Birkenstock Maine

Il sandalo crucco per eccellenza Birkenstock, si trasforma in scarpa nella versione Maine. Onestamente questa mi era sfuggita, la trovate anche su OiPolloi.

Birkenstock Maine

Handmade Towels: Five beautifully handcrafted towels to spruce up your morning routine

Handmade Towels

The new year has us updating our old routines around the house, and fresh linens seem like one of the easiest ways to make a clean start. This week, we’ve gathered up five beautifully crafted towels to help spruce up the bath and get us going on cold mornings….

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Best of CH 2012: Five Travel Pairings: Our most memorable destinations and a proper piece of luggage to complement the trip

Best of CH 2012: Five Travel Pairings

This year, like many before it, travel played a central role in the stories we found and the people we met. Not to mention the equipment we had the pleasure of traveling with. Knowing very well that the perfect piece of luggage can make or break a travel experience we’ve…

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The Rolling Owl Stool : Naturally informed, bird-inspired furniture from Maine

The Rolling Owl Stool

When creating a new piece of furniture, Maine craftsman Geoffrey Warner finds inspiration in the beauty and strength of natural forms. A carpenter by trade, Warner is especially drawn to those he finds in the woods that surround his studio to create such subtly whimsical pieces as the Rolling…

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Sea Bags and Woolrich

Recycled sails from Maine fused with Pennsylvania wool in a line of new bags

Sea Bags and Woolrich

Since its start in 2005, Sea Bags has spawned a number of imitations, but unlike its competitors Sea Bags still uses only retired sails for its durable, handmade totes and accessories. Now the Portland, Maine-based brand has partnered with fellow East Coast company, Woolrich, marrying its weathered nylon with…

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Seawall

Our interview with the proprietors of Portland’s first pop-up shop and gallery space highlighting Maine-made goods

Seawall

A hybrid between a retail and gallery space, Seawall is home to Portland, Maine’s first pop-up shop and also its newest clothing line. Founders Daniel Pepice, Sara Lemieux, Thom Rhoads and Brook Delorme opened Seawall this spring with the hope to open people’s eyes to talented Maine designers. Housed…

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Word of Mouth: Portland

Five local picks for food and drinks in the New England fishing hub

Word of Mouth: Portland

True to its name, Portland, Maine is first and foremost a bustling port. Inseparable from Portland’s character, the harbor is both a blessing and a curse. A kind of tourist attraction in and of itself, the harbor brings literally boatloads of cruise passengers into the city, flooding the all-too-popular…

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The Ropes

Bright bracelets from Maine

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A non-traditional take on a classic, utilitarian material, Shana Aldrich Ready’s jewelry line, The Ropes is a colorful ode to her Maine roots. “I always had a farfetched dream of trying to bring my design skills back to Maine,” says Ready. “I like the idea of visiting different metropolitan cities but then coming home to Maine to interpret and digest everything.”

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Inspired by the nautical materials and the rich marine culture of her home state, Ready launched The Ropes in March 2011. “The Ropes actually started completely accidentally,” she says. “About two years ago now I was just messing around with rope I had around the house and ended up making two bracelets for myself.”

Those two original bracelets are now the Kennebunkport and the Portland styles, which, along with the rest of the line come in a vibrant assortment of colors from neon brights to classic white—inspired by the buoys Ready’s husband uses in his lobstering business. Each piece is handmade in Maine using authentic nautical hardware and cords, most of which are made in Maine as well.

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The Ropes can be found online at Spaces Kennebunkport and at the Bliss boutique in Portland, Maine. Prices range between $30 for the Scarborough bangle to $70 for the multi-strand Portland bracelet.


Shuck Truck

We sit down with Juliet Totten to talk about her movement to bring the oysters to the people

by Matt Domino

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Since 2007, Juliet Totten has embraced society’s current entrepreneurial spirit as the co-owner and founder of the wedding decoration company Poppies and Posies. Building on the success of that venture, Totten decided to broaden her business scope by starting Cabin Cove Oysters, an oyster garden in South Bristol, Maine, which takes to the street on the Shuck Truck—a traveling Airstream trailer from which she and her business partner, Michael McAllister, serve fresh oysters—theirs and other local farmers’—with a variety of different sauces.

We sat down with Totten to learn more about her creative business spirit and the mobile fare she’s serving up from the Shuck Truck.

How were you and McAllister inspired to start the Cabin Cove Shuck Truck?

I just love the idea of bringing oysters to people in a way that isn’t fussy. I think over the past five years oysters have gotten a new rep and have been taken out of their previously “unapproachable” box, if you will. People are enjoying them in much more casual and fun-filled ways than they used to and I think the Shuck Truck is just a part of that whole movement. Bring the oysters to the people!

How did you find the oyster farm?

We started it! The farm is actually in South Bristol, Maine, just a few miles from Damariscotta. We are at the mouth of the Damariscotta River where the brackish river meets the ocean. The farm is located in the cove where my family home is—just off our dock. Being in the saltier water gives our oysters a distinct briny taste. Because the oystering community is a very supportive one (we wouldn’t have been able to get up and running without the sage advice of other farmers) we hope to serve as many local Maine oysters from the Shuck Truck as possible. We don’t want to limit the selection to just ours. I hope it will get people in this fabulous food-centric community excited to try all of the great oysters that are being grown here.

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Where did you get the truck?

When we got the idea for the Shuck Truck we searched high and low for an old Airstream or Shasta trailer that we could convert. It was sort of daunting, the prospect of doing a gut renovation on a trailer. Then one day, low and behold, I came across an Airstream that a catering company in Vermont had already converted into a food truck and were looking to sell. It was fate! The catering company has been absolutely lovely and when they sold us the Shuck Truck they gave us lots of good tips on how to keep her up and running smoothly.

Can you walk us through the process of farming the oysters and bringing them onto the truck

Whew! It’s a big one. The way we grow oysters on our farm is in bags (they’re actually sort of mesh boxes) that float on the surface of the water. The baby oysters, or the seed, are put into the bags and, over the course of about a year and half to two years, they grow to market size. Growing them to go to market is a long process with lots of steps that would probably bore you. When they are big enough they are taken out of the bags, cleaned, and brought up to the truck. Most of the time we are serving oysters that have been in the water that morning. That’s as fresh as they get!

How did you decide on the different sauces you offer and do they vary?

It depends on the scale of the event etc. There are lots of fabulous Maine-based companies that have provided sauces for us. So, what they are offering can often determine what we serve. We make a few in-house on a regular basis, such as Mama T’s Special Cocktail Sauce. It’s my mom’s recipe and a crowd pleaser so that’s usually on the menu. We also make a mean mignonette. Those are two must-haves in my opinion. We are actually working on our own line of sauces right now that will be produced commercially. So hopefully a few new favorites will emerge!

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What are some of your favorite stories from the truck so far?

I’m just always amazed at how happy people are to see us. People really love oysters and being able to walk up and grab a few on the go is such a nice treat. I also have to say weddings are really fun. We do sort of an unlimited hour for a lot of events and guests think they’re not allowed to have as many as they want. Some will come up trying to mask their identity by taking off a coat or putting on sunglasses because they think we’re going to cut them off. Or they’ll keep apologizing for coming up and taking more. I’m like, “Come and get ’em! That’s what we’re here for!”

What is your favorite type of oyster and why?

Well, Cabin Cove, of course, because they’re ours. I’m also a big fan of other oysters grown in the area like Pemaquid and Glidden Point. I’m a total sucker for Naked Cowboys from Blue Point on Long Island. Oh, and Kumamoto from the West Coast! I guess I have a lot of favorites.

Can you actually shuck an oyster and how did you learn?

Yes I can shuck an oyster!  I can shuck lots and I’m pretty fast if I do say so myself. I’m not as good as my business partner, Michael. He’s like a speed racer. I learned to shuck oysters from my father when I was younger and have been working on honing my skills ever since.

What are your goals for the truck in the upcoming year?

So many! There’s a law against food trucks in Portland right now, so we’re on the committee that’s working to change that law. In the meantime, we’d like to share our oysters during the summer in some other seaside towns, do a bunch of fun wedding and events, launch our sauce line, grow a lot more baby oysters… so many goals. Time to start a to do list.


HoneyMaker Mead

Fermented honey makes a flavorful comeback thanks to an artisanal Maine producer

by Jason Reindorp

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Located in a space resembling both wine shop and chemistry lab, a visit to Portland, ME’s Maine Mead Works to taste their handcrafted HoneyMaker wine is equal parts educational and delicious.

The HoneyMaker Mead uses 100% Maine wildflower honey and other locally produced ingredients, and then barrel aged with American oak. While many consider it a thick or syrupy drink, Maine Mead Works’ variety has a remarkably delicate and refined consistency. Subtle differences occur between the eight flavors not only because of their seasonally-sourced main ingredients, but because the honey changes in taste depending on when it was harvested, with spring honey yielding a lighter flavor than darker, autumn honey.

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Founded in 2007, HoneyMaker Mead is created by husband-and-wife duo Ben Alexander and Carly Cope along with award-winning South African mead-maker Dr. Garth Cambray and mead maker Nick Higgins, who have a joint patent for an ultra-filtration system that eliminates more pollen, yeasts and bacteria than traditional filtration methods, resulting in a cleaner and smoother taste. The team has worked hard to bring the ancient beverage back into favor, balancing the art and science of crafting mead with choosing locally raised honey and fruits, all while aiming to become carbon neutral.

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At just around 12.5% alcohol content, HoneyMaker Mead makes for a delicious after dinner drink or mixer for fruity concoctions. Popular during medieval times, mead is also thought to promote virility and fertility, which helped coin the term “honeymoon” because newlyweds would drink it for the first month after marrying.

Maine Mead Works Honeymaker Mead sells online from VinoShipper or from stores around the Portland area for $14-18 a bottle, depending on seasonal flavor.