Archive for September, 2011

Favorite Photo of the Week!

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011 by Zingerman's Deli

Thank you David Johnson!

Five Spanish Oils Streak to the Top of the Heap

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011 by Zingerman's Deli

Spanish cooking today is alive, energized and creative. The regional origins and diversity of the peninsula’s many cooking traditions are being celebrated in cities and small towns alike. If you want to eat well in Europe there are many places you can, go to. But if you can only pick one, and the cooking is what pushes you most to a particularly country over another, I’d pretty certainly send you to Spain.

’11 is the “Year of the Spanish Olive Oil.”

Listed below are five special oils. All are on the cutting edge of the oil world. All are excellent. From gentlest to giant – all good, all special, all well made, all at the cutting edge. Try any one of them, or better yet, taste them all. I have, and I happily stand by — and serve — all of them.

Mariano’s Oil from the Sierra de Gretos
This oil is really pretty much a prototype for what we like to sell here at Zingerman’s — great flavor, fantastic people, and a great story line, all packed into one very limited and very tasty product. Since it’s the gentlest and most elegant of this bunch of Spanish oils I opted to use it to lead off this essay.

This oil is made in such small quantities that I’m actually slightly reluctant to talk about it here. While there’s more now than there was when we started buying it ten years or so ago, there’s still very little to be had — what started with a 100 liters a year is now up to the superbly tiny quantity of 250. But the thing is that the man who makes it — Mariano Sanz Pech — is such a wonderful person, such a staunch champion of traditional foods, his oil is so distinctive, and his entire food and tradition-loving family so fantastic that I want to give credit where credit is due even if supplies are short.

I’ve known Mariano for probably nearly twenty years now; we first met I think over a table of traditional Spanish cheeses, then and now one of his big causes. At the time the cheeses were almost unknown in the U.S., but I’d read all about them and was excited to find someone who was ready to actually sell them to us!

Personally, I can’t help but be swayed by the man’s enthusiasm and dedication to great food, history and tradition — every time we meet up (which seems to be every couple years) I come back with ever-greater commitment to supporting his work.

Tasting the oil is, actually, much like meeting Mariano. It starts out softly, down to earth but still surprisingly suave, almost sweet. But as you spend more time with it you realize that it’s well grounded, complex, anything but one-dimensional, with a surprisingly peppery and rather opinionated finish. I’ve used it for salads, with grilled vegetables, on cooked beans (a favorite of the region), or soups. Pour it onto a thick slice of toasted country bread, sprinkle on a pinch of sea salt and add a couple roasted red Piquillo peppers from the Spanish Basque country. It’s surprisingly good on the Roadhouse bread — its sweet, subtle pepperiness blends beautifully with the cornmeal and molasses. There’s a touch of banana and maybe even kiwi in the flavor of the oil that make it a particularly good pairing with fruit — drizzle some onto slices of ripe apples, pears or plums this fall. Better yet, toss the fruit with the oil and roast it at high temperature. Serve the roasted fruit with cheese, a glass of dessert wine, or even gelato.

Naturvie Olive Oil from Spain
This oil comes from the western part of Spain (the land of Iberico ham if you’re into great pork), from a family-owned farm just a bit south of the beautiful walled town of Merida. The farm is run by Fernando Sanchez-Mohino — he made his career success as an attorney, but decided later in life to pursue his passion, to take on the production of olive oil. The family has run the farm for three generations now and he’s spent years working on improving the quality of the oil. They’re doing a very nice job of mindful, sustainable farming with a bit of an eye towards biodynamics. As, I suppose, is fitting, the oil’s following around here is growing as well.

The oil is from the Cornezuela varietal, an interesting old-school olive that’s unique to that area. All the olives for this oil are taken from trees planted no later than the year 1800. You read that right — all the trees in use are over two hundred years old. This isn’t just a romantic marketing tale — old trees of this sort have very low yields but produce oils with very interesting complex flavors. The olives are handpicked and then delivered to the press in under three hours. The complexity of the oil’s flavor reflects the age of the trees, the care taken in handling and the quickness of the press. (The Les Costes oil from Catalunya comes from the other end of the country, but is also made with olives from very old (four hundred years-plus, in this case) trees.

The flavor of the Naturvie oil is an interesting blend of sweet and spicy, almond and olive… really a very nice oil and one that’s little known in the US. It’s not the boldest oil of our bunch; if you want to get a big dose of big (which I like a lot by the way), I’d go with La Spineta from Puglia, Pasolivo from Central California, or the Canena from southern Spain. By contrast the Naturvie oil is… a bit more careful, not controlled but not out of control either. More like an elder statesman of the jazz world who’s spent a lifetime figuring out how to pack more complexity into a coda, keeping it all in a tight space, but moving marvelously around it with a lot of subtle but significant, edgy and very interesting energy. If you want to make a meaningful friend with a new olive oil, one that you’re likely to like the more time you spend with it, make a note to taste the Naturvie next time you’re in.

Marqués de Valdueza from Mérida
I have to admit to being moderately biased toward this oil — you’d be hard pressed to find any product that’s a whole lot more rooted in family and national history. The family — formally known as the House of Álvarez de Toledo — has been a fixture in Spanish history for something like ten centuries. I can’t tell you it’s some romantic rags to riches story — at least for the last nine hundred years, the family has been hugely successful. Best I can tell, quality and care have been a part of most everything they seem to have done, and this oil is no exception.

The Valdueza oil is composed from a unique blend of four different varietals that grow on the farm: Hojiblanca and Picual are standard varietals from southern Spain and are not uncommon out west as well. The former brings a soft, warm, nutty butteriness; the latter offers hints of artichoke, green asparagus, a bit of earthiness and a touch of black pepper in the finish. Arbequina arrived in the region only recently, planted for its good yields and round soft flavor; here in Extremadura, at least on the Álvarez de Toledo family farm, it tastes a bit different than what I’ve experienced in Catalonia, where it typically comes from — less appley, more olivey.

Most interesting to me though is the oil from the Morisca olives, which are unique to the area; this variety offers a fair bit of pepper, and interesting fruit, almost apricot in a way, with a touch of green grass and green tomato in there, too.
All told they produce about 30,000 bottles a year — huge by the standards of artisan friend Mariano Sanz, but relatively modest by comparison to any large-scale commercial producer. As is true of all these high-end, well-made, oils, there’s a complexity and an elegance (and a commensurate higher cost) that will likely mean that you’ll want to use it for finishing — at the table: drizzled on great greens from the market, or on top of a bit of roasted meat or vegetables.

Marques De Griñon from Toledo
I like this oil now as much — actually more I think — than I did when we first got it. It probably didn’t hurt that I got the chance to visit the farm, nor that, because of the Falco family’s drive to make everything they do better each year, new tweaks to their already strong technology have helped make what was already really good even better still.

Carlos Falco gets the credit for getting it going. An agricultural engineer who went to study oenology at UC Davis back in the early seventies, he did a lot of pioneering work with both grape growing and winemaking — he was the first to use drip irrigation in grape growing and the first to plant Syrah and Petit Verdot grapes in Spain. The quality of his work is widely recognized — you’ll find Griñon wines on many a top list.

More recently, he turned his attention to olive oil, with equally excellent results. Over his years in the wine world Carlos had befriended the Marchesi Antinori, one of the big innovators in Tuscany for both high quality wine and oil. Marchesi encouraged Falco to get going on the oil and linked him up with an Italian oil consultant by the name of Marco Mugelli. Falco talked Mugelli — who was reluctant to work with Spain — into coming to help him at the Griñon estate. Mugelli forgot to go and missed the flight and the meeting never happened. For many folks that would be the end of things, but to their credit both parties kept going and I’m glad they did since the Griñon oil is so darned good, with a remarkably big, fresh flavor and long finish that will add to most any dish you use it with.

A blend of Arbequina and Picual olives, all grown on the farm, the oil has a big, big aroma and the flavor follows right along — it’s not overpowering in the least but it is big, lusciously smooth, eye-openingly, well-balanced, savory, green and very, very, very good. In truth, I think this oil’s got all those flavor notes that people look for (or, I could say, I look for) in big green oils — hints of raw artichoke, green tomato, olives of course, a bit of pepper. I don’t want to get caught up in excessive adjectivization — just taste it.

Castillo de Canena Oil from Andalucia
The last, biggest, and boldest of this quintet of top-quality, cutting-edge Spanish oils, the Canena comes here from Jaen, in the southwestern region of Andalucia, the area of Spain that produces more oil than any other, by far. The harvest starts very, very early by typical Spanish standards, meaning, again, high flavor, low yield. The fruit is taken from the tree by hand and the olives are at the press in less than three hours after they leave the trees, minimizing the risk of oxidation, protecting the flavor of the oil that emerges. Once pressed, the oil goes into nitrogen flush stainless steel tanks in cooled cellars, which again acts to protect the quality of the oil. Bottling is done to order, always with a quick flush of nitrogen to keep the oil intact after it’s left the estate.

The Canena oil is made from Picual olives, the variety that’s unique to this region of the world (though, of course, others have now planted it elsewhere). The Picual olive produces distinctive oil, generally very earthy and big of flavor. Unfortunately, in too many cases that earthiness can be overbearing. I’ve probably tasted hundreds of Picual oils from Andalucia over the last twenty years, but the Canena oil is not only likeable, it’s got me as passionate as I’ve been on this region’s offerings. It’s got all the things I like about this sort of oil — it’s earthy, it’s well-rounded, it’s big but still really balanced, its aroma is pretty amazing, and the finish is very fine. On the flip side, it avoids all those off flavors and out of balance earthiness that are excessively present in so many Picual oils from the area.

Unlike some of the other oils above, I’ve not yet been to the estate, so my passion comes only from tasting, not from a first hand bonding with the people and the land. However, I can tell you truthfully that over the two years since I first tasted it, I’ve consistently gone out of my way to taste it over and over again. You should ask for a taste next time you’re at the Deli!

Take a picture in our photo op board, send it to us, and we’ll post it here!

Friday, September 2nd, 2011 by Zingerman's Deli


The three cute heads are Sam (pickle), Zoe (sandwich) and Ian (hammer) from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. They are the children of Paul’s (Paul Saginaw Co-founder of Zingerman’s) nephew and niece who were visiting before school starts. That makes Paul their great uncle and they think he is!


Chief Saginaw (92 years old), Zoe, Sam, Lisa, Ian, Dave!

Sam’s a planner and he’s now decided he wants to work at the Deli while he goes to UM and he’s committing to working hard to make that happen. He did a great job of bussing their table after breakfast. Photo was shot immediately after french toast and cream cheese all over an everything bagel.

Take a picture in our photo op board and send it to: merchandisingatzingermansdotcom

Ari’s New Finds – Paradox at Play in Product Selection

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by admin

[Excerpt from our Zingerman’s Newsletter July-August 2011, view the whole article here]

1. Tamworth Bacon from Herb Eckhouse
In this case, I suppose, the paradox isn’t really mine — Herb Eckhouse is another Jewish guy who’s been happily having his way with cured pork for probably nine or ten years now. His cured ham, pancetta (unsmoked Italian-style bacon), and guanciale (cured pork jowl) are all consistently excellent. And now, he’s added one more amazing product to his porketoire — this time it’s a bacon cured from the bellies of specially raised Tamworth hogs.

As was the case with Alex, and the very fine beef from Cornman Farms, the Tamworth is a very long term project. “This bacon was really an act of faith,” Herb told me as we were getting ready for Camp Bacon this spring. “Four years ago we made a few legs of Tamworth prosciutto to see what it would be like. It was totally delicious. In fact our buddy Bruce Aidells (chef, and author of Bruce Aidells’s Complete Book of Pork) said the Tamworth pork was as good or better than any he had had anywhere — Spain, Italy, you name it. This one was better! Unfortunately, when we went back to get more meat, we couldn’t find any. The breed is classified as “threatened” and there aren’t that many of them to be found — just a few here and there. Russ Kremer who is one of our favorite — probably now our favorite — pig farmer because he really does offer his pigs a place to roam outside on the hillside once they are out of the nursery is also is a Tamworth enthusiast. He has Tamworth lines that he has kept free of the modern pig breeding that has made pork too lean and caused the animals to become prone to stress. After four years of asking, begging, pleading, cajoling, guilt-tripping, and visiting we finally got a Tamworth program going with him. Our first delivery was October, 2010. Now we buy all of the legs and bellies he’s got!”

Having done a fair bit of research over the years while writing Zingerman’s Guide to Better Bacon, I can tell you that a lot of the old sources list the Tamworth hogs as hogs that were bred specifically to have their pork cured up into bacon. Herb told me pretty much what other sources have said as well — the belly meat from the Tamworth is supposed to be particularly tender. It’s also known for having a near perfect balance of fat and lean, and its flavor gets particularly sweet during the maturing.

You can of course do pretty much anything you like with the Tamworth bacon — it’s easy to fry up lightly with eggs, put on BLTs, chop and toss with pasta or whatever. The key of it for me is that the fat is super rich, almost buttery in texture. Given that Herb has even more practice preparing it than I do, I asked him for his input. “I like it very lightly cooked at low heat.” Perhaps even better still is that you can eat it raw, just as you would pancetta or prosciutto. Since we make and preserve it the way we do all our meats — drying it to remove the moisture — it is shelf stable. You can enjoy “bacon sashimi” if you want. “When you eat it without cooking it,” Herb said, “you can really taste the sweetness of the meat. But in a way, I guess, the light cooking is kind of the best of both worlds — the succulent melted fat with the sweet meat flavor. Because it is dry-cured and has a low water content, the fat has a lower smoke point so however you cook it, we recommend doing so at low heat. We use no sugar, dextrose, molasses, or any sweetening of any kind, yet that bacon is sweet. I love eating it — surprise! Probably, as important as anything is the soft, smoky, very clean, no burn aftertaste — it just lingers. We use only pork, sea salt, and spices [black and white pepper, rosemary, bay leaf].”

Herb’s right — it’s excellent on an antipasto plate. Great diced up, lightly fried and then tossed with pasta (put the pasta right into the hot fat with the bacon, pour into warm bowls and then grate on a bit of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese and plenty of black pepper.

2. Owens Creek Tuscan Varietal Olive Oil
A great story, a great oil, and a great cause all in one nicely labeled green glass bottle. This is the second oil to arrive on our carefully curated shelves from Walter Hewlett’s Owen’s Creek Ranch out in the Central Valley of California. I’ve written a lot about Walter, his oil and his work in recent newsletters so I won’t go on at length here. If you want the full, in depth, essay, by all means email me at ariatzingermansdotcom and I’ll send it your way tout de suite. The long story in its short form isthat Walter Hewlett is the son of Bill Hewlett of, you know, Hewlett-Packard fame. More relevantly in the moment though, he’s also the grandson of A. Walter Hewlett, who, while far less familiar to the average American than his supremely famous business building son, contributed mightily to the science of cardiology here at U of M and then at Stanford in the early years of the 20th century.

I met the modern day Walter Hewlett at the Deli last year. He was back in February to do a class on his oil at the Deli and also on campus at U of M. In short, Walter’s a super nice guy who’s got literally something like six graduate degrees (computer musicology is my personal favorite). He’s also a past marathon winner, concert viola player and, most recently, a very good olive oil producer. Clearly, underachieving is not a big problem in the Hewlett family. Despite everything though, Walter is very down to earth, very kind, very generous, and very, very excited about this oil. Both it, and the work in cardiovascular research, are his causes, and he very clearly cares deeply about each.

In sync with the spirit of generosity that’s so important in all the work we try to do, Walter decided that he would donate $4 from every bottle of the oil we sell to fund research at U of M’s Cardiovascular Center. Hard to argue with any of it — good oil, good guy, good cause. We’ve been getting the Owen’s Creek oil that Walter makes from Sicilian varietals for about eight months already and I’ve been a big

fan of it throughout. Just recently we’ve added a second oil to Walter’s wonderful repertoire. This time, it’s Tuscan varietals that are turning the trick. Really lushly green, more peppery than the other, a bit more of the artichoke and green tomato elements that are a hallmark of Tuscan oils. Great on salads, bruschetta, steak and sautéed swordfish or pretty much any other full flavored dish.

3. Sun-Dried Tomato Spread from Tunisia
I know that sun-dried tomatoes may seem like yesterday’s news. Given my aversion for things that seem to slide into the world of trendiness, I can’t say that I’d ever have listed anything made with sun-dried tomatoes on a list of my favorite things. And yet… here they are. This sauce is simply way too good to go forward with this list and not have it on here. Having eaten about a jar a week for the last few months… how can I keep it off? I can’t let popularity stand in the way of something really good to eat. While the sun-dried tomato sauce may be new here, the topic of Tunisian food definitely is not. If you’ve been around here much at all over the last few years you’ve likely heard me go on at GREAT length about how much I LOVE the harissa sauce from the Mahjoub family. Seriously, I’ve written thousands of words on the subject, have done a dozen different recipes that use it and recommended it to hundreds if not thousands of customers who, like me, love fantastic, full-flavored, well-balanced, hot and spicy stuff. The revolution earlier this year has certainly changed the political landscape, but harissa still rules the Tunisian table just as handily as it always has.

Of late though I’ve also fallen in love with this other amazing sauce that the Mahjoub’s make. This time it is, as you know already from the title, their sun-dried tomato spread. It’s not surprising, I suppose, that I’d fall for it as hard as I have — all the things I love about the harissa are also at play here. Organically grown tomatoes, peppers, and garlic from the family’s farm, all of which are hand-picked and then naturally dried in the sun for nearly a week, ground to a paste and then blended with ground dried coriander and a touch of caraway and then rounded out with some of the family’s own organic extra virgin olive oil. Both sauces are most definitely delicious; both are very ersatile; both are incredibly complex in flavor; and both are really well balanced. I could, have and will eat both in very large quantities. I keep a couple jars of each in my pantry at home. Truly I don’t want to run out; either one, with almost any other set of ingredients, is enough to make an otherwise average meal into something special.

All that said, the two sauces are not the same. What’s different, I suppose, is the relationship between the heat and the sweet. Where the harissa is happily very hot with a touch of tomatoey sweetness to round out its edges, in this one the tomatoes — hand-seeded and then literally dried in the sun for seven days — take it all up a notch. I know that sun-dried tomatoes over the years have reached beyond the point that I really look forward to seeing them anywhere, but this stuff is so good that it’s changed my outlook altogether. Think of how deep in flavor and intense a really great, vine-ripened tomato will be when you dry it in the sun for a couple of days and all its natural liquid evaporates and then you’ll start to have a better idea of what this stuff really tastes like.

Like the harissa you can do pretty much anything and everything with the Mahjoub’s sun-dried tomato spread. I love it on cheese sandwiches, pastas, and in tuna salads. Mix it with the Creamery’s handmade cream cheese or some barrel-aged feta from Greece. It’s great with eggs — spread on fried egg sandwiches, on the side with scrambled eggs, or spooned gently atop a newly poached egg (along with a bit of olive oil). Really fine with fresh fish — I’m particularly sweet on using it with swordfish, shrimp or squid. It’s beautiful on a BLT too — while you’re waiting for those first Michigan tomatoes to show up at the market this is a great way to get some intense tomato flavor into play. It’s pretty fantastic on a sandwich with fresh mozzarella. And the truth is that it’s really good with fresh tomatoes too — the rich, intense but still subtly spicy sweetness of the sauce is actually a great counterpoint to the poignancy and high notes of fresh tomatoes in their natural raw form. Add a spoonful to your homemade tomato sauce. Truthfully you could just spread it on toast — I do it regularly. A bit of olive oil on the bread first, then some of this spread on top and you’re ready to rock! So there you go, mundane as they may seem to those “in the know,” these jars of Tunisian sun-dried tomato paste are really probably one of the best new things I’ve eaten this year.

4. Jo Snow Syrups
Continuing on this path of products I probably wouldn’t have thought I’d be excited about, I’ll add in this line of really extremely darned delicious syrups made by Melissa Yen in Chicago. In truth, there’s probably not a huge amount to say except in a slightly understated and down to earth, fun way she’s infusing some seriously good, nicely balanced (there’s that theme again!) flavors into these anything but simple syrups. She started making them a few years back when she had her own café in order to more easily infuse the flavors she was after in her coffee drinks. She wanted a lot of flavor, customers wanted them quickly, together the result was this set of seven or eight different syrups. Honestly, every one of the ones I tasted was excellent. We’ve got at least three of ‘em on hand right now at the Next Door for coffee drinks and Italian sodas and on the shelves in the Deli for you to take home. I have a feeling though that other Jo Snow stuff will appear across our organization so watch for ‘em at a Zingerman’s business near you. You can spot them on the shelf quickly thanks to light-hearted, eye-catching, spirit-lifting graphic design work of Melissa’s friend, Jennifer Mayes. Right now we’ve got:

Fig, Vanilla and Black Pepper — given that I love all three of these, it should come as no surprise that this one is my personal favorite. No paradox here — not even sure what more to say… figs, vanilla and black pepper. I’m in.

Café de Olla — a tribute to the much loved (south of the border) Mexican coffee combination — brown sugar, cinnamon, molasses and a bit of a nice orange extract. Particularly good, as per the name, added to your coffee.

Ginger Passion Fruit — exotic, enticing, exciting, light, tropical and pretty much every other adjective you’d associate with a blend of fresh ginger and passion fruit. ‘Nuf said?

I could give you a lot of specific ways to use them but really the bottom line is that they’re all good in all the good ways you can think of. You can start your list with using them to make Italian sodas — just add sparkling water, stir and sip. Drizzle over fresh fruit, gelato from the Creamery or whatever other good ice cream you might have decided to buy. Melissa likes them a lot in cocktails, or at the least she must think about it a lot — for each syrup she rattled off at least two or three drinks in which they’d be great, and all of them, even to my purist’s palate, sounded really good darned good. Let’s see… then there’s French toast, pancakes or crepes. Coffee drinks. Yogurt. Hot tea. Iced tea. Hot chocolate. Polenta or oatmeal for breakfast.

5. Dulcet Moroccan Mustard
It’s been a while since I got so excited about a mustard that I wanted to eat it right out of the jar. Add to that the fact that flavored foods generally aren’t really my thing and it’s actually fairly surprising that this jarred mustard from Oregon would make my top summer foods list. But sure enough, I’ve been eating a lot of it, sometimes, truly, just with a spoon straight from the jar, regularly over the last few months. If mildly exotic mustards are at all up your alley I’d angle to get access to a bit of this stuff ASAP.

I’ve never really thought about mustard as a snack food, something to eat by the spoon, or something that I’d design a meal around. But here I am on my fourth jar of the Dulcet Moroccan Mustard in the last month. I’m not sure exactly what it is about it that’s got me going so much. It could be something about North Africa — I have been incredibly high on the harissa, couscous, olives, and sun dried tomato spread, etc. from the Mahjoub family. Maybe the Moroccan spices Dulcet founder Pam Kraemer has in her mustard are working some comparable southern Mediterranean magic on me. More likely it’s just that she’s done what I think very few people ever achieve — a touch of heat, a hint of sweet, a bit of slightly exotic spice all adding up to an exceptional balance of flavors.

Dulcet’s Madras Curry Mustard is only slightly behind the Moroccan on my list of good things to have in the house at all times this summer. Same basic concept, same well orchestrated blend of organic spices. Both are built off a base of organic dijon mustard, a bit of cane sugar and plenty of interesting spices. I’ve been eating them both with pretty much everything other than ice cream, and, now that I think about it, a small dab atop some vanilla gelato from the Creamery might actually be really good.

In either case, you might wonder what you do with this marvelous southern Mediterranean spiced mustard? It’s really good on salads, fish, cheese, egg salad. . . I’d happily serve it next to steak, pork chops or grilled chicken. I served it with some broiled salmon the other night and that was darned good, too. Mix it with a bit of yogurt or fromage blanc and it would be a very nice sauce. Ham sandwiches, grilled cheese. I can’t tell you it will change your life, but I will tell you it’s made eating more interesting all through the simple act of opening a jar!

6. Dunbarton Blue Delicious Blue Cheddar from Wisconsin
While we have a lot of cheddars and a lot of blues on the cheese counter at the Deli, we don’t generally have any blue cheddars; other than an occasional English farmhouse wheel that unintentionally veers off into the blue, these two categories really don’t mix. They certainly sit politely on the cheese shelves, probably eying each other’s differences, but respectfully staying out of each other’s way. Sometimes though, breaking out of the old molds makes sense. And that’s what Chris Roelli is doing with Dunbarton Blue. While it has all the good characteristics that everyone who works here is always excited to have in an old style, handmade cheddar, the whole thing is taken up a notch or ten by Chris’ clever and considered move to introduce blue mold to his mix. The result is remarkably good! In under a year the Dunbarton Blue has gone from being essentially unknown to one of the most sought after and highly regarded American cheeses on the market. In fact, response has been so strong that the Roellis are basically selling everything they can make — I feel fortunate to have some on the cheese
counter.

Dunbarton Blue isn’t just a good cheese; it’s also a really nice story. Chris is actually the fourth generation of his family to make cheese. His great-grandfather, Adolph Roelli, came to Wisconsin from Switzerland back in 1903. (Actually the family name in the Alps was Rolli, but it was anglicized at Ellis Island.) Adolph originally opened a grocery store, but the other farmers in the area discovered that he also knew how to make cheese — a valuable commodity in a state whose population of dairy cows was growing faster than that of its people — and invited him into the local co-op to work the curd. His son, Walter Roelli (no relation to the Virginia colonist) added milk hauling to the cheesemaking and the family business was basically born. The Roelli’s success was challenged though as industrial cheese standards started to take hold in the second half of the 20th century. With all the pressure on price and next to none on quality, the Roelli’s finally gave in — they closed the cheese plant in May of 1991.

For about fifteen years, they lived on the milk hauling. But Chris, who was just out of school when the factory closed, was determined to get back into it. Keeping his plans quietly to himself he started to make cheese again in 2006. Working originally from a 53-foot trailer next to the cheese plant, he tried his hand at a number of different cheeses. As is so often the case, one of the things he was experimenting with, a blue cheddar that most everyone else probably would have told him to stay away from, is the one that won out. Basically the boy hit a home run — Dunbarton Blue is probably one of the hottest cheeses on the already “hot” Wisconsin farmstead cheese scene. Like I said, Chris is selling everything he can make so I feel fortunate to be able to get some here to have on our shelves. It is as it sounds: very much the flavor and texture of a young, natural-rind, farmhouse cheddar — fairly firm and densely textured, mellow but rich and very nutty — along with the big earthy, bass lines of a good blue. You can eat Dunbarton Blue any way you like — I’m good mostly with eating it as is, a plateful of
fresh fruit and good thick slice of Roadhouse bread along side. But you can of course put it on salads, burgers, steaks or just about anything else you like as well.

8th Annual Taste of – SOLD OUT!

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by admin
Thursday October 20th, 7pm
Zingerman’s Events on Fourth

This is the culinary event of the year! For the 8th year in a row we are inviting local food lovers to help us complete the farm-to-table circle and enjoy the best food of the season elbow-to-elbow with the people who grew it – the folks from Tantré Farm. This year we’ll be reveling in the locally grown fall harvest at our new events space, Zingerman’s Events of Fourth.

The details of the multi-course meal remain secret until the last moment, since Chef Rodger and his kitchen crew hand-select most of the fresh ingredients the morning of the feast! But when you take your seats and see what they’ve prepared, your mouth will water and your pulse will quicken – each year the menu is more inspired and more perfectly tuned to the season.

The folks at Tantré Farm work hard year-round to produce an amazing variety of organic fruits and vegetables for the Deli. This meal is our way of saying “thank you” the best way we know how – with a feast prepared to highlight their fantastic offerings. This evening is always an early sell-out — Sign up now!

$50/person, $60/with beer. Call us to reserve your seat, 734-663-3400!

26th Annual Paella Party

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by admin
Sunday September 25th, 11am to 2pm
Paella Presentation at noon

Special Guest: John Cancilla from Marqués de Valdueza will be travelling all the way from Spain to be at the Paella Party this year!!

Our 26th annual September celebration of the fabulous foods of Spain culminates (as it always does) with a two grill Paella throw down on Zingerman’s Patio. There will be a special presentation on Paella at noon. Chef Rodger and crew deal the goods… three kinds of traditional Paella — Chicken/Chorizo, Seafood and Vegetarian grilled over Mesquite right before your eyes. Those in the know will be lined up for the Padron Peppers!

The show is free — the Paella is sold by the pound — don’t be shy.

View more photos from last year!

A Recipe for Servant Leadership

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by admin

may form a leaven that makes possible a reasonably civilized society.” — Robert Greenleaf Spirituality as Leadership

The phrase “Servant Leadership” sounds subtle, pleasant, probably sort of soft, maybe like one of those nice throwaway things they write into the opening section of an employee manual. But please don’t let any perception of passivity fool you — Servant Leadership is very strong stuff. Literally, if you really live it (as opposed to just mouthing the words which is a lot easier of course than actually making it a reality), Servant Leadership changes everything. Which includes, in my case, changing me — there’s no doubt in my mind that learning it, learning to live it, and working to get a little bit better at it every day, has made me a much better manager and, because it really is all just one very artful life, a better person in the process.

Servant Leadership is, quite simply, the core component of our management work, the ingredient around which all our other recipes for leadership are configured. Our approach to it is based on a book written back in 1977 by Robert Greenleaf entitled, simply, Servant Leadership. Over the years we’ve worked with, adapted, and adjusted various elements of his teachings, taking them from the theoretical into the practical world of day-to-day leadership here at Zingerman‘s. What follows is our interpretation and application of his approach — the Zingerman’s recipe for effective Servant Leadership. To be straight, if you let only one of the “secrets” in the Guide to Good Leading books out into your world, this is the one I would take. Perhaps more than anything else, it’s the easiest thing that any of us in leadership roles can do, almost immediately upon reading, to help make the world a better place to be and our organization more effective, simply by giving great service to everyone we work with.

To get you a small sense of what Servant Leadership is about, here’s a quick quote: “We should move,” Robert Greenleaf wrote, “towards a new institution that embraces both work and learning — learning in a deep and formal sense and all of the learning influence most people need. This,” he rightly added, “requires a new type of leader, one who can conceptualize such an institution, generate enthusiasm so that many good able people want to be part of it, and provide the strong focus of purpose that builds dynamic strength in many. Great things happen when able leaders create these conditions.”

To live Servant Leadership effectively, each of us has to really embrace the view that we come to work every day with the commitment to do what the organization needs done, to serve the entity as a whole even when that means that what we want or would like as individuals may get short shrift. Specifically we need to work with the mindset that those who “report” to us are actually to be treated as we would our customers, not as they would in the old model of staff on hand to serve our needs. In other words, as CEO, my first responsibility is to the ZCoB. Within that my major customers are the managing partners of the ZCoB businesses. Frank, the managing partner at the Bakehouse, as an example, is one of my big clients. In turn, his primary customers would be the managers at the Bakehouse. Their major customers would be the front line staff that report to them. As you can see, the idea here is to keep the service energy in the organization flowing out, toward the front line hourly staff. Why? Because, far more often than not the front line staff are the ones who are dealing with paying customers and/or making the products we sell. And we want to make sure their energy is freed to give the best possible service to customers coming in the front door, over the phone or via the web. The better the service we give to those frontline customers, the better the entire organization is going to do.

Paradox and Servant Leadership
Servant Leadership creates paradox because it says that, although we hire, pay, promote and have formal authority over our staff, to the best of our ability, we are going to treat them as customers. In the straight sense of service as we define it, that would mean doing whatever they ask us to do. In an extreme literal context that’s neither possible nor advisable. In fact, as servant leaders we’re regularly faced with the question: When is it appropriate to give service to an individual staff member in our classic, “I’ll get right on that, sir” sense of the word? And when is it time to give service to the group around that individual by NOT doing what a staff member has asked for because it’s not in the best interests of the organization overall? I wish I had some easy black and white answer to offer but the reality is rarely simple. We could have an employee ask us to transfer one of their peers because they don’t like working with them. Or they might demand to have their pay doubled because their rent went up. While I certainly don’t begrudge them asking for stuff like that, clearly those are things that we can’t, in good conscience, do just because they asked. That’s not easy to handle. In really extreme cases, we find ourselves having to fire a staff member — possibly someone we’ve worked with and treated as a really good customer for a long time — because it’s right for the organization.

Finally, there is paradox at play here because, at times, what we may want for ourselves can conflict with what is best for the organization as a whole. Certainly, our ideal is that each of us is able to fulfill all our personal goals and meet all of our needs, while simultaneously leading the organization to greatness. But realistically, things don’t always work that way. Which means that sometimes we, as leaders, have to choose to give up what we want for ourselves in the short term in order to provide more for others around us. Which of course may create some level of conflict between what we understandably and justifiably would like and what’s in the best interests of the organization we serve. How do you deal with all these paradoxes? The only way I know to work through them is to get help. Ultimately, in our experience, learning to become a great manager is a lot like learning to become a great taster. To do it you have to practice, and you have to work closely to regularly compare notes and realities with others that have more, or perhaps different, experience. When we act together through this sort of dialogue, sharing of thoughts and concerns, and sound reasoning, we’re a lot more likely to make sound, service-oriented decisions.

Why Bother?
After all that you could well be wondering, “Wouldn’t it be easier to just do this the old way?” Or, maybe you’re thinking, “It’s crazy to give employees service when we’re paying them to perform.” Both of which are certainly really reasonable things to think. Why after all, would you want to work hard to get promoted so that then you could have the chance to work harder? Why would it be worth dealing with all the added burden, complexity and paradox that Servant Leadership requires? Ultimately, each of us has to answer them for his or herself. But, at Zingerman’s, we believe that:

It’s the right thing to do
In any element of life, as we see it, service is the highest form of contribution we can make to those around us. Sure we may want to reap rewards for ourselves, and while there’s certainly nothing wrong with that, ultimately, it’s really much more what we give — not what we get — that defines us as leaders and establishes the legacy that we leave behind in our organizations and in our lives. In our experience our most rewarding work has been when we’ve created a successful Zingerman’s Experience for a staff member who was able grow and contribute here way beyond what anyone expected when they arrived. Knowing that in some small way our service contributed to this staff member’s success is a huge reward.

We get to help others grow and succeed
When they choose to work in our organization, staff members entrust us to provide effective leadership. They give us what can be called “the gift of followership.” In other words, they choose to follow us, allowing us the opportunity to succeed as an organization in ways we couldn’t without them. In return, we as leaders, are responsible for providing an environment to the staff in which they can fulfill their dreams and live up to their potential as participating members of the ZCoB. When we give great service to the staff we’re living this commitment.

Better service to customers
The service our staff gives to our customers will never be better than the service we give to the staff. We’ve seen this over and over again. So if we want to give our guests exceptional extra mile service, then we absolutely, one hundred percent, have to do the same for the staff. We, the leaders, are the ones who will either set the standard for, or, alternatively, hold back the organization’s service quality. The better we get at giving service — to both staff and guests — the better the service the staff give to guests is going to be.

Creates a more appealing workplace
From a strictly strategic perspective, providing great service to our staff can only help to make the ZCoB a better and more appealing place to work. And since we are competing with hundreds of other companies to attract the most creative, hardest working, food-loving staff we can find, this offers a huge strategic edge.

With service we set the tone for our organization
Like it or not, as leaders, we set the example for everyone in our organization. So sure, on the one hand, it seems crazy to give up more of your self-interest when you move “up” the organizational ladder. But the problem is that if we don’t put the organization’s interests above our own, then who will? If the leader sends a message that “I come first,” then it’s inevitable that the same “me first” approach will be the attitude that will prevail throughout the organization. In Sacred Hoops, then-Bulls basketball coach Phil Jackson wrote that, “creating a successful team… is essentially a spiritual act. It requires the individuals involved to surrender their self-interest for the greater good so that the whole adds up to more than the sum of its parts.”

It helps you move toward what you want for yourself
I really believe that the more you give the more you get. And because Servant Leaderhip is all about giving, it only makes sense that if one can get really good at it, it’s going to help make for a more meaningful, more rewarding life. You really will make a difference in the lives of your staff. And that’s a rare and special opportunity.

“Leadership requires selfless results, and these come only from the appropriate use of power and from making the whole more than the sum of the parts… Leaders who seek personal gain at the expense of peers or of institutional results generally lose over the long run.” — from Results-Based Leadership, by Dave Ulrich, Jack Zenger, and Norm Smallwood

The Recipe for Putting Servant Leadership into Practice
Provide an Inspiring & Strategically Sound Vision

At Zingerman’s the Servant Leader’s number one responsibility is to provide a vision for their part of the organization. An inspiring and strategically sound vision is one of the single most motivating things you can offer your staff. The vision is an answer to the simple, yet radical question: “If we’re really successful in our work, what will our organization look like ___ years/months from now?” A vision gets all of us on the same organizational page. It lets the staff know where we’re headed, what tomorrow will look like, what the positive future is that we’re all going after together. Perhaps most importantly it lets them know how organizational success will create a better tomorrow for all involved.

Live and Teach the Guiding Principles
In our Guiding Principles we detail how we will relate to those around us — staff, guests, suppliers, community — during our stay in the organization. As leaders we have a huge responsibility to live these principles day in and day out in our work. You can read them in the Zingerman’s Staff Guide (available at www.shop.zingtrain.com).

a) Treat the staff with dignity at all times.
We don’t have to agree with them, we don’t have to like them, we don’t have to be happy to see them, but we really do need to treat them in a dignified manner if want this to work.

b) Show that you care about them as individuals.
This doesn’t mean you’re responsible for their lives, nor does it mean you have to fix their problems for them. It does mean that you take a minute to ask how their vacation was, to ask how they’re feeling, how school’s going, how they’re family is, where they’re from. Show them that you know they have a life outside of work

c) Don’t hold grudges.
Although most of the world continues to carry them, our experience here is that grudges get you absolutely nowhere. At least nowhere good — they just suspend you in an angry, unproductive past. Hey, I know that employees err; sometimes they completely screw up. But the past is the past, and it’s over. Because we’re committed to giving great service to the staff, and because we’re not on Planet Fair (even though we should be), as servant leaders we commit to taking a forgiving approach. This doesn’t mean that you don’t hold firm on appropriate agreed upon consequences. It just means that you’re going to look forward toward a positive mutually rewarding future rather than let yourself get locked into an old grudge for past behaviors.

d) Be professional.
Return phone calls promptly. Stay away from gossip. Don’t talk smack about the organization or its members in front of staff members.

e) Have the courage to engage in caring confrontations.
This is an area in which Servant Leadership appears to diverge from a straight customer service approach. While I often see ways for our customers to alter their attitude or behavior to get the results they say they want, unfortunately it’s only very rarely appropriate to tell them. But in a management context, when a staff member who reports to us isn’t living up to our expectations, then it would actually be poor service — to them, and to the organization — NOT to tell them. Without our perspective, without a clear understanding of our expectations, we’re undercutting the staff member’s chances of success. In fact, the less they know about what we want, the less we share our concerns constructively, the lower the likelihood that they will succeed in their work. Which would be the exact opposite of what we we’re supposed to be doing.

Be an Active Learner & Teacher
Speaking of expectations this is totally one of those things that Paul and I had in our heads from day one. We’ve already been really active readers, we’ve always made time to go to seminars and classes, and we started teaching — both formally and informally — very early on in our work. It just seemed incredibly obvious that without that learning and teaching we were never going to have even the slightest shot at getting to where we wanted to go. BUT… as we grew and brought in more managers to lead, we found ourselves increasingly frustrated that many of them didn’t seem to have the same passion for these two things that we did.

Then one day in the fall of 1991 or 1992, we went to an Inc. Magazine conference in San Francisco where we had the chance to hear Skip LeFauve, then head of the Saturn Corporation, present on what he and his crew were doing to make a new kind of car company at their plant in Tennessee. One of the many things he shared was this expectation for learning and teaching. We loved it and we’ve been using it ever since.

(Turns out that Skip and his family lived in Ann Arbor and were good Zingerman’s customers. Over the years I had the opportunity to wait on him many times and to casually share thoughts and learn from his experience and insight. Sadly he passed away in 2003 at the young age of 68. While we never worked together directly I have the feeling that he lived much of what’s in this book in creative and inspirational ways.)

Help Staff Succeed by Using the Training Compact
This is one of the most difficult, most important and ultimately, most rewarding parts of our work as servant leaders. The most important and effective way we can do that is by living the Zingerman’s Training Compact. In a nutshell,

The Zingerman’s Training Compact
The Servant Leader

  • Gives clear Bottom Line performance expectations
  • Gives the resources to do the job
  • Recognizes performance
  • Rewards performance

In return the Staff:

  • Takes full responsibility for the quality & effectiveness of our training.

Say Thanks

  • Saying thanks is one of the key responsibilities we have as servant leaders. Why?
  • Everyone — you and me included — works more effectively when their efforts have been noticed and appreciated.
  • Ultimately, saying thanks and recognizing people’s contributions is one of the best ways to let people know that their efforts have really made a difference.
  • It’s a more effective and enjoyable way to work to be leading with appreciation than to lead with criticism
  • When we say thanks, we set the tone to move our organizational culture towards a more appreciative, positive future.

Postscript:
Because effective leadership is a craft not a science, there is no philosophy we can give you that will guarantee simplistic, multiple-choice solutions to complex management problems. What Servant Leadership can do is provide you with a framework in which to function: a set of guidelines and approaches to which you can return again and again as you grapple with the difficult, ever-challenging issues of effective leadership.

September 2011 – Fiesta de Espana!

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by Zingerman's Deli
Mahon (cheese)

From Menorca, the second largest of the Spanish Balearic islands, Mahon is a unique cow’s milk cheese from a region known for ewe’s milk cheese.

Roncal (cheese)

Aragonesa and Lacha sheep breeds from Navarra, situated in the Spanish Pyrenees, produce this buttery, toothsome cheese. If you love the great Manchegos from the South treat yourself to the lesser-known Roncal.

Azeitao (cheese)

Named after the town situated at the base of the Arribida mountain range of Portugal, Azeitao will leave a lasting impression. Rustic, perfect little cloth-molded rounds are aided by vegetarian rennet made of cardoon thistle, which amplifies the unctuous texture and concentrated herbal flavors we love.

Garroxta (cheese)

Delicious and eminently snackable goat’s milk cheese from Catalonia. Semi-hard texture with a smooth paste, the delicate goaty tang compliments sweet and savory alike.

Queso de Vare (cheese)

Delightful hard murcian goat’s milk cheese from Asturias. Approachable, well-balanced and complex.

Autor (cheese)

A unique farmstead raw goat’s milk cheese from Valencia, made using thistle coagulation for a subtle, complex flavor and a fine, elegant texture.

Jamon Serrano

We have tasted lots of Jamon Serrano, but this ham from Redondo Iglesias is our favorite. In Spain they eat this everyday…. I think they should do that in America too. Tell us your favorite way to eat it, and we will enter you into a drawing to win your own supply of Jamon Serrano for a year.* You must come into the deli to enter and the drawing will be held at the Paella Party on Sunday September 25th!

*winner will receive a half pound of ham each month for a year that must be picked up at the Deli.

Spanish Iberico de Bellota

Even the Italians will admit that this acorn-fed, dry-cured iberian ham is the best ham in all of Europe. Hand-sliced to order! Ask for a taste of this truly exceptional ham next time you’re at the deli.

Pig Diagram from Iberico

Portuguese Sardines and Mackerel in tins

In parts of Europe they take their tinned fish very very serious. And I can understand why, these tinned beauties are delicious. One tin quickly becomes a succulent appetizer, a late night snack or simply an amazing meal. Take some home today and taste the passion of tinned fish.

Ortiz Anchovies

After a 100 years and 5 generations, Conservas Ortiz anchovies haven’t changed. Each fish is caught using traditional methods and is still hand filleted, which results in a beautiful and great tasting product. Give them a try in any of the varieties that we carry.

Marqués de Valdueza Olive Oil

Beautifully balanced and smooth, this blend of four olives from Extramadura, Spain has an exceptional flavor (and a staff favorite here at the Deli).

Merula Olive Oil

Smooth, buttery and fruity- great for dipping, vinaigrettes, and (at 10% off an already great price) cooking. Go ahead- fry and egg in it- you’ll be delighted!

Castillo de Canena Olive Oil

Super fine, with flavors of sweet almond and green apples and a pleasant, peppery bitter green finish.

Masia El Altet Olive Oil

“Absolutely fantastic”… “super silky”… “great long, long lasting finish.”… This new blend from the south eastern coast of Spain, near Murcia, has a lot of personality, with big flavors and a resoundingly peppery finish.

Abbae de Quieles (pronounced “Kay-LESS”)

I can’t say you’re likely to bump into the Abbae de Queiles by accident. It’s up in the northern part of Navarre, in the eastern part of the Spanish Basque Country, not too far from the French border and the Pyrenees Mountains. If you do get there though it’s worth a stop—everything about the Abbae—from the architecture to the olives—is pretty darned impressive.

Unlike many of the people we buy from, this is not an old-line family business. The project was put together by a handful of very dedicated folks whose background is actually not in food. In honesty it’s the type of work I’m usually wary of because so often the energy ends up being about everything but the product; all flash and hardly any substance. But in this case, though, my fears were pretty quickly put to rest by our visit—the oil is excellent, the people are very sincere, the site is only one step down from sensational, and the whole thing comes together in an impressively, well-grounded, holistic sense.

They wanted to do something sustainable on the land and find a way to protect some of the old olive trees they’d inherited with the farm; olives and oil seemed an historically, ecologically, and financially sound way to do that. They have a very clear, limited in size but inspiring in terms of spirit, and strategically sound vision. They want to make amazing oil, to preserve the land from a historical standpoint and also make it viable—both agriculturally and economically—a long ways into the future (hence the organic growing).

The Queiles oil’s flavor is still on the soft side, a touch sweeter than those that follow, with a hint of apple and a little pepper at the end; if you want to get into detailed flavor descriptors I might say it has a bit of banana (“green banana” actually is what Antonio very pointedly said) and green almond, with a light saltiness almost on the top of the tongue that I really like.

Naturvie Olive Oil

This oil comes from the western part of Spain (the land of iberico ham if you’re into great pork), from a family-owned farm just a bit south of the beautiful walled town of Merida. The farm is run by Fernando Sanchez-Mohino – he made his career success as an attorney, but decided later to pursue his passion, to take on olive oil production. The family has run the farm for three generations now and he’s spent years working on improving the quality of the oil. They’re doing a very nice job of mindful, sustainable farming with a bit of an eye towards biodynamics. As, I suppose, is fitting, the oil’s following around here is growing as well. The oil is from the Cornezuela varietal, an interesting old-school olive that’s unique to that area. All the olives for this oil are taken from trees planted no later that the year 1800. You read that right – all the trees in use are over 200 years old. Old trees of this sort have very low yields but produce oils with very interesting complex flavors. The flavor itself is a blend of sweet and spicy, almond and olive…. stop by the deli and taste this tradition for yourself!

Gar Rioja Vinegar

Northern Spain famed Rioja wine, converted to a vinegar and aged 4 years in oak, is mellow and intense at the same time. It’s very versatile, with notes of black raspberry.

Sweet Sherry PX Vinegar

Outstanding and full of character – this fine sherry vinegar from Jerez, Spain, deeply rich and sweet, is fun to experiment with in the kitchen. Marinades, stews, vinaigrettes- the options are endless.

September Specials

Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by Zingerman's Deli
Olive of the Month!
Spanish Marinated Olives

Crunchy Spanish green olives dressed with sherry vinegar, garlic, olive oil, and aromatic herbs.

Zingerman’s Creamery,
Cheese of the Month!
Manchester

Our double cream with a golden buttery rind has gotten even more delicious. Last year we began experimenting with milk from the Schneider families herd of rare Dutch belted cows. Once we began receiving the pastured herds milk at the beginning of July and I saw how rich and buttery the grassy, complex milk was I knew what we had to do. We had to make the Manchester’s exclusively from this milk! Come try the new Manchester at the old price. September Only!

$11.99 each

Bread of the Month!
Paesano bread

The traditional bread of the Puglia region of Italy. Pass it around the table for ripping and dipping in great olive oil, soup or pasta sauce.

$4.50/ea

Special Bakes!

Blueberry Buckle for Labor Day Weekend, Saturday 9/3 delivery
A buckle is an American coffeecake that dates back to colonial times. Our sweet and moist version has a bounty of wild blueberries, sweet butter, a touch of orange and cinnamon, and is topped off with a remarkable butter-crumble crust.

Peppered Bacon Farm bread baked on 9/2 & 9/3
Everything is better with bacon right? Check out apple wood smoked bacon and black pepper in a crusty loaf of our signature farm bread. This is our most popular special bake.

Green Olive Paesano bread baked on 9/9 & 9/10
A chewy round of our Paesano bread with savory green olives. Makes an instant appetizer.

Porter Rye bread baked on 9/16 & 9/17
A moist and slightly sweet loaf made from a bit of organic muscovado brown sugar, Bell’s Porter from Kalamazoo, MI, a pinch of lard, and lots of flavor-packed rye flour.

Sandwich of the Month!
Jordan’s Buffal-oh-yeah!

This spicy little number is a Midwesterner’s tip of the hat to the chicken subs of sandwich line cook, Jordan Balduf’s, hometown. Chopped romaine, blue cheese and tomato compliment grilled chicken breast tossed with a Clancy’s-spiked sauce. Served on a sub bun, there’s enough heat to melt the biggest of snowdrifts.

$11.99/one size

Zingerman’s Next Door Specials!

Cake of the month
Ribbon Cakes – 20% off!

To celebrate the Bakehouse’s 19th birthday this month, all ribbon zing’casion cakes are 20% off! Available in chiffon, buttermilk or chocolate cake with chocolate butter cream and bright fondant ribbons.

NEW! Banana Cosmic Cake
The best idea since sending chimps into space! Two chocolate cakes, sandwiched with fresh banana vanilla butter cream, bathed in crispy dark chocolate. This is seriously fun treat with big grown up flavor.

Zingerman’s Next Door,
Drink of the Month! Spanish Drinking Chocolate

The Decadent Extreme of Dark Chocolate Drinking

It’s hard to get our hands on this one, so when the chance presents itself, we jump at it. It is one of the most luscious & rich chocolates to ever be sipped from a mug. In Spain they drink it morning, noon & night instead of coffee. This is one hot chocolate adults will keep all to themselves.

$3.50/ea

Zingerman’s Coffee Company,
Roaster’s Pick!
Honduras Finca Liquidámbar

We are featuring a Honduran micro-lot from Finca Liquidámbar. The coffee has notes of plum, milk chocolate and a subtle hint of grapefruit; a crisp clean cup. The coffee is produced by Reina Mercedes Claro. Our friend Mike Love first saw Reina’s coffee at a Cup of Excellence competition two years ago. This year Mike brought in the entire lot and offered to share it with us. We fell in “love” with it on first sip.

$18.99/12oz bag