Calendar of Events April/May 2012



We're about to have a very busy couple of months with a lot of fun and exciting things happening at our shop. Below you will find a summary of events that will span over the next little while. We will be posting more information about each event in the future as dates get closer, and for the curious few out there, most these events will take place upstairs.

April 22nd
Creanza Olive Oil tasting & Puglian dinner
Sold out!

May 3rd
The Pulse of Mixed Media book signing with author Seth Apter
Secret passions of 100 artists revealed

May 3rd - 6th
Butter on the Endive Guerrilla Dinners
A supplier and chef collaboration
For more information please e-mail info@butterontheendive.ca or visit www.butterontheendive.ca

May 10th - June 4th
Con Leche
An art gallery featuring the works of Patricia, Klee and Janaki Larsen, Ronald T. Crawford as well as guest works by Seth Apter.

May 24th - June 4th
Le Marché St. George Spring Pop-up Shop
New linens, cottons, ceramics and more!

French Colonial Pantry Items



Here we have an exceptional selection of goods for your home pantry that are reflective of old world French colonies. Items that will work well to make scrumptious dishes from Moroccan, Tunisian, and Algerian cuisine. To learn more about or purchase each item, please visit our online shop or follow the links below. Hopefully, we will soon have a menu inspirations post to showcase how these fine products can be included in your cooking.


L'Harissa El Manara de Djerba | $2.25 (Purchase This Item Online)
La Dalia - Smoked Paprika (Sweet)| $3.95 (Purchase This Item Online)
La Dalia - Smoked Paprika (Hot)| $3.95 (Purchase This Item Online)
Green Peppercorns in Brine from Madagascar | $3.50 (Purchase This Item Online)

Cups in Fragments N° 002





Another post from a place of heartbreak. Accidents happen and things will be broken, it is the nature of life. Items lost will be replaced with new ones and the cycle continues. Despite this it is always sad to see cups go, but their even in their broken state they are incredibly interesting to look at. Visit part one of this series here.

Now Available Online: Famiglia Creanza Olive Oil



Recently we posted two full-length articles with Tonio Creanza, one of which goes into detail about his family's premium extra virgin cold-pressed olive oil. Excellent news, we decided that it was about time for our readers and customers abroad to be able to get a taste of it for themselves, so it is now available on our online shop! These go pretty quickly at our brick and mortar, but we've made sure we keep a handful of bottles on reserve for the online store. Our supplies are extremely limited, however, as the Creanza olive grove is cultivated once per year, and only produces a limited amount of oil.

Purchase Online | Famiglia Creanza Olive Oil

Kinfolk Magazine Volume Three



Kinfolk has delivered another spectacular issue, now available at Le Marché St. George. The third instalment of the magazine celebrating small gatherings focuses on "meals, moments, and places who make us who we are individually and collectively". As always the photography is brilliant and the articles are nothing short of engaging. Each page is gorgeous because you're either looking at immaculate design, typography, images, or most likely a mix of all the above. If you haven't picked up a copy yet, we highly recommend it.

Beta 5 Marmalade



From local company Beta 5 comes a truly wonderful product that Le Marché St. George is now carrying in our shop. Their line of handcrafted marmalades are created with traditional methods, and using the most exquisite Californian citrus fruits. The variety of flavours include seville orange, traditional seville, bergamot, and bouquet des fleurs. Though each is wonderful in its own right, my personal favourite is bouquet des fleurs. Fine marmalade can turn a mundane breakfast into a thing of beauty.

Introducing Le Marché St. George's Online Shop



Every week, our inbox is flooded with messages from happy customers and people across Canada and the world over. It makes us feel very fortunate! Some of those who reach out to us have asked how they can get their hands on the products that are featured on our website, and for this reason, Le Marché St. George is proud to officially announce the launch of our online shop!

Forty items are currently available for purchase, and we will be adding new products every month, most likely coinciding with our posts about new merchandise. Endless thanks to all of our loyal customers and readers, we would not be where we are today without you!

Click here to visit our online store

Messors: Art Restoration, Culinary & Art Sojourns in Italy



Tonio is a dear friend of ours, and in addition to providing Le Marché St. George with some of the finest olive oil that could ever touch your lips, he runs a company that provides the most enchanting art restoration, culinary workshops and art sojourns in old-world Italy. If you've been looking to escape the monotony of city life and are looking for something rare and real, Messors is exactly what you've been dreaming about. I can guarantee that after reading this interview and visiting their site for more information and photography, that everyone will be booking flights to Italy and workshops with Messors. It is with great pleasure that we present to you another interview with the humble and magnificent Tonio Creanza.

For people not familiar with Messors, can you give them a general introduction?

Messors is the name of a workshop series I conduct in Italy - it's a new branch of my art restoration company, Sinergie, that I founded in 1989. Messors workshops include fresco, canvas, statuary and decorative restoration, origins of the Mediterranean cuisine, shepherding, and excursions to explore the southern regions of Puglia and Basilicata.

My background is in surveying, archeology and art restoration, and for the past twenty years I have been restoring frescoes, statues and canvases in private collections and for regional churches.

In 1994, after spending sometime abroad in Canada, the United States and Mexico, I returned, wanting to continue the 'cultural exchange experience' but on my native soil of Puglia. I came up with the idea to organize a volunteer camp to restore a historically important site and masseria located on the ancient Via Appia trade route. The site dates back to the neolithic period, which is rich with rupestral caves adorned with Byzantine frescoes, and archeological remains, and was a working farm up until the 1950's. Amazingly, the 'crazy' idea worked, and together with my colleagues we hosted over 700 international volunteers, and by 2009, 80% of the site was restored, thanks to their industrious enthusiasm. In addition to the volunteer sessions, we developed accredited fresco and archeology programs with an American university.

In recent years I've expanded the focus of the workshops, so the need arose to find a new name to encompass the new content and our growing contributors in the fields of cultural heritage, culinary history, architecture, local farmers, and shepherds, etc. I named our new crop of workshops Messors, after the Roman god of harvests - and I was delighted by the description of the aptly named 'messor ants' who are "flexible foragers and harvesters found in the old and new world, who are noted as industrious accomplished architects and whose role is to carry the seeds and distribute them." I think I'm a either a messor, the ant, or both. I grew up harvesting olives, wheat, almonds, and grapes on my father's land on the central agricultural plains of Puglia, and as a teenager, if I wasn't seeding a new crop or foraging for wild edible plants, I was discovering the subterranean world of rupestrian settlements and underground churches, and excavating burial sites and hellenic pottery.

I think of each workshop as a harvest: Harvesting ideas and knowledge and distributing them.

What makes your workshops different from those of others?

I was in the fields at a young age, learning by listening and watching, but mostly by 'doing'. By 11, I already had the responsibility of driving the tractor from town to the countryside, and given the confidence by my parents to help decide what was ripe for harvesting. And as young man with a blossoming interest in art history and archeology, I was fortunate enough to participate on archeological excavations and gained invaluable knowledge from the practical aspect of the excavation itself. So much of my learning beyond theory in art restoration has come from the actual process as it unfolds, because each object of antiquity has presented itself with its own set of problems that are unique to its own history. I apply this same philosophy to all of our workshops. To do, is to learn.

I believe to learn art restoration, one needs to first understand the methods and techniques of restoration but absolutely must marry these theories with hands-on practice. So many questions, answers and solutions come from active participation. All participants put theory into practice by working directly on rupestrian byzantine frescoes and statues and canvases from local churches. Its always about returning to the source or original state of creation. And the same is true too, when applied to the culinary workshops. We look at the evolution of its core roots. During the culinary programs we go to Pompeii to investigate the era of the idea of chefs and recipes, we work and meet with farmers and cheese makers, and learn how olive oil is extracted, so that one understands what is in the bottle and on your table.

Beyond the focus of the actual workshop themselves, everyone is all together, working and living in an elegant and rustic farmhouse (masseria) in the countryside, surrounded by acres of rolling fields. There is a shepherd who lives onsite; he goes to pasture each morning, and you can decide to take a walk with him and the herd; local cheese makers arrive each morning to make fresh cheese which you can watch if you chose. Massseria La Selva was built in the the 18th century as hunting lodge for the Roman Orsini family. The masseria has story-telling family collections of old pitchforks and farm tools, fencing masks, trophies, paintings, and antique furniture. We like to have long dinners outside in the courtyard, where sometimes locals drop by to practice their English or share their Italian - it can be really funny and fun.

On some warm summer nights we pull out the guitar and sing with the ever present chorus of the cicadas or project films on the exterior of the masseria, which makes for memorable evenings. We try to get to the traditional Sunday night stroll, passiagata, in the town of Altamura, and look for theatre and music that is going on in neighbouring towns. Hopefully there is a procession or festival of some kind going on- this year I want to try to go an ancient festival that I have yet to see, in which two trees are grafted together, or 'married'; there are big white oxen decorated with flowers that pull the fallen trees into town as people cheer. Two years ago we caught an intimate concert of Patrick Watson in Lecce, singing in a small stone square. People arrived with their children, old people brought their own wooden chairs, residents were out on their terraces and Watson sang with some local singers. It was fantastic. One of the wonderful things about Italy is most concerts and music festivals are free to attend because they are sponsored by local municipailties, so that everyone can go. Also there will be a Canadian group of archeologists who will be working on an excavation nearby this summer, participants of the workshops are welcome to go one day and watch how it is all done. We visit the coastline beaches and surrounding towns. In short, we are always looking for experiences and events that are fun and connect the traveler to the people of the region.



I heard that you're newly offering a culinary focused program, can you speak about this? Why now?

My passion for food, and all the traditions and festivities that surround eating, were central to my childhood. Essentially, it's my deep connection to working on my farmland and a perspective gained from traveling in other societies that led me to develop the culinary program, which focus on the origins of food specific to the Mediterranean diet.. In today's western culture, especially in big cities, I feel there is a disconnection between people and their food and the enjoyment of eating. I grew up eating what was available on the land - what was in season, or that what was made locally. Our family will eat fava beans and chicory or cherries infused in every meal for three weeks, and we devour it because we know it is the season for it and in two weeks something else will be ripe for eating. I believe as a culture and community that we can be connected to what we are eating through knowledge of how food is grown, harvested, and arrives at our tables. With that knowledge we can, in a way, influence what is offered to us in our local community markets.

The workshops focus on the fundamentals; the quality of crops, produce, ingredients, and methods of cooking that encompass health and pleasure - The Mediterranean Diet - from the old Greek words: dia-ita, way of living, life style - still largely practiced in the daily life of Puglia. These culinary traditions and this lifestyle has remained constant over the centuries, and is a good example of the connection of people's lives with the environment. By making our own cheeses, bread, olive oil, pasta, wine, sausages, etc, and sourcing the produce directly from the farmer or the fish from the port market there is a journey for your meal and a social interaction involved that leads to communal celebrations and festivities.

When Jamie Oliver came to my hometown of Altamura during his filming of his series Great Italian Escapes, he asked a group of kindergarten students to identify different types of vegetables. They knew them all. Oliver posed the same questions to high school students in the United States and they were floundering - because so many of them had never seen the vegetables in their raw natural state, either because things weren't being cooked at home, or because the ingredients had morphed too far from the natural state and in turn were lacking the health benefits. Another interesting side note about the Mediterranean culture and their connection to their food culture is that a great NY Times article was about how after three economically unsuccessful years, McDonald's shut down in Altamura (a population of 70,000) because it couldn't compete with the local food culture. It wasn't a direct protest to the fast food culture, the locals just didn't know what to make of the ingredients; the chicken McNuggets and deep-fried 'fries'. Not to mention that McDonald's was trying to package all those strange looking ingredients in buns - to sell to a culture who had been making their own bread for a millennia. The Altamura bread that even Horace noted in 37 B.C. was "by far the best bread to be had, so good that the wise traveler takes a supply of it for his onward journey." This culture, by staying true to their food, unintentionally took down the 'giant' - McDonald's.



Tonio, you're well known for working with Francis Ford Coppola. I'd love to hear more about this story.

Francis Ford Coppola had bought the historical Palazzo Margherita in Bernalda, the birthplace of his grandfather Agostino. My colleagues and I were contacted to do the restoration of the interior decorative wall paintings and the exterior plaster reliefs and decorative marbling on the exterior. We made extensive samples of decorative applications, finishes and styles for Coppola and his team, which included the French designer Jacques Grange. It was great personal pleasure to come to agreement with Maestro Coppola on the direction the restoration of the decorative applications took. He was very attentive to every single detail throughout the course of the restoration. And from what I understand, there was input on the details and the overall vision of the palazzo from his family members which I felt reflected the idea of a family restoring their roots.

I worked there intermittently through the course of a year working in the practices of Venetian plaster, tromp l'oiel, architectural decorative reliefs and false marble. I feel proud to have worked with such a creatively driven group of individuals, and on a project that exemplifies restoration in its finest detail. To see photos, the cover story of the March issue of The World Of Interiors details the completed Coppola's palazzo.

Puglia has become an increasingly popular luxury travel destination. What are your thoughts on the area, and why the recent spike in interest has taken place?

Maybe because the new luxury is aligning with the old idea of travel exploration, with culturally interested travelers seeking educational travel, creative travel, destinations off the beaten tourist track, a desire for a less ostentatious travel destination, or more of a feeling of privacy, away from large group of tourists. Sun, months of guaranteed sun. Wines of Puglia are gaining notoriety. Incredibly delicious, unadulterated fresh food. Its a region bordered by three brilliantly blue azure seas. Its incredibly wealthy in remains of ancient civilizations, Renaissance and Baroque art and architecture, age old traditions of patron saints and festivities, too. It's amazing that with the steady boom of tourism in northern Italy, that Puglia has remained relatively untouched by tourism. There are close to zero shops selling postcards, t-shirts or trinkets. In 1950, half of the population of the nearby town of Matera, still lived the sassi (cave dwellings) that their ancestors built and lived in 9000 years ago, and most those dwellings still didn't have running water until the late 50's. And if you want a beach, town, castle or hill all to yourself, go between 1 to 3 PM because the entire southern region will be eating lunch or taking a siesta.

What is one of your favourite moments that you have experienced during Messors' workshops, that exemplifies what your program and Puglia are all about?

There've been so many in twenty years and it's quite difficult to tell one in particular. The best feeling is about sharing my passion for restoration, history, food and my native region with participants.

But a fresh memory I have from last year during the restoration workshop, was that of a very reserved Japanese scientist who was working at Harvard University. After having spent the day in the barn immersed on a restoration project and picking tomatoes under the sun, while conversing about the experience at the dinner table they said, ”I'm living in a world too large and in a hurry all the time, but here I feel something different; the duration of the time is the same but, here, I enjoy thinking... I would like to improve this feeling in my world.”

During an archeology program we unearthed what we felt was an exciting 3rd century B.C. burial site; in one of the tombs there was a skeleton of child who had been laid to rest with an egg in his hands, the egg was still perfectly intact. Restoring a fresco of St. Christopher in my hometown of Altamura. The fresco of the Saint carrying the child Jesus to safety across the river, symbolizes safe journeys for all. It's situated to encircle walls, so that it could be seen by all those that once entered and left the original city centre.

What type of people would be interested in attending your workshops?

I've never targeted the workshops to any one specific group of people. There have been participants that after the art restoration workshop have decided to make their career in the field, others that have returned year after year as a 'second family' holiday destination; other solo travelers that have enjoyed the tranquil pace of life while learning something unique, interesting and useful; there have been university students who wanted to complete or integrate their theoretical studies with hands-on experience; mothers/fathers and sons/daughters wanting to share a cultural and educational vacation; couples in search of diversifying their dynamics by learning something new together while traveling, and ìn a group environment; teachers and speakers who now talk about their experience in their own courses and added the workshop content to their own programs; journalists in search of inspiration for an authentic story to write about; all walks of life!

For booking information visit www.messors.com

Interview: Famiglia Creanza Olive Oil



Tonio's olive oil is one of our shop's best-kept secrets. From personal experience, I can attest that it is the most delicious olive oil I have ever tasted. With that said, Janaki and I decided to interview Tonio, who provides us with his tasty product, and a second interview about his wonderful company, Messors, is up next.

Tell us about your family's olive grove, the type of trees, cultivation, and area.

Our family farmland and olive groves are located in the central Murgian plains of Puglia, the southern heel of Italy. My family has grown durum wheat, almonds, and olives for six generations. The orchards are located on ventilated hills which are rich with limestone. We have 700 Olea Europea trees and grow three varieties of olives that are indigenous and typical of the region; ogliarola (20%), silletti (40%) and coratina (40%). The trees vary in age from 4 to 400 years old, with the majority of them being around 80 years old. We use natural methods of fertilization that we mulch into the soil (partially made up of spent crops, especially fava beans, for their nitrogen-accumulating properties). We rely on the natural average rainfall as our method of irrigation, and do not pump in water from other sources.

What is unique about your olive oil's flavour, what is its flavour profile like?

The oliarola olive is very fruity and dense, the siletti has a smooth taste and the coratina is peppery, bitter and fruity. Together the blend produces an olive oil that is a vibrant, rich green colour. It is dense, and fruity with bitter notes and a peppery aftertaste. The peppery notes you taste indicate the contents of polyphenols, which are healthy, beneficial antioxidants, and preserve the olive oil itself. Our family, The Creanza family's olive oil is extra virgin, and cold-pressed.

What are some misconceptions about some of the types and uses of olive oil, and how can people use it better?

A true extra virgin olive oil is obtained from crushing and pressing the fruit of the olive trees, and is extracted through a mechanical steel milling process. Other definitions often seen on labels, like pure, refined or lite are used for marketing purposes: These label definitions often mean that the oil has somehow been altered from its purest form. Lite or refined gives the impression that it is somehow better for you than the virgin oil itself -- it is not. As consumer, you want to look for extra virgin olive oil, to obtain its natural health benefits. And if you can, look for olive oils that are from smaller producers that indicate where the olive is grown and pressed, rather than ones are labeled as Italian blends. The only other definition on labeling of extra virgin olive oil is cold pressed, which means that the process of extraction has been monitored in a way that the temperature doesn't go above 27°C, which retains the integrity of the oil's properties. It is very important to keep a bottle or can of olive oil in a dry, dark place, because olive oil is sensitive to light, which can change its properties.

In Italy, and especially in my region, Puglia, olive oil is basic in our diet. We use it for dressing, cooking, baking, and preserving. We do not make a distinction between finishing oils and cooking oils. Cooking with olive oil at a low temperature makes for a very flavourful dish with a very low saturated fat content. With my own family here in Canada, I've introduced olive oil instead of butter, for making pancakes and for sandwiches, etc.



What are some of your menu suggestions for how to serve or use your olive oil?

I use it for everything! We use it on all our salads with a little vinegar (we don't traditionally use balsamic), salt and pepper. We drizzle it on all our fresh pasta dishes. We use it in it simplest form as our flavour or spice.

  • Puglian brushcetta: Rub bread slices with sliced garlic cloves, toast, top with spoonfuls of an olive oil-marinated mixture of fresh sliced tomatoes, wild arugula and salt.
  • Preserve fresh mushrooms and peppers in olive oil: Boil water and vinegar, add fresh sliced cardoncelli (oyster) mushrooms for a couple of minutes, place them in a jar with sliced garlic and parsley, eat them next day with dense durum wheat bread. Keep them stored between 12 and 16°C; they get better every day.
  • Taralli: It's our savoury snack food, made of a flour dough, salt, and lots of olive oil. It's then rolled into tiny twists that are baked in the oven until crispy. You can find recipes for them online.
  • Octopus and fennel salad: Boil octopus in water and a little vinegar for several minutes. Let it rest, then mix with sliced fennel, parsley, garlic, salt, pepper and a very generous amount of olive oil. Let it marinate for several hours and serve at room temperature with crusty bread.
  • Make your own rustic pesto: Slightly brown walnuts, crush them with salt, fresh basil and lots of olive oil. Let it rest for a couple of hours, mix it with cooked warm tagliatelle pasta, and sprinkle with freshly grated parmigiano.
  • Dry your own very thin slices of zucchini in the sun, then mix with olive oil, balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper.

My very favourite dishes from home are simple and traditional:

  • Mashed fava beans and steamed bitter greens (example: wild chicory) with olive oil and garlic
  • White beans with pasta, dried hot peppers and olive oil
  • Beef or horse carpaccio, with grated hard flakes of Grana Padano, Pecorino, or Parmigiano, wild arugula, and drizzled with olive oil.
  • A very traditional lunch for shepherds and or farmers, called cialehed, which is an egg, a tomato, bitter greens, onion and garlic boiled and served over day-old bread and drizzled with lots and lots of olive oil.

When I was growing up, olive oil was also used as a remedy to calm inflamed skin irritations, eaten by the spoonful to calm an upset stomach, and as a moisturizer for very dry skin or hair.



Tell our readers about your volunteer program that people can attend, to harvest olives and explore Italy?

Every season we host volunteers to help with our family's yearly harvest, which takes place in November and December. Volunteers are involved in the daily process of the harvest: Picking the olives, laying nets out under the trees, raking the branches, filling crates and transporting them to the local press in town at the end of each day. The help is invaluable, and makes the stressful process of harvesting before the possible onset of frost go that much smoother. Volunteers learn about how the fruit of the olive is grown, harvested and made into oil, and we like to share our methods of organic farming, and what has been our family's culture for so many generations. I take the volunteers on excursions to historical sites, museums, neighbouring towns, and the coastline. We also try to socialize with locals in town for music and theatre events, festivals, etc after dinner. Also, in exchange, there is no cost for meals or accommodation.


I heard that it's grueling, but satisfying work. Can you expand on this?

Its a yearlong cycle of the olives' cultivation, and pruning and tending of the trees. When the right time arrives to harvest the olive, it's really hard work, no joke! The daylight during harvest season is short, so the morning work begins very early. This season can be erratic, so we try to judge when exactly to pick. It can be very very warm, but there is always the threat of rain or even possible frost, so we work intently and fast. The product of live oil is very precious; a tree yields 40 pounds of olives, producing 3 to 3.5 litres of olive oil; a person can pick 200 pounds of olives per day, or about 15 to 17 liters of oil. To try to beat the unknown factors, our tendency is to try to get as much picked in a day as possible. It usually takes around two-and-a-half weeks of full 8-hour days if everything goes well. Rain can slow the process down, and sometimes if it has rained during the night, we try to wait for the sun to dry out some of the wet soil that can feel like boulders cemented to each boot as you lift them, making work that much more difficult. I grew up doing this, so I am accustomed to the work. I know from volunteers that the work is very very hard, but there is a pleasure that they say comes from it later, a satisfaction of having worked so hard physically that was personally satisfying, and knowing how something that they consume was made - Where it comes from, what's involved, meeting the people who make what they eat and buy, etc. They say it's rewarding, and instills a sense of pride once they are back home, and can say "Hey, I made this!" , or "I know about how this was made, let me explain." It's a great kind of wealth, knowing where our food comes from and understanding the work that goes into making it, and it does provide a cultural exchange of understanding.


For more information visit www.messors.com