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Wings of Wachusett

Chicken Wings from Pho Dakao

Top notch wings call for great sauce, tenderly prepared meat, and a crunchy exterior. The towns of Wachusett are setting the stage for wings this Super Bowl season. Check out the following destinations the next time a wing craving hits:

Ladd’s Restaurant and Lounge in Rutland is a great place to catch the game and enjoy an order of Boneless Buffalo Wings or spicy Wing Zings. If you’re feeling hungry, order the Combo Appetizer Platter that includes Ladd’s world famous wings, along with jalapeno poppers, mozzarella sticks, and chicken fingers.

Flip Flops in Holden offers fantastic Flippin Wings with a variety of sauce options. Try the Buffalo, sweet chili, Asian, or plain with bone in or out. Commit to your decision – Flip Flops doesn’t do combos.

Dragon 88 of Boylston serves up General Gau’s wings with a zesty ginger kick. If you’re still hungry, try the PuPu Platter to add crab rangoons, teriyaki, spare ribs, and fried shrimp to your wings order.

Mexicali in Holden offers wing orders in portions ranging from 8 to 16. Ask them to turn
up the heat, if you dare. They’ll make it as hot as you’d like.

Whether you want spicy, simple, or boneless – Wachusett has wings for you!

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Third Farmer Dinner Biggest Yet

Lettuce Be Local's Third Farmer Dinner yielded its highest turn-out to date.
Chef Russo of Lock 50 works with Chef Forman from deadhorse hill.
Chef Russo of Lock 50 works with Chef Forman from deadhorse hill.

When Lynn and Lee Stromberg founded Lettuce Be Local, one of their goals was to strengthen the community by bridging the gap between farms and consumers. Just a few short years later, pushing the “farm to table” concept, they determined that a Local Farmer Dinner would be a great way to educate—through eating—by creating an opportunity for area farmers and chefs to work together to show what local can yield.

Three dinners later, following their first ever FARMstalk2016, the 2016 Farmer Dinner was bigger than anyone had expected: over two-hundred people took a seat under a tent at Lilac Hedge Farm in Holden where they feasted locally sourced ingredients and talent.

Chef Alina Eisenhauer of Sweet helps to plate one of the courses for the dinner.
Chef Alina Eisenhauer of Sweet helps to plate one of the courses for the dinner.

To feed this many people, notable Central Mass. chefs worked together to create a four course dinner, which included hors d’oeuvres by Chef Alina Eisenhauer of Sweet Kitchen and Bar; smoked Central Mass. trout, farm curry, mushrooms and grains by Chef Jared Forman of deadhorse hill;

Chef Treitman from B.T.'s Smokehouse working with Chef Evangelous of Armsby Abbey.
Chef Treitman from B.T.’s Smokehouse working with Chef Evangelous of Armsby Abbey.

charred summer vegetables with romesco, fresh herbs and dry cured hogzilla loin by Chef Damian Evangelous of Armsby Abbey; beef roulade with dirty grains, beans, and green sauce by Chef Brian Treitman of B.T.’s Smokehouse; and, ginger spiced, golden beet cake with blueberry compote by Chef Lina Reinhardt of Tangerini’s Spring Street Farm. Each meal had an optional wine and beer pairing by Nashoba Valley Winery & Orchard and Medusa Brewing.

For those who haven’t attended a Farmer Dinner hosted by Lettuce Be Local, be certain to check their website for what’s coming up for next year, because the feeling of community that comes from sharing a meal with those who grow, harvest, and prepare is a feeling that cannot be easily duplicated.

Lettuce Be Local co-founders, Lee and Lynn Stromberg, thank the farmers, vendors, chefs, and diners.
Lettuce Be Local co-founders, Lee and Lynn Stromberg, thank the farmers, vendors, chefs, and diners.