Getting Ready to Find Culinary Bliss at The Lost Kitchen

This past fall I heard about Freedom, Maine’s unique restaurant, The Lost Kitchen. Reservations here are harder to get than tickets to Hamilton! No joke. Chef Erin French has been wowing patrons at her 40 seat establishment in an old grist mill for a few years now. Her restaurant is only open 4 nights a week from May through New Year’s eve; when reservations opened on April 1st, 2017 for the season, she booked all her spots for the entire season on the very first day! She’s gotten some excellent press in the last year from the likes of Food & Wine, The New York Times, and Martha Stewart, adding to the fervor to experience her culinary artistry.

With last year’s crazy reservation process lingering in her mind, Erin French chose to go a little more old-school for reservations this year. Want to dine at The Lost Kitchen in 2018? Find a notecard,  envelope, and a stamp, because reservations are accepted BY MAIL ONLY!

I find the new process utterly charming and perfectly fitting for everything she’s made The Lost Kitchen out to be. It fits. I’m planning on sending my card off to Maine at the designated time, crossing my fingers, and hoping I get a call to schedule a reservation.

(Photos from The Lost Kitchen website and Instagram page)

Want to know more about Erin and what makes The Lost Kitchen so special? Check out the following articles about TLK:

http://www.foodandwine.com/blogs/heartbreaking-story-behind-lost-kitchen-incredible-new-restaurant-freedom-maine

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/01/dining/the-lost-kitchen-maine-erin-french.html

https://www.themainemag.com/eat/the-lost-kitchen/

http://www.themarthablog.com/2017/09/a-visit-to-the-lost-kitchen-in-freedom-maine.html

Now, most importantly, you want to know how to send in a postcard for yourself, right? Read all the details in the PDF. Go to The Lost Kitchen‘s Website, and click on 2018 reservations. https://www.findthelostkitchen.com/

Then simply download the PDF file you’ll see in the bottom left corner of your screen. “TLK 2018 Reservation Process” All the details are there! It’s a five page document, so make sure you read through it carefully. The most important thing to note is that cards will only be accepted from April 1 through April 10. Don’t mail it early! Cards postmarked prior to March 31st will be rejected.

Good luck to all my foodie friends out there! I hope you have a chance to find culinary bliss at The Lost Kitchen this season in Maine!

And just in case you don’t end up being one of the lucky chosen ones who gets to experience The Lost Kitchen this season, Erin French now has a cookbook out! You can purchase a signed copy of “The Lost Kitchen: Recipes and a Good Life Found in Freedom, Maine” right from her website. It’s filled with sumptuous, beautiful recipes lovingly curated from Erin’s own kitchen.

Celia Thaxter’s Garden Announces Summer 2018 Tour Dates

I have always wanted to go out to Appledore Island and see Celia Thaxter’s garden, perhaps this will be my year! I had hoped to fit it in last summer but by the time I’d nailed down a date I could go all the tickets were sold out. I’ve been out to Star Island before (one of Appledore’s neighboring islands) but Appledore is special, because of Celia Thaxter and her garden.

Don’t know the story of Celia Thaxter? Let me fill you in:
Celia Laighton Thaxter was born in Portsmouth, NH in 1835. When she was a young child her family moved to Appledore Island, one of the 10 or so islands that make up the Isles of Shoals, located approximately 6 miles off the coasts of New Hampshire and Maine. (Some of the islands are part of the state of Maine, some are part of New Hampshire. Appledore happens to be located in Maine.) Her father initially held the job of lighthouse keeper on White Island (also part of the Isles of Shoals), but after several years he left that position to build and open the Appledore Hotel on Appledore Island.

Celia grew up on Appledore, and married her father’s business partner Levi Thaxter when she was just 16. The Thaxters initally lived on the mainland, in Watertown and Newburyport, Massachusetts. Celia and Levi Thaxter separated after 10 years of marriage and Celia returned to Appledore Island to both care for her mother and help with the running of her father’s hotel.

While on Appledore she met many literary and artistic luminaries of her day, including Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Whittier, Childe Hassam and William Morris Hunt. There are several well known paintings by Hassam of Celia Thaxter and her gardens.

Celia Thaxter had been writing prose and poetry her entire adult life, but she is most well-known for her book An Island Garden which was published a year before she died at age 58 in 1894.  In the book, Thaxter lovingly describes her beautiful gardens, which she had arranged by height, as opposed to any specific color scheme. Flowers from her garden were made into arrangements that decorated both the Appledore Hotel and her island cottage home.You can see the entire text of Thaxter’s book, An Island Garden, here: 

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/thaxter/garden/garden.html

Celia Thaxter’s garden was reconstructed by Dr. John Kingsbury in 1977. Kingsbury was the founder and first director of the Shoals Marine Laboratory. He located the garden in the exact spot where Celia Thaxter’s garden had been, and some of her original plants still grown in the garden, including snowdrops, day lilies and the hops vine.

Now that you know a little more about Celia Thaxter, wouldn’t you love to visit Appledore and see her island garden? The Shoals Marine Laboratory runs a day trip tour limited to 34 participants per tour. It includes transportation to and from Appledore Island. The trip costs $100 per person; in addition to transportation, this fee covers a guided garden tour as well as a gourmet catered lunch. For more details, as well as the link to register, go to:

www.shoalsmarinelaboratory.org/event/celia-thaxters-garden-tours

These dates are limited and do sell out! There are only 10 tour dates, which means 340 spots. Don’t just dream of warm summer sea breezes and garden beds exploding with color, book your trip soon, or you’ll lose out like I did last summer!