Master chefs and culinary artists are inspired by their gardens, farms, greenmarkets, & artisanal food makers. Author Leeann Lavin has written a book about the nexus of garden art and culinary art. The blog chronicles the process of producing the first-in-a-series-book: The Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown Cookbook & explores the exciting, burgeoning farm to table movement, food, and local, seasonal, delicious ingredients.
The Hamptons & Long Island
Homegrown Cookbook Hits Bookstores
Celebrate Eat Drink Local New York with local chefs, farmers and food
Following its debut as the publisher’s most successful
pre-order, sold through the online booksellers Amazon, Barns & Noble and
Voyagurpress.com, the long-anticipated The Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown
Cookbook is now available at bookstores.
The Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown Cookbook celebrates
the distinctive cuisine of a homegrown Hamptons lifestyle with profiles on the
region’s best pasture–to-plate and fin-to-fork chefs who are dedicated to the
land, to using locally grown, seasonal ingredients to produce delicious
homegrown menus that boast unparalleled, delicious flavor and taste.
From the honey farmer to oyster farmer to veggie, duck and
mushroom grower, the Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown Cookbook also brims
with food stories about the artisanal food producers who inspire the 27-featured
homegrown chefs.
More than 100 tempting recipes and stunning photographs of
the iconic dishes, authentic and sustainable ingredients, and the majestic land
and seascapes that are the romantic hallmarks of the area’s cuisine-obsessed
culture, the book is equal parts foodie
narrative, gardening photo spread, travelogue, entertaining, and easy and
delicious cookbook guide.
For more information on arranging for an interview with the
author, chef or grower, or to secure a manuscript for book review please
contact: foodanddrinkny@gmail.com
or
MEDIA
CONTACT – BOOK REQUESTS, EXCERPT PERMISSIONS, INTERVIEW SCHEDULING: Dalyn A. Miller, 617-504-6869 / DMiller@DalynMillerPR.com
The
fourth annual Eat, Drink,
Local New York FoodFest or Food-A-Pallooza, coordinated by the hyper local
Edible portfolio of food-focused magazines is in full bloom: from local
greenmarkets to restaurants to wineries, brewers, and distillers.
Locavores
and foodies can eat in or dine out.Check
out their web page for highlighted events, especially tomorrow’s GreenMarket
GrowNYCTaste of Greenmarket
A
visit to the website is practically a virtual vacation, enchanting and seducing
the viewer away with spa-like music and beach scenery.
Vodka
should be made from potatoes, not grain, in this Examiner’s lofty opinion.
With a
daily martini de rigueur at cocktail time, this Food & Drink columnist has
earned her stripes.
There
is the ongoing debate about gin martini vs. vodka martini with gin always
fretting and twitching that those juniper berries earned its crown as the only
true martini spirit. As a jazz-age
impresario might have refined a famous song:
“You say pohtAto; and I say
potato… let’s call the whole thing off”
Fact is,
vodka is the number one, most favorite spirit in the world.
So gin
enthusiasts can cry in their cup.
Tonight,
this Examiner attended a Spirits seminar at the New School, where three authors
spoke about “how rum, gin and vodka have changed history.”
As
Patricia Herlihy, professor of History Emeritus at Brown University writes in
the introduction to her book, Vodka A Global
History”There cannot be too much vodka, there can only be not enough vodka.” Russian saying.”
Words
to live by.But forget those snooty
imports.
What
better locale than the verdant, picture-postcard farmland of the North Fork of
Long Island, blessed with centuries-old potato farms and pristine waterways to
produce an award winning artisanal vodka?
Besides,
Vodka Herlihy cites LiV as one of the good guys – the best!
In
fact, long heralded for it’s potatoes, the Island still grows around 40,000 to
50,000 pounds of potatoes per acre, where they used to grow more than 250,000
pounds per acre, according to Richard Stabile, founder and owner of Long Island
Spirits and the genius behind the first distillery on Long Island since the
1880’s.
What
took so long?
Long Island’s
LiV distillery, featured in the Vodka Global History, uses about 2 million pounds
of potatoes a year -- a very small percentage of Long Island’s bounty,
according to Stabile. “I am very much into sustainability,” he added.
Stabile
says he primarily works with three potato farmers: Ray Kioski,
Martin
Sidor (how much do we love their local Long Island potato chips?!), and Zwalinki.
All
the Long Island growers Stabile works with grow Long Island white Russet and
Maxi Russet potatoes.
“These
local potatoes are sweet, with more skin to fruit, given their 2-inch diameter,”
explained Stable.“There is an inherent
buttery feel or palate, that conjures a vanilla taste,” he added.
He
recalled that it took about nine months to taste-test the various distillations
before he arrived at that happy, eureka moment and to the vodka blend Stable
liked.
He
tried yellow and fingerling potatoes but found the Russetts were best.
LiV
shipped their first batch of artisanal vodka in June of 2008.
Today,
they ship more than 5,000 cases a year.
The
bottles are a clean look with a blue label.Stabile says that imagery suggests the depth of the ocean. “We’re
surrounded by water and we wanted to reflect that element of nature.”
“My
heart and passion is in wine and spirits,” Stabile said.He went on to describe how he was always a
fan of potato vodka.“I wanted to make
what I like”
Another
overlooked element to vodka, Stabile points out, is that all the spirits are
Gluten Free.
So
while it might seem a bit confounded to discuss spirits and health in the same
context, it’s really not.Truth be told,
in the early days of spirits, it was all about the medicinal properties.
To
your health and all that….
(At
the lecture this Examiner also learned that the term “quack” the term for a not
so great doctor, came from the time when “doctors” wore long beak-like
appendages on their nose filled with juniper berries/aka gin and they looked
like ducks.)
LiV’s Stabile
learned to make handmade or homemade wine growing up in the Red Hook area of
Brooklyn. Later, his family moved to Smithtown, Long Island.
Layering
on his childhood homegrown experience, Stabile was further enamored and infused
with a spirits élan, given his career as a semiconductor sales and marketing
executive who spent a considerable amount of time around Silicon Valley in the
wine country of Santa Barbara.
Stabile
described his international travel too but he saw he kept coming back to
wineries and distilleries.
Another
aha moment and smart business vision was when Stabile felt the year-round
opportunity of distilling vs. the seasonal wine production appealed to him.
“Plus,
I could see the results faster, “ noted this former tech executive turned distiller.Old habits die hard.
After
the World Trade Center attacks, Stabile moved back home to Long Island to raise
his family.
Strategically
and methodically, Stabile drew up a business plan.
He
attended wine and spirits Cornell workshops at their education center in New
York City, learning the distillation craft there and at other hands-on
education classes and seminars.
Stabile
found his dream 80-acre location on the Peconic Bay, East End of Long Island in
2005.
“It
took about three years to get the premiere vodka distillery and
tasting/sampling room ready for guests and commerce.
Stable
detailed that there are four elements to vodka production, highlighting the raw
materials or ingredients.
And it
can’t get much better than local potatoes or water or strawberries from SEPS
Farms in East Marion.
LiV
Vodka Signature Cocktail...
LONG
ISLAND STRAWBERRY LEMONADE
1 1/2
oz LiV Vodka
3 oz
Organic Lemonade
1/2 oz
Strawberry Sorbetta
Preparation:
Assemble all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice
cubes.
Shake well and pour into a martini glass. Garnish with a Strawberry
or Lemon
Wedge.
LiV is a featured spirit in most of this author's just published book: The Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown Cookbook
So many of the stars in the culinary constellation will be out, shining in support of chef Gerry Hayden.
It is unfathomable that the disease ALS, more commonly known
as Lou Gehrig’s disease, has claimed dominion within this spirited, talented,
food thought-leader and master chef.
Hayden is co-owner of the astonishing North Fork Table &
Inn, www.northforktableandinn.com)
with his wife Claudia Fleming, pastry chef and author, along with their partners,
Mike Mraz and his wife, Mary.
Chef Tom Colicchio, a former boss from their days at Gramercy
Tavern, and now a part-time North Fork resident, is hosting a culinary
star-studded benefit on Sunday, June 24th at Colicchio & Sons
restaurant to raise monies for chef Gerry’s newly formed organization,
“Hayden’s Heroes” that is “dedicated to raising money to assist Gerry and
Claudia with the overwhelming medical expenses that come with having ALS and to
channel proceeds to finding a cure for this life ending disease.” http://www.giveforward.com/haydensheroes#
Here is a video of Chef Gerry telling his Hayden's Heroes story:
The culinary community is widely recognized as one that
supports their communities in the food chain – from the farmers to children’s
nutrition and school lunch programs to greenmarket youth education – - to
supporting each other. With food as
their weapon, they wield their powerful alchemy to offer gastronomy-as-reward
for a good and worthy cause, with love being the most powerful ingredient.
Rallying around Hayden’s Heroes to deliver the mortal knock
out are chefs David Burke, Waylie Dufresne, Jonathan Waxman, Marco Canoro,
Bobby Flay, Charlie Palmer, Alfred Portale, Sherry Yard, Mark Ladner, Michael
Mina and other celebrity chefs.
Everyone else can lend a punch or two via the online
donation webpage. The outpouring has, so
far, placed the purse near the goal. If
foodies lend their support, that will easily be surpassed.
Hayden is a two-time James Beard Award nominee for Best Chef
Northeast.
The book features the best
locavore Long Island chefs and the growers who most inspire them and infuse
their cooking with fresh, delicious, homegrown flavor.
In addition to a cash
donation, this Examiner, author and fan of chef Gerry, his work, and The North
Fork Table & Inn, will donate 10% of the sale every Homegrown book purchased to
Hayden’s Heroes, and provide Free shipping.
Please email me at foodanddrinkny@gmail.com
Here is an excerpt from chef Hayden’s profile from the Homegrown
book:
A lot has been written
about Chef Claudia Fleming and Chef Gerry Hayden, the husband and wife culinary
couple co-owners of the North Fork Table & Inn.
She’s a 2000 Pastry
Chef James Beard Award winner and the best-selling author of her cookbook, “The
Last Course, The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern.” He’s worked alongside some of
the best chefs in American (she has too) including Charlie Palmer, David Burke,
Michael Mina, picking up awards too including Esquire Magazines for Best
Restaurant. Mainly there is the all-star
resume of their outstanding credentials that could make a Broadway actor’s
listing in Playbill green with envy at their impressive accomplishments. Followed by how they left the bright lights
of New York City behind to open their North Fork Table & Inn, nestled among
the vineyards and farms of Southold.
But the experts got it
all wrong.
They didn’t “leave”
anything behind. That was all just the
first act. You could even say a
rehearsal.
Combined, their
groundbreaking contributions to the culinary world, not to mention to their
home base on Long Island casts a long shadow.
These pioneers don’t
know when to leave well enough alone.
It’s no coincidence they find themselves on the leading edge of each
successive wave of the American gastronomic revolution.
Their insatiable
curiosity, respect for the people who work to provide them with the best
ingredients and the compelling desire to build a better local infrastructure of
quality, sustainable relationships to build better community are the reasons
why. And their relentless innovation.
And it’s their cooking. Their
creative culinary art renders the just picked and just caught simply sublime.
Separately they were
both at the ramparts of the second stage of a golden age that swept major
restaurants as the American culinary revolution took hold in New York.
Chef Gerry was working
at the epicenter, The River Café, with executive chef Charlie Palmer, Larry
Forgione who left River Café to open up An American Place, Jonathan Waxmen had
returned from Chez Panisse to open Jams, and Anne Rozenweig was at
Arcadia. 1986 America really coming on
scene
What inspires such
driven-to-despair-devotion?
Claudia hugs the
seasons, first and foremost, to parse what’s ripe and ready.
When she worked with
Tom Colicchio at Gramercy Tavern he always told her, “If it grows together, it
goes together. “ She agrees. “You are pretty much guaranteed it will go
together on the plate if it grows together in the garden. It’s a creed I embrace. It’s how I think about food,” she adds.
She selects a
particular fruit that belongs to that season. And takes it from there. She may
do a panicotta with rhubarb, move to blueberries, blackberries and then
peaches. She can dial it up depending on the harvest cycle.
Using local
ingredients is in fact easier, she claims….
…When asked if she and
Chef Gerry coordinate or balance menu items, she demurs and thinks for a
minute. They don’t plan it, but given
their taste and style and devotion to the seasonal menu, the desserts and
entrees are on the same page. And linked quite romantically, no doubt.
She describes
themselves as pioneers here.
She admits it may not
be Napa or Sonoma. Yet. But she’s
convinced someday it will be a food mecca.
The area has already
become a magnet for innovators like she and Gerry who want the very best
quality ingredients steps away from their door.
They couple developed
their growers, saying that it wasn’t easy. Growers or the fishermen were not
used to providing product on regular basis. There are no business terms. They
wanted cash. At the same time, it’s difficult to get a bill. It’s a very
complex arrangement, she sighs. But
clearly worth the effort.
The emerging and
reinvigorated local community is passionate and driven to establish an infrastructure
that will yield to a middle ground they create – looking back to a quality,
slower way of life to truly enjoy the unmatched flavors of fresh, local foods,
with the reality of providing that food given government regulations,
distribution and costs and the scrutiny of unforgiving master chefs. “We are all at the beginning together.” They
have allowed passion and experience to guide them. “There is a certain, lovely
camaraderie here,” she says. “We are very proud of the people that grow for us.
It’s a great way to live.” It is a food and nature lover’s paradise. The vineyards and B&B’s and the
restaurants are a food destination unmatched on the east coast...
Chef Gerry is an impatient chef.
He wants the best of everything.
He’s uncompromising.
It can’t come together soon enough. Not for the community of farmers or
vintners.
Not when he is seeking to establish an artisanal hog grower nearby.
Nevertheless, the hands on the clock hold on to each other, poised, as
he determinedly cooks and coaxes the food he adores onto the plate.
When Chef Gerry is creating his culinary masterpieces, there is nothing
else.
For a chef this focused, is there any doubt that he always knew he
wanted to be a chef?
In fact there was never anything else.
He is the youngest of seven children in a family of much older
siblings. His mother always worked – at
the telephone company, in department stores.
Plus the family had a vegetable garden she tended.
Gerry said he’d give her a hand in the garden where they grew zucchini,
tomatoes, herbs and eggplants. He also helped her with the cooking, especially
on the holidays.
His parents came from the same ethnic Brooklyn neighborhood of
Bayridge. His mother learned to cook
from her Italian neighbors; Good Housekeeping magazines, tearing out recipes;
and old cookbooks.
She was always preparing something, he remembered. She prepared food for the next day. After dinner.
Don’t get him started about people saying they don’t have time to cook
at home!
His family moved to what was then “the better life” in the suburbs of
Long Island the year before Gerry was born, moving to Stony Brook where he was
raised. One of his favorite memories of the open farm area then was that his
family frequented the local farm stands in Rocky Point and Wading River, known
for their strawberries, peaches, corn, apples, pears and melons. Later he and his friends worked at the farm,
harvesting.
His first restaurant job was in junior high school as a dishwasher.
That’s all it took. Young Gerry
wholeheartedly loved the kitchen environment and by the age of 15 he was
already cooking.
His first real restaurant job on the line at the family-owned Country
House in Stony Brook left a lifelong impression.
He remembers the father had been the maitre’d at the legendary Stork
Club in Manhattan. All his sons had been
cooks there, too.
Eventually, the father moved the entire family to Long Island to work
in their new family-owned restaurant.
Gerry remembers they had great cars and always had a lot of money in
their pockets.
The restaurant in the 70’s and early 80’s was a fun place to be. He
says he was fascinated; always learning.
Specifically, he was taught how to pound out a leg of veal, make veal
Oscar with béarnaise sauce, and how to make hollandaise sauce.
He also remembers working hard. Very hard.
Mainly his memories of The Country House were that it was a
sophisticated restaurant with a New York City polish.
He laughed when he realized that’s kind of what he’s doing now.
“I worked in New York City for 25 years and now I’m in Southold
bringing a bit of that sophisticated New York dining experience to the North
Fork….”
Gerry graduated from the Culinary Institute in Hyde Park, New York,
successfully completing the school’s 21-month program.
Significantly, there were two people there who played defining roles in
his developing career.
Chef Leon Dennon, a Belgian instructor, was responsible for helping
Gerry to secure his career-making externship with Chef Charlie Palmer at the
famous River Café in Brooklyn.
Ultimately, it was Gerry’s father, a New York City fireman in marine
company #1 who, as part of his unit patrolled the riverways of the city from
the World Trade Center on the Hudson, up past the tennis bracelet of bridges
that span the East River. His father is
the one who suggested Brian investigate two restaurant prospects to consider
for his externship: The swanky Sign of the Dove, but especially the River Café.
Gerry recalled how the restaurant impressed his father and fellow
firefighters as they passed the gleaming restaurant located under the Brooklyn
Bridge; perfectly positioned to take advantage of the unstaged sorcery and
romantic backdrop of the world’s most glittering skyline just across the
river.
In turn Gerry told Chef Leon about his wish to work at The River Cafe.
As it turned out, Chef Leon had been a benefactor to Chef Charlie and so he was
happy to make the call on Gerry’s behalf.
According to Chef Gerry, the other positive role model happened as a
result of a lucky coincidence that landed French Chef Roland Henin as
instructor when the regular CIA teacher was taken ill.
For seven days Chef Roland taught an intensive class on how to make
consommé, terrine and sauces. Gerry recalls Chef Roland was at turns brilliant,
strict, great. He says, “It was a
mind-blowing experience.” There was
something about Chef Roland’s comportment and depth of knowledge that other
chefs didn’t have. Chef Gerry says there
are some things you can’t really appreciate until afterwards, after your own
experiences.
He imbued Gerry with the pride of the culinary profession that has
stayed with him all through his career.
Only years after graduation did Gerry discover that Chef Roland was
very instrumental in teaching Chef Thomas Keller; and Keller acknowledges so in
his first cookbook.
After graduation Gerry was asked by executive chef Charlie Palmer to
return to work full time at The River Café.
Working for Chef Charlie Palmer, it seemed Gerry’s eyes were seeing
food for the first time. There were
miniature vegetables, fresh morels from the Pacific Northwest, ramps, and
fiddlehead ferns.
The fact that Chef Charlie had grown up on a farm fueled his adherence
to a seasonally based menu.
In a restaurant at that time, it was all pretty new, says Gerry. Likewise the darling of purveyors,
D’Artagnan, was new then too. The
company was new in the United States, but in fact stemmed from a well-respected
heritage of French food purveying, provided the chefs with freshly killed game
birds and organic foie gras. Up until
then, most things that passed as food had been pre-packaged, Gerry notes. “This was big news.”
“No one was going to farms then,” Chef Gerry is quick to add. “There
was always the broker between the grower and the restaurant.”
Yes, there were some New York state farms starting to ship greens.
There were tadpole-sized, fill-in trips to the fish market on Fulton
Street. And some also infrequent visits
to what was then a real meat packing district over on the west side of
Manhattan that is now home to designers and boutiques: both fashion and hotel.
Overwhelmingly, though, the only way business was conducted was over
the telephone. The one with bologna-curl
umbilical cord tethered to the desk or mounted on the wall.
There was no relationship with the growers, no contact with the
fisherman or dairyman or herders or any of the artisans who the chefs would
soon help to develop.
Today, he says he feel compromised if he uses the telephone to order
the food for his restaurant. He is
compelled to find the best, local ingredients.
And nurture them or make them if they don’t exist, as he did recently
when he worked to establish Iberco Pigs in Mattituck, Long Island. That food journey took Chef Gerry from Spain
and Hungary to a slaughtering and butchering class with an Austrian Mangalitsa
wooly pig master butcher in New Jersey and back to Long Island.
In 1988, when Chef Charlie opened Aureole, there was really no doubt
Gerry would accompany him to his new restaurant. Gerry says he had been
developing and collaborating menus with Chef Charlie when he asked him to take
on the full responsibility as the opening pastry chef for Aureole.
That position impacted his career tremendously, he states.
Ever the innovator, Chef Gerry created a new wave of desserts.
What was revolutionary was he worked on plating desserts.
It seems impossible to fathom but before this, desserts and pastries
were, by and large, cut from a bigger cake or pie or mouse or ice cream
mold. Think of those dome-shrouded
desserts at the diners. Just better.
“There were a lot of tortes, cut in the 80s,” he said.
Radically, Chef Gerry took a cook’s approach to pastry.
He established a pastry station.
He formulated a hot dessert category that would extend the sole entry
on any restaurant’s menu of the wonderful, but traditional soufflé.
Basically Chef Gerry created a cook’s station for Pastry.
The desserts became an individual item to order.
“A cobbler in a dish that we individually baked to order had
essentially never been done before,” he explains.
From his vaulted vantage point now, Chef Gerry says he didn’t start
getting into the farm movement until he moved to Sam Francisco to help open
Aqua restaurant in 1990.
“There were more small farms and farmers market at that time out there
that were light years ahead of New York,” he says.
Somewhat ruefully he acknowledges that if in 1989 Union Square
Greenmarket in NYC was there, and open, he wasn’t aware of it and wasn’t going
to it!
Oftentimes, when you move out of your element, you see things in a new
way he observes.
After several years, he moved back to New York. Chef Gerry worked in the Hamptons for five
years after TriBeCa Grill, where he and Claudia met. This was in between Aureole and before Park
Avenue Café.
When he worked at the East Hampton Point- a 400 seat restaurant for
Jerry DellaFemina and Drew Neirpont, Gerry says he liked being near the water,
loved being in his home of Long Island, but something was missing.
The couple wanted to buy a home on Long Island but didn’t know exactly
where. They took their time exploring
the magic of Long Island’s landscape:
its waterways that jab and poke the land here and there, the wide open
farmland, the colonial shingled houses and quaint towns, the movie-set mansions
from every century since it was settled in the 1600s.
He and Claudia visited on a number of day trips to the area, taking the
ferries to Andrew Wyeth-inducing scenes from across the South Fork to Shelter
Island and on to the North Fork.
It was soon clear. Here in the
North Fork, they could have it all: enjoy the water and more agriculture and
the vineyards and the community’s active commitment to preserve it.
“My godmother had a place in Jamesport and we had bungalows on Nassau
Point, as a kid. So I always liked the area of the North Fork. We had a boat house and enjoyed the
beach-combing in Stony Point too.”
The good news was Gerry and Claudia found a house. The “bad news” was they recognized they
couldn’t afford the city and the country house.
Together, they still had Amuse restaurant in the Chelsea neighborhood
of New York City. But now they had to
ask, “What will we do?”
He was ready to make the change.
Claudia said she was ready to get out of city.
Was it Destiny? Vision?
“We knew it was destiny,” said Chef Gerry.
The couple catered their own wedding at the Wolford Wolf Vineyard in
Bridgehampton. “Everyone loved it.”
It was late June, 2001. They served very simple striped bass, farm
fresh salad, peas, and fava beans. Not unlike what they do for their clientele
today, they developed the menu based on the time of year. “We cooked with the
farms,” he says.
Not surprisingly, all the guests agreed the wedding dinner created a
feeling of casual elegance inspired by the season.
Claudia and Gerry formulated their restaurant style based on that
unsolicited, genuine positive feedback.
Casual elegance, seasonally inspired
it would be.
And don’t forget Love.
Chefs Gerry and
Claudia opened North Fork Table and Inn’s 110-seat restaurant in 2005 to rave
reviews. It’s been wowing customers and fans ever since.
In fact, the North
Fork Table & Inn has become a food-lover’s destination.
Not unlike the area
Chef Gerry is compelled to develop.
Today, he is dedicated
to fulfilling the North Fork’s potential as a food lover’s paradise. They opened the restaurant here because he
believes it offers the best of the culinary world’s future.
And lest we forget,
this culinary couple hasn’t missed a beat in the evolving world of good, fresh,
delicious food.
The literary and culinary event hosted by the Hort for the premier of "The Hamptons and Long Island Homegrown Cookbook" was a delicious success.
Getting to the Horticultural Society of New York on the evening of the event was no easy feat, given all the happenings taking place that same night.
But then, just like that, we were getting off the elevator
at The Horticultural Society of New York to
be greeted at the elevator by none other than George Pisegna, Director of Horticulture
at The Hort. George is an enthusiastic
advocate for The Hort’s mission to sustain the vital connection between people
and plants; moreover, he is a garden hero.
He was happy and enthusiastic to see us and elated about the
attendance for the evening.
It seemed natural that chef Bryan and his inspired grower,
Jon Snow, from the Hayground School
would have traveled to Gotham together.
There, leafing through the Homegrown Cookbook and smiling as
we entered, was the inimitable garden sprite, Master Gardener, children’s
garden mentor, and artist, Jon Snow.
Later, during the presentation, we would learn in a
personal, almost poetic prose, how he works with the children – and the plants
– to weave a magical relationship with the natural world. The kids get their hands in the dirt, grow
food and learn to cook through the “Young Chefs Program” – designed by another
featured Homegrown Cookbook chef: Joe Realmuto from Nick And Toni's restaurant, who created
a program that was long a dream of the restaurant’s late owner, Jeff
Salaway. That dream – “to bring together kids, chefs,
and food in the spirit of community” is a true success.
And not unlike an aim of the Homegrown Cookbook.
The program and the children’s garden is delightful.
Soon, Chef Tom Schaudel arrived, his food larder in tow in
what looked like an oversized mobile cooler.
He’s done this before.
Chef Tom Schaudel, CoolFish getting ready at The Hort
He presides over a virtual empire of restaurants, strung
across the Island like jewels on an heirloom necklace.
In fact, he owns Jewel (!) – his Melville restaurant – and
CoolFish, A Mano, Alure, and, along with his daughter, Ross Schaudel
Catering. Schaudel has also authored the
highly popular book, "Playing
with Fire: Whining & Dining on the Gold Coast"
Arriving from an account meeting downtown, Kareem Massoud, Paumanok Vineyards' grape farmer and
vintner – and inspired grower to Chef Tom Schaudel as written in the Homegrown
Cookbook, bringing two of his family’s estate wines: a Rose and a Chenin Blanc.
Both were rich, nuanced, and tasty partners to the evening’s recipes, and very
popular with the Hort’s guests, too.
Chef Tom and Bryan made a recipe – or two – from the four recipes
every one of the 27 chefs graciously and lovingly provided for the Homegrown
Cookbook.
With a large Hort audience of food & drink fans eager
for Homegrown food and food stories, the guests were soon asked to take their
seats.
Homegrown author Leeann, speaks at The Hort
With lots of beautiful images of the natural landscapes of
Long Island and the behind-the-scene photos of the farms, gardens, waterways,
honey and duck growers, oyster and berry farmers, I told the story of the
making of The Hamptons & Long Island
Homegrown Cookbook (a coffee table, hardcover cookbook, also available at
B&N and now at bookstores) and the larger, food story that evolved in the
world surrounding the writing of the book: from Slow Foods to urban farming to the
resurgence in Farmer’s Markets and edible home gardening, including the White
House’s edible garden. I noted the First Lady is also doing a book tour for her
just published book, American Grown.
I also read excerpts from the Homegrown book taken from the
profiles of chefs Tom Schaudel and his inspiring grower partner, Kareem; and
Chef Bryan Futerman and his inspiring garden partner, Jon Snow.
Jon Snow, children's gardener, Hayground School
Growers Kareem and Jon spoke about their successful
gardening and farming on Long Island.
Noteworthy was the Hayground children’s gardener, Jon, commenting that
his 91-year old Mother commented he was a success at long last, because he was
speaking at The Horticultural Society of New York!
Paumanok Vineyards' Kareem Massoud
And speaking of matriarchs, Kareem shared how his mother had
a biblical quote framed in their kitchen admonishing, “Son, go and work in the
vineyard today.” Clearly, his mother –
and family -- recognized a higher authority to a lifetime of honored labor was
calling them. It shows.
Following the talk, the guests were led back to the area for
the chefs’ food and drink demo highlight part of the evening’s program.
With nothing more than a burner –the chefs made their
four-star recipes right at the lovely tables – complete with sweet,
picture-perfect pot of herbs growing in tiny wash bins -- set by The Hort.
The Homegrown chefs had the attention of everyone around
their individual tables, allowing for interaction with the foodie fans, which
were again sipping the crisp, bright flavors of the local Paumanok wines.
Local wine – and beer – naturally pairs better with the food
made from the local terroir and sea.
Just try a Paumanok Chenin Blanc local wine, for example,
with oyster farmer, Karen Rivera’s Peconic Pearls – also featured in the
Homegrown Cookbook.
Truly, heavenly.
The two Homegrown chefs wielded their magical alchemy to tease
out extraordinary flavors to a delighted audience. They had them crying with gastronomic
joy at their creative, distinctive Long Island cuisine.
Chef Tom made his over-the-top Up-Island Lobster Risotto with
corn, Heirloom tomato, and basil. So
simple yet so complex and a no-doubt-about-it crazy delicious, with a visual
impact too. Savoring the Up-Island
Lobster Risotto is a sensory experience.
The Recipe can be found on page 123 of the Homegrown
Cookbook.
Chef Bryan would have made his famous pizza with local
vegetables and dough made with fresh, local honey – I am not kidding – but
without the wood-burning oven, guests would’ve been shortchanged. (Gotta get Kalamazoo to donate an oven to the
Hort, don’t you think?)
Instead, chef Bryan opted to whip up the Cherry Wood-Smoked
Brisket recipe found on page 40. Again,
a few simple, local ingredients, but the end result had guests shaking their
heads in culinary wonderment. The meat was melt-in-your-mouth tender but
Rocky-strong in its integrity as a star ingredient.
To add to the standout taste, Chef Bryan served the brisket
on dark bread infused with sauerkraut (I am not making this up!) with a smoky
thousand islandish dressing and a spicy tomato.
Foody's Watermelon-Red Pepper Gazpacho at The Hort event
Speaking of tomatoes, there are none in chef Bryan’s
Watermelon-Red Pepper Gazpacho. For extra credit, Chef Bryan also made the
delightful twist on a summer classic – found on page 41 of the Homegrown Cookbook.
The cool, sweet watermelon flirts with the spicy hot jalapeno
right in front of all the others, er, the other locally grown veggies,
including onions, celery and peppers.
A perfect appetizer served in small cups for a BBQ or dinner
party. Or a main course for an easy-to-make family meal. It’s sweet and smoky. Dial the flavors up or
down…
Jon Snow, Hayground School (L) & The Hort's George Pisegna
Book signings accompanied the food tastings. It was a sell out! Food and Hort friends from New York,
California, North Carolina and the Garden State were there and recognized the
Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown lifestyle as featured in the book is one
they admire and can cook up at their own home, wherever that may be.
Jennifer Calais Smith (L) one of the Homegrown photographers, me/author
And George from The Hort honored this author and the
Homegrown chefs and their inspired growers by purchasing some books to give as
a gift to some key Hort supporters.
Shhh. It’s our secret until they take the wraps off their “Hamptons
& Long Island Homegrown Cookbook!”
George Pisegna, HSNY, adds the Homegrown book to The Hort's Library
And words can’t express how honored I was to sign a book for
The Horticultural Society of New York’s illustrious library. A dream come true…