dependable and it cooks well without becoming mush,” she said.

Extremely Large Doughnuts

Betsy’s Country Fair Donuts (facebook.com/betsysdonuts)

Find them at this fair: Hopkinton State Fair, Deerfield Fair, Sandwich State Fair

Cider doughnuts might be traditional, but enormous frosted doughnuts the size of hubcaps are the indulgence of choice for many younger fair-goers. Fully mature couples might need to split one between themselves.

Jamie Cross is the owner of Betsy’s Country Fair Donuts.

“We’ve been doing jumbo doughnuts at New Hampshire State Fairs since my grandfather started it in 1965,” he said. “We are third and fourth generation at the moment.”

Cross said his stand sells five varieties of doughnut, all of which are yeasted and leavened.

“We do five different varieties of jumbo doughnuts,” he said. “We do maple-frosted, chocolate-frosted, cinnamon-sugared, regular-sugared, and honey-dipped. Chocolate-frosted are usually the most popular in Hopkinton, honey-dipped in Deerfield, and usually maple-frosted up in Sandwich.” These are big doughnuts. “Ours are 8 inches across,” he said.

The doughnuts sell too quickly to keep track of, Cross said.

nine large doughnuts in a tray, glazed
Betsy’s Country Fair Donuts. Courtesy Jamie Cross.

“As far as actual doughnuts, we don’t actually count. We usually measure by 50-pound bags of flour is how we usually count the day. And I think the best Deerfield Fair we ever had was probably 10 50-pound bags of flour, so 500 pounds of flour in a day. A Deerfield Saturday is usually the busiest day of any of the fairs.”

To be ready for the midway, the dry ingredients for Cross’ doughnuts are mixed off-site.
“We mix dried powdered whole eggs, powdered milk, our shortenings, sugars and flavors. We’ll mix that in a batch. So we call it our base. So we have buckets of that. When we are at the fair, we only have to measure out a certain amount of base, water and yeast, and then you put the flour in until the dough feels a certain way. Then you let it rise, cut it, let it rise again, and then fry it. And then you dress them all up. They’re all the same doughnut, they’re just dressed differently.”

Cross notes that, surprisingly, frosted doughnuts are not at their best right out of the fryer.

“The perfect doughnut is like 15 minutes out of the fryer,” he advised. “They need to set a little bit. You don’t want them to be too hot when you add the toppings. … You don’t want them running all down your shirt. A lot of people are like, ‘Oh, do you have a hot honey-dipped?’ I’m like, ‘I do, and if that’s what you want, you can wear it; that’s fine.’

Gluten-Free Fair Food

No Pain, No Grain

Find them at this fair: Hillsborough County Fair, Deerfield Fair

Tenley Pello developed celiac disease as an adult, but she grew up loving fair food. According to her the most unfair thing about her situation is that she was able to develop a passion for wheaty, starchy foods before her body decided she couldn’t eat them.

“So I went from knowing how good fair food is to not being able to eat it,” she said. After some consideration, she realized that that feeling of injustice was also an opportunity.

“The way I kind of look at it,” she said, “is when I go to a fair I don’t want a smoothie, I don’t want to go and get a rice bowl, I don’t want a healthy option, I want typical fair junk food — and I couldn’t eat that anymore. So I wanted to kind of bring back enjoyable fair food to people who don’t really have options. Because even when you go to places that have gluten-free foods, there can still be cross-contamination; they might use the same fryer for everything, or forget to wipe a counter down.”

The thing to keep in mind, Pello said, is that “gluten-free” does not mean “healthy.” The whole principle of fair food, she said, is to be able to provide greasy, carby, indulgent food.

“Every event we work at, we sell something different,” she said. “Our fried dough definitely took us a couple of attempts to get right. We finally found a recipe that we really, really like and we settled on. A lot of people tell us that they’ve missed it, that they haven’t been able to have fried dough since they were kids.”

Pello said anything she fries is popular on the fairgrounds.

“Our Fry Bowls [huge servings of loaded french fries] seem to sell the most,” she said, “but our chicken tenders are really great …” Most of the dishes on the No Pain menu at any given event are built on a foundation of French fries. A Chicken Parm Bowl, for instance, starts with garlic-parmesan fries, topped with chicken tender bites, marinara sauce, and more parmesan cheese. Other bowls might be topped with pulled pork, Buffalo chicken, or a classic fair combination of grilled sausage, peppers, and onions. Pello said that she is particularly proud of the chicken tenders she has been able to source, which find their way into more than half of her inventions. “We’ve managed to find a distributor who can get us the best of the best,” she said. They are incredibly high-quality, and they’re halal. It is definitely a comfort food.”

Maple Cotton Candy

Ben’s Sugar Shack (bensmaplesyrup.com)

There is probably no fair food more iconic than cotton candy.

The New Hampshire twist on cotton candy is to make it out of maple sugar. Ben Fisk is the owner of Ben’s Sugar Shack.

“I’ve been making maple cotton candy at the fair since I was 15 years old,” he said. “It’s just a pure maple flavor.”

The way a cotton candy machine works, Fisk said, is that it melts sugar and spins it very quickly.

“There are heating elements in there and it just melts the sugar out there and spins it out. [The sugar] comes out into the air as a liquid and when it hits the cooler air is when it turns into the sugar fibers.” In Fisk’s experience, it’s children who like traditional bright colors. “But definitely, more adults eat the maple cotton candy,” he said. Because, in the end, maple cotton candy has such a pure maple flavor, the maple sugar can come from many different batches of syrup. “It varies, it can be dark,” he said, “but usually a dark to amber rich syrup is really good for making maple sugar.”

Smoked Turkey Legs

Michael Raffalo has seen smoked turkey legs evolve as a fair food staple over the years.

“I started doing turkey legs [at fairs] around 1996,” he remembered. They seem to have started as a niche food at renaissance fairs, and took a while to develop a following. “They weren’t popular in the beginning as they are now at a fair, but I believe most fair foods that are popping off are because of the food channels, you know, Carnival Eats, several shows like that on TV. Sausage has been a staple since before I was born. Popcorn, cotton candy, that type of thing, fried dough. But now, with these shows, people are frying everything — this and that. But the turkey legs have come around, and I’ve stayed with it through all these years.”

Raffalo and his family live in Florida but work the fair circuit throughout the summer and fall. The Deerfield Fair is an important event on his family’s calendar.

rack of turkey legs sitting on cinder blocks
Smoked turkey legs. Courtesy photo from Michael Raffalo.

“Deerfield’s a big staple,” he said, “and it’s a family affair. This year I believe is our 60th year at that fair. It’s now turned over to my son. I’m still here a little bit to help along, but the next generation is coming along now. He’s the fourth generation on his mother’s side; it’s the same business, but he’s third generation on his father’s side. He’s a good boy.”

The turkey legs themselves are straightforward, Raffalo said.

“They are turkey. It’s just smoking and it’s an easy preparation. That’s the one good thing about them. You don’t need bread, you don’t need peppers, onions, all that. It’s just boom, here’s your meat. It’s meat on a stick.We’re into smokers, we’re into picking up wood, making sure it’s the right wood. You can just use oak, it’s fine, but if you want a little sweeter taste to the leg — I mean, it’s just like a barbecue process.”

Raffalo said that while many turkey leg vendors fry their turkey legs he and his family are committed to cooking theirs in a smoker, which requires organization and planning.

“If we were in a hurry we could get a batch out quickly in three hours for production,” he said, “But we let them go a little longer if we have time.”

A turkey leg is bigger than most first-timers expect, Raffalo said.

“They roughly range from 18 ounces to 36 ounces. Some of the legs in a box are twice the size of others, but they are all no less than 18 ounces. If you’re going to call it ‘jumbo,’ we want it to be 18 ounces or more. [A turkey leg] is a walk-around-with-a-hunk-of-meat-in-your-hand meal in itself. It’s just a big old hunk of meat and deliciousness. The flavor’s simple — simple smoke. [Customers] love it.’

Deep-Fried Oreos

Brothers Concessions

Find them at this fair: Hopkinton State Fair, Deerfield Fair

If New England fair food has a specialty, it’s almost anything deep-fried. Fried dough springs to mind immediately, of course, and then there are french fries, cottage fries, curly fries, spiral fries, corn dogs, fried clams, even fried ice cream. But the quintessential decadent fried fair food has to be the fried Oreo.

Matt Reed is one of the owners of Brothers Concessions, which specializes in fried foods.

cardboard take out dish filled batter fried Oreos dusted with powdered sugar.
Fried Oreos from Brothers Concessions. Courtesy photo from John Lindsey.

“Fried Oreos started in about 2002,” he remembered. “I think we started doing fried Oreos in 2003. My brother and I started as soon as I got out of high school. We started with fried Twinkies, fried candy bars and funnel cakes. And then the following year we added a couple other items, but an Oreo was the biggest one that we added. It’s been one of the long-term stays that we’ve had.”

Reed said that timing is everything when it comes to eating a fried Oreo.

“You really need to let them cool a little bit,” he advised. “You’ll burn your tongue if you don’t, but they are best fresh. If you let them sit and kind of sit for too long — half an hour or so — they’ll go stale. I do know several people who have told me that they were taking them home and reheating them in the oven, but for the most part hot and fresh is the way to go.”\

The secret to a good fried Oreo is to not cheap out, Reed said.

“When we first started doing it, when we were getting our original trailer ready, we had neighborhood kids come over to try out different things. And we had done Oreos, just regular … Oreos. And then we tried Double Stuf Oreos and they were so much better! Like so much better that we’ve always used Double Stuf Oreos for probably 23 years now. And I’ve never seen any other vendors do that. … The filling in an Oreo will kind of melt into the batter a little bit, so more is better.”

“With a Twinkie,” Reed continued, “the way we do it, it’s actually got a cool taste in the middle, but the outside is nice and warm. It’s kind of like a baked Alaska type of sensation. We do fried ice cream as well.” That has to be very cold when it goes into the hot oil, he said. The concept is to have different flavors, textures and temperatures in the same treat.

Reed has seen a growing acceptance of decadent fried fair food.

“When we first started doing it, it tended to be something for a young adult crowd,” he said. “But, you know, now, I have grandparents buying fried Oreos, fried cookies, fried candy bars. Early on, parents were not as excited about serving their kids fried desserts, but over time they’ve become more of a standard fair food. They’re everywhere now.”

Three upcoming fairs

Hopkinton State Fair
Fairgrounds, 392 Kearsarge Ave., Contoocook
Dates: Thursday, Aug. 28, through Monday, Sept. 1
Hours: Thursday 5 to 10 p.m., Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., and Monday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
There will be livestock shows, a demolition derby, carnival rides, monster trucks, live entertainment, a farmers market, and a petting zoo. Expect stunt riders, horse-pulls and, of course, fair food. Visit hsfair.org.

Hillsborough County Fair
New Boston 4-H Youth Center, 15 Hilldale Lane, New Boston
Dates: Friday, Sept. 5, through Sunday, Sept. 7
Hours: Friday noon to 9 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Expect livestock showing, ox-pulls, carnival rides, tractor-pulls, sheep-herding demonstrations, live music, fireworks and fair food. Visit hcafair.org.

Deerfield Fair
Deerfield Fair Grounds, 34 Stage Road, Deerfield
Dates: Thursday, Sept. 25, through Sunday, Sept. 28
Hours: Thursday, Friday and Saturday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., Sunday 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Billing itself as “New England’s Oldest Family Fair,” the Deerfield Fair is a lot to take in. Expect horse and cattle pulls, a pig scramble, giant pumpkins, circus performers, live music, horticultural and dairy judging, sheep sheering, rides, dog shows, a women’s Fry Pan Toss, and, of course, an almost overwhelming amount of fair food. Visit deerfieldfair.com.

Featured Image: Apple crisp from Pat’s. Photo courtesy Danielle Calkins.

This Week 25/08/28

Thursday, Aug. 28

The Hopkinton State Fair starts today and runs through Monday, Sept. 1, at the fairgrounds, 392 Kearsarge Ave. in Contoocook. In addition to the midway with a selection of rides (see the list at hsfair.org), the fair will feature the Demolition Derby (Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 6:30 p.m), Dialed Action Sports (Thursday at 6:30 p.m.), the New England Lawn Mower Racing Association (Friday 6 p.m.) and Dialed Action Sports BMX (various times Friday through Monday). The fair will also feature dog events such as Disc-Connected K9s (shows Thursday through Monday) and Dockdogs (daily) as well as live stock shows, pulling competitions, home arts and NH 4-H show and auction, the website said. Get juggling and magic performances daily on the Country Porch Stage and find live music on The Ag Stage including Linda Nelson (Thursday, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m), Dan Morgan (times Friday through Monday), April Cushman (Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.) and Brad Myrick (Sunday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.), the website said. Fair hours are 5 to 10 p.m. today; 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday. Buy admission passes, admission and ride mega passes and special show tickets through the website.

Thursday, Aug. 28

The New Hampshire Fisher Cats will play Game 3 of a six-game home series against the Erie SeaWolves tonight at 6:35 p.m. at Delta Dental Stadium (1 Line Drive, Manchester, 641-2005, milb.com/new-hampshire). Come early for a Space Potatoes Koozie Giveaway. Tickets start at $17. Games continue Friday and Saturday (when the team plays at the Space Potatoes and there is a Space Potato socks giveaway) nights at 6:35 p.m. and Sunday at 1:35 p.m.

Thursday, Aug. 28

Post-grunge rock band Creed takes the stage at the SNHU Arena (555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000, snhuarena.com) tonight at 7 p.m. with special guests Daughtry and Mammoth will open. Tickets start at $49.

Saturday, Aug. 30

Cruising Downtown returns to downtown Manchester today from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., organized by the Rotary Club of Manchester. The day will feature cars on display, along with food, local vendors and live music with Off Duty Angels, Linda Lane Band, Speed Trap and Permanent Vacation, according to the club’s Facebook page. See cruisingdowntownmanchester.com.

Saturday, Aug. 30

Today is the Clear the Shelter Finale at Pope Memorial SPCA of Concord Merrimack County (94 Silk Farm Road, Concord, 856-8756, pmspca.org) from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. with a 50 percent off pet adoption fees for adult pets.

Sunday, Aug. 31

Temple Mountain plays an afternoon solo set today at 3 p.m. at Contoocook Cider Co. in Contoocook. The Peterborough-based singer-guitarist mixes originals with fun covers. Sunday, Aug. 31, 3 p.m., Contoocook Cider Co., 656 Gould Hill Road, Contoocook, templemountainmusic.com.

Save the Date! Friday, Sept. 19
The annual celebration of Scottish culture, music, food and sports returns to Loon Mountain Resort in Lincoln. The annual New Hampshire Highland Games & Festival will take place Friday, Sept. 19, through Sunday, Sept. 21, according to nhscot.org. See events such as stone lifting and caber toss, historical reenactments of life in the Highlands, “Try It” classes, kids’ events and more. Purchase tickets for a single day or the weekend on the website along with tickets for special musical performances and food events, such as the Cape Breton dinner and whisky master classes.

News & Notes 25/08/28

Remembering 9/11

Glenn Carlson, a Laconia resident and a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, will talk about his experiences as an active duty Air Force officer at Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana on Sept. 11, 2001, on Thursday, Sept. 4, at 7 p.m. at the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire, 27 Navigator Road in Londonderry, aviationmuseumofnh.org. Carlson was a B-52 crew member who was stationed at Barksdale, the “undisclosed location” that President George W. Bush, who was at an elementary school in Sarasota, Florida, was taken to after learning about the 9/11 attacks in New York City and on the Pentagon, according to a museum press release. Carlson had “just returned from a Red Flag exercise in advanced aerial combat training — and … suddenly found himself part of the unfolding response to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,” the release said. “Carlson will speak about his perspective from the air surrounding the horrific events of 9/11, and how that day shaped his military career and U.S. air power from that point forward,” the press release said. Admission to the talk costs $10 per person.

Teen talk

The Upper Room, a family resource center at 36 Tsienneto Road in Derry, has classes for teens and parents of teens on its fall schedule. The center will offer a six-week program called Mindful Teens for teens that “focuses on relationships, consent, decisions making” and more, according to a press release, with facilitator Val Mazzola starting Monday, Sept. 8, from 3 to 4 p.m. The program will run through Oct. 27 on Mondays and is offered at no cost. On Thursday, Sept. 18, the Upper Room will host an internet safety class with Derry Police detectives 6:30 to 8 p.m. where parents can “learn a little more about what access your children have, and the potential safety concerns it poses for them, including possible legal implications,” the release said. Register for either program by calling 437-8477, ext. 110.

Scouting history

Amherst Girl Scouts Troop 60162 of girls in grades 4 and 5 has earned a Girl Scout Bronze Award for a project that involved finding the graves of 48 Revolutionary War soldiers in Amherst and creating a booklet and website with each grave’s location, according to a Girl Scout press release. The website also features audio recordings of short biographies of each soldier, the release said. See their work at girlscouts60162.wixsite.com/patriotsamherstnh.“The troop worked with the Daughters of the American Revolution to get the monuments and headstones cleaned, which took place recently. The public can now enjoy a walk through the newly freshened cemeteries,” the release said.

See girlscoutsgwm.org for more about Girl Scouts.

Head to Kimball Jenkins Mansion, 266 N. Main St. in Concord, through Sept. 27 to check out “Old Friends, New Works,” an exhibit of paintings by local artists Tricia Gibbs, Betsy Holmes, TylerAnn Mack and Christine Ryan, according to a press release. The gallery is open for viewing Tuesdays through Sept. 23 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Wednesdays through Sept. 24 (except for Sept. 17) 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Thursdays through Sept. 25 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Friday, Sept. 5, for an artist reception from 6 to 8 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 6, 10 a.m .to 4 p.m. and Saturday, Sept. 27, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Joppa Hill Educational Farm in Bedford will hold a “Living Land: Field and Farm Walks and Talks” event on Thursday, Aug 28, from 5 to 7 p.m. focused on “Growing Grass for Healthy Herds” with UNH Extension’s Carl Majweski, according to jhef.org/events-at-the-farm. The program is free and starts at the farm stand. Upcoming talks include “From Feed to Field: Behind the scenes look at livestock care” on Thursday, Sept. 18.

The Nashua Garden Club will hold a free fall program, “Native Plants for New England Gardens,” with speaker Jane Raymond, a Master Gardener and Goffstown Conservation Commission member, on Wednesday, Sept. 3, at 7 p.m. at First Baptist Church, 121 Manchester St. in Nashua, according to a club email. See nashuanhgardenclub.org.

Indoor party

NH Irish Fest returns to Palace

By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

Two shows — one free, another ticketed — will celebrate New Hampshire’s connection to Ireland when the New Hampshire Irish Fest returns to the Palace Theatre. On the big stage, the Spain Brothers, Liam and Micky, host a bill topped by Eileen Ivers with renowned tenor Ronan Tynan, the Screaming Orphans and Mick McAuley.

In the Palace’s Spotlight Room, a free show (reservations required) has a local flavor, with JD & the Stonemasons, Black Pudding Rovers, Marty Quirk and Speed the Plough playing at the top of each hour, beginning at 3 p.m. Since the paid admission event kicks off at 5 p.m., a festival vibe will prevail.

“There will be some overlap between the two,” Liam Spain, who also booked the shows, said by phone recently. “We’re trying to make it more of a festival, having the multiple stages.” At the end of the evening all the musicians will gather to perform a closing song. It’s always a highlight at the event, now in its third year.

Screaming Orphans, a family band, have appeared at all three festivals. The four Diver sisters — Joan, Angela, Gràinne and Marie Thérèse — hail from Bundoran in Ireland’s County Donegal. Their last album, 2023’s Paper Daisies, hit No. 1 on Billboard’s World Music Top 10 and was a fan favorite. “Every track evokes a different feeling,” gushed one.

Called the “Jimi Hendrix of the violin,” Ivers performed a Christmas show at the Rex a few years back, but this will be her first Irish Fest appearance, and Spain is excited.

“She’s a go-to for a lot of contemporary artists that are looking to give that kind of extra spice to whatever they’re doing,” he said.

Tynan first rose to fame in the late 1990s as a member of the Irish Tenors, branching out to a solo career in 2005, with an eclectic repertoire that includes show tunes, standard pop songs and an occasional faith-based piece. Songs in his recent sets range from “My Irish Molly ’O” to “Send in the Clowns” and “Danny Boy.”

A longtime member of Solas, McCauley is a multi-instrumentalist who plays accordion, melodeon, concertina, whistles and guitar who’s contributed to albums by Mary Chapin Carpenter, Patty Larkin, Paul Brennan of Clannad, and he played melodeons in Sting’s autobiographical theater production The Last Ship.

The Spain Brothers debuted a new album last year — Bright & Better Morning, their duo’s first — and released a Christmas EP in tandem with a concert at the Rex Theatre with Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki and his band. That holiday season show will be back in December, Spain revealed in the interview.

The Irish-curious will enjoy the complimentary slate of musicians in the Palace Spotlight Room. Speed The Plough began as a duo in 1981, performing regularly at Jearnie’s End in Goffstown, growing into a quartet playing a range of acoustic music featuring fiddle, banjo, mandolin, guitar, pennywhistle and dulcimer. They’re a trio these days, with three albums.

Black Pudding Rovers, who played the Spotlight Room last year, are an area tradition every St. Patrick’s Day. The band features Mike Becker and Ken Wyman on guitar, with Gary Hunter on woodwinds, playing reels, hornpipes, polkas and Irish ballads, along with covers of tunes by everyone from the Dropkick Murphys to Van Morrison.

JD & the Stonemasons are called “New England’s most rollicking band of traditional musicians” and perform regularly around the region, including a show at The Fells in Newbury with Liz and Dan Faiella on Aug. 27 and at the Lancaster Fair on Aug. 31. Marty Quirk is a mainstay at Shaskeen Pub.

Being a musician booking shows, something he’s done for multiple years, gives Spain an advantage that provides lots of benefits to area fans, particularly with the New Hampshire Irish Music Festival’s lineup.

“We’ve known them for 20-odd years, so I can cater to that, make it more welcoming and make it feel like home for them when they show up,” he said.

NH Irish Festival

Eileen Ivers, Ronan Tynan, Screaming Orphans, Mick McAuley, Spain Brothers
When: Saturday, Aug. 16, 5 p.m.
Where: Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester
Tickets: $44 and up at palacetheatre.org

Free Event – Speed The Plough, Marty Quirk, Black Pudding Rovers, JD and The Stonemasons
When: Saturday, Aug. 16, 3-7 p.m.
Where: Spotlight Room, 96 Hanover St., Manchester
Tickets: Free, reserve at palacetheatre.org

Featured photo: Eileen Ivers. Photo by Tim Reilly.

Lamb, baklava and community

Assumption celebrates its annual Greekfest

By John Fladd

jfladd@hippopress.com

Hospitality is at the heart of Assumption Greek Orthodox Church’s annual Greekfest.

“This is our annual Greek festival,” Costas Georgopoulos said. “It’s a two-day event that we hold over the weekend to promote our Greek hospitality.”

Assumption Greek Orthodox Church’s annual Greekfest is a community event. Just about everyone in the congregation gets involved in one way or another, but a lot of the leg work falls on Georgopoulos as he’s the Parish Council President.

“I’m wrapping up at work,” he said the Friday before the festival, “so I can take all of next week to work on the Festival.”

According to Georgopoulos, Greekfest is a key to the church’s role in the larger community.

“It’s inviting people to an event and enjoying Greek culture, our food,” he said, “inviting them in as part of our family. Hopefully they enjoy our food, music, pastries, just the overall joyous occasion and we try to provide that to them. It’s not just about our food; it’s also [about] our spiritual aspect as well.”

Which is true, but with that said, one of the main draws for Greekfest is the food. As it’s a Greek celebration, of course there will be lamb.

“Our traditional lamb is lamb kabobs,” Georgopoulos said, “and we put that on skewers and we have a barbecue lamb machine, which cooks the lamb like a rotisserie. We also have half chickens, which we season with our Mediterranean seasoning and we cook in the oven. And then we do our specialty, which is called the “Greek lasagna”; it’s called pastichio and it has Greek noodles and beef hamburger and then we have a bechamel sauce that we put up in the oven.” It’s traditional Greek comfort food, he said. “It’s a long process to make it, so a lot of folks don’t make it at home because it’s very labor-intensive.”

And then there are the pastries.

“Of course, we have our traditional baklava,” Georgopoulos said. “That’s probably our best-known pastry. When people visit a Greek festival, baklava is kind of the main item.” Assumption’s baklava is a traditional New England version, he said, “with honey syrup, phyllo dough, and walnuts for the nuts. But then we have kadaifi, which is shredded phyllo dough. It’s the same as baklava, but it’s not actually the rolled phyllo dough, so that’s a little different type of texture. But still, it’s the same thing with walnuts and honey syrup. Then we have our finikia, which is our cinnamon honey cookies with walnuts.”

Georgopoulos said his personal favorite that he looks forward to all year is the loukoumades, small doughnut-like balls of pastry that are deep-fried and soaked in hot honey syrup, sprinkled with cinnamon and garnished with chopped walnuts or toasted sesame seeds. Every village or city neighborhood in Greece has its own take on loukoumades, he said.

“They each have their little spin on it … depending on what part of Greece that they come from they’ll have small differences, which is great because I love varieties.” The same goes for the loukoumades from each Greek church parish, he said. “Each church usually has one recipe that they use that gets handed down through the generations.”

Lastly, Georgopoulos said, there are the gyros.

“We do authentic gyros,” he said. “We have the gyro cones [of meat on a spit] and we have machines in the back that, you know, turn the gyro on. We cut the meat off the gyro and serve it on a traditional gyro bread with lettuce, tomatoes, onions and tzatziki sauce. It’s a mixture of beef and lamb.” To avoid confusion, he said, the Greekfest staff call them “JAI-roes” rather than the more authentic Greek pronunciation of “YEE-roes.”

“It’s 100 percent supposed to be called a ‘YEE-roe,’ though,” he said. “If you go to Greece and you say ‘JAI-roe’ they’re not going to know what you’re talking about.”

Greekfest
When
: Saturday, Aug. 23, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 24, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Where: Assumption Greek Orthodox Church, 111 Island Pond Road, Manchester, 623-2045, assumptionnh.org
Admission is free; bring money for food.

Featured photo: Loukoumades. Courtesy photo.

Puppets on a grittier street

Actorsingers Second Stage presents Avenue Q

Since the mid-1950s, Nashua’s Actorsingers theater company has been a mainstay in the area’s cultural scene, performing classics like The Sound of Music, Cats and Beauty and the Beast. In 2005, a subsection of the organization called Second Stage was launched to present non-traditional works.

Among adventurous Second Stage shows have been Evil Dead: The Musical, Reefer Madness and The Wild Party.

“It’s a little bit more against the beaten track,” Christie Conticchio of Actorsingers said recently. “What they would like to call their fringe productions.”

Conticchio is directing the company’s latest effort, Avenue Q, opening Aug. 22. The Tony-winning musical takes a Sesame Street-ish tale and places it in a gritty Brooklyn where most of the principals can barely afford rent. Most struggle with the search for meaning; this is underscored in an early song, “It Sucks to Be Me,” where cast members compare their woes.

Avenue Q is driven by puppets representing onstage actors. There’s neighbors Princeton and Kate Monster (Will Sulahian, Zoë Vitalich), odd couple roommates Nicky and Rod (James Spinney, Chris Drury) and Trekkie Monster (B.C. Williams), who along with the Bad Idea Bears (Dara Brown, Elsa Gustafson) embodies the musical’s irreverence. (Despite the puppets, this isn’t a kids’ show. According to a disclaimer on the company’s website: “This show contains racism, homophobia, profanity, sexual themes, and other sensitive topics.”)

Apex, North Carolina, custom fabricator DreamLab Studio provided the puppetry, which also includes boss lady Mrs. T (Kayla Williams) and the vixen-ish Lucy (Caitlyn Reilly). DreamLab founder Kerry Falkanger deserves her own credit in the playbill, with characters that are amazing.

“My actors keep talking about how comfortable it is to use their puppets and to look at them … they’re so pleasing to the eye,” Conticchio said, while noting that the production is using “between 20 and 30 puppets of different heads, bodies…. You wouldn’t think that Princeton needed three costume changes, but he does.”

For expertise controlling them, she consulted Ro Gavin, whose eponymous theater company in Portsmouth did Avenue Q in a previous season. “They came for … an entire workshop with the cast,” she recalled. “We went through syllables, how to do hand stretches, upper body strength. They got a crash course in Puppetry 101, even how to make a puppet breathe.”

A team of eight operators handles the puppets, and unlike the original Broadway show, there is no cast doubling. This is a move consistent with Conticchio’s directorial vision.

“Getting them as in-depth of the storyline as possible” was key, she explained. “This ensemble is, from the beginning, on stage I’d say more time than some of the leads.”

Actorsingers’ mission begins with “the promotion and presentation … of good amateur stage entertainment primarily of a musical nature” with “assistance and encouragement of many people, regardless of age, race or creed, in the development of their stage talents and to express such of their talents as will contribute to successful stage productions.”

Auditions for the show attracted an embarrassment of riches. More than 60 community actors showed up, all apparently Avenue Q fans.

“Casting Kate was probably one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do as a director,” Conticchio said. “Luckily, I have seven other people on the board to help me.”

Asked what the response said to her about the amateur theater community in New Hampshire, and in the southern region of the state specifically, Conticchio was full of praise. “Honestly, it levels up with anything else regional, if not Broadway; I was so impressed with the talent,” she said. “After every group, I was like, honestly, thank you for coming out and sharing your talents with us. This is not going to be an easy decision.”

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