Eat Drink RI
The best local food and beverage information in Rhode Island
  • Interviews
    • The Show
    • Subscribe as a Podcast
    • RI Small Business LIVE Forum on Facebook
  • Upcoming Events
  • Food & Beverage Jobs
    • Post A Job
    • Job Dashboard
  • Latest News
  • COVID Support
    • Restaurants with Online Ordering and Take Out
    • Shop Local Food & Drink Businesses Online
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 1 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 2 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 3 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 4 of 4
    • Resource Links for Small Businesses During COVID-19 Crisis
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
    • Shopping
    • About
    • Contact
Tag:

sausage

loading...

chefs & restaurantsfarms

Chef Beau Vestal’s Outstanding in the Field Dinner at Westport Rivers Vineyard and Winery

by David Dadekian August 24, 2011
written by David Dadekian
Preparing for the dinner. From left to right: Tom Zippelli, Beau Vestal, Oliver Crawford (behind), Doug Higley

Preparing for the dinner. From left to right: Tom Zippelli, Beau Vestal, Oliver Crawford (behind), Doug Higley

Last Thursday evening, on a gorgeous summer night in Westport, Massachusetts, I had the joy of photographing New Rivers‘ Executive Chef Beau Vestal and his team as they prepared a dinner outdoors in a vineyard for 160 guests. This was the second year Vestal was invited to be part of the Outstanding in the Field tour (photos from last year can be seen here). The diners in Westport were treated to truly a bounty of Rhode Island and Massachusetts food and drink.

The produce, meat, seafood and dairy came from a number of local sources, including: Eva’s Garden in Dartmouth, Plum Point Oysters in North Kingstown, ‘Round the Bend Farm in South Dartmouth, Four Town Farm in Seekonk, Steve Ramos Organic Produce in Bristol, Narragansett Creamery in Providence, Barden Family Orchard in North Scituate, Schartner Farms in Exeter, The Good Earth Gardening Center in Cranston, Big Train Farm in Cranston, Yacht Club Bottling Works in North Providence and North Star Farm in Westport.

The beer was provided by local “gypsy” brewers Pretty Things Beer & Ale Project and the wine was all locally grown as well, produced by Westport Rivers Vineyard & Winery where the dinner was held. Ultimately, from this invited observer’s point of view, it was a perfectly picturesque evening as you can see from this sampling of the many photos that were made.

Grilling Plum Point Oysters and 'Round the Bend Farm pork & wild foraged pine sausage

Grilling Plum Point Oysters and 'Round the Bend Farm pork & wild foraged pine sausage

'Round the Bend Farm pork & wild foraged pine sausage

'Round the Bend Farm pork & wild foraged pine sausage

Grilled Plum Point Oyster with a lemon and summer savory butter

Grilled Plum Point Oyster with a lemon and summer savory butter

Outstanding in the Field table is set along the Westport Rivers grape vineyard

Outstanding in the Field table is set along the Westport Rivers grape vineyard

Elizabeth LaMantia grilling 'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loins

Elizabeth LaMantia grilling 'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loins

Seasoning the grilled squash

Seasoning the grilled squash

Slicing heirloom tomatoes

Slicing heirloom tomatoes

Heirloom tomatoes

Heirloom tomatoes

Slicing heirloom tomatoes

Slicing heirloom tomatoes

The guests are seated for dinner

The guests are seated for dinner

Smoked Rhody bluefish pâté, grilled garlic country bread, fried shallots and Eva's Garden flowers

Smoked Rhody bluefish pâté, grilled garlic country bread, fried shallots and Eva's Garden flowers

Cool salad of RI grains & Eva's Garden herbs and purslane with Narragansett Creamery yogurt tzatiki

Cool salad of RI grains & Eva's Garden herbs and purslane with Narragansett Creamery yogurt tzatiki

Heirloom tomatoes, cucumbers, onions & Narragansett Creamy Salty Sea Feta

Heirloom tomatoes, cucumbers, onions & Narragansett Creamy Salty Sea Feta

'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loin, grilled and sliced

'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loin, grilled and sliced

Vestal demonstrates how the meat course comes together

Vestal demonstrates how the meat course comes together

'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loin, grilled squash & torpedo onion, tomatillo & charred corn chow chow

'Round the Bend Farm Tamworth pork loin, grilled squash & torpedo onion, tomatillo & charred corn chow chow

A section of the table from the vineyard looking west

A section of the table from the vineyard looking west

Guests through the grapes

Guests through the grapes

Blueberry

Blueberry

Plating tarragon & lavender shortcakes with lemon curd & Barden Orchard peaches

Plating tarragon & lavender shortcakes with lemon curd & Barden Orchard peaches

Back row (from left to right): Elizabeth LaMantia, Beau Vestal, Tom Zippelli, Oliver Crawford. Front row (from left to right): Christian Morales, Matt Blanchette, Doug Higley, Walter Aldana

Back row (from left to right): Elizabeth LaMantia, Beau Vestal, Tom Zippelli, Oliver Crawford. Front row (from left to right): Christian Morales, Matt Blanchette, Doug Higley, Walter Aldana

Outstanding in the Field

Outstanding in the Field

Elizabeth LaMantia & Beau Vestal catching a bite to eat at the end of the night

Elizabeth LaMantia & Beau Vestal catching a bite to eat at the end of the night

August 24, 2011 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditStumbleuponWhatsappEmail
cooking

Charcutepalooza June: Stuffing: sausage links

by David Dadekian June 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian

Italian sausageI have to confess something upfront about this month’s Charcutepalooza challenge: I don’t like stuffing sausage. I’ve done it before, more times than I really want to think about. I’m sure I’ll do it again. My problem is pretty simple. I’m not a particularly coordinated person. I don’t say that proudly by any means, but I accept the reality that I can barely walk around my bedroom without bumping into a piece of furniture, furniture which has been in the same place for seven years now. I may be understating things when I say my kitchen turns into a small disaster zone when it comes to my taking ground meat, feeding it back into a KitchenAid mixer, having that fill slippery pork casing (intestinal lining) and twisting that into links. Don’t even think I can make any photos while doing these dexterity-requiring moves. My one photo this month is the above “beauty” shot of my finished Italian sausage. I could use four hands for stuffing tasks, even more if I really wanted to photograph it, but my wife doesn’t love playing with ground meat and my daughters aren’t old enough—yet (just you wait girls, just you wait).

So yes, last month’s Charcutepalooza challenge is my preferred way of making sausage at home—formed patties (or sometimes other shapes). But we’re halfway into this Year of Meat and I’m not about to quit now, so I broke out the casing and got to stuffing. First up, the poultry sausage, where I once again decided to try something different and ground some duck confit I had made and stored back in January. The less said about this the better, not because it wasn’t any good, but simply because it didn’t do anything different than the confit non-in-sausage-form. I only made six small links and ate it all by simply lightly grilling it. After making the sausage I thought about doing it again but adding some ground liver or maybe even grinding in some foie gras. That could be really interesting. I didn’t take any photos of the duck links because they were kind of an unappealing brown color, and the last time I posted a photo of a dark brown length of sausage—a photo I thought looked really beautiful—the number of crap jokes made was pretty annoying. Ah the great communicative power of the Internet.

CharcutepaloozaMy duck sausage complete, I could’ve thrown in the towel. But I really wanted to make at least one photo and, having grown up in Rhode Island there are few things more Rhode “Italy” as my friend Rich would call it, than Italian sausage. Prior to a recent renaissance of meat in a casing, it was almost always assumed that any sausage you bought in Rhode Island was an Italian sausage, only really clarified further by deciding if you wanted hot or sweet. There’s also our proximity to Fenway Park where sausage and peppers has been a pre-game meal ritual for my family and friends (and millions of others) since I can remember going there. So I wanted to make Italian sausage (my preference has always been hot) and then make sausage and peppers for my huge-sports-fan wife.

I can’t talk about my recipe. I was asked not to. It’s an old Italian mother’s recipe and truth be told, now that I’ve read a whole bunch of hot Italian sausage recipes online, it’s not really that unique. I also don’t want to say who’s recipe it is because I made one small change (I split the total amount of paprika between regular Hungarian paprika and smoked paprika). I’m sure there’s some blasphemy in making that change, but that’s never stopped me before. The sausage came out great, not perfectly formed—you may be able to make out the right end is split in the photo above—but I managed to make about sixteen sausages without swearing too much. The clean-up honestly took me over an hour and included a vacuum cleaner and wet mop. When eating the whole links on a roll, with lots of peppers and onions, I thought the pork casing I used had a bit too much snap. But when I browned the links and cut them into one inch slices for putting in a gravy (there’s a Rhode Island line for you) it was like eating at my friend’s Italian mother’s house twenty-five years ago. That made it all worth it.

Recipe: Sausage and Peppers (and Onions, can anyone tell me why this sandwich is always just referred to as Sausage and Peppers?)

This is about as basic as it gets, so no typical recipe format. Brown some sausage links, using a tiny bit of olive oil if you need it, your sausage may render out enough fat without the additional oil. Put the sausage aside. If you want, put the sausage straight into buns and wrap loosely in aluminum foil so the sausage steams the bun. Into the browning pan goes much more sliced onion and green peppers than you think you need (along with salt and pepper, a little oregano and some sliced garlic for me). Add olive oil if necessary to saute. You’re going to saute the heck out of the peppers and onions, so it reduces quite a bit. If you want a little sweetness, caramelize the onions a bit, otherwise, take it off the heat when everything’s nice and mushy. Top the sausage-in-the-bun with a ridiculous amount of the peppers and onions so that when you take a bite it falls all over the place. Mangia!

 

 

June 15, 2011 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditStumbleuponWhatsappEmail
cooking

Charcutepalooza May: Grinding: merguez and Mexican chorizo

by David Dadekian May 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian

CharcutepaloozaSometimes, as the poet Burns wrote, “the best laid schemes of mice and men often go awry.” That isn’t to say I didn’t grind meat for this month’s Charcutepalooza challenge. Nor is it to say the final product wasn’t very tasty. It’s that, well, things went awry. Which is why there are only two “before” photos of my sausage making and none of the sometimes-food-porn that I make of the final product (see February’s “The Salt Cure: bacon & pancetta” for glistening pork love).

I love making sausage. I’ve been making it for years. Even when I lived in a studio apartment and only had a tiny kitchenette, I kept a food processor on what ridiculously little counter space I had and would pulse up all kinds of sausage patties. Since then I’ve graduated to a KitchenAid mixer and the very first attachment I bought was the sausage making kit. Which isn’t perfect, I know, but unless you’re going to buy me this beautiful beast, I don’t want to hear it. So when I saw that May’s Charcutepalooza challenge was grinding, I wanted to come up with something that was an additional challenge for me.

Usually I would play with recipes, experiment with different flavors and try something different in the mix. Something that would set me off on a new path. However, having made both merguez and chorizo in the past from Ruhlman & Polcyn’s Charcuterie recipes, I knew that for me they are two of the most bulletproof recipes in the book. I really like them both the way they are (though in typical I-must-do-things-in-the-kitchen-my-way fashion I’ll admit to doubling the red wine and nixing the chilled water in the merguez recipe). So I headed downstairs to the freezer and perused our inventory whiteboard attached to the door to see if it would spark some improvisation.

I knew it would be goofy to share that I have a whiteboard attached to our standalone freezer listing the contents of the freezer, but I didn’t realize how weird it would be describing it.

In the freezer we have a lot of lamb. I love lamb. My grandmother used to make us rib chops all the time and ground lamb is very common in many Armenian dishes. I really love lamb fat too, and we had a few pounds in the freezer, so I decided to use it instead of any pork fat this time out. Then I saw on the whiteboard that there was still some lamb offal left from the lamb I got for Christmas, and since there are very few ways I could sneak half a lamb heart and a liver into my family’s meals, they seemed perfect for sausage. I took from the freezer the lamb fat, heart and liver, along with some pork shoulder and liver, and a bag of corn cobs. Then I meticulously removed the items from the inventory whiteboard of course.

I left the meat items on the counter so they would thaw just a little bit, but not entirely as I wanted them firm to grind. I put the corn cobs into a pot of simmering water to make broth as I had this spring dinner vision in my head. I also stuck the KitchenAid grinder attachment and bowl in the freezer to chill. A couple of hours later I had this bowl of meat, fat and offal.

Clockwise from top: lamb liver, pork liver, pork shoulder, lamb fat, half a lamb heart

Clockwise from top: lamb liver, pork liver, pork shoulder, lamb fat, half a lamb heart

The corn broth had developed nicely so I added a couple of pounds of diced potatoes and some salt and went back to my sausage making. First up, merguez with the lamb heart, liver and fat. I had about 500 grams of heart and liver so I created a quick ratio to the amount of meat called for in the Charcuterie recipe and figured out the amount of fat and other ingredients I needed. Then I began grinding. Here’s where I first realized this might not be the best idea I’ve ever had. Everything ground up fine, I mixed in all the herbs, spices and wine and it certainly smelled like the same merguez I’ve made before. But it didn’t look right. The liver and heart were just too soft and I shouldn’t have thought to treat them like meat. As I tweeted to my friend Janis, the end result looked like an “unattractive meat slurry.”

Not to be deterred I heated up a saute pan, sprayed on a little non-stick cooking spray, took out a #20 disher and dropped two scoops of the liquid sausage into the pan. Kind of like meat pancakes. I cooked them for a few minutes on each side, and while the end result still looked kind of unappealing, it tasted exactly like good, spicy lamb sausage. I made the rest of my merguez-cakes before moving on to the chorizo. The pork ground up much tighter and behaved more like ground meat because of the shoulder. Also the pork liver was a lot more dense and meatier than the lamb liver. I added in the rest of the lamb fat too for texture.

Grinding away, the blurred shapes are arm movement during the long exposure

Grinding away, the blurred shapes are arm movement during the long exposure

So maybe things had gone awry, but I was back on track and having fun grinding. It was then that I realized how much time had passed, dinner wasn’t ready yet, my wife Brenda was hungry and also a little curious about the amount of blood and meaty substance that now covered a lot of our kitchen counter. She was also a tiny bit concerned about the fact that I had prepared sausage for dinner out of a bowl that looked like it had meat batter in it. So instead of taking the time to stuff the chorizo into casings, I whipped in the herbs, spices and liquid, turned the whole thing out onto a huge sheet of parchment paper, rolled it up tight into a 4″ diameter tube, placed it on a sheet pan and stuck it in the freezer. The next day I quickly sliced the chorizo tube into 1/2″ rounds and put those into bags in the freezer, keeping one out to fry up and make sure it tasted like chorizo, which it did.

So I completed the May challenge with two sausages that tasted great. The chorizo I’ll use in all kinds of dishes, maybe even frying up a slice for a quick snack or putting a round on the grill during the summer. The merguez? That went into our late dinner which was: Corn Broth with Potatoes and Freshly Sliced Schartner Farm Asparagus, Accompanied by Floating Rounds of Merguez.

Lawyer-poet John Godfrey Saxe said, “Laws, like sausages, cease to inspire respect in proportion as we know how they are made.” I’m sure there are hundreds of Charcutepalooza posts out today that disprove that quote. Thanks again to Cathy Barrow and Kim Foster. This month you inspired and challenged me.

May 15, 2011 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditStumbleuponWhatsappEmail
cooking

Charcutepalooza April: Hot Smoking: tasso ham and Canadian bacon

by David Dadekian April 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian
Boston Butt being hot smoked into tasso ham

Boston Butt being hot smoked into tasso ham

Another month has passed and it’s time for the fourth Charcutepalooza installment. This time we’re hot smoking (with a little bit of past months’s salt curing and brining thrown in too) and we’re back to all pork using Boston Butt (shoulder) and loin cuts. Once again I turned to Persimmon Provisions for some of my meat, buying some beautifully thick, ruddy Boston Butt from them that I then sliced up into the pieces you see on the Weber grill above.

The loin came from an animal that I saw alive on a Thursday morning, and packed it’s loin (along with a ham larger than my younger daughter) into my trunk on Friday evening. I was fortunate enough to be included in the Cochon and Charcuterie Workshop given at Claddagh Farms by Neal Foley, Kate Hill and Dominique Chapolard. At the pre-workshop workshop Foley demonstrated the slaughter and dressing of two nearly 300 pound Yorkshire pigs he had raised at Claddagh Farms in Montville, Maine.

two Yorkshires hanging in cold room at Claddagh Farms

two Yorkshires hanging in cold room at Claddagh Farms

On the next day, Chapolard demonstrated butchering of these sides of pork, and while the loin pictured below is not the one that I took home (it went home with fellow Charcutepalooz-ian Janis) that is the cut that I bought. I couldn’t help but slice off a few boneless pork chops before I put the rest aside for this month’s Charcutepalooza challenge. Here’s a couple more photos from the Cochon and Charcuterie Workshop before I get into that challenge.

Dominique Chapolard cutting pork with Kate Hill in back instructing

Dominique Chapolard cutting pork with Kate Hill in back instructing

pork loin being trimmed by Dominique Chapolard

pork loin being trimmed by Dominique Chapolard

So the Chartcutepalooza challenge put forth for April was hot smoking, something I enjoy often with one of the ten greatest cooking devices I could own, a Weber kettle grill. I dragged my Weber out of the garage a little early this year as I don’t usually smoke during the first two weeks of April. It’s a good thing I set up a big patio umbrella alongside my Weber because all three times I’ve smoked this month it’s taken place in the rain. In addition to the tasso ham and Canadian bacon for Charcutepalooza, I also smoked some pastrami for a cooking class I taught at Blackbird Farm.

I don’t use any smoking add-ons to the Weber for hot smoking, though I am very tempted to buy the Smokenator 1000 that I’ve been reading about. Basically I hot smoke by lighting a chimney starter about half-full with lump charcoal, dumping the hot coals on one side of the kettle and then covering the coals with wood chips that have been soaking in water. I keep the bottom and top vents of the Weber partially open (adjust as best as you see fit to manage the air flow for temperature control) and place the meat on the opposite side of the kettle from the smoldering heat. Lid up and watch the smoke pour out of the thing. When the smoke starts to thin, add more soaked wood chips. Continue this process until the meat hits its desired internal temperature (I usually also flip the meat once) and you smell like a campfire.

apple wood chips soaking

apple wood chips soaking

soaked wood chips burning on top of coal layer

soaked wood chips burning on top of coal layer

close-up of smoked tasso ham

close-up of smoked tasso ham

I learned about, and first made tasso ham (it’s ridiculously simple) in Louisiana. So to say my tasso recipe is hot would be like saying the bayou in August can get humid. I love tasso and I love making jambalaya with it. I make a lot of jambalaya, not as much as I used to since my daughters aren’t too keen on spicy food yet, but as they learn to love the burn I’ll step up production. My first choice of pork product in jambalaya is andouille sausage, if I can get real, good andouille. Here in New England, the best I can find is from D’Artagnan, which is fine, but not always easy to find. So when there is no andouille, there is tasso.

Here then is, my “standard” jambalaya recipe. I should say, I never quite make it exactly like this recipe (see note at end of recipe), sometimes adding a little more of this or trying a little bit of that, maybe you want shrimp instead of chicken. My adopted family in Louisiana swear by using stewed canned tomatoes, but I prefer plain tomatoes. Just make it with love!

Jambalaya

1/2 lb tasso ham, diced
1 lb chicken meat, cubed
1 Tbs vegetable oil
1 cup red bell pepper, chopped, seeded
1/2 cup celery, chopped
1 cup yellow onions, chopped
kosher salt and ground black pepper to taste
1 can diced tomato
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 bay leaf
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp dried chervil
1 tsp dried parsley
1 tsp paprika
2 1/2 cups chicken stock
Tabasco
1 cup rice

In a large pot over medium heat render diced tasso ham.  Remove tasso and add some of the vegetable oil to pot (if needed, depends on how much you render out of the tasso), cook the cut up chicken. Remove chicken, add rest of the oil if needed, cook the onions, pepper & celery with kosher salt, black pepper and cayenne until softened.  Add tomato, garlic and all the herbs, cook for minute more.  Add chicken stock, cooked tasso ham, cooked chicken and Tabasco.  Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer and add rice.  Simmer until done.

Note: in all honesty, I’ve been making this for years and don’t measure much of it. It’s about 1 bell pepper, 1 stalk of celery, 1 onion, some salt & pepper, and some herbs to taste.  I’m estimating the teaspoons of the dried herbs, it’s probably more like heaping teaspoons in some cases and scant teaspoons in others.

So that’s the tasso part of the challenge, what did I do with that beautiful piece of loin that I hot smoked into Canadian bacon?

pork loin on the Weber smoked into Canadian bacon

pork loin on the Weber smoked into Canadian bacon

We needed something for dinner on Wednesday. I had some leftover chicken, the Canadian bacon, a chunk of really sharp Cheddar cheese and there had been a lot of Twitter chatter about English muffins that day. The chatter was around Michael Ruhlman’s recipe for English muffins, which looks excellent. I am comfortable with Alton Brown’s recipe (available online but also found in his second Good Eats cookbook) so I made that version, but plan on trying Ruhlman’s next time.

I whipped up the English muffins, split a couple after they cooled (as usual, the waiting is the hardest part), layered the chicken, Canadian bacon and Cheddar and put it under the broiler for two minutes. I would call it an Americanized Croque Monsieur with chicken, except with all the things going on I suppose it’s an American/Canadian/Anglicized Croque Monsieur, if any of the foods actually came from the countries they’re named for. Either way it was delicious.

That’s another Charcutepalooza challenge happily completed and consumed. Thank you yet again to Mrs. Wheelbarrow and The Yummy Mummy.

Canadian bacon fresh off the smoke 1

Canadian bacon fresh off the smoke 1

Canadian bacon fresh off the smoke 2

Canadian bacon fresh off the smoke 2

April 15, 2011 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditStumbleuponWhatsappEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Search:

Recent Posts:

  • News Bites: RI Breweries Christmas & New Year’s Hours / Boat House Operation Blue Santa Toy Drive

    December 21, 2022
  • News Bites: New Sons of Liberty Flavored Whiskies / Anchor & Hope Wins Four Awards / RI Seafood Launches New Site and App / Help Giusto Donate Lasagnas / Neon Marketplace Opens in Providence

    December 7, 2022
  • News Bites: Oberlin’s Chef Sukle Opening New Spot and Announces Move / Rhody Feeding Rhody Awarded USDA Grant / Rory’s Market Launces Fresh Produce Program

    November 14, 2022
  • News Bites: Local Agriculture and Seafood Act Grants Now Open / The Good Trade Makers Market Returns / Branchfood Launches RI Operations / BEATNIC Offering BOGO for Beginning of World Vegan Month

    October 25, 2022

Advertisement:

Blackbird Farm

Advertisement:

Advertise with Eat Drink RI

Advertisement:

Advertisement:

Advertisement:

Advertisement:

Food Trucks:

Facebook
My Tweets

Four Time RI Monthly Best of RI Winner for the Eat Drink RI Festival

Four Time RI Monthly Best of RI Winner for the Eat Drink RI Festival

2019 Rhode Island Inno Blazer Award Winner & Two Time 50 On Fire Winner

2019 Rhode Island Inno Blazer Award Winner & Two Time 50 On Fire Winner

Rhode Island Foundation 2014 Innovation Fellow

Rhode Island Foundation 2014 Innovation Fellow

Instagram

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Linkedin
  • Tumblr
  • Youtube
  • Email

Copyright © 2010-2022 Eat Drink RI LLC. All rights reserved.


Back To Top
Eat Drink RI
  • Interviews
    • The Show
    • Subscribe as a Podcast
    • RI Small Business LIVE Forum on Facebook
  • Upcoming Events
  • Food & Beverage Jobs
    • Post A Job
    • Job Dashboard
  • Latest News
  • COVID Support
    • Restaurants with Online Ordering and Take Out
    • Shop Local Food & Drink Businesses Online
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 1 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 2 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 3 of 4
    • The Rhode to Recovery: RI Food and Drink, Part 4 of 4
    • Resource Links for Small Businesses During COVID-19 Crisis
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
    • Shopping
    • About
    • Contact

Terms and Conditions – Privacy Policy