Spring is waning, Summer is waxing

-pictured, heirloom apriums-

Spring is waning, Summer is waxing.

Think strawberries, stone fruit and Equinox greens.

Coming up this week: strawberries will be coming from Connecticut.  We have local chocolate mint.  And maybe if we all behave and think pure thoughts, the gods of stonefruit will bless us with some Santa Rosa plums mid-week–no promises.  In mushroom world, it’s all about porcinis, morels, and imported chanterelles.  Get some wild pousse-pied: they’re at their best right now.

Stone Fruit: there are a handful of chefs that call us on a regular basis to chat about what tastes best right now.  We love those conversations, and it’s the best way to get the real scoop on which lot or variety is truly primo and belongs on your plate tonight.  We get in all kinds of heirloom variety stone fruits.  They ripen at different rates, so the variety that we had last week will be different than today’s, and that means it will eat different, cook different, and taste different, and that you’re going to go through a lot of printer ink if you want the varietal name on your menu.  Right this moment: cot’n candy white apriums are super sweet and tender, Fitz Kelly “modesto” apricots are seriously off the chain.  And all of these could be gone in a hot second and we’ll be onto the next variety.

86: The last of the ramps are gone.  Green garlic has about one week left, maybe a week and half.  Knoll fava leaves and rapini are done for the season.  Baby artichokes continue to be short in the market, so if you want regular as a substitute, it would be good to note that on your order.

Also notable: we have a Soom tahini update: in addition to the 1# units, we now have big 40# buckets in stock.  If you use a lot of tahini, you’ll save some significant bucks buying the large bucket. We are also expecting a visit from the sisters producing this awesome tahini in July, so let us know if you’d like a visit from them to learn more about the story behind the project.  Staff meal education?

Maine Grains: a few new varieties in the mix

Available in 5# bags:
Heritage Wheat Flours
Hard Red “Magog” Wheat Berries
Spelt Flour
“Red Fife” Flour
“Marquis” Flour
“Overland” Pastry Flour

86% “Magog” Wheat Flour

72% “Magog” Wheat Flour

Rye, Triticale & Buckwheat
Rye Berries
Triticale Berries
Coarse Rye Meal
Rye Flour
Organic Japanese Buckwheat Flour

Triticale Flour

Heirloom Stone Fruit
Crimson Lady Peaches
Helena Apricots
Cot’n Candy White Apriums
Maycrest Peaches
Rose Diamond Nectarines
Modesto Apricots
Local Produce
Connecticut Strawberries
Native Fiddlehead Ferns
Native Chocolate Mint
 Native French Breakfast Radishes
Native Easter Egg Radishes
MA Spring-dug Parsnips
Chive Blossoms from Allandale Farm
Equinox Mesclun
Equinox Baby Arugula
Best of the Season
Field-grown Rhubarb from Oregon
Fresh Green Almonds
Oregon Morel Mushrooms
Oregon Porcini Mushrooms
Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied
Fresh Jersey Peas
Spanish Chanterelles
Black Mission Figs
CA Cherries
CA Peaches, Apricots, Nectarines
Champagne Mangoes
Fresh Fava Beans
Fresh Garbanzo Beans
CA Sugarsnap Peas
Spring Onions

amp it up.

Smoked Cherrywood Honey: pretty good in a whiskey sour, also makes a cool ice cream
Marrow Beans: one of the original varieties used for New England baked beans
Red Flint Grits : exceptional coarse grits from a small family farm in Columbia county, South Carolina
Dukkah: spice mix of toasted almond & hazelnut meal, with sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, pumpkin seeds, sumac, chili and aleppo, nice on roasted veg
Maine Duck Eggs: duck egg carbonara with Jersey peas and La Quercia pancetta?
Maine Grains Coarse Rye Meal: real Danish rye uses rye meal, not flour.  Make some house smørrebrød and put some beet-cured gravlax on there
Heiwa Tofu: if you haven’t checked it out yet, you should.  This Maine-made tofu has a just firm enough texture, gentle taste of fresh peas, from organic Maine-grown soybeans
Pear Mostarda: make your grilled cheese sandwich come alive, just like the hills in the Sound of Music
By Diego Maldonado

Native Strawberries, Frog Hollow Stone Fruit, Last of the Season Wild Ramps

Equinox Farm

Sheffield, MA

Native Mesclun

Baby Arugula

Frog Hollow Farm

Brentwood, CA

Crimson Lady Peaches

Helena Apricots

Cot’n Candy White Apriums

Allandale Farm

Brookline, MA

Chive Flowers

Ward’s Farm

Sharon, MA

French Breakfast Radishes

Easter Egg Radishes

Knoll Organic Farm

Brentwood, CA

ALL QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED
A PRE-ORDER IS ALWAYS A  GOOD IDEA

Green Garlic

Pea Tendrils

Lemon Verbena (limited)

Mustard Flowers (limited)

Last of the season

Wild Ramps

New Jersey Peas (very limited)

New Jersey Asparagus

Massachusetts Spring-Dug Parsnips

Maine Fiddleheads

First of the season

Native Strawberries

Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied

Oregon Field-Grown Rhubarb

Fresh Green Almonds

Fresh Oregon Morels

Fresh Oregon Porcini

Fresh Spanish Chanterelles

California Peaches

California Nectarines

California Apricots

California Cherries

Brown Turkey Figs – ½ trays only (one day pre-order)

Blood Oranges

Cara Cara Oranges

Meyer Lemons

Champagne Mangoes

Fresh Fava Beans

Fresh Garbanzo Beans

California Sugarsnap Peas

Spring Onions

Baby Artichokes (very limited)

Orange/Purple/Green Cauliflower

By Diego Maldonado

Stone Fruit, Wild Pousse-pied, Heritage Grains

above, L-R: apriums, nectarines, peaches

Stone Fruit Time.

Finally, premium stone from Fitz Kelly is ripe and ready to eat tonight.

For those of you that don’t like rock-hard stone fruit, listen up: we’ve spoken with our grower partners in California, and they finally have tree-ripened fruit that is ready to pick and ship.  While our competitors compete with one another to be the first to offer stone fruit each season, we prefer to focus on flavor.  We speak with the growers personally about ripeness levels, and ask them to leave ours on the tree until truly ready to eat.  Apriums are excellent, the early peaches have great flavor but are a bit tart, and the nectarines are flavorful but crisp–and could use a touch of heat to bring out their best.  Frog Hollow are expected in next week, rounding out the premium stone fruits we have available.  As always, early-ripening varieties of peaches and nectarines are clingstone.  Also, early-season cherries are here.  The variety is Brooks.  Bings come later.

86: Jumbo asparagus continues to be available, but is no longer the King’s’ Crown variety, nor is it what we’d consider peak season anymore.  New Jersey asparagus is delicious, and local is not far behind.  French white asparagus is dwindling.  Blue foot mushrooms are done.  Fresh Oregon porcinis, and imported chanterelles are available.  Some heirloom citrus is still available, although it is now commercial.  Green and Purple daikon are over.

Also happening: #thegrainproject continues.  In addition to stone-ground heirloom grits and cornmeal, we now have Maine Grains bringing us the best grains grown in Maine: wheat, rye, triticale, and buckwheat.  Check out our post on these awesome local grains and flours here.  If you haven’t yet tried Soom tahini, you are missing out on tahini that is truly superior in both taste and texture: you can pour this stuff straight from the jar.  And you should–it’s amazing.

remember: grains are produce, too.

Maine Grains

Available in 5# bags:
Heritage Wheat Flours
Hard Red “Magog” Wheat Berries
Spelt Flour
“Red Fife” Flour
“Marquis” Flour
“Overland” Pastry Flour
Rye, Triticale & Buckwheat
Rye Berries
Triticale Berries
Coarse Rye Meal
Rye Flour
Organic Japanese Buckwheat Flour

Spring things

First of the Season
Fitz Kelly Peaches
Fitz Kelly Nectarines
Fitz Kelly Apriums
Wild Oregon Pousse Pied
Native Fiddlehead Ferns
Lemon Verbena (limited)
New Jersey Asparagus (nice purple tips!)
Best of the Season
Wild Ramps
Field-grown Rhubarb from Oregon
Fresh Green Almonds
Oregon Morel Mushrooms
Organic Spring-dug Parsnips from Maine
Stinging Nettles from Knoll Farms
Fava Leaves from Knoll Farm
Green Garlic from Knoll Farm
Cardoons from Knoll Farm
Mustard Flowers from Knoll Farm
Fresh Georgia Peas

beautiful Greens

Equinox Mesclun Mix
Equinox Baby Arugula (limited)

 Spring Fruit

Champagne Mangoes
Seedless Pink Muscat Grapes
Sour Verjus Grapes (limited)
Blood Oranges
Cara Cara Pink Navels
Golden Nugget Mandarins
Meyer Lemons
 Oregon field-grown Rhubarb
Cherries

Funghi

Oregon Morel Mushrooms
Oregon Porcini Mushrooms
Imported Chanterelle Mushrooms
Honshemeji Mushrooms
Maitake Mushrooms
Fresh Trumpet Royale
Fresh Chef’s Mix Mushrooms

Roots, bulbs, radishes

Last of the Season Chantaney Carrots
German Butterball Potatoes
Russian Banana Fingerlings
Spring Onions (small bulbs starting soon)
Baby Artichokes (very limited)
Fresh Garbanzo Beans
Fresh Fava Beans
California Snap Peas
Fresh Heart of Palm (pre-order only)
French Breakfast Radishes
Easter Egg Radishes
Orange, Purple, Green Cauliflower
Jerusalem Artichokes
Salsify Root
Watermelon/Black Radishes

amp it up.

Hot Honey: a partner to fried chicken or whipped butter and biscuits
Maine Soldier Beans: a spoonful of these with wilted pea tendrils, chorizo and clams
Stone-ground Masa Harina : make your pupusas, tamales and tortillas taste less like commodity corn and more like actual corn
Dirty Secret: truffle/parmesan/black garlic seasoning mix for your home fries
Maine Duck Eggs: drop on top
Black Calypso Beans: same price as black beans, but this heirloom variety is much meatier
 Koji: make your own salt koji, high five yourself after
Tcho Chocolate: if you haven’t tried this, why not?  Their dark (68%) has edge, and their milk is a game-changer in the milk chocolate (39%) dep’t: much more complex than most
Iberico Ham: we have it, your asparagus wants it
By Diego Maldonado

Field-grown Rhubarb, Wild Ramps & Blackberries

Spring evolves.

 Awesome spring stuff in now–stay tuned for morel updates on some very cool new things we’re adding to our extensive collection of artisinal dry goods.

 

Now in:  Soom Tahini is here, and we’re excited.  We were skeptical at first that one tahini was really much different from the next, but when Ana Sortun suggests we try it, we listen.  This rich, creamy tahini is really something else.  The flavor is much cleaner, and perhaps that’s because the sesame seeds are the best of the lot, direct imported from Ethiopia.  But the texture truly sets it apart: rather then settling into a mortar-like paste topped with a layer of oil, this tahini stays smooth and mostly emulsified, which means you can spontaneously reach for it anytime you want to use it, and it’s approximately a thousand times easier to make sauces from it.  It’s also very reasonably priced, and comes in 1# jars.  You need this, you just don’t know it yet.

Also in: #thegrainproject continues.  In addition to stone-ground heirloom grits and cornmeal, we now have Maine Grains bringing us the best grains grown in Maine: wheat, rye, triticale, and buckwheat.  Additional varieties are available, too.  All inquiries: call and speak with Alison.

Remember: grains are produce, too.

Maine Grains

Available in 5# bags:
Heritage Wheat Flours
Hard Red “Magog” Wheat Berries
Spelt Flour
“Red Fife” Flour
“Marquis” Flour
“Overland” Pastry Flour
Rye, Triticale & Buckwheat
Rye Berries
Triticale Berries
Coarse Rye Meal
Rye Flour
Organic Japanese Buckwheat Flour

 

Spring things

First of the Season
Native Fiddlehead Ferns
Lemon Verbena (Saturday)
New Jersey Asparagus (nice purple tips!)
Arriving Tuesday from France
French Jumbo White Asparagus (case only)
Blue Foot Mushrooms
Best of the Season
Wild Ramps
Field-grown Rhubarb from Oregon
Fresh Green Almonds
Oregon Morel Mushrooms
King’s Crown Jumbo Asparagus
Organic Spring-dug Parsnips from Maine
Stinging Nettles from Knoll Farms
Fava Leaves from Knoll Farm
Green Garlic from Knoll Farm
Cardoons from Knoll Farm
Mustard Flowers from Knoll Farm
Fresh Georgia Peas

beautiful Greens

Equinox Mesclun Mix
Baby Pea Shoots (limited)
Equinox Farms Mesclun Mix

 Spring Fruit

Champagne Mangoes
Seedless Pink Muscat Grapes
Blood Oranges
Cara Cara Pink Navels
Paige Mandarins
Meyer Lemons
 Oregon field-grown Rhubarb

Funghi

Oregon Morel Mushrooms
Blue Foot Mushrooms (Tuesday)
Honshemeji Mushrooms
Maitake Mushrooms
Fresh Trumpet Royale
Fresh Chef’s Mix Mushrooms

Roots, bulbs, radishes

Last of the Season Chantaney Carrots
German Butterball Potatoes
Russian Banana Fingerlings
Spring Onions (small bulbs starting soon)
Baby Artichokes (very limited)
Fresh Garbanzo Beans
Fresh Fava Beans
California Snap Peas
Fresh Heart of Palm (pre-order only)
French Breakfast Radishes (very limited)
Easter Egg Radishes
Orange, Purple, Green Cauliflower
Jerusalem Artichokes
Salsify Root
Watermelon/Black Radishes
Purple/Green Daikon
By Diego Maldonado

Maine Grown, Freshly Milled Heirloom Wheat & Grains

Many of you are familiar with the quality of freshly-ground heritage corn, because you already buy and use heirloom grits and cornmeals.  You know that freshness makes a big difference in the flavor, and when you rub the grains between your fingers you can literally feel the difference: instead of a dry, dead powder you can feel oils and texture.  

Flour, however, we tend think of as being this one entity, with only functional variations: pastry, bread, all-purpose.  It comes from wheat: we think of this too as being one thing, forgetting that there are many types of wheat: Red Fife, Marquis, Magog, and other heritage varieties.   These pre-industrial non-hybridized wheat varieties act differently in the soil than modern wheat: deep roots tap into deep water sources, requiring less surface irrigation, and also have access to nutrients found deeper in the soil, giving these grains deeper flavor.

 As Dan Barber points out in this article about growing betterwheat for matzoh (which only has two ingredients–water and flour–so the flour matters), how wheat is grown also matter.  13-14% moisture is the optimal range for picking wheat.  That often requires leaving it in the field to dry out longer than a farmer might feel comfortable with.  After all, if it rains, all the time spent drying the wheat under the sun is lost.  So what often happens is that wheat gets picked early, and dried with high heat mechanically.  Many of the delicate oils in the germ are cooked away in this process.

Then, there’s how the wheat is milled.  You may not know why stone milling differs greatly from modern roll-milling.  In brief, slow milling on stone wheels keeps the grains cooler, keeping surface enzymes and oils intact, which affects everything from flavor to the ability of a slow-rise bread to rise.  It utilizes the whole grain, rather than stripping away the bran and endosperm.

Steel roll millers affect wheat a number of different ways. Rollers work based on stripping the grain down to it’s endosperm before milling it for flour.  First, off comes the bran, where most of the nutrients and much of the flavor is found.  Next comes the germ, which is where the oils are.  Then, the starchy endosperm is ground into white flour, at high heat, which cooks off what little nutrition the flour had left.  Nutrients are then added back in later and artificially, resulting in “enriched” wheat.  If they want to turn a portion of that flour into whole wheat, they add back some of the lost bran and germ.  You know, kind of like cheap rosé.

Stone-ground wheat, on the other hand, mills the whole grain.  The comparatively slow grind of the stone mill creates much less heat than the steel roller mills, so the wheat doesn’t get cooked in the process.  Then, if white flour is desired, it is sifted afterwards.  The germ, which was ground into the flour, has a chance to impart flavors, nutrients and oils to the end result, even if it is sifted to make white flour.  Caring for the wheat in this way ensures that it is more enzymatically active: important to bakers when you make breads, especially sourdough and other naturally yeasted doughs.

Also notable is that a stone mill can grind any variety of wheat.  Roller mills, on the other hand, require wheats that have a harder outer bran layer, to survive their first pass through the extreme impact of the roller mill.  That means that only certain varieties of wheat make it into most commercial flours, and many heirloom varieties have been lost to industrial roller mills.  Modern wheat varieties, grown specifically to survive steel mills, tend to be harder on the soil, requiring more water and stripping the topsoil of more nutrients, leaving the field more washed out and more depleted for the next year.

Ultimately, as a chef, flavor and consistency are key considerations.  Flavor-wise, the quality of these flours is apparent from the moment you open the bag, touch and smell them.  Nutty, flavorful loaves and crusts, we think you’ll find, are worth the experimentation it may take to learn to work with these special heritage grains.  While doing so, you’ll be supporting the local food system, helping to restore Maine’s farming community, and offering a superior product in both taste and nutrition.  Chefs such as David Bauer are using local heritage wheat as the cornerstone of his distinctive crust at his restaurant, All Souls Pizza in Asheville, NC.  Brooklyn’s Sfoglini Pasta Shop is doing the same to drive their hand-crafted pastas to the next level.

We are excited to be working directly with Maine Grains, of Skowhegan, Maine.  They source all of their wheat from farms in Maine.  Most of it is organic, and all of the farms practice IGM, rather than spraying their crop with things like Roundup.  When they do need to pick grains early to dry, they use fans and gentle heat, rather than high heat, to keep the wheat intact.  Finally, the wheat is stone-ground at the mill, to order, and is stored cold throughout the process, including here at Specialty.

Now carrying in 5# bags:

Pastry flour: made from Overland winter wheat.  Organic, stone-ground.

Spelt flour: a type of wheat similar to/the same as farro, some chefs are using to make pasta.  Organic, stone-ground.

Heritage Wheat Flours:  Marquis and Red Fife. These whole-grain flours are made from hard red wheat berries, are relatively rare, and therefore more expensive.  The way most bakers are utilizing them is cutting “regular” (a more neutral AP) flour with these varieties, so that you get some of the nuance/aroma but keep it cost-effective.  Organic, stone-ground.

Rye Flour: from organic rye .

Rye Meal:  much coarser than regular rye flour, would add an interesting texture to a cracker or crust. Often used to dust the tops of loaves.  Both are organic and stone-ground.

Japanese Buckwheat Flour:  traditionally used to make soba noodles, but is also cool to use anywhere you’d want to try out buckwheat flour.  Organic, stone-ground.

Hard Red Wheat Berries: variety is “Magog”

Rye Berries: the same organic rye used to make the flours listed above.  Organic.

Triticale Berries: triticale is a hybrid of rye and wheat.  All of these berries can be used much in the same way you’d use farro.  Organic.

Larger sizes available with at least two weeks’ notice.

By Diego Maldonado