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Delicious Wild Blueberry Dishes Will Turn You Into a Top Chef

Why do chefs love cooking with wild blueberries? Steve Corry, Owner and Chef at Portland’s 555 and Petite Jacqueline Restaurants (and a Food & Wine pick for its 10 Best Chefs) breaks it down: deeper color and more intense flavor than their cultivated cousins. Wild is a requirement for recipes at Corry’s restaurants where there are no compromises, and for many award-winning chefs wild means better performance in the kitchen and better reviews in the dining room.

Spicy Tortilla Salad with Wild Blueberries

Feel like channeling a top chef? With summer upon us, wild blueberries provide vibrant color and uniquely sweet taste that creates seasonal dishes worth raving about. Plus, if you live in Maine or Canada, serving dishes with a nod to the region is simply de rigueur. Here are three recipe ideas that exemplify these virtues to kick off your own personal culinary extravaganza.

Super Summer Salad 

Spicy Tortilla Salad with Wild Blueberries elevates salad with an inspired mixture of fruit and warmth that is dazzling to look at and utter fun to eat. Apples and peppers combine with wild blueberries, flour tortillas, and goat cheese to complete the flavor profile. (Check out other delicious salads for summer.)

An Ideal Duck Pairing

Duck Breast with Wild Blueberry Sauce

If you are looking for a special entrée that shows off the unique sweet-sour taste of wild blueberries, try duck. Duck with wild blueberries is a signature combination at Corry’s restaurants – its popularity is due to a flavor that works tangy blues against savory duck. Wild blues are also ideal to add acidity and cut the fat content of the dish. This Duck Breast with Wild Blueberry Sauce is the perfect example. You can buy conveniently packaged duck breasts at most the grocery stores (and stop by the freezer section to stock up on wild blues).

Wild Blueberry Baselito

Summer Cocktail 

It may not be first on your list of ways to use wild blueberries, but in fact, this underrated drink ingredient shines in summer cocktails. This Wild Blueberry Baselito is one example of how blues play a part in celebrating the season. Wild blueberries, basil and rum (though this drink is fantastic with or without) make an ultracool cocktail for sipping on the porch.

Top Maine Chefs Love Wild Blueberries. Watch What Makes Chefs Go Wild and see why area chefs use exclusively wild, and how they are inspired to use them in award-winning baked goods and dishes.

Find more wild blue recipe ideas at WildBlueberries.com

Seasonal Recipes Offer Fresh, Simple Food All Year Long

Kathy Gunst Shares Her Wild Blueberry Syrup Recipe & Talks to Wild About Health About the Virtues of Seasonal Eating 

The delights of summer in Maine are obvious. But local author Kathy Gunst has a lock on what makes all seasons in our state delightfully delicious. Gunst is a writer, food aficionado, and TV and radio personality who writes Notes from a Maine Kitchen, a blog that does double duty as a resource for a wealth of recipes inspired by living in Maine year round. Her recently published book of the same name, Notes from a Maine Kitchen (Down East Books, 2011), takes on the seasonal bounties of Maine, from January right through to December. The focus is on regionally-inspired food made from locally-sourced ingredients. While March ushers in Maple Cheesecake with Maple-Ginger Crust, July is the perfect month for Grilled Swordfish with Olive-Lemon Scallion Topping. What a year!

Is eating seasonally in a region where summer is central even possible? You bet, says Gunst. “I try to follow the seasons all year, even here in cold Maine. With winter farmer’s markets and a large vegetable garden it’s become easier than ever,” she told Wild About Health. “There is no better eating than following the seasons and eating locally.” She says she even tends to naturally eat less fat when she eats seasonally. “Food picked in season is bursting with flavor. I’m never craving ‘something more,’” she says.

More than just recipes, Gunst characterizes Notes from a Maine Kitchen as a literary cookbook. It includes a selection of essays, notably one about a smelt fishing expedition on the Cathance River with Portland Chef Sam Hayward (yes, the Cornmeal-Coated Maine Smelts recipe is included). She also addresses the rise of the winter farmer’s market and offers up already-assembled menus for any occasion, including a Hot Summer Night (cooled by soda with Wild Maine Blueberry Syrup) and an Autumn Apple Brunch (featuring Grilled Gruyere with Maple-Caramelized Apples – you can find the recipe on her recent blog post).

Author Kathy Gunst

Gunst’s food philosophy is one based on simple food that results in fresh, wonderful flavor – garden-picked greens, organically-raised chicken, local lobster, fresh-picked berry cobbler – simple dishes that let the ingredients shine. Chapters of the calendrical book focus on quintessential foodie activities in Maine, such as foraging for wild mushrooms, canning, planting, and uncovering treasures from farmers markets.  Her Wild Maine Blueberry Syrup recipe, which she was kind enough to share below, is a perfect example of her food philosophy. Great for sweetening many dishes, it’s ideal for capturing the season’s wild blue essence for use any time that a entrée, drink, or dessert needs a colorful, tasty zing.

This crisp season you’ll find Gunst all around Maine and beyond sharing her recipes and signing her book. She’ll be teaching recipes at the The Institute of Culinary Education (ICE) in New York City on Saturday, October 15, and doing demos at Harvest on the Harbor which takes place in Portland, Maine, on Saturday, October 22. You can find details and other local dates on her blog.

Wild Maine Blueberry Syrup

From Kathy Gunst’s Notes from a Maine Kitchen (Down East Books, 2011)

“What I like most about this syrup is that you can control the amount of sugar you use to create a natural blueberry soda or spritzer. A tablespoon or two is fabulous added to fruit salads, pie fillings, or mixed drinks (try mixing with vodka or rum and fresh mint leaves). The syrup will keep in the refrigerator in a tightly sealed jar for about a week or two, or it can be frozen (place in empty ice cube trays or plastic bags or small plastic containers) for several months.

You can also use blueberries, blackberries, or strawberries, as well, or a combination of all four.”

Find out more about Kathy Gunst or get a taste of her blog, Notes from a Maine Kitchen.

Maine Food at Your Fingertips: Down East Magazine Creates Food App


Live and eat in Maine or just love the state’s rich food culture? The Great Maine Food app, created for the iPad for Down East Magazine helps bring you and great local food together. The new app debuts with recipes, video tutorials, and menu planning for the Maine foodie, the foodie who enjoys a taste of Maine, or the foodie inside that might be aching to come out and, say, try some local steamers.

Maine is known for so many terrific foods, it makes sense creator CulinarMedia would endeavor to put them all in one conveniently tappable place. It’s no surprise that seafood features prominently, or that there is an entire category devoted to lobster. Even mooseburgers make an appearance in the database, along with other more mainstream but delicious recipes. Case in point: Maine blueberry muffins and New England baked beans. The photos are lush, and users can plan and make a shopping list in a flash for their next meal or their next dinner party –  they can even use the app to email guests and invite them to the spread!

The app, which sells for $4.99, looks like a shoe-in for visitors and residents alike. It maps places to eat, shop, and stay in four major regions of the state, and word is that it’s great for cooks, seafood lovers, and anyone that spends any time traveling the state. Tie on your bib and give it a spin at Great Maine Food!