Ethnic Food Market Tour brochure - Somerville
Transcription
Ethnic Food Market Tour brochure - Somerville
About ArtsUnion and the Somerville Arts Council ArtsUnion is designed to boost the cultural economic development of Union Square, Somerville. The Somerville Arts Council and the Mayor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development created ArtsUnion, in partnership with ArtSomerville, Brickbottom Artists Association, Washington Street Art Center, the Somerville Historic Preservation Commission, the Somerville Chamber of Commerce, Somerville Open Studios and Union Square Main Streets. Through funding from the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s John and Abigail Adams Program and the City of Somerville, ArtsUnion cultivates and promotes the square’s diverse artist and business communities. During 2006, ArtsUnion presented a series of cultural events/performances and conducted 12 craft markets. Through the end of the year and into 2007, ArtsUnion will present a tour of Union Square ethnic markets; install streetscape furniture and lightscape projects; and begin to implement the work surrounding a zoning/regulation review to further support the arts and distinct character of the square. The Somerville Arts Council works on a grass roots level to create imaginative and resourceful programming that is accessible to all of the City’s residents—with a focus on reaching youth and families. The Somerville Arts Council has been cited by the MCC as a statewide leader, and has received the Commonwealth Award, which recognizes excellence in the arts, humanities and sciences. The Arts Council is run by a small professional staff and a volunteer board. Many of our programs are made possible by the dedication of many community volunteers. Union Square In addition to ArtsUnion, the Somerville Arts Council organizes these other programs: Art in a Garden is a free summer arts and environ- Restaurants Restaurants Sherman Cafe 257 Washington Street Bukkyung, Inc. 9A Union Square Subway 71 Union Square ArtBeat is our annual multi-media arts festival in Davis Caesar’s Pizza and Subs 401 Somerville Ave. Sunny’s Deli 40 Bow St. Books of Hope is a 10-month creative writing and Dunkin Donuts 282 Somerville Ave. Taqueria La Mexicana 247 Washington St. Illuminations Tour is our trolley tour celebrating El Potro Mexican Grill 61 Union Square Union Square Pizza 63 Union Square Great Thai Chef 255 Washington Ave. Wu Chon Restaurant 290 Somerville Ave. The Independent 75 Union Square India Palace 23 Union Square Machu Picchu 307 Somerville Ave. Mama Gina’s 19 Union Square Mandarin Chinese Restaurant 7 Union Square Neighborhood Restaurant 29 Bow St. New Asia 328 Somerville Ave. Red House Restaurant 24 Union Square Clubs Pubs Clubs // Pubs P.A.’s Lounge 345 Somerville Ave. Sally O’Briens 335 Somerville Ave. Tir na Nog 366A Somerville Ave. Toast 70 Union Square mental program held outdoors at the Community Growing Center during July and August. It is open to children ages 6 to 12. Square highlighting local artists of all kinds and attracting up to 10,000 people to Davis Square each July. teen empowerment project held at the Mystic Activity Center. Somerville's extraordinary holiday light displays. LCC Grant Program is our annual grant program, with funding from the MCC. Each fall, we provide grants to local individuals and organizations that support artists and arts programming within the community. Mystic River Mural Project is a summer art and environmental program in which teens explore the Mystic River and help to create a large, ongoing mural located on Mystic Avenue near 1-93. Windows Art Project (WAP) is a visual arts exhibition that turns a city square into a sidewalk art gallery by using storefront windows and outdoor locales. Since 1996, WAP started out in Davis Square but now occurs in Union Square. ArtsUnion Ethnic Market G U I D E Union Square of Union Square’s numerous markets offer a wealth of culinary delights. These small markets are not only ethnically diverse—ranging from Brazilian to Bengali—they serve a surprisingly broad clientele, as well. Take a tour of the shops highlighted in this brochure and discover the diversity and essence of Union Square! Make a Donation — Every bit helps! Support Somerville Arts Council programming by making a tax-deductable donation: Somerville Arts Council 50 Evergreen Ave. Somerville, MA 02145 Special thanks go out to: Sharon Wolfson, who sheparded this project and conducted interviews; Steven Derocher for brochure design; Claudia Pato Carvalho and Pauline Lim who helped with outreach to specific markets; Rosie Gill for fact checking, Mano5 for photography, and, of course, to the generous business owners within the Square for sharing stories about their markets. Mayor Joseph Curtatone www.somervilleartscouncil.org www.somervilleartscouncil.org In the back kitchen of Capone’s, a machine dubbed “the Extruder” is hard at work pumping out anywhere between 200 - 300 pounds of fresh pasta per day. Over twenty specialty pastas are available, including such enticing flavors as saffron, wild mushroom, squid ink and Jennifer’s favorite: rosemary and garlic. Pair any one of these pastas with Capone’s homemade sauces (ask for the pairing chart, which recommends delicious combos). Most of the recipes at Capone’s were handed down from Al Capone’s mother, Nina, or developed by Al himself. 2 Casa deCarnes Carnes Casa de At this Brazilian-style butcher, you’ll find not only meat, but Brazilian staples and sweets, such as Garoto chocolates and a Brazilian candy called Passoquinha, made of peanuts. Casa de Carnes also sells juices and juice concentrates made of Acerola, also known as Barbados Cherry, a tropical fruit-bearing shrub or small tree, native to the West Indies and northern South America. Edson is investing in a specific fruit concentrate called Polpa de Pequi. Pequi is native fruit from the Brazilian Cerrado, a vast tropical savanna eco-region in central Brazil. 380 Somerville Avenue Owners: Rokeya & Jahangir Kabir From: Chittagong, Bangladesh Open since: 2006 B 5 3 et 2 re St 1 3 on gt hin 6 7 Somerville Avenue s Wa 8 4 UNION SQUARE in n gto sh Wa eet Str prices. Eduardo estimates that they sell 1,000 bags of rice each week. Check out their selection of spices, which includes numerous varieties of chili powder, including chile mulato, chile ancho, chile poblano and guajillo. Small tubs of spices sell for less than two dollars! Surprisingly, La Internacional Foods also sells Jamaican Jerk sauce at a steady clip. eet Str Most customers hail from: Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, India and the Middle East What you’ll find: Halal meat (which undergoes a special butchering process according to Islamic law), goat, fish, tahini, couscous, spices, rice, teas and sweets Recommended dish: Keski (small fish) fried with potatoes, green chiles, onions and oil Hours: 10am – 10pm daily On average, Rokeya sells three whole goats per day (that’s 100 pounds!), fresh from New Hampshire. They also sell many pounds of beef and chicken for parties and BBQs. In the back of the store, freezers are stocked with sixty different fish, shipped from Bangladesh and Thailand. Ask Rokeya or Jahangir to pull out the four-foot long, 30-pound fish called Lakka, which requires many hours to cook. Bangladesh is predominantly Muslim, so the food at Halal Market varies quite a bit from the Little India market across the street. For instance, Muslims eat beef, whereas Hindus do not. Hence, you’ll find beef at Halal Market—along with Middle Eastern items with Arabic packaging. 38 Bow Street Owner: Edson Nascimento Born: Goiana, Brazil Open since: 1999 Most customers hail from: Brazil What you’ll find: Meat Recommended dish: Linguica Hours: 8am – 8pm daily Halal HalalMarket Market ow et re St 1 14 Bow Street Owners: Al Capone & Jennifer Hegarty From: Buenos Aires, Argentina Open since: 1985 Most customers are: Locals & restaurants What you’ll find: Fresh pasta, home made sauces, prepared meals, dessert, cheese. Recommended dish: Cured meats with olive oil and fresh bread Hours: Mon – Fri, 8am – 6pm; Sat, 10am – 5pm; Sunday, closed w Bo Capone’s Foods Capone’s Foods 4 Little LittleIndia India 77A Bow Street Owners: Dipti and Umesh Mistri From: Mumbai, India Open since: 1983 Most customers hail from: Bangladesh, Pakistan and India, primarily the Punjab region What you’ll find: Spices, rice, fresh produce, samosas Recommended dish: Ladu (round sweet balls made of wheat, lentils, ghee and sugar) Hours: 10am – 9pm daily 5 In addition to fresh produce, Basmati rice, and over 30 types of frozen and powdered curries, this store sells audio tapes, dresses and jewelry. It also has a wide selection of newly-released Bollywood movies—many with English subtitles. Little India shoppers will also find everything for Diwali, the Hindu New Year. If you’re lucky enough to find both Dipti and Umesh working at the same time, Dipti can be persuaded to paint your hands with henna in traditional Indian designs (while Umesh runs the store). La LaInternacional InternacionalFoods Foods New Market New Bombay Bombay Market 318 Somerville Avenue Owners: Eduardo & Nora Cabrera From: Guatemala Open since: 1989 Most customers hail from: Haiti and Central and South America What you’ll find: Plantains, rice, spices, fish & produce from Costa Rica & Columbia Recommended dish: Guatemalan tortillas, rice and beans, Jamaican jerk sauce Hours: Mon – Sat, 8am – 9pm; Sunday, 9am – 7pm 359 Somerville Avenue Owners: Mohammad Nurpasha and Mohammad Khukon From: Sylhet, Bangladesh Open since: 2002 Most customers hail from: Nepal What you’ll find: Spices, lentils, pickles Recommended dish: Chicken Biryani or Hilsa (fish from Bangladesh) Hours: 9:30am – 9:30pm daily Customers come from as far away as Waltham, Mattapan and Malden for the store’s broad selection of Latin American and Haitian goods—and great 6 Hailing from Sylhet, Bangladesh, the Pashas came to Cambridge by way of New York in 1998. Try making Tahera’s (wife of Nurpasha) favorite Bengali dish of hilsa (the national fish of Bangladesh) with onion, garlic, tumeric, chile powder, mustard and curry—all of which you can buy at New Bombay Market! Check out their refrigerators in the front of the store, where you’ll find fresh exotic greens and intriguing drinks to go (wine and beer included). The market also has many frozen fish in storage and a fabulous, exotic tea selection. 7 Pao Acucar && Brazilian Brazilian Buffet Pao de de Acucar Buffet 57 Union Square Owner: Eduardo Rosa From: Rio de Janeiro Open since: 2006 Most customers hail from: Brazil What you’ll find: Cured meats for feijoada, Açaí (superfruit from Brazil’s rain forests), mounted cows heads, perfume and soccer shirts Recommended dish: Cheese bread & coxinha (chicken dumplings) Hours: 6:30am – midnight daily Eduardo estimates that he sells two hundred coxinha (cheese dumplings) a day! The store sells the ingredients to make feijoada, a Brazilian specialty that originally made its way to Bahia, in eastern Brazil, from Africa. It’s made from cow and pork meat—Eduardo prepares his by salting the meats every few days—collard greens, yucca flour and white rice. Typically, Brazilians savor this infamous, heavy dish every Saturday, accompanied by an orange, to aid in digestion. Eduardo is known throughout the community for cooking feijoada for 500 people at church functions. Reliable Reliable Market Market 45 Union Square Owner: Jim Park From: Seoul, South Korea Open since: 1982 Most customers hail from: Korea, Japan, China, and United States What you’ll find: Bulgoki (thinly-sliced beef or pork marinated in salty/sweet sauce), bulgoki sauce, prepared kimchee pancakes (made with spicy cabbage), seaweed laver for sushi, frozen gyoza (dumplings) Hours: Sun, 10am – 7pm; Mon, 10am – 8pm; Tue-Sat, 9:30am – 8pm 8 Shopping at the Reliable Market is like a vicarious trip to Asia. The shelves here are laden with exotic products with labels in many Asian languages. You can get Thai curry pastes, canned kimchee, Korean liqueurs, great rice cookers and a good selection of tea pots. Their produce is inexpensive and fresh. They always supply fresh Asian staples such as daikon radish, scallions, ginger, tofu, and Asian pears. Definitely check out the pastry machine in the back of the store, which makes Deli Manjoo, a delectable Korean pastry with a chocolate filling.
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