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The
Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
May 26 - June 1, 2005 Edition
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Print: Tina Miller's Cookbook Has Been Stewing for 18 Years
The Martha's Vineyard Times
May 26, 2005
By Perry Garfinkel
In the guise of
a cookbook, its a salute to an oft-unheralded segment of Islanders.
Giving props to local farmers, fishermen, hunters and other gatherers
had been home-grown Tina Millers idea all along and, with the
publication of Vineyard Harvest, she harvests a crop that
she started planting way back in the summer of 1987. It is as much
a testament to Tinas perseverance and her passion for life
particularly Island life.
Now, nearly two decades later, come the fruits. The launch event for
her literary labor of love will be a signing Friday, May 27, from
4 to 6 pm at the Bunch of Grapes bookstore, on Main Street in Vineyard
Haven.
Published by Broadway Books, the book teams Tina with Island photographer
Alison Shaw, whose original, slightly fuzzy close-ups, achieved by
shooting with a shallow depth of field, reflect a new stylistic direction
designed to evoke more intimacy.
But the real stars are the Islanders who feed us: agriculturalists
Andrew Woodruff of Whippoorwill Farm, Jim and Debbie Athearn of Morning
Glory Farm, Rebecca Miller and Matthew Dix of North Tabor Farm, Caitlin
Jones and Allen Healy, Marie Scott of Beetlebung Farm, Debbie Farber
and Alan Cottle of Blackwater Farm, and Freddie Fisher of Nip-N-Tuck
Farm; fishermen Robbie Coad, Louie Larsen, Scott Terry, and oyster
farmer Jack Blake of Sweet Neck farm; preserves queen Linda Alley;
hunter Danny Bryant; and sheepherders Allen Whiting of Whiting Farm
and Clarissa Allen of Allen Farm.
Their brief profiles are sandwiched between the photos and simple
but elegant recipes based on Tinas philosophy of cooking.
Easy, realistic approach
It shouldnt be rocket science, Tina said in an interview.
These are realistic recipes based on three steps: prepare, mix
and cook.
Thats Tinas whole mantra it should be easy
to make, not daunting, said Alison.
So, for instance, introducing her recipe for homard a larmoricaine,
Island Style, she begins, Do not be intimidated by the name.
It turns out to be steamed lobster with a sauce made by simmering
the shells in vermouth, tomatoes and cognac. Also included are familiar
dishes we all would like to make better: heirloom tomato-basil soup,
steamers, BBQ ribs, mini cod cakes, Portuguese kale soup, saffron
chicken stew in all about 100 recipes organized by season.
Along with suggestions of what to keep in the pantry and the basic
cooks tools, a handy back page lists all the Island purveyors
with addresses and phone numbers.
The ingredients, Tina emphasized, should be local, in-season, and
grown, raised, or caught by people with integrity, people like the
Islanders who have inspired her her whole life.
Tina was last seen publicly on the Island restaurant landscape at
the Café Moxie, which she opened on Main Street in Vineyard
Haven in 1998 and which immediately became the next hot Island restaurant,
evening guests running the Vineyard gamut from familiar year-round
faces to the literati and gliterati of summer. All shared at least
one value: appreciation for the fare that combined Tinas ideas
with chef Merrick Carrieos.
That successful venture had been preceded by the Roadhouse, a West
Tisbury restaurant she owned from 1989 until 1992 which some still
remember fondly for its ribs and red beans and rice (its where
the Bittersweet is now).
Family comes first
But after several years at the Moxie, in 2001, now with her second
child, Tina decided she had gotten restaurants out of my system
and I wanted to concentrate on my family.
Now she is a private chef for several lucky families on the Island
and devotes the rest of her time to her husband, electrician Steve
Gallagher, and their two sons, Henry, 8, and Theo, 5, in a house in
the woods they had built in 2003 off the Panhandle in West Tisbury,
a stones throw from one of the many places Tina lived since
being born here in 1964.
Many people know that Tinas father, Alan Miller, is a piece
of Island lore. He was one of the Black Dog Taverns founders.
But hers was not a privileged life. There were hardscrabble years.
As she admits in her introduction, We never had a lot of money
and our kitchen at home was rarely well-stocked with food. True,
the B.D. kitchen was like her nursery for a while, but it was at her
friend Beach Bennetts house that she developed a taste for cooking.
Making what became known as Miller-meter sandwiches to
endear herself to her friends family, she also discovered the
feelings that drives many chefs: I was able to experience a
bit of instant success and appreciation.
Cut to
years of working in kitchens, first as a dishwasher, then
as a waitress, finally on the line, from here to Key West to L.A.
and back.
The idea for the book came in that summer of 87, when she was
23, living in John and Bea Whitings boathouse on Tisbury Great
Pond in Chilmark. She worked for them as gardener, shingler, all-around
go-to girl. She was moved not just by the plentitude of naturally
growing things to eat surrounding her from the gardens and
from the pond but also by the visual beauty of it all. She
began taking pictures, cataloguing recipes and ideas that formed the
foundation of Vineyard Harvest. Focusing on the local
I never wanted it to be a cutesy Marthas Vineyard cookbook,
with seashells in the borders or using celebrities recipes,
she said. It was always going to be about the people and the
produce that come from here.
From wanting to write a cookbook to actually getting a publisher is
no mean feat, especially if youre not a so-called celebrity
chef. When she saw a customer from the Roadhouse listed as a Broadway
cookbook editor in a food magazine, Tina went to New York to meet
with her. That editor was not too encouraging, suggesting instead
Tina try regional publishers. But undaunted, by the summer of 2002
she had pulled together a proposal and through an agent sent it to
15 publishers. It was that editor at Broadway who ultimately bought
the book.
How Alison joined the project is an odd coincidence as well. The two
knew each other because both had children in the same school. I
saw her every day at pre-school, said Tina, and have always
admired her work but I was too intimidated to ask her.
Meanwhile, one of Alisons book editors casually mentioned
Tina was working on a Vineyard cookbook, recalled Alison, and
I immediately asked her, Do you think maybe, maybe Tina might
be looking for a photographer and consider me?
The pair spent nine months setting up shots together. Alison wanted
the look to match Tinas culinary sensibilities. We worked
with available light, no strobes, no food stylists, said Alison.
We shopped at the thrift shop for props. Its friendly,
informal food and I wanted to make it look like you could sit down,
pull up your chair, and dig in.
By shooting with a short depth of field, one detail of an image jumps
out at you. This style makes you focus on one part and you say,
Oooh, Im going to have to eat that.
And now its time for everyone to come to the table and dig in.
Meet Tina Miller at the Bunch of Grapes bookstore, Main St., Vineyard
Haven, Fri., May 27, 4-6 pm.
Perry Garfinkel, a former Times Calendar Editor whose article on Buddhism
will appear in National Geographic Magazine in December, is now at
work on a book, Buddha or Bust, to be published by Harmony
Books in 2006. |
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Martha's Vineyard Times 2005 - www.mvtimes.com
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