The Lost Kitchen: Recipes and a Good Life Found in Freedom, Maine: A CookbookHardcover (2024)

The Lost Kitchen: Recipes and a Good Life Found in Freedom, Maine: A CookbookHardcover (1)

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Description

From the New York Times bestselling author and founder of the beloved restaurant The Lost Kitchen comes a stunning collection of 100 Maine recipes for every season.

"A sensory joy . . . simple seasonal fare, creatively elevated and beautifully photographed . . . The recipes in The Lost Kitchen beckon you to keep returning for more."--The Philadelphia Inquirer

Erin French grew up in Freedom, Maine (population 719), helping her father at the griddle in his diner. An entirely self-taught cook who used cookbooks to form her culinary education, she founded her acclaimed restaurant, the Lost Kitchen, in the same town, creating meals that draws locals and visitors from around the world to a dining room that feels like an extension of her home.

No one can bring small-town America to life better than a native, especially when it comes to Maine, one of the country's most off-the-beaten-path states, with an abundant natural bounty that comes from its coastline, rivers, farms, fields, and woods--a cook's dream. Inspired by her lush locale and classic American cooking, Erin crafts deliciously satisfying and easy-to-make recipes such as Whole-Roasted Trout with Parsnip and Herb Hash, Maine Shrimp Rolls, Ramp and Fiddlehead Fried Rice, and Rhubarb Spoon Cake.

Erin's food has been called "brilliant in its simplicity and honesty" by Food & Wine, and it is exactly this pure approach that makes her style of cooking so appealing--and so easy to embrace at home, wherever you live.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780553448436

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed

Publication Date: 05-09-2017

Pages: 256

Product Dimensions: 7.70(w) x 10.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Erin French turned a string of early catering gigs into a secret suppers series in her apartment. She took her dinners on the road, organizing traveling "fork-to-field" dinners from a tricked-out 1965 Airstream trailer, before returning to her tiny hometown, Freedom, Maine, to build her dream restaurant, The Lost Kitchen, in a restored 1834 gristmill. Each spring, the day the phone line opens to accept reservations, the restaurant books up for the entire year. This is her first book.

Read an Excerpt

Read an Excerpt

THE LOST KITCHEN, FOUND

Sixteen miles west of the midcoast Maine town of Belfast lies a rural village called Freedom. Drive inland along Route 137, leaving behind the salty breezes of Penobscot Bay, and you pass little ponds, farmland, and wooded lanes. A singular flashing traffic light (the only one for miles) signals that you are nearly there. Once you’ve driven by the tractor shop, convenience store, and little diner on the corner and descended the hill into the heart of the tiny village below, you’ve found Freedom: population 719.

This is my home. It was on the back dirt roads of Freedom that I first rode a bike and at Sandy Pond where I learned to swim and ice fish and skate. It was along the old network of hiking trails where I discovered a love for nature and, in the soil of my family’s farm, the magic of growing things. I sold eggs by the roadside with my sister and made mud dams in the streams with the farm boys next door, and battled potato bugs, armed with a Mason jar filled with a couple fingers of gasoline.

Growing up in rural Maine, I came to understand the value of a homecooked meal, the joy of gathering around a supper table, and the importance of timeless dishes that form the fabric and culture of this place. I first noticed the simple pleasures of whole foods through the taste of fresh green beans, the cool and prickly crunch of a baby cucumber, the smell of a perfectly ripe tomato, the treasure hunt of digging for new potatoes.

As I grew older I found my place at the stove in my family’s fifty-seat restaurant, a rural greasy-spoon diner that my father owned for twenty years. By age fourteen I had learned how to cook fish to perfection, get a hamburger to a nice pink medium-rare, and run the lunch and dinner line between soccer practice and book reports. I was my dad’s replacement, giving him a break from a grueling sixteen-hour workday. He could finally lounge on the back deck of the restaurant with his friends, drink a beer, and sometimes use the cornfield in the distance as a golf driving range while inside I prepared platters of perfectly fried clams with mayo laced with diced bread-and-butter pickles. Occasionally I made a few extra bucks retrieving golf balls; after a few beers, my dad’s friends would gladly pay me a dollar a ball.

By sixteen I was seriously cooking on the line. It was hard work, but it paid (I was one of the only kids in school who could afford her own car, a 1984 VW Rabbit), and I found pleasure in cooking—especially when Dad wasn’t around and I was the boss. I created evening specials, garnished the lobster rolls with nasturtiums and violets I had harvested from my mother’s garden, and played around with desserts like tart rhubarb crisp with buttermilk ice cream—even though the locals seemed to prefer the graham cracker pie and instant chocolate pudding with aerosol whipped cream. I sometimes snuck a bag of brightly colored mixed baby lettuces into the diner’s produce order to replace the standard chopped iceberg in the house salad. I can still picture the melamine bowls that came back to the dish station with all of the red lettuces thrown aside. “Why do you have to be so groovy?” my dad would ask. “There’s a good living to be made here!” I did as any normal teenager would: disregarded everything my parents said because I knew better.

Living in a small town in Maine didn’t exactly promise enormous possibilities. During my twenties, I bounced from job to job, waiting tables and bartending, each gig ultimately leaving me feeling empty and lacking purpose.I tried conjuring up different entrepreneurial ideas. I baked and delivered treats to people’s homes. I took familiar family recipes and made them my own, elevating my grandmother’s soft molasses cookies with a handful of candied ginger, or using beets in place of carrots in my mother’s carrot cake recipe, topping it with a soft, sweet, and tangy goat cheese frosting. This led to a catering job where I taught myself how to make wedding cakes. I fell in love with the process of creating a piece of edible art, soaking layer upon layer of spongy vanilla cake in sweet basil syrup, stacking them with tart lemon curd, meticulously slathering the whole thing with a fluffy buttercream, and dotting it with soft pink peonies. My heart began to sing.

Deep into my twenties, the dream of a formal culinary education burned inside me but was further than distant. I was married and home raising my young son. I didn’t have the option to run back to college, and anyhow, I was way past the appropriate age where Mom and Dad would pick up the tuition bill. Instead I found my own way. Working at a local kitchen-supply store, I slowly built a collection of culinary equipment to play with by day and amassed a library of cookbooks to read by night. I picked up more catering gigs to learn new skills and keep on my toes. My mind was constantly churning with what I would do next, how I’d put all this stuff into practice.

And then, one cold and snowy December eve, I opened my apartment door to twenty-four strangers to host the first of a long series of “secret suppers”— and the Lost Kitchen was born. Saturday nights, the light at the bottom of my apartment stoop would flick on and the private door would open, letting in a flood of friends, strangers, and curious food lovers, wine bottles in hand along with a donation to help pay for the cost of the evening. Word spread quickly. People whispered of a new chef, a hidden venue with a blackboard scribbled with the night’s menu. The suppers became popular with both locals and outof-towners. It was there, at the four-burner electric stove in my tiny apartment, that I began to hone my visions of food, inspired by my Maine roots. I infused simple syrup with rosemary and combined it with apple cider and apple brandy to make smooth sorbets. I brined baby chickens with juniper and bay leaves, roasted them in hot skillets with good salty butter and lemon, and served them atop beds of spicy arugula. I roasted beets and pureed them with dill and buttermilk to create cold summer soups that I garnished with borage blossoms and olive oil. I perfected pastry dough and filled the tender crusts with any and every seasonal fruit or berry I could get my hands on.

After a year of rogue suppers, I finally found the courage to open a formal restaurant. I raised the funds from family and friends who believed in my ability and drive. Months later, the Lost Kitchen officially took shape in the commercial space below my apartment. It was beyond my wildest dreams. I had found my footing and made a name, established my place in this world. One evening, at the peak of service, Polly Shyka walked in. She and her husband own Villageside Farm in Freedom. She told me that her father-in-law was spearheading an effort to revive the old mill in town and was toying with the idea of including space for a restaurant. She asked if maybe I’d come check out the space. Who knows, maybe I could even open another spot there. I quickly dismissed the idea—I was working twenty-hour days just to stay afloat.

But life is unpredictable. In May of 2013, the Lost Kitchen took on a new meaning for me: I literally lost the kitchen in the messy end of my marriage. One simple change of the locks and the restaurant of my dreams was gone— along with everything inside. Every skillet, whisk, table, chair, fork and spoon, even my grandmother’s dishes. Everything I had worked so hard for and put so much love into. It knocked me on my knees.

So I did the only thing I knew how to do: I kept going. I realized that the heart of my cooking is not defined by the walls of any building, that the Lost Kitchen is defined by my heart, my soul, and my hands. I would rebuild.

Polly’s words about the mill echoed in my mind, but the possibility seemed distant and abstract. I needed something real, and real soon— especially if I was going to find work during the rapidly approaching busy summer season. And as is typical for me, change happened in atypical fashion. The ad read:

FOR SALE: 1965 AIRSTREAM TRADEWIND
PRICE: BEST OFFER
LOCATION: BAT CAVE, NC

There was only one thing to do . . . “To the Bat Cave!”

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The Lost Kitchen: Recipes and a Good Life Found in Freedom, Maine: A CookbookHardcover (2024)

FAQs

Why is Lost Kitchen closing? ›

The Lost Kitchen, which opened in the Gothic building in 2011, closed this spring with the only explanation for the sudden departure a blog post by owner and chef Erin French, who said she was taking a break after “going deep.”

Is Erin French still married? ›

Today, Michael is Erin French's husband and partner.

Will the Lost Kitchen be open in 2024? ›

FREEDOM, Maine — The Lost Kitchen, one of the most sought-after restaurant reservations in the country, has started accepting reservations for its 2024 dining season — and you'll need a postcard and a lot of luck to score one.

Does the lost kitchen have a cookbook? ›

Creating joy and connection around your table at home, and a very special memoir about renewal and freedom. OUR NEW COOKBOOK IS HERE!

Why did Lost Kitchen staff leave? ›

The last night of the service she describes was a breaking point, ending with a violent fight between French and her husband. On the verge of suicide, she ended up in rehab. He fired the entire Lost Kitchen staff, closed the restaurant and changed the locks on the doors, taking custody of French's son in the process.

Why did chef let Erin leave? ›

Den of Geek writes that the clap we hear as she bites into her burger might hint that the meat is poisonous. That's why Slowik let her escape: he knew she was going to die anyway after eating the burger.

Does The Lost Kitchen pay its employees? ›

It is our duty to give you an experience that not only feels magical, but priceless at the same time. Our dinners reflects the value of the best ingredients we can find, and our commitment to pay our staff fairly and consciously, the unique experience we work so hard to provide you with.

Is The Lost Kitchen closed in Maine? ›

The current top search question for The Lost Kitchen on Google is "Why is The Lost Kitchen Closing?" But as the restaurant continues to build its presence as a marketplace shop and farmers' market while maintaining its unique dining tradition, the damaging rumor generated by that question could not be further from the ...

Is Erin French a real chef? ›

Erin French is an American chef and author. She is the owner of The Lost Kitchen, a renowned 40-seat restaurant in Freedom, Maine.

Who owns The Lost Kitchen building? ›

Erin French, the owner and chef of The Lost Kitchen in Freedom, isn't complaining, but she has seen a few things change in her life since her culinary reputation shot into the stratosphere. "No one invites me over anymore," she acknowledged with a smile.

How many dinners does The Lost Kitchen do a week? ›

Inside a hydropowered grist mill in Freedom, a town about halfway between Augusta and Bangor, she cooks a set dinner for 40 people, four nights a week, editing the menu each day to keep up with subtle changes in season and supply.

How many days a week does The Lost Kitchen serve? ›

French does some of the serving herself and you can watch the prep at her workspace in the middle of the room. The best meal I have had. To get reservations is difficult. The restaurant seats 40 and is open 4 days a week from May to New Years.

How much does a bottle of wine cost at The Lost Kitchen? ›

The menu is posted on the cellar door for those who'd like to pair their wine choice with the main course. Prices for the wine were quite reasonable–starting at about $30 per bottle.

Does Erin French have a son? ›

Erin French - Thank you Today Show...my 14 year old son... | Facebook.

Who is the head chef of The Lost Kitchen? ›

In 2013, chef Erin French lost almost everything. Then, in Freedom, Maine, she started anew with her restaurant The Lost Kitchen.

What does Michael Dutton do for a living? ›

Michael has consistently been sought out as a strategic advisor to startups and early-stage ventures. He is the Co-Founder of 6ccMedia, a content strategy and production company. He is also manages Media Relations for Chef Erin French and her brand, The Lost Kitchen.

Will there be a 3rd season of The Lost Kitchen? ›

Watch The Lost Kitchen Online | Season 3 (2022) | TV Guide.

Is Erin from The Lost Kitchen married? ›

Michael Dutton: Erin's Current Husband

Michael Dutton met Erin French on the dating site match.com. According to Dutton's LinkedIn page, he started working as a media advisor/Executive Producer for the Lost Kitchen in June of 2015.

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