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âDown By the Seaâ Co-host Amy Traverso visits the Chatham Bars Inn, a classic Cape Cod vacation destination since 1914, for a farm-to-table dinner featuring crops picked from the hotelâs own fields. Meanwhile, co-host Richard Wiese heads to Rhode Island for a surfing lesson on Narragansett Bay. Then itâs into the New Hampshire woods to forage mushrooms with chef Evan Mallett of the Black Trumpet in Portsmouth. Back in the kitchen, Amy cooks up Roasted Carrots and Herbed Yogurt Sauce. [WATCH NOW]( [A Visit to Chatham Bars Inn Farm]( Enjoy an impressive display of farm-to-table bounty at Chatham Bars Inn on Cape Cod. For âBy the Shoreâ (season 2, episode 7), Weekends with Yankee visited Chatham Bars Inn on Cape Cod for a New England farm-to-table dinner featuring local fish, lobster, and fresh vegetables from the innâs nearby farm. Here, we take a look back at Amy Traversoâs 2015 visit to Chatham Bars Inn Farm for NewEngland.com. Located at âthe elbowâ of Cape Cod, halfway between Falmouth and Provincetown, and approximately 90 miles from Boston, Chatham has long been a destination for East Coast day-trippers and summer visitors alike. Chatham Bars Inn, originally developed in 1914 as a semiprivate hunting lodge, is a longtime favorite coastal getaway thanks to its seamless blend of old-world charm and updated amenities. While promoting the July/August 2015 Yankee travel feature âSandcastles by the Sea,â senior food editor Amy Traverso had a chance to visit Chatham Bars Inn and tour the innâs own farm â aptly named the Chatham Bars Inn Farm. Hereâs a look back at her visit. [Weekends with Yankee Episode 510]( Bars Inn Farm in Brewster, Massachusetts.
Amy Traverso A VISIT TO CHATHAM BARS INN FARM Farm-to-Table Bounty on Cape Cod When Arrows Restaurant opened in Ogunquit, Maine, in 1988, the idea of a fine-dining restaurant supplying its own fresh produce was a novelty to most New Englanders. There were small garden-centered restaurants at the time, like New Hampshireâs [Pickity Place]( but Arrows changed the game by bringing the ingredient-driven New American cuisine of California (where owners Clark Frasier and Mark Gaier got their start) to Maine. Farther up the coast, Melissa Clark brought a similar sensibility to Primo, which she opened in Rockland in 2000. Today, most diners expect to find some locally grown produce on their menus, at least in summer. And more and more chefs are partnering with local farms or even running their own farm operations. I got to see a remarkable example of a farm-restaurant partnership during a recent visit to Chatham Bars Inn and the nearby eight-acre [Chatham Bars Inn Farm on Cape Cod](. The farm has been a work in progress since 2012, when the inn purchased a former berry farm in nearby Brewster and set about enriching the sandy soil with layer after layer of compost and bringing additional acres of land into production. Itâs an ongoing project. âYou need to augment the soil,â says farm manager Josh Schiff. âIt really takes a motivated party. But with a lot of work you can turn Cape Cod soils into productive soils. Eventually the soil will be self-sustaining with cover crops and leguminous crops.â Fortunately, the resort has a motivated party in owner Richard Cohen, a New Yorkâbased real estate investor, who has been a strong supporter of Schiffâs efforts. [Weekends with Yankee Episode 510]( sampling of the innâs bounty.
Amy Traverso The effort is already paying off, with the farm yielding enough produce to supply the innâs restaurants with thousands of pounds of tomatoes, cucumbers, beans, herbs, lettuce, squash, carrots, and other edibles, as well as additional farm shares for members of the community. Each winter, Schiff meets with the innâs executive chef, Anthony Cole, to plan the lineup for the upcoming season. The two are always experimenting with new varieties. Schiff introduced us to Sakura cherry tomatoes, an antioxidant-rich, Dutch-bred plant that produces some of the most flavorful tomatoes weâve ever had: sweet-tart and juicy, more like berries than beefsteaks. To really enjoy the fruits of Schiffâs labor, itâs hard to beat a meal at the inn. Itâs a pricey treat, to be sure, but Coleâs team coaxes maximum flavor out of these supremely flavorful ingredients, combining the farmâs produce with local seafood, game, and prime and grass-fed beef. One section of the menu, titled âFrom the Farm,â is a great place to start. Schiff enjoys a lengthy tomato season, thanks to his savvy use of a greenhouse and high tunnels (unheated, covered structures), and Cole pairs the fruits with aged balsamic vinegar, local sea salt and Massachusetts-made Great Hill Blue cheese. His hand is gentle: the flavors enhance, but the tomato still shines through. [Weekends with Yankee Episode 510]( from Chatham Bars Inn Farm.
Amy Traverso Likewise with a Stars signature dish: Chatham lobster poached in butter so that the meat cooks gently and its sweetness plays against the richness of the sauce. Across the main lobby of the inn, you can find more of Schiffâs produce on the menu of the more casual Sacred Cod restaurant (named after the [four-foot carved wooden fish]( that hangs in the Massachusetts State House). Each day brings a âLocal Catch & Harvestâ special based on whatever is fresh from the farm and waters that day, as well a variation on the tomato-blue cheese salad and plenty of fresh greens, herbs, and other vegetables. Cole oversees it all. When I saw him earlier in the day, he told me that he came to the inn after many years working at Ritz-Carlton properties around the world. But he thinks heâs found his dream job. What more could a chef want? A view of the sea, fresh fish from down the road, his own farm to help plan and savor. He may never leave. SPONSORS Weekends with Yankee is a production of WGBH Boston and Yankee Magazine and is distributed by American Public Television. [Unsubscribe](
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