Month: September 2014
Muddica Steak Panini
Yesterday daughter Amanda was home from school for the day, to do laundry, watch football with the family and stuff her face with someĀ of her Momma’s home cooking !Ā Muddica Steak PaniniĀ was first on her wish list of foods to feast on during her short visit home.
This morning I madeĀ another batch of Muddica Cunsata to have on hand for fall timeĀ cooking! Click link below for my Sicilian Style Breadcrumb recipe video or see page 201 in my cookbook “Gifts Of Gold In A Sicilian Kitchen With Sista Felicia; Harvest”
http://cook123.com/recipes/mudica-bread-crumbs.html
Click Read More for Step-by-Step Photos Continue reading “Muddica Steak Panini”
Another Great Block Party!
Our final Block Party of 2014 was a great success. As usual, the gallery was too busy for me to walk the street to take pictures. This time, I had the energy to enjoy the event, especially the people. A large cheese platter was generously provided by The Cave, our neighbor at 44 Main Street (http://www.thecavegloucester.com/). Key Block Party folks visited me, including Susan Parent (L) of Toodeloos (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Toodeloos/388111807754) and Block Party organizer Valerie Marcley (R). That’s me in the middle!
Monday September 22nd , 2014 Cape Ann Weather…
Marine Forecast :
Small Craft Advisory :
Today W winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
Tonight NW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
First Day Of Fall !
Podcast Weather :
http://www.spreaker.com:80/episode/4992939
Hourly Forecast :
Fun at the New England Pet Expo ! With My Friend Meteorologist Rob Gutro …
Word is that power outage is from…
Blown transformers next to Gortons.
Smoke and fire engines on the scene.
Waiting for more info.
Update 6:30AM Power restored
Check out “National Grid” Android and Apple Apps To View Local Power Outages and Estimated Power Return Time
GloucesterCast With Guests Kim Smith, Toby Pett and Host Joey Ciaramitaro Taped 09/21/14
Subscribe to Get The GloucesterCast Podcast by Email For Free
Topics Include: The effervescent Toby Pett and Mr Grumpypants Kim Smith, Block Party Kudos, Sefathia, Mark McDonough Valerie Markeley, Block Party Review, Gianni Gallo, Rome TV based in where else but Gloucester MA, Mercedes Flavin and Paolo Laboa and The Space at Alchemy, J Pace, The Big Dig, The Format For The 100th Podcast, Holy Cow, Burnham’s Field, John McElhenny, Steve Winslow, Melissa Cox, Mayor Kirk, The Ward 2 Move, Richardson’s Ice Cream, Appleton Farms, Gloucester Daily Times Website Redesign, Arizona’s Stupid Motorist Law, Israel Horowitz’ My Old Lady Playing At Cape Ann Community Cinema, House Of Games, Lindsay Crouse, Adam Horowitz and The Beastie Boys, Rob Newton From Cape Ann Community Cinema, The Prototype For Kim’s Butterfly Screening Audience, Kim Smith Butterfly Movie On PBS, Send Kim Your Monarch Butterfly Sightings, www.journeynorth.org , Eastern Point Lit House Kumbaya Moment, Duckworth Book Series The Secret Life Of Bees, NFL Football Food Menu, Against Football: A Reluctant Manifesto, The Hard Core Liberal Car and Ron Gilson’s 10 Cent Trade In, Live On Boats Being Sold In Favor Of Cheap Housing, SmallHouseBliss, Send In Your Football Day Food Pictures
Thanks To The Earl Foote Band For The Intro Music. Download Gloucester Til the End Free Here At Gimme Sound
Click to Listen to The GMG Podcast On Stitcher Radio On Demand For Free

Riiiiiiiiibs!
Rocky Neck Art Colony Appoints Executive Director
Rocky Neck Art Colony Appoints Executive Director
Suzanne Gilbert Lee has been appointed by the board of trustees to the newly created position of executive director of the Rocky Neck Art Colony (RNAC). Gilbert Lee, a native of Gloucester, comes to the art colony following a long history of arts administration, most recently as festivals coordinator for Historic New England headquartered in Boston. As former gallery director at North Shore Arts Association, Gilbert Lee is well suited to handle the growing management needs of the expanding RNAC, that until very recently operated solely as a volunteer-run organization. The acquisition of the Cultural Center building on Wonson Street has created the opportunity for a wide variety of events, programs and rentals in addition to exhibition space requiring hands-on management.
Gilbert Lee is a graduate of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst with a BA in journalism and a graduate certificate in theology from Weston Jesuit School of Theology.
The Cultural Center at Rocky Neck is home office of the RNAC, the official Welcome Center for Gloucesterās Rocky Neck Cultural District and hosts exhibitions, workshops, meetings, lectures and cultural events of all kinds. The Cultural Center is open on Thursday-Sunday, 12:00-4:00 PM from September to May or by appointment. Please phone 978 515-7004.
The Center accommodates 60 to 100 people and is fully handicapped accessible. For information about renting the facility for a meeting, theatrical or musical performance, a small wedding or anniversary, both private or for the community, contact rnaccoordinator@gmail.com.
The Rocky Neck Art Colony, a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization nurtures excellence in the arts through exhibitions, workshops, residencies and vibrant cultural events for its members and the public.
Little Italy on Main Street ~ 2014 Block Party Season Ends on a High Note!
Terri and Gianni Gallo with sister and friend
What fun was last night’s block party!!! The best eventĀ of the season was saved for the last, as the West End of Main Street Gloucester became “Little Italy.” The streets overflowed with hundreds of partygoers whileĀ Gianni and Terry Gallo broadcast liveĀ an episode of their new show,Ā L’Italia Chiamò – Radio Show.
Artisan cheese makerĀ Luca MignognaĀ served samples of his outstanding cheeses asĀ Chef Paolo La Boa created delicious appetizers of prosciutto, complemented with hisĀ signature pesto.
The slew of Vespas parked out front of Caffe Sicilia caused everyone to stop and oogle.
I wishedĀ IĀ could have stayed for the entire eveningĀ but unfortunately had to hurry home. Looking forward to next year’s Block PartiesĀ although,Ā I don’t know how they’ll ever top last night’s event!
Lisa Griffiths, alsoĀ knownĀ as The Nutty Red Head, gets carded by Robin at the Cave–it makes her day!
The Goddess Family ~ Franny, Tony, Samantha, andĀ Baby Woody
Scott Memhard withĀ Hannah, Andrea, and Lise advocating for the “College Success Program in Gloucester.”
I’ll BEE SEEING YOU at . . .
Sailing on a sea of diamonds
Saturday on Rocky Neck – Party Lineup
The Moolongz love a good party and hope you do too. The I See Moolongz backer rewards and book launch party is happening this Saturday, September 27th from 4-6:00pm at the Cultural Center at Rocky Neck, 6 Wonson Street. Everyone is welcome. The party will also include a unique exhibit of five works by five artists in five weeks, called Spontaneous Collaboration. The I See Moolongz party will immediately be followed by a Colors party at the Rocky Neck Gallery (come as a color), 53 Rocky Neck Ave. starting at 6:00 and a Madfish Wharf Galleries Season Wine Down party starting at 7:00 at 77 Rocky Neck Ave.
A bunch of good, fun reasons to get yourself to Rocky Neck this Saturday.
Live Pats Game: Home Opener
Hard Work
Timothy Wilson Quote of the Week from Greg Bover
āā¦the intrigue of existence would be purposeless without the element of the ineffable.ā
Timothy Wilson (198?- ) From Quantum Art Review (as is the bio below.)
Timothy was born and raised in rural Maine. Upon graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design he enrolled briefly at the Grand Central Academy before moving back to Maine to work as a creative designer for a clothing company. Not long after, he decided to leave the portence of a successful career and pursue a life as a frustrated painter. In November he will be undertaking a two month Fellowship in the Hudson Valley courtesy of the Art Students League. Timothy keeps his studio in Portland, Maine where he occasionally cat sits for his sisterās purebred Persian. His solo exhibition at the Steven Amedee Gallery in New York City opens in October.
With thanks to Nick Bover
Rubber Duck on a leash

Essex Living History Tour in the Ancient Essex Burial Ground.
Len Burgess submits-
The Ancient Burial Ground in the village of Chebacco Parish (now Essex) came back to life this past
weekend. On Sunday afternoon, visitors had the opportunity to experience the burial ground and see
life in the 1700ās to the middle 1800ās through the eyes of some of its prominent citizens and even
one infamous one. The graveyard dates back to 1681. Among those buried there are two of the town’s
earliest ministers, many shipbuilders and veterans of the French and Indian Wars, Revolutionary War,
War of 1812 and Civil War.
The tour started with Emma Frances Burnham portrayed by her relative Becky Axelrod wearing an
authentic Civil War period dress owned by one of her ancestors. Becky also showed guests the Hearse
House, built more than 170 years ago, which holds the town’s original victorian hearse, purchased
in 1861. Also in the Hearse House is an early sleigh hearse and two holding boxes that predate the
practice of embalming. At that time, block ice was used to preserve the body of the deceased until
burial. In all, there are 374 headstones in the Ancient Burial Ground, the oldest ones dating back to the
beginning of the 1700’s.
Then guests met Barry OāBrien who, as Reverend Robert Crowell, introduced the story of the town’s
infamous Grave Robberies. The minister shared his famous sermon, given in 1818, when the empty
caskets of the victims were reburied in a common grave located under the Hearse House. Next thing,
David Gabor who had been lurking behind the building came out of the shadows, shovel in hand. He
was the town’s doctor Thomas Sewall, accused of stealing eight bodies from the Ancient Cemetery to
be used for anatomical study. Then appeared Kerry Breeze aka Sally Andrews, a young patient of Dr.
Sewall’s. Sparks flew. The fact that Dr. Sewall was fined a pittance, asked to leave Essex and the State
only to become a world renowned author on anatomy left guests wondering whether the science and
knowledge gained through the robberies were worth the anguish of the families.
Guests then met Alan Budreau who as Reverend John Cleveland spoke of his ministery in Chebacco,
and his Chaplaincy in the French and Indian War and in the Revolutionary War.
This year’s tour included a new character, the famous Madame Varney, portrayed by her 10th
granddaughter, Laura Doyle. Madame Varney and a few of her women friends orchestrated the
building of Chebacco’s first meetinghouse in 1677. When the town fathers of Ipswich forbade the āmen
of Chebaccoā from raising a meetinghouse, the woman of the parish took charge and enlisted the help
of men of Wenham, Gloucester and Manchester. Technically speaking, they were outside the ban.
The volunteers arrived from all over and the meetinghouse was up in one day! (Becky Axelrod is also
related to Madame Varney).
Mark Nelson was the Reverend John Wise, who became the town’s first minister in 1683. He served as
a regimental chaplain during the French and Indian War, and was well known for speaking out against
taxation without representation more than a half century before the Revolutionary War.
Jim Witham portrayed Skipper Wesley Burnham, who was a navigator and ships captain. He served
in the militia during the Revolutionary War and witnessed the surrender of General Burgoyne at
Saratoga. He spoke to guests about events leading up to the Revolutionary War including the Stamp
Act and Tea Act. He also spoke of the militia and the role they played during the war and shared
stories of his days as a privateer. One of Skipper Wesley Burnham’s great uncles was Jim’s 8th great
grandfather.
Guests departed by way of the museum to visit the collection and have refreshments. Throughout
the tour guests were treated to music played by Tom Duff on his tenor penny whistle. Jenny
Stephens, Liz Guerin and Sue Harrington assisted with ticket collection. Diana Hughes Maria
Burnham, Mary Wilhelm and Barbara Spyropulos led the guests on their tour of the Ancient Burial
Ground. Len Burgess chronicled the event by taking photographs.
Story by Jim Witham and Laura Doyle
Skipper Dave Marciano of FV Hard Merchandise visits ENHA tour at Cape Pond Ice
Celebrity NatGeo Skipper Dave Marciano of FV Hard Merchandise stopped by Cape Pond during our ENHA Trails & Sails Saturday morning tour, to sign autographs and settle up his ice bill – he’d been by earlier with the boat – and also to model a Wicked Tuna / Wicked Ice t-shirt, which we traded for a fresh blue fin tuna steak…. ā with Dave Marciano.
There’s a new Humpback Whale at Cape Pond Ice on Gloucester’s inner harbor – if you didn’t see one today out on a Gloucester whale watch, than come tomorrow, Sunday, or next Friday, Saturday or Sunday, for our free ENHA Trails & Sails Icehouse tours. Master Ice Sculptor Donald Chapelle of Brilliant Ice Sculpture is carving a “pod” of Humpbacks for our ice sculpture display, a smaller scale version of his life-size sculpture done in 2007 for Boston’s First Night…. and the first whale has definitely arrived, in all his fluking glory.
Scott
Cape Pond ice
Community Stuff 9/21/14
There will be a reception for local artist, Anita Johnson, on Saturday, September 27, at BankGloucester at 160 Main Street, Gloucester. You can meet the artist in the bankās lobby between 11:00 and 1:00, and enjoy light refreshments. Anitaās paintings include scenes of New England and Italy, still-lifeās, and portraits. Her work will be on view until Nov. 8th.
Gloucester maritime culture to be featured at New Bedford ās Working Waterfront Festival
Master boat builder Harold Burnham to bring Pinky Schooner Ardelle
Gloucester ās maritime culture will be well represented at New Bedford ās 2014 Working Waterfront Festival. A celebration of the commercial fishing industry, the free festival takes place on the working piers of New Bedford ā historic waterfront on Saturday, September 27 and Sunday, September 28.
The Pinky Schooner Ardelle, designed and built by master shipwright Harold Burnham, will be at the event on Sunday. Pinky Schooners were a common type of fishing vessel that sailed out of Cape Ann harbors from the early eighteenth century through the early twentieth century. Burnham bears a family name that is virtually synonymous with Essex , the birthplace of approximately 4,000 schooners. He is the 28th Burnham to operate a shipyard in Essex since 1819. Growing up in a family of shipbuilders in a town where shipbuilding is a tradition handed down over the generations, Harold has learned the traditional techniques of his forebears, carving out a place in history as a master designer, shipwright, and sailmaker. He twice has been a recipient of a Traditional Artist Fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and was the 2012 recipient of a National Heritage Award, the highest honor bestowed on traditional artists.
Gloucester based author JoeAnn Hart will be signing copies of Float at the Festival Bookstore on Saturday from 1:30-2:00. The novel is a wry tale of financial desperation, conceptual art, insanity, infertility, seagulls, marital crisis, jellyfish, organized crime, and the plight of a plastic-filled ocean. Essex based musician and childrenās author Daisy Nell will read from her latest book Moxie and the Whale aboard Schooner Ernestina on Sunday at 11:30. Ernestina was originally the Effie M. Morrissey, a Gloucester built Grand Banks fishing schooner. She will also read The Stowaway Mouse on the deck of the Schooner Ardelle from 2:30-3:00 about a mouse who sneaks on board as the Burnham Boatyard launches a new schooner.
Angela Sanfilippo, President of the Gloucester Fishermanās Wives Association will represent the Port of Gloucester as a cook in the Seafood Throwdown which takes place on Sunday at 3:30. She will compete against Vera Carvalho, representing the Port of New Bedford . The two cooks will compete to create a winning seafood dish using a surprise local seafood ingredient which is revealed to them at the event. The Seafood Throwdown is a collaboration between the Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance and the Working Waterfront Festival.
The Working Waterfront Festival is a project of the Community Economic Development Center of Southeastern MA, a non-profit organization. The FREE festival, a family friendly, educational celebration of New England’s commercial fishing industry, features live maritime and ethnic music, fishermen’s contests, fresh seafood, vessel tours, films, author readings, cooking demonstrations, kid’s activities and more. It all takes place on working piers and waterfront parks in New Bedford , MA , America ‘s #1 fishing port, on the last full weekend in September. Navigate to us at www.workingwaterfrontfestival.org.
Laura Orleans, Director
Working Waterfront Festival






































