Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

A busy, busy weekend ahead. Tonight, we’re off to a wine dinner at the Hilton that my husband bid on at last year’s Tres Bonne Annee, so that should be fun.

Tomorrow evening, it’s Over the Rhine at Midtown Scholar, amid rain showers.

Saturday, my usual Next Step/Broad Street Market routine before Derby Day.

On Sunday, I have both a morning wedding and an afternoon baby shower to attend, capped by dinner with a friend in the evening. Whew.

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

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A Field Day for Nonprofits: Harrisburg Hoopla raises money with friendly competition.

city island in the middle of the river on

Harrisburg Hoopla will take place June 3 at City Island’s Skyline Sports Complex.

Typically, professional athletes compete at Harrisburg’s City Island. However, come June 3, amateurs will have their day to play, while raising funds for local nonprofits.

Harrisburg Hoopla will give participants a day of friendly competition that ends with cold drinks, snacks and live music. Groups of at least six will face off in the Skyline Sports Complex in eight events of field day classics, such as the dizzy bat race and dodgeball.

The Emerging Philanthropist Program (EPP), a partnership between Harrisburg Young Professionals and the Foundation for Enhancing Communities (TFEC), created Harrisburg Hoopla this year to raise awareness and funds for local charities.

“We want to raise awareness for different causes and local nonprofit organizations,” said event organizer Devin Langan. “There are some organizations that are out there that are doing really good work, but people may not know about them.”

Teams select different local nonprofits to support. The winning three teams take the bulk of the donations for their charities. The first-place team takes 30 percent of funds raised. Second and third place teams, respectively, take 20 and 10 percent of funds raised.

After the field day activities end, the event turns into a party complete with live music, alcohol, snacks and a food truck.

“We have a little bit of everything,” Langan said. “People can relax, have fun and enjoy the weather.”

The winning teams will be given a platform to talk about their charity of choice.

So far, teams have been selected to compete for the Samara Center for Individual and Family Growth, the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank and a charity to benefit those with cystic fibrosis.

The event also serves as a fundraiser that will sustain next year’s event and EPP’s grant-making fund.

“Instead of just focusing on raising money for EPP, we can raise awareness of the local charities,” he said.

The program acquaints a class of 15 young adults with Harrisburg’s local nonprofit community. At the end of the yearlong class, the group doles out a $5,000 grant to a nonprofit. In its fourth years, EPP has donated $15,000 to local groups, including the YWCA and the Shalom House.

After completing the program, Langan and other event organizers wanted to create an annual event that would engage all the community and benefit the nonprofit community they became connected with.

“We want to keep Harrisburg growing and improving,” he said.

Participants must register to compete. Attendees can purchase tickets to come for the evening festivities. Register before May 7 for an early bird rate. Event organizers suggest that those supporting and cheering on teams during the day donate.

“[Harrisburg Hoopla is] open to everyone. We want as many people to come as possible,” Langan said.

For more information about Harrisburg Hoopla, including how to register, please visit www.tfec.org/hbghoopla/registration.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Mayoral Debate: Veteran candidates talk experience, others try to make a mark.

five candidates in suits and business wear sit in front of PennLive and CBS21 signs.

Mayoral candidates sat in the order they will appear on the ballot. From left to right: Lewis Butts, Gloria Martin-Roberts, Mayor Eric Papenfuse, Anthony Harrell, and Jennie Jenkins.

Harrisburg mayoral candidates Gloria Martin-Roberts and incumbent Eric Papenfuse defended their records last night, taking jabs at each other, while challengers Lewis Butts, Anthony Harrell and Jennie Jenkins tried to introduce themselves, and their ideas, to a live TV audience.

The moderators, CBS21 Anchor Robb Hanrahan, PennLive Opinion Editor John Micek and PennLive City Reporter Christine Vendel, asked candidates about pressing city issues and their backgrounds. Candidates sat in the order they appear on the May 16 Democratic primary election ballot. About 60 audience members filled the room at HACC’s Midtown Campus for last night’s hour-long, live-recorded event.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse took the first rhetorical punches at Martin-Roberts as candidates answered a question about improving blighted neighborhoods.

Martin-Roberts started off the panel’s responses with a common phrase of her campaign.

“I don’t have a favorite neighborhood, and I’ve been saying this,” she said. “This entire city would be the city that I love. I would start focusing on those neighborhoods that have been overlooked for a very long time.”

She added that, as mayor, she would listen to the needs of the community, use the law’s full force with absentee landlords and encourage buyers “to see blighted properties as diamonds in the rough.”

Papenfuse responded first with a dig at Martin-Roberts.

“I first would l to say that I do not have a favorite neighborhood,” he said. “I care about this whole city equally, and I find Ms. Martin-Roberts’ rhetoric, frankly, divisive. If the city is going to succeed, we are going to have to look for all of us to succeed together.”

He cited South Harrisburg’s sinkhole remediation plan, Allison Hill’s $3 million grant-funded MulDer Square development project and LERTA, a city-wide investment incentive program, as three of the “most important anti-blight remediation efforts” in many years.

Harrell, a veteran, mentioned a program to help veterans purchase houses before turning his answer back to crime.

“As long as crime is on the rise, no one will move into [these neighborhoods],” he said.

Butts referenced his “Harrisburg First” plan to train workers and contractors with a trade center in an attempt to connect job creation with neighborhood development.

Jenkins said she would go after federal funding for crime and blight, before criticizing the current administration.

“I thought three years ago, that’s what we were going to do: fight blight,” she said. “Here we are, three years later, wondering about blight,”

“Any funding that comes in for blight, that is what I am going to use it for,” she said of her plan.

Jenkins defended her troubled career as a police officer. The city fired her after accusing her of misappropriating $7,000 from the city’s Police Athletic League. She also found herself in trouble when thieves stole two guns from her unoccupied car. Currently, she is in a federal discrimination lawsuit against Police Chief Thomas Carter.

When asked about her transparency with these lawsuits, she said she couldn’t talk about the discrimination lawsuit as it is currently in progress. She said lawsuits prevented her from speaking about the embezzlement case with the city, though the case ended in January 2016.

Moderators asked a follow-up question about how, as mayor, she would manage a police department led by Chief Thomas Carter, who she said she would keep in office. She said that the discrimination lawsuit would be over in January, before she would take office.

“I don’t hold anything against anyone,” she said. “I’ve grown from it. I’ve learned from it.”

Martin-Roberts also defended her record in response to questions about her City Council vote to increase the incinerator debt and about her connections to former Mayor Linda Thompson and to James Ellison, a former associate of Mayor Stephen Reed.

Though Thompson had “hiccups with her personality,” she had “her hands deep in the Harrisburg Strong Plan,” she said.

“We would not be where we are today without her work,” she said.

She said that Ellison, now her campaign treasurer, would not serve in her administration. Ellison, a lawyer, found himself in controversy while serving both with the Harrisburg Authority under the Reed administration and, later, as counsel to the school district of Coatesville, Pa.

Papenfuse’s responses to certain questions elicited their fair share of groans, including one about the lack of a residency requirement for police officers.

“As a result, we have been able to attract some of the best and brightest from the nation and across the state,” he said.

Coming after Harrell and Butts commenting that police officers should reflect city neighborhoods, some members of the audience took Papenfuse’s comment as an insult.

As Harrell offered his closing remarks, Midtown resident Chris Siennick crashed the live television recording, introducing himself—complete with red headband and skateboard—as the Socialist candidate in the November general election.

After the audience erupted in laughter, Hanrahan closed the evening with these remarks: “[Last night was] a great example of how anything can happen on live television.”

Author: Danielle Roth

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Burg Blog: Last Words

The Farm Show’s New Holland Arena, where President Trump spoke on Saturday.

Over the past few days, some people have been surprised that I’ve written several critical pieces on the visit of President Donald Trump to Harrisburg, as he marked his 100th day in office.

TheBurg’s the nice guy on the block, right?

Actually, we’ve weighed in on politics and government from the very beginning and, as you may know, there’s often nothing more fraught than local politics. In my magazine column this month, I mention that, every election cycle, I get into “trouble,” as I begin to step on toes with my annoying opinions. And, as soon as Trump announced his visit to Harrisburg, deeming it a “campaign” stop, it became a local political story, as well.

Over the past few days, I’ve written two main pieces for TheBurg’s website about the Trump visit. They’re quite different, written for different reasons.

In the first, I suggested that Trump’s people did not choose wisely when deciding to come to Harrisburg to mark his Day 100. I found it odd that, seeking affirmation, he would visit a deep-blue city in an increasingly blue region.

I wrote that piece for two main reasons. First, I had been asked all week why I thought Trump selected Harrisburg, so decided to share my belief that his people likely didn’t understand where they were going—that Harrisburg seemed like a conveniently situated place in a state that had swung for Trump–and that was as far as their thinking went. But I also wanted the national media not to make the same mistake—to think that Harrisburg is the heart of Trump country, because it’s not. (For a totally different opinion on this, click here.)

And, in fact, yesterday, I exchanged a couple of emails with Marc Fisher, a Washington Post senior editor, about his story in the Sunday Post, which touched on exactly this issue. His response to me was:

“I had looked into the vote numbers and sought in the story not to make any sweeping statements about Harrisburg. But inevitably the name of the locale gets conflated to some degree with the larger region from which the crowd travels. I think the individual stories of Trump fans within my article demonstrate that the supporters came from many rural and suburban areas, not mainly from Harrisburg.”

Secondly, I wrote a satirical piece about Trump’s address. This was unplanned, but I wrote it spur-of-the-moment (maybe you can tell) after hearing his speech, which I found to be hateful, divisive and self-obsessed, far beneath the standards that we should expect of our president. Moreover, I was taken aback by the blind loyalty of some of his supporters, despite his constantly shifting logic, statements and policies.

I’ll be honest—I’m no Donald Trump fan, never have been. I grew up in the 1970s just outside of New York City, so have read and heard about him all my life—from his playboy/Roy Cohn/Studio 54 years to his many mistresses and marriages; from his high-wire builder and casino mogul days to his numerous bankruptcies; from his lurid chats with Howard Stern to his embarrassing appearance at a Comedy Central roast; from the books he didn’t actually write to the university he didn’t actually run; from his shameless branding to his reality show persona; from his sudden switch from mildly liberal, pro-choice plutocrat to spitting-mad conservative plutocrat. For 40 years, I’ve had a seat to the Donald Trump show and have enjoyed almost none of it.

When Trump declared for president—famously descending that golden escalator at Trump Tower—I thought to myself, “Another publicity stunt.” And, to this day, I believe that’s what it was supposed to be, another way for Donald Trump to direct the spotlight on Donald Trump. To attract attention in a large field of Republicans, he took the lowest road possible, demonizing entire groups of people while making wild promises (e.g. bringing back coal jobs, forcing Mexico to pay for the wall) he’ll never be able to keep. It was all strategy without sincerity, but it worked, which may be good for Trump (or maybe not), but, I believe, is terrible for the country.

In any case, Trump has now left the building (and the city). So, I’ll return to the tamer (not really) world of Harrisburg politics, where, after a rather quiet campaign, the mayoral candidates have begun swinging at one another in the manner to which we’re accustomed. I’ll have more on that later.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Burg Blog: Promises Made

As a public service, TheBurg offers a “fair and balanced” interpretation of President Donald Trump’s speech last night at the state Farm Show Complex.

Trump: I’m delighted to be here in Harrisburg to mark Day 100 of my presidency. Everyone knows that I’ve had more success in my first 100 days than any president ever.

Crowd: Wild applause

Now, some of you, I’m sure, are aware of all the promises I made during my campaign and in my “100-Day Contract,” which is why the banner in this hall reads, “Promises Made, Promises Kept.” We’ve kept them all, folks!

Huge applause

And I promised you that I would repeal Obamacare on Day 1!

Crowd: Hooray!

And have I?

No!

No, I have not, but that’s only because no one knew that healthcare reform could be so hard. No one. But the fake news media won’t tell you that, folks.

Boo!!

That’s right. They won’t tell you about all my tremendous accomplishments, and I know because that’s where I get most of my false information.

Boo!! Boo!!

From Fox primarily.

Yay!

Hey, we’re gonna build that big, beautiful wall on the border with Mexico—and who’s gonna pay for it?

We are!

That’s right, you are! You and you and you over there, way in the back. Mexico might, someday, maybe, because Donald J. Trump will pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.

Hamburger!

And then none of those MS-13 thugs will flood over the border into our great American nation to rape and rob and murder, even though MS-13 is actually a Los Angeles gang that spread from the United States into Central America. But you don’t know that, do you?

We do not!

Hey, and speaking of Mexico, I repeatedly promised that the United States would withdraw from NAFTA. Worst deal ever! So, have we?

No!

No, we haven’t. But, don’t worry, folks. Mexico and Canada will come back to the negotiating table because . . . hey, what about our amazing veterans, folks? Give our vets a huge round of applause!

U-S-A! U-S-A!

Then there’s China.

Boo!

You all remember what I said about China, right?

Unfair trader! Currency manipulator!

And our new best friend!

Hooray!

Chant begins: Lock her up! Lock her up!

We’re not doing that.

Yay!

Now, I also promised to drain the swamp. I admit, we’re a little behind in that effort, since I’ve only nominated 37 people for 530 senior-level jobs in the agencies. So, if anyone in this room would like to be an associate deputy undersecretary in the Department of Labor or a deputy United States Trade Representative, please let Mike Pence know. Anything not claimed by the end of the night is going to Jared Kushner.

OK, now folks, let’s talk tax cuts.

Wild applause.

I promised you that, within the first 100 days, I would slash the corporate tax rate from 35 to 15 percent. Is anyone in this room a corporation? No? Over here? No? That’s OK. I haven’t done much about that either.

More wild applause. 

But it’s not just corporations, folks. I also plan to eliminate the despised death tax, hated by everyone with an estate over $5.45 million. I’m sure that applies to almost everyone here.

Now, I made a bunch of other crazy promises in my 100-day contract—things like the “Restoring Community Safety Act,” the “End the Offshoring Act,” the “Affordable Childcare and Eldercare Act” and the “Restoring National Security Act.” But you folks have never heard of any of these—and I haven’t done anything about them anyway, so we’ll just forget about them.

Hooray!

In conclusion, I would like to reminisce for a moment about my wonderful campaign, and I know you all were there for me. Give yourselves a big round of applause for Making America Great Again!

Wild applause.

So, I once said, early on, during a campaign stop in Iowa, that I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and still not lose my voters. Bang! Good night!

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Burg Blog: Wrong Place

The scene outside the state Farm Show Complex today.

Last Saturday, during my weekly trip to the Broad Street Market, a fellow reporter stopped to tell me that President Donald Trump planned to host a 100-day-in-office celebration, campaign-style, at the state Farm Show Complex. Right here in Harrisburg. In a week.

And my reaction was, “Huh?”

It wasn’t just me.

Over the course of the coming days, several other people I spoke to had the same reaction: Why here? Why Harrisburg?

Eventually, the conventional wisdom seemed to be that Trump, wanting to bask in the glow of a fawning crowd, needed a large venue (check) in a swing state he won (check) that was close to D.C. (checkmate).

So, Harrisburg it was, a few minutes north from the White House as the plane flies.

However, if Trump’s people had done more checking, they may have decided to put a little more fuel into Air Force One and gone farther afield to, say, Bradford or Erie or Ohio. The city of Harrisburg, after all, went for Hillary Clinton by an overwhelming margin, and Dauphin County was one of just two counties between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh to turn blue during the last presidential election.

It wasn’t always this way.

Harrisburg was reliably Republican until the 1970s and Dauphin County even longer. However, today, every political office in the city is held by a Democrat, the city so blue that not a single Republican is competing in the May 16 primary for mayor, City Council or school board. Therefore, the Democratic primary winners almost certainly will be victorious in November’s general election, barring a shock from an independent or write-in.

It turns out that Harrisburg is following national urban trends, just a decade or so later than everywhere else—as usual. In large, northern cities, Democrats displaced Republicans almost entirely by the late 1960s. The close-in, older suburbs followed, and Republicans, now largely a rural party, today have trouble getting elected even in the wealthy, sprawling suburbs and exurbs outside cities like New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. So, I personally wasn’t surprised that Clinton won Dauphin County by nearly 3 percentage points, bucking the larger trend in central Pennsylvania.

This is all a prolonged way of saying that Trump, seeking friendly ground, could have chosen more wisely.

Could this be why, 24 hours before he’s due to take the stage to great adulation, tickets are still available for his campaign rally? I find this very surprising, as Trump, though low in the polls, still has many passionate supporters and is coming here to celebrate a milestone as president (and poke a stick into the eye of the White House Correspondents Dinner in Washington). I’m shocked he’s had trouble filling the New Holland Arena, as I expected the 10,000 or so tickets to be gone in minutes or, at most, hours.

However, I personally know more people planning to attend the counter-protest than the actual campaign rally, which, if nothing else, says something about the general mood within the city proper.

So, Mr. President, welcome to Harrisburg. I hope you’ll enjoy your motorcade ride in from the airport, and looking out the rear window of your limo, discover that we have a charming little city and hardly the “war zone” you once claimed it was.

But you also should know that Harrisburg isn’t really Trump country. It’s deep blue, a Democratic stronghold, an urban island and the seat of a county that also preferred your opponent. So, if you’re looking for blind adoration—and I’m pretty sure you are—I’m sorry to report that you’re holding your campaign event in the wrong place. Is it too late to book something outside Lancaster?

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Movies to Nosh On: Global flavors, Jewish stories set the table for the annual Harrisburg Jewish Film Festival.

To learn about a culture, taste its food. 

The Harrisburg Jewish Film Festival enters its 23rd season with this idea fueling its opening night event. 

Filmgoers can taste a spectrum of Israeli gastronomy with a buffet highlighting stops on the culinary journey featured in the night’s film, “In Search of Israeli Cuisine.” Award-winning Israeli chef Michael Solomonov takes viewers on a tour of the people driving Israel’s dynamic food scene.

Beyond opening night’s medley of yummy offerings (which also includes post-film desserts), attendees will enjoy a feast of Jewish-themed stories all week long.

The festival’s diverse offerings always impress audiences, said Julie Sherman, festival coordinator. But this year, it’s a “wow,” she said. 

“It’s really balanced—kids’ movies, documentaries, special events, dramas and comedies,” she said.

Some films, such as “In Between,” show a slice of life. This film takes place in present-day Tel Aviv and follows three young Palestinian women as they negotiate life and share a flat in the city.

Other documentaries, such as “Operation Wedding,” take on more serious subjects.

In 1970, young Jewish dissidents tried to hijack a small plane to fly to Israel after being denied permission to emigrate from the Soviet Union. This group used the pretext of attending a bridal ceremony as a reason to rent the entire plane. The daring escape attempt became known as “Operation Wedding.”

Filmmaker Anat Zalmanson-Kutznetsov, daughter of dissidents Eduard Kuznetsov and Sylva Zalmanson, created the documentary of the same name.

“It wasn’t so much anti-Semitism that motivated my parents,” Zalmanson-Kuznetsov said. “They just didn’t feel Russia was their home. They wanted to be free.” 

The Soviet Union considered the dissidents “terrorists.” But, all her life, the 37-year-old filmmaker said she has been asked, “Do you know your parents were heroes?” 

The film captures this complexity and will be followed by a local angle—a panel discussion of Soviet Jews who immigrated to Harrisburg. 

Another documentary film in the festival, “On the Map,” takes place in Israel but under the shadow of the USSR. In 1977, the Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball team unexpectedly won the European Cup after beating the Soviet team that initially refused to compete against them. 

“[This win is] a big story in Israel, maybe like in America the walk on the moon,” said Director Dani Menkin. 

A few films center on the Holocaust and World War II. 

The French-Belgian war drama, “Fanny’s Journey,” was inspired by the true story of a group of children fleeing Nazi-occupied France to Switzerland.

The German historical thriller, “The People vs. Fritz Bauer,” takes viewers into 1950s Germany. Bauer, a German attorney general, shared information about Adolf Eichmann, who was responsible for the mass deportation of Jews.

The World War II theme takes a lighthearted turn to Uruguay, with the comedy-drama, “Mr. Kaplan.” In it, an older Jewish man experiencing an existential crisis thinks a new-to-town German might be a Nazi. He tries to capture and bring him to justice.   

Other lighthearted films also should give viewers a laugh or two. 

“The Women’s Balcony,” a hit Israeli comedy-drama, depicts women in a modern Orthodox synagogue and the charismatic, young rabbi who challenges them. He appears at first to be a savior, but slowly starts pushing fundamentalist views. 

The family-friendly drama, “Abulele,” plays with the idea of the monster that Israeli parents use to threaten misbehaving kids. In this film, the monster is “pretty friendly,” Sherman said. 

“It’s a really sweet movie,” she said. 

The festival highlights famous Jewish Americans, such as Star Trek icon Leonard Nimoy and novelist Philip Roth.

For 3rd in the Burg on May 19, Midtown Cinema presents “For the Love of Spock,” a documentary about Nimoy made by his son, Adam.  

On May 21, the annual “Sunday Morning Book Club” will gather to discuss Roth’s novel, “Indignation,” and watch the film based on the book. The New York Times’ Stephen Holden wrote that this film is “easily the best film made of a Roth novel, which is saying a lot.”  

Literature and writing professor Yelena (Helen) P. Khanzhina-Wexler will join the group at that event to help guide the discussion about the book and its film adaptation. 

Once again, food will play an important role, as bagels and coffee will precede the event.

The Harrisburg Jewish Film Festival opens May 18 at the Jewish Community Center, 3301 N. Front St. The festival continues until May 25 at Midtown Cinema, 250 Reily St. For more information, visit www.jewishharrisburg.org or www.hbgjff.com. Find ticketing information for the rest of the festival at www.midtowncinema.com.

2017 HARRISBURG JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULE

Thursday, May 18 
Jewish Community Center
6 p.m.: Israeli Buffet Feast (reservations required)
7 p.m.: “In Search of Israeli Cuisine,” followed by a dessert reception

Friday, May 19
Midtown Cinema
6 p.m.: “For the Love of Spock”

Saturday, May 20, 8:30 p.m.
Midtown Cinema
“The Women’s Balcony”

Sunday, May 21
Midtown Cinema
10 a.m.: “Indignation,” followed by a book club discussion
2 p.m.: “Abulele”
4 p.m.: “Mr. Kaplan”
7 p.m.: “On the Map”

Monday, May 22
Midtown Cinema
3 p.m.: “The Pickle Recipe”
5:30 p.m.: “Fanny’s Journey”
7:30 p.m.: “Sabena Hijacking: My Version”

Tuesday, May 23
Midtown Cinema
11 a.m.: “In Between”
3 p.m.: “The Women’s Balcony”
3:15 p.m.: “My Hero Brother”
5:15 p.m.: “Mr. Kaplan”
5:30 p.m.: “On the Map”
7:15 p.m.: “The Pickle Recipe”
7:30 p.m.: “The People vs. Fritz Bauer”

Wednesday, May 24
Midtown Cinema
3 p.m.: “Sabena Hijacking: My Version”
5:30 p.m.: “In Between”
7:30 p.m.: “Operation Wedding,” followed by a panel discussion 

Thursday, May 25
Midtown Cinema
3 p.m.: “The People vs. Fritz Bauer”
5:30 p.m.: “The Women’s Balcony”
7:30 p.m.: “Fanny’s Journey,” followed by closing night reception 

Author: Barbara Trainin Blank

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Cooking with Qui: Rosemary teams up with Harrisburg’s dean of Italian cuisine—and the result is a springtime delight.

Burg in Focus: Cooking with Qui from GK Visual on Vimeo.

When TheBurg suggested I get together and cook with Qui Qui Musarra, chef/owner of three premier Harrisburg restaurants (Mangia Qui, Suba and Rubicon), I had a few moments of apprehension.  

I knew she was extraordinarily busy. And while food is my passion and favorite “pastime,” I am a home cook. I read cookbooks like novels and try to learn as much as I can about Italian food, the cuisine of my heritage. But I am an amateur. I couldn’t imagine Qui would want to make time for something like this, or even had the time.

But, after speaking with her one evening at Rubicon, I sensed she was eager to do it.  And, for me, I knew it would be a wonderful adventure and that the resulting column would be a unique addition to the annual food issue of TheBurg.

I was honored for the opportunity to cook with Qui. So, we discussed possible dishes and decided on one that would celebrate spring and all of its bright green vegetables that are with us so briefly. I told her I’d always wanted to cook with fresh fava beans, a broad bean popular in Italian cooking, but have never been able to find them. I also love artichokes and freshly shelled peas and suggested that we might use them, too.

Qui suggested a dish called Roman vignarola, which is a mix of spring vegetables cooked together into a savory stew that can be a meal in itself. In Rome, locally grown artichokes serve as stars of this dish, but I learned that many other combinations of vegetables can be used according to personal preference and availability. We included little Yukon Gold potatoes, which I love, and that added more substance to the dish.

Photo by Dani Fresh

I was a little nervous putting my cooking skills on display, but Qui very kindly gave me some pointers on slicing and chopping and grasping a sharp knife properly. She showed me how to use a mandolin, which is used for making thin and uniform vegetable slices (only one close-to-finger-slicing encounter!). I had many questions for Qui as we began to put the vignarola together:

  • How do you shell fresh fava beans? (The outer pods and inner skins must be removed.)
  • Can you substitute baby lima beans if fresh favas are unavailable? (Yes, as favas are hard for the home cook to find.)
  • What kind of onions should be used, and what is the easiest way to slice them? (Qui used yellow cooking onions, while I usually cook with Vidalia or another sweet onion.)
  • Do you use any special olive oil? (She used regular extra virgin.)
  • What type of sauté pan are you using? (Qui used an aluminum skillet but any good, heavy piece of cookware will do.)
  • Is a mandolin necessary to slice the little potatoes? (Regular slicing with a sharp knife is fine.)
  • Why do you add water to cook the potatoes instead of just olive oil? (The potatoes absorb the water and oil mixture to become creamy and soft.)

Since we didn’t have artichokes to accompany the potatoes that day, we used fava beans, fresh pod peas, yellow cooking onions, garlic, sliced Italian green beans (my mother called them Roma beans), and lots of chopped fresh herbs. We didn’t measure our ingredients but, in the directions below, I have tried to approximate the amounts we used.

Ingredients

  • 2 medium, yellow cooking onions, cut in half and then sliced into half-moons
  • 1 pound of small Yukon Gold potatoes, unpeeled, and cut into thin slices (either by hand or by using a mandolin)
  • Several fresh garlic cloves, peeled and minced
  • 1 cup of water and about ¾ cup extra virgin olive oil (or more if needed)
  • About 2 cups shelled, fresh fava beans or frozen baby lima beans
  • 1 to 2 cups of shelled fresh pod peas
  • 1 cup of fresh Italian green beans, sliced into 1-inch pieces
  • Fresh oregano and chives, chopped
  • Freshly grated Parmesan Reggiano cheese
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Directions

  • Gently sauté the onions and garlic in the olive oil until softened and golden in color.
  • Add the sliced potatoes, additional olive oil, water, salt and pepper and cook over medium-low heat until the potatoes are tender.
  • Add the fava beans, Roma beans and peas, and cook gently until tender and most of the liquid has evaporated. (Do not cover the pan or the vegetables will lose their bright green color.)
  • Mound the vignarola on an oval platter and shower it with a handful of chopped oregano and chives and freshly grated Parmesan. (Dried herbs will not do!)

Our finished dish was wonderful. Topped with some edible flowers, it seemed like a real celebration of spring (I kept sneaking little spoonfuls hoping no one would notice). How lovely it would be to serve vignarola for a simple lunch with some crusty bread and a cold white wine. It could be part of dinner, too, along with grilled chicken or pan-fried flounder or sole. Qui told us vignarola may soon be making an appearance at one of her restaurants paired with some tender spring lamb.

As my special afternoon with Qui at Rubicon came to an end, I studied the beautiful still life she had set up for TheBurg photographers: the platter of vignarola, a big wedge of Parmesan, a sauce boat of green olive oil, a cheese grater that resembled a witch’s hat and several of the raw ingredients we had used.

The afternoon sun was streaming through the front windows of the lovely bistro that is Rubicon, and I thought how lucky our little city is to have this talented and unique chef in Qui Qui Musarra. Our editor at TheBurg, Larry Binda, once wrote that Harrisburg “needs to do small city well.” Qui certainly does, but I think she could do big city, too.

Author: Rosemary Ruggieri Baer

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And The Winners Are… 25 years of the best in Harrisburg arts.

Jeff Lynch and Bebe Mullaugh were munching on some lunch with Mike Greenwald at Mangia Qui when Greenwald announced to the pair that they would be recipients of an award recognizing their contributions to the area’s cultural life.

“We were surprised and deeply flattered to be in the company of past recipients, many of whom are also friends,” Lynch said later.

Flattered? Yes, and for good reason. The 2017 Awards for Distinguished Service to the Arts in the Capital Region (aka the “Arts Awards”) is now in its 25th year of celebrating extraordinary individuals (Stuart Malina, Lois Lehrman Grass, Steve Rudolph to name a past few) whose magic touch is felt throughout art arenas.

Surprised? The pair, Harrisburg residents, shouldn’t have been. Lynch, a commercial filmmaker, designer, photographer, musician and local impresario, has presented, produced, performed, mentored and supported some of the major music organizations in the region. Mullaugh, an attorney with McNees Wallace & Nurick and president of the Capital Area School for the Arts Charter School, shepherded the plan that led to the school’s creation. She also served as past board member and board chair of Concertante, the chamber music ensemble.

“The level of artistry available to this community is on a strikingly high level and, in many cases, equal to or exceeding many major metros,” Lynch said. “For us, it’s particularly satisfying to provide some degree of support and guidance to aspiring artists as they work to create inspiring work going forward.”

Lynch and Mullaugh will be joined by other honorees whose accomplishments are just as impressive.

The Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet (CPYB) is a recipient this time around, 25 years after its founder, Marcia Dale Weary, received the award for her solo efforts in bringing this Carlisle-based organization worldwide recognition for offering the finest in classical ballet training. Many alumni have gone on to perform as principals, soloists and corps de ballet members in some of the most prestigious ballet companies in the world, including the American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet and National Ballet of Canada.

“Right now, 81 of our dancers are active and performing professionally,” said Nicholas Ade, CPYB’s chief executive officer. “But there are much more than 81 who are lawyers and doctors and working in other professions who have been trained by us, and we are equally proud of both. Dance teaches life skills. It teaches resilience, strength, self-confidence. It creates a more well-rounded person. It creates better lives.”

Despite all sorts of accolades CPYB has received over the decades, receiving this award is special. Ade admits he was thrilled when Greenwald phoned him to let him know that the group would be added to a historic list of arts honorees.

“I was elated,” Ade said. “I immediately called our board members to let them know about this high honor. At the ceremony, we are planning to have our youngest dancers perform and our older current dancers. We will also have a surprise alumni guest.”

Another recipient, Dr. George Orthey of Newport, will be given a special achievement award at the ceremony in June. Orthey is a premier autoharp maker who has had a folk arts award named after him. In fact, he annually hosts the Mountain Laurel Autoharp Gathering at Little Buffalo State Park, where hundreds of autoharpists from around the world arrive for five days of workshops and concerts.

Greenwald, the producer for the event, a noted arts advocate and the bearer of good news for this year’s winners, was himself an honoree last year, though a reluctant one.

“I initially declined it because I didn’t see myself as a candidate,” he said. “I felt my role was as a producer and not wanting or needing to be chosen. After further consideration—and encouragement and sentiments expressed to me by past recipients—I felt terribly honored to be embraced in such a way and ultimately decided to accept.”

Using the Kennedy Center Honors concept, the Arts Awards were initially staged as “Accolades & Applause” by Harrisburg Community Theatre, now Theatre Harrisburg. Barbara L. Schell, a former theater board member, chaired the special events committee when the concept turned into reality.

“So many wonderful people have been involved over the years,” she said. “To that end, the Arts Awards event has continued to evolve over the years from honoring just artists and philanthropists to including corporations and foundations. This award represents their achievements in our community and is a way of saying thank you for bringing their talents to life for all of us to enjoy.”

The 2017 Awards for Distinguished Service to the Arts in the Capital Region will be presented June 4, 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., at Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts, 222 Market St., Harrisburg. For more information about the awards and the event, visit theatreharrisburg.com.  

Author: Lori M. Myers

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A Place at the Table: The faces behind Harrisburg’s women-owned food businesses

Photo by Hartman Benzon Media

They’re newbies, seasoned veterans and family members continuing a culinary legacy. These women happily find themselves part of a boom of female-owned food businesses in Harrisburg.

For a long time, Harrisburg didn’t have much of a dining scene.

Then, in the early 2000s, a few pioneers took a risk, mostly downtown, and, over the past few years, another wave of restaurants opened. But one thing was different this time around—many, perhaps most, were owned and operated by women.

A few women said they entered the business to continue a family legacy. Others said they wanted to work for themselves. Then there are those who, like many business owners before them, simply had a dream to do it.

They pull long workweeks, doing everything from preparing meals to washing the dishes to managing the finances.

“I’m under the sink with a wrench,” said Kristin Messner-Baker of the Vegetable Hunter, a vegetarian restaurant downtown. “It’s not glamorous.”

Some said they’ve encountered sexism on the job, from customers or in a business setting.

“I go into a place, and I have to spend the first 15 minutes to half hour convincing people that I’m worth listening to,” said Andrea Grove of Elementary Coffee, adding that customers sometimes think her male employees run her popular stand in the Broad Street Market.

Though their jobs are stressful, challenging and risky, these owners and co-owners said they wouldn’t have it any other way. In the following pages, we briefly introduce several of the women shaking up Harrisburg’s food scene.

Staci Basore, Elide Hower and Qui Qui Musarra: Rubicon, Mangia Qui and Suba

Though in charge of five menus, four kitchens and three restaurants, the owners of Mangia Qui, Rubicon and Suba still find time for afternoon adventures.

“We like to go biking, kayaking, play golf,” Staci Basore said. “If we can squeeze an hour in between lunch and dinner service, we’ll do that and come back.”   

These seasoned restaurateurs thrive in the freedom that comes with self-employment.

“We answer to each other,” Qui Qui Musarra said.

They chuckle at romanticized visions of running a restaurant. Each woman clocks in 60 to 70 hours per week. Plus, working weekends “comes with the territory,” Basore said.

The trio opened Mangia Qui nearly two decades ago. They credit consistency in a quality product for sustaining a supportive customer base, “vital members to our families,” Basore said.

Each woman came to Harrisburg with professional restaurant experience from across the country and world. Their three restaurants’ internationally inspired menus and drinks reflect this.  

They stay abreast of food trends, adapting as needed. Unceasingly, they stay true to themselves.

“It has to come from within,” Musarra said. “What Staci does, what I do, what Elide does—it’s all based on who we are.”

And that’s another reward to running an independent restaurant.

Andrea Grove: Elementary Coffee

Running a lemonade stand with her brother at 8 years old taught Andrea Grove her first business lesson.

“You can’t drink the lemonade because that’s drinking profits,” she said.

Since starting Elementary Coffee at the Broad Street Market in 2014, the former English major has learned a few more.  

“When it comes to how to run a successful business, it comes down to meeting people and connecting with them,” she said.

Her shop partners with local businesses such as Calicutts Spice Co. in Lemoyne and Frederic Loraschi Chocolate in Colonial Park. These relationships extend internationally, too. Grove is developing a partnership to bring in ethically sourced coffee from Ugandan farmers.

She wants her specialty coffee shop to connect with all members of the community.

“Coffee shouldn’t exclude anyone,” she said. “You can almost leave people behind, based on price point or … based on atmosphere,” she said.

A small cup of specialty coffee costs $2, with creative espresso drinks a buck or two more. The market location attracts folks from all walks of life.

Though she initially hesitated to open in the Broad Street Market, seen as risky before its remarkable renaissance, the community has embraced Elementary Coffee, she said.

“I feel like this is such a self-supporting community,” she said. “I feel like, in general, people are warm and really willing to help.”

Leena Shenoy: Passage to India

Leena Shenoy likes to share a story that shows just how much Passage to India has become an essential part of the Harrisburg community.

For decades, one special guest celebrated his birthday at the Shipoke restaurant. Ten years ago, after marking his 90th, he told Shenoy, “I don’t know if I’ll see you next year.”

This past April, the day of his 100th birthday, he said the same thing after Shenoy brought his favorite dishes to a birthday celebration at his senior living facility.   

“He was so happy to see us,” she said. “To do something like that was the best thing I’ve ever felt in my life.”

Over the course of the restaurant’s 24 years, she’s met some guests as newborns, and, now, they’re married. The restaurant has also hosted countless Indian wedding ceremonies with “nothing less than 300 people,” she said. Meeting guests and learning their stories keep the restaurant business fun.

“That’s what puts me back into my shoes,” she said.

Her husband, Vishnu, ran the business until his sudden passing in 2011. She said he emphasized treating guests as if they were royalty. Now, as the owner, she carries forward this vision.

“Every guest is like god, and you have to treat them like a god,” she said. “That’s what we believe in our customs. That’s what I believe.”

That’s what keeps customers coming back.

Nora Proctor: P&R Bakery

Nora Proctor’s mother always prepared her southern sweet potato pie from memory, never considering this dessert to be special. But to Proctor, her husband Ed and customers at P&R Bakery, the pie was an instant favorite.  

Eager to replicate the dessert, she watched her mother closely. Then, she spent a whole day in the kitchen figuring out the recipe. “I think I got it!” she told Ed when he came home that evening.

“He blew my bubble,” she said, smiling. “He said, ‘You don’t know if you got it until I taste it.’”

He confirmed it. She had discovered her mother’s recipe.

Since then, this recipe has been a mainstay in their decades of selling homemade pies, cookies and other baked goods.

P&R Bakery sustains her mother’s legacy in more ways than just the pie. After her mother passed away, the couple took a “leap of faith,” as Ed called it. In 2006, they opened in the Broad Street Market. Six years later, they moved to Midtown Scholar Bookstore.

The consistent quality keeps customers coming back, she said.

“We use the old-fashioned ingredients,” she said. “Real butter, eggs.”

Plus, the sweet potato pie hasn’t changed significantly since the moment Proctor put the recipe to paper.

Elodia and Ana Saenz: Mexico Lindo

To sisters Ana and Elodia Saenz, preparing tacos from authentic recipes keeps family traditions alive.  

The co-owners of Mexico Lindo, the taco truck parked at 15th and Market streets, serve cuisine derived from the region their father Eloy calls home. After two decades of serving the people of Harrisburg, he retired to his native Michoacán four years ago.

That’s when the sisters stepped up to run the family business.

They use fresh ingredients to prepare tacos from scratch, “because that is the Latino way,” Elodia said.

Customers appreciate the authenticity. Many find the truck through word of mouth. Some have eaten Saenz family tacos since 1990, when Eloy opened shop.

“They’re like part of the family,” Elodia said.

Knowing they’re continuing a family business motivates the sisters to each work about 70 hours per week. Ana’s daughter and Elodia’s son work weekends to “make some money and eat,” Elodia said.

A third generation may take over the shop. Elodia’s son studies hospitality management at Penn State, after being inspired by his grandfather and the family business.

“Because my father began this, I don’t want this to die,” Elodia said. “I can pass it on to my family.”

Mihye Pak: Yami Korean Food

Mihye Pak runs her stand at the Broad Street Market “the hard way,” she said.

She starts each week driving to Baltimore to purchase ingredients at a Korean market. Then she and her four employees hand-cut all the vegetables (because there’s more crunch and flavor than machine-cut, she said) and prepare fresh sauces (“So I know what’s in there.”).

She does all this work so that, when the market is open, Thursday to Saturday, she is able to serve authentic, home-style Korean food.

“When you make things the easy way, you’re not going to last long,” she said. “Customers, they know.”

She’s owned Yami for four years, after the previous owner reached out to her. Though scared, she said she would try it.

When Pak took over the shop, she swapped the old recipes—prepared with shortcuts and unhealthy MSG—with a new menu of dishes cooked as the customer ordered it.  

She’s picky, she said. Her employees know this, too.

“I tell employees, ‘If you don’t want to eat it, don’t give it to the customers,’” she said.

Though, she admitted, if she cut corners, she could work less.

“I’m the last one to leave [the market’s stone building],” she said. “I never shut down unless the market shuts down.”

Kristin Messner-Baker: The Vegetable Hunter

Adaptability serves Kristin Messner-Baker well.

She studied creative writing, practiced law and entered motherhood, all while nurturing a dream to open a café.

Then, in June 2014, she and her husband John seized an opportunity to open a vegetarian restaurant called Crave & Co. on N. 2nd Street.

As the co-owner, she does everything from manage employees to fix what needs fixing.

Most importantly, she stays flexible.

Over time, the café evolved into the Vegetable Hunter, the name better reflecting its focus on vegetarian and vegan dishes. It even recently started selling its own craft beer. Messner-Baker plans to roll out a new menu, too.

“If you are stubborn and stick to one vision, and it doesn’t work, you are out of business,” she said.

Crave & Co., she believes, sounded too generic. The new name positions the businesses well for its future, she said.

The Vegetable Hunter feeds a hungry niche of veggie lovers in the Harrisburg area. Throughout the changes, the friendly atmosphere and quality food have remained the same.

“I love creating this atmosphere of a happy home,” she said. “[I love] meeting different people. Everyone’s friendly.”

Author: Danielle Roth

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