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MASSACHUSETTS: From sea to table: Hotel, restaurants serving Gloucester Fresh seafood

July 23, 2018 — Eric Lorden, the owner of Passports and Machaca restaurants, has been cooking and running restaurants in Gloucester for a quarter century and there’s always been one thing he never quite understood about some of his local culinary peers.

“For 25 years, I’ve been cooking here and I’ve never understood why anyone would cook and serve frozen seafood,” Lorden said Thursday amid a state visit from Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken to welcome Machaca to the Gloucester Fresh restaurant program. “Both of our restaurants try very hard to use only non-chemical products.”

Machaca, newly opened at 14 Rogers St., joined Captain Carlo’s on Harbor Loop and the Beauport Hotel Gloucester on Commercial Street as the newest members of the marketing program designed to raise the profile and availability of locally landed seafood among restaurants and consumers.

As part of the program, the restaurants agree to carry one locally landed seafood item on their regular menu and many choose to carry even more. In return, they receive a distinctive blue Gloucester Fresh placard to display at their establishments to inform their customers of their investment in the local fishing community.

The Gloucester Fresh restaurant program now boasts more than a dozen local restaurants — not counting the 110 Ninety-Nine restaurants that feature Gloucester-landed haddock on its menus — and has begun to imbue its members with a deeper sense of community.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Chefs, city promote local catch

June 26, 2017 — The city is expanding its Gloucester Fresh seafood campaign with a membership program for local and regional restaurants that will supplement the direct pipeline of fresh, locally harvested species with ideas on how to prepare and promote them.

The Gloucester Fresh Restaurant Membership program will offer its members seasonal seafood promotions, as well as guidelines for seasonal seafood availability, a listing of under-utilized species for “creative and cost-effective recipes” and other benefits.

“By utilizing fresh and local seafood, you are not only providing delicious and healthy food to consumers, but also supporting your community,” said Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken. “We’re excited to launch this first-of-its-kind restaurant membership program to showcase our heritage while providing the freshest seafood products.”

The campaign already has attracted some of the most prominent restaurants in Gloucester, including The Gloucester House, the Azorean Restaurant and Bar, The Causeway Restaurant, Tonno Restaurant and Passports.

Organizers said most of the member restaurants already served seafood harvested locally and landed in Gloucester and they became members because they believe in the course the city has plotted to promote the area’s fresh seafood, its restaurants and its seafood processors and suppliers.

“Right now, the market favors places that use local ingredients and products,” said Lenny Linquata, owner of The Gloucester House. “The key is to provide people with a means for enjoying the local experience. And there is no better way to do that than by sampling local foods and local cuisine.”

Linquata said his restaurant buys its lobsters, fish and scallops directly off boats landing their catch in Gloucester, as well as purchasing its clams locally.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Video series with local chef showcases Gloucester fish

June 6, 2017 — The Gloucester Fresh campaign to market Cape Ann’s bounty of seafood has made its way to the little screen. Several of them, actually.

The campaign, which in the past has included digital billboards and other marketing tools, now has produced five seafood video demonstrations of recipes tailored to the local catch, as well as a tutorial from local fisherman Al Cottone on how to shop and buy the freshest seafood.

“By utilizing fresh and local seafood you are not only preparing delicious and healthy food, but also supporting your community,” Gloucester Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken said in a statement. “We’re excited to launch a new series of captivating cooking videos which will help inspire chefs of all kinds to utilize affordable, seasonal, local, and regional seafood.”

Got a hankering for pollock with mashed potatoes and parsnips? Got you covered. Pining for a new flounder recipe? There are two, as well as individual recipes for whiting pate and redfish with warm spring corn and a tomato salsa.

“These really are updated recipes, with a fresher and more modern approach to cooking,” said Heather Atwood, the esteemed local food writer who began working with the city and the Gloucester Fishermen’s Wives Association on raising the regional and national profile of Cape Ann seafood.

The videos, shot in the kitchen of Atwood’s Rockport home, feature Annie Copps, a well-known presence on the Boston restaurant and food-writing scene. Copps has worked in the kitchens of restaurants such as Olives and Jasper’s, as well as serving as food editor at Boston Magazine and Yankee Magazine.

“I’ve known Annie for, gosh, I don’t know how long, just from being involved with food,” Atwood said. “She’s just fabulous and did a great job in these videos.”

Read the full story at The Gloucester Times 

MASSACHUSETTS: Gloucester’s presence at seafood expo leading to fish sales far afield

March 21, 2017 — The city of Gloucester announced its presence with authority Monday at the massive Seafood Expo North America by hosting an international reception that drew seafood executives from around the globe.

The Gloucester Fresh reception at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center, hosted by Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken and featuring state Assistant Secretary for Domestic and International Business Development Nam Pham, continued the city’s marketing drumbeat on the sustainability and culinary benefits of the region’s fresh seafood.

“If you are looking for fresh seafood, the quality that comes off our boats is 100 percent,” Romeo Theken told seafood processors and buyers from Malaysia, Indonesia, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Iceland, Ireland and other seafood producing and consuming countries.

City organizers said the city’s presence at the gigantic show this year has provided more than 100 business leads and 20 meetings between Gloucester seafood companies and international seafood executives.

The Seafood Expo is one of the largest seafood trade shows in the world, drawing thousands of industry executives to the three-day event to buy, sell and network.

This marked the third appearance by the city at the show and the second year that Gloucester has ramped up its game to spread the word internationally on the Gloucester Fresh brand and the bounty of seafood still being harvested from the waters off Cape Ann.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Gloucester receives $20K to help city sell seafood

January 23, 2017 — The city has received a $20,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and plans to use the funds to bolster its Gloucester Fresh marketing campaign for locally landed seafood.

“These funds will enable us to continue our outreach efforts on behalf of the Gloucester Fresh campaign,” said Sal Di Stefano, economic development director for the city. “It really came as an extension of the “Local Foods, Local Places” initiative we’ve already engaged in with the USDA.”

Bolstering the Gloucester Fresh campaign may be the short-term goal, but Di Stefano said the city hopes the $20,000 can be used to leverage larger sums that would enable it to launch a product development test kitchen.

The kitchen, at a site to be determined, would be operated by a partnership of the Gloucester Fishermen’s Wives Association and SnapChef.

“It would be a seafood testing and demonstration kitchen that could be utilized by companies for developing new products that could ultimately be marketed under the Gloucester Fresh brand,” Di Stefano said. “It also will be used for workforce training for the culinary industry.”

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Gloucester Fresh banks on ocean-to-table appeal

September 12, 2016 — This is a story that starts at 2 o’clock in the morning, when those who work on Gloucester fishing boats rise for the day, ready to hit the water.

“Gloucester Fresh” is the mantra coming from America’s oldest fishing port, intended to tap into the farm-to-table trend while applying it to the Atlantic Ocean. The bid to reinvigorate the city’s historic industry conjures a tradition of hard work, blue water, fresh air, and one of nature’s most beneficial resources.

“This is a very healthy protein,” said Angela Sanfilippo, president of the Gloucester Fishermen’s Wives Association, whose husband, John, is one of the hardy souls who sets off in the early morning and returns to the dock at 3 p.m. with that day’s catch. “It’s the only natural protein left in the world. You’re talking about the North Atlantic, the cleanest water around the United States. We’ve fought very hard so we can keep a clean ocean for the fish.”

While cod, flounder, and haddock continue to serve as the breadwinners, the ocean-to-table movement is promoting underused species such as whiting and redfish that are often eaten by fishermen’s families but not often found on restaurant menus. Exposing consumers to new species is the reason Gloucester Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken has been demonstrating how to cook redfish soup at seafood shows.

Read the full story at The Boston Globe

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