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Politics at the Dinner Table with Our State Representatives

Representatives Jim O'Day and John Mahoney talking politics over dinner at Mari E Monti.

Some say it’s taboo to talk politics at the dinner table, but I tend to disagree.  What better place to get to know our elected officials than at their favorite restaurants? In my first installment of ‘Politics at the Dinner Table,’ I set out to dine with six honorable State Representatives.

Representatives Jim O’Day and John Mahoney

Mari E Monti

Representatives Jim O’Day and John Mahoney are pondering dessert. “What do you think of the mousse?” O’Day asks.

“It’s a big brown animal with antlers,” responds Mahoney. He never skips a beat.

There’s actually not much pondering going on. They will decidedly get dessert, it’s just a matter of which one. We eventually buckle down and order all three.

People are always trying to feed these two. O’Day says that he could probably eat at an event everyday if he chose to. But, he doesn’t; he’s watching his caloric intake.

In order to lure them to dinner, I have agreed to meet at Mare E Monti where everything from the pasta to the dessert gets made from scratch daily. The two men often find themselves doing business over a hot meal. This is their favorite spot.

O’Day’s background as a social worker means that he is uniquely attuned to the needs of children living in central Massachusetts. Likewise, Mahoney has remained a staunch supporter of public education throughout his career. This duo understands the importance of building family and community. Where better to start than the dinner table?

Mahoney insists on introducing me to the owner of Mari E Monti. He praises her family’s persistence in keeping 19 Wall Street alive and points to her childhood photo on the wall like a proud father. “The homemade food – there’s nothing like it!” Mahoney exclaims.

He has an impressive appetite. During our meal alone, Mahoney downs two baskets of bread, an order of shrimp cocktail, a house salad, the Vitello Vincenzo over Pappardella, an almond tort, and two cappuccinos. At one point when Mahoney misplaces his glasses, O’Day leans over his Spaghetti Alle Vongole and says very seriously, “He might have eaten them.”

These guys can take a joke. It’s a good thing because they both like to dish them out. O’Day chuckles and says, “Sometimes I feel like we’re an old married couple.”

Mahoney flags down the waitress for another basket of bread.

Representatives Mary Keefe and Dan Donahue at Coney Island
Representatives Mary Keefe and Dan Donahue at Coney Island

Representatives Mary Keefe and Dan Donahue

Coney Island

Representative Mary Keefe is running a bit behind schedule. To be fair, as a member of the legislature, she ostensibly has more important obligations on her plate than eating hot dogs with me on a Friday afternoon. But, Keefe is happy to oblige because she loves “Coney’s” and she cares a great deal about drawing attention to urban agriculture. She, herself, keeps bees in downtown Worcester.

Keef’s delay, for which she is all apologies, allows her colleague, Representative Dan Donahue to wax poetic for sixty minutes about four generations of Donahue men who have eaten at Coney Island. He is unabashedly giddy about this place; he loves that nothing has changed at 158 Southbridge Street since he was a kid.

Representative Donahue insists that I order my hotdog “up,” with all of the fixings. He likes them with mustard. He’s actually a little bashful about that fact, insisting, “Everyone always says I’m SO Worcester except for the fact that I don’t order my hotdogs ‘up.’”

I ask him, “When was the last time you ate here?” He tells me he had Coney Island for lunch yesterday.

“I’ve been coming here with my grandpa for as long as I’ve been alive. My grandpa used to shine shoes here. He’d bring me here after my baseball games and take the ’back roads’ so he could tell me about the neighborhood,” Donahue explains.

Donahue values his work with the Mass Food Trust aiming to alleviate food deserts in his district. He wants his constituents to have access to healthy food. He is optimistic about the impact of urban farming in Worcester, noting accomplishments of the Regional Environmental Council.

When Keefe walks through the door, I thank her for driving from Boston to meet us. She insists it is her pleasure, saying, “We have colleagues from the State House who stop here whenever they are anywhere near Worcester.” She tells us that Coney Island’s 100th anniversary is quickly approaching.

“New restaurants try to recreate this. But, who can recreate that?” she asks, pointing to the carvings in the booth behind Donahue’s head.

I ask Keefe if she goes out to eat often, but she shakes her head. “I love to cook at home. I really like to look in my fridge and put something together. I always let it get down to the bones before I go grocery shopping,” she says. Clearly, Keefe is a problem solver.

Keefe’s annual fundraiser at Coney Island is just a few weeks away. Donahue notes that it falls on his birthday every year, and she never forgets to present him with a cake. I have a feeling he’ll be back at Coney Island before then.

 

Representatives Kate Campanale and Dave Muradian sitting down at Nuovo on Shrewsbury Street.
Representatives Kate Campanale and Dave Muradian sitting down at Nuovo on Shrewsbury Street.

Representatives Kate Campanale and Dave Muradian

Nuovo

Representative Kate Campanale is surprised when the bartender remembers her name and favorite drink. She has only been to the restaurant for a handful of events since she was sworn in two years ago, but the caliber of guest relations at Nuovo is nothing short of dialed in. My impression of this is further cemented when Representative Dave Muradian arrives and owners, Loretta and Alex, both appear to welcome him with a hug.

At first, I suspect that Nuovo’s warm reception might be a sales pitch; after all, the Republican Party is shopping for a state convention venue. But, it turns out the connection runs much deeper than that. Muradian and his wife had their rehearsal dinner at Nuovo and it’s pretty much the only place he eats outside of his district.

As for Campanale, she’s pleased to actually enjoy her dinner for once. “There’s food at nearly every event, but I never remember to eat. Most nights I end up just having cheese and crackers when I get home,” she says.

We order the antipasto and the calamari. Muradian tells me about the boxed garden on his porch in Grafton where he grows peppers and tomatoes. Muradian turns the question on Campanale, asking if she grows anything at home. “Actually, I planted strawberries last night,” she informs us.

“Look at you, Representative! A green thumb!” Muradian says, laughing.

Muradian’s passion for agriculture is no joke. He is a huge supporter of the Community Harvest Project, an organization that has been run by the Abbott family of North Grafton since the 1970’s. CHP’s annual harvest equates to 1.2 million servings dispersed throughout Worcester County. They draw over 9,900 volunteers each year including corporate groups and schools. “A lot of the young visitors don’t know where their food comes from,” Muradian says. He is adamant that I attend Plantapalooza in May to receive my own free tomato plant from CHP. I give him my word.

Campanale is also an advocate of unique agricultural initiatives. She cites Dismas Family Farm, a transitional program for ex-offenders as a beneficial initiative in the area.

When entrees arrive, Chicken Marsala for Campanale and Pot Roast for Muradian, I relay the story of my previous dinner with Representatives O’Day and Mahoney. I ask about dynamics between the parties.

“Our motto is: ‘Don’t burn down the barn,’” Muradian says.

“We all want to work together for the betterment of our districts,” adds Campanale.

As if to illustrate, Muradian holds out his plate, “Pot Roast, anyone?”

 

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Neil Rogers: The Man In Worcester’s Test Kitchen

Neil Rogers accepted the position of Kitchen Operations Manager at Worcester Regional Food Hub.

Neil Rogers and his sous chef once ordered twenty-four George’s Coney Island hot dogs all the way or “up” with cheese and ate them over the course of a day. This is not a model for his latest venture: executive chef at The Test Kitchen, Worcester’s Niche Hospitality Group’s latest venture.

Well, maybe not a model. Who knows? Right now The Test Kitchen has no set boundaries, just possibilities, and that’s what Rogers loves about it. He’ll be more than a chef for his own kitchen but executive chef de cuisine for all of Niche.

Neil Rogers, Executive Chef du Cuisine for Niche Hospitality Group
Neil Rogers, Executive Chef du Cuisine for Niche Hospitality Group. (Photo by Alex Belisle, Belisle Images for WorcesterScene.com)

“We really don’t have any rules for it yet,” says Rogers. “We can sit in managers’ meetings and say, ‘We really want to try this…’ and The Test Kitchen can do it with the chefs or try it out for them. We are building a community within our group. One night, we might make paella or have a ramen night and have the teams come in. We might create a couple of different versions of dishes we are considering for the restaurants and then let diners vote on them. If the people are going to eat it, why not let them have a say? It’s all limitless.”

Rogers and The Test Kitchen team will explore these limitless possibilities for the public when they start hosting monthly events for 25 to 30 people by reservation only starting in April 2015. (The space will also be available for private events.) Plans for the first dinner—celebrating Worcester Foodies‘ 50th restaurant visit—are centered on a whole pig with individual courses made to showcase a taste of what each Niche restaurant represents. Guests will enjoy an ever-changing menu cooked and plated in front of them as they sit communally at long steel prep tables in the open and bright stripped down space of the kitchen. It promises to be an exciting, intimate, and interactive experience in Worcester. Most importantly to Rogers, it will be “totally fun.”

As much fun to Rogers are the collaborative possibilities The Test Kitchen offers to work with other chefs: It will act as a sort of “think tank” for Niche’s eight restaurants, which include Mezcal (which is next door to The Test Kitchen on Major Taylor Boulevard), three Bocado locations, Rye & Thyme, The People’s Kitchen, and The Fix Burger Bar. Niche chefs will be able to come in and work with Rogers to try something different, get together to work on specific items like French Fries, or plan menus without being bogged down in their own kitchens, something Rogers understands:

“Sometimes you try and do these things in your kitchen and you are not only working alone but against the work of the restaurant. As a result, something that should take an hour takes days. If they come here, we can just play with ideas and do it. We can plan courses for and even prep them for events. We can refine recipes and make them better, making the food at the restaurants better overall. Making incredible food and working with and learning from these chefs and all our group’s personalities on a daily basis? It’s fantastic.”

Neil Rogers in the Test Kitchen, Executive Chef du Cuisine for Niche Hospitality Group
Neil Rogers in the Test Kitchen, Executive Chef du Cuisine for Niche Hospitality Group (Photo by Alex Belisle, Belisle Images for WorcesterScene.com)

That collaborative spirit extends to sourcing too. To that end, Rogers just introduced shrimp from Tasty Harvest, an aquaculture farm in West Boylston, into a dinner at The People’s Kitchen. While Niche and Rogers are devoted to local ingredients, The Test Kitchen will help them do more of this sourcing and create locally driven specials starting this summer.

Clearly Rogers loves that the change around him requires him to seek inspiration constantly. That said, he believes strongly in classic techniques and rails against chefs who think they can incorporate crazy flavors and go into molecular gastronomy without actually learning how to cook. “If you don’t have good technique,” he argues, “if you can’t sauté or dice or chop something properly then you can’t make the best use of great ingredients.”

Rogers, who has no formal training, devotes himself to understanding all he can about technique, citing Jacques Pepin as inspiration. He waxes rhapsodic about his amazing, rare, and ridiculously sharp Shibata Kotetsu knife and gives a nod to Marc Vetri’s acclaimed cooking in Philadelphia. Rogers interned with Vetri in 2014 to learn firsthand how to “bring refinement up to a level that is attainable and approachable for everybody using spectacular ingredients.” On the day we spoke, Rogers had been on a cookbook-buying spree and was grooving on the recipes of London-based Yotam Ottolenghi, pulling ideas for more vegetarian and vegetable-based dishes as spring approaches.

“Not everything needs to be a starch and vegetable and a protein on every plate,” says Rogers. “You can pare it down, use better and different ingredients, and let them shine without being clouded by the standard meat, potato, veg combination.”

Even in Worcester where tradition can rule the day? “Location doesn’t matter!” adds Rogers. “People take location to heart too much. Why not here? We are the second largest city in New England. Why can’t we have the fantastic and different? The city works hard, and a new generation is trying to make it even better by making a difference with forward thinking and doing – building from the ground up instead of just talking. They and we deserve this!”