SUNDAY NEWS: Honoring the craft of sausagemaking one bite at a time

Buying Polish sausage for Easter dinner is not particularly difficult in Buffalo. From supermarkets to butcher shops, refrigerated shelves are groaning with garlicky links made by companies whose names end in “ski.”

Given the plethora of pork possibilities, it takes a lot of pride to make your own sausage. Even more, it takes a lot of work, a day or two depending on how long you like to smoke your meat.

So it was an honor to get to sample so many home-grown sausage efforts at Saturday’s Buffalo’s Best Kielbasa Contest, held at Pott’s Deli in Cheektowaga.

Congratulations to the wieners, sorry, winners:

Michael Martinez’s prizewinning smoked traditional

Smoked Traditional: Michael Martinez. He loaded his coarsely ground pork mixture with cracked black pepper and enough smoke for one link to flavor a pot of beans.

Keith Bednarz’s prizewinning maple-infused non-traditional

Non-Traditional, Keith Bednarz. He made a maple-flavored sausage using maple syrup made from sap collected from his own homestead’s maple trees.

Fresh holiday (with marjoram), Andrew House; smoked holiday (with marjoram), Steve Slazak; fresh traditional: Keith Bednarz.

Winners received trophies, bottles of Buffalo Distillery krupnik, and gift certificates to the Sausage Maker charcuterie supply store in the Niagara Frontier Food Terminal.

Halibut with fava beans, Bistro Avera

REVIEW: Driven by the culinary talent and focused professionalism of chef-owner Stephen Pusateri, Bistro Avera has quietly become the other can’t-miss high-end night dining out in Lewiston. Just down the block from longtime favorite Carmelo’s Coat of Arms, Bistro Avera offers a distinctly different vision of the table, where risk-taking is a more pronounced part of the experience, as entree after small plate after pasta finds a way to stick the landing. (Later this week, for patrons.)

TAKEOUT MANSAF APRIL 2: At reader request, I’ve added a take-out option for my Amira’s Kitchen 101 event April 2.

That’s mansaf, lamb braised in yogurt broth, over rice with toasted almonds; tahini salad; a beef-and-bulgur kibbe fritter; and Amira’s rice pudding for dessert. 

Dinner is $30; order at fourbites.net/shop

It’s 6 p.m. April 2, 1500 Cleveland Drive, Cheektowaga.

Euro Deli farmer’s cheese selection, lower shelf.

ASK THE CRITIC:

Q: I’m trying to make pierogi for the first time and I can’t find farmer’s cheese. Help!

  • Sandy B., Depew

A: Check out Euro Deli, 4166 Union Road, Cheektowaga, for a thorough array of Ukrainian, Polish, and Slavic groceries – including several types of farmer’s cheese, found in its cheese cooler. Check out this video for more details.

More reading from Michael Chelus of Nittany Epicurean:

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