Autumn Apple Pressing in New England

By Anais Wheeler, Wcities Boston Contributor

What could be more quintessential in autumn in New England than picking apples and pressing cider? Escaping from the bustle of Boston, we drove north on an early October weekend, through New Hampshire and into Vermont on 89, that hilly, winding highway that is one of the only ways to get (still north but) west at over 40 miles per hour in northern New England.

During my childhood, my family had a plethora of back-to-the-lander friends, and my memories of pressing apples took place at Wayback Farm, where the cider press was building-sized and used conveyor belts to sort the apples before they were crushed and squeezed. While collecting apples was fairly hard work for a nine-year-old, the actual pressing was effortless and not a little fascinating.

This trip, too, involved friends who have embraced farm life. We arrived at their farm on a beautiful Saturday morning. The leaves were peaking, and the hills were mottled with those autumn reds and yellows that make this area a favorite weekend destination at this time of year.

Image courtesy of Christopher Read.

Apple mush makes good pig feed. Beer not so much. Image and happy drunk pigs courtesy of Benjamin Polloni.

In no time at all, we had grabbed cement buckets and set to work on a few trees. The trees hadn’t been pruned in years, and picking from them proved difficult and occasionally painful. (I came home with an especially attractive scratch under my eye in addition to the many on my hands and arms.) Our efforts were augmented by a friend who had spent a season picking olives in Italy; he suggested shaking the trees over tarps, but our tarps were too small, and the ground too uneven, so we settled for using a rake to shake the small apples free from the branches. This resulted in cascades of hard little crab apples landing on our backs and heads, as well as winding up in impenetrable undergrowth. Not only did we pick our own apples, but we helped the deer with their share.

I have no yard in the city, let alone an apple tree, and it’s easy to forget what wild apples can really look like. Many of our specimens were a mottled brownish red, and with the random lumpiness, they looked more like little roasting potatoes than the platonic ideal of an apple we’re used to at Whole Foods or Generic City Co-op.

Someone had heard that a truck-bed full of apples would make 10 gallons of cider, so we stopped when it looked like ten gallons worth, and set about setting up our borrowed hand-crank cider press.

There she is: our spectacularly high-tech apple press (and our first five gallons of cider). Image courtesy of Benjamin Polloni, 2008.

This apple press was probably made from a kit, like this one, but the terribly enterprising of you, dear readers, could probably design your own. It’s a simple hand crank, with a slatted round receptacle. Insert a porous bag in the slatted receptacle, crush the apples into the bag through the hand crank (harder than it sounds). When the bag is full, attach the disc-shaped press to the drill-like thingie (technical apple-pressing term, obviously). Spin to press and squeeze the juice from the porous bag. It drips through a hole on one side of the base, and into a small pot. It would probably be a good idea to have some cheesecloth to filter out seeds and skin before you pour into your storage container (we used several 5-gallon glass carboys, but you could also use a bunch of gallon jugs).

Hand-cranking is hard work. Image courtesy of Christopher Read.

 

Mmm…apple mush ready to be squeezed into cider. Image courtesy of Benjamin Polloni.

That Saturday, we pressed almost ten gallons, but found that the truck bed still looked much the same (that is to say, full of apples), so the Boston portion of our crew vowed to come back in the light of the next day to finish the job. We did, and pressed a total of 15 gallons by Sunday afternoon.

The Boston crew sticks with it: Chris Read, Ira Gooch and me, giving those apples what-for. Image courtesy of Chris Read.

…while everyone else gets distracted…building barns and such. Image courtesy of Benjamin Polloni.

We took a couple of gallons to drink fresh, but the rest of our cider is still sitting in its carboy, bubbling away. In a few months, it will be delicious and alcoholic. For more information about how to ferment cider, check out Leeners, which has information about pressing cider as well as fermenting it.

If you aren’t so lucky to have friends with unkempt trees that need picking, there are lots of orchards around that you can pick at for a fee, and some with presses that won’t give you nearly the workout that ours did.

Russell Orchards in Ipswich, MA, offers apple picking all season, as well as delicious apple products – try the Apple Cider Donuts – and occasional entertainment.

Also, try The Big Apple Farm in Wrentham, although pick-your-own for 2008 is finished.  You can still buy apples and apple products in the store there. During the summer months, they also have pick-your-own blueberries and raspberries.

Or, check out Red Fire Farm in Granby, MA, where you can press your own cider each year at their Fall Feast. This farm also offers a CSA for pick-up in Boston locations, which offers a nice infusion of locally-grown veggies all summer and fall for what turns out to be a very reasonable price.

Driving back to Boston with our cider securely buckled into the back seat, we knew that in a few weeks, the trees would be brown and the wind would be howling. Our cider will be even better then, hot and with a cinnamon stick. 

Somewhere there is a lonely birthday cake

Fulton Street, Sunny San Francisco

The cops are coming, ditch the forks. Ditch the Forks!

Why Does Lael’s Music Kick Ass?

FYI: Lael works here.

1. “…we even got a secret handshake”

2. vocal harmonies

3. complete disregard for release date

4. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastiche

5. Lael IS Hip Hop

6. “de markee on a wee mo day hala ba dee bop, ba dee boo day”

7. Two mentions today of “bangin’ on the bathroom floor”

8. Lael: “shhh…too loud”

On the Floor over Singapore

Ha-ha! This is the official photo accompanying Wcities’ guide to dining and drinking in Singapore. We like it because it really makes you want to eat, eat, eat and drink, drink, drink.

The Erotic Chaos of Human Nature

Party this Friday at Tantrum!

Touring Asia

So although I have technically been to Asia (I crossed the Bosphorus in Istanbul), I have never experienced the “real” Asia. About 5 years ago my brother and his friend got a deal wherein they could travel around Asia for one low price. I think it was through the Cathay Pacific All Asia Pass.  And it looks like a pretty good deal right? Travel to Hong Kong and to two other destinations for $1500?  But then I began to wonder about the cost of overland trips.  I suppose this is good for those who want to see everything in a short amount of time - but I want to see everything over a very long period of time.  So what do you think - is this a good deal?

ManchVegas

Manchester, NH is affectionately known as “ManchVegas” to its citizens. Assuming it earned the name because of its sparkling nightlife and tawdry underbelly, I convinced a friend to come spend some time in the largest city in New Hampshire.

My first attempt to experience ManchVegas failed dismally as I was relying on public transportation (i.e. buses that came once every hour) and the last bus left the downtown area at the rather early hour of 5:30 pm. However, the upside to this public transit system is that I was literally the only person on the bus, so the driver and I had a pleasant conversation as I took my own, bus-sized personal taxi back to my hotel.

Forays into the darkness of Manchester were greatly aided by the arrival of my friend - not only for her car which allowed me to explore the city into the night, but also because with an ally at my back, I was more willing to explore. A Wednesday night consisted of eating at Peking Garden, a Chinese restaurant with NO ONE else in the restaurant except one rather shady man watching the Olympics and eating at the bar. With the failure of Wednesday night, our hopes for the discovery of ManchVegas were diminishing hourly.

Then came Thursday - a day when only those truly committed to the art of the party emerge. Our initial Thursday night bar was The Shaskeen, Irish pub with a rather snooty bartender, at which I held a real Grammy in my hands. After being hit on by a rather unappealing 50 year-old man, we switched bars. At our next place, TJ’s, we knew we had found a gem. Chatting up several locals, we followed one Manchesterite to a bar, Strange Brew Tavern, just off the main drag. Although not promising on the outside, the inside was filled with young adults intrigued by the fresh blood of outsiders. My friend and I were impressed by the friendliness of the locals and plied them with questions about the city. Loathe to leave our new friends, we headed out to one more place, The Black Brimmer, for a final dance before the nightlife shut down at 1:30 am.

Wikipedia says that some people want to change the name to “ManchHattan.” Although not a resident, simply an admirer of Manchester nightlife, I believe Manchester has earned the nickname ManchVegas fair and square, and for that, it will always have a place in my heart.

Wcities Feels the Love from TripWiser

We got a great write-up on the Olympics guide from Tripwiser. Just listen to Ingrid McCleary:

I’ll have my feet planted firmly on California soil but I downloaded the Wcities Guide to accompany my TV viewing and will thoroughly enjoy visiting Beijing virtually.

Wow…talk about dedication.

Check out the full blog post here: link

Today’s the day, 8/8/08, get your sneakers and track suits on and plant yourselves firmly in the recliners people!

Wcities FTW! The Olympics Project

The Olympics guides are done! Well…close to done at least.

It was really a project of massive scope: to create a useful guide for travelers to the Beijing Olympics in 9 languages. While a 6 month allotment of time would probably have been ideal, we instead managed to crank out a solid little product in about 4 weeks. Due to some last minute bail outs from high level sponsors, we’re having to do a more guerilla-style marketing approach, but that’s okay. The real goal of producing the guide was to try our hand at attacking a specific project on a specific event. With that goal in mind, I think the project was a real success. We now have something that looks nice to use to market similar future products. And we have a good idea of our capabilities, strengths and weaknesses as a producer of travel guides. These are good building blocks to work with.

Overall I consider the project a strong (albeit hectic) success. Great work everyone who was involved. I’m gonna see about getting us some commemorate mugs so that each time we sip coffee we’ll think of large translation spreadsheets and Chinese governmental Internet restrictions. Yung Sing! (translation: drink and win!).

The guides can be downloaded here: Wcities Olympics Guides
(Make sure you have Adope Reader 9.0)

Epilogue: Any pros and cons comments on the guide would really be helpful. That goes for both the product and the process. I also have plenty of conclusions of my own, which I’m more than happy to share and discuss in the interest of smoothing out future bumps in roads.

Pageant of the Masters Ticketing Torture

Yesterday, Hoiyin Ip filled us in on seating problems at Orange County’s world-famous Pageant of the Masters event. Today, the saga continues:

The Ticketing Dilemma

On December 1, seven months before the new season, tickets went on sale. I immediately contacted the Pageant, only to find out most desirable seats were gone, and none for weekend! Then I heard the words “pre-sale to members.” I was disheartened. I felt that I was just not good enough to have a spot at the exclusive Pageant.

A few months later, I was introduced to a scalper - a member of the Pageant and an owner of 16 desirable tickets! Yet, he was not the only choice. There were a group of Pageant scalpers online!

Here is an ad on Craigslist. This poor guy, who unfortunately cannot celebrate his father’s birthday at the Pageant, has to let all eight tickets go (for $190 above the original price). Well, this might be the only way to take care of daddy’s gift!

I cannot help but to compare Pageant of the Masters with Shakespeare by the Sea (SBTS). Both are local non-profits sponsored by a number of corporations. Both provide summer-night outdoor performances. Both present masterpieces of art. And both use volunteer actors. But they create quite different patron experiences:
·    SBTS is free to watch. The Pageant sells over 100,000 tickets each summer for $15 - $150 per ticket. And the privilege of purchasing tickets during pre-sale (and possible scalping opportunities) makes the $35 - $7500 membership desirable.
·    SBTS performs in parks with no fixed seating. Everyone is free to claim a good spot on the grass. The Pageant performs at its own theater with 2000 crammed seats in 13 classifications. (Oops, I meant “sections.”) And the higher sections provide compromised enjoyment.

Don’t get me wrong. I have no intention to dig into the financial details, although my expectation of a non-profit organization may need some adjustment. And I’m curious what Leonardo da Vinci would say about the money generated by replicating the Last Supper each year.

Indeed, I am just looking for a good summer-night outdoor performance. And I like deals. When I pay for something, I prefer the feeling of being special, at least not inferior. SBTS makes no dent on my budget, and gives me a sense of egalitarianism. So I prefer SBTS to the Pageant.

Think twice before you buy a Pageant of the Master ticket. If you must do it, eBay has it!

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