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food

News acorns (10/28/14)

October 28, 2014

farm animalsSee a slide show of Lincoln’s agricultural history

Lincoln’s “rural character” is the result of conscious efforts among residents and conservation groups to protect large contiguous farms and to maintain their historic agricultural use. The Lincoln Agriculture Commission and Lincoln Garden Club invite the public to a slide show celebrating our agricultural heritage on Monday, Nov. 3 from 7-9 p.m. at Bemis Hall.. A panel of farmers from the following farms will tell their unique stories: Codman Farm, Drumlin Farm, Raja Farm, Levin Farm, Breton Farm and Matlock Farm, as well as farmers with horses, alpacas and bees.

 


Winter CSAs offer shares

Starting on November 6, Codman Community Farms will offer “bag sales” of its organic meat as part of its meat CSA (community-supported agriculture) program. Bag sales will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the CCF office next to the barn (ask for Barb or Eric). You may also purchase bags of meat during the scheduled meat CSA pickup on the first Thursday of each month from 5-7 p.m. in the Codman barn. You have two options: $120 for a 10-lb. bag of Codman’s own pork and beef (including cuts and ground meats) or $65 for a “Taste of Codman” bag with 5 lbs. of pork or beef. A six-month Codman meat CSA share for $600 helps Codman manage its stock and brings you 10 lbs. of meat each month. That works out to $10 per pound for grass-fed beef and naturally fed pork from Codman’s own animals—all antibiotic- and hormone-free. The next session runs from January to June. Join the meat CSA here.

You can also try Codman meat during the Food Project CSA’s winter vegetable share distributions at the Codman barn on November 22, December 6 and December 20 from noon to 4 p.m. Five- and 10-lb. bags of CCF pork and beef will be for sale (purchase separately with cash or check). Food Project winter CSA shares for Lincoln pickup are $200. See this Food Project web page for information on winter, spring and summer 2015 shares.

Full and half shares are still available in Drumlin Farm’s Winter CSA program, which provides eight distributions of locally and sustainably grown produce from November to February. The first distribution is November 6. Produce may include winter squash, potatoes, beets, carrots, turnips, parsnip, radish, Brussels sprouts, onions, garlic, shallots and more. Register online today at www.massaudubon.org/drumlincsa. Work shares are also available—email dfgrower@massaudubon.org for more information.


The Rafters come to Lincoln

The Rafters (Dave Fitzgibbons and Miki Bryan) are the featured performers at the next LOMA (Lincoln Open-Mike Acoustic) night  on Monday, Nov. 10 from 7 to 10 p.m. They’ll perform a half-hour set starting around 8:30 p.m. The Rafters, who play mostly originals in the indie-folk genre, have been steadily gaining recognition, playing prestigious venues and opening for the likes of Joan Osborne, Amy Ray and John Gorka. Their three CDs include Breathing Room (hear samples and buy songs on CD Baby).

LOMA is a monthly event.  Performers can sign up at the event or email Rich Eilbert at loma3re@gmail.com before noon of the open-mike day for a slot. Names of those who are signed up by 7:15 p.m. will be drawn at random. We have a sound system with mikes and instrumental pickups suitable for individuals or small groups playing acoustic-style. Admission is free and refreshments are provided. The featured artist at the December 8 LOMA will be Glenn Pettit.

Category: food, news

November activities hosted by the COA

October 26, 2014

bemisLincoln Academy with Ian Spencer—Forensic art: Blending creativity and crime-fighting
November 3 at 12:30 p.m.
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 3 at 12:30 to hear Ian Spencer of the Lincoln Police Department discuss “Forensic Art: Blending Creativity and Crime-Fighting.” Bring a bag lunch. The Council on Aging provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion.

Ole time traditional jazz concert
November 6 at 2:30 p.m.
Join in the fun on Thursday, Nov. 6 at 2:30 when our regular traditional jazz combo gathers around the Steinway Grand at Bemis Hall for an afternoon of spontaneous jamming. Share the joy as cornet, sax, clarinet, trombone, bass, drums and piano belt out good old foot stompers of the ’20s,’30s and ’40s. Tap your toes to old favorites such as Ain’t Misbehavin’, I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Makin’ Whoopie, On the Sunny Side of The Street, Honeysuckle Rose, I Got Rhythm, etc., ending with a rousing all-in When The Saints Go Marchin’ In. Get up and dance around the room if you feel the urge. If you missed the last one, you definitely won’t want to miss this one. Just ask anyone who was there. Check them out. You might end up staying!

Zen cancer wisdom
November 7 at 10 a.m.
If you or a friend or family member has been touched by cancer, you know that having cancer is a journey involving the body, mind, heart, and soul. That journey can be made easier, however, by words of wisdom from those who have experienced it. All are invited to Bemis Hall on Friday, Nov.7 at 10 a.m. to hear Sue Stason discuss the newly released book Zen Cancer Wisdom: Tips for Making Each Day Better by Sue’s daughter-in-law, Daju Suzanne Friedman. Ms. Friedman, a scholar of Daoism, qigong master, Zen teacher and professor and doctor of Chinese medicine, was a cancer patient twice. Her book includes tips on and specific practices for managing the physical effects of cancer and its treatment, coping with stress, living fully with a cancer diagnosis, harnessing the mind and more.

Basic self-defense with the Lincoln Police
November 7 at 1 p.m.
Whether you’re at home in Lincoln or traveling to another place, you need to know how to prevent crime or, if you find yourself in a dangerous situation, know how to get away unharmed. Find out the best ways to secure your home and your vehicle as well as learn strikes, blocks, kicks, and patterns of movement to get you out of a situation in which you are being attacked when Ian Spencer of the Lincoln Police comes to Bemis Hall on Friday, Nov. 7 at 1 p.m. The methods you learn will use minimal energy with the goal being escape. Those who attended the previous workshop will benefit from the refresher provided by this workshop.

Lincoln Academy with Holly Holleroth—The “naked truth” about aging
November 10 at 12:30 p.m.
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 10 at 12:30 to hear Hugo “Holly” Holleroth discuss “The Naked Truth about Aging.” Bring a bag lunch. The Council on Aging provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion.

Important Hanscom Air Force Base and MassPort update
November 12 at 10 a.m.
Hanscom Air Force Base and Massport are integral to Lincoln in many ways. Join part two of our conversation about what’s going on at Hanscom and Massport when Tim Higgins, Lincoln’s Town Administrator, comes to Bemis Hall on Wednesday, Nov. 12 at 10 a.m. He will update the group and then answer questions and concerns. This presentation is part of Fireside Chat, a discussion of a current news topic using questions and answers led by Sharon Antia each second Wednesday of the month. All are welcome.

Veterans Day luncheon
November 12 at Noon
Veterans and their spouses are invited to a Veterans Day luncheon on Wednesday, Nov. 12 at noon at Bemis Hall. Come for soup/chowder and sandwiches. This will be a relaxing, fun time for veterans and their spouses to get together, chat, and enjoy some time together. Please sign up by Friday, Nov. 7 by calling the COA. A $5 donation is requested.

European river cruises and meet-up
November 14 at 9:30
The Danube, the Seine, the Rhine the Main—Europe’s rivers are romantic, beautiful and full of historic intrigue. Find out more about the rivers and cruises that can take you on them without the aggravation and uncertainty of planning the trip yourself when Peggy Dawson, travel advisor and accredited cruise counselor, comes to Bemis Hall on Friday, Nov. 14 at 10 a.m. She’ll describe some popular tours, let you know how to choose a.m. ong them, and give the inside scoop on costs. Start the morning at 9:30 a.m. with a “meet-up” of people who would like to travel but need traveling companions or who just like to talk about traveling.

Observation status: are you an inpatient or outpatient?
November 14 at 1 p.m.
The difference between being admitted as a hospital inpatient vs. being under “observation status” as an outpatient is a costly problem for seniors and even more difficult to understand. Learn the difference between the two and how to advocate for yourself or a loved one when Lindsay Brennan, LSW, CMC, executive director of Life Care Directions of New England, comes to Bemis Hall on Friday, Nov. 14 at 1 p.m. There will be time for questions and concerns. Refreshments will be provided by Right at Home.

Do you have something you need sewn?
November 17 at 10 a.m.
Do you have a seam that needs repairing or a hem to be taken up, or some other sewing need? Barbara Straus has volunteered to come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 17 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. to help you with your sewing needs! No need to sign up, just come on down!

Lincoln Academy with Walter Bossert—was Edith Wilson the de facto president?
November 17 at 12:30 p.m.
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 17 at 12:30 p.m. to hear Walter Bossert discuss “Was Edith Wilson de Facto President of the United States During the Last 17 Months of Woodrow Wilson’s Presidency?” featuring live music of the era. Bring a bag lunch. The Council on Aging provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion.

Senior dining
November 18 at 11:30 a.m.
Lincoln seniors are invited to a gourmet meal in an elegant setting at 11:30 on Tuesday, Nov. 18 at St. Anne’s Church. You must reserve by calling the COA at 781-259-8811 at least a week ahead even if you have previously attended. The cost of each meal is $5. Caregivers are welcome to come with those for whom they are caring. Let the COA know when you call if you need transportation or a seating partner. The lunch is co-sponsored by the COA, the Friends of the COA, Minuteman Senior Services, and St. Anne’s. And the volunteer serving staff consists of your Lincoln friends and neighbors. Except in extenuating circumstances, you must call to cancel at least a week ahead or the COA will need to charge you for the meal in order to cover costs.

Meet with an aide to Congresswoman Clark
November 19 at 1 p.m.
You are invited to Bemis Hall on Wednesday, Nov. 19 at 1 p.m. to meet with Natalie Kaufman, Constituent Service Representative for Congresswoman Katherine Clark. She will be available to assist residents with Social Security, Medicare, and MassHealth/Medicaid. You’re also welcome to discuss other matters with her that she may be able to help with.

Happy feet, happy life: foot massage you do yourself
November 21 at 10 a.m.
Your feet don’t just get you here and there—they have key pressure points. Keeping them in good shape is essential to our overall health and well being, including improving circulation, removing toxins, stress relief, and more. Find out how foot massage can become part of your wellness routine and how to do foot massage on yourself or someone else with Jai Kaur Annamaria San Antonio on Friday, Nov. 21 at 10 a.m. Jai Kuar Annamaria teaches the COA’s popular Easy Yoga course, among other yoga classes, and is a qualified massage therapist in private practice. Bring your feet and your questions!

Developing a job search action plan
November 21 at 1 p.m.
Join Tee Provost of Operation ABLE when she continues her series on successfully finding a job on Friday, Nov. 21 at 1 p.m. at Bemis Hall. Tee will focus on deciding between job options, setting goals, evaluating resources and obstacles to achieving goals, and developing an action plan with clear, obtainable steps. This program will be of benefit even if you have not come to previous sessions.

Lincoln Academy: Birches School teachers
November 24 at 12:30 p.m.
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 24 at 12:30 p.m. to hear Teachers from Birches School discuss “Birches School: Offering a Nature-based, Community-based STEAM Education” (STEAM = science/technology/engineering/arts/mathematics). Bring a bag lunch. The Council on Aging provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion.

Reagle holiday gala
Revel in holiday joy as you experience over two hours of enchanting Christmas cheer at the Reagle Music Theater’s Holiday Gala on Sunday, Dec. 7. You’ll enjoy a breathtaking spectacle including a full orchestra and 150 talented performers featuring Yuletide songs and pageants of the Parade of Wooden Soldiers, Santa’s Workshop, a Victorian Christmas and more. The bus will leave the Mall at 3:15 p.m. on a Doherty’s bus and return about 7 p.m. The cost, including transportation, is $36 per person. Remember to bring some cash for ice cream and drinks that will be served at intermission. To reserve your place, send a check made out to FLCOA Trips to Claire Mount, 123 Tower Road, Lincoln, MA 01773 by November 19. Questions? Call Claire at 781-259-8695.

Save the date! Winter piano recital by Wanda Paik
Join Lincoln resident Wanda Paik for a solo piano performance on Friday, Dec. 5 at 2:30 p.m. at Bemis Hall. Admission is free and open to the public and will be followed by refreshments. Music by Chopin will be performed. Paik has appeared as soloist with the Boston Pops under Arthur Fiedler and Erich Kunzel, the Boston Classical Orchestra with Harry Ellis Dickson and the Boston Civic Symphony with Max Hobart, among others. She has also performed at the National Gallery in Washington, the Fogg Museum at Harvard University, at numerous colleges and universities throughout the U.S., and in Brazil, Trinidad and South Korea. Paik has served as president of the New England Piano Teachers’ Association and a board member of the Concord Area Music School Association. She is a member of the music faculty at Regis College in Weston and has released two CDs: Piano Perennials and Romantic Classics.

Category: arts, food, health and science, seniors

Library to host musical cabaret

September 30, 2014

libraryThe last and largest segment of the Lincoln Public Library’s fire suppression system is complete, and the library is grateful to residents for funding this important safeguard for staff and patrons. To say thank-you, the library will host a musical cabaret and a taste of a savory “Lincoln tart” provided by Aka Bistro on Wednesday, Oct. 8 from 2-6 p.m.

Musical performances will be arranged by Brad Meyer and will include musicians Peg Espinola, Kathy Hoben, Wanda Metcalf, Carolyn Waters, David Fishken and Ellen Groves. Brad Meyer will also perform with Amy Lohman and Mel Green. Stroll through the library and revisit your favorite areas, say hi (and thanks) to the staff who worked hard to provide exceptional services during the construction, and say hello to several new library staff members: part-time Reference Librarians Kate Tranquada, Janet Spiller and Sarah Hogan; Alyssa Freden, Head of Technical Services, and newly promoted Assistant Director Lisa Rothenberg.

Category: arts, food

October activities sponsored by COA

September 29, 2014

Here are the October activities sponsored by the Lincoln Council on Aging.

Enjoy old-time jazz with the Lincoln Trad Jazz Jammers
October 2 at 2:30 p.m.
If you ain’t been to one of these yet, find out what you’ve been missin’! Come celebrate the joy of jazz at Bemis Hall on Thursday, October 2 at 2:30 p.m. when the Lincoln Traditional Jazz Jammers will share with you their love of this hot and cool music in a delightfully spontaneous jam! If you find you just can’t sit still, go ahead and tap your toes or get up and dance as they belt out favorites we all know and love, like Ain’t Misbehavin’, Makin’ Whoopie and others. The musicians are mostly retirees, amateurs who give life to the music of the ‘20s, ‘30s and ‘40s at the Trad Jazz Jams at Bemis Hall, the library, and the Colonial Inn on Wednesdays.

Chaplin meets Beethoven
October 3 at 1 p.m.
Mark your calendars for Friday, October 3 at 1 p.m., at Bemis Hall when the COA will show The Immigrant, a silent film by Charlie Chaplin, accompanied by a live string group, Con Affeto, which includes Lincoln residents Laura Bossert and Terry King and others. Con Affeto will play music by Beethoven, Mozart, Kreisler and more. They have performed on New York music station WQXR and elsewhere in the region. This event is supported by the Friends of the Lincoln COA. [Read more…] about October activities sponsored by COA

Category: arts, food, health and science, seniors

June events at the Council on Aging

June 4, 2014

bemisBelow are June events sponsored by the Lincoln Council on Aging. For more information, call the COA at 781-259-8811.

Coffee with artist Ellen Milan
June 5 at 2:30 p.m.
Indulge your senses in the grace and liveliness of paintings on silk, prints, pastels, and scratch board engravings by Ellen Milan in the Bemis Hall Artists Gallery this month. You are also invited to meet Ellen at the “Coffee with the Artist” on June 5 at 2:30 p.m.Ellen’s work has been included in public and private collections and shows in Wisconsin, Massachusetts, New York, Israel and Europe. Locally, her work has been part of group shows at the Danforth Museum, Concord Art Association and elsewhere. Last year she had exhibitions at the Lincoln Library and the Harvey Wheeler Community Center. You can see the full scope of her work in various media, including wearable art, at www.ellenmilan.com.

[Read more…] about June events at the Council on Aging

Category: food, government, health and science, history, seniors

More things to do in Lincoln this month

May 2, 2014

Theater now, music later on at L-S

The LSB Players at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School will stage the final two performances of The 39 Steps tonight and tomorrow, May 2 and 3, at 7:30 p.m. in Kirschner Auditorium. Based on the classic Hitchcock movie, The 39 Steps is an hilarious farce of mistaken identity, who done it, and deadpan humor. Produced in conjunction with the English Department’s Drama in Production class, the show will incorporate complex stagecraft sure to be crowd-pleasing. Tickets are $15 for adults and $8 for students and seniors. Go to the LSB Tickets webpage to reserve seats.

Also at L-S in May, the Lincoln-Sudbury Civic Orchestra (LSCO) will wrap up its 2013-2014 season with its spring concert on Friday, May 30 at 7:30 p.m. Interim Conductor Ray Daniels will direct the orchestra in the overture to Mozart’s opera The Magic Flute, Gabriel Faure’s Pavane for a Dead Princess, Alexander Borodin’s On the Steppes of Central Asia, and Felix Mendelssohn’s Reformation Symphony (#5). L-S senior and Sudbury resident Emily Liang is the featured soloist in the Concerto in A minor, RV 356, by Antonio Vivaldi. Admission is a suggested donation of $10 for adults or $5 for students and senior citizens. A reception will follow the concert.

LSCO is a volunteer community orchestra comprising high school students and adult community members who share a love for preparing and performing substantial orchestral repertoire. The members have classical music training at the intermediate to advanced level and rehearse weekly. Neither professional performing experience nor residence in Lincoln or Sudbury are requirements for membership. Daniels also serves as associate conductor for the Waltham Philharmonic Orchestra and has conducted symphony orchestras throughout the U.S.

For more information about this concert or about participation as a performing member, contact the orchestra at lscivicorchestra@gmail.com.


Spring cleanup at Codman this weekend

Please join us for Codman Farm’s Volunteer Spring Cleanup Work Day  on Saturday, May 3 starting at 8:30 a.m. Come for the day or come for an hour. Volunteers will be treated to a great lunch. We’ll find a task to suit your energy level and time commitment. Tasks include:

  • Barn cleanup
  • Refrigerator shelf cleaning
  • Brush burning
  • Wood pile moving
  • Wood chip spreading
  • Sugar shack cleanout
  • General trash pickup (tell the kids it’s a hunt!)
  • Painting

deCordova

Dance Spot at deCordova.

Dance outside at deCordova on Sunday

Try out your moves on outdoor dance floors in the deCordova Sculpture Park on Sunday, May 4 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Multimedia artist Elisa H. Hamilton pairs colorful diagrams, site-specific dance routines and songs in her participatory installation Dance Spot. Free with admission or membership.

Also on Sunday at the deCordova: celebrate jewelry artist Wiwat Kamolpornwijit, Artist of the Month at the deCordova Store for May 2014, during a drop-in weekend reception at 2 p.m. Admission to deCordova Store is always free.


Garden Club fundraising sale is on May 10

Get out your trowels and potting soil—it’s time for the Lincoln Garden Club’s biennial fundraiser plant sale on Saturday, May 10 at the Codman Barn. There will be something for every type of garden including perennials from local gardens, rare and unusual specimens, patio planters, herbs and shade plants. This year we have an abundant number of peonies and unusual lilies and irises, as well as hostas, ornamental grasses, echinacea, daisies, geraniums, anemones, spirea, trillium, astilbe, bee balm, bleeding heart, coriopsis, rubeckia, and much more. To entertain the kids, the Garden Club has a fun hands-on craft planned that will make a perfect Mother’s Day gift.

Plants will be sold from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., so plan to spend the morning browsing for plants. This fundraiser supports the Garden Club activities such as the planter in front of the library, floral arrangements for home-bound residents, and public lectures on gardening topics. Questions? Email Belinda.gingrich@verizon.net. Learn more on the Lincoln Garden Club website and hear news about meetings and events.


frog

A capella night to support LEAP

Join fellow Lincolnites for a night of a capella at Bemis Hall on Friday, May 16 from 7-10 p.m. to support LEAP (the Lincoln Extended-day Activities Program). There will be food, drinks and fun, as well as a silent auction and raffle to support LEAP, Lincoln’s longtime afterschool program. Prizes to bid on include dinner and a movie with babysitting, gift certificates to salons, a basket of wine, a loaf of bread every month for six months from Nashoba Valley Bakery, 18 holes of golf, Red Sox tickets, and more. Tickets are $25 ($30 at the door). Come to LEAP to purchase tickets in advance. Child care for the event will be provided at LEAP for $10 per child. Reserve a spot by May 14. To donate something to our benefit auction or raffle, please contact Kathryn Hawkins at978-505-8751.


Pie bakers

Rev. Daniel MacDonald and Eva Elder of St. Anne’s show off their pie-baking skills.

Pie-baking competition at St. Anne’s on May 16

St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church  is hosting a pie-baking competition as a fundraiser for the youth mission trip this summer. The event takes place starting at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, May 16 in Flint Hall. We’ll have pies for judging, pies for eating and pies for buying.

You can submit a pie to be judged in any one of four pie categories (fruit, custard and cream, savory, and exotic); prizes will be awarded for each category as well as Best in Show. Register online at www.stanneslincoln.org. There will also be a pizza pie dinner and live music with admission to this fabulous event. Come hear more about our mission trip to New York City in July, and help support its funding by entering a pie, or buying a pie, or just coming to enjoy the festivities.


“What Makes Me White?”

The Lincoln METCO Coordinating Committee (MCC) will present the 45-minute film What Makes Me White? on Monday, May 19 at 6 p.m. in the Brooks Auditorium. The documentary discusses the role of race in the daily lives of white people. Designed as a gentle tool for the classroom, boardroom, and house of worship, the film avoids blame, guilt, or “political correctness.” The hope is to inspire individuals to reflect on the invisible influence of whiteness on personality and life. The audience will engage in a discussion of the feelings and thoughts raised by the film. Students in grades 6-8 can also see the film on Wednesday, May 21 at 12:40 p.m. Lunch will be provided courtesy of the MCC.

Category: agriculture and flora, features, food, kids, news, schools

Council on Aging events for May

April 24, 2014

bemisHere are the events scheduled for May by the Lincoln Council on Aging.

Sublime sunflowers: pastel paint like the masters
May 2 at 1 p.m.
The COA is pleased to present award-winning pastel artist Greg Maichack who will offer his new hands-on workshop for beginners to advanced artists in pastel painting on Friday, May 2 from 1 to 3 p.m. at Bemis Hall. Maichack will provide insights into the lives of sunflower painters van Gogh, Monet and O’Keefe, and then participants will be coached to create their own sunflower paintings. The workshop is free, but please call the COA at 781-259-8811 to sign up. This workshop is supported in part by a grant from the Lincoln Cultural Council, a local agency supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

[Read more…] about Council on Aging events for May

Category: arts, food, history, news, seniors

AKA Bistro to reopen by end of April

April 10, 2014

AKA Bistro co-owner Christian Touche inside the restaurant, which is being renovated after a flood.

AKA Bistro co-owner Christian Touche inside the restaurant, which is being renovated after a flood.

By Alice Waugh

AKA Bistro expects to reopen by the end of this month with an all-new menu and other improvements.

The restaurant has been closed since December, when an overhead water pipe ruptured and caused extensive water damage. Most of the dining room interior as well as much of the kitchen equipment has been torn out and replaced.

It’s been a battle for co-owner Christian Touche, who has had to fight for compensation not just for the renovations but also for business-interruption insurance payments. He said his insurance company was initially reluctant to compensate him for what his staff would have earned in tips as well as their $2.63 hourly salary while the restaurant was closed. Touche decided to pay them out of his own pocket while discussions were going on so he could keep the staff available to return to work when the restaurant reopens.

“We’ve developed a really nice team,” Touche said. “It sounds like a cliché, but we’re really like a family.” AKA Bistro has 25 employees, 12 of whom are wait staff, he added.

When customers return, they’ll notice a few changes, such as a menu that now lists traditional French and Japanese dishes together, rather than on separate pages. There will also be lots of salads and new dishes, Touche said.

Other changes were made for the comfort of diners. The biggest complaint before the closing was the conversation noise level, so workers have installed sound-absorbing foam beneath the new floor, custom-made cloth wall panels, thicker ceiling tiles and even soundproofing behind the pictures on the walls. There will also be better window shades and improved air flow, Touche said.

“We took the time to reinvent ourselves,” he said.

It didn’t make sense to reopen the restaurant in a new location, Touche said. “I feel at home here, and I think people [in Lincoln] deserve a decent restaurant. I hope they’ll give us another shot.”

The reservation line at 781-259-9920 should be back in operation by next week, he said.

Category: food, news

First annual “Celebrate Asia!” at L-S this weekend

April 7, 2014

asia-food

The first annual “Celebrate Asia!” Festival on April 12 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. will celebrate the diverse cultures that enrich Lincoln-Sudbury school and town communities and will serve as a fundraiser for the L-S Memorial School, the high school’s sister school in Battambang, Cambodia.

Among the offerings at the festival: crafts activities for kids, cultural performances by diverse dance groups, martial arts exhibitions, henna tattoos, tai chi, yoga, Asian goods and gifts, and some of your favorite Asian foods.

The L-S Memorial School was the brainchild of Mira Vale, a 2009 Lincoln graduate of L-S,  who worked with former history teacher Bill Schechter and others to create the school as a way to help the L-S community heal after the in-school murder of 15-year-old James Alenson in 2007 (see article in the Sudbury Town Crier). Community members raised money in partnership with American Assistance for Cambodia to build the 300-student school, which opened in 2009 with five classrooms furnished with desks, benches, chalkboards, school supplies, and English-speaking teachers.

The school commemorates the L-S students and young alumni who have died during the school’s 50-year history. Names of about 300 deceased students and alumni are listed on the L-S Memorial School website, along with this video of how the  school became a reality.

Category: food, kids, news, schools

News acorns

March 8, 2014

New “spring greens” CSA offered by The Food Project

To get a jump-start on the growing and distribution season, The Food Project has launched a brand new “Spring Greens” community-supported agriculture (CSA) share. For $200, you get five weeks of cooking and salad greens (4 pounds a week on average) grown in our high tunnel greenhouses in Lincoln. Distributions on Thursdays from 3-6 p.m. will start in May at the Lincoln farm on Baker Bridge Road (the exact start date will be determined depending on the weather). Visit The Food Project website to sign up online, or call 781-259-8621 x20. Spaces are limited.

Codman Community Farm and Drumlin Farm are also offering CSA shares—see the Lincoln Squirrel, March 5.

Meals on Wheels needs delivery volunteers

The Lincoln Council on Aging needs people to deliver Meals on Wheels either regularly or as occasional substitutes. Drivers pick up the meals in Concord at about 10:30 a.m. and deliver them to two to three homebound residents in Lincoln. The meals are absolutely essential to those who receive them, and we would be so grateful if you could help! For more information, please talk to Carolyn at the Council on Aging at 781-259-8811. Meals on Wheels is administered by Minuteman Senior Services.

folpocketFill out your File of Life

A File of Life is a red plastic envelope that attaches to your refrigerator or a small folder to put in your wallet that holds a piece of paper with essential information that would be needed by emergency medical services should you ever have a medical emergency. Lincoln residents of all ages are welcome to pick up one more free Files of Life at the Council on Aging at Bemis Hall anytime Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. You will receive both the envelope or folder and the paper that goes inside with spaces to fill in your information. You may also call the COA at 781-259-8811 and they will mail a File of Life to you.

Category: food, news, seniors

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  • Legal notice: Select Board public hearing May 7, 2025
  • Property sales in March and April 2025 May 6, 2025
  • Public forums, walks scheduled around Panetta/Farrington proposal May 5, 2025

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