Limoncello Making: Part Two

See Part One Here

Last night we strained and bottled (and sampled!) out-of-this-world-delicious limoncello. The first time I had ever tasted limoncello that I found to be enjoyable was while filming at the Groppo Family’s Feast of Saint Joseph celebration. Nina serves her icy cold homemade limoncello in the traditional tiny glasses and I think it is so much better tasting than commercially bottled preparations. The flavor of her limoncello is intensely lemony fresh, sweet, and tart all at the same time, without the alcohol burn on the way down.

limoncello making ©Kim Smith 2014

The limoncello doesn’t look that appetizing in the pre-bottled stage.

As part of the film’s sequence on Feast preparations, Nina and friends Cathy Gunn, Kathy Pratl, and Jane Beddus very graciously agreed to allow me to film during the different steps of limocello-making, along with inviting me to participate and make my own batch! Nina and her family and friends have been so wonderfully helpful and accommodating with Gloucester’s Feast of Saint Joseph Community Film Project and I will be eternally grateful. Making limoncello with these sweet ladies has been so much fun and a wonderful reminder of the delight and joy that comes from sharing a project with friends.

Cathy Gunn, Nina Groppo, Kathy Pratl, Jane Beddus ©Kim Smith 2014

Catherine Gunn, Nina Groppo, Janer Beddus, and Kathy Pratl

After bottling, we sampled each other’s batches, the reason being that they were all made in slightly different ways; several types of lemons were used, some had more vodka, and some had more simple syrup. Kathy pointed out that the because the recipe is so super simple, the only real error in making would be if you were to grate the lemons to close to the pith, which would make the beverage bitter.

Nina Groppo Kathy Pratl © Kim Smith 2014

Needless to say, we had a ball sampling all, as well as indulging in the beautiful array of cookies and treats prepared by Nina. To see more photos visit Jane Beddus’s FB page here.

The sieve we found to be the easiest and most effective for straining the pulp was a simple wooden flour sifter, used with cheese cloth, that Nina had purchased in Italy (see below in the Vine).

Chestnuts ©Kim Smith 2014Nina served hot, freshly roasted chestnuts. To remove the shell, simply give the chestnut a slight whack. The nut opens and the meat is easily removed by hand.

Niles Beach in the Thickening Fog

Niles Beach Foggy Afternon ©Kim Smith 2014After a day of madly painting interior rooms, whipping our home into shape for the holidays, and for Liv’s upcoming wedding, I took a walk to get out of the paint fumes in what I had hoped would be a lifting fog. Instead of dissipating, around every bend in the road the fog became increasingly dense.  Albeit beautifully atmospheric, I imagined how dangerous it would be to be aboard a ship in the heavy fog and wouldn’t have wanted for anything to be a sailor or fisherman yesterday.

 

Science All Around Us Has Raised Over $18K Surpassing Their Halfway Point!

This is wonderfully exciting news not only for Captain Tom, Colin, and Nubar, but for our community at large. If you haven’t yet backed their Kickstarter program to raise funds for the the pilot of the series, Science All Around Us, the first of which will be created aboard Gloucester’s own Schooner Thomas E. Lannon, now is the perfect time. With less than two weeks to go, the project will not go forward unless the full $35,000. needed for the pilot is raised.

Read More About the Project from Captain Tom Elliis and Joey Here

If you have already donated, you can continue to help by spreading the word to reach as many people as possible during the fundraising campaign. Let your friends and family know about this exciting series and share the links on Facebook and Twitter.

More from Colin on the Science All Around Us

 

 

GMG FOBs Write In Their Doggie Wellness Tips Plus the 10 Foods Most Toxic to Dogs

After posting yesterday that I gave our dog Rosie chicken soup for her cold, Lise Breen thoughtfully wrote in the comment section that onions and garlic are known to be toxic to dogs and in large quantities can damage a dog’s red blood cells. I don’t make chicken soup with tons of garlic and onions, but am very glad to know for future reference.

The following is a list from the MSPCA on the ten most hazardous foods to dogs. You can visit the MSPCA website here for additional information. 

Avocado
Bread Dough
Chocolate
Ethanol (Grain Alcohol)
Grapes and Raisins
Hops
Macadamia Nuts
Moldy Foods
Garlic and Onions
Xylitol

Rosie Scottish terrier snow ©Kim Smith 2013

Winter’s Coming ~ Time to Bundle Up!

Nat Johnson writes that he keeps his elderly Basset warm with a quilted cotton coat from Orvis. Here’s a link to the Orvis Quilted Waxed-Cotton Dog Coat. Nat suggests that it is better to spend money on the more substantial coat. This coat from the Company Store looks toasty warm and think it would be so charming on our little black Scotty. If you have a moment Nat, we’d love to see a photo of your Basset hound wearing his coat.

Thanks so much Nat and Lise for sharing your tips and suggestions!

Rosie-1Hmmmmm, Rosie was none too pleased when I asked her to model this bow for a GMG holiday post several Christmas’s ago. I wonder how she is going respond to wearing a cute little red and black plaid winter coat…

Can Dogs Catch a Cold?

Rosie Money Penny 4mosThe answer is YES, which was news to me! Raspy breathing, lethargy, loss of appetite are all symptoms our sweet pooch Rosie was exhibiting and, because she is quite the cuddle girl, very determinedly nudging and burrowing to get under the bed quilts!

I swear by my chicken soup for whatever ails our human family members. Rosie immediately began to regain her appetite with just the first of many bowls. Keeping her indoors out of the cold and rain is recommended also. It has been nearly a week of extra, extra doggie pampering (my husband thinks she’s coddled entirely too much as it is) and although she is perking up, if the now only occasional raspy breathing isn’t completely gone by Wednesday, we’ll be visiting the vet.

If you have a spare moment, please send us your tips and recommendations for making your pet more comfortable when they are under the weather. We’d love to hear from you. Thank you!

IMG_1260Chicken Soup for the Doggie Soul (with some dry dog food added)

The website that I found helpful is Pet MD.

This Just In~ Free Edible Arranging Demonstration Tuesday Night, November 11th

Kate Wilwerth writes:

Hi Kim – we have a fantastic program lined up for Tuesday, November 11th at the Manchester Community Center.  This event is free to all and just in time for your holiday entertaining! Social time begins at 7:00pm, program begins at7:30pm.  Light refreshments will be served.  Lou will be raffling off his amazing creations.

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Lou Greenstein, from Edible Centerpieces, will be demonstrating techniques using carved vegetables and fruits and herbs to create beautiful centerpieces for your holiday table. Do you have an artistic flair and a love for great food? Lou Greenstein can show you how to indulge both passions at once by designing edible centerpieces to delight your guests.

Lou is a New England Epicurean Consultant with 48 years of experience in the dining service world. He has managed hotels, country clubs and restaurants as well as being a television chef, columnist and a consultant to several national kitchen appliance manufacturers. Lou is also a culinary historian and is lots of fun! For more info visit his website: http://wwwlouepicure.com.

This program is supported in part by a grant from the Manchester Cultural Council (pending approval), a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC), a state agency.  Together, MCC and its advocates and partners across the state are working to restore funding for the arts, humanities, and sciences. We have a long way to go, and it remains crucial that we continue to demonstrate the value of arts and culture to the people of Massachusetts. The Manchester Cultural Council  has been a generous supporter of the Seaside Garden Club programs.  Visit their website for more information: www.massculturalcouncil.org

About the Seaside Garden Club: We are a group of fun, active, civic-minded and hands-on gardeners.  We welcome all types of gardeners from beginners to experienced… there is always something to learn and share.  We invite you to become a member of our club ($25 annual membership) and enjoy our monthly programs which feature interesting guest speakers and creative workshops.  The Seaside Garden Club meets the second Tuesday of every month (September through June) at 7:00 pm at the Community Center, Manchester-by-the-Sea.  Visit our blog: http://seasidegardenclub.wordpress.com/

Beautiful Mama Jessica Brand and Baby Emerson

Jessica and Emerson ©Kim Smith 2014Last weekend I had the joy to meet Jessica Brand and her adorable baby boy Emerson when she stopped down at the dock to talk to Joey about her company Dinner Dealer and her upcoming event, North Shore Emporium. You can hear all about the event as well as the fabulous deals she is offering for this years’ Dinner Dealer deck–Passports, Duckworth’s, and Foreign Affairs, to name only several of the outstanding restaurants participating–by listening to today’s Couples in Love Podcast.

Jessica Brand Baby Emerson ©Kim Smith 2014Jessica Brand Baby Emerson -2 ©Kim Smith 2014

More Community Goings On

Updates from Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team, Peter Todd at the Sawyer Free Library and Giggles Gloucester tonight at CACC.

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2014 11-13-14 PETER TODD POETRY2

Logos.AIRick Roth from Cape Ann Vernal pond Team writes:

We had a very nice pumpkin carving session at the Get Outside Center on October 25th. I know that was a long time ago, but I’ve been busy and I’m a little behind on my correspondence. Anywho… good crowd, lots of cool pumpkins. Check out photies on the Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team Facebook page.

Here’s a cool thing:
We have an intern this year. His name is Ben Alger and he is a senior at Manchester/Essex Regional High School. He is a member of the Green Team and he has chosen CAVPT to work with. He is already at work on a long-awaited power point presentation, and those of us who are technologically impaired are looking forward to using his expertise in updating our website and working on our Facebook page. Welcome Ben.

As far as presentations and field trips go, this is a slow time of year. However, there’s lots to do. We need volunteers for:
Office critter care- frogs, salamanders and turtles. We can train you.
Fundraising- we need people to work on this, ideas. We have a lot of expenses.
We need board members- Secretary, treasurer, director.
Now that we have a nice facility on Main Street in Gloucester, it would be real nice if we could have people there to answer questions and show people some of our animals. I’m at my real job during those hours and I just can’t really spend much time there.

And… one really cool organization, Cape Ann Wildlife Inc., is having a fundraiser on Wednesday November 12th at Jalapenos Restaurant, 86 Main St., Gloucester from 4:30pm til closing. 10% of proceeds go to CAW. Please help support these great rehabilitators of Cape Ann Wildlife, eat fabulous food, maybe have a beverage, and rub elbows with other people who are interested in the natural world. See you there.

On line auction for CAVPT and Kestrel is still in progress. New items will be showing up soon. Bidding closes on December 7th. Check it out, there’s cool stuff on there.

Please consider volunteering for some aspect or another of CAVPT’s activities.

Flashback Friday

best-friends-dresses-2

Last Sunday afternoon I met two of my very best friends for lunch in Boston, a luxuriously fun four hour champagne lunch I should add. Claudia lives in Lexington with her family and Donna lives in Hollywood Hills with hers, and is in Massachusetts working on the Disney film The Finest Hours for another month or so. We are trying to cram as much time together as our work schedule’s allow. There was a great deal of wedding talk, with our daughter Liv’s pending June wending. I made both Claudia and Donna’s wedding dresses and bridesmaid dresses, and Claudia and I were bridesmaids in Donna’s wedding. Liv watched all the “bride fairy princesses”  coming and going for fittings and was the flower girl in several of our friend’s weddings. From that very early age she has been say, “You’re going to make my dress too Mom.” I’ll be dusting off my dressmaker’s form, drafting and draping when she is home for the holidays!

Above is a snapshot that my husband Tom took in front of our apartment on Comm. Ave of my best friends and I. We were trying on the samples of the very first spring collection that I designed. Donna is on the far right standing next to me. Claudia wasn’t there that day but I found this album cover that she modeled for her friends the Lemonheads.

lemonheadsfavorite

Claudia Bermudez ~ Favorite Spanish Dishes Album Cover for the Lemonheads

See more Flashback Friday photos on my website, including my husband’s “selfies” from our wedding.  (We eloped; selfies are our only wedding photos!). I’m hoping to post more, if I ever have a few spare minutes.

best-friends-and-dresses

Left to right: Gina Barrow, Kim Smith, Donna Casey, Kate Hines, Annie Dayton

See related GMG post here: Friends, Old and New!

Lise Breen to Lecture on Cape Ann’s Participation in the Slave Trade

unnamed-1Lise Breen will be lecturing on Cape Ann’s Participation in the Slave Trade, Sunday November 9th at 7 pm at the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church. This lecture, “Black O Heavens: Links to Some Cape Ann Slave Owners, Slave Ship Owners and Captains, and Universalists,” is open to the public and there is only a free-will offering to benefit the Meetinghouse Preservation Fund.unnamed

Throughout this year, Lise Breen has been presenting various aspects of her research on Cape Ann’s complicity with slavery. You may have heard her speak at the Church last February on the Daltons of Gloucester. She has given talks on related topics for NOAA, The Gloucester Writers Center Diggers Series, the Rockport Unitarian Church, and at the Sandy Bay Historical Society. Ms. Breen has received a Phillips Library Fellowship from the Peabody Essex Museum and a Paul Cuffe Memorial Fellowship from the Munson Institute, Mystic Seaport Museum, to help support her research.

Peaceful and Protected ~ Brace Cove Makes for the Perfect Seal Hang Out!

Brace Cove Seals b-w ©Kim Smith 2014I’ve never seen so many conglomerating all at once at Brace Cove; at one point I counted over twenty lounging on the rocks and swimming in the water. The seals are fun and interesting to observe as they often play a game that seems very much like the children’s game King of the Mountain. Click to view larger.Brace Cove Seals 2 ©Kim Smith 2014

 

Harbortown Celebration at The Hive ~ Come One, Come All!

unnamedHARBORTOWN CULTURAL DISTRICT

PARTNERS CELEBRATION

 

You are cordially invited to celebrate!

Harbortown Cultural District’s Annual Meeting and Soiree

Wednesday, November 5, 2014, 5:00pm to 7:00pm

The Hive

Complimentary refreshments, entertainment and more!

Meet the new Harbortown Cultural District Partners

RSVP: Carol Thistle, cthistle@gloucester-ma.gov, 978-281-9781

Join us in celebrating a spectacular year filled with museum openings, special events, national press, and other landmark happenings!

 

Amanda and Andy II Heading Home ~ And Don’t Forget to Vote! The Polls Are Open Until 8pm Tonight

Amanda and Andy ©Kim Smith 2014