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What’s French for “fast (and fabulous) food”?

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by guest blogger Susan S. Yeske

Food that’s delivered this quickly shouldn’t be this good, but the cuisine is fast as well as flavorful at Lahaska’s smallest restaurant, La Madeleine French Country Café.

Chef Laurent Leseur
Chef Laurent Leseur

Chef de cuisine Laurent Leseur and wife April enjoyed the grand opening of their petite café recently after a soft opening in July. Customers streamed through the small, charming eatery, located on the northern side of Route 202 in the Penn’s Purchase shopping area. You can’t miss it; it’s next to the Dairy Queen.

The menu changes frequently but the Leseurs regularly offer croissant sandwiches, salads, soups, crepes, entrées and quiche. And, of course, the small, sweet cakes for which the cafe is named.

A big favorite among the rapidly growing clientele is the $8.50 boxed lunch, which includes a sandwich, salad or soup and dessert pastry in a pretty pastel box.

A native of Paris, Leseur has cooked since he was 14. His years as a chef were spent at a variety of eateries as remote as the island of St. Bart’s and as near as Hamilton’s Grill Room in Lambertville. He has worked as a private chef and spent three years at Zinc Bistro in Philadelphia under master chef Olivier Desaintmartin. His work has been featured on Comcast Network’s “The Chef’s Kitchen.”

La Madeleine is a takeout restaurant, with three tables outside that are nice now but will cease to be appealing when the weather turns cold. The future may bring an indoor restaurant at another location.

In the meantime Leseur is building his customer clientele and offering specials for catering customers who are happily discovering a taste of Paris in Lahaska.

As Julia Child would say, “Bon appétit!”  

La Madeleine French Country Café
2860 York Road (Route 202) #9B
Lahaska (next to Dairy Queen)
(215) 794-6900
Hours: Monday-Saturday 10 am-7 pm, Sunday 11 am-6 pm

We’re ba-a-a-ck…

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Apologies for the lack of posts this week. We just got back from Maine – pictures of great food from the Schooner Heritage to follow – and I have been wallowing in the usual backlog of emails, junk mail, etc. Also getting ready for a dinner we are doing tomorrow night. We offered (again) a silent auction item at the Heritage Conservancy’s Farm to Table Dinner in August a dinner at our home, all Bucks County ingredients. I spent yesterday roaming Upper Bucks. Today I’ll hit some of my favorites in Central Bucks, and start cooking. Yikes.

But thanks to my wonderful guest bloggers, I’ll have some interesting posts for you later today. Have a wonderful weekend. There is lots going on so check out our Food Events in Bucks County calendar.

Some of My Favorite Places are in Trenton

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I’ve got this thing about Trenton. I like it there. Over the course of 15 years living and working in the city, I came to know its community as diverse, dynamic, artistic and kind. So it’s a shame that when I suggest places to eat there, a fair number of people wrinkle their noses or shrug. They’re missing something. And I can be specific.

Cafe Ole, TrentonFirst, they’re missing Café Olé, on South Warren Street. This veritable coffee house serves breakfast, lunch and some of the best coffee around. Go in for breakfast and you’ll find artists, politicians, state workers, police officers, lawyers, lobbyists, merchants and other business people chatting away as they wait for their coffees, teas and breakfasts. My favorite: The breakfast wrap, scrambled eggs, potatoes, cheese and sausage wrapped in a hot tortilla. For lunch, try the vegetarian chili or any one of the freshly made sandwiches. Starbucks wants you to think it’s like Café Olé.

If you’re in a beef-eating mood for lunch, go the next block up from Café Olé, still on Warren Street, to Checkers. There, owner Tom Fowler cooks up thick burgers, cheese burgers, cheese steaks and grilled chicken sandwiches, among other things, from a desk-sized grill. (He’s got salads and a rotating family of specials, too.) Tom knows how to cook burgers: Order rare, you get rare. Ask for medium-well, that’s what he’ll cook. But, I think ordering the meat too well done here is a mistake. They form the patties fresh each morning, and it’d be a shame to cook away all their flavor. There’s a full bar with a modest but solid selection of beers, which is tough to resist with these bacon cheeseburgers, whether it’s lunch time or not.

If you’re looking for a more sedate lunch or dinner, try Setimo Cielo, around the corner on Front Street. Setimo Cielo (“Seventh Heaven”) serves classic Italian food in a quiet, comfortable and friendly atmosphere. Whether you prefer chicken marsala or ravioli, the food is consistent, fresh and expertly made. The bar features a wide range of wines from Italy as well as California. Be sure to pay attention to the appetizers and salads, which often put a creative spin on old favorites like hearts of palm or carppacio.

Archives, Trenton MarriottFinally, there’s the Archives at the Marriott Hotel, at the corner of South Warren and Lafayette Streets. Yes, Marriott’s a chain and, yes, I know we usually don’t write about chains. But the Marriott has become such an integral part of Trenton’s downtown community, it wouldn’t be fair to exclude it. The Archives bar hits all of our criteria for bars we like, with a friendly crowd, good bartenders and good food. The Archives restaurant offers buffets and full menus for breakfast and lunch, and an intriguing menu based on local recipes for dinner.

These are just some of the places to eat downtown. It’s not the long a drive, you know – and it’s a good place to eat.

Cielo Settimo Restaurant on Urbanspoon

Fresh from the market: September 19th

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Fresh From The MarketHere’s all the great vegetables and fruits available at many local farmers’ markets this week. See our Food Events in Bucks County calendar for listings of weekly area farmers’ markets. For a listing of year-round markets,  roadside and “pick your own” farms in your neighborhood, see our previous post.

This week’s freshly picked vegetables are: sweet corn and tomatoes (including heirlooms), plus basil, parsley, cilantro, dill, fennel, garlic, leeks, scallions, onions, kohlrabi, cucumbers, celery, beets, string beans, winter squash, kale, collards, spinach, chard, lettuces & salad mix, okra, hot peppers, diverse sweet peppers, potatoes, carrots, radishes and tomatillos.

Freshly picked fruit: apples, cider and pears.

In addition, many markets are selling grass-fed locally grown beef, pastured poultry and eggs, cow and goat yogurt, goat cheeses, lamb, homemade pies and sweets, breads, cookies, muffins, scones, raw veggie chips, raw honey, organically grown flowers, freshly roasted organic coffees, prepared foods, Italian “gravies” and tomato pies, plus handmade soaps, fiber products and handcrafts!

Thanks to Anne Biggs and Robin Hoy of the Wrightstown Market for her help on this list.

Interested in showing your support of buying and eating local? Check out the new marketplace on the Buy Fresh Buy Local Web site. Get a t-shirt, hat or bumper sticker and show the world you eat local.

Serving up breakfast in Riegelsville

Updated 8/18/17

I grew up in Philadelphia where firefighters are municipal employees. In fact, our nearest fire house was right across the street from my junior high school. Every Wednesday at noon, the air raid horn was blown. Remember, this was the 1970’s when the Cold War was still fairly recent. If you had a class on that side of the building, all talking came to a halt for that minute.

The North House engine, photo courtesy Reigelsville Community Fire Co.So when I first moved out to the ‘burbs, I was a bit taken aback to learn that my local firehouse was a volunteer operation. “Volunteers? Called via a siren??”

I have since learned that most firehouses in the United States are volunteer-run, and run very well. It is a very special person who volunteers to protect and help their community in this way, and my appreciation for him or her is great.

Living in Bucks County, though, I have come to appreciate our local fire companies for something else — their food (come on, you knew where I was going with this). I am stating here in print that it is one of our long-term goals to sample every firehouse breakfast in Bucks County. Why? Because, as the saying goes, it’s there. Consider it our public service.

A firehouse breakfast every month

Some fire companies do a breakfast once or twice a year. Some do it four times a year. The Community Fire Company #1, Station 42, in Riegelsville, does it EVERY MONTH. And they have done so for over twenty years. This we had to check out.

Firefighter Joe Chavar cooking up breakfast
Firefighter Joe Chavar cooking up breakfast

It was a warm August Sunday when we arrived in Riegelsville. If you’ve never been to a firehouse breakfast, here’s how it typically works.

Tables and chairs are set up in the actual firehouse (they move the engines outside). You usually pay up front, sit down at a clean table setting, and wait for a friendly face to appear with a pot of coffee.

Breakfast – eggs, pancakes, meat, toast, etc. – is served to you at the table shortly after that. The firefighters are often the ones in the kitchen turning out the hotcakes, with the Auxiliary ladies serving up.

The atmosphere is boisterous and friendly, with families, seniors and everything in between. Strangers talk to each other and become new friends. This city girl was charmed the first time I went to one here in Wycombe.

It’s more like a diner that operates once a month.

The Riegelsville breakfast works a little differently, but then, they’ve got the experience. Instead of paying one set price up front, we were directed to sit down and fill out a simple paper menu at our seats with choices of eggs (circle how you want them), three kinds of meat (ham, sausage or scrapple), hotcakes, French toast, creamed beef, potatoes, toast, juice, and hot beverages (coffee, tea, hot chocolate). It’s more like a diner that operates once a month.

Firefighters Special, photo credit Lynne S. Goldman

Seeing as we had an obligation to sample as much as we could, Mark, our friend, Peter, and I all ordered the Firefighters Special: 2 eggs, 2 hotcakes, 1 slice of ham, 2 pieces of sausage, potatoes and toast. Price? $8. And that’s the most expensive dish on the menu. Oh, and Peter also got the French toast. Good man.

I wanted to find out more about the Riegelsville firehouse and its meals (they do dinners too), and Diana Cox, president of the Auxiliary, was good enough to sit down and chat with us. She filled in some of the details and told us about the important role the breakfasts and dinners play in helping to pay for engine trucks, repairs and other firehouse improvements. [Update: welcome Leanne Hissim, new Ladies Auxiliary president]

As for sources, all their eggs come from Rick’s Egg Farm in Kintersville. Meat comes from R&R Provisions in Easton. And all produce comes from Trauger’s Farm, also in Kintersville.

Diners come from as far as Warminster and Souderton, or folks just passing by on 611 who see the sign and drive up the hill. During the summer months, they serve 300 to 400 people. In the fall and winter, they get over 400, with almost 500 around Christmas. And they do this from 8 am to noon on the third Sunday of every month.

Dinners too!

Ah, but the dinners. It began innocently with a spaghetti dinner a few years back, says Diana. Now they are doing them almost every month.

October will be Pork and Sauerkraut. May is their now famous Roast Beef Dinner with fresh local asparagus. Lent brings a Fish Fry. Spaghetti Dinner in June.

The baked goods are all homemade and donated by community members. The stuffing and potatoes are real, says Diana, horrified when people suggest otherwise.

And the vegetables are all fresh and local. In fact, the day after we spoke was going to be corn blanching day for the Auxiliary, to freeze and use for the rest of the year during the dinners.

The Community Fire Company #1, Station 42
333 Delaware Avenue
Riegelsville, PA
610.749.2737

Updated 8/18/17

A last taste of summer

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by guest blogger Elisabeth Villarroel
 
Although the weather has turned a bit cooler and our thoughts may be on the flavors of fall, summer is not over yet.

Kenny’s Spirited Eatery in Southampton is giving us one last chance to savor the tastes of summer with their final seafood night of the season on September 16th. Since May, Kenny’s has been hosting seafood night each Wednesday, featuring all-you-can-eat snow crab legs and specials on pitchers of beer – what says summer more than that!

Other seafood night staples include king crab legs, oysters on the half shell, BBQ shrimp, and crab bites, but as you can see the moment you arrive, the all-you-can-eat crab legs steal the show. The tables, normally dressed in cloth, are covered in paper and the kitchen door is constantly swinging as servers bring out plate upon plate of steaming Old Bay-covered crab legs to the sound of cracking shells. And they really mean “all you can eat” – this summer, two-and-a-half plates was all I could tackle, but I have been witness to a couple five-plate crab leg feasts.

For those not into seafood, Kenny’s dinner menu offers plenty of variety, from traditional bar appetizers like quesadillas and wings (I suggest the Caribbean jerk wings with chipotle ranch sauce), to a wide variety of burgers and sandwiches, to more sophisticated entrees such as ahi tuna and veal marsala. Perhaps if the cooler weather is an inspiration you’ll try a soup like I recently did; their meat-packed chili has just a touch of heat – enough to warm you up on these slightly cooler evenings.

Kenny’s was established in 1955 as a small neighborhood bar and was recently renovated and reopened. The “spirited eatery” has a full lunch and dinner menu as well as two bars and a full calendar of nighttime entertainment, including weekend DJ dance parties and Sunday night poker tournaments.

For those looking for casual dining, a menu with plenty of variety, daily dinner specials, a lively atmosphere, and, of course, all-you-can-eat crab legs, Kenny’s is worth checking out.
 
Kenny’s Spirited Eatery
1134 Street Road
Southampton, PA 18966
215.357.9974

Kenny's Spirited Eatery on Urbanspoon

Great brews and food at the Spinnerstown Hotel

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by guest blogger Emily Trostle

If you have a hankerin’ for ostrich and good beer, have I got the place for you.

The Spinnerstown Hotel in Quakertown is located in the very northwestern part of Bucks County. I first heard of this place when my father, an adventurous fella, and uncle, his helpless sidekick, stumbled upon this gem. They brought back a beer bible as evidence of their discovery.

Hefe-WiessIt’s rather unassuming from the road but enter and be amazed. The Spinnerstown Hotel is a white-table-cloth kind of place but you’d never know it sitting at the bar. Soon after we sat down all the regulars began filing in.

I tend to be one of those women who takes forever browsing a menu for the perfect meal. In order to speed up the selection process, I jumped onto their Web site and decided days ahead to go with the ostrich quesadilla, and mussels in Guinness butter sauce with a glass of Kono Sauvignon Blanc. My boyfriend, Wes, settled on the ostrich cheese steak and began the evening with a glass of Franziskaner Hefe-Weisse. Beer at the Spinnerstown is served in glasses particular to the kind of beer. Different glass shapes allow the head to form properly and release all those delightful aromas specific to each type.

Ostrich QuesadillaOstrich is a difficult flavor to describe – kind of gamey, beefy chicken. A dark meat, it was difficult to tell just by looking at the cheese steak that it wasn’t your everyday, run-of-the-mill steak. As soon as we tasted it though, we knew it was extraordinary. The ostrich held up very well to all the flavors associated with a quesadilla: the spice, the cheese, the sour cream. In fact, I dare say that it’s better than beef.

As the friendly banter between regulars and bartender continued, Wes was browsing the menu for his next brew. The bartender spoke very highly of the Stone 13th Anniversary Imperial Red Ale that was on tap. This is not a brew for those afraid of hops. Keep in mind though that “hoppy” doesn’t necessarily mean bitter. Hops are, essentially, the flowering part of the plant and are steeped to get great flavor and aromatics in brews. After drinking Stones Anniversary beer, the exhale immediately following will fill your nose with hops while your mouth gets the caramel-toffee notes typical of red ales (side note: the best way to get a great flavor profile of beer is to drink it then immediately exhale through your nose with your mouth closed. Try it!).

If you have a tough time choosing, they offer a flight special: four 6 oz. samples, your choice, for $9. Or, for those who live by the book, some of the menu selections give beer suggestions to ensure pairing is perfect. Don’t forget though, the best resource is the bartender.

The Spinnerstown has many beer-related events, like the Summer Send-Off with the Victory Brewing Company on September 16th. Different beers paired with “opulent culinary creations,” like beer cheese and potato soup, baby back ribs braised with maple brown sugar and beer, shellfish and Hop Devil stew and chocolate porter crème brulee. See their Web site for more information and call for reservations.

This is a place that I can’t wait to explore in more depth. The menu, the beer selection, the atmosphere; it all beckons to me. My only regret is that it’s not a wee bit closer to home so that I could make it a regular venture.

The Spinnerstown Hotel
2195 Spinnerstown Road
Spinnerstown, PA 18968
215.536.7242

Spinnerstown Hotel Restaurant & Tap Room on Urbanspoon

Eating ice cream in the fall

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It's always a good time for ice creamYes, it’s cooler outside…but that shouldn’t keep us from eating ice cream,  should it? Not when there is so much good ice cream in Bucks. Here are the fall hours of some of your favorite ice cream places in Bucks County (according to our Bucks County Taste poll). See our previous post on ice cream places in Bucks for more.

Owow Cow Creamery (Ottsville), at the intersection of Routes 563 & 412, near Rt. 611, 610.847.7070
Starting the Tuesday after Labor Day, fall hours will be: Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 12 – 9 pm; Friday and Satruday 12-10 pm; and Sunday 1-9 pm; Mondays – closed.

Dilly’s Corner (Center Bridge), on River Road (Route 32), north of New Hope, right at the Center Bridge-Stockton bridge, 215.862.5333
Tuesday – Sunday, 11 am to 7:30 pm; closed Mondays; will start closing earlier as it gets darker earlier; open at least until Thanksgiving.

Chubby’s Dairy Barn (Plumsteadville), right behind the Plumsteadville Inn, near the intersection of Route 611 and Stump Road, 215.766.7554
Fall hours will be the same: 7 days a week from 12 noon to 9 pm. Open all winter. Winter hours start November 1st – Wednesdays through Sunday, 1 pm to 8 pm.

Goodnoe Farm Dairy Bar (Newtown) 4 South Sycamore Street, 215.968.3544
Open 7 days a week, 10 am to 9 pm; open all winter.

Uncle Dave’s (Yardley) at Shady Brook Farm,  931 Stony Hill Road, 215-968-1670
Will be open through the end of the first week of January then closed until mid-March. Hours will vary. Check the Web site for current hours.

Tidbits: The Raven flies again

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We knew of the reopening in July of the New Hope favorite Raven Resort but haven’t had a chance to get there. Thankfully, Susan S. Yeske, one of our guest bloggers, has. Here’s her review in this week’s Bucks County Herald (September 10th). The Raven will celebrate its 30th anniversary next month. Watch their web site for updates.

Fresh from the market: September 12th

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Fresh From The MarketHere’s all the great vegetables and fruits available at many local farmers’ markets this week. See our Food Events in Bucks County calendar for listings of weekly area farmers’ markets. For a listing of year-round markets,  roadside and “pick your own” farms in your neighborhood, see our previous post.

This week’s freshly picked vegetables are:basil, red beets, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, celery, cilantro, collards, cucumbers, dill, edamame beans, various eggplants, fennel, garlic, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, lettuce, okra, onions, parsley, hot and sweet peppers galore, potatoes, radishes, salad mix, scallions, string beans, summer squash, sweet corn, Swiss chard, tomatillos, heirloom and regular tomatoes, zucchini, winter squash.

Freshly picked fruit:Apples and freshly pressed cider, blackberries, cantaloupes, peaches, pears, plums, raspberries, and watermelon.

In addition, many markets are selling pastured, all natural meat (beef, chicken, pork), pastured eggs, homemade pies and sweets, breads, cookies, muffins, scones, raw veggie chips, raw honey, organically grown flowers, freshly roasted organic coffees, prepared foods and handmade soaps, fiber products and handicrafts!

Thanks to Anne Biggs and Robin Hoy of the Wrightstown Market for her help on this list.

Interested in showing your support of buying and eating local? Check out the new marketplace on the Buy Fresh Buy Local Web site. Get a t-shirt, hat or bumper sticker and show the world you eat local.

Carnivores Delight

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Before you go to naBrasa you should understand a couple of things. First, if meat’s not your thing you’ll probably be happier elsewhere. Next: Go hungry. naBrasa isn’t a place where you go for something light.

na Brasa rodizionaBrasa is a “rodizio,” a Brazilian- and Portugese-style barbecue where a variety of meats are brought directly from the rotisserie to your table. Once you’re settled, a horde of servers, each bearing a skewer holding one type of meat, arrive in turn – and keep arriving until you ask them to stop. Throughout the night they’ll bring up to twelve different kinds of meat including flank steak, sirloin, filet mignon (with or without bacon), pork tenderloin (in a garlic-parmesan crust), chicken, pork sausage and, every once in a while, grilled salmon. It’s accompanied by a high quality salad bar – the term doesn’t really do it justice – with three kinds of soups, cheese, sliced meats, mixed salads and bread. It’s easily a meal in and of itself. (See their Web site for a full description of the meats and salad bar.)

Salad bar at na BrasaOf course, you’re completely in control of how much you eat, but I always find it hard to say “no.” First of all, the staff presents each dish with a certain flourish and pride. More important, the food is good, fresh and not overly seasoned. (Of course, the pork with garlic-parmesan has a bit of a kick, but you’d expect that.) Waiters rotate through to make sure you have the drinks and water you want, and a pleasant collection of side dishes – fried bananas, creamy whipped potatoes, fried polenta and a light, cheesy bread made with smoked mozzarella – provide counterpoints to the protein.

As would be expected, the attention paid to the grilling of the meat is intense. The rotisserie chef came around to each table and – sincerely – wanted to know how the meat was. At this point, we were done, and stuffed. “Great!” “Fine! we both chimed in. But he was insistent. Then, Lynne made a mistake. “Well…the filet was a little dry.” After confirming how she liked her steak (medium-rare), he thanked us and disappeared. A minute later, a waiter appeared at the table with a skewer of filet mignon, accompanied by the chef. A beautiful, medium-rare piece of steak was selected and laid on Lynne’s plate. It was not dry.

na Brasa barTroy, our waiter, told us naBrasa’s popularity has been steadily growing since the restaurant opened in March. On the night Lynne and I went, the dining room was crowded though we were seated right away without a reservation. Troy said we were lucky. On most weekends, he counts reservations in the hundreds and getting a table without one requires some combination of luck and patience.

It’s worth it, though. At $34.95 per person on weekends, $29.95 on weekdays (plus drinks and dessert), the price is fair for the generous and good meal you get. Plus, making a reservation means you’ll have to plan ahead, which is a good thing. It also means you can plan on a light lunch that afternoon.

naBrasa
680 N. Easton Rd. (Route 611) [across from the Naval Air Base]
Horsham, PA  19044
215.956.0600
Monday – Thursday: 5 – 9:30 pm
Friday – Saturday: 4:30 – 10 pm
Sunday: 3 – 9 pm

NaBrasa Brazilian Steakhouse on Urbanspoon

Fresh from the market: September 5th

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Fresh From The MarketHere’s all the great vegetables and fruits available at many local farmers’ markets this week. See our Food Events in Bucks County calendar for listings of weekly area farmers’ markets. For a listing of year-round markets,  roadside and “pick your own” farms in your neighborhood, see our previous post.

This week’s freshly picked vegetables are: basil, red beets, carrots, celery, cilantro, collards, cucumbers, dill, edamame beans, various eggplants fennel, garlic, herbs, kale, lettuce, onions, parsley, hot and sweet peppers galore, potatoes, radishes, rhubarb, scallions, string beans, summer squash, sweet corn, Swiss chard, tomatillos, heirloom and regular tomatoes, zucchini, and first of the season’s winter squash! Time to can and freeze for winter enjoyment!

Freshly picked fruit: Apples and first of the season’s CIDER, blackberries, cantaloupes, nectarines, peaches, pears, raspberries, and watermelon.

In addition, many markets are selling pastured, all natural meat (beef, chicken, pork), pastured eggs, homemade pies and sweets, breads, cookies, muffins, scones, raw veggie chips, raw honey, organically grown flowers, freshly roasted organic coffees, prepared foods and handmade soaps, fiber products and handicrafts!

Thanks to Robin Hoy of the Wrightstown Market for her help on this list.

Interested in showing your support of buying and eating local? Check out the new marketplace on the Buy Fresh Buy Local Web site. Get a t-shirt, hat or bumper sticker and show the world you eat local.

Labor Day in Bucks County

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“Can you believe it’s Labor Day?” That’s what everyone seems to be saying. But we welcome the cooler weather and the increase in food activities in Bucks County and nearby. Lots of fun stuff to do this weekend, and in the weeks to come. Check out our calendar of Food Events in Bucks County any time to plan your eating. We update it constantly.

Manoffs apples
Manoff’s apples – just in!

Mark and I had the pleasure of being at last night’s potluck and farm tour at Manoff Market Gardens, sponsored by the Bucks County Foodshed Alliance. What a perfect night. As Gary and Amy Manoff walked us through their orchards, the sunset painted the sky and the cool air surrounded us. Be sure to stop by Manoff’s for some peaches and their beautiful and varied apples have started coming in.

Labor Day Weekend Eats…where shall we start? There’s something for everyone.

First off, make sure to stop by your local farm stand or farmers’ market for the cookout. The weekend weather looks bee-u-tee-full. Veggies and fruit that is fresh and wonderful right now – corn, tomatoes, peppers (sweet and hot), eggplants, onions, and get some peaches before they’re all gone. Linden Hill has their market on Friday afternoons; Doylestown and Wrightstown are Saturday mornings. Catch Springtown’s market on Wednesday afternoons, and Lower Makefield and New Hope on Thursday afternoons (details on our calendar).

Pierogi
photo MSClipArt

The 44th Annual Polish-American Festival takes place all weekend at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa on Ferry Road in Doylestown. Lots of good lip-smacking Polish food – pierogi, potato placki, grilled kielbasa, golabki, Polish ice, Polish fries and then all the normal fun fair food. Smacznego! (Polish for “Bon Appetit”)

 

Frenchtown (over on the other side of the river, in Nu Joisey) is hosting their annual RiverFest on Saturday and Sunday. The word is food is going to be great, focusing on fresh, local food and restaurants. Just the way we like it!

Get details on any of these events at our Food Events in Bucks County calendar. Have a safe and sweet weekend.

Back to School with Healthy Lunches

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This Saturday, September 5th, the Wrightstown Farmers’ Market hosts two coordinating events—a chef demo of fresh, healthy school lunch items and a potluck “eat-in” at noon in support of Slow Food USA’s national school lunch initiative—to show parents and responsible adults the advantages to providing healthier school lunches for all kids.

Guest chef Denis Chiappa, co-owner of Carlow Cookery in Doylestown, will demonstrate ways to prepare delicious, healthy, kid-friendly back-to-school lunches using readily available fresh ingredients.

Chiappa’s demos in the morning lead into Slow Food’s Time-Out for Lunch Eat-In at noon, part of the local and national campaign taking place this weekend all around the country to raise awareness of the quality of school lunches and to put “real food” on the menu in school cafeterias.

To show support for healthy school lunches, area residents are invited to bring to the Saturday market a healthy lunch dish to share and a folding chair. For more information about the Time-Out for Lunch initiative or to sign a petition that will go to legislators and school officials, go to the Slow Food USA Web site.

Putting up tomatoes – the easy way

It’s a beautiful, cool day here in Wycombe. Instead of working at the computer, I’m thinking of “putting up” veggies and fruit.

Found this nice website by the Penn State Cooperative Extension that has lots of tips on freezing, canning and preserving our Bucks County bounty.

Check out the boards at Chowhound, and if you have a subscription to Cooks Illustrated , they have suggestions as well. What with the tomato blight this year, I’d recommend grabbing all the good tomatoes you see and preserving or freezing them.

Blooming Glen Farm tomatoes

Here’s a “quick-and-dirty” method for freezing tomatoes that I was taught last year by Miles Slack at the Center Farm in Forest Grove. Pick up a box of overripes for less money and follow this:

  1. Wash tomatoes and cut off all damaged parts and stems. You do NOT have to remove the skins.
  2. Lay out on cookie sheet and place in freezer.
  3. Once tomatoes are frozen, remove and place in ziploc freezer bag until you want to use.
  4. When it is time to use tomatoes, place in a large pot and let them slowly defrost at room temperature.
  5. Drain in colander, saving tomato juice (to drink or use in soup stock.)
  6. Separate and discard skins and any seeds.
  7. Use pulp in sauce (which will be so sweet) or other recipes.
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