December 2021

Another casualty of the world’s Pandemic in Maine was Bisson’s Meat Market, who announced in August that they would be closing after 92 years of serving the Topsham community and beyond. The legendary butcher shop and farm cited these reasons: age and  health of the principles of the farm’s butcher shop and the lack of personnel to serve the throng of shoppers who love this place.  Few of these old-fashioned butcher farm shops still exist today as far-reaching retailers.  Another one, Curtis Meats in Warren, is still running strong.  Though  when I visited last month a sign on the door  said: “Closed due to Covid.”  They reopened soon after, and I was there several weeks ago for my stash of beef, from cows that are pastured on their own fields.

The counter at Bisson’s with an array of meats produced at the farm: butter, cream, milk, beef, bacon, sausage,  ham, salmon pie

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Originally “Food for Thought” was created as a food diary–a blog with daily entries about my personal focus on local food, farms and restaurants in Portland when the term locavore was new to the lexicon and blogging was a quirky endeavor. It first appeared online at Downeast Magazine in around 2001 and later commissioned by an enterprising editor at the Portland Press Herald where it ran for years until it morphed into the Golden Dish.

For better or worse, the space quickly became focused on restaurant reviews, a shaky moment for some or a stellar  time for others.

It was exciting to eat my way through Portland’s restaurant renaissance.  Suddenly it was no longer just Back Bay Grill and Fore Street as keepers of the flame but rather newcomers like Five Fifty Five, Bandol, Caiola’s, Hugo’s, Cinque Terre, Vignola and Duck Fat joined the group if only to make the old guard strive to be better.

Below are some photos from the past of dining in Portland, most around 2015-2016, as far back as my current Photoshop catalogue goes.

Five-fifty Five back in the day 2015 and much earlier in the early aughts

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For starters, use the  finest, most authentic buttermilk you can find.  This in itself starts a pivotal discussion on what is real buttermilk?  The best we have in Maine, if not in most of the country, is Kate’s Buttermilk made in Arundel,  Maine, our backyard producer of fine butter products like its buttermilk and butter. In fact, the renowned producer of heirloom grains, Anson Mills, in South Carolina instructs in their recipes for cornbread or biscuits to use Kate’s Buttermilk.  That’s quite an endorsement coming from this southern stalwart of southern foodways.

The bible on buttermilk  has unadulterated southern roots. The renown of this food staple can be found in their luscious cakes, pies, biscuits and pastries.   Southern chef Sean Brock in his various cookbooks calls for “full-fat” buttermilk. It’s really an oxymoron because buttermilk is low in fat. But it’s made from the leftovers of churned butter, which is made from whole milk before the milk is separated.  Most commercial producers use skimmed milk to which yogurt or other cultures are added to give tang and heft to the finished milk.  Most of the time grocery store buttermilk is called nonfat. Kate’s is made from fresh cream churned into butter and its milk derivative.

Photo courtesy of High View Farm

Until recently you could find buttermilk at our farmers’ markets, but such dairy farmers who made the stuff found that it was more profitable to use the remains of churned butter for cheese and yoghurt products, which are in high demand. Occasionally, if you ask for it, Swallowtail Farms has real buttermilk made from raw  whole milk. Balfour Farms used to make what they called old-fashioned buttermilk that had the little pieces of butter in it.    High View Farm in Harrison–and at the Bridgton Farmer’s Market–which in my opinion made the richest, raw  butter from their herd of guernsey cows also produced old-fashioned buttermilk that had little chards of the leftover butter from the solids to make butter from raw milk.  Different from the cultured variety, which is thickened with cultures, this was thinner but very tangy and sweet, an irresistible yin-yang combination of flavors.  Real Umami, if you will.  They rarely make it anymore except by special request. Again, there are more profitable uses for the churned butter byproduct. Even their butter is in low supply since they use it for other dairy products.

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