Author: Joey Ciaramitaro
The creator of goodmorninggloucester.org Lover of all things Gloucester and Cape Ann. GMG where we bring you the very best our town has to offer because we love to share all the great news and believe that by promoting others in our community everyone wins.
Look for WBZ Hottie Lauren Leamanczyk Shown Here With Cameraman Rick Macomber and Dave Jewell and Tom Ring On Tonight’s WBZ News
Lauren came down to talk to our fishermen about storm preparations. We shot some “C” roll material with your boy Joey but hopefully they won’t have to use my ugly mug in the telecast.
Cameraman Rick does a great website- www.macomberproductions.com check it out!
AlsoFollow Rick on twitter @boston_camera
Lauren on Twitter LaurenWBZ
also Assignment Editor and Uber Boston News Twitter Star Andrea Courtois @AndreaWBZ
Bread & Butter Pickles Recipe From Sista Felicia
2 ½ lbs. pickling cucumbers
1 lb. white onions sliced very thin
2-3 Tablespoons of Kosher salt
1 ¼ Cups white distilled vinegar
1 Cup apple cider vinegar
2 ¼ Cups white sugar
1 Tablespoon mustard seeds
1 Teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
¾ Teaspoon celery seeds
1 Stick cinnamon
6 Allspice berries
1 Pinch of ground allspice
6 Whole cloves
1 Pinch of ground clove
½ Teaspoon turmeric
Step 1: Clean cucumbers and onions under running water to remove any dirt
Step 2: Slice cleaned cucumbers and onions 1/4 inch thick (discard the ends)
Step 3: Place sliced cucumbers and onions in a large bowl![]()
Step4: Sprinkle Kosher Salt or Pickling Salt over the cucumbers and onions, and toss well distributing the salt evenly (DO NOT use table salt)![]()
Step 5: Cover salted cucumbers and onions with a tea towel
Step 6: Cover tea towel with several cups of ice
Step 7: Place bowl in refrigerator for 3-4 hours
Step 8: Remove bowl from refrigerator (ice should be melted)
Step 9: Remove tea towel
Step 10: Strain mixture in a large colander
Step 11: Rinse cucumbers and onions EXTREMELY well with clean water.
**Repeat rinsing 3-4 times
Step 12: Set rinsed/drained cucumber onion mixture aside
Step 13: Place vinegar, sugar, and spices in a 6 qt. pot and bring to a rolling boil
Step 14: Carefully add Cucumbers and onions to boiling mixture
Step 15: Stir mixture making sure all the cucumber and onions are coated with spiced liquid, and bring to a boil again
Step 16: Quickly remove pan from heat
Step 17: Sterilize canning jars, lids, and rings by placing them in a water bath
Step 18: Boil jars, rings, and lids for 10 minutes
Step 19: Using long tongs carefully remove jars, lids and rings from water bath
Step 18: Place a kitchen towel inside of a cookie sheet and place hot /wet jars, rings and lids on top of towel.
Step 19: Ladle warm bread and butter pickles into sterilized jars leaving a half inch space at top of each jar. Make sure all pickles are completely covered with liquid and there is a ½ inch space at top
*Note: I use my grandmother Felicia’s Canning Cuff to fill my jars. I highly recommend picking one up at a kitchen store. It really makes filling the mason jars super easy and mess free!
Step 20:Place a lid on each jar and fasten with a metal ring
Step 21: Place sealed jars back into water bath and boil for 10 min
Step 22: Using long tongs, carefully remove mason jars from water bath, placing them back on cookie sheet lined with towel, and let them cool.
**While they cool on towel, you should hear little popping noises. Don’t be alarmed that’s a good thing, it a sign that your jars have been properly processed!
Enjoy!
Kathy Chapman’s Award Winning Deviled Eggs
Sinikka Nogelo- Khan Studio/ Good Morning Gloucester Guest Artist
It’s Ardelle Day!!!! Complete Coverage Round Up
She’s A Coming and we will be live blogging it!
Here is the first video of her making her way to Gloucester this morning from Nancy Dudley at The Essex Shipbuilding Museum-
Expected at The Heritage Center around 6PM, be there to welcome her!
Not To Miss!!! Welcoming the Ardelle to Gloucester August 24th at 6:30PM
Here is a link to the progress of The Ardelle including through The Weeks From Our Boy Marty Luster-
https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/?s=Ardelle
There are several pages of posts so go to the bottom and click older posts to go back in time.
We will be updating all day.
This just in from Bill O’Connor-
Hi Joey,
The Ardell and the Lannon were just tacking off of Eastern Point and it made for a nice photo.
Enjoy,
~Bill O’Connor
North Shore Kid

Schooner Ardelle Sails Into Gloucester Harbor Photos from Anthony Marks-
Photos From Vickie S. Van Ness-
The Birth of a Schooner
ARDELLE Takes Shape
ARDELLE is Coming Along
Support Ardelle
ARDELLE: Week 7
ARDELLE Week 11
Ardelle Week 14
ARDELLE Week 15
ARDELLE Week 16
ARDELLE Week 20
ARDELLE Week 23
Frame Up – Pictures of the Pinky Schooner Ardelle From Elinor Teele
The Schooner Ardelle 2-19-11 From Photoholic1
Chickity Check It! Boatbuilding With Burnham
ARDELLE Week 30
Did You Know? (Ardelle’s Rum Plank)
4th Annual Digital Photography Workshop
Ardelle Week 37
The Ardelle at Sunset Photo From Len Burgess
Chickity Check It! Daisy Nell writes children’s book about Essex Schooner Ardelle
Did You Know (Ardelle Launch)
Top Pick For Saturday- VIEW THE LAUNCH OF THE SCHOONER ARDELLE FROM THE ESSEX SHIPBUILDING MUSEUM
Unique Essex Side Launch of Wooden Schooner Ardelle Set for Today July 9th and Ardelle Photos From Len Burgess
ARDELLE MAKES A SPLASH IN ESSEX photos by Marty Luster
Launch Of the Ardelle Photos From Anthony Marks
Video- The Schooner Ardelle Hits The Water From Roger Torre
Ardelle Launch Photos From Len Burgess
Scenes From The Schooner Ardelle Launch From Rick Isaacs
VIDEO- SCHOONER ARDELLE LAUNCH FROM JOANNE MARKS
Mike Dyer Ardelle Launch Photos
Schooner Ardelle Gets Her Masts Installed- Photos From Len Burgess
Schooner Ardelle with Masts and Rigging Photo From Anthony Marks
Karen Pischke’s Ardelle Photos
Not To Miss!!! Welcoming the Ardelle to Gloucester August 24th at 6:30PM
Pinky Schooner Ardelle Heeled Over for Stability Test- Photos Mike Dyer
Stoga Hard At Work
Cape Ann Farmer’s Market Day Is Thursday! Don’t Miss It!
The GloucesterCast Podcast Archives
Carol St.John Has Some Nice Things To Say
Before I leave Cape Ann for my other life in the west, I want to say to those who care that I love this place for more reasons than I can name, but one of them is the people. For example, I took my grandkids to the Gloucester Cinema one rainy day and left my purse hanging on the back of a seat when I left.
It took 24 hours for me to realize what I had done. I was sick with worry and then rewarded with the integrity of a number of people. First the usher who my broughtmy bag to the manager. Then the manager who tried to identify the owner by looking inside the purse. When he learned I was from Arizona, he could have stopped there but he found an appointment card from the Unique Hair Salon for the the following week. With the possibility I was still in town he called the salon, who not only called me a few times but contacted my daughter to confirm my cell phone number. What a group effort to save the day for one scatterbrained old lady!
These acts of kindness will live in my memory forever, right alongside the funky parades the block parties, the art and the inspirational vistas. From Gloucester to Rockport it is a feast for the senses. Thank you for sharing. Carol St.John
Tom Bruno Posts Classic Car Photos From This Weekend’s Waterfront Festival
Check Out His Blog The Jersey Exile For all The Good Stuff
here’s a link to the full sized slide show
Karen Ristuben "Beneath the Blue" Installation/Presentation September 3 At The White Ellery House
Hello all,
Wanted to let you know that I’m doing an installation and presentation at Cape Ann Museum’s White Ellery House on Sat. Sept. 3, from 11-3 pm. I’ll be presenting my 45-minute performance/lecture at 11:30 and 1:30 called "Just, one word…"
The project deals generally with our use, over-use, and disposal of plastics, and their toxicity and effect on our public health. The presentation specifically highlights the issue of marine plastic pollution and its impact on ocean ecosystems including the marine food chain. The project is based on a whole lot of research I’ve done in the past year or so, including my voyage last month across the North Pacific with leading marine scientists who study the issue of marine plastic pollution.
Addressing this issue as an artist, I’m offering a different kind of communication of the hard scientific data that is currently on the minds of many marine scientists, toxicologists, epidemiologists, and policy-makers. I hope you will join me at the White Ellery House on September 3!
Yours,
Karen
www.karenristuben.com
Good Day For The Happy Taco
GMG Tech Talk- Google Plus, Google Circles
How many of you are actually using these services?
When they first appeared around what seems like a couple of weeks ago lots of people were signing up and tech media were predicting that it was going to turn Facebook on it’s ear. ahem (Paul Morrison).
The numbers of people were signing up for the services were enormous as there are already a ton of people who use and trust Google products to begin with. So the growth was probably from people saying sure, what the hell, I’ll give it a try and with the sheer number of Google users to begin with those numbers of new accounts when reported in the media are staggering.
Well Google products have a long history of success and I use many of them daily. Gmail, Google Calendar, Documents, Google Music and Google Listen among a few I use most every day. There have been a few misses with products that may have been a little ahead of it’s time or too smart to catch on universally. Among one that comes to mind was the collaborative tool Google Wave which promised real time online collaborations. I used it once or twice and it was interesting but not enough folks caught on. Kenny and I edit our podcast shownotes in Google docs sometimes simultaneously and Google Docs seems like it took a lot of things from Google wave and integrated them.
As tech savvy as I consider myself I still can’t get the hang of circles. It may be just a little too slick and I just don’t have the energy to figure it all out right now. So my intuition tells me that if I can’t figure it out in a snap that most grandmothers will say fuck it and not bother. This is a huge difference between Facebook and Google Circles. Facebook seems just super easy peasy lemon squeazy whereas Google Circles seems like people really need to sort a whole bunch of stuff out to make it manageable.
Google +? I’ve clicked on that +1 button on a bunch of different sites including this one when there are things that I find interesting and I figure it will share that somewhere but I’ve yet to figure out where that +1 button is visible or who gets to see the post or page that I find interesting enough to click the +1 button for. Again, I consider myself pretty much a 9.5 on the scale from 1-10 on the tech geek scale so for me not to understand it gives me a strong sense that a good majority of people don’t understand it either.
Maybe once my season slows down and once the winter doldrums set in I’ll have time to get more into it but I’m just not sure the masses will and isn’t that what Google wants to capture with it’s products- the masses?
Clouds Over Stage Fort- Donna Ardizzoni
Announcing Contractors Mixer at The Building Center Wednesday August 24th
The Man at the Wheel…on the arm
Joey
We thought GMG would appreciate this photo as much as we did here at the Blue Shutters…
There are many ways fans of Gloucester can show their love for our favorite seaside town — you’ll find "The Man at the Wheel" emblazoned on tee-shirts, baseball caps, refridgerator magnets, ashtrays and coffee mugs up and down Main Street. But we were particularly impressed with one Blue Shutters guest — Bob from Maryland — who showed us this most awesome tattoo. Bob, whose has roots here, says he always has Gloucester with him wherever he goes.
Tony, Patty, Ed and Annmarie
To see the Fisherman tattoo series of photos click here
3rd Annual GMHC Harbor Race, September 10th
Please join us for our 3rd Annual GMHC Harbor Race, September 10th. We welcome pilot gigs, whaleboats, dories, and other traditional rowing craft.
This is a 5.5 mile triangular course in beautiful Gloucester Harbor (see attached course diagram).
Registration – 8:00 a.m. (pre-registration is encouraged)
Captain/Cox meeting – 9:00
Race Start – 9:30
Water will be supplied, prizes will be awarded, and each participant who pre-registers will receive the first ever GMHC Harbor Race hat. These are sure to be a collectors’ item, and to bring big bucks on eBay®.
Lunch will be served on the beach following the race (BYO liquid refreshments).
Cost: $25 per person with advance registration (received by August 8th).
$30 per person if registering after August 8th.
Contacts:
Esther Martin for registration – esther@netwa.com (please reply to the spam-blocker message; it will only happen once, but I won’t get your email unless you reply)
Suzanne Clerkin for overnight accommodations – suzannec362@gmail.com
Bart Schick for all other questions/issues – dobbs@gis.net
Do not hesitate to contact Suzanne if you’d like to stay over the night before and/or after. We’ll do our best to accommodate everyone.
URL for more information: http://www.gloucestergigrowers.com/gmhc_race_2011
Registration Materials | Directions | Race Flyer | Race Course 
Desi Smith At The August 2011 Downtown Gloucester Block Party
Forbes Knows What’s Up! The Other Cape: Cape Ann
Check out Beth Greenfield’s Nice Piece On the Place we Love-
Beth Greenfield, Contributor
8/22/2011 @ 12:56PM |232 views
The Other Cape: Cape Ann
Drive (or ride the train) just a half hour northeast of Boston and you’ll hit paradise: the diverse and scenicCape Ann, which likes to market itself as Massachusetts’ “other cape.” Less tourism-driven and therefore more mellow than much of Cape Cod, this little mass of land provides a gem of a getaway for anyone loving water, seafood, arts and a fierce community spirit. Its southern portion,Gloucester [Glóh•ster], achieved hard-won fame a decade ago with the release of the Hollywood film The Perfect Storm (based on the book by Sebastian Junger), which dramatized the story of six commercial fisherman lost at sea in 1991. Today it’s still a vibrant fishing community—the oldest in the country—but also home to spectacular beaches, a thriving music scene, great spots for shopping and eating, and an art colony that dates back to the late 19th century. And, come September 2, its bays will be filled with head-turning vessels for the annual Gloucester Schooner Festival, bringing races, public sails, boat parades and fireworks to town. On the cape’s northern portion isRockport, a village that thrums with life through its quirky boutiques and eateries, quaint B&Bs and spectacular coastlines. Herewith, a handy guide to seeing it all:


