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An enchanting bed and breakfast in the heart of Camden village that Fodor’s considers “An elegant and sophisticated retreat and culinary destination,” this Mansard style Victorian built in 1835 offers a unique experience in pampered luxury.

Archive for the ‘Dining at the Inn’ Category

Spring Food & Beer Pairing

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

BeerJoin us on Friday, April 10, 2009 for our Spring Food and Beer Pairing Event. We have crafted a dinner menu and matched it with some fascinating beers to create a feast for your senses. The dinner menu consists of five courses with separate beer pairings for three of the dishes. Dinner is $55 per person.

Menu:

Maple-Roasted Quail with a Spring Herb Quinoa (Andrew’s Northern Brown Ale)

Cream of Asparagus Soup with Crisp Pancetta and a Boursin Custard (Oaked Arrogant Bastard Ale from Stone)

Maine Blueberry Sorbet

Seared Halibut with Creamed Spring Peas and Spaetzle (German Hefe-Weizen – Kulmbacher from Kapuziner)

Chocolate-Almond Torte with Almond Macaroons

Maine Maple Sunday

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

CB108218Today is Maine Maple Sunday and Maine sugar shacks are bustling with activity, many open for visitsors, some offering food and others featuring entertainment. To celebrate that all so spectacular tree (and it’s bounty) we are featuring a Maple menu at the Inn.

 

Maine Maple Sunday Dinner Menu

Maple Seared Duck Breast with Peppered Tropical Fruits and Walnut Oil

 

Sweet Potato, Rutabaga and Green Apple Soup with a Maple Cream

 

Maine Blueberry Sorbet

 

Maple Glazed Salmon Fillet with Wilted Spinach and Jasmine Fried Rice 

 

Maple-Walnut Soufflé with a Maple Crème Anglaise 

 

Home Made Maple Candies and Chocolates

Easter at the Hartstone Inn

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Join us on Easter, Sunday, April 12th for our Easter Brunch at 11:00 am or for our Easter Dinner at 5:00 pm. Chef Michael has created some holiday menus and will be displaying some of his antique Easter chocolate molds, complete with chocolate eggs and bunnies. 

Easter Brunch Menu

 Mango and Passion Fruit Smoothie

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Baked Bosc Pear with a Raspberry-Star Anise Sauce and Lemon-Almond Biscuit

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Hartstone Benedict with either House Smoked Salmon or Prosciutto

 or

Shrimp and Mushroom Quiche with Gruyere Cheese and tossed Greens

 or

Grilled Atlantic Salmon with wilted Spinach Walnut Dressing

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Assorted Tarts and Petite Fours

 

$23.95 per person

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Easter Dinner Menu

Maine Seafood Tartlet with a Chive Custard

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Sweet Potato, Rutabaga and Green Apple Soup with a Maple Cream

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Maine Blueberry Sorbet

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Braised Lamb Shanks “En Croute” with a Celeriac Puree and Grilled Vegetables

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White Chocolate Soufflé with a Pistachio-Crème Anglaise

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Easter Candies and Chocolates

  

$45.00 per person plus taxes and gratuity

Atlantic Salmon Cake with a Mint and Sweet Pea Cream

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Atlantic Salmon Cake

Atlantic Salmon Cake

 2 Tablespoons, plus 1 teaspoon canola oil

1 shallot, minced

1/4 cup dry white wine

1/2 cup heavy cream

1/4 cup, plus 1 Tablespoon unsalted butter, cut into small pieces and soft

1 teaspoon lemon juice

1 cup shelled fresh peas (or frozen)

1 teaspoon minced fresh mint leaves

Kosher salt and ground white and black pepper

1 pound fresh salmon fillet, skinless and boneless

1 egg white

2 Tablespoons heavy cream

3 Tablespoons minced celery

1 Tablespoon minced scallions

1 teaspoon finely chopped dill

2 Tablespoons sour cream

1 cup panko bread crumbs

1/4 cup canola oil

1 European cucumber

Fresh dill and mint for garnish

 

1.      Heat a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Add 1 teaspoon canola oil and the minced shallot and stir for 30 seconds. Deglaze with the white wine and reduce until it is almost dry. Add the cream and reduce by half, until the sauce thickens. Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the 1/4 cup of soft butter. Add the lemon juice and season with a pinch of white pepper and salt to taste. Cover and reserve in a warm place.

2.      If you are using fresh peas, place them in a small saucepan with the remaining Tablespoon of butter and 1/4 cup water. Bring to a boil and simmer over medium heat for about 3 minutes. For frozen peas, simply heat them in a pan with the butter. Season with salt and white pepper.

3.      Place half of the warm peas in a blender with the minced mint and the sauce and blend until smooth. Cover and reserve in a warm place. Cover the remaining peas and reserve in a warm place as well.

4.      To make the salmon cakes, divide the salmon into 2 equal pieces. Finely dice half of the salmon into 1/4-inch cubes and reserve. Coarsely chop the remaining salmon into1/2-inch pieces and place in the bowl of a food processor. Process for 30 seconds to make a smooth puree. Add the egg white and heavy cream and blend for 20 seconds longer, scraping down the bowl as necessary. Remove the mixture to a medium-sized bowl and stir in the minced celery, scallions, dill and sour cream. Season with a few pinches of salt and a pinch pf white pepper.

5.      Form the salmon mixture into four even sized balls and then form into cakes. Place the panko bread crumbs in a bowl and add one salmon cake. Coat the cake with panko by pressing it quite firmly into the cake until the cakes are uniformly coated with the bread crumbs. Repeat with the remaining cakes.

6.      Heat a large sauté pan over medium-high heat and add the canola oil. Pan-fry the cakes, cooking them for 2 minutes on each side, or until they are golden brown and cooked through.

7.      Thinly slice the cucumber with a mandoline and arrange them around the rim of each serving plate in a circular overlapping pattern. Sprinkle the cucumbers with kosher salt and black pepper.

8.      To serve, ladle the pea sauce inside the ring created by the cucumber slices. Place a salmon cake in the center of each serving plate. Sprinkle the exposed sauce with the remaining peas and garnish with the dill and mint sprigs. 

 

Final Vegetable Harvest of 2008

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

After weeks of cold weather, snow and ice, the ground has thawed enough for me to get my final harvest of carrots out of my raised bed garden. If you recall from my May 12, 2008 blog article titled “New Herb & Vegetable Garden Beds” I planted the carrot seeds on April 15th, harvesting most of the vegetables throughout the summer, and left a few patches of carrots to mature in the ground until yesterday (December 10, 2008.) With numb fingers, I returned to the kitchen and washed the dirt from the carrots. They were sweet and delicious. I have a carrot soup on the menu this Sunday, December 14, 2008 and they will be the star attraction. Watch for the carrot soup recipe in an upcoming blog.

I had a great deal of fun with my gardens this summer and with expert assistance from Shelley (my vegetable garden guru), I had the best yield of home grown fruits and vegetables ever to use in the restaurant. With my last crop harvested and my fingers thawed, it is time to sit down and start planning next year’s gardens. Below I have included a few pictures from my 2008 harvest.

Portabella Mushroom Soup with a Dry Sherry Cream

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

This recipe is from my second cookbook “In the Kitchen with Michael Salmon” and serves 6.
1 Tablespoon canola oil
1 cup finely chopped yellow onion
1 pound portabella mushrooms, sliced
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup dry sherry
1/2 cup dry white wine
3 1/2 cups chicken stock
1 small bay leaf
Kosher salt and white pepper to taste
Sherry Cream (recipe below)
Croutons and coarsely chopped Italian parsley as garnish

Heat the canola oil in a 4-quart saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the onions and sweat for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the sliced portabella mushrooms and cook for 6 minutes, stirring occasionally, as the mushrooms begin to release their juice.
Stir in the flour and stir continually for 2 minutes. Add the dry sherry and white wine and cook for 2 minutes, using the spoon to release the flour mixture from the bottom of the pan. Add the chicken stock and bay leaf and bring the soup to a boil. Reduce the heat to a simmer and cook for 25 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Remove the bay leaf from the soup and puree the soup with either an immersion blender or a regular household blender until smooth and return it to the pan. Season with salt and white pepper and serve in a bowl with a dollop of the sherry cream, some croutons and coarsely chopped Italian parsley.

Sherry Cream
1/3 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon dry sherry
Small pinch of white pepper
Large pinch of kosher salt
Place the heavy cream in a cold mixing bowl and whisk on high speed until stiff. Add the sherry, salt and white pepper and whisk to combine.

Zeph wins first runner up award in Maine Lobster Cook Off

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Congratulations Zeph!!! Yesterday at the Blaine House (the official residence of the Governor of Maine), the Hartstone Inn’s Sous Chef, Zeph Belanger, was named first runner up in a state-wide Maine lobster cooking competition. Here he is pictured (holding his award) with Maine’s First Lady Karen Baldacci. The annual competition for “Maine’s Chef of the Year” is organized by the Maine Lobster Promotion Council and sponsored by Maine Food and Lifestyle Magazine.

Zeph’s dish was a Maine Lobster Salad with Ginger, Daikon, Bacon and a warm Ponzu Dressing. Look for it on upcoming menus at the Inn. Zeph started working at the Hartstone Inn in October 2007 and has become a valuable member of our team. Like myself, Zeph started working in restaurants when he was a young teen-ager and was destined to excel in the kitchen. He is a very talented cook with great “kitchen sense,” a drive and curiosity to learn and discover all there is to know about food. This spring, Zeph attended the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone in St. Helena, California (Napa Valley) and took a course on Mediterranean cuisine.

Congratulations again Zeph, we are all very proud of you.

Click here to see Zeph’s Recipe.

Photo courtesy of Jim Bazin – Creative Director, Maine Food and Lifestyle Magazine

Christmas Dinner Menu – Reserve Now

Saturday, December 1st, 2007

We’re gearing up for the holidays. Come and savor the season with us and let our holiday decor put you in a festive mood. Our two-night gourmet getaway packages are available from $280-$440 (based on your room selection). If you’re feeling like a little extra pampering, we would be happy to schedule a spa treatment for you in our new on-site massage room.

Chef Michael has put together the following menu for Christmas Dinner:

  • • Goose and Spinach Cannelloni with a Sun Dried Tomato Tapenade
  • • Maine Shrimp Bisque with a Brandy Cream
  • • Cranberry Granite
  • • Pepper and Thyme-Crusted Standing Rib Roast with Yorkshire Pudding and Gruyere Gratin Potatoes
  • • Eggnog Soufflé with a Vanilla Crème Anglaise

Happy Holidays from Camden, Maine!