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Organic Food & Slow Cooking with Natural, Local Ingredients.
Experience Gourmet Cuisine at a Maine Bed & Breakfast.
FEEDING BODY AND SOUL IN BEAUTIFUL BATH, MAINE
“Your food sensibility is so magnificent - I can’t
wait to go back and inspire my team the way you
have inspired me.”
Dana Cowin, Chief Editor, Food and Wine magazine
“Serenity will be yours at the Kismet Inn.”
Down East Magazine, May, 2007
It often happens at the Kismet that while preparing
breakfast or dinner, I find myself looking up and discovering
guests drawn into my kitchen by the aromas it sends
wafting through the house; these tantalizing emanations
always prove irresistible and those staying at the inn always
find its kitchen open for a casual exchange around the island
cook top or, if they wish, a more elaborate demonstration
of the culinary art. I believe anyone can become an artist
at the stove, not just somebody who cooks; unfortunately,
it takes time, usually in short supply for most people, an
unavoidable fact of modern life which was one of the
reasons which led me to establish a place to feed the body
and the soul, where “slow cooking” is a way of life.
A Maine Inn that Values Organic, Natural Cooking
This kind of cooking begins with purity of ingredients; that
means food of the highest quality, organic, natural, and,
wherever possible, local, nothing canned, no additives,
no pre-made broth, no packaged seasoning. I make my own
tomato paste, jams, yogurt, pickles, pastry, and a form of
clarified butter called “ghee,” often used by chefs because
it will not burn during frying. My bread comes from
bakeries that supply specialty stores or sell only at farmers’
markets or natural food co-ops. The dairy products I use
come from a third generation family farm in Maine where
all machines are horse-powered or hand-cranked and the
cows and goats are grass-fed, yielding raw milk, butter and
ice cream (also hand-cranked). Two award-winning
creameries specializing in goat and sheep milk cheese, all
natural with no artificial or growth hormone, supply my
cheeses, artisan products made by hand in small batches
and aged from two months to a year (in a cellar under
conditions of high humidity and cool temperature, while
being constantly brushed and turned to ensure a consistent
rind).
The “Fountain of the Spirit of the Sea”
Fine Dinning at an Extraordinarily Beautiful Inn
It is only fitting that during good weather in the City of
Ships, as Bath is known, breakfast and dinner are served
on Kismet’s screen porch overlooking the “Fountain of the
Spirit of the Sea,” a mermaid-like statue set amidst flower
beds in the park below celebrating the community’s long-
standing maritime tradition. During colder weather the
meals move into the dining room where a large bay window
allows the same view but from a less exposed vantage.
Here is offered a more intimate setting, dominated by a
tapestry circa 1800 done in gold, silver and silk on taffeta.
In this room dimmed lights provide a romantic aura, while
a set of arches allows a glimpse of the gallery featuring
portraits by Tina Ingrahm, a renowned local artist. This
gallery, with its lace curtains, radiant heat and oak flooring,
is worth a visit on its own account.
Ready for a relaxing vacation, complete with delicious, organic, slow food meals. Book your stay.
Visit our B&B blogs where you can read about organic food and gardening and more about Kismet Inn.
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