Celebrating together

Fest features African-Caribbean and Latin communities

The We Are One Festival is something of a legacy for Sudi Lett, and like all legacies it comes at a cost.

“I’m excited to do it, “ he said. “It’s one of those things that I feel good about doing, but it is work and it takes a lot of time. We’ve been going at this since April. So I’m excited.”

The We Are One Festival got its start more than 20 years ago by Lett’s parents.

“My folks organized the first African Caribbean celebration back in 2001,” he said. “We initially started [the Festival] with this Haitian woman named Marcy Boucher. She was talking about that there wasn’t really anything for Caribbean people in terms of cuisine or entertainment or anything. And so they really went out of their way to kind of create this space for people in Manchester and in New Hampshire.”

Since then, the Festival has grown. Fifteen years ago, it joined with Manchester’s Latino Festival, making it the oldest Latino-and-African-centered cultural festival in New Hampshire, with the goal of reducing feelings of social isolation among Manchester’s Black and Spanish-speaking communities. A big part of that is the food.

“There’s a lot of overlap between African-Caribbean and Latin cuisine.” Lett said. “I think the common thread is that these cuisines, even though they overlap with each other, are really new food for this area of New England. A lot of the cultures here are not as familiar with things like goat meat and oxtail and even things like sweet plantains for that matter.”

Working with Manchester Caribbean restaurants, like La Fierra (521 Wilson St., 518-5644) and Don Quijote (362 Union St., 622-2246, donquijoteunion.com), Lett hopes to present new foods to some of the city’s residents, and give a taste of home to others.

“We have oxtail, African rice, [Caribbean] curry chicken and fried chicken,” he said. Other restaurants will serve chicharron — crispy, fried pork skin — stewed chicken, rice and beans, empanadas and pastelitos. “Every year so many people I see in the park, they always come out and say, ‘Hey, Sudi, we’re here for the food!’ I think that’s awesome.”

In addition to the food, We Are One will feature music, dancing and other expressions of Caribbean and Latin American culture. Master percussionist Theo Martley of the Akwaaba Ensemble (akwaabaensemble.com) will perform, as will the band Tuca del Norte.

After all these years, Lett is still excited about We Are One.

“The festival combines obviously African, as well as African American culture, music, food, as well as Latino and Latino American culture, music and food,” he said. “It’s a great opportunity. We’re hoping to get some really good weather because we go rain or shine. Some years, we’ve had unbelievably great weather. And I mean unbelievably great, like 71 to 75. But also weather, where it’s rained or it’s been 92 and it’s just so hot outside. It’s a great thing for me because it really just kind of shows a little bit about life, like the years come and go. Some years are better than others, some years are great.”

Lett says that regardless of the weather, the food will be spectacular.

”You can’t argue taste, man. You can’t argue taste.”

We Are One Festival
Saturday, Aug. 17, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Veterans Memorial Park, 723 Elm St., Manchester
Admission is free.
Visit manchesterproud.org/the-event/we-are-one-festival.

Time for Mahrajan

Lebanese food is on the menu for the annual fest at Our Lady of the Cedars

“Mahrajan” — pronounced “MAR-john” — is an Arabic word that carries meanings of “festival” or “celebration.” For more than 50 years, Our Lady of the Cedars Church in Manchester has been throwing a mahrajan for the community every summer to share Lebanese food and culture with its neighbors.

“The food is Lebanese,” the Rev. Thomas Steinmetz, the Church’s pastor, said. “The parish itself was founded by people from Lebanon. And now, we have a real mix of Lebanese people and everybody else here. The Lebanese [parishioners] have taught a lot of the other people how to do [this type of] cooking too.”

Lebanese cooking has many similarities to the foods from other Mediterranean countries. A Greek or Israeli visitor to the Mahrajan Festival would feel very much at home.

“We call it a Middle Eastern food festival,” said Nikki Bullock, one of the parishioners responsible for the food, “but the emphasis is really on Lebanese specialties. We do have the classics — the lamb kebab and the chicken kebabs and the grape leaves are a big favorite — but we also have some things that maybe you can’t get as easily in this state. So we have our lamb shawarma and we have freshly made falafel, which is my favorite part of the festival.”

Unlike many food festival coordinators, who are so busy that they don’t have an opportunity to actually eat any of the food, Bullock is happy to work right next to the falafel ladies. ”So there’s crunchy, fresh falafel balls all weekend, so that’s great,” she said. “There’s just lots of home food for people who grew up with it, but also, because there’s not really many places to get it around here, it’s definitely exciting for us to be able to share it.”

Almost no Middle Eastern party would consider itself a proper mahrajan without lamb.

“Well, of course, I think the lamb is always a big hit,” Steinmetz said, “and we have that in two forms. One is the [charcoal-grilled] lamb kebabs, which is traditional, and the other is lamb shawarma.” This is a cone of thinly sliced meat that is roasted on a slow-turning vertical spit. “We also have chicken kebabs and chicken shawarma. But along with that, it’s a lot of the typical Arabic, Middle Eastern, Lebanese fare. What comes to mind is the stuffed grape leaves, which are very popular.”

The stuffed grape leaves are a good example of the attention the cooks behind the Festival bring to the details of each dish.

“We try to make everything that we can ourselves,” Bullock said. “You know, the grape leaves? Those leaves are picked from our vines. The whole church goes and picks their grape leaves. Our vine is my great-grandmother’s grape vine, so it’s special. It’s really wonderful because it is sort of this family affair, whether we’re related by blood or not.”

Guests can look forward to other Lebanese specialties like hummus, tabbouleh and kibbeh, but for many of the regulars the highlight of the Festival is the desserts, particularly the baklawa. “We call it ‘bet-LAY-wah’ in Lebanese,” Bullock said, explaining that there will be several varieties of the pastry. “We have walnut, we have pistachio, and we have a chocolate-hazelnut version. And you can buy a mix of those, which is great. And the Lebanese baklawa is a little lighter than the Greek, because It has a simple syrup versus the honey.”

This year’s festival is bittersweet for Bullock. Her mother, Marylou Lazos, whom she lost recently, was the long-time co-chair of the Festival. “She was the heart of our kitchen,” said Bullock. “All the things I know, I learned from her; our food definitely started with her in her heart.”

The from-the-heart aspect is the whole point, said Steinmetz, and something that makes him proud. “We want this to be a good kind of family-oriented event for people. We get to enjoy having people here enjoying the event. That’s a pleasure for us as well.”

Mahrajan Middle Eastern Food Festival
Our Lady of the Cedars Melkite Church, 140 Mitchell St., Manchester
Friday, Aug. 16, from 5 to 10 p.m.; Saturday, Aug. 17, from noon to 10 p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 18, from noon to 5 p.m.
Admission is free. Visit bestfestnh.com.

The Weekly Dish 24/08/15

News from the local food scene

Nashua Burger Month: As reported in a July 25 Nashua Telegraph article, Nashua’s Department of Economic Development has designated August Nashua Burger Month. Nine participating restaurants have chosen a week during the month to feature a specialty burger. Customers who post a selfie online with one of the burgers and tag it with #NashuaBurgerMonth will be automatically entered to win a $50 gift card. Ten winners will be selected each week. The participating restaurants are Odd Fellows Brewery and O’Brien’s Sports Bar, Bistro603, Stella Blu, The Peddler’s Daughter, Fody’s Tavern, Rambling House, Riverwalk Bakery and Café, Martha’s Exchange, and Casey Magee’s.

Mocktails with romance authors: To celebrate the sixth annual Bookstore Romance Day, Gibson’s Bookstore (45 S. Main St., Concord, 224-0562, gibsonsbookstore.com) will hold a mocktail party with three popular romance authors on Saturday, Aug. 17 at 2 p.m. The Gibson’s website said, “Come meet some authors, mingle and chat, talk tropes, debate who is the best book boyfriend/girlfriend, and enjoy some delicious drinks from Gibson’s Cafe.” Jilly Gagnon, author of Love You, Mean It, Sarina Bowen, author of the True North series and the Brooklyn Hockey series, and Margaret Porter, author of A Change of Location and over a dozen historical romance novels, will be in attendance.

On The Job – Christian Macdonald

Owner of Macdaddy Guitars

Christian Macdonald, owner of Macdaddy Guitars in Weare, thinks of guitars as “beautiful three-dimensional sculptures.” His guitars can be found on his MacDaddy Guitars Facebook page as well as at select local dealers.

Explain your job and what it entails.

My job now is building guitars full-time, basically working in my home shop. I build acoustic-electric hollow-body designed guitars that I’ve designed. I use all solid woods, mostly from the area, locally sourced if I can.

How long have you had this job?

Well, that’s a long story but officially I started in 2003, working part-time at my business-slash-hobby at the time, and then it wasn’t until 2019 that I decided to leave the office world behind and just jump into this full-time.

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

I’ve always, since I was a young kid, dabbled with my brother’s guitar and banjo … I built my first guitar back in 1981 I think it was. A solid body, kind of like a Fender Strat kit, and I really loved it…. I wanted to get more adventurous and build a hollow-body guitar … Just sort of evolved from there and I just fell in love with the whole process, the making of them, and it kind of became an obsession.

What kind of education or training did you need?

I went to college and got a B.A. in communications and one in fine arts. I was trained as a two-dimensional artist, a painter … I had to really be self-taught, the guitar-making part of it. I never had formal training as a guitar-maker.

What is your typical at-work uniform or attire?

It depends on what time of year it is, but right now it’s a T-shirt and shorts. I like my Crocs with socks. I also wear my Macdaddy work apron to keep stuff off of my clothes and there’s a lot of things like earmuffs and dust masks and goggles on top of what I wear.

What is the most challenging thing about your work, and how do you deal with it?

I think for me the most challenging thing is to be a self-motivator and -promoter. I mean the most challenging aspect of making a product and selling it is the marketing.

What do you wish other people knew about your job?

I wish they knew how much work is actually entailed. It’s such a multi-step job … From cutting raw wood to putting all the pieces together and then doing all the finishing and the setting up.

What was your first job?

My first job was at a little Italian restaurant in Connecticut…. I was a dishwasher and a food prepper and I made $1.25 an hour.

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

I was at a conference for business and a person, I don’t think this is an actual quote, but I wrote it down, [said,] ‘When you find that passion that drives you, work it for all it’s worth knowing what you don’t want to do.’

Zachary Lewis

Five favorites
Favorite book: Night Fall by Nelson DeMille
Favorite movie: Definitely Jaws
Favorite music: Lately I really love Amos Lee.
Favorite food: All things cheesy. Cheese of any kind.
Favorite thing about NH: I guess, metaphorically speaking, I can breathe easier here in New Hampshire, it just always feels like home.

Featured photo: Christian Macdonald. Courtesy photo.

Kiddie Pool 24/08/15

Family fun for whenever

Fairs and fests

• Don’t miss Londonderry’s 125th annual Old Home Days, which started Wednesday, Aug. 14, and go through Saturday, Aug. 17. There are concerts, fireworks, a parade, a 5K road race, a baby contest and children’s games. See the article in last week’s Hippo for details or visit londonderrynh.gov.

• The 125th Gilmanton Old Home Day is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 17, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside the Smith Meeting House (Meeting House and Governor roads, Gilmanton). Previous events have included live entertainment, a puppet show, a silent auction, an antique auto parade and an art show. Visit gilmantonnh.org/organizations/gilmanton-old-home-day for details.

• The Sunflower Bloom Festival at fields in Concord will run daily until Sunday, Aug. 18, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays, according to sunfoxfarm.org. The festival features live music, food vendors and more. See the article on the festival from last week’s issue of the Hippo. Admission costs $10; kids 10 and under get in free; cut your own flowers for $2 per stem.

History & machines

Hillsborough’s History Alive event will be held Saturday, Aug. 17, and Sunday, Aug. 18, at Jones Road in Hillsborough. It will focus on historical reenactments of famous battles and daily village life from times past, and will include activities, crafts and musicians. Tickets are $10 per adult and $8 for seniors. The event is free for children 16 and under when accompanied by an adult. You can purchase a bracelet on the day of the event and it will cover both days. Cash only; credit cards are not accepted in person. Visit historyalivenh.org.

• The New Hampshire Farm Museum (1305 White Mountain Highway, Milton) is hosting its annual Truck and Tractor Day on Saturday, Aug. 17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Trucks, wagons, antique cars and tractors dating back to the mid 1900s will be on display, and the event will feature demonstrations on things like the two-man saw and the butter churn treadmill. Admission is $12 for adults, $8 for seniors 65 and older, $6 for children ages 4 to 17, and free for children under 4. A family pass is available for $30. Visit nhfarmmuseum.org.

• The Aviation Museum of New Hampshire (27 Navigator Road, Londonderry, 669-4820, aviationmuseumofnh.org) hosts Planefest! Saturday, Aug. 17, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with outdoor aviation-related activities and games, planes on display, pilots and other aviation-related professionals on hand to discuss their careers and, at 1 p.m., a cake to celebrate the Aug. 19, 1871, birthday of Orville Wright, according to a press release. The free outdoor activities are geared toward elementary school and middle school aged kids. The museum will be open (with regular admission prices) during the event.

The museum is also extending its hours as we enter the final week of summer vacation. In addition to its regular hours of Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays from 1 to 4 p.m., the museum will also be open Wednesday, Aug. 21, and Thursday, Aug. 22, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with the museum’s Elite Flight Simulator open from 1 to 4 p.m. on those days, according to a press release. The flight simulator is open first come, first served for ages 12 and up, the release said. Admission to the museum is free for children ages 5 and under, $5 for ages 6 to 12 and $10 for ages 13 and above, the release said.

Plays and movies

​• The Palace Youth Theatre Summer Camp presents The Wizard of Oz, Youth Edition on Friday, Aug. 16, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, Aug. 17, at 11 a.m. at the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org). The student actors are in grades 2 through 12. Tickets start at $12.

• Also at the Palace, catch the next few shows in the 2024 Bank of NH Children’s Summer Series. Disney’s Beauty and the Beast Jr. is on stage through Aug. 16, and Disney’s Little Mermaid Jr. runs Aug. 20 to Aug. 23. according to the theater’s website. Shows are Tuesday through Thursday at 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m., and Friday at 10 a.m. Tickets to each show cost $10 per person.

• Fathom Events has kid-friendly movies on its schedule (see fathomevents.com for local theaters). Coraline (PG, 2009) will be screening from Thursday, Aug. 15, through Thursday, Aug. 22, at select theaters, including Apple Cinemas in Hooksett and Merrimack; AMC Classic in Londonderry; Cinemark in Salem, and O’neil Cinemas in Epping.

Treasure Hunt 24/08/15

Dear Donna,

I got this flower ceiling light at a local consignment store. I have a question about whether it should be re-wired. Also can you give me an idea if I got a deal on it or not?

Thank you, Donna.

Phil

Dear Phil,

Your chandelier looks to be in good clean condition.

Let’s address the wiring first. I always say if there is any wear on the cord or where it makes an electrical contact, then definitively yes, it should be re-wired. Better safe than sorry, right? If it’s clean and still not hard but a pliable cord then maybe just leave it.

If your chandelier is an older one from the 1940s-1970s and in working order I would say the value is in the range of $250.

It could also be a reproduction of an older one. You could tell by the electrical cord, screws, paint or if there is any maker’s name on it.

So, Phil, depending on what you paid for it, I would say you got a little treasure. Nice piece. Thanks for sharing with us and I hope you get to use it with minimal or no repairs.

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