Archive for Green Aisle Exclusives

Pawssyunk Porter, Care of Mellody Brewing

We here at Green Aisle love adventurous eaters. We also love to hear the new and interesting experiments those same eaters come up with. Sean Mellody, of Mellody Brewing, has been sitting on an idea since last year that he’s finally been able to follow through on: a pawpaw porter.

Some of you may not know what a pawpaw is. I’ll be honest, I didn’t know it was anything other than part of a children’s book until we got them in at Green Aisle. When I saw it I thought “Huh, check out that tiny papaya. Can you grow papayas locally?” Well, not really.

Pawpaws, which are most definitely not papayas, are indeed local to the eastern United States. They look like a papaya on the outside, but on the inside they have a creamy color and are custardy, kind of like a mashed banana (they’re actually called “Poor Man’s Banana” in some places). They contain largish black seeds, reminiscent of a kidney bean. They have a short, fall season.

Photo courtesy of Mellody Brewing Co.

Anyway, back to Sean and his beer. Since he discovered the fruit last year, Sean has been yearning to create a pawpaw infused pale ale, but the short season got the better of him. Patiently, Sean waited for the new season to begin and jumped at the chance to bring this beer to life. While he waited, he changed his mind to experiment with a porter rather than a pale ale.

He checked in with Ben Wenk from Three Springs Fruit Farm who didn’t have any, and then turned to us. We had just gotten in a shipment of pawpaws from Green Meadow Farms and were more than happy to oblige.

Sean picked up 32 pawpaws, removed the fruit from it’s thin skin, and froze the pulp to make his beer. He’s got a few ideas he’s mulling over, including a slightly chocolate porter with pawpaw. We can’t wait to see what he comes up with.

Sean's pawpaw pitting party. I think he won.

Oh, and he let Adam name it. Pawssyunk Porter.

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Vendor Profile: Little Baby’s Ice Cream

We know you’ve heard about them over and over again on our Twitter and Facebook pages: Little Baby’s Ice Cream. Here’s some information about the brand that is sure to make you love them even more.

Little Baby’s was founded in May 2011 and is owned by three Philadelphians: Pete Angevine, Martin Brown and Jeffery Ziga. They hand-make all their ice cream in small batches and specialize in “unusual and surprising” flavors. (What could be more surprising than Earl Grey Sriracha?) Flavors include Cardamon Caramel, Balsamic Banana, Strawberry Pink Peppercorn, Birch Beer Vanilla Bean, Bourbon Bourbon Vanilla, Blue Bottle Coffee Toffee, Vegan Mint Oreo, Vegan Coconut Tea, Peanut Butter Maple Tarragon, Chipotle Chocolate, Blueberry Ginger, and Yerba Mate.

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Sausage Party with Le Virtu

Last week, we began a voracious pillage of Le Virtu‘s salumi room, World Headquarters of Massimo Conocchioli, the Master Butcher turning Country Time pork and other local meats into the best salumi we’ve had outside Italy. Massimo came to Philly from Colonnella in Abruzzo’s Teramo province, where the regional specialty is ventracina, a coarse, spreadable pork sausage veined with chili and orange zest. We’ve got it in stock, plus much more from Massimo and Le Virtu chef Joe Cicala, whose blood-red ragu del macellaio (“butcher’s ragu” with pork rib) is what Virtu co-owner Cathy Lee calls “the grandfather of Sunday gravy.” Full list after the jump.

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Cookie Monsters Rejoice: Momofuku Milk Bar’s are Coming to Philly!

 

In what is quite possibly the dopest connection we’ve ever secured, Green Aisle will begin carrying the legendary cookies from David Chang‘s Momofuku Milk Bar. We know. Let’s say it again because it hasn’t really sunk in for us either: Green Aisle will begin carrying the legendary cookies from David Chang’s Momofuku Milk Bar! Pastry Chef Christina Tosi is best know for her Compost Cookie chock full of pretzels, potato chips, ground coffee beans, oats and butterscotch and chocolate chips. We’ll have those, sold by the single and in pretty six-count tins (great gifts!), as well as the rest of Milk Bar’s cookie line: Blueberry and Cream, Chocolate-Chocolate, Peanut Butter, Corn and Cornflake-Marshmallow. It blows our mind even more that we’re the only retail grocer anywhere carrying Milk Bar goodies. They’re traveling down the Turnpike tomorrow, so stay tuned. We’ll let you know when the Compost truck arrives.

[photos courtesy of momofuku.com]

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Brooklyn Brine in Valet’s Food Lover’s Fall Pantry

 

Our dude Shamus Jones of Brooklyn Brine landed #1 in Valet e-zine’s Food Lovers’s Fall Pantry feature, authored by Francine Maroukian—we love her insider’s guide to cooking like the pros, Chef’s Secrets—who lives right here in Philly.

 

“Brooklyn Brine makes brilliantly seasoned pickled vegetables like Fennel Beets, Moroccan Green Beans and Whiskey Sour pickles kept crisp with naturally occurring tannins from oak leaves rather than chemical additives. Bonus: As you empty each jar—which will be all too soon—you can convert the mellow apple cider vinegar brine into a savory marinade.”

 

We’ve got all those pickles in stock, plus snappy Chipotle Carrots, Thai Garlic Scapes, Lavender Asparagus and classic NYC Deli and Damn Spicy cukes. They’re available here and at Green Aisle at Bodhi for $9 a jar.

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Thanksgiving Turkey Pre-Orders

 

Barb Shelley

 

You eat local and organic in your everyday life. Why should a holiday be any different? But finding sustainably and humanely raised turkeys is not as simple as finding, say, a sustainably grown apple. At Green Aisle, we’re making it easy on you this year by sourcing beautiful birds from Mountain View Poultry in Walnutport, PA. That’s the farmer, Barb Shelley, above, at her stand at Headhouse Square. We currently carry Barb’s amazing chicken and turkey sausages and wanted to keep our Thanksgiving turkey pre-orders in the Green Aisle family, so to speak. Here are the deets: Barb’s turkeys are available from 15 to 30 pounds, for $4.99 per pound. (For transparency’s sake, Green Aisle’s cost is $3.99 per pound, so we’re only marking these blue-ribbons up a buck.) They’ll arrive at Green Aisle on Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving, at noon and must be picked up before we close at 8 pm. Stop by the store to place your order; we’ll take down all your info and a 50% deposit (remember we’re cash only) and you can relax knowing that your turkey is taken care of. No supermarket hassle. No last-minute scramble. No mystery about who raised your turkey and how. Do try to let us know if you’re interested ASAP, as we’ve only reserved a few dozen birds with Barb. In the case, the early bird definitely get the, um, bird.

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Sandwich Love for American Meats & Provisions

Photo: Philadelphia

This month, Philadelphia magazine features the city’s 18 best sandwiches, and our boys at American Meats & Provisions made the cut with their fennel-and-vodka-cured Sockeye salmon. Come see what the lemon-zested, thyme-and-caper-cream cheese-schmeared hype’s about; AM&P chef Tim McGinnis is on his way with a delivery.

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Ghost in the Grocery

boo!

Over the weekend, we were visited by a ghost. No, not the chain-rattling, suck-you-into-the-TV variety. We’re talking bhut jolokia, the Indian chili better known as ghost pepper for the elusive, sneaky nature of its heat. In 2007, the Guinness Book of Wold Records certified this smoky melon-flavored pepper as the hottest in the world, registering 1,041,427 units on the Scoville Scale. The habanero, by comparison, only gets a score of 300,000.

“A few years back, while living in Kansas City (known for it’s barbecue and spice rubs), I was introduced to the legendary Ghost Pepper,” says Jay Sheldon, the sculptor and artist behind Bhut Jolokia. “I’ve always been interested in great food, spice and food culture. I was drawn to the pepper’s unique shape, smell and name. When I first experimented with the Ghost, I knew I wanted to share it with the world. Its awesome taste was one I’d never encountered before. The Ghost Pepper is authentic, powerful and it appeals to all the senses.”

We’re selling packets of dried ghost peppers…
and ghost pepper-spiced watermelon candies…
They’re $5 a pop, available exclusively at Green Aisle and Green Aisle at Bodhi. Sheldon, who designed the brilliant packaging for Bhut Jolokia, recommends using ghost pepper in roasted tomatillo salsa verde. We’ve got the recipe after the jump.
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Earl of Sandwich

Ask, Green Aislers, and you shall receive! Today we start selling sandwiches, and not just any sandwiches. These butcher paper-bundled beauties are coming from American Meat & Provisions, takeaway arm of chef (and former PW food scribe) Tim McGinnis’s upcoming South Street restaurant project. McG fills Ba Le baguettes with sustainably raised meats and fish he brines, smokes, cures himself, then kits them out with the likes of balsamic-strawberry mostarda, Maker’s Mark syrup, picholine olive tapenade and more.

Check out the full menu after the jump.

And did I mention we’re running samples all day?

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Pickle Man

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Attention, shoppers! Please meet Shamus Jones, ginger-haired pickle maven and head of Brooklyn Brine. If you like pickles, you will like Shamus. We brought the Brooklyn Brine line to Philly this spring, stocking several varieties of vinegar-soaked, unusually spiced, Lancaster-sourced heirloom veg, including the spicy cukes given the seal of approval by Esquire scribe (and Philly girl) Francine Maroukian and a nod in Details recent feature, “Artisanal America” (also included: Green Aisle purveyor Mast Bros. chocolate). “Sorry I’m a little spaced,” Shamus explained when we picked up 150 jars of pickles last Thursday, “I’ve just been drinking Guinness and making lavender asparagus all day.” After the jump, peep a (very-amateur) video we took of Shamus making pickles off-hours in Greenpoint’s Lamb & Jaffy, followed by our current Brooklyn Brine selection. Read the rest of this entry »

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