The Press Herald has published a very good overview of the Beard Awards process leavened with perspectives from local chefs on what the awards mean to them.
2024 Beard Awards Semifinalists
The list of semifinalists for the 2024 James Beard Foundation Awards was just released. There are 10 semifinal nominees from Maine:
- Outstanding Restaurateur – Cara Stadler and Cecile Stadler, Bao Bao Dumpling House/Tao Yuan/Zao Ze Cafe and Market in Portland and Brunswick
- Emerging Chef – Joseph Robbins, Bissell Brothers Three Rivers in Milo
- Best New Restaurant – The Alna Store, Alna
- Outstanding Bakery – ZU Bakery, Portland
- Outstanding Pastry Chef or Baker – Atsuko Fujimoto, Norimoto Bakery in Portland
- Outstanding Hospitality – Woodford Food & Beverage, Portland
- Best Chef: Northeast – Celia Bruns, Artemisia Cafe; Ian Driscoll, Bar Futo; Valerie Goldman, The Honey Paw; and Jake Stevens, Leeward
The final list of nominees (5 per category) will be released April 3rd, and the awards ceremony will take place on Monday June 10th in Chicago.
Related information:
- Maine Award Winners, Nominees and Semifinalists – a complete list of Maine award winners and nominees from 2008 to 2024.
- Award and Nomination Process – learn more about the award nominations process.
- Award Categories – see the 2024 list of categories and eligibility requirements.
- James Beard in Portland – read about the time James Beard taught a set cooking classes in Portland.
Don’s Lunch in Westbrook
Former Westbrook food truck Don’s Lunch (facebook) is relaunching as a brick and mortar restaurant. Owner Craig Bernier is taking over the former River’s Edge Deli location at 616 Main Street. The new Don’s Lunch will be open for breakfast and lunch serving the River’s Edge breakfast menu and the classic menu from the Don’s food truck for lunch. Bernier expects to open at 6 am, 6 days a week.
Bernier has started renovations to the kitchen and dining area and until those are closer to completion an opening date is still TBD. When it does, Don’s will have counter service with both indoor and outdoor seating. Bernier is adding a takeout window that faces out onto the restaurant’s deck.
River’s Edge Deli recently closed upon the retirement of its owner Steve Lampron.
Upcoming Events & Valentine’s List
Wednesday – Chaval is holding 5-course vegan wine dinner.
Thursday – Oak & Ember is holding a 4-course Sicilian wine dinner. The SMCC Culinary Arts program is kicking off this season’s lunch program.
Saturday – Flanagan’s Farm in Buxton will be holding a Supper Club dinner featuring chef Christian Hayes from The Garrison.
January 29 – The Roma Cafe is holding a 4-course Italian wine dinner.
January 30 – The Portland Symphony is partnering with the Hunt and Alpine Club on the latest edition of Symphony & Spirits; the program “designed for music lovers aged 21-39” a $25 tickets gets you access to a pre-concert happy hour at Hunt + Alpine, a signature cocktail and a seat at the “Beethoven’s 5th” concert that evening.
February 10 – The Portland On Tap beer festival is taking place at the Cross Insurance Arena. Flanagan’s Farm in Buxton will be holding a Supper Club dinner featuring chef Krista Kern Desjarlais from Bresca and The Purple House.
Valentine’s Day – we’ll be sharing V-Day specials here as restaurants announce them. Please let us know if you see someplace missing. Valentine’s Day falls on a Wednesday this year.
- Alto Terrace – will be serving a 5-course dinner for $85 per person.
- Evo Kitchen + Bar – will be serving a 5-course tasting menu for $125 per person. Reservations go live Tuesday.
- Helm – will be serving a 3-course dinner for $65 per person.
- Ida’s (Waldoboro) – the wine bar at The Waldoboro Inn in collaboration with The Crooked Spoon is serving a Valentine’s Day dinner for $60 per person.
- Isa Bistro – will be serving a 3-course dinner (see menu) for $110 per person.
- Knotted Apron – will be serving a 4-course dinner with champagne and optional wine pairings for $120 per person.
- Locally Sauced (Yarmouth) – is teaming up with Battery Steele Brewing on a 5-course dinner for $100 per person.
- Love at First Bite – is offering a variety of Valentine’s Day treats including chocolate dipped strawberries.
- Miller’s Table – will be serving a 5-course dinner for $85 per person.
- Mr. Tuna – has a selection of three Valentine’s Day takeout sushi boxes.
- Nina June (Rockport) – will be serving a 5-course dinner for $100 per person.
- Noble Kitchen + Bar (Brunswick) – will be serving a 6-course dinner with optional wine pairings for $115 per person.
- Ore Nell’s North (Biddeford) – is serving a 3-course dinner with a complimentary glass of bubbly for $49.99 per person.
- The Alna Store (Alna) – will be serving a 5-course with optional pairings for $95 per person.
- Thistle & Grouse – will be serving a 3-course dinner for $90 per person with optional wine pairings.
- Twelve – will be serving a 4-course French-inspired dinner.
- Wander at Longwoods (Cumberland) – will be serving a 4-course dinner for $100 person.
- Wayside Tavern – will be serving a Roman-inspired dinner for $90 per person with optional wine pairings.
- Woodford F&B – will be open serving their regular menu augmented with some Valentine’s Day specials.
- Other Options – While we’re waiting for details, check for open reservations on February 14th via OpenTable and Resy.
February 18 – Flanagan’s Farm in Buxton will be holding a Supper Club dinner featuring chefs Ilma Lopez and Damian Sansonetti from Chaval and Devin Finigan from Aragosta.
February 21 – A West African Culinary Workshop and Dinner is taking place in Brunswick in collaboration with Jordan Benissan the chef/owner of Me Lon Togo in Rockland.
February 22-24 – The Inn by the Sea is holding their annual Ice Bar and Seafood Celebration.
March 1-12 – The 16th Annual Maine Restaurant Week is taking place.
March 28 – Ballast will be hosting a murder mystery dinner.
April 29 – The Good Food Awards winners will be announced. Eight Maine food producers are finalists in the 2024 Good Food awards program.
May 11 – CiderFeast, an “all-inclusive tasting event celebrates craft ciders from some of the top cider makers in New England and beyond” is taking place.
May 18 – The Maine Wild Wine Fest is taking place in Freeport.
June 10-16 – Portland Wine Week is taking place.
June 26 – Secret Supper (instagram) is holding a dinner in the Portland area.
June 29 – The 3rd Annual Mast Landing Wavy Days Festival is taking place.
August 30 – September 1 – Maine Apple Camp is taking place.
September 20-22 – The Common Ground Fair will be taking place.
Maine Farms in the Offseason
Today’s Maine Sunday Telegram includes a report on the wide range of work Maine farmers engage in during the offseason.
In a challenging landscape for the mostly family-run operations, many use the winter months to enhance their survival, finding ways to boost production or diversifying what they offer.
My Kitchen Their Table: Barak Olins
Welcome to the January 2024 edition of My Kitchen, Their Table, an interview series with the chefs and culinary professionals who work hard to satisfy our small city’s big appetite. This month we’re featuring an interview with Barak Olins the founder and head baker of ZUbakery. Visit our instagram on next week, to see Barak and his team at work at the bakery.
A boat builder turned bread maker, Barak Olins is a master of craftsmanship and tradition. Originally from Tennessee, he moved to Rockport, Maine, to build boats. Eventually, his love affair with cooking became his profession when he and two partners opened Cafe Uffa (now the location of El Corazon in Longfellow Square), in 1995. In their quest to prepare everything from scratch, his journey in breadmaking took off.
In 2000, Olins launched ZUbakery out of a barn in Freeport equipped with a hand built woodfired oven and age-old techniques. From milling locally-grown grains to proofing at ambient temperature, his bread is as traditional as it gets. “I’m not an innovator. I’m not trying to reinvent bread. I don’t believe I can create a loaf of bread better than those before me,” he humbly explains.
For over two decades, he sold exclusively at farmer’s markets in Brunswick. On Fridays, the day before a market, he would sleep in the barn on a cot after he loaded the final batch of bread into the oven. The following day, after only a few hours of sleep, he would haul nearly 180 pastries and 300 loaves of bread to the market. “It was romantic for years, and then I said, I can’t do this anymore,” he says, laughing.
In 2022, Olins went from barn to boulangerie when he took over a space at 81 Clark Street in Portland’s West End. After many months of renovations, he opened the doors on October 21st, 2022. Inspired by a 1930s French bakery, it is chic, minimalist, and intentional. The 650-square-foot space has an open kitchen separated from the retail area by a narrow marble countertop and paned window — a cozy spot to watch your daily bread being made. Like all things Olins, there is beauty in its simplicity and practicality — from the wood shelves piled high with willow baking baskets to the proofing trough and work tables he built himself.
Unlike most bakeries, the counter at ZUbakery is far from fully stocked at the time of opening. Rather, Olins and his small, talented crew bake throughout the day. His menu, or rather schedule, begins at 9 a.m. with pastries served alongside coffee and tea. From late morning to early afternoon, they load the shelves with bread. Then, pizzettes and focaccia hit the counter until close at 5 p.m. This schedule allows the baking crew to start their day at a reasonable hour (if you consider 5 a.m. reasonable) and allows you to get an exceptionally fresh, even warm loaf of bread. Also for sale are housemade biscotti and granola, local honey, olive oil, ceramics made by Olins’ wife, Mimi, and a small selection of thoughtfully sourced wine.
Continue reading to learn more about Olins’ “unfussy utilitarian” approach to baking, where he’s ordering takeout from, and which brewery you’re most likely to find him at.
THE INTERVIEW
AR: How would you describe your baking style?
BO: I don’t make bread with a lot of other things in them. They’re fairly simple and rustic. I’m really interested in reclaiming that word because now you can go to a grocery store and buy artisanal, rustic bread, but that word rustic really means something. To me, it means handmade, regional, unfussy, and utilitarian.
AR: Why do you mill grains in-house?
BO: For one, it gives me the opportunity to work directly with the farmer. Also, flour loses flavor and oxidizes if it sits around for a long time. Eventually, the germ oil can go rancid. Freshly milled flour adds a layer of flavor. The range of offerings at my bakery is relatively small, and I want everything I do to be done as well as possible, so having control over the wheat that I use and the flour that I have is really important.
AR: What is your favorite pastry to make?
BO: I just love scones. I think they’re so good. I make an Irish scone with currants. They’re really simple. The trick is how you handle it. You don’t want to overwork the dough.
AR: What about your favorite bread?
BO: I make one called pavé. That’s French for a paving stone. It’s so good for dipping in olive oil or with a salad. The loaf is large, somewhat rectangular, and slightly flat. I usually make it with buckwheat, whole wheat, and white flour.
AR: What are the ingredients in pavé?
BO: Flour, water, salt, and starter. A bread recipe is more accurately a baker’s schedule. It’s not so much the ingredients as it is your technique of working the dough, how long you’re fermenting it, how you shape the loaf, and, of course, the wheat you’re using. One schedule that works for many bakers is cold fermentation. Sometimes shaped loaves cold-ferment in a cooler overnight. I don’t do that. My bread, with few exceptions, is always fermented at ambient temperature. Sometimes, I use refrigeration to slow it down, but I aim to do everything at room temperature. I don’t like relying that much on technology, and I like being more in touch with the dough as it’s going along.
AR: What is one of your favorite dishes in Portland?
BO: At Yosaku, they still make soba noodles in-house daily. For me, a bowl of cold soba noodles with dashi, wasabi, and grated daikon is magical. It’s not innovative. It’s just perfect. There’s no flavor that doesn’t need to be there. And it’s beautifully presented. That’s my dish.
AR: What is one of your go-to spots in Portland?
BO: I really love Bahn Appetit, the little takeout spot on Cumberland Avenue. They’re excellent. Everything I’ve had there is delicious. The Bahn mi is really good. I love honest, straightforward cooking. I don’t need to be surprised by combinations.
AR: Where did you eat one of your most memorable meals?
BO: One of my favorite dinners ever was at Bresca. At the time, I didn’t know who Krista Kern Desjarlais was. My wife and I sat at the bar looking into the kitchen. It was a sweet, cozy place with a small menu. Everything was delicious — the food, the wine. We were totally in love with it.
AR: Where do you go for a drink?
BO: I love Bunker Brewing. It’s a little off the beaten path. It’s on the backside of a building with some picnic tables. It reminds me of my favorite parts of what Portland was like twenty years ago. And the beer is so good. I’m not a big cloudy IPA drinker. I like their Machine Pilz and Salad Daze IPL. The one that transports me to an Irish or English-style bitter is the Chickadee nitro beer.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Previous editions of My Kitchen Their Table have featured Courtney Loreg, Chad Conley Atsuko Fujimoto, Matt Ginn, Jordan Rubin, Cara Stadler, Thomas Takashi Cooke, Ilma Lopez, Bowman Brown, Brian Catapang, Kelly Nelson, Lee Farrington & Bryna Gootkind, Jake and Raquel Stevens, Tina Cromwell, Nathaniel Meiklejohn, Evan Atwell, and Mimi Weissenborn.
The My Kitchen Their Table series is brought to life by food writer Angela Andre Roberts, and the generous sponsorship by Evergreen Credit Union and The Boulos Company.
Solo Cucina Market Closing Sunday
The owners of the Solo Cucina Market have announced that this Sunday will be the market’s last day in business. The owners had announced in in November that they were seeking a buyer for the market.
Despite our most sincere efforts and fervent hopes, we have been unable to arrange a sale of the market to a buyer who will continue the concept. We are deeply grateful for your ongoing patronage and good cheer since the news of our closure came out, and your optimism has buoyed us to this point—but sadly these last few rogue waves have left us without a path forward.
The market opened on March 25, 2020. Solo Cucina is part of a family of businesses that also include Solo Italiano in Portland and Solo Pane e Pasticceria in Bath.
Luna Shawarma and Falafel Now Open
A new business called Luna Shawarma and Falafel is now open on the second floor of the Public Market House in Monument Square.
Owner Eve Alrashidi and her team are serving a menu (see below) that includes shawarma (beef or chicken), falafel sandwiches, cheeseburgers, hummus plates, salads and hot dogs. Luna will be open daily 11 am to 8 pm.
BA Most Anticipated: Oun Lido’s
Bon Appétit has included Oun Lido’s (website, instagram) in their short list of the Most Anticipated Restaurant Openings of 2024.
The opening of Oun Lidos, the second restaurant from the team behind popular Portland Vietnamese mainstay Cong Tu Bot, is a good enough reason to book a trip to Maine this spring. Oun Lidos will be a multi-level restaurant in Old Port, with an all-day takeout counter offering Chinatown-style baked goods, rice plates, and boba to-go. Chef Bounahcree Kim will move over from Cong Tu Bot to helm the kitchen and serve the Khmer-Chinese food of his childhood, with dishes like iced jello salad with coconut sauce and mi ka thung—a fresh wide noodle stir fry with shredded beef, five spice gravy, and pickled mustard greens.
The list includes just nine featured restaurants. The others are located in Ashville, Atlanta, Denver, Detroit, New Orleans, New York, San Francisco and Seattle.
First word on Oun Lido’s (originally to be named Lido’s 2) broke in May of last year and the restaurant is under construction at 30 Market Street (former home to Pat’s Pizza). Plans are for it to launch in February for takeout and with limited seating and with the full launch of it’s dining room and expanded menu in the spring.
5-10-15: January 2024
The Portland Food Map launched in August 2007 and the archive of posts provides a chronicle of the past 16+ years of the Portland restaurant scene. While a lot of the reporting here is about what’s happening now and coming next, we thought it would be fun to take a look back at what the hot topics were from 5, 10 and 15 years ago.
Here’s are highlights from January 2009, 2014 and 2019:
- The grand opening of Paciarino took place on January 5, 2009
- A “new food blog” called The Blueberry Files published a review of Bresca in January 2009. Fifteen years later author Kate McCarty has published two books and has vibrant career as a food writer for Maine newspapers and magazines.
- Word broke in early 2009 that a new coffee shop was under construction on Middle Street. Scant info was available on the business that we all now know as Bard Coffee.
- In early 2014 Small Axe food truck owners Karl Deuben and Bill Leavy began looking for a brick and mortar location. That search eventually landed them the East Ender which Deuben continues to operate to this day. (January 2014)
- The Portland Food Co-op announced plans to move into their current space at 290 Congress Street, and Nathaniel Meiklejohn shared plans to open The Jewel Box at 644 Congress Street. (January 2014)
- Miyake Diner launched on January 20, 2014. The 16-seat izakaya restaurant was located at 129 Spring Street where the Miyake restaurant group got its start.
- The event line-up for the 6th Maine Restaurant Week was announced. (January 2014)
- Developer Tom Landry bought the former Aurora Provisions building at auction. The well-loved West End eatery had closed in August of the prior year. (January 2019)
- 2019 got off to a strong start as we learned that Coals Pizza, Maiz, Little Giant, Crooked Mile on Brighton Ave, Kuno, Quinn’s Bardega, Royal Lunch Bar and the Island Lobster Company were under construction.
- Gross Confection Bar opened on January 4, 2019.
- A 6-day Maine Chef’s Summit took place at O’Maine Studios in Portland and at Sunday River. The Portland segment included a varied program on business, industry trends and leadership. (January 2019)
Check back next month for a look back at the hot news from the Februarys of 2009, 2014 and 2019.