Wednesday — the premier of the Portland episode of Man vs Food on the Travel Channel, a wine tastings at RSVP and Old Port Wine Merchants, and Wine Wise is teaching a class at The Wine Bar.
Thursday — a wine dinner at Havana South featuring wines from Les Vins De Vienne.
Friday — a wine tasting at the Scarborough Wine Outlet.
Saturday — a wine tasting at the Black Cherry Provisions.
Sunday — Vignola and Cinque Terre’s 6th Annual Harvest Dinner at their farm in Greene, Maine, and Rippling Waters Organic Farm’s 6th Annual Soil to Supper event.
Farmer’s Markets — the traditional series of Farmer’s Markets are taking place Monday (Monument Square), Wednesday (Monument Square) and Saturday (Deering Oaks Park). Cultivating Community is running their new series of markets Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at various locations around the city.
For more information on these and other upcoming food happenings in the area, visit the event calendar.
If you are holding a food event this week that’s not listed above, publicize it by adding it as a comment to this post.
This Week’s Events
Wednesday — the premier of the Portland episode of Man vs Food on the Travel Channel, a wine tastings at RSVP and Old Port Wine Merchants, and Wine Wise is teaching a class at The Wine Bar.
Thursday — a wine dinner at Havana South featuring wines from Les Vins De Vienne.
Friday — a wine tasting at the Scarborough Wine Outlet.
Saturday — a wine tasting at the Black Cherry Provisions.
Sunday — Vignola and Cinque Terre’s 6th Annual Harvest Dinner at their farm in Greene, Maine, and Rippling Waters Organic Farm’s 6th Annual Soil to Supper event.
Farmer’s Markets — the traditional series of Farmer’s Markets are taking place Monday (Monument Square), Wednesday (Monument Square) and Saturday (Deering Oaks Park). Cultivating Community is running their new series of markets Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at various locations around the city.
For more information on these and other upcoming food happenings in the area, visit the event calendar.
If you are holding a food event this week that’s not listed above, publicize it by adding it as a comment to this post.
Maine Chocolate Ice Cream and Truffles Win Honors
Dean’s Sweets won top honors in both the Best Truffle and Best Traditional Chocolates categories as well as placing in four other categories at the 2010 Boston Luxury Chocolate Salon.
Gifford’s Ice Cream won 1st place at the 2010 World Dairy Expo in the category for Regular Chocolate Ice Cream, according to a report in Maine Ahead magazine.
Gifford’s Ice Cream (www.giffordsicecream.com), central Maine’s third-generation family ice cream business, swept the competition at the 2010 World Dairy Expo, earning not only the title of “World’s Best Chocolate” for the third time, but also being recognized as “Grade A & Ice Cream Grand Champion,” besting the entire Championship Dairy Product category, considered a coup in industry circles.
MooMilk
MooMilk, the Maine-based organic milk company, is scaling back operations, according to a report in the Bangor Daily News.
MOOMilk, which stands for Maine’s Own Organic Milk, processed milk Wednesday but will suspend production Sunday on skim and 1 percent milk, as a variety of reasons have combined to force the business toward closure. The company’s cash flow is so low that it can only purchase 2 percent and whole milk cartons.
“We are out of money,” David Bright, MOOMilk’s secretary and one of its founders, said this week.
News Update: Portland Press Herald reports they will be staying open after “a number of individuals and foundations have provided enough money to enable the company to sell its product to two Maine food banks.”
First Review of Havana South
The Portland Phoenix has published a review of Havana South.
While we did not leave Havana South raving about the dishes, beyond the lamb entrée, we nonetheless liked the place. Though things are not quite perfect, the spirit of the restaurant is right and you get the sense they take their food seriously and are going to work out the details. But as Obama is learning, patience can wear thin when there is a lot of money involved, and with most entrees over $25, Havana should keep that in mind. In the meantime, go with the existing strengths: hear the band on a Wednesday, be sure to chat with Ezra, and try the lamb.
Review of The Great Lost Bear
From Away has published a review of The Great Lost Bear.
The Great Lost Bear succeeds in the ways you need it to, providing a great selection of mostly local draft beers in a cool, calmly-lit environment, serviced by an easygoing, yet attentive staff. Knowing what to order and what to avoid seems key, and it seems like sticking to simpler dishes (chicken wings) and skipping their more “exotic” fare (Peanut Thai Chicken Rollup? Spanakopita? Seriously?) might be the order of the day. So far, it is our favorite choice for a cool place to lay low until October with a few beers and some good pub food.
Under Construction:Figa in October
According to the Munjoy Hill News, Figa is planning to open their doors on October 22nd.
The news that the foodie world has been waiting for came this afternoon from Lee Farrington: Figa restaurant will be opening on October 22nd. Farrington has been entangled in a water rights dispute that has repeatedly delayed the opening of this much anticipated restaurant.
August 2010 Monthly Stats
The 10 eateries looked up most often in August were:
- WhaddaPita (6)
- Miyake (23)
- Caiola’s (11)
- Bar Lola (1)
- Bresca (4)
- The Grill Room (8)
- Five Fifty-Five (9)
- Havana South (2)
- Mike’s (-)
- Hot Suppa! (56)
The numbers in parentheses indicates their rank last month.
Women Who Lunch
An article in today’s Sun seeks to explain/describe Women Who Lunch.
Major metropolitan areas are their natural habitat, but evolution and sharp environmental adaptation skills have been kind to them. Those at the top of the socio-economic food chain are endangered, but for the most part, they can thrive almost anywhere there are two or more of them. They are Women Who Lunch (WWL).
Cape Kitchen Tour & The Costs of Industrial Food
The Food & Dining section in today’s Press Herald includes articles on the kitchen tour taking place next weekend in Cape Elizabeth,
In this era when the average home cook has been whipped into a Food Network frenzy, kitchen tours have become a popular way for nonprofits to raise money. Foodies love to drool over other people’s Viking stoves, Subzero refrigerators and acres of counter space begging to be filled with Kitchen Aid mixers and Dualit toasters.
a Natural Foodie article on the real costs of the industrial food system,
“What we’ve got now are microbes, such as E. coli 0157:H7, that were not common in the past and seem to have originated in feedlots and are now ubiquitous in the environment,” said Russell Libby, executive director of the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association.
a reminder that Anna Lappe, author of Diet for a Hot Planet: The Climate Crisis at the End of Your Fork and What You Can Do About It will be at Longfellow Books tonight at 7 pm for a reading and book signing,
and an article about the new Maine restaurant cook book by Michael Sanders and Russell French. For more on the cookbook see this June television interview with Steve Corry.