Sunny Sips

What to drink this summer

By John Fladd
jfladd@hippopress.com

Summer provides another season, another reason for making some new sipping choices. It’s easy to fall back on drinking habits and not explore new drinks that might be right up your alley.

Emma Stetson thinks you should think about trying some new wines. She is the owner of Wine on Main in Concord and holds WSET (Wine Spirits Education Trust) Level Three certification in wine and spirits. A good place to start exploring, she said, is with rosés.

“For me,” she said, “the first thing that comes to mind for summer wines is rosé. It’s such a seasonal drink. It originated kind of in the Mediterranean, especially in France for the summers and people who are in their boats and who are looking for something with fresh acidity and very light and dry and clean and classic to enjoy even like with lunch or in the afternoon in those warm areas. It’s something very seasonal, so usually the freshest batch of rosé — which is 2024 now — you start seeing those come out around April and then they start disappearing again about September. They say it’s rosé season when the boats go in the water and when they come out of the water it ends.” (To clarify: “boats” in this case are yachts, not fishing boats.)

“Some people think that rosés are sweet,” Stetson said. ”That’s a misconception that people come to us with. I feel like white zinfandel gave rosé a bad rep because it’s a pink, sticky, sweet drink. But most rosés are dry and light and elegant, more along the lines of a white wine.”

Stetson also suggested that wine adventurers keep an open mind and think about wine cocktails.

“My husband and I traveled to Portugal last summer, and the best summer drink that we came home with is the Porto Tonic. You think of port being like a fortified, robust offering that you might enjoy like in front of the fire or something in the wintertime. But in warmer months, if you go to Portugal, everybody drinks the Porto Tonic. You start with lots of ice, tonic water, an orange slice, and then a kind of a port floater. They usually use white port, but you can use anything. We really like it with tawny port. It’s kind of like a spritz, if you will, kind of like a play on the gin and tonic or the Aperol spritz, but with port.”

Emma Stetson’s summer wine recommendations

“Mont Gravet Rosé is made just outside of Provence, France. It’s totally delicious, very light, very easy drinking and clean,” Stetson said.

“Artigiano Rosé is a rosé of Montepulciano from Italy — Montepulciano being the grape. That one’s fun. It’s still dry and relatively light in the glass, but just a little bit more flavorful. There’s like a little bit more strawberry and watermelon [flavors] for you to sink your teeth into. It’s just drinking phenomenally right now.” (750 ml, $13.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets)

“Any aromatic dry white wine is great,” Stetson said. “I love vinho verde in the summertime. That is a little bit lighter in alcohol too. It’s from a region in northern Portugal. Vinho verde is the grape that the wine is named after, but it’s become synonymous with a style of wine. What they do is they stop fermentation before all of the sugar has transformed into alcohol. They’re not extremely sweet, but there is a little bit of natural sugar left behind. They are just very appealing and easy drinking in the afternoons.” (Bicudo Vinho Verde, 750 ml, is $13.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets.)

Emma Round owns Unwined Wine Bar in Milford. She’s also a fan of rosés in warm weather.

“As soon as I think about the summer,” Round said, “I think about ‘porch pounders.’ I think about rosés, I think easy-drinking, light, bright, breezy wines that we can enjoy with the amazing seafood we have here in New England. For me a ‘porch pounder’ is something that’s easy-drinking, with medium to high acidity, very smooth forward — something that is better drunk alone. You don’t need food for it. You don’t need it to be complex. You want it to be easy drinking.”

An additional advantage for that type of wine, Round said, is its affordability. “Something that we have to be very conscious of currently is economics,” she said. “We are in an economic downturn, so we want to drink affordably. We want to have the best-quality products for a lower price.”

Robert Waite, owner of Averill House Vineyard in Brookline, has an out-of-the-box summer wine suggestion: wine slushies, which he serves at his vineyard during the summer. Imagine a drink of ice granules and syrup from a convenience store, but made with good-quality wine.

“We make wine slushies with a red or a white wine every day,” Waite said. “And then the customer also has the ability to have the two blended and we call that a Zebra. So that’s always kind of fun and the flavors change from week to week, depending on which type of wine we’re using.” Averill House has been using South African wines in its white slushies recently. “They are really fun,” Waite said. “And then on the red side we have a couple that work really well. One of them is an aged blueberry wine that is aged with oak. We actually make it both ways, a sweet and a dry, but the dry is what we would use in the slushy. Because what happens is when you get the ice, any sweetness that’s in the wine itself is enhanced by the ice.”

The wine slushies go extremely well with food, Waite said, but obviously not anything that takes itself too seriously. “We usually have a couple of different things to serve with them,” he said, “”but one of the fun things that we offer is a tasting board that is wine chips. They’re actually potato chips that are created specifically to enhance the flavors of wine. That’s kind of fun because you’ve got a sweet component inside the wine and then you’ve got a seasoned and salty combination with the chips.”

Krista Fisher’s summer cocktail recommendations

You’ve got company, but it’s been raining all week: “If you’re staying inside, pop a bottle of prosecco. People love that,” Fisher said. “The sound of the pop of a cork is an instant party. Whether it’s raining out or not, it’s going to put people in that mood. A great cocktail to add to that to is a French 75. That’s my go-to for a cocktail. Bubbly, lemony, a little bit of gin. You could jazz it up any way you want.”

It’s been hot and dry and you’ve been gardening: “You want something like a John Daly, like what they drink on a golf course. It has fresh iced tea, fresh lemonade, vodka and fresh mint. It’s light, and when the glass sweats, it makes you thirsty,” Fisher said.

The kids have been driving you crazy all day and they’re finally out of your hair for an hour or so: “For this, you’d better make it bold and quick, right? So a nice whiskey sour. This is a good way to use brown liquors or bourbons in a more spring or summer way. Again, fresh lemon juice, a little bit of simple [syrup], and a cherry on top.”

Wine is clearly delicious and a solid summer drinking option, but when you picture sitting on a porch on a summer evening, it’s probably beer that comes to mind. Is there a difference between summer beers and ones you might drink when it’s cold outside?

Brian Link and Camaron Carter have put a lot of thought into that.

Link and Carter are the owners of the Sunstone Brewing Co. in Londonderry and, like many microbrewers, they brew different types of beer depending on the season. This summer they’ve been thinking a lot about pineapples.

“It’s one of those things where pineapples are great this time of year,” Link said. “They are super refreshing. We kind of always make a small batch of something to test it out.” One of these test batches was called Pineapple Express, which sold out almost immediately. “It flew,” Link said. “It only lasted for about a weekend.”

Traditionally, Link said, summer beers tend to be lighter — lighter in color, lighter in flavor, and lower in alcohol. At the moment, he said, Sunstone is looking at brewing something called a Saison beer. “It’s kind of light,” he said, “with an alcohol level of about five percent. It will have some fresh ginger, lavender and coriander in it. It’s going to be a nice, light, refreshing summer beer. Another thing we’re thinking of doing is a hefeweizen [a German-style beer made mostly with wheat instead of barley], which is a nice light beer. It’s got a lot of flavor, it’ll have a lot of citrus to it, it’ll be very bright and easy to drink.”

Carter said summer is a good time for brewers and beer drinkers to explore fruit beers.

“Our next sour is going to be mai tai-inspired,” he said. “Again, there’s a little bit of pineapple, but you’ve got some cherry in there too. It’s still very light and refreshing. I think our next limited release is going to be blueberry and açaí berry, with pomegranate. We’ll have a lot of small-batch and larger-batch blueberry mix-ups going through the season. Whether it’ll be a golden ale or a hefeweizen, it’ll be a good mix.”

Brian Dobson is the owner of Bert’s Beer & Wine in Manchester. He agrees that during the summer customers look for lighter beers. “I find that typically they want a lower ABV [alcohol by volume], crisper, and easy to drink,” he said. “So a non-light beer would be like a double dry hopped IPA, right, where it’s very thick in the body, and if you drink two of them really fast you’re going to feel very full. Whereas if you drink a wheat beer you can have a couple of those and you’re going to be fine. Typically when someone comes to me and they’re like, ‘I want something light and easy for hot weather’ or ‘I want [something to drink while] I sit on the patio’, that’s what they’re looking for.”

Krista Fisher is the manager and bar manager at Local Street Eats in Nashua. She designs a slate of summer cocktails based on ingredients that are especially good and available.

“I always usually say we live in such a great area,” Fisher said. “In New Hampshire, just having all the seasons means we have all different things available to us season to season. There are a couple of staple drinks that stay on the menu year-round,” Fisher said, “but usually we try to change up just about everything the same way the kitchen would. So I think our menu has about 12 or 13 drinks on it, and I’ll probably change at least nine of them. As we go into the summer, this is the menu we’ve most been looking forward to. The fact that we can pick our own strawberries, blueberries, flowers, everything like that, right in our neighborhood really inspires the drink menu pretty hard. Fresh is always the way to go.”

Brian Dobson’s New Hampshire summer beer recommendations

White Mountain White Ale by Concord Craft Brewing: “It’s light and easy to drink. It’s got a good orange flavor, and a little coriander,” Dobson said. $3.80 per 16-ounce can at Bert’s.

“I always recommend Schilling’s beers. They’re out of Littleton, New Hampshire. They do a lot of old-world style, Pilsners and lagers, either German or Czech style,” he said. “They have dark lagers, which are roasty and malty, but still light on the tongue and crisp and refreshing. They’re fantastic.” Schilling Especial Mexican-Style Lager is $4.10 per 16-ounce can at Bert’s.
“Woodstock [The Woodstock Inn Brewery] does a Lemon Blueberry Pale Ale, which is very blueberry-y and very lemony.” $3.20 per 16-ounce can at Bert’s.
“The Sea Dog Blue Paw is kind of a classic that you can have year round; it’s light and easy to drink.” $19.95 for a 12-pack of 12-ounce cans at Bert’s.

Fisher, too, sees summer as a time for lighter drinks.

“I try to always lighten up bourbons and stuff like that,” she said, “to make them all-season. But when you think of summer, you definitely think of gins and tequilas. I mean, margaritas are the drink of the summer, right? But also lower-ABV stuff because it’s hotter out and people are maybe outside a little bit more. So that’s where spritzes will always be popular, something with a lower level of alcohol, maybe like an aperitif. So, something like prosecco that has bubbles, that you can drink by the pool but then not feel like, ‘Oh man, I can’t do anything for the rest of the day.’”

Marissa Chick, the bar manager at The Birch on Elm in Manchester, considers a classic daiquiri one of the quintessential cocktails of summer — not, she hastened to add, the frozen blender drinks that call themselves daiquiris.

“A daiquiri is pretty simple and a classic,” she said. “The only ingredients that need to be in there for it to be a daiquiri are lime, sugar and rum. Rum and summer go together like hand in hand. It’s just nice and refreshing, at least if you’re doing it the original way. So it’s supposed to be fairly tart, not too sweet, but pretty dry as well. So like a dry, tart drink.”

“When I started bartending,” Chick said, “I learned the Hemingway daiquiri first; it was Hemingway’s drink of choice — super tart and way less sweet. Iit was white rum, lime, grapefruit and maraschino liqueur. It had double the amount of rum as usual.”

One of the reasons Chick likes daiquiris so much, she said, is their adaptability. She recently won a “Daq-Off” daiquiri-making competition with a bright pink Bubble Gum Daiquiri. “I had tried to make a bubble gum drink work for a while,” she said, “I tried out a couple different variations … Once I heard about the Daq-Off happening, I thought, well, that’s a fun drink and I feel like something sweet obviously goes in the daiquiri very well. So I researched bubble gum a little bit to see what kind of flavorings go into it naturally, like cherry, pineapple, lime and mint. I used natural pineapple juice, natural cranberry juice, cherry juice, and made everything separate. I used a dark rum and [the finished drink] was a nice bright pink color. I used a charred pineapple with some pineapple fronds as garnish. So it was very summery and fun.”

Emma Round’s summer wine recommendations

“I have an incredible rosé on my list right now called Prisma from Chile,” Round said. “It’s a rosé, it is a pinot noir base. It’s very fruity. We all think of red pinot noir, but this is a rosé pinot noir. It is very bold, but it’s very easy-drinking and it’s really nice by itself. I could happily drink a bottle of it by myself.” (750 ml, $13.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets)

To drink at a clam bake: “With clams and lobsters I want something with a little backbone but I also want some minerality to it. So my first reach would probably be a vinho verde or an alborinho,” Round said. According to winefolly.com, this is another Portuguese wine from the coastal area of the Iberian Peninsula, popular for its rich stone fruit flavors, a hint of salinity, and its zippy acidity. An example: Nortico Alvarinho, 750 ml, $18.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets.

To drink at a backyard barbecue with burgers and hot dogs: “So, with burgers and dogs, if you want to go red. I would probably pick up a pinotage from South Africa,” Round said. “In South Africa they do things called braais. A braai is their version of grilling, barbecuing. Pinotages are a good match for them. They have a richness, a meatiness to them. And they give off notes of berries, almost like a tea flavor with some orange peel in there.” Consider Longridge Pinotage, 750 ml, $26.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets.

To drink on a picnic: “I would love for someone on a picnic to pull out a crémant — a crémant de Loire, a crémant de Bourgogne, a crémant of some sort,” Round said. “It’s a sparkling wine. Usually they’re from different areas of France. They are made in the same style as Champagne, but they’re more affordable. They use different [grape] varietals. A creme de Loire usually contains like a chenin blanc, which gives it some more floral notes, and they’re just beautiful, well-made sparkling wines at a much lower price point than a Champagne, but similar quality. For me, they go beautifully with crackers and a charcuterie board. You can get a good crémant for 20 bucks.” An example: Maurice Bonnamy Cremant De Loire Brut, $18.99 at NH Liquor & Wine Outlets.

Featured photo: Blueberry Daiquiri by Marissa Chick. Courtesy photo.

This Week 25/05/29

Thursday, May 29

Author Marina Kirsch reads from her family memoir Flight of Remembrance and signs copies at the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire (27 Navigator Road, Londonderry, 669-4820, aviationmuseumofnh.org) tonight at 7 p.m. Admission costs $10; copies of the book will be available for $20 each during the event.

Thursday, May 29

Thursday is Poetry Night at Stark Brewing Co. (500 N. Commercial St, Manchester, 625-4444, starkbrewingcompany.com) from 7 to 10 p.m. Bring your own poems to share, or come for a good drink and listen. There is a $5 entry fee.

Friday, May 30

The Tupelo Music Hall (10 A St., Derry, 437-5100, tupelomusichall.com) hosts a double dose of Southern rock tonight beginning at 7 p.m. Supergroup Once an Outlaw and Allman Brothers tribute band The Peacheaters will bring authentic Southern rock to Derry for one evening. Tickets are $40.

Saturday, May 31

Celebrate Hillsborough, an event by History Alive, will take place today 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Hillsborough Center. The day will feature tours, music, activities, demonstrations, student art, workshops and more focused on Hillsborough history, according to historyalivenh.org.

Saturday, May 31

There’s a live simulcast of Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville from the Metropolitan Opera in New York at 1 p.m. today at the BNH Stage (16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com). Tickets are $32.20 for adults, $26 for Met members and Capitol Center members, and $19 for students.

Saturday, May 31

Experience intense mixed martial arts action at Combat Zone 88 tonight, beginning at 6 p.m. at the SNHU Arena (555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000, snhuarena.com). Tickets start at $60.

Sunday, June 1

The Northern New England Book Fair and the NHADA (NH Antiques Dealers Association) Members Antiques Show is being held today at the Everett Arena (15 Loudon Road, Concord) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dozens of vendors will exhibit their wares. Admission is $5. Visit nhada.org.

Tuesday, June 3

American roots legends Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ will take the stage at Chubb Theatre (Chubb Theatre at CCA, 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com) tonight at 7 p.m. as part of their Room on the Porch tour. Tickets start at $69.

Wednesday, June 4

Suzanne Vega performs a career-spanning show tonight at the Nashua Center for the Arts (201 Main St., Nashua, 800-657-8774, nashuacenterforthearts.com) at 7 p.m. Tickets start at $55.

Saturday, May 17

It’s plant sale Saturday! The Goffstown Community Garden Club sale starts at 8 a.m. and runs until noon (or when they sell out, whatever is first) at the Goffstown Town Commons. Find the Milford Garden Club from 8:30 a.m. to noon at the Community House Lawn, at the corner of Union and Elm streets. The Nashua Garden Club will hold its annual plant sale from 9 a.m. to noon at the Nashua Historical Society, 5 Abbot St. The Bedford Garden Club will hold its sale at Joppa Hill Farm (174 Joppa Hill Road in Bedford) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Quality of Life 25/05/29

Concord has the best water

According to a tasting panel of fourth- and fifth-graders, Concord’s municipal water is the best-tasting. As reported by the Concord Monitor in a May 13 online article, this year’s New Hampshire Drinking Water Festival (nhwaterfestival.org), hosted by the Department of Environmental Services, brought “professionals from around the state to show fourth and fifth graders how water treatment — and contamination — works.” The yearly event includes a water-themed science fair and a poetry contest. The Water Festival itself features classes, demonstrations and a blind taste-test of “five tap waters from five New Hampshire municipalities: Concord, Hooksett, Manchester, Plymouth and Rochester,” according to the Monitor story.

QOL score: +1

Comment: According to the Monitor story, this is Concord’s sixth victory in the past seven years.

That’s a lot of Tagalongs

Some Loudon Girl Scouts have put their cookie money to good use in traveling to New Mexico. According to a May 15 press release, the seven girls from Loudon Girl Scout Troop 60180 “planned the trip themselves with help from their leaders and funded it from the proceeds of their Girl Scout Cookie sales. The troop voted on where to go, where to stay, eating, packing, and picking out a car.” The press release quoted Girl Scout Dalia, who said, “The trip was completely worth the cold, long cookie booths!”

QOL score: +1

Comment: During the trip in March, the Scouts visited White Sands National Park and Carlsbad Caverns. They rode horseback and met with “female college students that were volunteering at the caverns to clean lint that builds up from visitors.”

All girls. All named Willow.

According to a May 17 online story by NHPR, retired Forest Service ecologist Scott Bailey has tracked down something elusive to the point of near non-existence: male specimens of a rare New Hampshire tree. “Specifically,” the NHPR story read, “Bailey has been inventorying satiny willow trees, also known as Salix pellita. They’re more shrub than tree, native to northern parts of the United States, and shiny.” Like all trees, the satiny willows need blossoms on female trees to be fertilized by pollen from male trees. But nobody had been able to identify any male satiny willows since it was discovered until Bailey finally identified two males this spring.

QOL score: +1

Comment: Male silky willows are incredibly difficult to find, as it turns out, because they produce blossoms for an incredibly short time, often a matter of hours, before dropping them, the story said.

QOL score last week: 62

Net change: +3

QOL this week: 65

What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire?

Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

The week that was

The Big Story – The Red Sox Stumble Into June: To say they have not lived up to expectations is an understatement. Especially given that their major off-season acquisitions Alex Bregman and Garrett Crochet are living up to what’s been expected of them.

The good news is that with the Orioles having already fired their manager the division overall is a mess outside of the Yankees. So despite being under .500 they enter Memorial Day weekend within striking distance of the Yanks at 4.5 games and just a couple out of the wild card race. If they can shake off the malaise there’s ample time to get in the race over the next four months.

Sports 101: Seven NBA coaches have 100+ career playoff wins. How many can you name?

News Item – Top 4 Reasons For Red Sox’ Dismal Start: (1) Abysmal work of their awful bullpen (outside of closer Aroldis Chapman) who in a two-week span in May blew six ninth-inning or extra-inning leads and lost all six times. (2) Starter Tanner Houck and his 8.04 ERA as of last week thanks to delivering the two worst starts in Red Sox history. (3) The ongoing travails of shortstop Trevor Story that have people thinking he may be headed for being DFA’d despite being owed a boatload of money over the next two years. (4) And of course the major distraction caused by the brass’s cowardly response to Raphael Devers’ refusal to move over to play first base after Triston Casas went down for the season. He’s hitting now but they’re still looking for a first baseman and the perfect solution for them and him is already on the team.

News Item – Alex Cora and Pitching: When is the spotlight going to fall on the Red Sox manager for being a typical stat geek handler of the pitching staff who, despite having a bullpen full of flame throwers, regularly yanks starters after five innings or less to let the bullpen lose the game? Most egregious was last week vs. the Mets when he yanked ace Garrett Crochet in a 1-1 game after 5.1 innings and 85 pitches. Then, big surprise, they immediately put up three runs vs. Liam Hendriks, leading to a 5-1 loss. Given the state of affairs, wouldn’t it be better to let the starters go deeper in games to give the pen only two innings to blow it until pen reinforcements come?

News Item – Tush Push Lives: The vote to ban the Eagles’ signature play failed last week. I’m not for it or against it, but I do know this: The Eagles were for it because they’re great at it. Knowing how hypocritical and self-serving most are (outside of the Rooney family), if Philly’s rival in NY were great at it and they weren’t, they’d be against it. Push or no push, the real reason they’re so good in short range is because they have a great offensive line. So they’d have still been the best after any ban.

The Numbers:

3 – managers fired before the second month of the baseball season concluded (Pittsburgh, Colorado and Baltimore).

58 – after their elimination by Florida, years since the Toronto Maple Leafs last won the Stanley Cup in 1967.

430,000 – dollars Anthony Edwards has paid the NBA in fines so far this season after he got hit for $50k for dropping an f-bomb in his post-game press conference after the T-Wolves Game 1 loss to Oak City.

.… Of the Week Awards

And Another Thing – Aaron Judge: Aaron Judge’s monster start over the season’s first two months has him on a 64-homer pace. If it continues it will tie him with Babe Ruth and the PED twosome of Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwire for most 50-homer seasons with four. That is Hall of Fame material.

Sports 101 Answer: The NBA coaches with at least 100 playoff wins are Phil Jackson, Pat Riley, Gregg Popovich, Erik Spoelstra, Doc Rivers, Steve Kerr and Larry Brown.

Final Thought – Cedric Maxwell: Max is right that he doesn’t get enough credit for his contributions to the Celtics. And it’s a joke how the Bill Simmons self-indulgent, fanboy HBO Celtics series treated him. First by not giving him props for saving the team when he was MVP in the 1981 Finals, a series where Houston’s Robert Reid handcuffed Larry Bird into shooting a combined 11-37 while scoring just 8, 8 and 12 points in Games 3, 4 and 5 when Max went for 19, 24 and 28. And while Kevin McHale had the higher ceiling at their Celtics peaks, Max was far more important to the two championship teams they played on together. The Celtics-loving Simmons knows that because he saw it all happen and should have given him his due. Instead Max joins Dave Cowens, Bob Cousy and John Havlicek as guys whose Celtic greatness is sadly being lost to time and memory.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 25/05/29

Health care research

In a May 22 press release, New Hampshire Attorney General John M. Formella announced a $1.6 million grant to the University of New Hampshire for a research center to inform the public on the “impact of consolidation to the New Hampshire health care market. The center will examine hospital, physician and private insurance market consolidation. Using data-driven methodologies, the research will compare New Hampshire’s market trends with both nearby states and broader national patterns,” the release said. See doj.nh.gov/health-care-consumer-protection-advisory-commission.

Birthday pic

To celebrate Bedford’s 275th birthday, artist Ann Trainor Domingue painted “Village of Bedford, NH- Established 1750,” a work featuring notable town structures including Joppa Hill Farm, the Presbyterian Church, the Bedford Public Library, the Bedford Village Inn, the Town Hall and others, according to a press release. The work was unveiled last week at Sullivan Framing and Fine Art Gallery (15 N. Amherst Road in Bedford; sullivanframing.com) which will be selling commemorative prints to benefit “Bedford Historical Society and their completion of the Stevens-Buswell Community Center,” the release said. The prints cost $135 unframed, $250 framed, and are signed by the artist, according to the website.

Waste line

Nashua Regional Planning Commission is holding a Household Hazardous Waste Collection Day on Thursday, June 5, from 3 to 7 p.m. at the Nashua Park and Ride, 25 Crown St. in Nashua, accepting up to 10 gallons or 20 pounds for $20 per vehicle, cash or check, according to a press release. The collection is open to residents of Amherst, Brookline, Hollis, Hudson, Litchfield, Merrimack, Milford, Mount Vernon, Nashua, Pelham and Windham, the release said. No latex or acrylic paint, electronics or medicines; see nashuapc.org/hhw or call 417-6570 for a list of accepted items.

Full-time vet

Salem Animal Rescue League (4 SARL Drive in Salem; sarlnh.org) has hired a full-time staff veterinarian, Dr. Jordan Gagne, according to a press release. “With a steadily increasing number of intakes and medical cases, having a full-time veterinarian on-site will allow for faster diagnostics, improved treatment plans, and enhanced preventive care for the animals under the rescue’s care. It also will allow for an increase in community clinics for the underserved in our community,” the release said.

The Ted Herbert Music School will hold its Jazz Showcase on Sunday, June 8, at 3 p.m. at the Ted Herbert Music School and Majestic Studio Theatre (880 Page St. in Manchester), according to a press release. The event will feature performances by the 2025 Ted Herbert Community Big Band and the school’s students and instructors, the release said. Tickets cost $15; see majestictheatre.net.

The Derry Public Library (64 E. Broadway in Derry; derrypl.org) will host a “Dartmouth CARES — Heart Health Screening” event on Thursday, June 12, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. including free screenings of blood pressure, cholesterol and blood glucose, according to an email. No registration is required.

The Nashua Chamber Orchestra will present a performance of Beethoven’s Fifth for its season finale, Saturday, May 31, at 7:30 p.m. at Nashua Community College (Judd Gregg Hall, 505 Amherst St. in Nashua) and Sunday, June 1, at 3 p.m. at the Milford Town Hall on the Milford Oval, according to a press release. See nco-music.org for tickets, which cost $20 for adults and $15 for seniors, military and students ages 18 and over; kids under 18 get in for free.

YMCA of Greater Nashua will offer a free Water Safety Day event on Sunday, June 1, at the Merrimack YMCA (6 Henry Clay Drive in Merrimack), according to a press release. The event will include free “safety around water” swim lessons for children, drowning prevention giveaways, water watcher tag giveaways, activities and family swim time, the release said. Register for the free event at nmymca.org/water-safety-month.

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