|

Chef:
Jerome Watkins
Restaurants:
Mac's Shack
91 Commercial St.
Wellfleet, Mass.
(508) 349-6333
map

World Grille
Restaurant
Willy's World Wellness & Conference Center
4730 State Highway 6
North Eastham, Mass.
(508) 255-6370
map
|
|
“We
have had a lot of fun with the purple kale. It is neat because it
is one of those leafy winter vegetables, and so the more frost and
the colder it is, the firmer it gets and the more flavor it has.” |
|
|
Seasonal
Chefs
How
an
Accidental Crop of Purple Kale
Enlivened Winter Menus on Cape Cod
| February 2009
-- Icy
winter winds have swept
Cape Cod
free of tourists and summer residents, and have sent most local
restaurants and farms into hibernation. But the frigid weather
hasn’t stopped Jerome Watkins -- executive chef at Mac’s
Shack, an upscale bistro in Wellfleet, in summer, and at Willy's
Gym in Eastham in winter -- from searching out and
using local produce. |

|
Watkins, whose career includes stints at acclaimed restaurants in
cities from Pittsburgh to New York City to Boston, has been in
Wellfleet, out near the tip of the Cape, for just a year. But he has
already cultivated relationships with a network of local farmers.
Those connections were mutually beneficial this winter, when Watkins
cooked for a series of benefit dinners at Willy's Gym sponsored by the Cape
Cod chapter of Slow Food. The rabbit, lamb, venison, potatoes,
purple kale and baby greens were all locally grown or caught,
creating a market for local farmers who usually have to wait until
the summer months to make any money.
Watkins recently spoke with
Seasonal Chef about his adventures with local wintertime cuisine on Cape Cod.
|
|
“Everybody thinks it’s hard getting
local stuff
this time of year. A lot
of places will close. But we have found several farmers who grow
things in the winter. We use Tim
Friary, in Barnstable. Another farmer named Julie has phenomenal shiitake mushrooms in the
summer. She wanted to get into doing more things in the winter, so she
got what she thought were turnip seeds, but it happened to be kale.
So she had this phenomenal organic purple kale, which she didn’t
know what to do with.
“She told me it was the best kale she had ever
seen. When she brought it in,
it was just phenomenal. It
had like a foot long stem. We trimmed the stems off and made stock
with it, and then we used the leaves as a vegetable.
“At the last Slow Food dinner, we paired the purple kale with
venison shanks. We did the kale Italian-style. We slow-braised it
for about 30 minutes with
pancetta bacon, heirloom garlic, cracked black pepper and red
pepper flakes. For the next dinner, I wanted to take a different
direction, so I made a really nice vegetarian purple kale soup. I
made a stock with white mirepoix, and the kale stems and
some aromatics, and let that simmer for about an hour.
It had a really nice fragrance to it. I let the kale greens steep
in there. Then we strained it. We also roasted organic red
and yellow tomatoes. And we had some
just-dug potatoes from Farmer Tim that we roasted with extra-virgin olive
oil, thyme, rosemary, and savory. We served the roasted tomatoes and
potatoes in a bowl with the wilted kale from the broth and a handful
of julienned kale that we added raw just before we poured the hot
broth over it. That soup was
our first course. It was a big hit. A lot of people enjoyed that.”
“We have had a lot of fun with the purple
kale. It is neat because it is one of those leafy winter vegetables,
and so the more frost and the colder it is, the firmer it gets and
the more flavor it has. And what’s neat is, it doesn't get bitter.
“During these dinners, it's a whole new
thing. It's like wintertime cuisine. We have a lot of fun with it
and make a lot of contacts and develop a strong relationship with
farmers I didn't know.
“I
am actually working with the farmers now on things we would like to
see in the coming months. When I was in
New York, I worked at Esca,
which was one of Mario Batali's restaurants. Working with farmers
was one of the things that was really big with him.
He brought a lot of seeds from
Italy, and he had a farmer on
Long Island
plant them. That way, he could have a lot of things available.
“That's something that I am doing now. I am working with some of the
farmers I've just met and we are developing lists for April, May and
June, which are some of the tougher months when things are not quite
as plentiful. One of the
things we are working on for spring is ramps. And white asparagus,
plum tomatoes, and English peas. And rhubarb is fantastic that time
of year. We will have fun with that.”
|
|
Some of Watkins'
Local Suppliers
| The farmers who
Watkins relies on for fresh, local produce on Cape Cod include Tim
Friary,
who grows an array of vegetables, from potatoes to tomatoes, on his 14-acre
Cape
Cod Organic Farm in Barnstable.
Julie Winslow, who is best known
for the mushrooms
she grows on oak logs at Cape Coastal Farm in
Orleans, supplied Watkins with kale in the winter.
|

Tim Friary of
Cape Cod
Organic Farm
Photo: Edible
Cape Cod |
Donna Eaton, of Cedar
Spring Herb Farm, in Harwich, is developing a line of herbs for
Watkins' restaurant.
E&T Farms
in West Barnstable, an innovative “aquaponics” operation that
grows tilapia and bass in tanks and cycles the rich, fish
waste-laden waters through a hydroponic greenhouse, supplies Watkins
with baby red chard, arugula, micro carrot greens, mesclun
mix, and other greens.
|
|
|