Fine, you can have pumpkin beer now

Who knew pumpkin beer would be such a win?

I saw a reputable brewing company heavily promoting via social media their pumpkin beer’s availability in mid-August — without irony. Seriously. OK, what I’m trying to say is, they were trying to get me jacked up about pumpkin beer while I was in the middle of my summer vacation.

It didn’t work at the time.

And, OK, we’ve all seen pumpkin creep into our lives sooner and sooner each summer and we all have to acknowledge that we as a society here in New England sort of shift to fall overnight, so breweries kind of need to be ready with the pumpkin for that first cool night.

Now that the air is crisp and cool and downright chilly at times, I’m ready to consider the universe of pumpkin-flavored beer. It’s a universe that, to me, is almost diabolical in how hit-or-miss it is. For every one that tastes delicious, you have another that is sugary pumpkin syrup. In beer form, that’s not a good thing.

Enough with the snark; there is something pleasing, comforting and delicious about a well-balanced, spicy, slightly sweet pumpkin ale. First, of course, pumpkins are seasonally appropriate but if brewers are careful with the sugar, it just works really well. But it seems it is hard to amp up the pumpkin without amping up the sweetness.

The success of a pumpkin beer is in its subtleties. You want the aroma of pumpkin and spice. You want a lingering flavor of roasted pumpkin-y goodness but there’s probably a reason why you don’t just see pumpkin juice on the shelves of your local grocery store.

I tend to like a pumpkin beer on the heavier side, like a pumpkin stout or porter, such as Harpoon’s Imperial Pumpkin or a full-bodied Smashed Pumpkin Ale by Shipyard Brewing Co. I think the earthy taste of pumpkin pairs well with rich malts and deep flavors — that way the pumpkin adds to the complexity rather than overpowering the brew.

That said, lighter- and medium-bodied pumpkin brews like Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale or Roadsmary’s Baby by Two Roads Brewing Co. are also quite pleasing. Again, for me, their success is tied directly to subtle sweetness, rather than in-your-face sugar and spice. I do not go for the cinnamon-sugar rim — not because it tastes bad — but if you go that route, regardless of the brew, I just don’t think you are going to actually taste and appreciate the beer; the cinnamon and sugar takes over.

The good news is that you have a lot of choices to work with.

Homecoming by Able Ebenezer Brewing Co. in Merrimack is a nice choice that features big pumpkin flavor but without the sometimes dominating flavors of cinnamon, vanilla and other spices.

The Toasted Pumpkin Ale by 603 Brewery in Derry, on the other hand, is another great, unique and well-balanced choice that is aged on vanilla beans and cinnamon sticks. This one has a little higher ABV at 8.2 percent, which helps the beer stand up to a little extra sweetness from the vanilla and cinnamon. The pumpkin still shines through for sure.

Of course, then there’s the Southern Tier Pumking, which is big, syrupy, and sweet, and which I should probably hate, but I love, so go figure.

I think the message here is simple: Go out and explore pumpkin beers this fall and don’t get down if you don’t like one or two. Move on to the next one.

What’s in My Fridge
Sip of Sunshine by Lawson’s Finest Liquids (Waitsfield, Vermont)
I haven’t had this one in a long time so it was almost like being reintroduced to an old friend. This is just a wonderful brew. It’s juicy and hoppy with lots of floral aromas and tropical flavors. This beer just works any time. Cheers!

Featured photo: Courtesy photos

In the kitchen with Christos Babis and Lexi Griburas Babis

Christos Babis and his wife, Lexi Griburas Babis, of Candia are the owners of Villaggio Ristorante (677 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 627-2424, villaggionh.com), which opened in the Queen City’s North End in 2012. Villaggio is an eatery known for its classic Italian dishes, including those made with chicken, veal and fresh seafood, as well as a full-service bar with wines, beers and specialty cocktails. Other popular offerings include lasagna, housemade potato and ricotta gnocchi, and fresh egg angel hair or fettuccine pastas with your choice of sauce. Villaggio reopened daily for dinner on June 18.

What is your must-have kitchen item?

CB: Definitely tongs, because everything on the menu is made in a saute pan.

LGB: For me it would be a potholder.

What would you have for your last meal?

CB: Octopus with tomato salad, olives, feta cheese and a nice crusty bread.

LGB: Grilled calamari with fresh steamed greens, and then Christos’s chocolate soufflé.

What is your favorite local restaurant?

CB: Mine!

LGB: The Golden Tao [Restaurant in Manchester].

What celebrity would you like to see eating in your restaurant?

CB: Al Pacino.

LGB: Gordon Ramsay.

What is your favorite thing on your menu?

CB: The filet mignon with cognac sauce.

LGB: Frutti di Mare.

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

CB: Made-to-order food that can be personalized.

LGB: We never really had a big takeout business … [but] takeout is so huge right now.

What is your favorite thing to cook at home?

CB: Grilled salmon.

LGB: I like to make all kinds of soups, like bean soups, meatball soups and pumpkin soup in the fall.

Butternut squash soup
Courtesy of Christos Babis and Lexi Griburas Babis of Villaggio Ristorante in Manchester
½ gallon whole milk
1 large butternut squash (cleaned, peeled and diced)
3 tablespoons freshly grated ginger
4 tablespoons butter
Salt and pepper to taste
Bring milk to a boil. Add the squash, followed by the salt and pepper, then the ginger. Boil until squash is soft. Take off heat and blend with a hand-mixer until smooth, then add butter and enjoy.

Featured Photo: Courtesy photo

Brewed with quality

BiTsize Coffee Bar opens in Hooksett

A new shop has just arrived in Hooksett’s Granite Hill Shoppes plaza, but its concept has been in the making for more than a year. BiTsize Coffee Bar (pronounced “bite-size”), which opened Sept. 8, offers single-origin Costa Rican coffees, Italian blend espresso drinks and several types of teas and smoothies, plus a food menu of fresh baked goods, paninis and desserts.

The shop is a partnership between Granite Hill Shoppes property owner George Kassas and Rabih Bou Chaaya, who has owned Maya Gourmet in Methuen, Mass., since 2014. After operating as a successful wholesale baking business for several years — you can find its baklava at several Market Basket and Whole Foods stores across southern New Hampshire — Maya Gourmet opened a retail coffee shop and storefront in June 2019. Kassas, who had envisioned the then-vacant space on the lower level of his Hooksett plaza for more than a year, said he was immediately taken with Maya Gourmet’s concept during a visit one day as a customer.

“The minute I walked into Rabih’s place, I said ‘this is it,’” Kassas said. “I wanted a top-notch quality coffee bar … and so I said to him that I’d like him to come and see the location that I had here. He and his wife came up and looked at it and they kind of fell in love with it too.”

According to Bou Chaaya, the new coffee bar’s concept is similar to that of Maya Gourmet’s. All of its baked goods, which include French-style butter croissants, Danishes and more than a half dozen types of cookies and muffins, are prepared fresh at the Methuen location the night before. Maya Gourmet’s baklava is also available for sale, both the Greek and the Lebanese style, as well as several treats out of a bakery display that include French macarons and cake slices in several flavors, like red velvet, chocolate and limoncello.

The daily drip coffee, Bou Chaaya said, is a single-origin bean from Costa Rica that’s roasted at Maya Gourmet, available in pour-over or siphon brewing methods. Espresso drinks, which include lattes, cappuccinos and macchiatos, come from a bean imported from Italy.

The shop also offers seven different types of hot and iced teas, sourced from Mighty Leaf Tea, that are all brewed to order, plus multiple flavors of smoothies, like strawberry banana, raspberry, mango, pineapple coconut and blueberry pomegranate.

“We use a real fruit puree,” Bou Chaaya said of the smoothies, “and then you have the option to add whipped cream or boba, which are juice balls.”

Paninis are made to order too, on your choice of either a ciabatta bread or a French baguette. Flavors include a tuna melt, a ham and cheese, a caprese, and the Ultimate, which has turkey, salami, pastrami, cheese, mayonnaise, mustard, roasted peppers and fresh mixed greens.

Other food offerings are crepes with strawberry and banana flavors and a Nutella spread, and an oatmeal bowl with milk, walnuts, honey and fruits. Bou Chaaya said breakfast sandwiches on croissants and bagels will likely be added to the food menu soon.

BiTsize Coffee Bar
Where:
1461 Hooksett Road, Unit A-1, Hooksett
Hours: Monday through Saturday, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (may be subject to change)
More info:
Find them on Facebook and Instagram @bitsize_coffee_bar or call 210-2089

Featured photo: BiTsize Coffee Bar. Photo by Matt Ingersoll.

Grape expectations

Black Bear Vineyard to host Harvest Weekends

It’s peak grape picking season in New Hampshire, and a local vineyard is celebrating by inviting you to come out and enjoy freshly crushed juice, live music, food trucks, games and more.

Black Bear Vineyard in Salisbury offers wine tastings and tours throughout the year. But during its two Harvest Weekends, on Saturdays, Sept. 26 and Oct. 3, and Sundays, Sept. 27 and Oct. 4, you’ll be able to watch the fruit getting destemmed and crushed before you taste samples of the juice.

“It’s the only time visitors can try the juice that makes all the wines that we offer,” Black Bear Vineyard chief marketing officer Nick Jarvis said. “These weekends will be prime time for picking the grapes, because they will be at the optimal sugar levels.”

Between noon and 6 p.m. on any of the four days, people can come to the vineyards, watch the grape-harvesting process and try the juice — no reservations are necessary, but masks are encouraged when out on the vineyard and required when entering the indoor facility.

With five grape varieties grown on site and about 18 acres of rolling hills, Black Bear is one of the state’s largest vineyards, with lots of room to socially distance outdoors, Jarvis said.

“We’ve had a lot of great responses over the years, but this is the first year we’ve taken the extra step to really try to grow the event,” he said. “We’re ready for more people to come, especially in these times, when we’re looking for anything that will get us outside.”

A few local food trucks are expected to set up at the vineyard during the Harvest Weekends, beginning at noon. Mama’s on the Run, brought to you by the owners of Mama McDonough’s Irish Pub in Hillsborough, will be there on Sept. 26 and on Oct. 3 and Oct. 4, according to Jarvis. The truck features a menu of American-style foods — some options even have their own Irish twist, like the Reuben burgers and the corned beef poutine. The Rochester-based Sausage Express food truck, with gourmet hot dog, sausage and sub options, will also be at the vineyard on Oct. 3.

Each live music act will perform at the vineyard from 2 to 5 p.m., Jarvis said, while games of cornhole will also be available. Singer-songwriter April Cushman will be there on Sept. 26, followed by Rory Scott on Sept. 27, Gabby Martin on Oct. 3 and Austin McCarthy on Oct. 4.

Jarvis said wine tasting tickets will also be available for sale at the vineyard for $12 per person, which usually include four to six different wines to sample, in addition to a tasting glass.

Harvest Weekends
When: Saturdays and Sundays, Sept. 26 and 27, and Oct. 3 and 4, noon to 6 p.m.
Where: Black Bear Vineyard, 289 New Road, Salisbury
Cost: Free admission and parking
Visit: blackbearvineyard.com
No reservations are required. Masks or face-coverings are required when in the indoor facility.

Drive-thru Greek fests
There won’t be a Glendi Greek food festival in the traditional sense this year, but St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral (650 Hanover St., Manchester) is returning to bring you two drive-through events; the first, a Gyro Day, is happening on Saturday, Sept. 26, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Attendees can drive up for their gyro bag with chips and water for $10 (cash only). Then on Saturday, Oct. 17, from 4 to 7 p.m., you can drive up for a lamb shank dinner for $20, which will include rice and green beans. Orders for that dinner must be placed by Oct. 11. Visit stgeorgeglendi.com.

More harvest happenings
For more grape harvesting fun, you can head to Fulchino Vineyard (187 Pine Hill Road, Hollis) for its fourth annual New Hampshire Grape Festival on Saturday, Oct. 3, beginning at 11 a.m.

The event will feature wine tastings at the vineyard and photo opportunities in a grape stomping barrel before concluding with a live performance from comedian Paul D’Angelo at 7 p.m.
Fulchino Vineyard owner and winemaker Al Fulchino said the event is in line with the conclusion of the harvesting season for its more than 20 varieties of grapes.
A similar event, the Hollis Grape Festival, was held earlier this month on the town common.
The vineyard will also soon be overseeing the make-up dates of its commemoration of National Drink Wine Weekend during the weekend of Oct. 24 and Oct. 25, after the event was rescheduled from earlier this year.
“We have five wineries participating and for a $20 ticket, people can go around and taste four wines at each location throughout the weekend,” said Fulchino, whose vineyard is one of the participants, in addition to Averill House Vineyard in Brookline, Moonlight Meadery in Londonderry, Apollo Vineyards in Derry and Winnipesaukee Winery in Wolfeboro.

Visits will be open to ticket holders from 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. each day. Tickets are available for purchase at fulchino-vineyard-inc.square.site and also include a commemorative tasting glass.

Featured Photo: Photo courtesy of Black Bear Vineyard.

The Weekly Dish 20/09/24

News from the local food scene

Oktoberfest celebrations: To Share Brewing Co. (720 Union St., Manchester) will host its Oktoberfeston Saturday, Sept. 26, from noon to 9 p.m., featuring a triple beer release in drafts and cans (of an altbier, a double IPA and a blueberry and raspberry sour), raffle tickets and T-shirts for sale, and food specials like pretzels, bratwursts with sauerkraut and German-style potato skins. Reservations and masks are required — for the duration of the event, there are 90-minute reservation blocks with 15 minutes between them dedicated to cleaning and sanitizing. Email [email protected] to make a reservation. And The Hills Restaurant at Hampshire Hills Athletic Club (50 Emerson Road, Milford) will offer an Oktoberfest specials menu from Thursday, Oct. 1, through Saturday, Oct. 3, featuring appetizers, like obatzda (seasoned beer and cheese spread with pretzel and radishes) and apfelmostsuppe (creamy apple cider soup); entrees, like wienerschnitzel (pan seared breaded veal), brathendl (half roasted chicken), schweinhaxen (crispy slow-cooked pork shank) and sauerbraten (wine and vinegar braised beef); and desserts, like apfelkuchle (apple ring fritters and vanilla ice cream), as well as a selection of Oktoberfest beers and specialty cocktails. Visit hampshirehills.com.

Canterbury farmers market to conclude: The final date of the Canterbury Community Farmers Market’s summer season is set for Wednesday, Sept. 30, from 4 to 6:30 p.m. in the parking lot of the Elkins Public Library (9 Center Road, Canterbury). Since early June the market has featured around 20 local vendors on average, selling fresh fruits and vegetables, baked goods, artisan cheeses, meats, personal care products and more. The indoor winter markets this year have been canceled, so the final market on Sept. 30 will also feature several specialty vendors to help you get ready for the holidays, like note and holiday cards, mittens from repurposed wool sweaters and fresh wreaths for preorder, plus soups from the Friends of the Elkins Library. Visit canterburyfarmersmarket.com.

Cafe One East now open in Warner: A new cafe offering specialty coffees, baked goods and other items is now open in Warner. Cafe One East opened Sept. 5 at 1 E. Main St., the former space of Schoodacs, which had closed its doors earlier this year. Although the shop is now under new ownership with a new name, Cafe One East features a menu similar to that of its predecessor, with brewed coffees and espresso drinks, fresh smoothies, doughnuts, breakfast sandwiches, and several rotating hot dishes for lunch, like soups, chilis and macaroni and cheese. Find them on Facebook @cafeoneeast.

Putting the garden to bed

Get started early to avoid the cold

This year I resolve to get my garden put to bed early so I am not wearing gloves and long johns as I cut back the daylilies on cold, wet fall days.

First on my list is the need to sow some grass seed. I have places where my lawn was killed when a torrential downpour dumped sand from my road onto the lawn. Fall is a better time to sow seed because the ground is warmer and it will germinate quickly. In the spring, seed can rot during cold, wet weather. I will spread some topsoil or compost to improve the soil, then mix it in with a short-tined rake. After spreading seed, I will cover it with a layer of straw. That will help to keep the soil and seeds from drying out, though I will water occasionally if it gets dry.

Chrysanthemums are for sale now at farm stands, and I purchased a few pots of them to brighten up the front yard. I treat them as annuals, even though some of them are perennial. But the growers cut back the plants as they grow, causing them to branch out and produce hundreds of blossoms on bigger plants. If I let them over-winter, the plants would have some flowers, but never so many as what the professionals produce. It’s worth it to me to buy a few each fall.

Mums in pots tend to dry out quickly, so I have been soaking mine in my birdbath. That way the pots suck up water, getting it down deep. I could actually plant my mums in the ground, but I like them in pots on the front steps or in my wooden wheelbarrow. They need water every few days.

This is also the time of year when I move shrubs. I recently moved a diervilla, one called Kodiak. It was given to me years ago, and it was crowded in between a crab apple tree and a red-veined enkianthus. I decided it needed more space to grow, and I wanted to expose a stone wall behind it. So I dug it up.

This shrub is about three feet tall and wide and had been in the ground more than five years. I used a shovel called a drain spade: a spade with a long, narrow blade. I pushed it into the ground at a 45-degree angle in four places around the bush. Each time I pushed the shovel handle down to lift the shrub slightly. Then, when I’d gone all around it, I got the spade under the middle of the plant, pushed down hard, and popped it right out. I tugged on the plant and pulled it loose, roots and all. Some were cut by my shovel, others not. I moved it to its new home, covered the roots and watered well. A week later it looks fine.

The vegetable garden is winding down, and as each crop is harvested, I weed the row and apply mulch as needed to keep wind-blown seeds from finding a home. My favorite mulch consists of chopped fall leaves: I run over leaves on the lawn with my lawnmower to chop them, and rake them onto a tarp, which I drag down to the vegetable garden. It’s too early for leaves, so I’m using straw for now.

When cleaning up the vegetable garden it’s important to keep diseased plants separate from healthy ones (which go on the compost pile). I generally have a location for noxious weeds and diseased plants and do not use that material after it breaks down, or not for many years.

I tend to get a little lackadaisical about the perennial flower gardens late in the season. Weeds and grasses have a way of showing up there, and by pulling them now, the work will be less in the spring. Cindy and I have done a pretty good job of mulching the flower gardens this year using a ground hemlock bark mulch, though some weeds push on through. This is a good time to get rid of those rascals.

I cut back some flowers in the fall but like to leave some tall perennials — birds enjoy their seeds, and some beneficial insects need places to lay their eggs, or to use as shelter. On the other hand, there is a lot to do in the spring, and cleaning up the flower beds now reduces the work later on. Cutting back perennials with a pair of pruning shears is tedious. I prefer to use a serrated harvest sickle that allows me to slice through a handful of stalks in one quick motion.

This is also a good time to divide perennials to make more plants. Peonies, for example, are best divided and moved in late September to mid-October. Dig up daylilies, phlox or asters now the way you would a shrub, and then use a small saw or root knife to divide it into two or more plants. Most plants like being divided, assuming you give them some compost and a little fertilizer

Featured Photo: Photo by Henry Homeyer.

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