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Chef’s Best: The Evangelous Experience

Armsby Abbey's Chef Damian Evangelous speaking about his journey as a chef and the menu for the evening's Chef's Best dinner experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)

The allure of the Chef’s Best dinner series is that it gives chefs the opportunity to cook what they want while giving us insight into their process. To date, chefs have interpreted this idea differently.

The reception course at Mass Foodies' Chef's Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)
The reception course at Mass Foodies’ Chef’s Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)

Chef Bill Nemeroff talked about a childhood memory of fried chicken. Chef Chris Rovezzi presented fan favorites. Chef Bill Brady ­ let the wine pairings enhance every bite on the plate.

Chef Evangelous preparing the reception course in the kitchen of Armsby Abbey on Main Street in Worcester, MA (Photo by Erb Photography)
Chef Evangelous preparing the reception course in the kitchen of Armsby Abbey on Main Street in Worcester, MA (Photo by Erb Photography)

July’s event featuring Chef Damian Evangelous of Armsby Abbey came at the perfect time. In addition to showcasing local farm-to-table cooking with a Spanish influence, the Evangelous Experience fell a few days after the Boston Globe article claiming we Central Massers finally have a food scene in Worcester.

Armsby Abbey is not only considered one of the best places to grab a beer in the country, they are also celebrating their tenth anniversary next year. Without intending it, Chef Evangelous symbolized an important reminder that not only have we had a show-stopping food scene for longer than a year, our feasts rival the holy mecca of Boston—and maybe even King’s Landing.

This feast was certainly fit for lords and ladies. We arrived to find a reception of ten pre-meal bites. Highlights included the house-made charcuterie, seasonal pickled vegetables, gazpacho, and the Mushrooms en Escabeche with chevre, honey, and thyme.

Course 2: Lubina [Veta la Palma] a la plancha, phytoplankton “risotto”, radishes, herbs, pickled green strawberries at Mass Foodies' Chef's Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)
Course 2: Lubina [Veta la Palma] a la plancha, phytoplankton “risotto”, radishes, herbs, pickled green strawberries at Mass Foodies’ Chef’s Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)
Chef Evangelous expressed an affinity for preparing one ingredient many ways in the first course. Raw, charred and pickled tomatoes came out with onions, fennel, sheep cheese, and ajoblanco, a popular Spanish soup. Damian explained that a tomato and onion salad he had in Spain inspired the simple, yet flavorful, concept.

While the color and shock of the second course’s phytoplankton may have stolen the visual show, the perfectly cooked lubina, Spanish for sea bass, could have stood alone. The crispy skin and the light seasoning alongside the phytoplankton risotto made for a hearty dish. Bright green phytoplankton is a micro-organism drifting on the oceans’ currents, and recently it’s becoming a popular spicy new take on spice.

Course 3: Slow cooked lamb neck [Lilac hedge], summer squash and lamb marrow puree, local potatoes, lovage, celery, jus at Mass Foodies' Chef's Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)
Course 3: Slow cooked lamb neck [Lilac hedge], summer squash and lamb marrow puree, local potatoes, lovage, celery, jus at Mass Foodies’ Chef’s Best: The Evangelous Experience. (Photo by Erb Photography)
The decadent third course of slow-cooked lamb, summer squash and lamb marrow puree, local potatoes, celery, and lovage jus was fit for a coronation.

Chef Evangelous humbly warned us that he is not a pastry chef. However, the fourth course fruit tart filled with Tougas Farm cherries, blueberries, rhubarb, and strawberries topped with a hop and herb ice cream had everyone raving. This was no easy feat considering we lamented how full we were then inhaled our dessert while simultaneously asking if they had any hop and herb ice cream cones to go. The whole wheat crust (made using flour that was ground from grains at The Abbey’s new in-house mill) and natural sweetness of the fruit produced slightly less internal guilt for the indulgence.

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Urban’s Chicken and Dumplings

Urban Kitchen's Chicken and Dumplings

Urban Kitchen's Chicken and Dumplings

The Urban Kitchen and Bar housed in the former Coral Seafood on Shrewsbury Street is one of Worcester’s newest dining destinions for upscale dining. Upon entering the restaurant one is greeted by a theater style wall over the bar and a subtle renovation to the prior restaurant.

After reviewing the menu I was drawn to the restaurant week menu and the thought of warm savory chicken and dumplins on a cold winters night. For my first course I started with the Salsify Clam Chowder. The clam chowder came with Manila clams in the shell small pieces of root vegitables, celery, thyme, cream, bacon, and a nice smokey flavor and was a nice twist on a New England clam chowder. The one suggestion would be a little less salt.

The chicken and dumplings was described as a mushroom consomme, Swiss chard, beech mushrooms, and toasted garlic. The dish was masterfully prepared and lived up to the desciption of the dish, but was overly salty and missed the mark for chicken and dumplins.  It was an exquisitely prepared dish in the style of a good French trained chef, but missed the slow cooking and comfort food nature of chicken and dumplins in my opinion.

For desert, I opted for the carrot cake with candied pecans and cream cheese gelato.   This was a nice petite desert in which the high point was the cream cheese gelato which left me wanting for more gelato.   Again quality and attention to detail was apparent.

Overall, I was impressed with the quality, presentation, and effort that went into each dish. My struggle with dinner was two of my dishes were oversalted and the portions were small.  I felt satisfied after my four course meal with an extra appetizer I ordered, yet if it had not been restaurant week the smaller portions and pricey menu might be a challenge to the Worcester dining scene. To find it’s place in the Worcester dining scene The Urban Kitchen will need to find it blend of quality, creative menu, and value in the Worcester market.