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Sandwich Salvation In The Storm

Trying out the offerings at the Village Bake House in Groton

Let’s face it: For all the challenges our region faced in the days after Irene, the storm humbled us more than it hurt us.  By the time it reached our corner of Connecticut, Irene had weakened from a hurricane to a tropical storm, and the damage left behind amounted to an expensive inconvenience but hardly the deadly devastation seen in other states.  In fact, the conditions most of us lived through this week were probably much more comfortable than what millions of Americans endured on their summer camping trips.

For example, I suffered the hardship of swimming in my parents’ pool because I couldn’t shower at my house.  When I needed electricity to write this column, I had to sit in an air-conditioned library.  And when I needed to put gas in my car, I had to drive to an oasis of electricity—all the way to Groton—to do it.  While I was there, I sought relief for my tattered spirit by eating lunch at the Village Bake House on Long Hill Road.

The Village Bake House, which also has a location in Niantic, is a wise destination for breakfast and lunch in pleasant or stormy weather.  The restaurant makes several salads for around $7 or $8, soups for $3.99 a bowl, and more than 30 wraps and sandwiches on fresh bread for $6.99 with a pickle and a side.  Half sandwiches are only $3.69, and on Saturdays all sandwiches are $5, which makes the Village Bake House a great place to pig out on delicious food cheaply.

The Grilled Hamilton is a smart investment at any price.  Grilled on eight-grain bread, it contains layer upon layer of ham, enough layers that it requires effort to count them, like the rings in the trunk of a tree felled during a hurricane.  The sandwich includes still more layers of roasted red peppers, purple Bermuda onion (a bit too much of it), melted Swiss, and mayonnaise.  Ham sandwiches are always good, but the Grilled Hamilton takes it to another level.

A friend of mine recommended the Chicken BLT Melt, which also comes on grilled eight-grain bread, although I ordered mine instead as a wrap.  Thick slices of chicken breast and ample bacon join lettuce, tomato, mayo, and gooey American cheese inside the wrap, which would be better if it were softer and stuffed fuller.  The sliced tomato in mine was extra sweet and fully ripe, however, and its juice mixed with the mayo to put an acidic exclamation point on the classic BLT flavor.  

When I called in my order—the Village Bake House is a perfect choice for take-out—I asked for the chef to surprise me with my third sandwich.  He responded with the Chicken Salad Melt.  It’s hard to tell which is the star of this sandwich—the chicken salad, which is worth asking for the recipe, or the Indian grain bread.  Dark brown, a touch sweet, and so fresh that it’s pillowy soft, the bread is studded with sunflower seeds and oats.  The chicken salad, meanwhile, plays it safe down the middle—not too peppery, not too oniony, and no surprises like mustard or curry, although it is rather wet.  The chicken is chopped finely, the onion more coarsely, and bits of scallion add more color than flavor.  The best part, though, is the occasional sliced red grape, which bursts with juicy sweetness.  Thin slices of tomato and green pepper add heft, and melted American cheese holds it all together and helps it stick to your teeth.

I tried not to eat all three sandwiches in one sitting.  I thought it would be wiser to save some food for later, after surviving a natural disaster and all.  But then I remembered my refrigerator would be lukewarm anyway until power was restored, so I forced myself to finish all three.  Oh, Irene, the suffering you have caused.

Village Bake House

500 Long Hill Road

Groton, CT 06340

(860) 445-8292

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Barbara Crocker May 22, 2013 at 10:05 am
I have asked people I work with that reside in the surrounding towns if they agree with Mr. Frucht'sRead More comments. Not one felt that NL hated them, but many agree that surrounding areas hate on NL...maybe he or his parents experienced something on a personal level that makes him/them believe NL hates them. Like I said, I have lived here for my whole life and never got the impression that NL hated, only that NL is hated. Seems Mr. Frucht is one New Londoner who hates other New Londoners...
Jason Morris May 22, 2013 at 10:01 am
Greg, I don't change myself to pull the wool over a voters eyes long enough for them to vote. I'veRead More shown my abilities and worth over the past year, and will continue to. If I didn't have any opposition, I would be doing something wrong. Yes, I get to be a part of this community just as much as anyone else - voted in or not. Your question speaks to your likely character when representing people in a public office, not mine.
Greg Bryant May 22, 2013 at 07:46 am
Jason do you think this type of attitude will help you in your quest for the Board of Education seatRead More you desire?
Felicia Hendersen May 21, 2013 at 07:52 am
OMG this is too funny. Nice comparison.
Sue P. May 20, 2013 at 11:03 am
Very good comparison. I also wanted to add that the Ct. College students that believe what FinizioRead More has to say remind me of The Children of the Corn. After speaking with a friend we realized that Mayor Finizio is like a college student. I just wish he knew that real life does not work this way. New London has already played this game with the Giordano lady years ago. Remember her she was from Ct. College and also was going to make New London a hip city. We got homeless people and brownfields. So much for that idea. Been their done that. How about a new idea for once. Please don't think about shutting down State St. that too was a bad idea. Just ask Mr. Hyslop and Ms. Glover how their ideas worked out. It doesn't matter anyways it's all about the votes and getting your Children of the Corn on the Council. I mean come on drivers licenses for illigals who ever thought that one up.
J. Scagnetti May 20, 2013 at 10:07 am
I'd say more like G.I. Joe vs cobra, oh no wait, He man vs skeletor or maybe even the thundercats vsRead More mumra! Lol
Carol Haley May 19, 2013 at 07:14 pm
Here's the latest Spencer from the AP, if we can believe them: Traffic in southwest ConnecticutRead More could be a mess for as much as a week until service is restored to the commuter rail line affected by a derailment that injured scores of passengers, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy warned Sunday.
Spencer May 19, 2013 at 07:10 pm
Another blow to not only NL's but the entire Southern CT's economy! Guess who will be picking upRead More the tab?
Carol Haley May 19, 2013 at 05:26 pm
I read that Malloy is hoping Monday but there are problems with the tracks and that has to beRead More repaired. Taking a guestimate, if it isn't Monday, maybe the end of the week.
Richard Waselik May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
I have not seen any details other than word of mouth at this time in reference to more being addedRead More to the pension plan after two years. I would not be surprised. This would be another instance in which the charter was violated and would have to be mentioned to the Admin. Committee. I would be willing to gamble that they were put into the employee pension plan as well.
Richard Waselik May 22, 2013 at 10:30 am
Yes Kathleen, at on point there was an agenda item on the City Council. It went to the Admin.Read More Committee. The Police Department would not let me out of work for a little bit to speak with the Admin. Committee, so it was tabled. A letter has been sent to the Admin. Committee to place the matter back on the agenda. Nothing has been heard back as of this writing.
Kathleen Mitchell May 21, 2013 at 06:26 pm
Richard, When you say "The city..." to whom are you referring? At one point, there was anRead More agenda item about this issue but, as far as I know, nothing more was heard about it. Now we hear that people who haven't even worked for the city for two years are being generously rewarded via the pension plan, etc. Can you address this issue? If not here, then maybe in an email to orkenizer@gmail.com
Alphonse DeLachance May 21, 2013 at 08:30 am
I cannot believe that they lied! Who could have seen this coming.
Carol Haley May 17, 2013 at 07:44 am
Pretty funny Spencer. But you don't want a museum there. You need something that generates taxes.Read More Museums are mostly non-profit thereby not generating any taxes. I know you were being funny. I was disgusted to read the developer couldn't show financial backing.
Kathleen Mitchell May 17, 2013 at 05:47 pm
Who would haveever thought of Wasp Spray? When you get the case of spray, be sure and drop a can offRead More at my house;>)
Jeff Brown May 17, 2013 at 03:46 pm
Good article, gonna have to pick up a case of wasp spray!
Carol Haley May 17, 2013 at 12:34 pm
Barbara, I agree with you. But it is probably a lot easier to get an illegal social security numberRead More than we would know. There are two ways of looking at this issue, but my resentment is that I have to pay for them.
Barbara Crocker May 17, 2013 at 07:52 am
But for state aid they would have to have a Social Security number. Bending and breaking laws isRead More how they got here in the first place. The fact that elected officials condone and encourage these laws to be broken is the biggest problem that I have with this whole debacle. "Undocumented residents" place a burden on all of us, and take jobs that could be worked by legal residents. Employers hire illegals (yes I prefer calling them what they are, to hell with being politically correct) because it saves them money, not because "no one else would work these jobs". This is a slap in the face to all of our ancestors who came to this country and followed the rules to become citizens.
Carol Haley May 17, 2013 at 06:51 am
The way things have been going in the eastern part of the United States, as long as the illegals areRead More not breaking the law criminally (motor vehicle is different), they are not arrested for being illegal. Its the illegal immigrants who break the law, such as the large drug bust recently in the papers. As long as they are minding their own business, they get a pass. The only problem I have with illegals is their rush to get on state aid, food stamps, etc. I don't think we should have to support those that choose to live in this country illegally. Becoming a US citizen is not cheap. It is expensive, but it is something that they must work for.
Spencer May 16, 2013 at 04:42 pm
Perhaps because people who vote continue to vote the same way they have for years--and expect to getRead More different results when they do so?