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Birchtree Bread Co.’s Latest Beer Dinner Features 3cross Brewery

BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)

Moules et frites, or mussels and fries, is the national dish of Belgium and popular everywhere from France to our shores and beyond. The preparation varies little from place to place: steamed mussels piled high in a pot, sprinkled with herbs; broth redolent of white wine, butter, garlic, shallot, perhaps onion; and a side of perfectly crisped fries on the side with some creamy mayo (if you’re enjoying Belgiafn style). The preparation is so ubiquitous I have had equally wonderful yet similar helpings from Boston to Briton to Brussels. It’s a classic that commands: if the dish ain’t broke don’t eff with it.

Rob Fecteau during the BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
Rob Fecteau during the BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)

The other night in Worcester, someone effed with it. Broke it down – deconstructed it if you will. Reduced it to its base ingredients – mussel, potato, a member of the onion family, a creamy sauce for the fries – and rebuilt it to create something smaller and richer yet still inviting and familiar: A tangle of braised leeks nestled in a cream sauce topped with crisp bite-sized wedges of fingerling potatoes and mussels, shelled after being steeped in a broth flavored with coriander, chamomile, orange, and lemon. The richness of the dish was balanced by its pairing with an excellent Belgian whit bier brewed from the same ingredients featured in that steeping liquid. The lightness of the beer cut the richness of the dish and neither lost its character.

It was a clever take without being too clever – a fun, tasty, and totally perfect dish for a winter night. In many ways, it is what we have come to expect from the chefs and restaurants in this town. Just not this chef. Because, most of us don’t think of him as a chef. We think of Rob Fecteau as the brilliant baker behind the beloved BirchTree Bread Company. Turns out that bit of alliteration belied a deeper truth: Rob Fecteau can COOK.

Yeah yeah, Fecteau and his team make great pizza on Wednesdays and Fridays. The lunch dishes certainly reveal a deeper food sensibility beyond baking. But not like this. That riff on moules et frites was the first plated course Fecteau sent out as part of BirchTree’s 3Cross beer dinner. The dinner was the second (Wormtown was first, Flying Dreams is next) in the monthly series BirchTree hosts the first Thursd3ay of every month with the brewery. Each dinner is unique to the brewery’s beers and give Fecteau a chance to show off a side he rarely has gotten to show in the three years since BirchTree opened (as the place almost never slows down).

Dave Howland from 3Cross Brewery talking beer at the BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
Dave Howland from 3Cross Brewery talking beer at the BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)

“I had an itch to get back into the kitchen as a cook,” says Fecteau. “Baking is obviously a passion of mine but it wasn’t my original passion. I cooked first: At home, with my mom when I was a little kid and my grandmothers were both excellent cooks. It’s just in my blood. To get back to doing some food gives me a challenge and also gives me a chance to make food I really like to eat. I’m a chef first because I just love to eat.”

And drink the things he loves to drink. Fecteau and his partner/wife Avra Hoffman added a terrific rotating beer selection on tap in 2016 so the synergy was an obvious one even if the food pairings are not.

“There’s a lot of different avenues before I get to the menu,” Fecteau notes. “I start by tasting all the beers. I go through pretty much every one that’s available from that brewery and then I narrow it down to those flavors that jump out at and inspire me and might pair well with what I want to cook.”

For example, those flavors in the 3Cross Whirlwind Withier Belgian Whit Bier (named for the Major Taylor the “Worcester Whirlwind” and the first African-American world champion cyclist) “stewed” for Fecteau ideas that a straight whit beer just wouldn’t inspire ingredients for. For the rest, he considered factors like the body of the beer, bitterness, and alcohol content. Whatever speaks to him, he goes with it. As a baker, he is also attuned to the flavor the hops and grains and other ingredients that go into the beer, particularly the unexpected ones. Fecteau especially likes that 3Cross founder Dave Howland uses wild yeast in his beers and plays with a lot of flavors others do not.

Fecteau chose to pass hors d’oeuvres with 3Cross’s flagship pale ale, Single-Speed with Citra (an immensely drinkable beer with citrus notes that adapt nicely to the food). “The Citra has passionfruit-like citrusy notes that jumped out so I included citrus in all three preparations,” says Fecteau, who sent out a trio of starters: house-cured citrus salmon with kefir (fermented milk) sour cream on some crisp BirchTree Danish rye; beet “tartare” with local beets marinated in citrus and roasted served with goat cheese on a sesame crisp; and (lest all that stuff sounded too healthy) gougères, a pâte à choux dough with gruyere folded into it, baked, and then piped full of creamed potatoes homemade pancetta (an homage to decadence, Fecteau’s French roots, and the fact we can cover our bellies with sweaters these days).

BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
(Photo by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)

Following the mussels, a farmhouse IPA made Fecteau think of the abundance of root vegetables and a warm winter soup. The resulting roasted turnip and clothbound cheddar soup topped with a sourdough crouton and crispy parsnips, carrots, and beets felt more like a vegetable puree and was exceedingly rich – yet not decadent: “It’s just roasted turnips and vegetable stock, not much else except for the cheddar and sourdough croutons. My bother says you can make a dish rich without layering on lots of calories. I’m more of the type that layers on a lot of calories. But the flavor of these roasted turnips was enough.”

Fecteau’s brother also played a part in changing the final course just days before the event, much to Hoffman’s consternation as she tried to print the menu. “I had the dish mapped out – pork belly with baked beans and brown bread to go with the 3Cross Sheldon Brown Ale. I was doing a final tasting when my brother said I should do chicken fried venison,” says Fecteau, who couldn’t resist the idea. “I’ve been hunting since I went with my dad at 12. There is no more sustainable way of eating meat than harvesting a deer, and I had access to one. So I took the loins and the leg meat and fried it.” The decidedly un-cheffy chicken fry was given a gamey touch with the venison and elevated by caramelized delicata squash, venison jus made from the bones, and marinated bear paw mushrooms I would happily be buried in. The entire dish was locally sourced.

BirchTree Dinner (Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
(Photo by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)

For dessert, Fecteau went with 3rd Revolution, 3 Cross’s first blended traditional Flemish style sour, which drinks like a cocktail and is lean and more acidic with flavors of cherry, vanilla, and bourbon – all of which he incorporated into a millefeuille topped with a traditional pastry cream, bourbon pecan streusel, and cherry compote. It was perhaps the only familiar BirchTree taste we got all night in a place that feels right at home to us now.

It’s the kind of evolution no one should or would dismiss.

Which is exactly what Fecteau and Hoffman want. In fact, the dinner showed the evolution of their partnership in making BirchTree so welcoming. Hoffman wasn’t even there full time when they opened. She did the marketing and bill paying, set up the coffee program with Acoustic Java, and handled farmer’s markets. Now she sets the mood and gives the space its welcoming touch – making sure the customers are satisfied even when chaos and crowds reign.

For the dinner, Hoffman’s skills were in fine form, choosing to seat guests at two super long communal tables perfectly decked out to engage and reflect that sense of community that has developed at BirchTree. She even sets the playlists, as eclectic and diverse as the crowds BirchTree gets. In a way, they remind me of Karen and David Waltuck of New York City’s dearly departed Chanterelle: For 30 years, she ran the front, him the back, and together they and the staff who reflected them made everyone feel at home.

Which is what Fecteau and Hoffman want BirchTree to be in and for Worcester. “So many small businesses in Worcester are coming and working together,” Fecteau says. “We are a community of restaurateurs, brewers, and entrepreneurs working together to help each other and complement each other.”

No better wish for any of us in 2018.

BirchTree beer dinners will be held the first Thursday of every month. Visit BirchTree’s website for information on upcoming dinners. Tickets can also be purchased on BirchTree’s website or at the shop.

(Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
(Photos by Belisle Photography for Mass Foodies)
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No Margin Of Error For Rob Fecteau & BirchTree Bread Co.

Rob Fecteau Baking Bread at BirchTree Bread Co

Rob Fecteau remembers the feeling he had when the first loaves of bread came out of the oven at his BirchTree Bread Company on Green Street: “Not to sound mushy but it was pretty magical.”

Coriander Raisin Loaves at BirchTree Bread Co. Photo by Alex for WorcesterScene.com
Coriander Raisin Loaves at BirchTree Bread Co. Photo by Alex for WorcesterScene.com

The bread was baked before BirchTree opened – ciabatta, an Italian white bread, for Rob’s cousin who helped with the construction: “We are all Italians or mostly Italian eating the Italian bread coming out of the oven. There’s a picture of me with a loaf and there’s construction and a ladder in the background and it was awesome. There were about ten loaves of bread and they were all a little burnt and caramelized, but they were the first and magic.”

That ciabatta, now flecked with rosemary, is still on the menu at BirchTree, one of the special breads that rotate in to complement the three daily loaves, the most popular of which is the simplest: a crusty Country loaf. Second place, however, is more surprising: Coriander Raisin. Not to Rob – he loves the sweet-savory combination – but some really do not care for coriander or aren’t used to having it in bread. The other daily bread is made with local whole wheat and flax. All of them are made with natural leaven – a mixture of wild yeasts and naturally occurring good bacteria that help leaven and flavor the dough – which in itself is a kind of magic… and menace.

Rob Fecteau Baking Bread at BirchTree Bread Co. Photo by Alex Belisle for WorcesterScene.com
Rob Fecteau Baking Bread at BirchTree Bread Co. Photo by Alex Belisle for WorcesterScene.com

“I thought baking would be easier as a chef and it’s not,” says Rob who was born in Worcester and spent 15 years working as a chef in the surrounding area. “There’s a real challenge using the natural leaven starter. It is not always predicable.” Like any living organism, you need to feed it, and Rob adds, “Unless you are on point with the feeding you will get a different result.”

According to Rob, that’s one of the biggest differences between bakers and chefs: “Chefs make lots of miniature calculations and can make amends when they miss. Bakers make a few calculations and if you miss any of them you mess up the whole thing. You must know your dough and what is happening in each level of the process to make the right decisions. You can’t scramble. Once something’s done, it’s done.”

So why leave his established and comfortable career as a chef? To take on that challenge and learn new culinary skills. Besides, chefs work late nights, and Rob, who got married in May of 2014, hopes baking will give him a more balanced life. The baker’s life, like the bread itself, is more precise. Even though his days start early, his wife is a teacher and they both like waking up with the sun. So, he set out to find baking inspiration both near (Five Loaves in Spencer and Hungry Ghost in Northampton) and far (Tartine, Acme, and others in California).

The real revelation was the space Rob ended up with for BirchTree. He pictured himself and a helper opening something like Hungry Ghost, which basically has bread racks and a walk in counter. He knew he wanted to be in Worcester, but he never imagined occupying the massive space on Green Street with its warm, industrial-feel, openness, and constant sunlight pouring in from the windows.

“Sometimes the space creates the vision for what you make,” says Rob.

That big, welcoming, inclusive vision seems much more logical when you consider Rob’s cooking inspiration. His father is French and his mother is Italian and both sides of the family cooked. He remembers semiannual trips to his maternal family’s house in upstate New York where the food just kept coming, the kitchen and dining room filled with platters of seafood, vegetables, and sauces. Rob credits his father, a travelling salesman, for expanding his international tastes and fueling his desire to explore with stories, pictures, and food brought back Africa, China, France, Germany, and South America.

And Rob hasn’t left his chef hat behind. In addition to the breads and pastries, BirchTree added sandwiches to the menu in January and runs what he calls a “scratch kitchen,” braising its own corned beef and making its own preserves, pickles, and nut butters. Rob won’t say what’s coming next – despite this author’s plea for pizza – only that he is happy with the slow growth, wants to keep doing what he is doing better, and is listening to his customers even as he forges ahead with his own vision.

“It’s not called artisan bread because it is baked in an artisan oven,” he notes. “It’s because there is an artisan making it, crafting it every step of the way.”

BirchTree Bread Co on Green Street in Worcester, MA. Photo by Alex Belisle for WorcesterScene.com
BirchTree Bread Co on Green Street in Worcester, MA. Photo by Alex Belisle for WorcesterScene.com