Eventide: Recipes for Clambakes, Oysters, Lobster Rolls, and More from a Modern Maine Seafood Shack
Eventide: Recipes for Clambakes, Oysters, Lobster Rolls, and More from a Modern Maine Seafood Shack book cover

Eventide: Recipes for Clambakes, Oysters, Lobster Rolls, and More from a Modern Maine Seafood Shack

Hardcover – June 2, 2020

Price
$18.98
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Ten Speed Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1984856326
Dimensions
7.66 x 0.93 x 9.43 inches
Weight
2.15 pounds

Description

“For over a decade, my family has planned vacations around visits to Eventide in Portland, which is a full six-hour drive from our house. The menu feels like it was designed expressly for us, from their insane oyster selection and simple pickled vegetable salads, all the way to their indulgent brown butter lobster and crab rolls. You can only imagine the collective joyous shriek in our house when we found out we could have a little Eventide-inspired Maine magic in our own kitchenxa0all year round. Thank you Arlin, Andrew, and Mike, this book is destined to be well-used and well-loved.” —Jenny Rosenstrach, New York Times bestselling author of Dinner: A Love Story “From the moment Eventide opened in 2012, it clarified a dream we’d all nurtured without quite realizing it: a longing for a place where the crowd was salty, the smack of the sea was ever-present, and every morsel of food reminded you why you’d been making a beeline for the ocean since childhood. It was the seafood shack that showed you why seafood shacks mattered. What a gift to have thatxa0Eventidexa0magic poured into a book. Now the world is your shack.” —Rowan Jacobsen, author of A Geography of Oysters “ Eventide (the restaurant and the cookbook!) is what happens when three Maine-loving friends with the just the right mix of talent, heart, and moxie put passionate vision in front of practical know-how and commit to figuring out any kinks along the way. Arlin, Andrew, and Mike’s delicious risky business created a framework for contemporary New England seafood shack fare. The recipes in their gorgeous cookbook offer the perfect blueprint for bringing their Maine seacoast magic home.” —Mindy Fox, food writer and bestselling cookbook co-author of Antoni in the Kitchen “In an ode to Maine and the bounty from cold New England waters, Eventide takes the classic comforts found in favorite clam shack dishes and elevates them to a whole new modern, dreamy, and delicious world.xa0From simple to celebratory, the outrageously gorgeous crudos, clambakes, and cocktails will inspire, while the sauces alone will become new staples in your own kitchen. Go shuck, slurp, sip, and enjoy!” —Erin French, chef/owner of The Lost Kitchen Arlin Smith is general manager/co-owner and Andrew Taylor and Mike Wiley are the chefs/co-owners at Eventide in Portland, Maine. They also are co-owners of Eventide at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts, as well as Honey Paw and Hugo's in Portland, Maine. Sam Hiersteiner is a Boston-based food writer whose work has appeared in the Boston Globe, Lucky Peach, First We Feast, HuffPost, Art of Eating , and many other publications. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction: Breeze Blown' In Sometimes inspiration strikes like a lightning bolt, and other times it’s a slow burn. The groundwork for our little restaurant was laid decades ago, during happy summers spent with family traversing New England’s coast, including the rocky shores in Maine. Our childhood experiences scavenging crabs, clams, in-shore fish, and seaweed deeply influenced the Eventide concept and menu, as did the clam shacks and lobster pounds that are given altar-like reverence in New England. These singular, superlative experiences became so ingrained in our minds that when we set out to put modern touches on them, we had an incredible sense of nostalgia to build on.But as we look back on the journey, we also have to be transparent about something: we didn’t know what the hell we were doing, really. By most of the laws and conventions of the restaurant industry and common business sense, Eventide should have been the entrepreneurial equivalent of a spectacular dumpster fire.We opened in the summer of 2012 in quaint Portland, Maine—population 67,000. Although we put in some years together at Hugo’s, a trailblazing restaurant in terms of Portland fine dining, we had no hands-on experience in getting an establishment up and running. Our budget was a frayed shoestring, and we didn’t base many (any?) of our key decisions on sound restaurant business practices.The seemingly bold decisions were actually naivety at work. We designed the restaurant ourselves on drafting paper and hired a local residential carpenter to build it out. We put in only two tables because, well, we didn’t like tables. We decided not to build a kitchen and had no hood fan. Our stovetop firepower included one induction burner and a tabletop fryer to match. We failed to foresee that our monumental stone oyster basin, dubbed “The Rock,” was going to destroy multiple floors with plumbing issues and condensation in the years to come. We opened with absolutely no art on the walls because we couldn’t afford any.Discoveries of setbacks and our own mistakes grew more frequent, as did the daily, anxiety-driven vomiting in the shower. A peek behind the scenes at the chaos suggested that it was exactly the rookie disaster that it deserved to be.And yet—and we say this with the same mix of shock and bemusement we’ve had all along—Eventide has been busy since day one. People even found it charming. The bighearted little city of Portland took the leap with us from the moment the doors opened. Man, do we love this town. The Backstory The first thing our first customer said to us, after he wandered in, not knowing we were open yet, and looked incredulously around the space, was, “Where are all the seats?” For a bunch of greenhorns who could have used some positive reinforcement at the time, that hurt. The proverbial pain was amplified because that first customer happened to be Dana Street.Dana and his James Beard Award–winning partner, chef Sam Hayward, are the proprietors of Fore Street, which opened in 1996 as the first real, excellent, farm-and fishery-to-table restaurant in Portland. To this day, it remains the quintessential Maine restaurant (the team also owns Street and Co., Standard Baking Co., and Scales). Dana and Sam, along with James Beard Award–winners chef Rob Evans of Duckfat and Rob Tod of Allagash Brewing, were the first to bring any kind of national food and beverage media attention to Maine.In fact, it was at Hugo’s, Rob Evans and his wife Nancy Pugh’s restaurant, that the three of us (Arlin, Andrew, and Mike) met. Arlin arrived first as general manager in 2009, after graduating from the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York, and working a mix of front-of-house positions in restaurants in the Hudson Valley. Andrew came through a short time later as sous chef, after stints at Thierry Rautureau’s Rover’s in Seattle and Ken Oringer’s Clio in Boston. The last piece of the puzzle was Mike, who started in 2010 as a line cook, after working restaurants, getting a graduate degree, and skiing sick lines in Colorado.At the time, Hugo’s was considered a pioneering restaurant, bringing modern elements into the tradition-bound fare of New England and, more specifically, the cuisine of Maine. And it punched above its weight, because Rob had come to Portland in 2000 from chef Thomas Keller’s The French Laundry in the Napa Valley, one of the world’s best restaurants and an incredible wellspring of culinary talent. Hugo’s was a modern restaurant that followed high gastronomic trends from Napa, New York, and western European capitals. Despite the accolades that it garnered, it had never really been embraced with open arms by the community the way Eventide was later (things have changed now, but that’s for another book). We learned that Mainers like things that are simple and low-key, rather than superconceptual. Nevertheless, the heritage, heretical element, and ethos overall at Hugo’s spoke to us at a deep level, and given that Rob and Nancy had largely stepped away from the day-to-day at the restaurant by the time Mike arrived, the three of us had the chance to develop our own collective point of view. That’s pretty rare, to be thrust into that kind of creative opportunity together, and we intended to push in our own direction.Fast-forward two years, and some pretty powerful forces (hubris, opportunity, and pregnancy among them) coalesced to vault us into the terrifying world of restaurant owner-operators. And while we were in way over our heads in so many ways, we were lucky to have a few things going for us: a wave of change in the restaurant world and in Portland, an incredibly supportive local community, and the best ingredients on earth at our fingertips, to name a few. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Turn your kitchen into your own personal seafood shack and oyster bar with 120 recipes from the James Beard Award-winning restaurant that personifies the allure of Maine.
  • “This book is destined to be well-used and well-loved.”—Jenny Rosenstrach,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Dinner: A Love Story
  • From one of the best restaurants in Maine comes a cookbook for easy entertaining and endless coastal-inspired cooking. Built on the pristine ingredients of southern Maine, including the world's best shellfish, Eventide restaurant is renowned for bringing this bounty to the table with a thoughtfully rooted yet experimental and improvisational style of cooking and hospitality. The result is modernized lobster shack and oyster bar fare with distinct additions from Maine's classic "down east" cooking style. Whether you live by the coast or not, you'll love these 120 recipes, including:
  • Eventide's famed Brown Butter Lobster Roll on a Bao Bun
  • Oysters with Kimchi Ice
  • Tuna Tartare with Ramen Crackers
  • Family-Style Maine Clambake (with instructions for cooking in your home or in the wilderness)
  • Tempura Smelts with Spicy Tzatziki
  • New England Clam Chowder with Homemade Saltines
  • Smoked Shellfish
  • Honey-Roasted Peanut Butter Ice Cream SandwichesBeautiful photo tours of the breathtaking wilds of southern Maine bring this incredible collection to life. Also included are guides to properly buying and preparing seafood and shellfish for unexpectedly easy crudo spreads and raw bar dishes. Through recipes, profiles of local food makers, stories of Maine's foodways and of the seafood that makes the New England coastline so iconic,
  • Eventide
  • is a tribute to the region and an indispensable resource.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(193)
★★★★
25%
(81)
★★★
15%
(48)
★★
7%
(23)
-7%
(-23)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not an accurate title

I ordered this because there was an article about 3 new cookbooks about Maine. It gave no indication of what this book is really about.

Did any of these glowing reviews actually cook any of the recipes? ! I did not, and won't, it's going back. This has nothing to do with Maine cooking. It's really sushi and Japanese fusion cookery, with a nod to the seafood of Maine.

As a cookbook, though?-- many of the recipes require an item for which you need to go to another page. And a couple of times, that second recipe tells you to turn to yet another page for yet another component. Very few of the recipes have an ingredient list of which I would have every single item on hand. And most of what I don't I can't get locally or would have to mail order.

If you are into this sort of thing, that's great, you'll like this cookbook. But the title and the description do not at all reflect this, and if you are not familiar with the restaurant, this is not a book about Maine cooking.
33 people found this helpful
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A sparkling cookbook!

Eventide is a delightful book - I've received a free copy from Ten Speed Press in exchange for a free and unbiased review. I own hundreds of cookbooks, so I was surprised by my reaction: I wanted to cook every recipe in the book; I wanted to fly to Portland, Maine, to eat at Eventide! The photographs are beautiful; the writing is sharp and smart. I loved the fact that the authors wanted to teach and inspire without condescending. In the Foreword, David McMillan, the co-owner and chef of Joe Beef and other restaurants, described the restaurant and cookbook perfectly: "This is an oyster bar executed by a team of highly skilled career cooks and restauranteurs with impeccable taste, esthetics, and vision. Interesting right?" The recipes are creative and inspiring. I chose three to test because I happened to have the ingredients on hand, remarkable during this time of sheltering-in-place, as soon as possible, I will try many more. The recipe I loved was the Tuna Crudo with Ginger Scallion, Tare, Radish. The combination of the Ginger Scallion sauce and the Tare, with the raw tuna, was sublime. Some work was involved, but the outcome was remarkable. The second recipe was the caramelized crab. This dish was a splurge. It was expensive, but the caramelized crab did have a depth of flavor that was a delicious surprise. I will make this again. The third recipe was the Mussels En Escabeche. There was no fennel or olives in the fridge, but I did have chorizo and oranges, this was a fresh and lively dish. A big surprise was the dessert section; I was thrilled to find so many tasty desserts in a predominantly seafood-focused cookbook. I almost forgot the cocktails, Dirty Dirty Martini – count me in. I strongly recommend you buy this book; it is a joy on many levels!
7 people found this helpful
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It okay but I wouldn't buy it again

Here me out......there are like 50 pages of non seafood recipes...apple pie ,coleslaw, and baked beans....like this was supposed to be a seafood book. The beans and coleslaw recipes should have been included in relevant recipes and dessert should have been omitted all together and there should have been 50 more pages of seafood recipes instead of nonsense....
5 people found this helpful
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small book 8.5x11

great step by step photos ruined by the tiny book size. Photos and layout deserve bigger.
5 people found this helpful
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A taste of Maine

I live in Oregon, about 4 hours from the beautiful Oregon coast. I had a work/vacation visit to Maine roughly 25 years, and had a glorious time! It was springtime, before the biggest tourist rush, and it was one of my all-time vacations. There’s nothing quite like the fresh lobster rolls, clams, and chowders. They are so good! And the people so friendly - what a breath of fresh air. Getting a look at the bats on Stephen Kings wrought iron fence In Bangor was a kick too. This book conveys some of the best of Maine. And some simple recipes too.
4 people found this helpful
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Perfect cookbook!

This cookbook is amazing! We visit Maine several times a year and we plan our trip around going to Eventide! For those who feel the cookbook has too much Asian food or is not “New England” enough I would say please visit the restaurant before you pass judgment. This cookbook is perfect! Thank you Eventide for sharing these amazing recipes.
4 people found this helpful
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Great recipes

I'm from Maine and these are great recipes
3 people found this helpful
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Can’t get to New England? Bring it to you! Fresh and Flavorful seafoods are with your reach.

With a section of basics that will help to build several unique recipes, this cookbook will have you exploring loads of Unique New England dishes that are certainly leagues above boring fish fries. This is definitely l a great book for an adventurous seafood lover. I’ve received a free copy from Ten Speed Press for a free and unbiased review, but I plan to purchase a second copy for my adult son who is a pescatarian living in Cape Cod.
Designed for novices and experienced cooks alike, the book offers step-by-step directions for basic food prep and flavor building. Following the recipes in this book will lead novices into previously unexplored territories, with unique fish selections that will likely require a trip to a large fresh fish market that will have the variety of fresh fish that are outside of mainstream whitefish or haddock.
The book opens with a background on the restaurant itself, and then gets in to “The Rock” – Eventide’s premier “ultra-local” fresh seafood raw oyster bar, and how readers can make their own at home, complete with step-by-step picture-laden directions for preparing oysters for a raw bar at home – taking the prospect from intimidating to doable for folks with little to no experience with the shellfish. IT then gets into one thing this book has loads of – recipes for unique sauces and sides to impress yourself and your friends with a true New England experience at your own kitchen counter.
This first section is indicative of the tone of the rest of the book – a hands-on, step by-step manual for “New England Sushi” (Chapter two) and how to make “The Ultimate Clambake” (Chapter 3).
The recipes all require fresh fish and food and use home-made base ingredients (such as fried aromatics oil – recipe included in the book) and will revolutionize how you prepare seafood in your home. There are even recipes for home-baked sesame buns for fish sandwiches and burgers and even saltine crackers so the entire dish is made completely from scratch. There are sections for desserts and cocktails, but they are far overshadowed by the focus of the book – great, fresh, flavorful seafood dishes.
3 people found this helpful
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Great for Eventide Lovers

I ordered this for my sister in law - Eventide is her favorite restaurant and as she lives in the midwest, and we are living in a pandemic, I thought I would send along for her hobby chef husband to make some dupe attempts over the long winter ahead. I flipped through it on arrival, it's a great weight and is definitely a quality cookbook.
2 people found this helpful
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Stay Connected

Great way to stay connected to one of the best restaurants in Portland.
2 people found this helpful