5 Things: June 14th, 2019

A lot of Things™ happened this week at NWS. Here's a handful of them.

Wine joined our beverage list.

We're officially selling beer and wine in our deli. This is huge news for us, as people love to have a beer or a glass of wine—which we'll be selling by the glass, or by the bottle with the option of corking it to-go—with a meal.

As soon as we received our buyer's license, we had pallets of beer from our neighbors at Hoops at our door, ready to sell. Our other vendors quickly followed suit, and we were fully-stocked on beer by the evening.

The wine orders operate on a different schedule, so we went through the weekend without it, but as of yesterday, our wine selection has arrived.

Thought about describing our wines to you, but whoops!, I have not tried them & TK already knocked this one out of the park.

Thought about describing our wines to you, but whoops!, I have not tried them & TK already knocked this one out of the park.

Each of our options falls into the category natural wines, or wines farmed organically and made without adding or removing anything during the fermentation . Like the production of our salumi, this is an ancient tradition. While I haven't yet had a chance to try our wine selection (it's only been a day—chill), TK has assured us each of them has something special to offer, and will pair well with just about any item on our menu.

The Spring Roll joined our sandwich menu.

Composed of smoked teriyaki tofu, cabbage, cucumber, pickled vegetables, lettuce, Marcona almonds, basil, cilantro, sriracha and sesame oil with rice vinegar all wrapped up in a naan (or on a hero roll, if you're ISO a vegan option), this sandwich tickles the tongue, and is taking over a menu slot for The Tempest.

Patricia, who comes in at 5 a.m. to bake cookies and pasties before working in the deli, is an absolutely unstoppable force of creativity with food. Within weeks of her tenure at NWS, she already had folks abuzz about the prototype to this sandwich. Just a few short months later, it has arrived on the sandwich board. At the time, we were making variants with pork loin, gravlax, tofu and even skipping the prepped protein altogether—all of which had their strengths, and are available as substitutions for essential carnivores—but we've landed on tofu.

One final note on the Spring Roll: Unlike most of our sandwiches—which are best consumed immediately, or at least within the day if you—there is a strong undercurrent amongst our staff that the sandwich is best eaten after a short wait, or even chilled.

I usually can't wait that long, but it is worth noting: this is a great picnic sandwich, for that reason.

Michael left for Bonnaroo.

Our co-worker Michael—who typically arrives at work with a ukulele in his hands and a song in his heart—left Tuesday to make his way to Tennessee for Bonnaroo Music Festival.

In addition to catching not one, but two Phish sets, he's also decided he wants to be the Duluth, MN Bonnaroo Street Team. It sounds a lot more labor intensive than it actually is—he's just taking a selection from several local breweries, and some NWS "buddies" & swag to the annual Craft Beer Exchange—but it is still awesome that he's chosen to represent our city.

While I doubt most or any of our readership is currently in Great Stage Park, TN, at the festival, or reading this post in time if they are, check our Instagram later today to see how NWS's first trip to Bonnaroo is going.

Final round of interviews for our Mail Order director position.

If you didn't know that we've been operating sans-Mail Order Director for an undisclosed temporal span, that's a good thing and doesn't surprise me. Our team has a knack for filling-in the cracks when they appear. The marketing & media team have taken over the mail order phone calls, an we needed only list the job internally to find a handful of candidates.

The interview process came to a close this week, and next week, we should have a new director in-place. We're only six months out from the wild, wild West that is late-November through the end of the year in mail order, so they'll have a lot on their plate to manage in a short span of time.

Thank you for your patience in the meantime. Our mail order clientele are awesome, and a fundamental aspect of our success as a business, so not having someone specifically in-place to handle that job is not a state in which we ever hope to stay for long.

They asked me if I wanted to lead another scavenger hunt.

This was basically my reaction, I think, though I don't know the context of this .gif.

This was basically my reaction, I think, though I don't know the context of this .gif.

Last July, we hid twenty sandwiches-worth of magnets around town in honor of our Twentieth Anniversary. With the exception of a few very thoughtful responses I received, the campaign went over well.

This year, we'll be doing things a little bit differently. The stakes will be higher, it's going to be more challenging, and it's going to happen slightly later in the Summer (personal reasons, don't worry about it), but believe me when I say I'm very excited to get any willing participants into the outdoors, getting their hands dirty—maybe literally—in pursuit of free NWS grub & swag.

Stay tuned for details in the very near future. Until next time, I am Ned, and these have been five things that happened this week at NWS.

5 Things: June 7th, 2019

Northern Waters Smokehaus is always evolving.

There are new faces in several departments and more to come in the near future, but there is also a bunch of new hardware. Coolers break down, and cases run out of space. Replacing and upgrading equipment happens more often than you'd expect.

This week's deli overhaul was a big one, but quite smoothly. The two changes that might catch your eye are the beverage cooler and the fish case. Both are bigger, and in your line of sight when you enter the deli.

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The fish case is now a replica of our smoked meat case, which we held onto from the NWR days. Lately, our fish case has been packed to the brim—with candied king salmon and smoked salmon sticks becoming NWS mainstays—almost to our detriment. Cramming a bunch of items in a small space and having to decide which things we stock does our product a disservice. Now that we have a bigger case, there should be no need to wonder whether there are All-Season Filets or Baby Tails. There is room for it all.

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The beverage cooler will now need room for our array of soft drinks, as well as beer and wine (*cough* we've already got Hoops Brewing beer in-stock and more on its way *cough*). In addition to replacing our old beverage cooler with a taller one, we also swapped out our secret deli freezer for another cooler, to hold back stock of beverages. Fortunately, the freezer has a place in our third floor office.

And finally, my favorite piece of repurposed gear—a cooler that stopped cooling and became extra dry-storage, but needed to stay because it's our expo station—is now a fully-functional cooler/expo station.

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On the aesthetic front, we have new, larger, green and red respectively "Enter" and "Exit" signs (Summer lines! We are prepared for ye this time!) and Flo is painting a mural on our side of the hallway to the elevator. It was a drab hallway, though exceptional at its purpose—leading us to the elevator and service staircase—and in need of some love. Flo has been coming in at 6 a.m. every day to catch as many hours of empty hallway as possible, because Flo is amazing (and the illustrative voice of NWS). The mural—which features at least four very pleasant colors, and whimsical pigs and fish—will be hard to miss and easy to enjoy. I'm personally quite excited to observe the process each morning I come in to work.

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We launched another Sandwich Lab special this week. The Sebu-Chan features our scallion cream cheese and buttery Atlantic salmon gravlax on a hausmade ciabatta roll. That alone would make a pretty tasty sandwich, but creator Sebastian complemented that base with a jean jacket (cilantro+sriracha), cucumber, tomato, onion, and lettuce. It's a sandwich you'll try once in earnest and end up craving the rest of the week. It'll be available through the end of June via delivery and in our deli. It costs $10.25 before tax, and, like all Sandwich Lab specials, gets you two stamps on your sandwich card.

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We're at Hoops Brewing for a pop-up tonight, Friday, June 7th. We're selling half and whole sandwiches, of the Cajun Finn, Cold Turkey, and Fuzzy Bunny varieties. You can now have a Cajun Finn and a Hoops beer at Hoops and Northern Waters Smokehaus.

The Kenspeckle Letterpress shirts are in! I don't mean to belabor my excitement about this, since I have mentioned it several times before, but they're finally in, in all sizes! We even have a few nice photographs of them, which is something that previous posts lacked.

Look at these cool T-Shirts:

I can't wait to pick up a "Fish" shirt, finally. The shirts are $20 and printed on soft, breathable cotton. If this style of art appeals to you, check out the Kenspeckle Letterpress studio. It's on the second floor of the DeWitt-Seitz Marketplace.

In

SANDWICH LAB: The Sebu-Chan

IN THE DELICATESSEN SCENE, NEVER SHAKING UP YOUR SANDWICH MENU IS CONSIDERED ESPECIALLY HEINOUS. AT NORTHERN WATERS SMOKEHAUS, THE DEDICATED DELI EMPLOYEES WHO INNOVATE ON THE SANDWICH MENU ARE MEMBERS OF AN ELITE SQUAD KNOWN AS THE SANDWICH LAB. THESE ARE THEIR STORIES:

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The Sebu-Chan is an inspired reimagining of a classic NWS-style sandwich—composed of scallion cream cheese, gravlax, cucumber, tomato, onion, cilantro, lettuce, and sriracha on a hausmade ciabatta—but I’d invite you to think about it more poetically:

The Sebu-Chan, named for its creator, Sebastian—based on a nickname—is inspired by his love of cats. Like a cat, it is playful and bright, but it has a bite. It's a perfect sandwich to showcase our delicious, buttery gravlax.

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It’s whimsical in design—like a rainbow strawberry pop-tart cat flying through space at high speeds to the beat of its own song—but every bite is dead serious delicious sandwich artistry. Like a cat, it is quite pretty to look at, and you might find yourself suddenly compelled to squeeze the heck out of it/take a big bite out of it. It's called "cute aggression," and it is totally normal. Fortunately, this is not your pet, so that would be totally okay and appropriate.

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The Sebu-Chan will be available in our deli, and via pickup and delivery, Wednesday, June 5th through Sunday, June 30th for $10.25 and like all Sandwich Lab creations, it gets you double stamps on your loyalty card.

WHAT IS SANDWICH LAB?

AT NORTHERN WATERS SMOKEHAUS, OUR WORK IS PLAYING WITH FOOD. THAT MEANS SOMETIMES, IN THE LINE OF DUTY, WE STUMBLE UPON AN AMAZING COMBINATION OF INGREDIENTS THAT EVOLVES OVER SEVERAL SHIFT-MEALS INTO A NOTEWORTHY NEW SANDWICH. OTHER TIMES WE UNCOVER A MORE EFFICIENT WAY TO BUILD A SANDWICH, OR WE SWAP AN INGREDIENT ON A CURRENT MENU ITEM. SANDWICH LAB IS AN ANNUAL GATHERING OF OUR STAFF TO REFINE OUR SANDWICH-LINE SKILLS, TO COME TO AGREEMENT ON ANY CONTROVERSIES, AND—THE BEST PART—TO INTRODUCE OUR PET SANDWICHES TO THE GREATER SMOKEHAUS COMMUNITY.

NOTABLE SANDWICH LAB FINDINGS FROM PREVIOUS YEARS INCLUDE THE CEDARS’S SECRET, THE PURPLE RANGE, THE PHOEBE, AND THE PORK LION. LAST YEAR’S SANDWICH LAB HAD SO MANY GOOD SANDWICHES THAT WE COULDN’T DECIDE ON JUST ONE OR TWO TO ADD TO THE MENU, SO WE DECIDED TO GIVE THEM ALL A CHANCE TO SHINE, AS MONTH-LONG SPECIALS.

5 Things: May 31st, 2019

This week on 5 Things™, we delve into the surprising success of a new side, the never-ending fluctuations of our deli's interior, the timely return of a classic piece of NWS swag (and what NWS swag can do for you), some comings-and-goings, and previews of what's to come from our Sandwich Lab and our shop in-general.

Kale caesar salad.

You likely already have an inkling that NWS is good at smoking fish and other meats. You probably also know that we've garnered some acclaim for our sandwiches. You might even know that we have a smartly curated selection of olives and local cheeses. You might not know that we regularly introduce new side options to our menu. While some of them hide behind the sandwich line and signs on our menu board, we've begun displaying others in the deli case, next to our smoked meat selection.

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It has paid off. Not only do our sides taste great, they are also aesthetically pleasing. Being able to see them (and buy them in whatever weight quantity you choose) helps sell them—meaning you'll continue to see them. To that end, we'll continue stocking the meat case with our tried-and-true and latest sides, as well as pasties and pre-sliced/pre-packaged meats.

This week we tested a roasted kale caesar salad, and sold it all within the day. Which pleases me, because the salad is good, and I want it to stick around. Don't believe me? Try it.

Sass aside, if you ask, you can definitely try it.

A shortened wall.

If you've been following us for the last half-decade,you'll have an idea what I mean when I say the shop is always in flux. For example, when I started at NWS, our workspace was literally half the size it is now, and the line ran the opposite direction. Working at NWS is at times reminiscent of a game of Tetris or Jenga—constant rotation and reconfiguration and treacherous pulling and replacing.

The wall between our seating area and the sandwich line is an important boundary. Watching us work really isn't the best use of anyone's time—many of us are self-conscious individuals, who work less efficiently when observed, and you don't really want to be watched while you eat, do you?

Joking aside, the barrier does have one glaring limitation—it is very tall. When it was first installed, I called it the "Wilson Wall."

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So Oneida, ahead of schedule (thank your local Oneida employee for their steadfast work immediately), cut down a segment of the wall and moved the counter top down with it. This means patrons and staff under 5'7" will finally be able to make eye contact and just generally communicate when handing out and picking up orders.

As with many small changes we make to our workspace, the benefits may not be immediately obvious—force of habit has made me place orders on the higher segment of counter even with the lowered counter in place—but over the Summer, this will undoubtedly result in a smoother interface when picking up your food.

With the impending arrival of beer and wine, there is more reconfiguration to come. Nothing too world shattering, though you might notice some different stainless steel and glass making its way into the shop over the next month or so.

Kenspeckle Letterpress shirts went to print.

These shirts are great. They showcase the brilliant, meticulous, and clever work of local printmaking legend Rick Allen, whose studio (the aforementioned Kenspeckle Letterpress) is located on the second floor of the DeWitt-Seitz Marketplace, and for whose dedication to the Split-finger Fastball variant of the Clubhaus sandwich we are forever grateful.

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On Thursday, our friends at On The Limit, let us know that they had begun printing the shirts. That means that, soon enough, these shirts will be available in all sizes, on softer, more breathable cotton.

Speaking of NWS swag: If you're spotted (or if you politely point out to us) wearing our gear/carrying our totes/etc., you'll get 10% off your order. Every. Single. Time.

The Wallaby leaves us.

Our first-ever avocado sandwich, which came to us via our annual Sandwich Lab, is entering its last weekend.

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If you haven't yet tried this avocado, lemon pepper, balsamic, locally-sourced ramps, and tomato sandwich, on our hausmade Prince Myshkin Rye, this weekend is your last chance. If you're feeling a bit more carnivorous, try it with crispy smoked pancetta.

When the Wallaby leaves us, another Sandwich Lab special takes its place: The Sebu-Chan.

The name comes from a nickname for its creator, Sebastian, and the sandwich is a playful variation on the classic salmon & cream cheese sandwich.

The Sebu-Chan—gravlax, scallion cream cheese, tomato, cucumber, onion, lettuce, cilantro and sriracha on a hausmade ciabatta—will be available Monday, June 3rd through Sunday, June 30th.

A few things I'm looking forward to at NWS.

I tried to fit a few different Things™ in this slot, but came up short each time. So, in lieu of anything better, here's a short list of things that I'm looking forward to in my own personal life at Northern Waters Smokehaus, that might also be interesting to you:

  • The Cookbook. It's happening, and though the public will have to wait some time before it is in their hands, a good deal of my near future is set to be entangled with the text.

  • Another Hemlock Preserve event. The first time I was involved with a Smokehaus event at Hemlock Preserve—the charming barn on the edge of Jay Cooke State Park in Esko, MN—I played music for five hours, essentially nonstop. It was a strange feat that I don't know I could repeat. I'm not sure how involved I will be with the event, but I will certainly have some words to write about it as it draws nearer. The event is still in development, but based on previous experience, it will happen toward the end of Summer, feature an awesome menu, good music, and an optional party bus to get to and from the location.

  • Grilling NWS brats & sausages. Our Maple Breakfast Sausage is my favorite sausage, period, but that's not what I'm talking about. I'm not sure whether the Beer Brat (made with Grain Belt Premium), Apple Brat or Classic German Brat is my top choice for the grill, but I will say that white onion (raw, grilled, or sautéed), NWS Kimchi and Sauerkraut are great toppings respectively. We've got Jalapeño Bacon Brats and Italian Sausage too, for those seeking a bit more bite in their brat. Tucked away in a corner, these products often go unnoticed. The time to grill is nigh. Don't sleep on these sausages.

  • Honorable mention to our Smoked Ribs. They're back in stock, available weekly as our Monday special, and great for any BYO grilling events or potlucks. Or just as any ol' meal. $10.99/lb in 2 lb racks or half-racks for these beauties is a steal!

  • Northern Waters Catering. Though we've been at the catering business quite a while, this year we've really decided to get our act together, putting in a lot of creative work, developing an extensive menu that showcases our best abilities and depth, making an Instagram profile specifically for our catering department, and putting Hannah's capable hands in charge of the operation.

  • I love catering events because they showcase different shades of NWS not found in the deli, both in terms of food served and the service offered. It's a bit more refined, and less of a grind. It's a breath of fresh air, reminiscent of a childhood field trip, traveling to an offsite location and not making six to eight sandwiches per ten minute increment. And the catering pay rate is great for the staff. My Nintendo Switch isn't paying for its own games, so I am into that.

  • More Sandwich Lab specials. With fun official and working titles like Jacob's Lake Trout Situation, The Perfect Fall Sandwich, and The Fish Stick, they've clearly got a lot to offer the imagination, and it'll be a satisfying mystery to resolve once you can finally taste them. And honestly, the ads our marketing team has been creating for them get more fun every month.

Well, I think I've said quite enough. Happy Friday, or whichever day you might be reading this.