Grit & Grain

I know once people get connected to real food, they never change back.

-Alice Waters

photo: Pencil Cob Corn, coming October 2016

What color are your coriander seeds?  The thing that sparked my recent hyper-focus on the age of the dried goods was the color of the dried coriander we carry.  After years in the kitchen, ordering spices through whatever dry goods company a given restaurant was using at the time, I was shocked to see a jar of coriander seed such a bright green-gold.  Most of what I had seen in the past had only slightly more tint than a white peppercorn.

Sourcing matters just as much in dry goods as it does in produce.  With produce, it’s fairly obvious if something is getting tired.  With dry goods, age is not as obvious.  Where is the product coming from?  When was it harvested?  What variety is it?  These considerations, along with how it’s treated in transit–storage, handling–all make a big difference in the end product.  You really have to feel, taste and smell the raw product.

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Our Coriander Seed, Extra Bold


Why do you want freshly ground coffee?  Another surprising thing was learning about how industrial white flour is made.  In particular, industrial varieties of wheat have to be able to withstand the intense pressure and heat of steel-roller mills.  The process cooks and strips the wheat to the point that it is very shelf-stable for a very long time.  It also means that any ephemeral qualities (aromas, oils) that one would associate with freshness and proper treatment are gone.  I don’t know about you, but I’d rather have that flavor in my flour then blown out the venting shaft of a commercial flour mill.

At the no-barriers-to-entry end of the scale, Maine Grains makes an all-purpose flour that can be swapped for the AP you’re using now.  Check it out, and see for yourself if the nutty aroma and more complex flavors from these locally grown heirloom-variety stone-ground flours make the switch worthwhile.  Many of our chefs are also using flours made from spelt, buckwheat and rye to make whole-grain pastas and breads.  Bakers who follow Tartine are taking the 86% “high extraction” Magog wheat flour.  We have all of the above in 5# bags, and we also have most of these items in “whole berry” format, for those of you doing your own grinding or looking for an interesting local alternative to farro.  Any of it can be obtained in more economically advantageous 50# bags, with a week’s notice, or stocked for you–call and ask for Alison.

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“Red Fife” heritage whole-grain flour, Maine Grains


What variety of corn is are your grits made from?  Besides the Carolina white grits and red flint “Floriani” grits, we just brought in a shipment of “Lowman Yellow” grits.  While some folks think of grits as being primarily white, yellow is the preferred variety when you get inland, away from the coast.  The farm we work with is in central South Carolina, and yellow grits are the typical local favorite.  Their true corn flavor pairs remarkably well with tomatoes and sweet corn.  This is a great one to use right now, while those items are in season.

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Lowman yellow stone-ground grits, Keisler’s Mill.

Oh yeah, and: #nofilters needed.
By Diego Maldonado

Fairytale Eggplant, Native Corn, Sungold Tomatoes

July Market Update

Stone fruit report:  flavor king pluots are one of the plum family’s most gorgeous offerings.  When you cut into one, it practically takes your breath away: a reddish purple almost all the way to the core, where it fades to a deep yellow.  Zee Lady peaches from Frog Hollow are also excellent, but their Flavor Top nectarines steal the show in terms of full taste and texture.  Several of these late-season varieties are firm when ripe: so try one before you judge it to be under ripe.  It will probably surprise you.

Also available: white nectarines and yellow pluots from Fitz Kelly. Washington Bing and Golden Rainier cherries are in now, and you can expect to see sour cherries in about a week.

Summer vegetables are in full swing.   Super cute heirloom Fairy Tale eggplant are in.  Their small size makes them super versatile. Now’s the time to put corn, native beans (green, yellow wax, romano) on the menu.

 

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Ark Foods- Chesney, SC

  • Heirloom Fairy Tale Eggplant

First of the Season- Lakeville, MA

  • Native Corn

 

Equinox Farm- Sheffield, MA

  • Native Mesclun

Frog Hollow Farm- Brentwood, CA

  • Zee Lady Peaches
  • Flavor King Pluots
  • Flavor Top Nectarines

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Fitz Kelley Farm- Reedley, CA

  • Mr. McNulty White Nectarines
  • Splash Yellow Pluots

Farm Girl Farm- Great Barrington, MA

Garlic Scapes

Songbird Farm- Starks, ME

  • Pea Tendrils

Jordan’s Farm- Cape Elizabeth, ME

  • English Peas

Ward’s Farm- Sharon, MA

  • Baby Carrots
  • Raspberries (very limited)
  • Red Currants
  • Romano Beans
  • Yellow Wax Beans
  • Green Beans

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Terra Firma Farm- Winters, CA

  • Mixed Heirloom Tomatoes

River Dog Farm- Guinda, CA

  • Mixed Medley Tomatoes
  • Orange Sungold Tomatoes
  • Lemon Cucumbers

 

Now in season

  • Champagne Grapes
  • Italian Blood Oranges
  • Meyer Lemons
  • Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied
  • Field-Grown Rhubarb
  • Fresh Oregon Morels
  • Fresh Oregon Chantarelles
  • Fresh Black Mission Figs
  • WA Golden Rainier Cherries
  • WA Bing Cherries
  • CA Plums
  • CA Apricots
  • CA Peaches
  • CA Nectarines
  • Champagne Mangos
  • Baby Artichokes- very limited
  • Fresh Garbanzo Beans
  • CA Sugarsnap Peas
  • Spring Onions
  • Canadian Strawberries
  • Orange, Purple and Green Cauliflower

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By Diego Maldonado

diamond princess, maine peas and pea shoots, equinox baby arugula

these diamond princess peaches are no joke.

 

Late June Market Update

Seriously, get your hands on these peaches–best thing in the walk-in right now.  Hands down.

Other stone fruit news: Just in this morning, first of the season speckled pluots from Frog Hollow.  Cherries = delicious.  Rainiers are getting better.  Apricots are now market only, unless you want to grab one of the two flats of apriums we have left: tiny and sweet.  Other fruit to use now: champagne mangos, black mission figs, native strawberries.

Summer squash, zucchini, and “gold bar” yellow zucchini are from Jersey.  The peas are now from Maine, tender and sweet–do it now, before they turn starchy.  Super tender pea shoots from Maine, both large and small.  The large ones are not woody, so don’t be afraid.  Pea emulsion, anyone?  Awkward to write on the menu, awesome to use on the gnocchi.

You all know Ted Dobson’s Equinox excellent mesclun mix.  Right now he’s also bringing us baby arugula and baby kale.  The baby arugula is what arugula is meant to be: peppery but not bitingly so, tender, gorgeous.  This is the arugula you want to gently dress a handful of and eat on beef carpaccio, if anyone is still doing beef carpaccio.  Dry-aged beef carpaccio, maybe?  #gotriverrock?

If you’re anticipating a quieter week than usual, here’s a line project: crush and turn everything gorgeous we have right now into shrubs: rhubarb, strawberries, cherries, santa rosa plums, while it’s peak.  Toss on a 2# bag of demerara sugar if you’re looking for those molasses undertones to peek through.  Finish the strawberry one with a touch of saba.

Pickle me now or forever hold your peace:  last of the season Maine fiddleheads.

86: cara cara navels, kumquats, green garlic, porcini mushrooms, stinging nettles, ramps, lemon verbena, knoll rapini, fava leaves.  Almost gone: local spring-dug parsnips.

Equinox Farm- Sheffield, MA

  • Native Mesclun
  • Baby Arugula
  • Baby Kale

Knoll Organic Farm- Brentwood, CA

  • Santa Rosa Plums

Frog Hollow Farm- Brentwood, CA

  • Suncrest Peaches
  • Dapple Dandy Pluots

Fitz Kelley Farm- Reedley, CA

  • Diamond Princess Peaches
  • Lovely Lolita White Nectarines
  • Splash Yellow Pluots

Farm Girl Farm- Great Barrington, MA

Garlic Scapes

Songbird Farm- Starks, ME

  • Pea Tendrils

Common Sense Farm- Unity, ME

English Peas

Ward’s Farm- Sharon, MA

  • Fava Beans
  • Baby Red Beets
  • Baby Gold Beets
  • Easter Egg Radishes
  • French Breakfast Radishes

Terra Firma Farm- Winters, CA

Mixed Heirloom Tomatoes

Now in season

  • Last of the Season Maine Fiddleheads
  • Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied
  • Oregon Field-Grown Rhubarb
  • Fresh Green Almonds
  • Fresh Oregon Morels
  • Fresh Spanish Chantarelles
  • Fresh Lychee Fruit
  • Fresh Black Mission Figs
  • CA Golden Rainier Cherries
  • CA Bing Cherries
  • CA Plums
  • CA Apricots
  • CA Peaches
  • CA Nectarines
  • Champagne Mangos
  • Baby Artichokes- very limited
  • Fresh Fava Beans
  • Fresh Garbanzo Beans
  • CA Sugarsnap Peas
  • Spring Onions
  • Native Strawberries

By Diego Maldonado

Soom: a better tahini

To make the best tahini, start with the best seeds.

When we think of single-origin ingredients, things like wine, coffee and chocolate come to mind.  But we may not think of tahini.  Even if we consider the brand, or reflexively reach for a container we recognize, we may not wonder where the seeds grew, how it was made, or how fresh it is.

At Soom, it all starts with the seed: the white Humera sesame seed.

Humera is a town in Northwestern Ethiopia, and the hot and dry growing conditions there are ideal for growing a particular variety of white sesame seed that’s considered one of the best in the world.  These are selected and purchased at the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange:
ECX_Sesame
after being inspected for quality:
Omri inspection
For us, it’s pretty interesting to work with a company that approaches their product (tahini) the same way we approach ours–by talking to the farmers and brokers who work directly with the product about growing conditions, prices, and harvest methods–things that all make a big difference in the end product.  Until we tasted Soom, we didn’t know that there were such vast differences in the quality of tahini.  But here is what we now know:
  1. Seeds matter: some seeds varieties are fatter, oilier, less bitter, and different growing conditions favor the seed being plump and full of oil.  The dry growing conditions and seed varietal of the Humera white sesame stand out on those fronts.
  2. The choices the producer makes matter: most commercial tahini is made from a mixture of seeds from all over the world, whereas Soom sticks to a single, particular variety that they’ve found to be the best.
  3. Smaller batches matter: smaller batches mean fresher tahini.  Look at the consistency of your tahini.  The extreme separation that occurs in most commercial tahini doesn’t happen until it’s been sitting around for about a year.  The fresher it is, and the better the seed, the more emulsified it is.  That means a tahini that both tastes much brighter as well as being much easier to use.
Soom tahini was introduced to us by Ana Sortun, and this small company is run by three sisters.  To hear them describe their company in their own words:
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“We fell in love with tahini as Jackie was falling in love with Omri.  Omri is an international sesame/ tahini export, who, at the time, was distributing tahini from Israeli manufacturers to restaurants.  The quality of the tahini he was distributing was unlike anything we had ever tasted.  Nutty, thick and flavorful, we were eating it by the spoonful.  All we had known of tahini was that it was an ingredient in hummus and/or an ambiguous white sauce drizzled on falafel sandwiches.  What was this delicious condiment that was used on everything in Israel like ketchup?
The real kicker was when Omri’s mom baked a carrot cake using the tahini instead of butter.  We were in shock how versatile tahini could be!  And then when she informed us of the health benefits, we had to learn more.
We discovered a lot about tahini, and were so inspired that we took a bold leap of faith (and a well thought-out business plan…) to offer this magical ingredient to the US Market.  We never previously discussed going into business together, but being from a family of entrepreneurs and realizing we had complementary strengths, we couldn’t pass up on this once of a lifetime opportunity.
What makes Soom tahini so unique is that it is made with Ethiopian White Humera Sesame seeds.  Like grapes to wine, or beans to coffee, the varietal and the terroir combines for very different types of sesame seeds.  The white Humera sesame seeds grown in ethiopia has a wonderful balance of “meat” to “Oil” which makes it perfect for milling into tahini.
We work with one of the best manufacturers in Israel to mill these seeds into tahini. Their cleaning, hulling, and roasting process is top-notch and brings out the best flavor of the sesame, enabling it to be used in both savory and sweet recipes.
It has been extremely exciting, rewarding and humbling to “meet” the diversity of customers that applaud Soom tahini.  From top professional chefs to novice bakers, Soom tahini is enjoyed by so many different people, and in so many creative ways!  Marinades, Gelato, Cakes, Sauces, Smoothies, Granola bars!  The possibilities are endless.  Tahini is high in calcium, nut-free, creamy, and plain-old delicious. Soom is passionate about getting tahini into the hands of as many people as possible who can benefit from its taste, versatility and healthiness.”
By Diego Maldonado

Garlic Scapes, Lychees & Santa Rosa Plums

Market Update

We are excited to see the first garlic scapes of the year, at their tender best, from Farm Girl Farm in western MA.  Strawberries are getting better, and our friend Ted Dobson now has, in addition to his beautiful mesclun mix, native baby arugula and native baby kale.  From Queen’s Greens, we have perfect and beautiful french breakfast radishes and baby hakurei turnips.  We continue to get small tender pea greens from Maine.  And the stone fruit just keeps getting better–see below for the full list of what’s in house now.  Fresh lychee fruit arrives tomorrow.  Black Mission figs are looking, and tasting, good.  First of the season California heirloom tomatoes from Terra Firma Organic Farm here.

86: green garlic, porcini mushrooms, stinging nettles, ramps, lemon verbena, knoll rapini, fava leaves

Equinox Farm- Sheffield, MA

  • Native Mesclun
  • Baby Arugula
  • Baby Kale

Knoll Organic Farm- Brentwood, CA

  • Santa Rosa Plums
  • Patterson Apricots

Frog Hollow Farm- Brentwood, CA

  • Rich Lady Peaches
  • Goldensweet Apricots
  • Cot’n Candy White Apriums

Fitz Kelley Farm- Reedley, CA

  • Lady in Red Peaches
  • Virgin Blush White Peaches
  • Rose Diamond Nectarines
  • Lovely Lolita White Nectarines

Farm Girl Farm- Great Barrington, MA

First of the Season Garlic Scapes (this is as tender as they’ll be all season)

Queen’s Greens Farm- Amherst, MA

  • French Breakfast Radishes
  • Baby Hakurei Turnips

Songbird Farm- Starks, ME

  • Pea Tendrils
  • Red Flint Cornmeal

Ward’s Farm- Sharon, MA

Native Strawberries

Terra Firma Farm- Winters, CA

Heirloom Tomatoes

Now in season

  • Maine Fiddleheads
  • New Jersey Peas
  • Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied
  • Oregon Field-Grown Rhubarb
  • Fresh Green Almonds
  • Fresh Oregon Morels
  • Fresh Spanish Chantarelles
  • MA Spring-Dug Parsnips
  • Fresh Lychee Fruit
  • Fresh Black Mission Figs
  • CA Rainier Cherries
  • CA Bing Cherries
  • Champagne Mangos
  • Baby Artichokes*
  • Fresh Fava Beans
  • Fresh Garbanzo Beans
  • CA Sugarsnap Peas
  • Spring Onions

By Diego Maldonado