Tag Archives: meat

Fore Street

Late last month we visited Fore Street on a whim while passing through Portland, Maine. In the main dining room tables are arranged on two sides of an open kitchen scene that includes a wood-fired oven, line, and a glassed humidor of sorts for fresh produce. Although the presence of bread seemed to dominate customer reviews (after all, Standard Baking Company is on premises), it is merely an element that competes for attention within the non-stop bustle.

The overwhelming daily menu flowed from garden salads punctuated with mizuna, Hokurei turnips, and grilled Vidalia to chilled meats and offal offerings that included Maine farm rabbit liver pâté and Pekin duck sausage. Wood-grilled meats, oven-roasted seafood, and fresh vegetables ranged from quail and veal sweetbreads to Atlantic bluefish and hake.

Various menu options provide multiple reasonably-priced smaller portion offerings for relief from selection anxiety: Oysters from Nonesuch River, Winter Point, and Hog Island; tastes of Pekin duck rillettes and Maine farm heritage pork brawn; a chilled seafood platter that includes Maine lobster with pickle and tarragon mayonnaise, sliced yellowfin tuna with favas and grilled scallion sauce, summer flounder tartare with lime, shallot, and fresh herbs, and house-caught Atlantic mackerel with pea tendrils and pistachio gremolata. We cannot make the reach to entrees.

Dessert choices include seven artisan cheeses from York Hill Farm and Hahn’s End in Maine and Jasper Hill Farm and Cabot in Vermont. There are also “simply ripe Maine strawberries” from Wayne, Maine (I love saying that) and delectable hand-made chocolates such as orange and white chocolate bon bons and sage flower ganache truffles.

Are you hungry yet? Service and general staff friendliness are high here. Waitstaff take pride in both their tenure and the quality of this restaurant family. So much so that we elect to visit sister property Street & Company on a future visit (Fore Street remains our favorite), but we never make it to Standard Baking Company, Scales at the Public Market, or Two Fat Cats. It is also interesting to note that Fore Street has an always-open reputation that endears it to locals when they occasionally seek shelter from winter storms. Lucky locals.


Fore Street in Portland, Maine

Fore Street occupies a warm brick building with an open kitchen in the Old Port District of Portland, Maine

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Photo of the Day – Keepin’ It Local

Chefs Chris Shepherd and Randy Evans

Chefs Chris Shepherd and Randy Evans at Eastside Farmer's Market (photo by Kenn Stearns)

The community benefits when chefs and farmers connect through locally-produced vegetables, fruits, and farm products. Yesterday I spotted these locavore chefs – Chris Shepherd (chef and managing partner of Catalan Food & Wine) and Randy Evans (executive chef of Haven) – comparing notes in the 90+ degree heat/humidity during a break in their buying activities at the Urban Harvest Farmers Market at Eastside. Farmers appreciate the restaurants’ buying power and restaurant customers enjoy fresh ingredients that taste good. It’s all good!

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Photo of the Day – Bayou City Farmer’s Market in Houston

Bayou City Farmer's Market

Bayou City Farmer's Market in Houston (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Fresh, organic,  and especially LOCAL are the rage when it comes to cheese, meat, coffee, produce, seafood, honey, baked goods, candles, and more. Every major city has their farmer’s markets. The fourth largest U.S. city has many but we like the Urban Harvest effort at 3000 Richmond. It’s large enough to offer a selection but small enough to cover in 30 minutes or less – more when running into friends (thankfully there’s fresh coffee).

We think it’s a good sign to often see several of Houston’s top chefs working their way from vendor to vendor negotiating quantities beyond what most of us can pony up. Our favorite vendors are Jennifer and Dimitri Georgantus with Texas Wild for gulf shrimp from Freeport; Christian and Lisa Seger with Blue Heron Farm for family-owned goat dairy (check out their Mexican goat milk caramel called cajeta and try it with fresh apples); and Theresa, Mike and Bobby Atkinson with Atkinson Farms, a family farm north of Houston. If you stop by one of these vendors, tell them we said hello.

Something for everyone at Bayou City Farmer's Market

Something for everyone at Bayou City Farmer's Market (photos by Kenn Stearns)

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