A lasting legacy

Republic Cafe, Campo Enoteca to be put up for sale as owners retire

By Matt Ingersoll

mingersoll@hippopress.com

They’ve been James Beard award semifinalists, TED Talk presenters and pioneers of the local food movement. They’ve owned several successful Manchester restaurants spanning more than 30 years, including the first to receive “certified local” status by the New Hampshire Farm to Restaurant Connection.

And now, chef Edward Aloise and his wife, Claudia Rippee, are stepping away from the kitchen.

“We figured we should go out on a high note. Kind of like Joe DiMaggio,” Aloise, a New York City native, joked during a recent phone interview with the Hippo. “It’s kind of bittersweet. Half of our lives have been here in Manchester, and more than half our lives have been in this industry. But it’s time. It’s time to get on and move on to whatever phase is next in our lives.”

The plan, Aloise said, is for Republic Cafe and Campo Enoteca — two separate restaurant concepts that he and Rippee have operated under the same roof at 969 Elm St. as the “Republic of Campo” since August 2020 — to remain open normal business hours through New Year’s Eve. The downtown storefront will then soon be put up for sale as the couple prepares to retire.

But the pair’s decision to leave the business is not because their restaurants haven’t been doing well. On the contrary, in fact, both have remained as busy as ever. Aloise, who just celebrated his 69th birthday on Dec. 12, said he has plans to “resuscitate” their restaurant consulting company, E&C Hospitality and Consulting Services, while Rippee, an accomplished photographer and artist in her own right, aims to focus more on her craft.

“We are absolutely not running out of gas, but we do want to use what’s left in our tanks and go in a different direction,” Aloise said.

No matter what happens following the sale of the 969 Elm St. property, the fact remains that Aloise and Rippee will leave behind a decades-long legacy in the Queen City, a presence in the restaurant scene that will be missed by many. Here’s a look back on what they’ve accomplished.

From Colorado to Manchester

Aloise and Rippee met in Boulder, Colorado, of all places, back in the late 1970s.

“Claudia was a cocktail waitress and I was a bartender,” he said. “It was an over-the-bar love affair.”

They would end up getting married, continuing to work in the restaurant industry out west, in addition to a brief stint in Aloise’s home state of New York. Through a friend in Colorado with ties to the Massachusetts area, they soon found themselves moving to the seaside community of Gloucester. It was there that, Aloise said, they attempted twice to open their own restaurant concept, but they were unable at the time to acquire financing for it.

Another opportunity arose some 70 miles away in Manchester, where Aloise for a time worked as president of Hospitality Holdings Corp. But he and Rippee knew they still wanted to start their own restaurant concept. Eventually, they were able to put together a business plan that got financed and, in 1990, opened up Cafe Pavone in Manchester’s Millyard.

“There was no real Italian here at the time. What there was, was your basic red sauce, spaghetti and meatballs place,” Aloise said. “We brought in fresh pasta that we made daily. We were bringing in different regional Italian recipes as opposed to everything from Naples and Sicily. It had the first outside patio in the city [and] we had a wood grill, which was news to everybody. … It became a real central point for a lot of people in the city. Regular customers would have these little brass nameplates around the bar and we used to call it the Walk of Shame. That’s how people were identifying with it.”

Enjoying a 10-year run throughout the ’90s, Cafe Pavone was named for the Italian word meaning “peacock.”

“We wanted to bring a little bit of color, a little bit of life, a little bit of versatility to the city, and we thought the name stuck,” Aloise said.

Their success just a few years after opening Cafe Pavone led them to an opportunity to start a second restaurant concept at Manchester-Boston Regional Airport — known as the Milltowne Grille — in January 1994.

By 2000, they decided it was time for a change — Cafe Pavone was sold, and Aloise and Rippee would start E&C Hospitality and Consulting Services, an initiative that continued throughout most of that decade.

“The airport [restaurant] was extremely successful at that point, so we had a little bit easier life for a while,” Rippee said.

Fresh from the farm

As Aloise put it, he and Rippee soon “got the bug to do it again,” and that was when Republic Cafe would arrive at 1069 Elm St. in downtown Manchester in January 2010. But this restaurant would be a totally different concept, ushering in a new philosophy for several other New Hampshire eateries that would follow.

“I’m a pescatarian, and I said that if we do another restaurant, then I did not want to deal with any factory-farmed animal products,” Rippee said, “and so that’s how we got involved in looking for local producers.”

Today, Republic is renowned not only for its scratch-cooked kitchen and pan-Mediterranean cuisine, but also for its commitment to sourcing from local farmers. But it didn’t catch on right away; in fact, Aloise refers to the first year and a half or so of being open as a little rocky.

“People were not really ready for a pan-Mediterranean restaurant,” he said. “Twenty-eight countries touch the Mediterranean and Claudia and I researched recipes from all 28 of them.”

That all changed in 2012, when they achieved semifinalist status for Outstanding Restaurateur in that year’s James Beard Foundation awards.

“That was the trajectory that really took Republic into the stratosphere,” Aloise said.

That same year, both Aloise and Rippee gave a joint TED Talk presentation about the importance of farm-to-table restaurant practices. Their talk detailed many of the local farms they have worked with and the products they buy from each, as well as the process of how they are continuously in contact with them to help shape their restaurant menus. Many of the farmers, Rippee noted, have been working with them from the very beginning — the list can be viewed on Republic’s website.

“When you couple the farm-to-table concept with recipes coming from Morocco and Turkey and Greece and southern Italy, and even Egypt and Israel for that matter, it shocked some people, but then eventually people said, ‘Wow, I’m not eating a piece of salmon on a Caesar salad anymore,’ and that’s what happened,” Aloise said.

Aloise and Rippee continued to operate the Milltowne Grille simultaneously with Republic until 2014. But when Southwest Airlines announced it was leaving Manchester’s airport to become a carrier down in Boston, that was when they noticed a sharp drop in volume, Aloise said.

“It became a non-viable entity and our lease was up anyway, so we decided to move,” he said. “But we had employees that were there with us for a decade, and so we had that human capital and decided not to waste it.”

That April, Campo Enoteca opened its doors at 969 Elm St., just a two-minute walk south of Republic. As opposed to its Mediterranean counterpart, this was an Italian restaurant serving house pastas and small plates, but still in line with the farm-to-table theme.

The Republic of Campo

Republic celebrated its 10th anniversary in business in January 2020, releasing a special “meet the farmers” Q&A series to commemorate the milestone.

Two months later, on March 16, came Gov. Chris Sununu’s emergency order limiting all restaurants and bars in New Hampshire to takeout and delivery only in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Both Republic and Campo Enoteca initially joined the dozens of other local restaurants in offering a special takeout and delivery menu, but the decision was soon made to shut down operations at both for the remainder of the governor’s dine-in ban.

As the pandemic stretched into the summer, by mid-August it was determined that Republic’s physical plan would be incompatible with the spacing requirements.

“Inside, you had to have 6 feet between tables … but at Republic it was one long line of seating down the right-hand side of the building and an 18-seat bar,” Rippee said, “so we probably could’ve gotten maybe 20 seats out of 60 and comply with the Covid guidelines, and that would not have supported what it took to reopen that location.”

Instead, Aloise and Rippee decided to leave the 1069 Elm St. location altogether and move all of Republic’s operations under the same roof as Campo Enoteca.

“One of the benefits was that a lot of our staff, especially the kitchen staff, moved between both restaurants,” Aloise said. “Everybody was familiar with all of the menus, all the recipes, all the descriptions of the product or the style of cooking that I had, and so we sat down with [partner and manager] Peter [Macone] and my chef de cuisine at the time, and I said, ‘This is what I want to do, how do we do this,’ and everybody was on board immediately.”

In the two years since, they’ve successfully been able to offer two separate menus for both restaurants under one location — dubbed the “Republic of Campo.” Whether or not that concept will continue, Aloise said, is all up to the eventual purchaser.

As Aloise plans to hang up his apron, he remains optimistic about the future of the hospitality industry, but he does predict there will be many changes.

“I think what’s probably going to happen is that people are going to react to the market,” he said. “You’re going to see concepts that are less labor-intensive and concepts that are more cost-effective. You’re going to see less full-service. … Tablecloth restaurants, upscale restaurants are going to go the way of dinosaurs for the most part.”

Featured photo: Chef Edward Aloise and his wife, Claudia Rippee. Courtesy photo.

The Weekly Dish 22/12/15

News from the local food scene

Festive eats: There may still be time to order your holiday dinners and desserts — check out our annual listings in the Hippo’s Dec. 8 issue; they begin on page 23. You’ll find a comprehensive list of local restaurants, bakeries and other businesses offering all kinds of specialty eats available to order, from entrees and sides to pies, cakes and other sweet treats. Some places are still accepting holiday orders now through the coming days, for pickup at designated times during the week of Christmas. Go to issuu.com/hippopress and click on the Dec. 8 issue to read the e-edition for free. Read on to page 26 of that week’s issue to find out which local restaurants are open for limited hours on either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, in addition to those that are serving special holiday dine-in meals.

Last holiday market at the Y: The final date of the weekly Holiday Food & Arts Market at the YMCA Allard Center of Goffstown (116 Goffstown Back Road) is Saturday, Dec. 17, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Events in this series, which kicked off on Nov. 19, have included a different menu of lunch items and baked goods each week, along with a unique selection of themed crafts, all to benefit the Y’s Center for Older Adults. This weekend’s market is “sparkle season,” featuring winter apparel and accessories in addition to a variety of holiday cookies and treats. See the event page on Facebook @yallardcenter for more details.

Share in the celebration: Join To Share Brewing Co. (720 Union St., Manchester) for its fourth anniversary party, happening on Saturday, Dec. 17, from 1 to 9 p.m. The brewery will have games and special birthday treats from Bearded Baking Co. all day long, in addition to face-painting and balloon twisting from 1 to 3 p.m. and live music from Ryan Gagne-Hall at 3:30 p.m. and from Songs with Molly at 6 p.m. Husband-and-wife team Aaron and Jenni Share officially opened To Share Brewing Co. on Dec. 15, 2018, in the space of a former electronics manufacturer on Union Street in Manchester. Visit tosharebrewing.com or find them on Facebook @tosharebrewingco and on Instagram @tosharebrewing.

Making a difference: The Common Man restaurant group of New Hampshire has exceeded the $1 million goal of its Common Man Ukraine Relief Fund to benefit Ukrainian refugees, raising more than $2 million since its launch in May, according to a press release. Earlier this month, Common Man owner and founder Alex Ray traveled overseas to meet with Polish and Ukrainian Rotary representatives and other agencies working to provide relief to Ukrainian refugees who are fleeing the ongoing war in their home country. The Common Man also offered each of its restaurants as collection sites for donations of critical supplies. “We asked the people of New Hampshire for help, and their answer was overwhelming,” Ray said in a statement. “Ukrainians are headed into a brutally cold winter in already uncertain conditions … [and] your donations are providing warmth and sustenance. You are saving lives.” According to the release, donations to the relief fund will continue to be accepted through Dec. 31 — they can be made online at graniteuw.org, or by texting NH4UKRAINE to 41444.

On The Job – Joey Bolduc

DJ

Joey Bolduc is a DJ with his own business, Joey Bolduc Entertainment, based in Manchester.

Explain your job and what it entails.

People hire me for weddings, corporate events or private parties, basically looking to have somebody to play music or just create some fun or some ambiance for their party. I have a questionnaire that I use to get a basic idea of the types of music or entertainment they want for their event.

How long have you had this job?

I’ve been DJing for around 15 years now, but I’ve been playing in my band for even longer than that, since I was 13, so essentially I have over 25 years of entertainment experience.

What led you to this career field and your current job?

I started off with the band when I was in my early teens, playing in bars and clubs in the New England region. The DJing business was just a natural step from being in a band because I had the equipment and I had the experience entertaining people.

What kind of education or training did you need?

You don’t need any special education. Being a good DJ, in my opinion, is about being a good communicator and being a good reader of people. If you can read a room, you can kind of predict what things the crowd might like and what things would get them pumped up. Knowing how to create energy inside of a room is another important factor. You can’t be afraid to put yourself out there and be the person to take charge, be a focal point and get things moving.

What is your typical at-work uniform or attire?

For weddings, it’s more traditional, like slacks and a tie and all that stuff. Birthday parties and things like that are a little more casual. For those, I’m in jeans and a nice shirt and maybe some sneakers so I can dance around, do some backflips, do some handstands and just really put on a show for the people.

How has your job changed over the course of the pandemic?

I experienced a little dip during the first year when it was all happening, but after that, people wanted to party, so that first summer back was actually crazy for me. I experienced a heightened sense of appreciation for being able to come together again and celebrate.

What do you wish you’d known at the beginning of your career?

I wish I had known how easy it was to start my own business doing this, and I wish I had started earlier. I also wish I had started trusting my instincts sooner instead of being so worried about playing cool music and focused more on reading the room than trying to think so much about what will work.

What do you wish other people knew about your job?

I’m an introvert deep down inside. Everybody thinks I’m this crazy, charismatic, outgoing person because I have to be. I’ve learned how to turn it on. But when it really comes down to it, I’m just a homebody and actually kind of a shy person.

What was the first job you ever had?

Dunkin’ Donuts.

What’s the best piece of work-related advice you’ve ever received?

Follow your gut. Trust your intuition. Do what makes you happy. And don’t do things just because of social pressure. Just be the individual snowflake that you’re meant to be.

Five favorites

Favorite book:
Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
Favorite movie: Tommy Boy
Favorite music: Hip-hop, rock and R&B
Favorite food: Chicken Parm
Favorite thing about NH: The diversity within the seasons and within the landscape

Featured photo: Joey Bolduc. Courtesy photo.

Kiddie Pool 22/12/15

Family fun for the weekend

Getting crafty

Make your own cocoa mug at Voices of Clay (16 Meetinghouse Hill Road, Brookline) on Saturday, Dec. 17, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Kids will get to build a mug out of slab-rolled clay and decorate it with underglaze paint to make it uniquely their own. The mugs will be ready for pickup one month after the class. The price of the class is $35. A space can be reserved at voiceofclay.squarespace.com.

• Drop kids off at AR Workshop (875 Elm St., Manchester) for a mini Santa and friends wood block workshop on Saturday, Dec. 17, from 3 to 5 p.m. This program is recommended for kids ages 6 and older. Choose a reindeer, a snowman, Santa, an elf or a gingerbread man. A set of three costs $29; all five cost $45. Visit arworkshop.com for more information and to register.

Meet Santa

• Santa is coming to the Educational Farm at Joppa Hill (174 Joppa Hill Road, Bedford) for a Christmas Festival on Saturday, Dec. 17, at 5 p.m. The festival will include a tree lighting, a bonfire, s’mores kits, food trucks and face painting. Visit theeducationalfarm.org for more information.

• Join the New Boston Parks and Recreation department for s’mores with Santa on Saturday, Dec. 17, from 4 to 6 p.m. at the town’s gazebo. The tree lighting ceremony will be at 5 p.m. and kids can visit with Santa afterward. There will be cocoa and hot cider in addition to the s’mores. Visit newbostonnh.gov for more information.

Museums and libraries

• The Children’s Museum of New Hampshire (6 Washington St., Dover) is having two free admission days for Service Credit Union Members on Thursday, Dec. 15, and Saturday, Dec. 17, for the 9 a.m. to noon or 1 to 4 p.m. sessions. For more information on how to use the discount for a playtime session or to register for a play session, visit childrens-museum.org.

• Friday, Dec. 16, is the last chance kids will have to visit the Concord Public Library (45 Green St.) to write a letter to Santa. The library has all the materials needed for kids to write their list and check it twice. The event runs all day, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the children’s section. Visit concordnh.gov for more information.

• The McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center (2 Institute Drive, Concord) is premiering a new planetarium show called “The Great Spirit Bear Chase” on Wednesday, Dec. 21, at 7 p.m. The show was made to tell the story of the night sky from the perspective and cultural traditions of indigenous people. Admission is free and there will be hors d’oeuvres served. Visit starhop.com for more information.

Showtime

• Find out who did it at the free family mystery show A Merry Little Crime Scene at Emmanuel Church (14 Mammoth Road, Hooksett) on Sunday, Dec. 18. The comedy mystery show follows people searching for who stole a missing piece of the nativity scene. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and the show starts at 6 p.m. Visit emmanuelhooksett.com for more information.

• Join Chunky’s Cinema in Pelham (150 Bridge St., Pelham) for a family-friendly showing of Elf (2003 PG) on Wednesday, Dec. 21, at 6:30 p.m. The show follows Buddy, a human adopted by one of Santa’s elves, as he goes on an adventure to find his biological family.

YMCA holiday

• The theme for the teen night at the Y is Yankee swap at the Westwood Park YMCA (90 Northwest Blvd., Nashua) on Saturday, Dec. 17, from 3 to 6 p.m. Teen ages 13 to 16 can participate by bringing a gift to exchange with others. There will also be other activities and snacks and refreshments. The cost of the event is $5 for YMCA members, $10 for nonmembers. Tickets can be bought in advance or at the door. Visit nmymca.org for more information.

Treasure Hunt 22/12/15

Dear Donna,

I have a few old gloves from when my dad was a kid. Can you advise me how to research them for any value?

Thanks

Dan

Dear Dan,

Although sports items are not something I have dealt with much. I can tell you that one old glove can be worth $10 and another thousands. So research is important to determine values.

I think I would also bring them to either a sports store or antique shop that could help. Age, maker, signed, condition are all factors in valuation.

One last thought is doing research online. Be very careful if you choose this way. It can be easier but comparing one to the other is really tough. Mistakes easily happen and incorrect values happen frequently. Once you have identified the gloves, then online might be a more accurate way to determine a value.

I hope this gave you a helpful direction, Dan, and thanks for sharing with us.

Donna

Note: When you find old gloves leave them in the condition you found them in. Let a collector do the cleaning and restoration.

Composting: It’s important, even in winter

Today’s veggie scraps makes tomorrow’s soil

When I was a boy it was one of my many jobs to take out the kitchen scraps every few days and dump them in our woods in a compost pile. Like the postman, I did my job no matter what: “Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night stays this boy from the swift completion of his appointed rounds.” I would not say that the postman nor the boy enjoyed their tasks in a blowing rain. But I did it. Now, older and wiser, I still do it.

Making good compost is easy. Plenty has been written about the best way to create that “black gold” we all love to give our plants. There should be the proper mix of ingredients that are high in nitrogen and those that are high in carbon. That will help our microbe pals breakdown leaves, weeds and kitchen scraps into useful biologically active material to support plant growth. Now, in winter, composting is more of a challenge.

Scientists disagree about the ratio of carbon and nitrogen materials to get a compost pile “working.” Some say an even 50-50 mix of materials, but others say up to 30 times more carbon-based materials than those high in nitrogen. Me? I aim for three parts dry, brown material to one part high nitrogen material. Eventually, everything breaks down and turns into compost.

What ingredients are high in nitrogen? Grass clippings, green leaves and weeds. Animal manures are good, but you should never use cat or dog waste. Vegetable scraps, raw or cooked, fall in this category too, and coffee grounds. Moldy broccoli from the back of the fridge? Sure.

High-carbon materials include dead leaves, straw, tea bags, even a little shredded paper. If using newspaper, avoid glossy pages and things with lots of color. Newspapers are pretty benign these days, as they use soy inks and no heavy metals. I keep a supply of fall leaves next to my compost pile and spread a layer over the kitchen scraps every time I empty the compost bucket. That also minimizes flies in summer.

A good compost pile also needs oxygen to work well. And if your pile stays soggy, it won’t allow the microorganisms to get enough oxygen. But if your pile is too dry, the working microbes won’t be able to thrive, either. If you grab a handful and squeeze it, it should feel like a wrung-out sponge. People who really want a fast-acting compost pile turn over the compost with a garden fork regularly to help aerate it, but I don’t have the time or energy to do that.

In winter, most compost piles stop breaking down plant material because it is too cold for the organisms that cause decomposition. In summer, if yours is working well, temperatures can go up over 140 degrees F, which will kill weed seeds. In fact I’ve done experiments and found that 125 degrees for a couple of days killed the seeds of the annual grass I placed in it — though some weeds may be tougher to kill than that. To get my compost pile that hot I layered in fresh lawn clippings. Still, the pile had cooler pockets and hotter ones.

So how does all this help you in winter? First, accept that your kitchen scraps will be frozen and not breaking down. Even those big plastic drums that rotate compost probably won’t work in winter — the material will be one big lump impossible to turn.

I used to keep my compost pile near the vegetable garden so I could throw weeds in it. But the problem was that in winter I needed boots or snowshoes to get to my compost pile. If you don’t want to build a bin or trudge to a distant compost pile in winter, think about just using a big trash can and saving all your scraps until spring when things thaw out and temperatures are good for composting. This will also keep dogs and skunks out of it. Recently I built a nice bin made of wood pallets that is next to my woodpile, near the house — and more accessible all year.

Not all compost is the same. The microbes attracted to material made from woody plants are different from the ones attracted to kitchen scraps and grass clippings. Think about the soil in an established forest: It is dark and rich, formed by the breakdown of leaves, twigs and branches over a long period of time. You can mimic that and speed up the process to create mulch or compost to put around newly planted trees and shrubs. Just compost your autumn leaves, twigs and small branches. I shred them in a chipper-shredder machine.

If you collect scraps (no meat or oil) and are a member of a CSA, they may accept your kitchen scraps for their composting system. If you have a 5-gallon pail with cover, you can easily transport it to a farm or recycling facility that accepts food scraps. When we were on vacation in Maine, we brought our kitchen scraps to a farm that used them for compost.

Aside from helping your plants, making compost helps keep food waste out of the landfill, which is important: We are running out of space in landfills. So do your part, even in winter. And whatever you make will enhance your soil when you add it in at planting time.

Featured photo: I keep chopped leaves in a barrel next to my compost pile to spread over kitchen scraps. Photo by Henry Homeyer.

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