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A Toast to Toast: Why This Health Trend is Here to Stay

The avocado toast from STEAM Energy Cafe at the Worcester Ice Rink (STEAM)
Country toast with Vermont Cabot butter and housemade raspberry jam (BirchTree Bread Company)
Country toast with Vermont Cabot butter and housemade raspberry jam (BirchTree Bread Company)

What comes to mind when you see the word “toast” on a menu? Five years ago I would have said a piece of white bread with butter (and maybe jam) on the peripheries of a classic breakfast meal. Today, toast is its own entity and it’s something I’m constantly on the lookout for. A simple piece of thickly sliced and toasted bread becomes a blank canvas for all of the toppings and aesthetics that make up an artisanal dish, and the options are endless.

Although toast might seem new, it’s been around for what seems like forever without gaining much attention, let alone trending on Instagram. A simple concept of adding avocado to tortillas dates back thousand of years to the Aztecs. The addition of avocado to toast occurred during the 1500’s with Spanish settlers in Mexico – at the time, avocados were accessible and inexpensive, which allowed for avocado toast to be a staple in Spanish culture. Unlike now, when avocado prices are rising and menu items at various restaurants tend to have an extra cost associated with adding avocado (or guacamole).

STEAM dresses up its Cashew Almond Toast with freshly sliced banana and strawberries. (STEAM)
STEAM dresses up its Cashew Almond Toast with freshly sliced banana and strawberries. (STEAM)

Toast has taken cafés and restaurants by storm not only for its tasty flavor combinations but also because of its nutrition spotlight. Starting with the base, common selections include freshly baked naturally leavened breads with minimal ingredients. Naturally leavened bread, especially sourdough, is not only easier for us to digest but also allows for more nutrients to be absorbed. Go for the whole grain option if you’re looking for a source of complex carbohydrates and fiber. Add healthy toppings from avocado and egg to homemade nut butter and fresh fruit. Try hummus and veggies or a variety of superfoods. You’ve got a buzzworthy menu item that is here to stay.

Olive & Herb with whipped feta, evoo & herbs (BirchTree Bread Company)
Olive & Herb with whipped feta, evoo & herbs (BirchTree Bread Company)

Another bonus: depending on what’s on your toast and how much of it you’re eating, toast can serve as a snack or a meal; it’s great for portion control (think open-faced sandwich – one slice of bread instead of two) and getting a variety of nutrients and flavors from different toppings. Lastly, it is a win for the indecisive; why choose sweet or savory when you could have both?

Central Mass toast options are on the rise – restaurants are bringing unique combinations and their own twists on a classic. You can find stand-alone menu options for toast at some cafés and bakeries, such as BirchTree Bread Company and STEAM Energy Cafe.

Avra Hoffman, co-owner of BirchTree Bread Company describes toast as “not only breakfast, but a perfect snack, a light lunch, a vehicle for carrying wholesome house-made toppings on and a way to keep things simple by returning to our roots of having toast with family.” Expect to find some creative combos from BirchTree Bread Company that focus on using local and seasonal ingredients, whenever possible. Their unique weekly specials created by Brittany, head pastry chef and graduate of the New Culinary Institute, even has its own hashtag (#brittanystoast.) If you follow the hashtag you can look back on some fan favorites, such as Taco toast or S’mores toast with homemade fluff.

Artisanal toast also shows up occasionally on brunch specials from restaurants such as Lock 50,  in the form of open-faced steak and eggs; or at Armsby Abbey, which sources its naturally leavened and freshly baked breads from Crust Artisan Bakeshop. You’ll also find avocado toast, a trend within itself, as a hot menu item at local spots like Brew on the Grid and Nu Kitchen. You can stick with classic avocado toasts, like the one from Nu Kitchen, which has avocado, red pepper flakes, salt, and pepper; or mix it up with one from STEAM Café which builds on the classic and adds goat cheese and mixed nuts.

My prediction is that toast is here to stay. Expect this trend to grow and start showing up on more menus. Are you hooked on toast? If not, I think it’s only a matter of time…

Brittany’s Toast-bbq baked beans, caramelized onions With bacon, melted sharp cheddar on country (BirchTree Bread Company)
Brittany’s Toast-bbq baked beans, caramelized onions With bacon, melted sharp cheddar on country (BirchTree Bread Company)
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BirchTree Bread Pulls its Honest Weight

BirchTree Bread Company’s recent dinner with Honest Weight Artisan Beer dug into the significance of storytelling through the union of food and drink.

Pairing is all about chemistry.

Sometimes, chemistry comes into play by showcasing discernable interactions or likenesses; other times it’s about creating a fluid narrative. In both instances, on Thursday evening, guests were utterly captivated. Attendees delighted in the spirited commentary of Chef Rob Fecteau, along with brewers Jay Sullivan and Sean Nolan.

Owner Avra Hoffman had set the stage for enchantment. Breathtaking floral arrangements adorned two unending tables that included stunning ceramic cabbage centerpieces made by Worcester Center for Crafts resident artist, Paige Ward.

The evening began with Honest Weight’s unfiltered pilsner, Prescott. This bright, dry lager was named for one of the four towns flooded in 1938 to form the Quabbin Reservoir. Honest Weight is located in the north Quabbin region of Massachusetts, and many of their beers honor the brewery’s storied surroundings. Prescott was paired with grilled cheese assembled from BirchTree’s country bread and Robinson Farm’s own tribute to Prescott – a nutty alpine artisanal cheese made from raw milk. Guests also enjoyed bratwurst and pretzel sliders, a collaboration by Fecteau and Matt Mahoney of neighboring establishment, Kummerspeck.

Next, came the buckwheat grisette, Gate 37, a nod to one of the Quabbin’s most remote access points. The brewers praised their grisette as “saison’s little sister,” a sessionable farmhouse style offering up hints of lemon and spice. Fecteau paired Gate 37 with crispy skin rainbow trout – native to the Quabbin – served over a buckwheat crepe with lemon-pepper burre blanc.

Tom Swamp Road paired with ramen noodles, soy-marinated pork belly, emulsified broth, mushrooms, scallion, and sesame.

The most fascinating pairing of the evening came during the fourth course with soy-marinated pork belly ramen and a multi grain stout called Tom Swamp Road. Fecteau credited BirchTree team member, Christopher Ly, for his unctuous emulsified broth made with collagen-rich chicken feet. He also applauded farmer Sean Maki of Christian Hill Farm for raising the heritage breed pork with dignity and respect. Sullivan echoed his admiration for Maki, explaining that the pork had been fed on spent grain from Honest Weight for close to a year – a fact that elevates the symbiosis of this pairing to astounding heights.

Sullivan likewise appreciated the unique pairing saying, “I find Tom Swamp Road rich enough but also dry enough that that it can balance a whole number of different dishes,” adding, “Happy pigs, happy brewers!” As if to illustrate this fact, the brewers toasted their glasses, initiating a “beer wave,” which to guests’ great amusement, traveled the length of the table.

As for the legend of Tom Swamp Road, the beer’s name comes from a local myth about an alleged counterfeiter who mysteriously disappeared in a local pond after a night of debauchery. Honest Weight knows there’s nothing like a ghost story to embrace local culture. (And, Mass Foodies knows there’s nothing like a swamp stout to brandish a broth’s great depths.)

BirchTree Bread Company’s beer dinner series will continue on April 5th with Stone Cow Brewery of Barre.