Ashley Laskiewicz

Ashley “Ash” Laskiewicz of Fremont is the owner of Beauty & Beast Meals (beautyandbeastmeals.com, find her on Facebook and Instagram), which offers weekly menus of fully cooked meals available to order and pick up on the go. She originally opened a coffee shop about four years ago called the Fremont Town Market, where she started offering grab-and-go meals that would often sell out. Soon after beginning to work with a nutritionist at her gym, Laskiewicz decided to close her coffee shop to focus on serving a weekly menu of health-focused meals, preparing everything out of the same storefront at 25 Spaulding Road in Fremont. There are a few menu staples, like lunch bowls and protein doughnuts and waffles, while other recent items have included cheeseburger stuffed peppers, and a turkey wrap with raspberry chipotle barbecue sauce and mixed greens. New menus are usually posted to her website on Mondays, with orders open until 2 p.m. that Thursday and pickups on Sundays from 9 to 10:30 a.m.

What is your must-have kitchen item?

I’m going to say my metal bowl. I have this big set of metal bowls I got from my grandmother, and I always feel like I’m mixing something in one.

What would you have for your last meal?

Pizza. I literally just love the frozen cauliflower pizza from Hannaford.

What is your favorite local restaurant?

The Atkinson Country Club. They always have an excellent turkey wrap.

What celebrity would you like to see ordering one of your meals?

The first person that popped into my head was Arnold Schwarzenegger, but back during his body-building days. I just find that world to be fascinating, and I think it would be super cool to sponsor somebody like that.

What is your personal favorite menu item?

I would definitely say the protein doughnuts. Going back to my coffee shop days, I used to bake all these wacky flavors. … I have a new doughnut that I just made that’s called “Fit” Fetti.

What is the biggest food trend in New Hampshire right now?

I think it’s grab-and-go. You see it everywhere now — I feel like even places like 7-Eleven have upped their game on it.

What is your favorite thing to cook at home?

Anything on the grill. I love grilled fish [like] haddock and scallops.

Protein bites
From the kitchen of Ashley “Ash” Laskiewicz of Beauty & Beast Meals in Fremont

¼ cup melted coconut oil
¼ cup honey
½ cup peanut butter
1½ cups oats

Blend wet ingredients until smooth, then pour over the oats and mix. Roll into balls and store in the refrigerator or freezer.

Featured photo: Ashley Laskiewicz

Fresh and balanced

New meals each week at Hopkinton’s BB Take Home Kitchen

Hopkinton native Emily Knowlton and her mother Deb found success last July with the launch of BB Take Home Kitchen, also known as the Balanced Brussel, a weekly take-home meal business they operated out of a stationary food truck. A year later, the mother-daughter duo has grown out of their mobile space, selling the truck in favor of a new brick-and-mortar location.

BB Take Home Kitchen reopened earlier this month following a brief renovation period, introducing grab-and-go options for the first time, as well as an overall more streamlined ordering process for its meals. Before, pre-ordering was required and meal pickups were only available at the truck within a two-hour window every Tuesday. The new space expands the Knowltons’ hours of operation to Tuesday through Friday, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

“The plan will be to have the same as what we have available for pre-order on the website also available in the deli case, so if somebody was driving by they could just stop in and pick up something on their way home,” Emily Knowlton said. “You can still pre-order and you guarantee what’s on the menu. But if you just walk in, you can have anything we have in the case.”

A graduate of the University of New Hampshire with a degree in nutrition and dietetics, Knowlton offers a new menu each week; once it appears on the website, it’s available to pre-order and pick up any time BB’s is open. Certain specialty items will be available on Thursdays and Fridays each week.

“I had a lot of people who would order meals for the entire month, so I’m actually going to release them now on a rotating basis,” Knowlton said. “So as one week goes away, the next week will come up, just so that we can keep a couple of weeks in advance for people, and also for us.”

Depending on an individual meal’s ordering popularity, you might see it rotated out once or twice a month, or several months in between. Next week’s featured menu items include ginger sesame chicken with white rice and vegetables; Buffalo chicken macaroni and cheese and a side salad with house dressing; a falafel wrap with house tzatziki sauce and hummus; and a shrimp corn chowder with a side of homemade cornbread. The specials for later that week will be sauteed lemon chicken, and taquitos with an avocado ranch dipping sauce.

Other items that have been popular with Knowlton’s clientele have been the pork ponzu meatballs, a beef enchilada casserole, and a chicken and vegetable stir-fry served over noodles. You’ll also find a selection of baked goods out of the display case, from freshly baked chocolate chip and peanut butter cookies to blueberry muffins and jumbo cinnamon rolls.

BB Take Home Kitchen is closed on Saturday, Sunday and Monday to fulfill catering orders, which Knowlton said have “gone through the roof” over the past several months. The space will then reopen each Tuesday with the start of a new menu of take-home options.

“Our event business has picked up probably 300 percent since we started,” Knowlton said. “I get weeks where I’ll get five inquiries a week, and it probably does have something to do with Covid restrictions being lifted and people starting to plan weddings and parties again.”

BB Take Home Kitchen

Where: 633 Maple St., Hopkinton
Hours: Tuesday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Weekly menus are posted on a rotating basis; meals can be pre-ordered online, but some items are also available for walk-ins)
More info: Visit bbtakehomekitchen.com, or find them on Facebook and Instagram @bbtakehomekitchen

Featured photo: Pork ponzu meatballs. Photo courtesy of BB Take Home Kitchen.

The Weekly Dish 21/07/29

News from the local food scene

Take a bite: August is NH Eats Local Month, and the New Hampshire Food Alliance is kicking it off with New Hampshire’s Big Bite on Sunday, Aug. 1. The campaign, according to a press release, aims to connect Granite Staters through local food by encouraging everyone to take a “big bite” out of the same local food on the same day. The theme is pancakes — participants can get involved in a variety of ways, from sourcing local ingredients and making pancakes at home with family and friends, to dining out for pancakes at their local restaurant. Several local businesses are getting in on the fun too. Diz’s Cafe (860 Elm St., Manchester) will offer a pancake special on Aug. 1, while the Kearsarge Food Hub and Sweet Beet Farm (11 W. Main St., Bradford) will host a community pancake breakfast. The New Hampshire Food Alliance is encouraging everyone to share their big bites by snapping a photo and sharing it on social media with the hashtags #nheatslocalmonth and #nhsbigbite. Visit nheatslocal.com for more details and upcoming campaigns throughout the month of August.

New spot for Bedford market: The Bedford Farmers Market has moved to a new location about a mile up the street, in the parking lot of Murphy’s Taproom & Carriage House (393 Route 101, Bedford), according to a statement on its website and Facebook page. July 27 was its first date at the new spot, and the market will continue there on Tuesdays, from 3 to 6 p.m., through Oct. 12. Visit bedfordnhfarmersmarket.org or find them on Facebook @bedfordfarmersmarketnh for more details.

Greek meals to go: Join Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church (68 N. State St., Concord) for its next boxed Greek dinner to go event on Sunday, Aug. 8, from noon to 1 p.m. Now through Aug. 4, orders are being accepted for boxed meals, featuring a Greek vegetable medley with rice pilaf, tiropita and a roll for $15 per person. The event is drive-thru and takeout only — email [email protected] or call 953-3051 to place your order. The church is also planning a similar takeout event for Sunday, Sept. 12, which will feature a meal of pastichio (Greek lasagna) and Greek salad to go. Visit assumptionnh.org.

From canning to pickling: The Rodgers Memorial Library (194 Derry Road, Hudson) will host a virtual program on preserving fresh fruits and vegetables on Thursday, Aug. 5, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Ann Hamilton, food safety field specialist for the UNH Cooperative Extension, will discuss various methods to preserve fresh fruits and vegetables at home so you can enjoy them year-round, such as pickling, canning, freezing and drying. There is no admission fee, but registration is required. Participants will receive a link via email to the Zoom meeting. Visit events.rodgerslibrary.org.

Tammaro’s food: A new local eatery offering a variety of freshly prepared Italian meals from family recipes opened this week in northern Litchfield. Tammaro’s Cucina (469 Charles Bancroft Hwy., Litchfield), which opened on July 27, features a diverse menu of homemade dishes cooked to order. Many of the options are named after and use recipes from multiple family members, including owners and founders Donna Tammaro and her daughter, Lindsey Russo, as well as Donna’s mother, MaryAnn Tammaro, and several other family members from overseas in Italy. Items include salads, soups and a few Italian hot subs, but the stars of the menu are the pasta dishes, from Russo’s meat or cheese lasagna to chicken penne broccoli alfredo, shrimp scampi and five-cheese tortellini. The eatery features a small dine-in space, with takeout, delivery and catering services also available. Follow them on Facebook @tammaroscucina4 or call 377-7312.

The Great New Hampshire Ice Cream Tour

It’s time for a road trip to enjoy one of New Hampshire’s treats- 34 ice cream locations! Join the Hippo on the Great New Hampshire Ice Cream Tour! Share your adventures with photos of your favorite Ice cream place! Hashtag us at #NHicecreamtour !

Axel’s Ice Cream
608 Daniel Webster Hwy, Merrimack, NH
axelsnh.com
(603) 429-2229

The Beach Plum
3 Brickyard Square,
Epping, NH
thebeachplum.net
(603) 679-3200

The Beach Plum
2800 Lafayette Rd,
Portsmouth, NH
thebeachplum.net
(603) 433-3339

The Beach Plum
16 Ocean Blvd,
North Hampton, NH
thebeachplum.net
(603) 964-7451

The Beach Plum
Tuscan Village: 8 S. Village Dr, Salem, NH
thebeachplum.net
(603) 458-7266

Beech Hill Farm
107 Beech Hill Rd,
Hopkinton, NH
beechhillfarm.com
(603) 223-0828

The Big One
185 Concord St, Nashua, NH
thebig1icecream.com

Blake’s Ice Cream
353 S Main St, Manchester, NH
(603) 669-0220
blakesicecream.com

Brookdale Fruit Farm
Serving Annabelle’s Ice cream
41 Broad St, Hollis, NH
brookdalefruitfarm.com
(603) 465-2240

Buza at Vibes Burgers
25 S Main St, Concord, NH
vibesgourmetburgers.com/buza-dairy-bar
(603) 856-8671

Dodge’s Ice Cream
77 Weare Rd, New Boston, NH
(603) 487-3339

Frekey’s Dairy Bar
74 Fisherville Rd, Concord, NH
frekeysdairyfreeze.com
228-5443

Gould Hill Farm
656 Gould Hill Rd,
Contoocook, NH
gouldhillfarm.com
(603) 746-3811

Granite State Candy Shop
832 Elm St, Manchester, NH
granitestatecandyshoppe.com
218-3885

Granite State Candy Shop
13 Warren St, Concord, NH
granitestatecandyshoppe.com
225-2591

Hayward’s Ice Cream
364 Daniel Webster Hwy, Merrimack, NH
(603) 424-5915
haywardsicecream.com

Hayward’s Ice Cream
7 Daniel Webster Hwy,
Nashua, NH
(603) 888-4663
haywardsicecream.com

Kilwins
Market Square, 20 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH
(603) 319-8842
kilwinsportsmouth.square.site

Kimball Farm
158 Turnpike Rd, Jaffrey
(3 other locations in MA)
kimballfarm.com
532-5765

King Kone
336 Daniel Webster Hwy,
Merrimack, NH
kingkonenh.com
(603) 420-8312

Lickee’s & Chewy’s
53 Washington St, Suite 100, Dover, NH
(603) 343-1799
lickeesnchewys.com

Lix Ice Cream Parlor
55 Charles Bancroft Hwy, Litchfield, NH
fb.com/LixIceCreamParlor
(603) 883-9300

Maple Creamery Truck
Food Truck at 426 NH Rte 104 New Hampton, NH
fb.com/The-Maple-Creamery

Moo’s Place
27 Crystal Ave, Derry, NH
moosplace.com
(603) 965-5224

Moo’s Place
15 Ermer Rd & Rte 111,
Salem, NH
moosplace.com
(603) 898-0199

NH Doughnut Co
2 Capital Plz, Concord, NH
nhdoughnutco.com
(603) 715-5097

Pete’s Scoop
187 Rockingham Rd, Derry, NH
petesscoop.net
(603) 434-6366

Sub Zero Nitrogen Ice Cream
83 Main St, Nashua, NH
subzeroicecream.com
(603) 943-8491

Super Scoops
58 Main St, Henniker, NH
(603) 717-0661
superscoops.com

Susie’s Sweets
at the Community Oven
845 Lafayette Rd, Hampton, NH
susies-sweets-nh.com

Susie’s Sweets
700 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH
susies-sweets-nh.com

Triple Elm Coffee and Ice Cream
323 Main St, Sandown, NH
tripleelm.com
(603) 887-0666

Trombly Gardens
150 North River Rd, Milford, NH
tromblygardens.net
(603) 673-0647

What’s The Scoop?
Over 60 Flavors!!
160 Main St, Kingston, NH
whastthescoop.fun

Kings of wine

Comparing two red wines from Tuscany

“Montepulciano of every wine is king,” said the founder of modern experimental biology, Francesco Redi, in 1685, after tasting 500 types of wines. You may remember from high school biology that Redi, the Italian physician, demonstrated that maggots resulted not from spontaneous generation but from eggs laid by flies. Perhaps as important to Redi’s celebrity as a scientist is his judgment of wine. A native of Tuscany, and later residing in Florence, where his most notable scientific achievements were made, Redi had access to the same great wines from Tuscany that we enjoy today.

The sangiovese grape is the varietal that goes into the making of fine classic Chiantis, brunello di Montalcino, and vino nobile di Montepulciano. (Brunello is the alias given to the sangiovese grape.) The sangiovese grape is grown throughout much of Italy, with an estimated 250,000 acres and more planted to it. However, when planted in the southern region of Tuscany, the grape shines to produce a wine that is ready to drink early but becomes full-bodied after cellar aging.

Our first wine, Cantina Del Redi 2015 Toscana Sangiovese Pleos (originally priced at the New Hampshire State Liquor & Wine Outlets at $42.99, reduced to $20.99), is from a winery in the town of Montepulciano, 25 miles southeast of Sienna. As the label states, the wine is made from 100 percent sangiovese grapes. The alcohol content is 14 percent. The Pleos, as described on the website, “is born of the need to bring to your tables all the taste of the purest and most fresh sangiovese of our lands. It wants to be a fun wine, with scents of purple and crispy black cherry. Light but rich in history.” This vintage was awarded a score of 91 points by James Suckling, former Senior Editor and European Bureau Chief of Wine Spectator and regarded as one of the most influential wine critics. The color is intense with a slight burnt sienna red, in the depth of the glass thinning to an orange rim. It holds up to the website’s suggestion of rich dark cherry, both to the nose and to the tongue with some added spice, along with a little chewiness, ending in a long, dry, slightly acidic finish. This wine is not a sipping wine but needs to be paired to food. It can be enjoyed with white- or red-sauced pasta, marinated beef, or Mexican dishes. As the label states, this is a rosso from Montepulciano, and as such has an aging requirement of only six months in oak (as compared to the minimum of two years for our next wine); however, this wine is a great bargain and can be enjoyed for another five years, if cellared.

Our second wine, Lunadoro 2015 Vino Nobile Di Montepulciano (originally priced at the New Hampshire State Liquor & Wine Outlets at $44.99, reduced to $18.99), is sometimes called the big brother to the rosso. Also made from sangiovese grapes, it is aged for a minimum of 24 months in oak barrels, not so much to add flavor as for the slow maturation the barrels provide. The barrels are larger than traditional barrique and thus have less surface area in relation to volume, to avoid the vanilla or toast notes found in wine. While not enjoying the same cache as the Brunello noted above, it does carry the moniker of “nobile,” as the wine was once the wine of popes and nobles. After a short decline of quality in the mid-20th century, it has rebounded as the lesser grapes of this region are now slated for the rosso, sampled above, improving the quality and status of the vino nobile.

The color is maroon red, and will take on a subtle brick orange tint as it ages. To the nose it also has cherry notes with some plum, generated by the aging. To the tongue, the cherry stays on with a light tannic leather finish. Because of the aging, and its acidity, it is a wine suitable for cellaring, as it can improve with a decade or even two in your wine cellar. This “big brother of the two” can be sipped, or thoroughly enjoyed with a grilled steak.

It was extremely interesting and informative to taste and compare these two wines, coming from the same hilltop town in the same region noted for its exceptional quality of red wine. It is well worth conducting your own test and comparing the two. Take the test!

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Rose N. Hibiscus

All flowers supposedly carry symbolic meanings, but some are more emotionally fraught than others.

When I was a child, my mother told me that our elderly neighbor was sick and that we should probably send her some flowers.

Me: “How about lilies? Those are pretty.”

Mom: “Honey, those represent Death.”

Me: “So, no?”

Even if you don’t buy into the whole symbolism of flowers thing, it still permeates our culture. If you showed up for a blind date and they brought you a dozen long-stemmed red roses, you’d start looking for escape routes.

My dad is a carnation man. Growing up, anybody, any occasion, I could pretty much expect him to give a bunch of red and white carnations. They lasted forever, smelled good and didn’t carry too many expectations. Me — I’m an alstroemeria guy. They are pretty, don’t make anybody nervous and are pretty much bullet-proof; stick them in some water, and they’ll outlast the sour cream in your refrigerator. The downside is that they don’t have much of a smell.

Why flowers smell so good is a bit of a mystery. I mean, we know why they smell good — to attract bees, hummingbirds and chorus girls — but nobody has ever been able to figure out how to breed reliably fragrant roses, for instance. The intersection of botany and human chemoreceptors is a complicated and mysterious dance.

Nowhere more so than in a cocktail.

Scientists estimate that somewhere around 80 percent of everything we eat is actually based on what it smells like. If you’re holding a shmancy party and want to serve a cheese board, experts will tell you to take the cheese out of the fridge an hour or so before you actually want to serve it, so that the volatile chemicals in the cheese loosen up and become easier to smell, and thus, taste. This is one of the reasons why so many cocktail recipes call for you to chill a cocktail so thoroughly — as your drink warms up, the flavor will evolve as the esters float up into the back of your palate.

That gets tricky, though, when you are basing your cocktail on floral smells. Rose water or lavender pull you into a dangerous standoff — too little, and your drink won’t taste like much of anything. One drop too much, and you’re dealing with the little decorative soaps in your grandmother’s bathroom.

This drink depends on that. Your first sip or two should be extremely cold. The taste should be crisp and a little gin-forward. As it warms up — and, not for nothin’ that’s why glasses have stems; to slow down the warming process — it will start to smell more perfumy and floral. The taste will match the color; it will start to taste pink.

Rose N. Hibiscus

2 ounces gin (For this, I used Collective Arts Rhubarb and Hibiscus Gin, which a friend who distributes gin in New Hampshire gave me, because it is gently hibiscus-y, but pretty much any gin will work, though it will add its own stamp onto the finished drink.)
1 ounce hibiscus syrup (see below)
1 ounce fresh squeezed lemon juice
1/3 oz. amaretto
5 drops rose water

Combine all ingredients over ice in a cocktail shaker. Shake until very cold.
Strain into a martini glass.

Why this strange combination works so well:

The botanical backnotes in the gin play well with the rose water. Roses play well with almonds — in this case, the amaretto. Almonds and lemons go together extremely well. Lemon, in its turn, is a classic pairing with gin. The hibiscus makes it pink. If you like your drink a little crisper, pour small amounts of it into your glass at a time, and drink it extremely cold. If you want a little more of the flowers, pour it all in one go and let the perfume develop as you drink it.

Much like carnations and alstroemeria, this is delicious to share with somebody without making anything weird between you. All it says is, “I like spending time with you.”

Hibiscus Syrup

5 ounces water
5 ounces sugar
1/3 ounce fresh squeezed lemon juice
1/3 ounce dried hibiscus blossoms

Combine sugar and water in a small saucepan and bring to a boil, stirring often.
Let the simple syrup boil for 10 to 15 seconds to make certain the sugar is completely dissolved.
Remove from heat. Add lemon juice and hibiscus blossoms.
Cover and steep for 30 minutes.
Strain and bottle. Keep indefinitely in your refrigerator.

A Market in Manchester carries dried hibiscus and they can also be found online. Rose water is available in most supermarkets and can usually be found in the international foods aisle.

Featured photo: Rose N. Hibiscus. Photo by John Fladd.

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