Still Life, Connecticut Style
Food memories are some of the strongest. As a lifelong food traveller, I have had the pleasure of enjoying many cuisines and loving most of them. And yet, the taste of home for me is always one of the most satisfying. On a recent trip to Connecticut I was able to indulge in two of my favorite baked goods: Portuguese rolls and chocolate chip cookies.
If you haven't experienced the airy goodness that is a Portuguese roll, I'm sorry and I hope you get to the northeast to try one. I didn't realize that they were not available to everyone until I moved to California and my queries were met with a puzzled, but pleasant "what?"
Thankfully, the folks at Chaves Bakery in Bridgeport, CT are keeping the tradition alive. What started out as one family bakery is now a chain of nine stores where you can still hear Portuguese spoken between the staff and customers. Aside from the rolls and other freshly baked breads, they stock an amazing assortment of traditional Portuguese pastries including pasteis de nata, custard-filled pastry cups.
But really, I'm just there for the rolls. These pillows of deliciousness are good at any time of day. In the morning, they are typically slathered with a slab of butter and make the perfect accompaniment to a cup of tea or coffee. You can also gild the lily with an egg and ham or bacon, but it's really not necessary.
At lunch, Portuguese rolls make a terrific foil to lunch meats and even messy meatball and chicken parmesan sandwiches. They soak up sauce, but don't get mushy. In a pinch, you can freeze them and they toast up beautifully. Whenever I am in town, I pick up a dozen to take home.
All in all the perfect food. And for dessert, you can have a bakery chocolate chip cookie. My formative years were spent in Connecticut and there were many summer days spent on the porch of my grandmother's beauty salon, listening to gossip and watching the world go by. Aside from the old-fashioned coke machine, with bottles, not cans, the best part of spending the day at the salon was its perfect location across the street from Ann's Bakery. Ann's is no longer in business, but the legacy of their chocolate chip cookies live on in other bakeries around Bridgeport.
They also made beautiful cakes and pastries, but as a kid, I went for the cookies. So what was so great or different about them? The picture tells the story, but I will try to add color. They are big. In fact, at Chaves Bakery, home of the Portuguese rolls, you can get the cookies in small (normal size), medium (saucer-sized), and large (salad-plate). And, they are somehow a little salty and sweet at the same time, but never too sweet. And the dough has a sandy, crumbly texture which is so different from super-buttery, chewy texture of most bakery cookies today.
You can't go home again, but you can make a pilgrimage for your favorite foods. We still need to talk about hot dogs and lobster rolls. A post for another day...