Category Archives: Harry’s Pizzeria

Flocking Together at Lake Meadow Naturals

While the growing season is winding down here in South Florida, up in Ocoee just outside of Orlando, Lake Meadow Naturals is alive with activity!

“Spring is a very busy time not only for ducklings, but for lots of animals that are being born and hatching,” explains farmer Dale Volkert. “We had 18 goats born the last 2 weeks, over 100 geese, 240 turkeys, guinea hens, 2 baby calves, let alone the batch after batch of ducklings. And ducklings are a lot of work when they start to hatch!”

We’ve been working with Dale and his team at Lake Meadow since fall of 2010 when we fell in love with his farm after a visit to shoot Michael’s television pilot, The Local Table.  Michael’s Genuine has been sourcing product from him for ever since; what began with heritage eggs including chicken, duck, guinea fowl, and goose has grown to include poultry such as broilers, fryers, and poussin — even goat.  We’ve placed an order for 18 ducks for SBRAGA Pizzeria, our Harry’s pop-up on May 22.  A lot can happen in a month!

“Ducks take about 28 days to develop inside the egg. Their egg tooth lets them cut around and through the shell and then push themselves out,” Dale continues. We then move them to a brooder, each holding 400 chicks which keeps them at 95 degrees and introduces them to water and an all natural diet of grains and vitamins.  We reduce the temperature 5 degrees each week until we get to room temperature and watch them closely. They drink a lot of water or should I say they like to play in a lot of water and they want more than they need but that’s just how ducks are. We then move them outside into duck hotels which we call them where they have more space to run around in and start to really enjoy playing in the water and enjoying life.  Once they get about 50% of their feathers on we let the doors open and they explore pastures and open spaces as they grow up into adult ducks.”

The Lake Meadow pasture is a beautiful thing.  It now plays home to 400 turkeys and 100 geese, baby ducks, and they even had to get donkeys.  They work wonders to control wild predators like coyotes, foxes and bobcats.

“We took the turkeys and geese
over to Jeremy and Heather’s farm who are farm partners of ours to raise them until harvest,” Dale shares.  “They have 15 acres and took a pair of our geese and the moment the babies drove in they were curious and adopted them as if they were their own. Geese are wonderful parents and very protective of even adopted chicks.”

Since we visited, the farm has updated its infrastructure, too, adding hydroponic gardens and several new chicken barns, three near the local farmers market and some up by the hydroponic gardens and orchard.  We can’t want to get back there!  For more information on Dale’s eggs, please find him featured in the current issue of Edible South Florida magazine.

Chat Chow Goes On the Air, Harry’s Throws Its First Calzone in the Oven!

Harry’s Pizzeria is celebrating the premiere of Content Miami with the Chat Chow Special Calzone!

Miami’s hottest restaurant show online — sporting an ingredient motif in its logo not unlike our Friends with You wall at Harry’s — is now coming to a TV near you!  That’s right.  Our friends at Chat Chow are the featured food segment on WPBT2′s new show, Content Miami, taking the best programming created for the web in the South Florida area and broadcasting it over the air. Chat Chow goes behind the scenes with the chefs, owners and barmen and women of Miami’s celebrated restaurant industry, like Michael!  We filmed an episode with host WiiFit girl Lauren Bernat and producer Gio Gutierrez last fall on Oasis of the Seas, when we first introduced Chef’s Farm-to-Ship menus onboard.

We’re all fired up for their small screen premiere at midnight tonight, Friday, May 4, so we’re marking the occasion with a special at Harry’s Pizzeria. Customers who visit Harry’s today can enjoy the Chat Chow Calzone for $12, featuring Michael’s housemade dough fired until crisp in our wood oven with creamy, organic ricotta and mozzarella cheese, and fire-rosted tomato sauce on the side for dipping. Add two of our craft beers on draught or a Miller High Five bucket for $10 more.

See you then!

Meme Want My Fish in a Bag

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Three times is a charm.  Thanks to daily menu change emails from the team in reservations, we tend to notice when @MGFD_MIA chef de cuisine Bradley Herron hits on a dish he’s having fun fooling around with.  The set-up of the moment? Al cartoccio, or, better yet, Bradley’s term of endearment — fish in a bag.  It’s going three weeks strong now, first Yellow Jack with  artichokes, fennel, asparagus, & lemon, followed by Flounder with leeks, georgia corn, asparagus, and thyme, for which our friend Steve Tweeted some love.  Michael’s a big fan, too.

Mutton Snapper al Cartoccio comes together with heirloom tomato, chorizo, chickpeas and cilantro, courtesy Bradley's iPhone.

“I love fish in a bag. I think the Harry’s pop-ups with Vetri and Sawyer inspired him to do it at Genuine. Fish in cartoccio was one of the first things I made at Dilullo’s. It’s nothing new, but that’s what’s great about it.  Rolling those bags up man? I remember that shit.”

We asked line cook Jason Arroyo about the simple preparation yesterday.  After the fish is wrapped up in parchment with a few ingredients and a great compound butter, the little packages quickly bake in the kitchen oven, rather than next to the wood fire which would be a challenge to manage during a busy service.

Knowing Bradley’s penchant for fish-cutting, there will likely be more bags to come before he tires and moves on. Yesterday’s Mutton Snapper was deliciously smokey and rich, but I have my fingers crossed that we’ll get some cobia in there next.  If it’s anything like what we tasted at Greenhouse Pizzeria, he’s got that one in the bag!