Posted on

The Annual Harvest Dinner at The People’s Kitchen

5th Annual Harvest Dinner

5th Annual Harvest Dinner

I love the sun and the heat of summer but as a lifelong New Englander, I love the change of seasons even more. The end of summer is bittersweet. The days are already getting shorter and we have had our first sub 70 degree day but crunchy local apples and pumpkins are plentiful. The harvest is here and that means the annual Harvest Dinner at The People’s Kitchen (TPK) in Worcester.

Harvest Dinner CourseNota bene: For next year’s Harvest dinner book early! I was waitlisted. The event sold out. I felt very lucky and privileged to later snag two seats because this was truly an extraordinary evening! Initially I was expecting this even to be a wine dinner but I was pleasantly surprised to learn that we would be pairing meals prepared with mostly New England ingredients with Massachusetts beers and wines! The night featured the still wines from Westport Rivers and various beer and ales from Newburyport Brewery.

The night began with a self-service table full of assorted charcuterie, bread and cheeses all from local producers. There was a stampede and the table was emptied in what seemed like mere seconds. I headed in the other direction and snagged myself a welcome cocktail. I have found that a welcome cocktail is a must if antsy diners have to wait for their first pour of wine. The cocktail was a sweet blackberry punch made with Berkshire Mountain Greylock Gin, blackberry puree from Tougas Farm, lemon juice, Olio Sacrum and TPK Thyme Syrup. It was delicious and refreshing and it got people talking.

The night had a family banquet type of feel, the way I would imagine a harvest dinner used to be and perhaps still is. People took their seats fairly quickly in anticipation of the lengthy meal that lay ahead. The tables of 6-10 people were assigned which I thought showed great forethought and familiarity. The room is spacious but somewhat loud. However, the crowd was courteously quiet when the presenters from the kitchen, winery, and brewery took to the floor to explain the logic behind the pairings.

The first course was a perfect portion of tomatoes and cheese served three ways. It was an 85 degree evening, so for me the Westport Rivers barrel aged reserve Pinot Blanc was a no brainer. A stuffed heirloom cherry tomato with basil and aged balsamic was served alongside fried green tomatoes with Cremont (cream of Vermont/Vermont Creamery) cheese and Grafton smoked cheddar and heirloom tomato bruschetta. The pour of wine was very generous and complemented the dish very well. The acidic tomato sounds like a daunting pairing with this acidic, full bodied, neutral wine but the fully flavored, palate coating cheeses constructed a broad bridge which enhanced both the wine and the dish.

The second course reminded us that we still had some summer left. 2014 Westport Rivers Chardonnay was just fruit forward and toasty enough to pair beautifully with oven roasted peaches wrapped in local prosciutto with a baby greens salad. One of the things I liked most about the first two courses was that they were perfectly portioned. Not too much and not too scant. I was able to focus equally on the food and the wine. The servings were not so overwhelming or tiresome to the palate. On to the main course!

oven roasted peaches wrapped in local prosciutto with a baby greens saladOur server generously allowed me to sample the Newburyport Plum Island Belgian White Ale and the 2012 Westport Rivers Pinot Noir. I could not decide which would be the better accompaniment for the Pan Roasted Day Boat Halibut with apple butter. At first glance, I was surprised to see a red paired with such a delicate fish but the pork belly lardons and kabocha squash puree sealed the deal for the earthy Pinot Noir. The white ale was the slightly better pairing where the dish enhanced the flavor of the beer and vice versa. I also paired the Pinot Blanc and Chardonnay with the fish and the white ale was still the winner.

I am not a big fan of sweets but the white peach napoleon was so beautiful it was really difficult to resist. Served with a side of toasty, candied macadamia nuts it was expertly paired with Berkshire Finish Bourbon, bitters and orange oil cocktail. As I sipped the cocktail I found myself nibbling away at dessert while chatting with our new friends. I was surprised to see that I had finished off the plate.

The folks at TPK really have the art of the wine dinner down pat. The pairings, presentation, and timing were expertly executed. The staff was friendly, knowledgeable, and very accommodating. Check out their website for upcoming events and be sure to reserve early. Dinners like this are best when they are intimate and they are sure to sell out quickly.

Posted on

Chef Jacob Bowser’s Nose-To-Tail Eating At The Urban Kitchen

Chef Jacob Bowser from The Urban Kitchen on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester

The Urban Kitchen and Bar, which opened for business this January, bills itself an “American Brasserie.” That means two things for Executive Chef Jacob Bowser: Brasserie for the relaxed, lively, convivial feeling of the space and American for the food, which Bowser calls “a melting pot of flavors” deeply rooted in French and Italian techniques.

“You could call what I do refined comfort food,” says Bowser, who trained at the French Culinary Institute and with some of the top chefs in New York City. “For me it is very important to maintain that refinement. Comfort food is delicious but that’s really about the quantity of food put on a plate. We have to get away from quantity as a measure of quality. We put more touches on our food to make things interesting and deliver value in the experience, quality, and refinement we bring to it.”

For Bowser refined doesn’t mean fancy but twists on the most simple and rustic dishes. Even the Urban Kitchen’s pastas are not classic red-sauce Italian dishes. They start with fresh pasta Bowser’s fiancé makes using the skills she acquired as a chef in New York City. Then, Bowser creates dishes that draw on his passion for mixing flavors and defying diners’ expectations: A tortellini filled with duck and cooked with Brussels sprouts and shallots, a potato ravioli served with caramelized onions.

Bowser calls his salsify clam chowder “the best idea” of this approach. He takes the base of a classic New England Clam Chowder but uses salsify – a white root vegetable similar to a carrot that complements the clams’ sweetness – to thicken the broth. Combined with the other flavors and vegetables you expect from the chowder and finished with local clams and a little bacon, it is fresh and familiar yet a little different, right down to the oyster crackers, which are baked in house.

“It’s not about being different,” says Bowser. “It’s about how we can make what has already been there forever better. I’m not reinventing the wheel just putting our touch on things.”

That starts with not only an idea but also great ingredients, which are seasonally focused and hopefully more and more local and sustainable, a point Bowser makes while standing in front of his “Living Lettuce” – small greens grown in the kitchen and cut fresh before being served. For Bowser, this is not a gimmick but ties into the quality of life he seeks in returning to Massachusetts. (Bowser hails from Leominster and lives in the woods in Sterling.)

“The beautiful part about Worcester is there are so many small farms around us that we can get cheese or seasonal produce from. Why do we need to get apples from Chile if we live in New England? We get our fish straight from the piers, not purveyors. You can’t just keep buying things from big corporations and ignore what we have here. It’s important to do our part for where I want to live and work in now.”

That’s why Bowser also plans to do “nose-to-tail” cooking at Urban Kitchen & Bar, eventually bringing in whole pigs and using the familiar cuts for dishes and the extra bits for house made charcuterie – something few chefs in Massachusetts are doing.

Bowser hopes to make people a little more open minded to offal. Maybe not brains, he adds, but chicken liver, beef tongue, or a venison pâté de campagne (country terrine) that features pistachios and duck liver. “I know it is going to be hard and a bit of a challenge to sell that but it’s delicious and the people who have it really enjoy it.”

For Bowser, that’s the biggest compliment a diner can give him – to appreciate what he does, understand what the food connects to, and have an experience that interests and inspires as much as it satisfies: “I am doing what I love. Food is it is the only art form that requires all five senses. You don’t really want to smell and taste a painting. The intuition and process of satisfying all those senses for people – that is the most fun for me.”

Editor’s Note: Executive Chef Jacob Bowser left the Urban in June 2015.