On a roll

Fresh lobster rolls, Italian sausages and more from new Nashua-based food truck

It’s not hard to figure out what’s on the menu of Donali’s Food Truck once you see its design. Featuring a large lobster on the side of the truck holding an Italian sausage sub roll in its claw, this land-and-sea concept is uniquely New England — lobster rolls and Italian sausages, cooked fresh with local ingredients, are the cornerstones of its offerings alongside other rotating specials.

The truck’s name is an amalgamation of the names of founders and business partners Donnie White of Nashua and Ali Zosherafatain, the latter of whom also owns Fishbones Restaurant in Chelmsford, Mass. Donali’s hit the road for the first time last month and is now a regular presence at both Boston Billiard Club & Casino in Nashua and Able Ebenezer Brewing Co. in Merrimack.

Originally from the Medford and Everett, Mass., areas, White used to sell sausages in front of the former Boston Garden. He ended up moving to Nashua about two decades ago for a job in radio before switching fields to various jobs in sales and marketing.

White’s interest in launching his own food truck stemmed from a trip to Key West, Florida, where he purchased a sausage cart after a chance encounter with a local vendor.

Italian sausage sub with peppers and onions
Italian sausage sub with peppers and onions. Photo courtesy of Donali’s Food Truck.

“Ali and I … ended up having to go down to Hammonton, New Jersey, to get some parts for my sausage cart to see if I could get this thing going,” he said. “We jump on a plane, fly down, and we roll in and there’s all these food trucks there. … They’re building all these big ones for Disney and Ikea and Chick-fil-A, and I just was like, ‘Man, I want one of these!’”

Although his menu is simple, White is very particular about his selected ingredients. His lobster rolls, for instance, use claw, knuckle and tail meat, all of which come freshly shucked every day, never frozen, from Boston Sword & Tuna. The rolls, sourced from Piantedosi Baking Co. out of Malden, Mass., are toasted on both sides and lathered with Kerrygold brand Irish butter.

The Italian sausages, meanwhile, come from Bianco & Sons, hailing from White’s hometown of Medford. He has offered 8-inch subs featuring multiple flavors of sausage from hot or sweet to garlic and cheese, prepared with freshly sliced peppers and onions. Other staples of Donali’s menu have included Philly cheese steak subs, smash burgers and barbecue chicken sandwiches, and White also has plans to soon begin dabbling in some taco and breakfast sandwich options.

In addition to Boston Billiard Club and Able Ebenezer Brewing Co., more featured locations likely coming soon are also in the works, including at some public events — exact dates and times are regularly updated to a schedule on Donali’s website and social media pages.

Donali’s Food Truck
Where: Donali’s Food Truck can be found at Boston Billiard Club & Casino (55 Northeastern Blvd., Nashua) and at Able Ebenezer Brewing Co. (31 Columbia Circle, Merrimack) most Fridays and Saturdays — exact dates and times vary; see website for its full schedule. The truck also regularly participates in public and private events.
More info: Visit donalifoodtruck.com, find them on Facebook and Instagram @donalifoodtruck or call 897-9714

Featured photo: Food truckers Ali Zosherafatain and Donnie White at a recent event. Photo courtesy of Donali’s Food Truck.

Breaking grounds

New England Coffee Festival comes to Laconia

A two-day celebration of specialty coffee culture, the New England Coffee Festival is packed with local speakers, workshops, vendors, samples and even a competitive “latte art throwdown.” The inaugural event will take place in downtown Laconia, kicking off with a networking mixer on Friday, May 20, followed by a full day of coffee-related festivities on Saturday, May 21.

Organizer Karen Bassett is also the co-owner of Wayfarer Coffee Roasters, a producer of small-batch house-roasted coffee blends with two cafe locations in the city. She said her plans to hold a regional coffee festival actually go back pre-pandemic, to the fall of 2019. Covid got in the way, but since then, support among the coffee roasting community has been positive.

“Our goal … was to have a community event that brings coffee professionals and coffee consumers together, and really to build relationships and get people to try locally made products,” Bassett said. “We want to kind of give awareness to what specialty coffee is, and how there actually really is a lot of really good high-quality coffee right here in New England.”

Defiant Records & Craft Beer is hosting the networking mixer on Friday night, which will also feature live music from Mike Loughlin. Coffee Festival happenings will then take place all day Saturday across several downtown venues, and there are both indoor and outdoor components.

The Colonial Theatre on Main Street, for instance, will serve as the festival’s “coffee education center,” Bassett said — a full schedule of panel discussions, Q&A sessions and workshops will take place there, covering all kinds of coffee-related topics and led by local industry professionals.

“Because we wanted specialty coffee to be accessible, we didn’t want these to feel like scientific lectures,” Bassett said. “We want them to be stories and conversations … and then the workshop series is a lot more hands-on, so we’re going to have brewing workshops, barista basics, a loose-leaf tea workshop … and a coffee cocktails workshop put on by Tamworth Distilling.”

Admission is broken down into a “choose your own adventure” format, Bassett said, with each workshop and panel discussion welcoming ticket-holders on a first-come, first-served basis.

“We’ve brought in speakers with vastly different perspectives in the industry, to kind of share their stories,” she said. “We’ll also have a virtual interview with producers from Honduras.”

Outside the theater, Canal Street will be closed between Main and Beacon streets for the festival’s duration to accommodate some local vendors, games and giveaways — Nobl Beverages of Seabrook, for example, will be there giving out samples of its cold brew. More vendors will have booths just a short walk away inside the city’s historic Belknap Mill on Beacon Street.

“We have close to 30 vendors … so it will be coffee roasters and we’ve got some other non-coffee beverages, so some kombuchas and sparkling teas and things like that,” Bassett said. Also in the Belknap Mill will be two pop-up cafes, hosted by Chobani Oat Milk and Contoocook Creamery. Museum staff will be providing hourly tours throughout the day.

“It’s cool because it’s an old water plant and textile mill. … A portion of the ticket proceeds will also go toward The Water Project, which is based out of Concord,” Bassett said. “So it’s kind of neat to bring water back full circle, as it’s one of the top two ingredients of a cup of coffee.”

Outside the Belknap Mill, an “art walk” display will be held along Peter Karagianis Way and Rotary Park from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Live music and food trucks will also be featured all day long.

The city’s train station on Veterans Square will be home to an “outdoor adventure experience,” featuring booths and interactive offerings from local businesses and nonprofits specializing in various recreational activities. Laconia Local Eatery will have a beer tent, and other participating downtown eateries are planning to serve various coffee-inspired brews during the festival.

Toward the end of the event, at 3 p.m., Revelstoke Coffee of Concord will host a “latte art throwdown” inside the Colonial Theatre. Baristas will go head-to-head in a friendly competition to create the best latte art designs in various themed categories for the chance to win prizes.

Coffee Festival tickets can be purchased online, or you can get them inside the Colonial Theatre box office on the day of the event. Packages include a one- or two-day pass, which grants you access to everything the event has to offer that day, or you can get tickets to attend the vendor expo only. All outdoor activities on Saturday are free and open to the public, Bassett said.

“You don’t have to be an industry professional or own a coffee shop to try something new or to enjoy the event, and that’s why I wanted families to come and feel like they had something to do,” she said. “We’re expecting a great turnout [and] we hope to have it be a yearly event.”

New England Coffee Festival
When: Friday, May 20, and Saturday, May 21
Where: Various locations across downtown Laconia, including the Colonial Theatre (617 Main St.), the Belknap Mill (25 Beacon St. East) and the city’s train station (Veterans Square), as well as on Canal Street, which will be closed to vehicular traffic between Main and Beacon streets.
Cost: $50 for a one-day pass or $75 for a two-day pass; includes access to all the educational workshops, panels and speakers inside the Colonial Theatre, as well as the “latte art throwdown” at 3 p.m. on Saturday. Tickets to the vendor expo only are $20 per person and $10 for kids ages 12 and under. Purchase them online or inside the box office of the Colonial Theatre the day of.
Visit: newenglandcoffeefestival.com

Schedule of events

Information according to the schedule at newenglandcoffeefestival.com

Friday, May 20

Networking mixer: 7 to 10 p.m. at Defiant Records & Craft Beer (609 Main St.)

Saturday, May 21

Speaker series: 40-minute events on the hour from 8 a.m. to noon inside the Colonial Theatre (617 Main St.) — topics include “Meet a Coffee Producer,” “Leveraging Coffee Shops as Community Gathering Places” and “Lessons Learned from 15+ years in the Coffee Industry.”

Workshop series: 45-minute workshops held from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. inside the Colonial Theatre (617 Main St.) — topics include “Barista Basics,” “Loose Leaf Tea 101,” “Better Brewing,” “Coffee Cocktails” and “Jellybeans and Coffee: A Sensory Experience.”

Vendor expo: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. inside the Belknap Mill (25 Beacon St. East)

Art Walk: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. outdoors on the grounds of the Belknap Mill (25 Beacon St. East)

Outdoor Adventure Experience: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Veterans Square train station (13 Veterans Square)

Live music: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Rotary Park gazebo (30 Beacon St. East). Acts include Green Heron, Choro Louco, the Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki Trio and River Sang Wild

Latte art throwdown: 3 to 4 p.m. inside the Colonial Theatre (617 Main St.)

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

The Weekly Dish 22/05/19

News from the local food scene

Taco Tour winner announced: Firefly American Bistro & Bar was crowned the winner of this year’s Taco Tour, the Greater Manchester Chamber recently announced. Firefly was one of more than 70 participating restaurants during the May 5 event, receiving thousands of votes for its seasoned chicken taco with cheddar cheese, Mexican rice and a hot and smoky chipotle crema that was served in a soft flour tortilla. The eatery received a special “golden taco” trophy designed by Manchester Makerspace, as well as $1,000 to give to Granite United Way, its nonprofit beneficiary of choice. “We appreciate the overwhelmingly positive feedback we’ve received from business owners, attendees and survey takers,” the Greater Manchester Chamber wrote in a May 10 Facebook post. “We hope to do it all again next year and all questions, feedback or sponsorship inquiries can be sent to [email protected] to help us stay organized and plan an even better Taco Tour Manchester next year!”

Raw goat milk ice cream debut: Head to Little Red Hen Farm & Homestead (85 Norris Road, Pittsfield) on Saturday, May 21, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., for the debut of its raw goat milk ice cream, which will be available in 16 flavors. On March 18, Gov. Chris Sununu signed HB 95 into law, allowing small raw dairy producers to make and sell their own ice cream and frozen yogurt for the first time. Under the new law, ice cream and frozen yogurt made with raw milk are limited to six-ounce containers and are required to be marked with an expiration date of 30 days from their manufactured date. Little Red Hen Farm & Homestead has been at the forefront of this legislation since late 2019 — according to its website, a bill had been passed in the House and set to go to the Senate just before the pandemic shutdown in 2020, but it was ultimately vetoed by Sununu after months of delays. State legislators reintroduced the bill in 2021 and it passed with amendment later that year. During the May 21 event, Little Red Hen Farm & Homestead will have an ice cream topping station and will also host appearances from several farm store vendors. Visit littleredhenfarm.net.

Spirit of community: Now through May 30, Salem’s Fabrizia Spirits is partnering with the New Hampshire Liquor Commission and Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits for their “When Life Hands You Lemons” initiative, which has raised more than $113,000 for local nonprofits since 2010. This year’s beneficiary, according to a press release, is the New Hampshire Foster & Adoptive Parents Association, which is using the funds to establish a new program that reunites siblings separated while in foster and adoptive care. Around $15,000 was raised for the organization last year, while other nonprofit beneficiaries over the past 12 years have included Homes For Our Troops, the Crotched Mountain Foundation and the New Hampshire Hospitality Employee Relief Fund. Visit fabriziaspirits.com.

Adventures in Cheese

Wherein an intrepid cheese-lover attempts several daring experiments with cheese that lead to delicious and unexpected results

Goat cheese, part 1

It was the thyme that pulled me down the rabbit hole.

I had always said that the title of my first cookbook would be I Don’t Have Thyme For This. Over the years, though, as I’ve done more and more cocktail recipe development, I began to suspect a better title would be, It’s Cocktail Thyme! It’s a great title — cheerful, to the point, a little stupid — in short, much like me.

As I honed my bartending skills and got a better sense for flavor combinations, one small but nagging problem kept raising its head: I had never actually developed a cocktail using thyme. To be fair, it always seemed a bit of a formality; thyme is delicious, cocktails are delicious, it shouldn’t be too tricky to bring the two of them together.

Eventually, I decided to tackle the project and looked up thyme in The Flavor Bible.

I tend to think of thyme as a pretty ubiquitous herb. I mean, I don’t really use it, but you see fancy chefs on TV using it all the time.

The Flavor Bible would beg to differ.

cover of the Flavor Bible
The Flavor Bible.

The Flavor Bible
The Flavor Bible by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg (Little, Brown, and Co., 2008) is an excellent handbook for anyone playing mad scientist in the kitchen. Essentially, it is the result of a very, very comprehensive poll of extremely thoughtful chefs of what flavors they like to pair with particular ingredients. This book gives you a good idea of what the professional consensus is about any given pairing. If, for instance, you wanted to use coffee in a dish, one or two chefs might suggest pairing it with barbecue sauce. Almost all of them, though, would suggest using it with chocolate. It gives you a sense of which combinations are classics and which are a little more avant-garde.

Overwhelmingly, the most popular pairing that chefs recommend with thyme is goat cheese.

Goat cheese.

How absurd. Clearly, that wouldn’t work in a cocktail. What kind of depraved thrill-seeker would drink a goat cheese cocktail? I would have to try something else.

What else do the chefs suggest to go with thyme?

Carrots, cod or eggplant.

So — goat cheese, huh?

One problem with using goat cheese in a drink is that you can’t just drop a dollop of it into a cocktail shaker and expect it to mix well with the other ingredients. The fat in the cheese would be reluctant to mix with the other liquids without some sort of emulsifier to help it along.

You’ve heard the expression that oil and water don’t mix. Not only is this true, but it can make life difficult for a cook. A good example of this is salad dressing. A classic oil-and-vinegar dressing does not want to mix and must be shaken together vigorously, and used immediately, before it starts to separate. An emulsifier is some ingredient that helps the oil play nicely with other liquids. The classic example is a beaten egg. The fat in a raw egg yolk will latch onto oil molecules readily, while the proteins in the egg white will provide a bridge to water-based fluids.

A goat cheese-based cocktail is a big ask to begin with, without bringing a raw egg on board.

Another approach might be to go in a milkshake direction — a sort of savory mudslide, perhaps. Unfortunately, I didn’t think of that at the time and got distracted by sort of a culinary sleight-of-hand: fat washing.

The basic theory behind fat-washing is that almost any compound that is fat-soluble is also alcohol-soluble. For the past few years, high-end bartenders have been using that chemical loophole to flavor bourbon with bacon, or rum with brown butter. The secret, apparently, is to mix an alcohol with a fatty food, then raise the temperature of the mixture to a couple of degrees above the melting point of the fat you are trying to liberate flavors out of. If you give the fat and alcohol time to get to know each other better, flavors can be exchanged. Goat cheese-infused alcohol is feasible, if you are patient enough.

After several spectacular failed attempts and panicked telephone calls to food scientists (I’m not kidding) I eventually cracked it.

Step 1: Choose a base alcohol

After a lot of thought, I decided to use gin for my experiment. It seemed like the herbal ingredients in a gin would complement the flavor of goat cheese and serve as a bridge to the thyme in a finished cocktail. But which gin?

I asked Andy Harthcock, the owner of Djinn Spirits in Nashua. He seemed a little confused when I told him that I wanted to infuse goat cheese into gin.

“Don’t you mean the other way around?” he asked. (Which actually sounded like a good idea, but I decided to focus on one dangerously ill-conceived project at a time.)

I assured him that I actually was planning to flavor gin with the cheese. He admitted that this was a first for him, but on reflection he had some thoughts about how to go about it.

“You probably don’t want a really high-end gin for this,” he told me. “Any subtle flavors are going to be totally blown out by the goatiness of the cheese.” He advised me to try a heavily botanical gin. “I think you’re probably going to have to eat a round of cheese with several different labels and see which ones stand up to ‘The Goat.’”

goat cheese gin in bottle, thyme, lemon, and goat cheese sitting on top of cook book
Goat Gin. Photo by John Fladd.

So, I did.

After comparing eight different gins, I discovered that Harthcock was right – the two most botanical gins held up to the flavor of the goat cheese the best; in this case, Djinn Spirits’ Original Gin and Drumshanbo Gunpowder Gin. The Djinn gin was extremely botanical and was able to meet the cheese on equal terms. The Drumshanbo isn’t especially botanical but has its own very forceful personality. Either of them would work well.

Step 2: Choose a cheese.

After some trial and error, it turns out that you will need the strongest, “goatiest” cheese available. In this case, I went with Bijou Crottin by Vermont Creamery.

Step 3: Combine the gin and stinky cheese in a zip-lock bag and smoosh it up — a technical term — until it is thoroughly combined. Grope it shamelessly.

Step 4: Heat the mixture to 120°F (49°C) — the melting point of goat cheese — and leave it at that temperature for four hours. A sous vide tank would make this much easier, but you can do much the same thing with a plastic cooler and a thermometer, replacing hot water every 20 minutes or so to keep the water temperature fairly constant.

cheese in a water bath
A water bath can act as a substitute for a sous vide. Photo by John Fladd.

Sous vide
A sous vide water bath is a piece of equipment originally developed for use in scientific and medical labs. It keeps a tub or pot of water at an exact and consistent temperature. You could bathe a bag of lamb chops at 135º, for instance, and walk away secure in the knowledge that it would cook to a perfect medium-rare, and stay there.

Step 5: After a four-hour soak, remove the bag of cheese gin from its bath and put it in a bowl somewhere out of the way for 72 hours. Once or twice per day, you might want to smoosh the bag around in your hands to remix the infusion and keep the cheese in solution.

Step 6: On the big day, thank your bag of gin for working so hard for you, then strain it through a fine-mesh strainer. There will be a surprising amount of cheese solids — or casein — left behind.

Step 7: Filter the cloudy liquid through a coffee filter.

Goat Cheese Gin Recipes:

martini glass on plate on counter
The Relentless March of Thyme. Photo by John Fladd.

The Relentless March of Thyme

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces goat cheese gin (see above)
  • 1 ounce fresh squeezed lemon juice
  • ½ ounce thyme syrup (see below)
  • 2 sprigs of fresh thyme

Combine all ingredients, with ice, in a cocktail shaker. Shake brutally, until you hear the ice shatter.

Strain into a martini glass.

This is a goat-forward, thyme-y, martini-like cocktail. It has a bit of sweetness from the thyme syrup, but it has a clean, cold taste that picks up on the multi-stage nature of the gin and comes in waves.

Thyme Simple Syrup

Ingredients

  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 cup water
  • 10 grams / ⅓ ounce fresh thyme (about half a plastic clamshell package from the produce department at the supermarket)

Combine the sugar and water in a small saucepan, and bring to a boil. Let the syrup boil for 10 or 15 seconds to make sure that all the sugar has been dissolved into solution.

Remove from heat, add the thyme, and cover with a plate. Let the thyme steep for 30 minutes.

Strain into a bottle and store in your refrigerator.

Die Goat-erdämmerung

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces goat cheese-infused gin
  • 1 ounce thyme simple syrup
  • 1 ounce lemon syrup (see below)
  • Plain seltzer

Add gin, thyme syrup and lemon syrup to a cocktail shaker, with ice.

Again, shake brutally, until the ice shatters, or the world ends.

Pour, with the ice, into a tall glass and top with seltzer. Stir gently.

This take on goat-cheese gin is sweeter and more amiable than its martini-ish baby brother. Instead of shouting, “HEY!! GOAT CHEESE!!” at you, it soothes and persuades you: “Oh, this is lovely. Oh, there’s some lemon; you like that, don’t you? What’s that in the background? Thyme, you say? Oh, that’s perfect. You know, this is just goaty enough.” It is perfect for dedicating your first weekend of deck-sitting.

Lemon Syrup

Zest some lemons — any amount; don’t let some recipe order you around on this.

Juice the lemons into a small saucepan. Add an equal amount of white sugar, and bring to a boil.

Remove from heat, add the zest, and allow the mixture to steep, covered, for 30 minutes.

Strain, bottle and refrigerate.

“OK,” one might say, “so this whole goat cheese gin thing is very clever and sounds fun, but what if I’m in a cheesy mood, but don’t want to take a leave of absence from work and get a degree in Laboratory Science to make something? “

Ah! You’re in luck!

Goat cheese. part 2

One of my go-to sources for baking recipes is the King Arthur website. Every bread, brownie or pizza crust that they post a recipe for has been rigorously tested and is pretty much bullet-proof. One of my favorite aspects of their recipes is that the amount of each ingredient is listed by volume (cups, etc.) and by weight (ounces and grams). I find that weighing ingredients is easier and more accurate than scooping them with measuring cups.

One of their most recent projects has been something called a Basque cheesecake.

Cheesecake-making can be nerve-wracking. You want your cheesecake to be done all the way through, but not overly baked. You worry about it heating unevenly and developing a crack across the top. You worry about whether you should have used a water bath or not, and if you did, should you have heated the water up first? And then, when you finally finish baking, cooling, and depanning it, you will serve it to someone who shrugs and says, “Yeah. It’s OK,” because it doesn’t fit their mental model of what a cheesecake should be. And then you have to worry about hiding a body.

A Basque cheesecake, on the other hand, is meant to be rustic-looking. You are supposed to bake it at an unreasonably high heat, until the top is deeply, deeply caramelized; it’s supposed to look over-baked.

This makes its deliciousness somewhat surprising and gives it a bigger impact.

I’ve taken the original recipe and tweaked it to accentuate its cheesiness. I’ve replaced cream cheese with a mild goat cheese and dramatically reduced the sugar in this recipe by about a third, to make its tartness pop. It is easy. It doesn’t take long. It is a tremendous confidence-booster.

Basque Cheesecake

cheesecake on a plate
Basque cheesecake. Photo by John Fladd.

Ingredients

  • 24 ounces / 685 grams soft, mild goat cheese
  • 7 ounces / 200 grams white sugar
  • 5 eggs
  • 6 ounces /170 grams heavy cream
  • ½ teaspoon coarse sea salt

Heat oven to 500º.

Line a springform pan with parchment paper.

Combine all ingredients in a blender, then blend for five minutes.

Pour into the springform pan, trimming off any excess parchment paper.

Bake for approximately 45 minutes, until dark.

Cool for at least one hour, then remove from pan.

Eating this tart, crumbly cheesecake is a meditative experience. It is delicious. The sharp taste of the goat cheese provides a mouth-watering sourness that seems a little citrusy, but is also emphatically not. The pared-down nature of this dish makes it perfect for paying very close attention to every bite, and leaving you fully in the moment.

And now perhaps you’re thinking: “That does sound good, but my mother-in-law is famous for her cheesecake, and I’m afraid that if I made this, word would get to her, she would take it as some sort of criticism, and my quality of life would degrade significantly. Do you have something else?”

OK. As it turns out, yes I do.

Digital scale
Once you get used to it, a digital scale becomes an indispensable tool in your kitchen. When you need to add multiple ingredients to a bowl or a saucepan, for instance, you can put the container on the scale, then add each ingredient by weight, using the tare function to zero out the scale and avoid doing math. You stop having to wonder what “tightly” or “loosely” packed means in a given context. Your baking becomes much more consistent.

Smoked cheddar

One of my great passions is shopping at flea markets. I have a particular fondness for finding obscure cookbooks. Our kitchen shelves long ago ran out of room to hold all of them, and I am about three volumes away from filling a bookcase in the living room. Their mere existence is something of a trial for my wife, who feels that by taking up valuable space but never actually being cooked from, they are openly mocking her.

“Can we get rid of some of these?” she asks me two or three times a year. “Are you ever going to actually make any Bengali street food?”

“You never know, Baby,” I reply with an air of mystery. “You never know.”

And the scary thing for her is that she doesn’t know. She could be going through her day, not suspecting a thing, then suddenly catching a whiff of the exotic but slightly alarming scent of asafetida from the kitchen.

Last week’s purchase was the promisingly titled Adventures in Cooking by Rasmus Alsaker, M.D., published in 1927.

I was fully prepared to navigate old-fashioned recipes calling for vague measurements, like “a knob of butter, the size of a pullet’s egg,” or “a medium oven.” Doctor Alsaker was a man of science, though, and his measurements were precise. What I was not prepared for was his enthusiasm for pimientos. At a rough estimate, he calls for pimientos in approximately 5,000 recipes. I don’t know what was going on pimiento-wise in 1927, but I have used our own relative pimientolessness as license to modify his recipe for the very promising-sounding:

Cheese Crumb Pudding

Ingredients

piece of bread crumb pudding on plate with fork
Cheese crumb pudding. Photo by John Fladd.
  • 2 cups / 110 grams bread crumbs. (I feel like you could blitz Triscuits in the food processor in lieu of fresh bread crumbs.)
  • 2 cups / 250 grams shredded, smoked cheddar. I went with an Australian brand called Old Croc, and I was not disappointed.
  • ½ teaspoon dry mustard
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 Tablespoons jarred salsa (This is playing pinch hitter for the pimientos.)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup / 225 grams whole milk
  • ¼ teaspoon paprika

Heat oven to 375º.

Generously butter a 9×9” baking dish.

Mix the mustard, pepper and paprika together in a small dish.

Spread 1/3 of your crumbs over the bottom of the baking dish. Look at them critically. Do they look cold and lonely?

Cover them with a blanket of cheddar — half the cheddar. Sprinkle half of the seasoning on top of the blanket. You know — like a blessing.

Repeat, with another layer of crumbs, the rest of the cheddar, and the rest of the seasoning. Top with a final layer of crumbs.

Mix the milk, eggs and salsa; gently pour over the top of the guys you already have in the baking dish.

Bake for 30 minutes.

Allow to cool for 10 minutes before serving.

The center of this savory pudding is tender, custardy and smoky. The edges are where it really shines though. If you are, like all good Americans, a fan of brownies from the edge of the pan, the chewiness of the pudding border will be something of a revelation. You could describe this as being a bit like a very good macaroni and cheese without the macaroni.

Or, in the words of my own sullen teenager, “Why didn’t you ever tell me you could cook something like this?”

But perhaps you’re thinking: “I can’t make that. Mercury is in retrograde.”

OK, now you’re just messing with me, but I’m going to call your bluff.

Electric whisk
Most recipes that call for a custard will include very finicky instructions on how to temper beaten eggs with hot milk, then whisk the warmed-up egg mixture back into whatever you are cooking. Then comes possibly the most frustrating cooking instruction ever written: “cook, stirring constantly, until the custard coats the back of a spoon.” I don’t know what kinds of cooking prodigies can actually manage that. I’ve been trying to perfect that particular maneuver for over 20 years and I can still never tell when I’m closing in on “soupy scrambled eggs” territory.

The game-changer for me was finding a whisk with an integrated thermometer in it. Some research revealed that ice cream base should be heated to approximately 175º, so now I can just whisk my custard thoroughly until I hit that temperature.

Blue Cheese

Honey-Roquefort Ice Cream

Ingredients

  • 8 Tablespoons / 120 grams clover or wildflower honey
  • 4 ounces Roquefort or blue cheese
  • 2 cups / 500 grams half & half
  • 4 egg yolks
bowls of ingredient for honey-roquefort ice cream
Making honey-roquefort ice cream. Photo by John Fladd.

The brilliant thing about this recipe — aside from its unexpected excellence — is that it only has four ingredients.

Crumble the blue cheese into a bowl, in small pieces.

Combine the honey, half & half and egg yolks in a small saucepan.

Whisking constantly, heat the custard (because that is what this is — a loose custard) over low heat until it reaches 173º. (We’re actually shooting for 175º, but the temperature will continue to rise a few degrees after you remove it from the heat.)

Pour the very warm custard through a fine-mesh strainer, over the blue cheese.

Whisk until the blue cheese almost completely dissolves. It is OK if there are a few small, surprise pieces of cheese left in the mixture.

Chill the mixture, then churn in your ice cream maker, according to the manufacturer’s recommendations.

You may have heard that some avant-garde chefs have been experimenting with savory ice creams. This is not one of them. This is a fully sweet dessert ice cream that just happens to be blue cheesy. The honey provides a muskiness that complements the earthy, salty flavor of the cheese. It is possibly the most creamy ice cream you have ever tried.

Do you have to be stout of heart to try it? Do you have to look Adventure in the eye and shake its hand?

Yes, and yes. But you will enjoy this, and you will come out the other side of the experience slightly changed.

But you know what would make this honey-ish, cheesy ice cream even better?

Cake.

Consulting The Flavor Bible again shows that a great many chefs like the combination of apples with blue cheese. Who am I to argue with a great many chefs?

Apple Bundt Cake

Ingredients

  • 3 Granny Smith apples, peeled and diced — about 440 grams
  • 3 cups / 360 grams all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg. If you’ve never grated your own nutmeg, try it. You’ll never go back to pre-ground again.
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1½ cups / 360 grams sour cream
  • 1½ cups / 275 grams white sugar
  • ½ cup / 64 grams brown sugar
  • 3 eggs
slice of cake on plate with 3 small scoops of ice cream
Apple bundt cake. Photo by John Fladd.

Heat your oven to 325º.

Paint the inside of your Bundt pan with Cake Goop (see sidebar)

Whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt.

In another bowl, mix the sugars and sour cream. Mix in eggs, one at a time.

Mix in the diced apples by hand.

Pour mixture into your pre-gooped Bundt pan. Lift the pan and bonk it on your counter 10 times.

Bake for 70 minutes or until it reaches an internal temperature of 200º F.

Remove from the oven. Let it cool for 20 minutes, then remove from the pan.

This is an outstanding Bundt cake. The apples are tart and still a tiny bit crunchy. The cake itself is rich but not too sweet. The nutmeg and cinnamon shine through.

And it is extremely good with blue cheese ice cream.

But still, perhaps, you say: “That does sound good. Unfortunately, I’m not allowed in the kitchen since the Lasagna Incident.”

I hear you; we’ve all been there. I’ve got you covered.

Bundt cake
Bundt cake might be the Cake Lover’s ideal cake. At its best it is moist, flavorful, not too sweet, and free of frosting distractions. That goodness comes at a cost, however; it presupposes that you can get your cake out of the pan. There are few heartbreaks in life on a par with inverting a Bundt pan only to find that you’ve left half a cake in it.

This can, happily, be avoided. For months, I have been hearing rumors online about “Cake Goop.” It is a mixture of equal parts solid shortening, vegetable oil and flour. Word on the street was that if you paint the inside of your Bundt pan with this stuff, your cake won’t stick.

It’s true.

Haloumi

There is a Greek sheep’s-milk cheese hidden away in the specialty cheese section of your supermarket called haloumi.

charcoal grilled haloumi on plate with lemon and parsley
Charcoal-grilled haloumi. Photo by John Fladd.

In many ways, it is much as you’d expect it to be — salty, mild-flavored and fairly modest. If you taste a little, it might seem a little chewy, but not outrageously so. If it were a person, it would be named Melvin.

You wouldn’t suspect him of hiding a superpower.

Haloumi has an extremely high melting point. Oh, you could force the issue and make it melt, but you would probably need a blowtorch to do it. At temperatures that would frighten other cheeses out of the room, haloumi hums softly to itself and minds its own business.

So nicely in fact, that you can charcoal-grill it.

Charcoal-grilled Haloumi

1. Light the charcoal in your grill.

2. Thoroughly grease a grill pan. Use an oil with a high smoke point. This means one that won’t catch on fire when things get serious. Use any oil you would fry with. I like ghee — clarified butter — but shortening or peanut oil would also work really well.

3. Open packages of haloumi and cut it into finger-sized pieces.

4. Make a cocktail and go back outside to watch the coals.

5. When the coals are red and white and feeling all right, grill the haloumi over them in the pre-greased grill pan. Turn the cheese frequently with tongs. It will only take a few minutes to char-grill them beautifully.

6. Serve with a fresh parsley and a squeeze of lemon juice. A salad would be nice, too.

When I was a kid, once a year — usually on July 4 — my church would hold a big auction. It was the church’s big fundraiser for the year. One year my mom gave me $3 to bid with and I won a mystery box of books. There were a couple of really great pulp adventure novels from the ‘30s in it, as well a truly unexpected piece of literature that I’m pretty sure my mom wouldn’t have approved of, that was extremely educational. It was the high point of my summer.

The men of the church would man the grills — giant 50-gallon barrels split down the middle with industrial grating thrown over the top. They would risk serious burns and smoke inhalation to grill hot dogs, burgers and quarter-chickens. The smoke, barbecue sauce and the constant threat of danger made that the best chicken I ever had.

What does that have to do with grilled haloumi?

Not much, except that this will also make you very, very happy. The smoke and salt and mild char on the cheese will be a bit of an epiphany. The acid from the lemon juice will add just the tang it needs to put it over the top.

It might even get you kitchen privileges again.

At last, you might think, “I’m feeling a bit overwhelmed. All this cheesiness is just a little exotic for me. I’ve had a rough week and I’m feeling a little fragile. You said ‘grilled cheese’ and you got my hopes up.”

I understand completely.

Blowtorch
You know that blowtorch we talked about a couple of minutes ago? It turns out that a plumber’s blowtorch is the perfect tool for lighting charcoal without leaving a lighter-fluid taste behind.

Colby-jack

Do you know who else does?

Marcie Pichardo, the owner of Prime Time Grilled Cheese,a restaurant in Manchester specializing in grilled cheese sandwiches. She spends a lot of time thinking about cheese — according to her, approximately 18 hours a day.

Cheese might be the glue that keeps society from splintering apart, she says. “Cheese holds things together. In the house I grew up in, cheese is the thing that held us together as a family. It’s the glue that holds a recipe together.’

According to Pichardo, the key factor to consider when you are putting together a grilled cheese sandwich is consistency. “That’s the most important reason why we choose a particular cheese for a sandwich,” she says. “Think of a pizza. If you put cheddar on it, it would taste good, but it would go everywhere! That’s why you go with a mozzarella.”

She agrees that the Platonic ideal of a grilled cheese sandwich involves (1) white sandwich bread, (2) American cheese (“It’s gooey in the middle and crispy on the outside.”) and (3) being grilled in butter. “That’s the benchmark,” she says.

She’s not wrong.

Platonic ideal
The concept of a “Platonic ideal” states that for every concept, there is a perfect theoretical example of it that all real world examples are measured against — the most perfect blue sky, the most exquisite jazz trumpet solo and the most grilled-cheesiest grilled cheese sandwich.

And yet, I’d like to submit an idea for your approval:

A grilled colby-jack on pumpernickel, with caramelized onions.

You know how to make a grilled cheese sandwich. I know you know. You know that I know that you know.

Still…

grilled cheese on pumpernickel on plate with chips
A grilled colby-jack on pumpernickel, with caramelized onions. Photo by John Fladd.

Butter one side of each slice of pumpernickel generously with softened butter. It’s tempting to just drop a dollop of cold-from-the-fridge butter in the pan, melt it, then swirl the sandwich around in it, but it never works out as well as buttering the bread itself.

Assemble the sandwich completely before putting it in the pan. It is always tempting to put the first slice of bread in by itself, then add the cheese and the other slice in stages, as you finish them, but your finished sandwich will be cooked evenly on both sides if you observe traditional grilled-cheese protocols.

Watch the sandwich with a jaded, suspicious eye. The pumpernickel will try to fool you about how grilled it is. Do not fall for its tricks. Because the bread is so dark to begin with, you cannot rely on color to let you know when to flip it.

Flip the sandwich experimentally, and gently tap the surface of the bread with the edge of your spatula. When it feels grilled, it is grilled.

Do not make the omelet mistake of waiting until the cheese is thoroughly melted before removing your pan from the heat; your sandwich will be overcooked. Take it out of the pan as soon as the bread is ready. The grilled bread will be warm enough to finish melting the cheese on its own.

We should throw a grilled cheese party. We could all wear t-shirts that read “Proud to Be Crusty.” We could rig up a cheese piñata full of Baby Bells. June 4 is National Cheese Day.

There is still time.

Featured photo: Die Goat-erdämmerung. Photo by John Fladd.

Amarone amore

A look at the wine made from dried grapes

Wine made from raisins? Some credit this technique to the Romans, while others say it originated in the medieval period. Matters not; it is an ancient technique of the Verona Province in the Veneto region of Italy.

The wine known as Amarone della Valpolicella was assigned a “designated controlled area” or Denominazione di Controllata (DOC) status in 1990, with both the Villa Vetti and Secoli Amarones being promoted to the status of Denominazione di Origine Controlla e Garantita (DOCG), “a guaranteed designated controlled area.” Impressive credentials!

According to the Wikipedia entry on Amarone, the grapes for Amarone wine are harvested ripe in the first two weeks of October, by carefully choosing bunches having fruits not too close to each other, to allow air to flow through the bunch; the grapes are traditionally dried on straw mats. This concentrates the remaining sugars and flavors, Wikipedia said.

After drying, usually for around 120 days, the grapes are crushed and go through a dry, low-temperature fermentation for another month or two, then are aged in oak barrels for 36 months before bottling. Wikipedia notes that this traditional method of drying grapes for Amarone can lead to variations in the wine and therefore the bulk of modern Amarone is produced in special drying chambers under controlled conditions to minimize handling and prevent the onset of fungus. The quality of the grape skin brings the tannins, color and intensity of flavor to the wine, the entry said.

Our first wine is a 2016 Villa Vetti Amarone Della Valpolicella (originally priced at $59.99, reduced to $29.99 at the New Hampshire Liquor & Wine Outlets). It has a rich red color, with berries to the nose and initially to the tongue. The taste develops into residual notes of raisins and figs, along with some spice, lingering and subsiding gradually. There are tannins, which subside with decanting. This is a dry wine to pair with rich foods, due to the strong flavor profile and high alcoholic content at 15 percent.

Our second wine is a 2017 Secoli Am rone Della Valpolicella (originally priced at $49.99, reduced to $22.99 at the New Hampshire Liquor & Wine Outlets). Like the first wine, this has a deep red color, but with plum and black cherries to the nose and tongue. These are joined by notes of figs and rich dried fruit, along with chocolate. The tannins of this wine, coming from the grape skins and reinforced by three years of aging in oak, subside with decanting. This is a wine to be enjoyed with beef, lamb, game or robust cheeses, such as a rich, creamy blue cheese. The alcoholic content is not given for this Amarone, but its dry notes and strong “legs” on the side of the glass imply it’s at least 14 percent.

Good Amarone wine has a reputation for aging. While these wines are five and six years old, they have only been bottled for two or three years. Cellared properly, these wines can age another 10 to 15 years.

So try something different, a new, old-fashioned wine — one made from raisins! You will enjoy it!

Featured photo. Courtesy photo.

Rhubarb margarita

When you were in school, did you ever have one of those teachers who always went off-topic?

You know the type: He was supposed to be lecturing on the Dewey Decimal System or something, and he would tell the class a story about a haberdasher he used to know in Cleveland, who had nine fingers and a dog named Sylvia.

And yet — somehow — he would end up circling around and making an important and pertinent point about the actual subject. Anyway, this is one of those stories:

My teenager and I had just finished our Taekwondo class and were driving home. The Teen asked if we could stop at our favorite convenience store, because if she didn’t eat some chocolate-covered pretzels immediately, she would die, messily in the passenger seat.

I grabbed a diet orange soda and was waiting at the front counter, while The Teen gave the variety of pretzels the intense scrutiny they required.

Two clerks were on duty. I know one of them pretty well — I’m a regular customer — but the other was clearly new. I nodded at each of them.

We had just come from martial arts class, and it was a sparring week, so not only was I in uniform and unpleasantly sweaty, but I had also just taken a beating.

“Rough week?” my regular clerk asked.

“Man!” I replied. “I dropped some bad powdered unicorn horn over the weekend. The guy said it was pure, but I think it was cut with some of that South Korean stuff….”

“I hear you,” my friend said.

I continued. “I’ve got a cousin who managed to score me some pixie dust on Monday, and that helped a little, but I kept floating a foot off the couch, and I couldn’t play XBox properly.”

“We’ve all been there,” Clerk No. 1 said, comfortingly.

At this point, Clerk No. 2 was extremely confused.

“I mean,” I said with real frustration in my voice, “I’m just trying to stop the tentacles. You know what I mean?”

Clerk No. 1 nodded understandingly and patted my shoulder. Clerk No. 2 started to say something, then thought better of it. The Teen found her snack. I paid, and we left.

As we walked out the door, I heard Clerk Number Two ask, “Is he always like that?”

“Yeah, pretty much,” said his colleague.

This is my point: It’s been a rough week and you could use a pretty pink drink.

Rhubarb Margarita

  • 2 ounces blanco tequila — I like Hornitos.
  • 1 ounce fresh-squeezed lime juice
  • ¾ ounce rhubarb syrup (see below)

Add all ingredients and 4 or 5 ice cubes to a cocktail shaker. Shake vigorously.

Pour unstrained into a rocks glass.

Regardless of how you start this drink, it will have an effect on you. I am a grumpy, walrus-like man in late middle age. By the time I finished shaking this, I found myself wearing a tutu and sparkle-shoes.

This is a tart, refreshing take on a traditional margarita. The lime juice and tequila are the dominant tastes, but there is a tart fruitiness in the background that you would not be able to identify if you were drinking this blindfolded — which, for what it’s worth, sounds like a really great way to spend a weekend, making new friends. That’s the rhubarb. It’s delicious but prefers to stay in the background, steering this cocktail in delicate and happy directions.

Yeah, that’s really pretty and all, but I’m not the world’s biggest fan of tequila.”

Fair. Replace the tequila with white rum, and you’ll have something we might call a Blushing Daiquiri.

What if I’m 9 years old?”

You’re not supposed to be reading cocktail columns. Have Dad replace the alcohol with club soda. It will be the Very Prettiest Soda.

Rhubarb Syrup

Combine equal amounts of frozen diced rhubarb and white sugar in a saucepan. You will be afraid you have made a major miscalculation — it will look like a lumpy pile of sugar. Be stout of heart.

Cook over medium heat. As the rhubarb thaws and cooks, the sugar will draw out a surprising amount of liquid. Bring the mixture to a boil and let it cook for 30 seconds or so.

Remove from the heat, and let it steep for half an hour or so. Strain off the syrup into a bottle for use. Do not discard the rhubarb; it is the base of a superb compote. Squeeze a little fresh lemon juice into it and you will have a fantastic topping for toast or ice cream.

Featured photo. Rhubarb Margarita. Photo by John Fladd.

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