Northeast
Next hot thing in hot wings, 'trashed' or 'dirty,' breaks the rules of America's favorite bar food
America’s hottest hot-wing trend is garbage.
Bar-food aficionados can’t wait to take it out or enjoy it at the bar with a few cold beers.
Trash wings are a popular style of chicken wing served at pubs and restaurants in and around St. Louis, Missouri. The same style of fried chicken is called dirt wings in Connecticut.
KETCHUP VS. MUSTARD: WHICH IS ‘BETTER’ FOR YOU? EXPERTS CHIME IN ON THE DEBATE
Trash or dirt wings are fried, doused in hot sauce — then fried again. The process creates delectable little poultry limbs with skin so crispy that it snaps when you bite into it. Yet the meat remains juicy inside.
They’ve grown into casual culinary traditions in both parts of the country over the past three decades.
Zach Jalbert, a customer at Fenton Bar and Grill in Fenton, Missouri, called its locally famous trash wings “beautiful.” (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)
“I like to then re-dip the wings in whatever sauce is available,” Zach Jalbert, a customer at Fenton Bar and Grill in Fenton, Missouri, told Fox News Digital.
“Look at that! It’s beautiful. Wow!” Jalbert added, holding up a wing in front of his eyes before crunching into it.
“Look at that! It’s beautiful. Wow!” — Zach Jalbert, trash wing enthusiast
Trash or dirt wings appear poised to break out as a national phenomenon in 2024 — while disrupting 60 years of American culinary tradition established when Buffalo wings were first fried in Buffalo, New York in 1964.
“I love it when people step outside the box,” America’s “Wing King” and Buffalo native Drew Cerza, founder of the National Buffalo Wing Festival, told Fox News Digital.
Dirt wings are a Connecticut casual-dining tradition that originated in the 1990s at J. Timothy’s Taverne in Plainville. The wings are fried, sauced, refrigerated, then fried and sauced a second time when they’re ordered. (Courtesy J. Timothy’s Taverne)
“That’s how cool new things are created.”
Trash wings earned their name because cooking the saucy once-fried wings again “trashes the oil.”
MEET THE AMERICAN WHO INVENTED BUFFALO WINGS, DISRUPTED ENTIRE CHICKEN INDUSTRY
J. Timothy’s Taverne in Plainville, Connecticut, is the birthplace of dirt wings.
The bar-food favorite boasts a more personal origin story that “came about just by dumb luck,” said beverage director Rino Ouellet.
“Wing King” Drew Cerza proclaims Miki Sudo the victor over Joey Chestnut at the 2022 National Buffalo Wing Festival. Sudo ate 233 chicken wings in 12 minutes, to 224 for Chestnut. (Courtesy Drew Cerza)
J. Timothy’s fielded a beer-league softball team when it opened nearly 30 years ago.
“We were all in our 20s. The oldest guy on the team, our pitcher, was in his 40s. We called him Dirt,” said Ouellet.
The pitcher was, to the rest of the players, older than dirt.
“The trashed wing is a phenomenal culinary delight and is now synonymous with St. Louis.” — Pat Imig, Imig Communications
One day, the oft-told tale goes, Dirt ordered wings at the bar and stepped out to have a cigarette.
He returned to the bar and asked for his now-cold wings to be reheated.
They were an instant sensation.
Trash wings at Fenton Bar and Grill in Fenton, Missouri. Double-fried trash wings are a culinary tradition in and around St. Louis. (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)
“Pretty soon the entire softball team was coming in asking for Dirt’s wings,” said Oullet.
Dirt wings are now a bar-food favorite at pubs and sports bars across Connecticut.
MAN GOES VIRAL FOR TASTE-TESTING LAST MEALS OF NOTORIOUS DEATH ROW INMATES
Trash wings also appeared in St. Louis about 30 years ago. The simultaneous appearance in New England and along the Mississippi River of the similar wings appears to be complete coincidence.
Fenton’s touts itself as the “home of the trashed wing.”
But St. Louis magazine reports they were invented elsewhere.
Fenton Bar and Grill in Fenton, Missouri, outside St. Louis, is a popular destination for trash wings. A local culinary tradition, trash wings are fried, sauced and then fried again, making for a crispy wing that’s moist inside. (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)
“My father started doing trashed wings 30 years ago at one of his restaurants, Frankie G‘s Grill and Bar in Oakville,” Billy Gianino Jr., of Billy G’s in Kirkwood, told the outlet in 2022.
The story claims that Fenton’s general manager Chuck Nash “semi-corroborated Gianino’s story.”
“The trashed wing is a phenomenal culinary delight and is now synonymous with St. Louis casual cuisine,” Pat Imig of Imig Communications, a local food insider and chicken-wing aficionado, told Fox News Digital.
Trash wings served at Fenton Bar and Grill in Fenton, Missouri; and Fenton manager Kelly Brannam. (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)
After achieving local stardom in Connecticut and Missouri, dirt and trash wings have recently appeared on menus in Chicago, New York City — and even as far away as London.
A similar twice-cooked wing is found in Buffalo, New York — except these are finished on a grill after being fried and sauced, said Cerza.
Double-fried wings “break the cardinal rule of wings here in Buffalo,” claims the keeper of the city’s storied wing-tradition.
But, he added, “there are no rules when you’re creating new rules.”
For more Lifestyle articles, visit foxnews.com/lifestyle.
Read the full article from Here
Connecticut
Local priest dies after crashing car into tree in West Hartford, police say
An 85-year-old priest has died after he crashed his car into a tree in West Hartford on Wednesday afternoon, police said.
Police received a report that a car went into the woods near Simsbury Road and Tumblebrook Lane around 2:41 p.m. The West Hartford Police Department responded, along with the West Hartford Fire Department and AMR medical personnel.
The driver, later identified as 85-year-old Terence Kristofak, of West Hartford, was the car’s only occupant. Firefighters extricated him from the car before he was taken to a hospital with serious, life-threatening injuries, police said. He was later pronounced dead at the hospital.
Kristofak served as a Passionist priest at the Holy Family Passionist Retreat Center, according to a Facebook post from the church.
“Father Terry had been visiting family and was on his way home at the time of the accident,” the church wrote. “We are filled with grief at the loss of such a kind, loving, and faithful friend. His presence touched the lives of so many, and his passing is a tremendous loss to our community.”
Simsbury Road was closed in both directions between King Edward Road and North Main Street while crews responded. The road has since reopened.
West Hartford police’s traffic division is investigating the crash.
The scene of the crash.
Anyone with information about the crash is asked to contact the West Hartford Police Department at 860-523-5203 or submit an anonymous tip by calling 860-570-8969 or emailing whpdtips@westhartfordct.gov.
Maine
Maine justices to decide fate of transgender sports ballot question
Maine’s highest court weighed Wednesday whether the state can reject petition signatures collected by out-of-state circulators who did not check a box consenting to Maine’s jurisdiction, a legal dispute that could determine whether Mainers vote on transgender inclusion in sports this November.
The group called “Protect Girls Sports” initially submitted enough signatures to qualify for the ballot, proposing an initiative that would restrict what school sports teams, bathrooms and facilities trans students can access. Secretary of State Shenna Bellows later determined that the campaign had failed to qualify, after thousands of signatures were invalidated. That ruling was upheld by a Superior Court judge in June and the campaign appealed that decision to the Supreme Judicial Court.
More than 1,500 of the invalidated signatures were collected by four out-of-state circulators who had not checked a box on the form agreeing to Maine’s jurisdiction. The Maine Supreme Judicial Court must now decide whether those signatures were properly invalidated. The initiative is short 500 signatures to qualify.
The Maine Constitution prohibits out-of-state circulators from submitting petitions, but that ban was declared unenforceable by a federal appeals court in 2022, since it likely violated the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. In response to a lawsuit, Maine then entered into a consent agreement, which all citizen-led initiatives still rely on to hire out-of-state circulators to collect signatures. However, they must consent to the state’s jurisdiction.
Attorney Tim Woodcock, who represented Protect Girls Sports, argued that out-of-state circulators should be treated the same as Maine residents who collect petition signatures, since the consent agreement requires the state to allow them to work on campaigns. Woodcock said the consequences of not reversing the ruling would be dire.
“If this is upheld, it’s essentially a petition that has been pulled off the ballot with 1,520 otherwise valid ballot signatures,” Woodcock said in the Augusta courtroom. “That would be a remarkable result of these circumstances.”
The same argument was made after the May hearing before the Secretary of State’s Office as well as before the Superior Court, but neither accepted it.
Protect Girls Sports has not pushed back on any other findings showing a pattern of negligence in the signature collecting process, with circulators leaving forms unattended, adding ditto signs on some columns, and other infractions. Rather, Woodcock challenged the secretary’s authority to impose what he said was an unfair burden on out-of-state signature collectors by requiring them to check an additional box to consent to Maine’s jurisdiction.
Attorney Christopher Dodge from Elias Law Group, the national law firm representing the three Maine residents who initially challenged the petition signatures, said, “We are here today because Protect Girls Sports has essentially reached the bottom of the barrel for its last few arguments to try and dislodge the secretary’s well-reasoned and well-supported findings.”
“And each of those arguments basically concedes that the initiative violated … Maine law.”
Since the vast majority of the 120 out-of-state circulators complied with the requirements, Dodge said Woodcock could not make a convincing case that the rules were a burden.
“The burden here is they have to complete the circulator affidavit … and they have to check the box, that’s it,” he said. “And most of the non-resident circulators have absolutely no problem complying with it.”
One circulator, Cairo, had initially left the box blank but later checked the box through a corrected affidavit in May, three months after the petition was submitted for validation. Woodcock has previously argued that her signatures should be considered valid because of her corrected form.
However, her decision to intentionally leave the box blank was a “substantive lack of agreement” to Maine’s jurisdiction, Superior Court Justice Deborah Cashman said in her opinion validating Bellows’ decision on June 11.
Woodcock said in court Wednesday that the “consent agreement says nothing in it about when an out-of-state circulator must consent to jurisdiction,” and that those rules were being imposed by the Secretary of State’s office.
The Supreme Judicial Court is expected to rule on the appeal before mid-August, before the deadline for the secretary’s office to put a question on the ballot.
This story was first published by Maine Morning Star and is republished here under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
Massachusetts
Improving Long-Term Care for Seniors in Massachusetts – Center for Retirement Research
In recent years, Massachusetts has taken significant steps to improve care for seniors, most notably the Act to Improve Quality and Oversight of Long-Term Care. In a recent Risking Old Age in America podcast, Rep. Thomas M. Stanley, Co-chair of the Elder Affairs Committee, describes this initiative as well as further steps in the works. These include creating a family caregiver commission, licensing home health agencies, and working towards universal long-term care insurance.
Here are some excerpts from our conversation:
Senior Living Facilities
Risking Old Age in America (ROA): You have been working [to make improvements] across the whole continuum of care from nursing homes [to] assisted living facilities to home healthcare. Please talk about the legislature’s initiatives in these areas.
Rep. Thomas M. Stanley: In 2024, the governor signed the long-term care reform bill into law. This was the first major legislative update of nursing homes and assisted living residences in over 25 years.
It increases transparency and oversight of nursing homes through new suitability standards for owners and operators. It requires a review of the civil and criminal litigation history of owners and operators; and we put in place tools for the Department of Public Health to monitor and take punitive action against facilities, including increased fines and creating the ability to appoint a temporary manager to oversee a struggling facility.
It expands the suitability reviews of management companies including any [firm] with at least a 5-percent stake in a nursing facility. The law also establishes the long-term care workforce and capital fund to help address the workforce crisis in nursing homes. Money from the fund can be used for Certified Nursing Assistant training grants, career ladder grants for Licensed Practical Nurses, and also leadership training.
The law gives assisted living facilities the ability to offer basic health services, like wound care, eye drops, and medication distribution to their residents.
ROA: The Dignity Alliance [a senior advocacy group]…[has said] state supervision and enforcement of nursing facilities is…not tough enough, that there might be fines and other penalties on the books, but nobody’s applying them to nursing homes that don’t meet their obligations. It sounds like the ability to put them into receivership under the new legislation may be the remedy that’s needed.
Stanley: That’s correct. Under the old rules you would end up in the situation of really punishing or fining a nursing home and end up having it going to foreclosure. In that case, where are the residents going to go? The new law allows the Department of Public Health (DPH) to get in earlier and work with them so that they understand what the DPH is looking for in terms of quality of care and so forth. They can take care of the facility and all the residents so they don’t go astray.
ROA: So the DPH might have felt that it was between a rock and a hard place because if they enforced the regulations, they might lose the nursing home.
Stanley: [Yes]…and the nursing homes, by and large, were not letting them know that they were having certain problems. So this allows the DPH to get in earlier, understand what’s going on and help them make adjustments so that they can right the ship.
Long-Term Care Insurance
Stanley: The state of Washington is really in the forefront of looking down the road to provide for some type of revenue stream…for folks to be able to afford their home care or [other] long-term care needs. So we’re modeling our program after theirs and we’re learning from their mistakes and successes.
ROA: That’s the Washington Cares Fund?
Stanley: Yes, exactly. Last session Senator Jehlen and I worked together to get $500,000 in the state budget for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to hire an independent firm to conduct the actuary study of various public, private and public-private long-term support service financing options. They hired Milliman to conduct the study. [The full study is available here.]
How it would work in a nutshell is that a public…insurance program would be funded via a payroll tax. After individuals pay into the program for a certain number of years, a vesting period, they would become eligible. And as they age and require long-term support services, they can apply for benefits under the program. There are countless ways to design the program, increasing or decreasing the benefit amount or…the vesting period, determining what the benefit can be used for – home care, assisted living or even paying family caregivers. We have filed legislation to establish a commission to discuss the results of the actuary study and the feasibility of a public long-term care financing program in Massachusetts and potentially recommending a model that works.
ROA: It sounds like this would help a lot, but one question I have about it is that if there’s a vesting period where you have to pay in for a number of years before you can become eligible for the benefit, would it only be available for people who are continuing to work during that time?
Stanley: That’s definitely something that has to be discussed by the commission, but everyone has to contribute and the 10-year vesting period is necessary to get enough money into the program to make it sustainable.
Listen to our entire conversation here.
For more from Harry Margolis, check out his Risking Old Age in America blog and podcast. He also answers consumer estate planning questions at AskHarry.info. To stay current on the Squared Away blog, join our free email list.
-
Arizona3 minutes agoArizona Chamber installs Monica Coury as board chair – Chamber Business News
-
Arkansas6 minutes agoArkansas accumulates $655 million general revenue surplus, fifth-largest in state history | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
-
California11 minutes agoWhat’s open, closed for Independence Day weekend in California?
-
Colorado18 minutes agoMAP: Where Colorado wildfires are burning
-
Connecticut21 minutes agoLocal priest dies after crashing car into tree in West Hartford, police say
-
Delaware26 minutes ago
County councilman says Newark data center plan paused after deal
-
Florida33 minutes agoOutrage over ‘cruel’ Florida move to ban undocumented students from college
-
Georgia36 minutes agoGeorgia officials urge drivers to add emergency contact to license record