Over the past few months, upscale North End seafood spot Mare has been closed for a renovation (sound familiar?) that will turn it into a more casual, oyster-bar concept. The revamped Mare opens to the public this Friday, and I got a hold of the the new menu, which you can find ahead. READ MORE
Archive for the ‘Seafood’ Category
MARE OYSTER BAR OPENS THIS FRIDAYPreview the menu of the reboot of the North End seafood restaurant.Posted by Leah Mennies on 2/7/2012 at 12:14PM | No Comments
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ISLAND CREEK OYSTER BAR TO BRING OYSTER SLIDERS, LOBSTER ROLLS TO HEAD OF THE CHARLES THIS WEEKENDPosted by Leah Mennies on 10/18/2011 at 1:05PM | No Comments
The 47th annual Head of the Charles Regatta takes place this weekend, and there’s an added bonus for those who attend this year: a food stand from the folks at Island Creek Oyster Bar. READ MORE |
FOOD TRUCK NATION TO DEBUT “LOBSTA LOVE” TRUCK ON HARVARD CAMPUSPosted by Leah Mennies on 9/28/2011 at 11:58AM | No Comments
![]() Food Truck Nation hopes to debut the Lobsta Love truck tomorrow. (Photo courtesy of Food Truck Nation) Food Truck Nation, a food truck company that’s the force behind the popular Grilled Cheese Nation truck, is set to debut a brand new lobster-centric truck concept on Harvard’s campus tomorrow. We just hung up with co-owner Todd Saunders, who gave us the lowdown on the truck, dubbed “Lobsta Love.” |
WHAT’S BREWING: BEER WARSPosted by Anne Vickman on 9/15/2011 at 10:22AM | 1 Comment
Good news, beer drinkers: The Beer Wars dinner series at McCormick and Schmick’s is upon us. This equates to 16 craft-beer dinners between now and May. Each five-course meal showcases two East Coast breweries competing to serve a more superlative selection. The rules are simple: One beer per brewery per course, and diners mark their choices on a paper ballot after each plate. The brewery with the majority vote wins the round. This year’s brackets are set, and contenders include 2010 winner Peak Organic, as well as Clown Shoes, Magic Hat, Troegs, Mayflower, Wormtown Brewery, Victory, Stoudts Brewing Company, Woodchuck, Sam Adams, Otter Creek, Offshore Ale Co., Olde Burnside Brewing Company, Saranac, Newport Storm, and McNeill’s. READ MORE |
EATING TO COOK: A TRIP TO ALSACEPosted by Annie Copps on 6/17/2011 at 10:00AM | No Comments
I can’t help it. I became a convert to these gorgeous wines while eating Thai food at Jean Georges’ Vong in New York a good decade or so ago. I, like so many, considered grapes like Riesling and Gewurztraminer far too sweet and cloying to be enjoyed with savory food, if at all. Another great wine lesson learned. The beauty of these fermented and bottled juices is their crisp acidity, dryness, and mineral attributes, which combine to make them wines that beg for some food to be fully enjoyed. Perfect for the Thai-inspired meal I indulged in so long ago, but equally well-suited for New England seafood this summer. Olivier Humbrecht, a dashing man (and Master of Wine) from Alsace, is the 12th generation wine maker for his family’s many hectares of vineyards. He poured a 2008 Pinot Blanc, which is the “Miss Congeniality” of his portfolio. Creamy crab tartlets, king crab tempura with wasabi, and a spicy shrimp fondue were served with it — both the rich dairy and the spice of the appetizers came through and got along famously with his selections. Humbrecht said, with Franco-Germanic accent: “We drink this wine with everything, all year long, with everything but meat and dessert — but sometimes them, too.” At that point, he could have asked me to drink a glass of sand and I would have (and told him it was delicious). Back to the wines, though. From Pinot Blanc, we moved into richer and fuller bodied Rieslings from different land parcels (by the way, all the Zind-Humbrecht wines are both organic and bio-dynamic, “to respect the environment and the people who work the land”). As Humbrecht spoke about how difficult these grapes are to grow due to the particular extremes in the weather and “the mosaic” of complicated geology, it became clear what a labor of love these special wines are. To match the wines, the kitchen plated its version of the traditional Alsation “choucroute garni,” a pork sausage and sauerkraut dish, using rainbow trout instead of pork, with bacon-wrapped potatoes, grainy mustard, and juniper scented sauerkraut — another fine match. We tasted Gewurztraminer with grilled duck served with a mango chutney and fava bean puree, which brought out the rose and geranium notes and balanced the acidity of this late-harvest Gran Cru. You, too, can taste these special wines, as well as wines from other stellar Alsatian producers (including Trimbach, Hugel, Schlumberger, and Gisselbrecht) through July 3 at Legal Sea Foods throughout New England. Legal Sea Foods, 26 Park Plaza, Boston, 617-426-4444. For a list of other locations, go to legalseafoods.com. |
RECIPE: ENGLISH PEA SOUPPosted by Erin Byers Murray on 6/15/2011 at 8:23AM | No Comments
Chef Chris Parsons, of Winchester’s Parson’s Table, is one of the chefs on board for the for the first annual Food & Fin event set to take place on Nantucket from July 7-10. He shared with us his sweet summer soup recipe ahead of the event. Chilled English Pea Soup with Maine Crab Salad Serves 4 INGREDIENTS 2 c. English peas, blanched until tender, shocked in ice water Drain the English peas and pat dry with a towel. Place the peas in a blender and pour just enough milk over the peas to almost cover. Season with kosher salt and white pepper. Blend on high until smooth. If the soup is too thick add another splash of milk. Strain through fine mesh strainer pushing through with the back of a ladle. Taste, adjust seasoning and place in refrigerator. Place the crab meat in a bowl with the chives, a drizzle of olive oil, and the lemon juice. Season with fleur de sel and white pepper. Gently mix the crab, taste and adjust seasoning. Ladle the soup into four chilled bowls. Spoon the crab salad into the center of each bowl. Place the pea tendrils in the empty crab bowl, drizzle with olive oil and gently toss. Place the tendrils on the crab salad and sprinkle with fleur de sel. Serve with a chilled spoon. Enjoy. |
FIRST COURSE: BCAE COOKING CLASSPosted by Brittany Jasnoff on 6/6/2011 at 1:00PM | 1 Comment
Let me preface my post by saying this: Yes, I cook quite a bit at home, and yes, I consider myself fairly well versed in chopping, searing, frying, and other basic kitchen techniques. But I’m a self-proclaimed wimp when it comes to preparing shellfish — specifically lobster, which is actually one of my favorite things to eat. There’s just something so…barbarian about cracking the claws and twisting apart the body and the tail to reap the reward of sweet, delicious meat. (As you might have guessed, I’ve never fully embraced the whole snout-to-tail trend.) But as I step into the Boston Center for Adult Education’s crusteacean-themed cooking class, dubbed (what else?) “Lobsters on Parade,” I’m hoping to change that mindset. As part of the school’s celebrity-chef series, “Lobsters on Parade” features chef Andrew Wilkinson of Skipjack’s restaurant as the arbiter of all things shellfish and — bonus! — Skipjack’s mixologist Colin Kiley. The course begins seminar-style in one of the BCAE’s well-equipped kitchen classrooms, but it quickly becomes apparent that my experience here will be less dinner lesson and more dinner theater (in a good way, that is). As chef Wilkinson begins steaming the day’s victims with his team of sous chefs, Kiley entertains the crowd of 14 by demonstrating his recipe for a potent Sons of Liberty punch. After a few minutes of lobster trivia with chef Wilkinson — did you know they can drop off a claw when threatened? — we break into groups and begin a mass prep for the meal ahead. While some students take to chopping vegetables or slicing ginger, I tackle my demons head-on…by learning to dismantle a lobster. Messy? Yes. (Luckily, a fellow student’s recipe packet is the only casualty of my lesson.) Difficult? Certainly. (Thank goodness for the good-natured sous chef.) But nothing felt better than pulling that perfectly in-tact claw meat out from the shell after successfully cracking it with a chef’s knife. Once we finish prepping the vegetables and the pounds upon pounds of lobster meat, things become decidedly more relaxed. Students hang around the main cooking area as chef Wilkinson starts a lobster broth — lobster bodies, a mirepoix, lobster powder, et cetera — and a beurre fondue, or butter emulsion, which will be used in a number of the evening’s dishes. Select classmates volunteer to help with these more-specific prep tasks, though at this point my stomach is growling so loudly that I think it best to sit back and enjoy the show. Chef Wilkinson finishes the first course, JFK lobster stew, and the sous chefs quickly distribute it to the students, who happily sit back down to slurp up the creamy, buttery, lobster-y mixture. Then it’s back up to the prep station for the lobster, shrimp, and crab salad, an elegant composition layered with tangy guacamole inside a circular mold. While we munch, Kiley shows off his considerable skills with a refreshing “Grovestand Fizz,” made with Old Tom gin, fresh orange juice, grenadine (the real stuff), lemon, and orange bitters. By this point most of the class has become more interested in eating than participating in any hands-on sort of way, but it doesn’t matter: Everyone is engaged, asking questions and conversing with the instructors, as course after course after course (lobster mac and cheese; lobster tail with ginger, lime, and Sauterne sauce; chocolate bread pudding) are prepared and served. As parting gifts, chef Wilkinson offers leftovers and his personal contact info, should anyone ever need supplies for a special meal. Fears conquered, I leave full, happy, and — here’s the best part — armed with plenty of knowledge on how best to tackle that ornery, hard-shelled creature known as the lobster. For more on the BCAE’s celebrity-chef course series, click here. Follow managing editor Brittany Jasnoff’s escapades in the kitchen as she tests out cooking classes around the city. |
TIDBITS: RAZOR CLAMSPosted by Alexandra Hall on 4/20/2011 at 10:00AM | No Comments
As a kid, I always believed in eating dessert first, but was of course forbidden by parental law to indulge more than once or twice a year. The razor clams appetizer at Island Creek Oyster Bar equals the very next best thing. Sultry and Available now until they’re gone (and then probably again around the next full moon). Island Creek Oyster Bar, 500 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, 617-532-5300, islandcreekoysterbar.com. |
COMING RIGHT UP: BEER AND LOBSTER, TOGETHER AT LASTPosted by A. J. Downey on 10/12/2010 at 10:38AM | No Comments
Get your bibs ready: This Saturday marks the first-ever Beer and Lobster Party. About a year and a half ago, EatBoston’s founder Aaron Cohen created a Twitter feed to keep followers informed about the haps in Boston’s restaurant scene. But now, Cohen organizes widely popular fundraising events like last spring’s Bacon and Beer Festival, which sold around 1,500 tickets. (The last 300 sold out in two minutes.) You may also remember EatBoston’s Ice Cream Showdown, Guacaholics Anonymous, and Ginger Explosion events… For the Boston Lobster Party, a smart smattering of local restaurants (Garden at the Cellar, Gaslight, Petit Robert Bistro) cook up a lobster-themed lunch while much-loved local craft brewers bring the suds (Mayflower, Peak Organic, Boston Beer, and more). Cohen expects nearly 1,000 attendees, and all the proceeds benefit Community Servings, Share our Strength, and Lovin’ Spoonfuls. “The goals of each of these events are to make everyone really excited about Boston food, make sure everybody has a good time, and connect diners with local restaurants,” says Cohen. But giving back plays a big part, too. “People my age like volunteering and giving back, but not many of them do it very often because it’s hard to figure out what to do.” Cohen estimates that total donations from all his events will be close to $45,000 by the end of the year. While specifics for future culinary adventures are off the record — “I like to keep the events a surprise,” he says — you can be the first to know by subscribing to EatBoston’s mailing list or following Facebook and Twitter. Saturday, October 16, 2 p.m. $35-$46; Trolley Barn, 540 Harrison Ave., Boston. Purchase tickets here.
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