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A Quick Bite With Amy Chase

Amy Chase of Crompton Collection in Worcester.

In a world divided, lays a common space of peace and tranquility, a space where bonds are created over pure laughter and where cultures collide to produce an endless list of harmonious perfections. It is the undeniable devotion society maintains to the existence of food. The studies of food examines the complex relationships among cultures and societies from numerous disciplines in humanities. The term alone can bring strangers, ex-lovers and newly immersed inquisitive minds into a state of nirvana.

In our “A Quick Bite With” series, we will examine the thought-provoking devotion or non-devotion to food, and analyze the various roles it plays within communities, industries and vocations. We take a deeper look into how society portrays this evolution of food as a past-time.

Amy Chase, owner of the Crompton Collective – an artisan and antique retail front with an expansive collection of local artists and designers in Worcester, MA – has led a sixteen year career in the fashion industry starting with a mobile vintage shop, The Haberdash, in early 2009 – a few years ahead of the trend. As an entrepreneur, role model and a business visionary, Chase’s passion for fashion is just as impressive as her passion for food.

“I love to eat and explore new places so traveling for food is always on my radar,” says Chase in a recent correspondence. Food is often the cause of travel and the concept behind destinations. “I often take day and weekend trips to eat some of my favorite foods. I love traveling to Maine to eat at Black Birch and Duckfat,” she says. While Black Birch offers a seasonal menu, Duckfat is rooted in its consistent items, luring in the attention of patrons and food enthusiasts from all over the northeast. The styles of choices among favorite dining spaces are centralized around two concepts: fresh ingredients and a rustic interior. Maybe, just maybe, this is a direct correlation between work and play for Chase. Her vocation as a fashion retailer and lover of all-things vintage can be revealed in her top choice for dining experiences. The artistic, creative and open sense of community in both, Black Birch and Duckfat is a reflection of Chase’s personal style, artistic appreciation and culinary love for creativity.

Of Swedish descent – a culture idolized by its non-heavy eating habits – Chase argues the simple notion that food ultimately serves a social purpose. “For me, dining is social,” she says. While the Swedish culture eats smaller meals throughout the day, oppose to the American three-full-meals routine, the Swedish do not pass up a good time with family and friends. Dining, whether for breakfast, lunch, dinner or even “fika” (traditional coffee breaks), is about spending the time socializing with friends and family. Fika is the moment in the day when all tainted blood, disagreements and stress cease for a simplistic cup of coffee and accompanying cinnamon bun. While looking forward to a specific meal is not something Chase builds into her daily routine, she does, however, incorporate friends and family into her meal breaks, frequently. “I start off my mornings at BirchTree Bread Company. It’s where I run into all of my friends and it’s where the local business owners, in my community, tend to hang out,” says Chase.

Amy Chase Doesn't Just Support Local, but Enjoys Local.Staying connected to a traditional, at-home, dinner is not the methods of a busy business woman conquering the city of Worcester one antique at a time. And although, there is no true ritual or prerequisite to indulge in culinary choreography, Chase expresses her association of food with celebration and eating-out. “When running your own business, work hours can be crazy. So, I eat out more than the average person and I love to celebrate with dining and food. Accomplishments are always a reason to share a good meal,” she states as she connects her enjoyment of a celebratory dinner and its local social-economic impact. “For me, it’s important to support small businesses and eat locally. Luckily, Central Massachusetts is filled with amazing food. I have also noticed that people are more aware of the impact of keeping money local and when I go out to eat, I often run into other small business owners. It’s nice to see the community supporting each other,” Chase says, pointing out her admiration for cupcakes at The Queen’s Cup, the margaritas at El Patron, and the impeccable sushi at Baba.

Dining out may be the go-to answer for fulfilling the desires to taste new foods and balancing an unpredictable work schedule, but if Chase could decide on the perfect homemade dish, it would be her “grandmother’s macaroni and cheese” – a meal she ate every week growing up yet has not grown tired of.

Social structure suggests that, to live a happy life, society must consume three meals a day and while many struggle to find the time to prepare, cook and eat three full meals a day, Chase is exploring the role of food as purely social and embracing its ability to generate an amplified sense of happiness despite a non-traditional, three-meal a day routine. Intertwined with memories of homemade comfort foods and newly acquired tastes, Chase will continue to debunk the theory by exploring her eating habits with friends and family.

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Wine On The Half Shell: Oyster Happy Hour

Oyster Happy Hour at The Urban on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, MA

Oyster Happy Hour At The Urban on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, MA

“Happy Hour: A period of time in which an on premise establishment offers reduced prices for certain beverages.” Use of the term in Massachusetts has been illegal until very recently. Happy hour was banned in 1984 after a person was killed by a drunk driver coming home from happy hour.   But in 2013 the Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission (ABCC) changed the restriction on use of the term in an effort to give establishments a fighting chance against casinos that give out free alcoholic beverages. Mmmm, OK, a little slack is better than none at all. Creative and industrious restauranteurs, like Ian Nal at The Urban Kitchen and Bar, have slowly begun to capitalize on the small change by offering steep discounts on certain appetizers at the bar in an attempt to put the happy back into happy hour. The thing that makes me happiest of all, it involves oysters!

I am a bivalve addict. Without some self-restraint, I could easily slurp down 100 oysters in a sitting and then have a few dozen more for dessert.  There are very few places outside of 10 miles from the coast I would trust to put out a perfectly cleaned, shucked, and brimming with brine half-shell. Worcester now has two and The Urban is one of them. Deliveries are made several times a week, thus the raw bar menu changes on a daily basis. They source the oysters from a local company with exceptionally high quality control standards. As a result, oysters can be a pricey appetizer for someone like me. Normally, prices range from $2.25 to $3.00 per oyster, but not during happy hour. Every day from 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM in The Urban’s Bar, oysters range from only $1.00 to $1.75. I tried them all and I even found a new favorite.

Oyster Happy Hour at UrbanNamed for the area where they are harvested each “brand” exhibits distinctive flavors and textures which are unique to the environmental conditions in and around the beds where they are cultivated. Nothing shows “terroir” more consistently than oysters, not even wine. Of course, while you’re at the bar you will want to pair the oysters with a beverage that will not overpower the range of delicate flavors. My knee jerk wine pairing for oysters is always Chablis, for others it is oysters and Guinness. Nal says, “I just don’t get the oysters and Guinness pairing. The flavor is just too overpowering.” The best way to find the perfect paring is to break away from what is expected and experiment! I selected the Plum Island Belgian White from Newburyport, MA. The wine was Roth, Sauvignon Blanc, Alexander Valley, CA. The cocktail, Nal suggested, a grapefruit shrub.

I will start with the grapefruit shrub since I had never had one before. I found the drink to be a very good cocktail companion for oysters. Refreshing grapefruit aroma and effervescence are balanced perfectly with rum and a hint of vinegar. Yes, vinegar, this is what makes this cocktail work so well with the oysters. The cocktail provides the balance of citrus fruit and savory notes which highlights the complimentary components of the clams. The cocktail worked particularly well with the Pemaquids from Demariscotta River, Maine. Large, plump, little oyster steaks with a complex, lemony brine that needed a hearty beverage as a partner.

The Belgian White displays a brilliant straw yellow, intensely aromatic floral hops, lemongrass, earth, mushroom, and yeast with a light, creamy body. While a suitable companion for the Pemaquids it was a match made in heaven with the Blue Points from Long Island Sound, Connecticut. The Blue Points were exceptionally salty and sweet with compact, firm texture. The creamy, refreshing effervescence toned down the salt to reveal the satiny flavors and texture of both bivalve and beer.

The wine was the most complimentary companion across the board for all of the oysters I enjoyed at happy hour. In addition to the oysters I mention above, I paired the three beverages with Daisy Bays and Summersides from Prince Edward Island, Canada and Wellfleets from the Cape. All were beautifully presented, clean, and unique in flavor. I never expected to find a new favorite but I think it had a little help from the Roth Sauvignon Blanc. Powder Points, Duxbury MA were the reigning champion for my palate until I had the opportunity to try Thatch Islands from Barnstable, MA.   The pairing was profound. The wine exhibited a high, juicy, acidity, and medium body harmonized beautifully with the plump, firm texture of the wine. Tropical aromas in the nose and citrus on the palate made a spritz of lemon completely unnecessary for the oyster. Clean, crisp, complex, happy!

I can understand why the great state of Massachusetts is against happy hour. Discounting drinks might make people go overboard which is a dangerous thing. However, discounting oysters is never a bad thing. If you aren’t into mollusks, The Urban also offers shrimp cocktail during happy hour. If shellfish isn’t for you the creative cocktail menu, craft drafts, and wine list should be enough to entice you into the vibrant, upscale, and comfortable bar scene. Happy hour sure beats closing time.