ssorllih wrote:It is a very ambitious and comprehensive menu that you show. Will you be able to have all of those items on opening day? I ask because many of them require months to prepare. Do you also plan to offer vacuum packaged frozen entres?
Last week I gave friends a loaf of fresh bread and 3 stuffed bell peppers and received a note from them yesterday thanking me and praising the peppers.
Hey there Ross. Thanks for the nice words

. I can't really tell you if that is the size menu we will be offering on any given day. I imagine that it will be scaled down to 25, but even that will be dictated by what our display case will hold and the flow of customers. I cant see us going below 20 items though. I am going to start a dry-aging program and start selling aged steaks, prepared roasts, stuffed quail, ect as we get busier, but the perishability rate is very high on those type of items.
You are right about the salumi end of things with the time it takes. That is the first thing I am going to start making once we get our inspection. I am going to start with smaller diameter salamis and dry cured items such as pancetta, and guanciale that have a shorter maturation period. We are going to operate quietly for friends and family for about two weeks until we fine tune our production and service before opening the flood gates.
We might have a few things frozen such as demi-glace, stocks or bones but I am going to limit freezer food only because we are getting such beautiful whole animals in to work with. It would be shame to have to freeze that type of quality product. Nothing wrong with it, it just doesn't really fit in with the concept of fresh food, ya know? It does have its place though