Nibbles: Ricotta Cheese Pie

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This was an odd Easter weekend for me. On Good Friday, I picked up my daughter-in-law Nancy and second-youngest granddaughter Casey in Newbury, Massachusetts, then drove up to Kennebunkport Inn.

It all began with an e-mail from the beautiful hotel in Maine. It is less expensive to spend a day or two there in the late fall, winter and early spring, but the advertisement said it would be even less so for March and April, with a special discount of 29 percent. Hmmm, it was time to visit my cousins from Portland (she a breeder of Corgis, he a retired AP reporter). Perhaps a Friday night dinner at Fore Street (one of the many in Portland) and a visit with cousins Adrienne and Jerry. So I called Nancy, and asked if it was time for a road trip. (Our last had been last year in Boston to see a Bette Midler concert and an overnight stay in a boutique hotel in walking distance from the concert.) She was game and said, since it was a school holiday for Casey, could she come too? What a treat I said. She is a high school sophomore and great company.

I called the Kennebunkport Inn, doubting there would be rooms available, but we got one big room with two double beds and a twin for Friday and Saturday. Not only that, I got a reservation for us at Fore Street on Friday night. By the way, Nancy and Casey are Greek; my cousins are Jewish, as am I; so we celebrate Greek Easter and Passover (which isn’t a Jewish Easter but a spring kind-of festival) later this spring.

In any case, I didn’t make Easter dinner for anyone and, hopefully, I will be invited to Greek Easter. Here is what I will make. It is a luscious dessert that everyone loves.

Ricotta Cheese Pie

For the filling:
2 cups ricotta cheese or cottage cheese
1 cup cream
1 cup sugar
4 eggs
3 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon

For the crust:
1 cup melted butter
1 tablespoon sugar (no sugar if using cookie crumbs)
1 cup graham cracker crumbs (or chocolate wafer cookie or vanilla wafer crumbs)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter or spray with nonstick cooking spray a 9-inch springform pan. Wrap the outside of the pan with two layers of heavy aluminum foil.

To make the crust, in a bowl combine crumbs, sugar and melted butter (this can be done in the food processor). Press crumbs evenly over bottom of pan, saving a few for the top. Refrigerate while you make the filling.

To make the cheesecake filling, in your food processor or electric mixer, mix ricotta, cream and sugar until well blended and smooth. Beat in flour and salt; then add eggs, one at a time, processing or beating until incorporated. Finally, add vanilla extract and cinnamon and process until incorporated. Pour into prepared crust and dust top with crumbs. Take care not to overmix.

Bake about 50 to 60 minutes, or until cheesecake is set, yet moves slightly when the pan is gently shaken (the edges of the cheesecake will have some browning). Remove from water bath and cool on a wire rack. Cover and chill in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours, or preferably overnight.


Nibbles: Perk on Main

A couple of weeks ago, I judged the 14th Annual Chocolate to the Rescue. For the past few years, the fundraiser benefits the Middlesex Family Shelter and, according to John Roberts, executive director, I have judged each year since its inception.

As always, the chocolate was delicious. I am not sure who won but the chocolate seems to get better and better every year. My favorite this year was from Perk on Main, primarily because it was warm crepes folded around warm chocolate, raspberries and blueberries. Even better, it is a café that serves breakfast, lunch and dinner in two different locations: 6 Main Street in Durham and 20 Church Street in Guilford. And if that were not enough, there is Perk on Wheels. Check out www.perkonmain.com.

About the author: Lee White has been writing about restaurants and cooking since 1976 and has been extensively published in the Worcester (Mass.) Magazine, The Day, Norwich Bulletin, and Hartford Courant. She currently writes Nibbles and a cooking column called A La Carte for LymeLine.com and the Shore Publishing and the Times newspapers, both of which are owned by The Day.

LYSB Hosts Community Forum on Current Opioid Crisis Tonight

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The Community Action for a Substance Free Youth (CASFY) group run by Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) will host a Lyme-Old Lyme Community Forum titled, “Spotlight on Heroin-The Opioid Crisis: Identifying Community Solutions to Treat and Prevent Addiction,” at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School auditorium.

Panelists will include prevention and treatment experts, and residents affected by opiate addiction. The forum will discuss facts and fiction about addiction and opiates, recovery successes and challenges, treatment options, safety advice for the community, and how families and friends can support addicts and those at risk of addiction.

The panel will incldue Karen Butterworth, MSN, RN, regional director of Emergency Services, Hartford Healthcare/Backus Hospital; Angela Duhaime, MA, Southeastern Regional Action Council; Julienne Giard, LCSW, director, Evidence Based-Practices & Grants, DMHAS; Christa Quattromani, MA, L+M Hospital, administrator, Shine A Light on Heroin; Michele Rollins, RPh, pharmacist; and four Lyme-Old Lyme residents affected by addiction

This program is free and open to the public.  All are welcome at this important event for our community.

For more information, contact LYSB at (860) 434-7208 or visit www.lysb.org.

Bonne Santé Hosts Ladies Wellness Night Tonight, Benefits SafeGrad Party

Screen Shot 2016-03-20 at 9.48.53 PMBonne Santé Wellness Center, located at 4 Huntley Rd., is hosting a special “Ladies Wellness Night’ fundraising event to be held on  Wednesday, March 30, from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Funds raised will benefit the Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) Class of 2016 Safe Graduation Party (Safegrad).

4000146Safegrad is an all-night, substance-free party enjoyed yearly by seniors. Rosemary Barclay, founder and owner of Bonne Santé wellness center states, “We have a great tradition in Lyme-Old Lyme. For many years, parents have hosted an all-night party at a “secret location,” where students have the opportunity to share food, music, entertainment and memories with their classmates. While the party is hosted entirely by parents of seniors, it takes a community effort to help our children remain safe and supervised while celebrating this wonderful milestone.”

Barclay is a supporter of education in our community: she is a founder member of the Lyme/Old Lyme Education Foundation (LOLEF) and has also initiated a scholarship for youth entering the business studies arena through the Lyme-Old Lyme Chamber of Commerce. 

Barclay understands the need to support this event financially but also encourages celebration of achievements and milestones.  Additionally, many teachers, senior class students and parents are clients of Bonne Santé and sponsoring this event with proceeds going to Safegrad is a special way of thanking valued clients. 

Entrance fee to the “Ladies Wellness Event” is $30 including refreshments and a mini-service but an RSVP is important, particularly if attendees wish to take advantage of a service on the night (chair massage and make up color matches or nutritional advice, all of which will be offered as well as an introduction to our holistic acne clinic.) Services will be on a first come, first served basis with sign-up in advance – call 860-434-7429 to reserve a service on the night. If you wish to book a service for a later date, proceeds will still be donated.

In addition Barclay will also donate a percentage of all gift certificate and product sales made throughout the month of April so any community member wishing to purchase gift certificates for birthdays or Mother’s Day in advance should do so online at www.bonnesantellc.com throughout the month of April 2016 and mention code SAFEGRAD.

Refreshments will be served throughout the evening, which promises to be a fun night and a time for both parents and community members to socialize while raising funds towards this cause.

“Friend Raising” Reception in Essex This Evening for HOPE Partnership

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HOPE Partnership, a nonprofit organization dedicated to developing affordable housing options on the shoreline and lower Middlesex County, is hosting a free reception on Wednesday, March 30, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the River Valley Junction Gallery at Essex Steam Train.

The reception, which is HOPE’s annual “FRIEND Raiser,” is sponsored by Page Taft and Essex Steam Train. The event will include a cocktail hour, complete with appetizers, beer and wine, and is free to all who wish to attend.

HOPE is inviting all interested members of the community to come together and learn about HOPE’s mission to develop affordable housing options along the shoreline.

Executive Director of HOPE, Lauren Ashe noted, ”The issue of the need for affordable housing is often surrounded by myths, which we work to dispel. Residents in need of affordable housing may be working full time but unable to make ends meet for their family or they may be young adults who wish to stay or return to the area where they grew up. This evening is about friendship, partnership and educating the community while enjoying a glass of wine and refreshments at an amazing venue.”

Anyone interested in attending can RSVP to Loretta@HOPE-CT.org or by calling 860-388-9513. More information about HOPE at http://www.hope-ct.org/

Editor’s note: Founded in April 2004, HOPE Partnership is a non-profit organization committed to advocating and developing affordable housing opportunities to support families living and working in southern Middlesex County and surrounding towns. HOPE’s purpose is to advocate for and create high-quality rental housing targeted to people earning between 50% and 80% of the local median income.

CT Legislators Support Study to Preserve Plum Island From Commercial Development

Aerial voew of Plum Island lighthouse. (From Preserve Plum Island website)

Aerial view of Plum Island lighthouse. (From Preserve Plum Island website)

Last Thursday, March 24, at a press conference in Old Saybrook, a triumvirate of Congressional legislators from Connecticut, State Senator Richard Blumenthal and US Representatives  Joe Courtney (D-2nd District) and Rosa DeLauro (D-3rd District) confirmed their support for a study to determine the future of Plum Island located in Long Island Sound.

Members of the Plum Island Coalition — which has some 65 member organizations all dedicated to preserving the island —  were in attendance to hear the good news.

The island still houses a high-security, federal animal disease research facility, but the decision has already been taken to move the facility to a new location in Kansas with an opening slated for 2022. The current facility takes up only a small percentage of the land on the island and significantly for environmentalists, the remainder of the island has for years been left to nature in the wild.

In supporting a federal study on the future of Plum Island, Sen. Blumenthal said, “This study is a step towards saving a precious, irreplaceable national treasure from developers and polluters. It will provide the science and fact-based evidence to make our case for stopping the current Congressional plan to sell Plum Island to the highest bidder.”

He continued, “The stark truth is the sale of Plum Island is no longer necessary to build a new bioresearch facility because Congress has fully appropriated the funds. There is no need for this sale – and in fact, Congress needs to rescind the sale.” 

Congress, however, still has a law on the books that authorizes the sale of Plum Island land to the highest bidder. Therefore, opponents of the sale will have the burden of convincing Congress to change a law that is currently in place.