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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!”

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Chef Michael Muscarella: The Man Behind The Burgers

Chef Michael Muscarella from The Fix Burger Bar on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, MA

The man behind the burgers just might be one of Worcester’s most unlikely chefs.

Michael Muscarella, chef at The Fix Burger Bar on Shrewsbury Street, began his professional life about as far away from the kitchen as you can get. With a marketing degree, Muscarella was an inside sales manager for a company that dealt in heavy machinery — excavators, wheel loaders and the like.

“I was good at it and the money was good, but I just wasn’t happy with it,” Muscarella says.

So, he threw it all away and did something radical. Muscarella enrolled at Salter College to study culinary arts. He’d always loved food, but until that pivotal moment had never considered making it his life. He’d already spent a quarter of a million on his marketing degree, so he sidestepped the big culinary arts schools. But he wanted some education before jumping in. Then, when a friend of his became the general manager at the Whistling Swan in Sturbridge, Muscarella got his first taste of working in the kitchen. It’s a make it or break it industry, but Muscarella was a quick learn. And Whistling Swan led to his next job, and a formative experience at that — working in The People’s Kitchen under then-chef Bill Nemeroff.

“For me, that was awesome,” the 37-year-old Muscarella recalls. “TPK was doing a new menu every week. They were throwing everything away and starting over.”

It was a learning environment — the kind that demanded creativity — and the standards were high. When Nemeroff went on to head up Ceres Bistro, then under the management of Niche Hospitality Group, located at the Beechwood Hotel, Muscarella went with him. That’s when Niche’s Michael Covino approached Muscarella about a new venture. The concept was simple, but required the right flare — a restaurant devoted to burgers.

“So, burgers are a really classic dish. It’s an iconic American dish. And it’s a great dish,” Muscarella says. “It’s ground beef, soft bun, french fries, you only have a couple of ingredients, but because so many people have experienced it, you have an opinion about it — a fairly informed opinion. So, any sort of dish like that I feel that it’s really difficult to get just right.”

With a population full of burger experts, nearly everyone has a place they think has the best burger they’ve ever eaten, Muscarella says. His goal has been to make The Fix that place.

So, what does make a good burger? For The Fix’s chef, it’s a flat top burger — cooked on a griddle rather than a grill, allowing the meat to cook in the fat.

“I want a little bit of crust, good seasoning, a solid quality piece of meat,” Muscarella says. “It’s all about the texture. Just enough crust.”

The Fix’s burgers run just under a half inch in thickness. From there, the options are robust — 20 to 30 different toppings, 15 different sauces.

It’s a simple food, honed to perfection.

“Just because something is more complicated and more difficult to make does not mean it is necessarily better,” Muscarella says. “I really enjoy this concept because of the kind of vibe it has. It’s not super expensive. It’s comfortable. We have interesting food, really great cocktails. I find that more interesting. I’m not interested in what super-rich people are eating.”

The Fix Burger Bar has an extensive menu of not only meats, but fixin's.The concept is spelled out clearly right on The Fix’s website: “The Fix menu is designed to make you feel good. We think juicy burgers, cold beers, house-made sodas and spiked shakes do just that.”

It’s the perfect challenge for the one-time sales manager turned chef. Working with a small crew in the kitchen, Muscarella enjoys the fact that the success of the food is up to him and his team.

“If we want to start serving eel burgers then we can do that,” He says.

They don’t serve eel burgers (yet), although The Fix has offered up bison burgers, lamb burgers, duck burgers, wild boar burgers — yes, there’s a house-made veggie burger, too. The most popular is the crunchy burger, made with lettuce, fried prosciutto, parmesan crisp, potato chips, garlic mayo, mustard pickle and served on a sesame roll.

When it comes right down to it, the food, the atmosphere — Muscarella’s whole reason for jumping into the long-hours and hard work of the restaurant business — it all has to be deliciously fun.

“Why is it so great?” Muscarella asks. “Because it is so great. You’re going to have tasks that look almost insurmountable — like the wheels might fall off tonight, but somehow you pull it together … this happens all the time … you pull it together and make it.”

The Fix is located at 166 Shrewsbury St., the former location of Mezcal.

House Grind Burger with Focaccia Roll from The Fix on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, MA
House Grind Burger with Focaccia Roll from The Fix on Shrewsbury Street in Worcester, MA