8/30/2016

Ten New England Design Habits



Though it doesn't have to, Living Local often means embracing the styles you find right in your own backyard.  Frequently inspired by the resources indigenously available to a local region, the lifestyles, trends, and must-haves in a home were long based on geography and economy until the influences of mass media adjusted our eye(s) for fashion. Though trends now differ from home to home and taste to taste more than ever, there are still common home and home-goods designs that remain true to a geographical area, like New England.

Below are ten New England design habits. If you can check some off the list, it may just mean you belong right here in good old New England....


10.  You may or may not have a mudroom full of fancier things, but you love your LL Bean tote and rain boots.


9.  In the summer, you kickback in your boathouse, pull up a chair on a dock, or hop outside for a family canoe race.

8. Firewood is not only a heating must-have, it's also a rustic decoration on your porch.

7. Oars, lighthouses, rope, ships in a bottle, pictures of sailing boats? Yeah, you have 'em.

    
       


6.  Stars and stripes: they come in all shapes and sizes, but no house is complete without them!


5.  Shingles?  For sure.













4. Cottage or colonial, you have wood. Polished or rustic. Rounded or raw.
 


3.  You knew what shiplap was before Joanna and Chip Gaines made it famous.

2.  Without that New-England-history-lesson, it could appear to be simply boring.  But your exterior trim matches your base color, even if it's not fashionable anywhere else.
Until the Industrial Revolution, most paints in New England were mixed in small batches using naturally found earth pigments. Paint colors, therefore, tended to reflect these pigments: red oxide, yellow ocher, lamp black, red and white lead, etc. Common exterior colors were especially reds, yellows, and greens, and most often entire homesteads tended to have one exterior color.

1.  You cannot get enough stone walls!

8/05/2016

Narrangassett Cheese

I know, I know. I'm dairy free. But do not remind my husband.

Always happy to find a reason to sneak milk into our household, Kurt recently enjoyed this tasty treat, straight off the boat (or truck perhaps...) from Providence, Rhode Island. Though the Narragansett Creamery has oodles of local artisan products, including their you-can't-go-wrong-with-this Fresh and Feathery Mozarella (left), their best is one of their most recent product creations, Mediterranean Grilling Cheese (below).

Until moving abroad, like most Americans I was not familiar with "grilling cheese," also known as halloumi. Once I tasted it, a standard fare in a number of parts of the world, it was an immediate favorite. The cheese is squeaky clean and perfect on a number of tasty complex treats or simply a slice of local, grilled apple. Grilling cheeses have a deeply savory taste that pairs well with just about anything, standing up to heat by becoming crispy on the outside and gooey on the inside. Is your mouth watering yet?! Though we may be a cheese-centric country, this is one kind of cheese Americans need to learn more about!

What's even better than good cheese? Good production practices.  At Narragansett Creamery, local milk, kind bacteria, vegetable-based rennet, and salt are used to produce a pure and responsible product. Narragansett supports fair-trade and local ingredients to the best of their ability, their farmers pledge to not use growth hormones, and they are proud to be a family-owned company providing products to their local community of New England.

Do try a slice today... just don't remind me and my dairy free tummy what I'm missing! Sigh...


Need a few fantastic ideas of how to incorporate Narrangasett's Grilling Cheese into your next meal? The BBC may not be local, but they do know their halloumi cheese! Check it out here: http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/howto/guide/9-new-ways-serve-halloumi

Find Narrangassett Cheeses in these local markets:

Rhode Island:  A Market Natural Foods * Belmont Market * Black Pear * The Blue Kangaroo * Blue Rocks Market * Brigido’s Fresh Market * C & R MercantileCarpenter’s Farm * Charlestown Wine & Spirits * Clement’s Market * Dave’s Marketplace * DeCastro Farms * Dunns Corners Market * East Side Prescription Center * Eastside Marketplace * Fertile Underground * Food for Thought * The Good Earth Goose Pond Farm * The Green Grocer * Happy Acres Market *  Hope & SundriesMcQuade’s Marketplace * Milk & Honey Bazaar * Morris Farm * Munroe Dairy * Roch’s Market * Sandy’s Fine Food Emporium * Schartner Farms * Shaw’s * Shore’s Markets * South County Food Co-op * Sweet Berry Farm * Tom’s Markets * Venda Ravioli * Whaley Farm Market * Whole Foods Markets * Wishing Stone Farm * Young Family Farm *

Massachusetts:  Allandale Farms * American Provisions * Bacco’s Wine & Cheese * Bacon Street Farm * Bartlett’s Family Garden & Market * Bartlett’s Ocean View Farm * Bee’s Knees Supply Co. * Big Y * Blue Blinds Bakery * Boston Wine ExchangeBroadway Marketplace * Brothers Marketplace * Cape Abilities * Cape Cod Package Store * Cardullo’s * C’est Cheese  (NH)* Chatham Cheese Company * Chatham Village Market * City Feed & Supply * Coastal GreenGrocer * Common Crow Natural Market * Crusty Ventures * Dave’s Fresh Pasta * Deluca’s Market * Donelan’s * Fancy’s Market * Five Seventy Market * Foodies Urban Market * Formaggio Kitchen * Fruit Center Marketplace * Guaranteed Fresh * Harvest Co-op * Holmes FarmHow on Earth * Joppa Fine Foods * Lambert’s Farm Market * Last National Wine Co. * Lees Market * The Market at Pinehills * Milk & Honey Green Grocer * Morning Glory Farms * Natural Food Exchange * Nauset Farms * Needham Center Fine Wines * Prime * Quality Fruitland* Roche Bros. * Savenor’s * Savor Wine & Cheese * Siena FarmsSpring Brook Farm Country Store * The Spirited Gourmet *  Sudbury Farms * Tangerini Farm * Tastebuds Fresh Marketplace * Tendercrop Farm * Vidalias * Ward’s Berry Farm * Water Fresh Farm * Whittier Farms * Whole Foods Markets * Windfall Market * The Wine Cask * The Wine House * The Wine Vine * Woodberry Food Market

Connecticut:  Big Y * Caseus Fromagerie & Bistro * The Common Bond Market * Fairfield Cheese Company * Jonathan Edwards Winery * McQuade’s Marketplace * P & M Orange Street Market * Whole Foods Markets

New York:  Manhattan: Barnyard Cheese Shop * Battery Place Market * Beecher’s * Cheese on 62nd * Dean & Deluca Madison * Eataly * Eli’s * Forager’s Market * Formaggio Essex * Inwood Gourmet *  Lucy’sWhey * Malt & Mold * Market Basket * Milk & Hops * Saxelby Cheesemongers * The Wine Merchant * Westside Market Chelsea * Willoughby GeneralWhole Foods Market, Bowery * Zabar’s  Brooklyn:  Blue Apron * Brooklyn Larder * Brooklyn Victory Garden * Court Street Grocer * DePanneur * Eastern District * Forager’s MarketGreen Grape ProvisionsLucy’sWhey * Marlow & Daughters * The Meat Hook * Park Slope Co-op * The Ploughman * Stinky Bklyn  * Valley Shepherd 

Long Island & beyond:  * Ahabs Corner Shop * Beacon PantryCold Spring General StoreDeciccos * Loaves & Fishes * Plum Plums * Stuarts Seafood Market * Tarry Market * Village Cheese Shop * Whole Foods Lake Grove * Whole Foods Port Chester

Maine: Joppa Fine Foods *

New Hampshire: On the Vine Marketplace *