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Denise Foley

Food & Drink

Got Champ?

February is a short month. Before you know it, March will be upon us and we’ll all be looking around for some great food to serve on St. Paddy’s Day. We already know that a lot of you come here for recipes. We know because our ham-and- cabbage recipe gets more hits every year than Jimmy Rollins.

So if you have a good recipe—for anything from soda bread to salmon—please send it along to us. Just click on the “contact us” button on the left and either send us your recipe or let us know how to reach you so we can get those hundreds of recipes you want to share with your fellow readers.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

We’re gearing up this week for what’s shaping up to be three slam-bang months of Irishness in the Philadelphia region.

First, this weekend the Cumann Rince Naisunta 2009 Regional dance championships will be held at the Irish Center, starting early Saturday morning with a parade of Irish dancers. Winners of this competition will be heading to Dublin in May for the world championships.

On Saturday night, Blackthorn will be performing at Archbishop Ryan High School, while the Barley Boys will be on stage at Porter’s Pub in Easton.

On Sunday, the Braveheart Pub in Hellerstown is launching the latest session in the area—the second Sunday session which will, of course, occur every second Sunday of the month.

You can take your favorite squeeze to the Springfield Inn in Springfield, Delco, for a Valentine’s dinner and dancing or head to the Sellersville Theatre to hear the McDades, a five-piece Canadian ensemble of siblings who fuse Celtic sounds with everything from jazz to global music.

On Wednesday night, The Grand in Wilmington, DE, is hosting an Irish Spectacular, featuring Irish performers Gerry O’Connor, Emer Mayock, Frankie Gavin, Cora Venus Lunny, Robert Harris and Regina Nathan with the Dublin Philharmonic Orchestra.

Make your way over to Camden, NJ, on Thursday night for a treat—the annual fundraising concert for Sacred Heart Parish featuring Mick Moloney and Friends, who this year includes legendary Northern Ireland singer and activist Tommy Sands (look for Sands to return in March to appear at Longwood Gardens with his daughter, Moya). Special bonus: There will be a raffle for a trip to Ireland with only 150 tickets available for $50 each. We like those chances.

Starting on Friday, there will be three days of Irish music, vendors, and whiskey tastings at the 17th Annual Scottish and Irish Festival at the Valley Forge Convention Center in King of Prussia. The lineup is incredible and includes the Tannahill Weavers, the McDades, Dublin City Ramblers, Brother, Five Quid, Searson, the Hooligans, and many, many more. This is one of those don’t miss events for the entire family. And the food is usually pretty good. Best of all—there’s lots of parking and it’s all free.

We’ve been updating our calendar almost daily, so if you want to take a peek ahead, please do. You’re going to get as excited as we are about what’s coming up this month and next.

Remember, support your local Irish merchant and if you have a few extra bucks, think about donating it to the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee, which runs the annual parade. Philly’s budget cuts have left the parade organizers $40,000 in the hole. Contact them at info@philadelphiastpatsparade.com.

News

Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

Keep these girls marching and dancing.

Keep these girls marching and dancing.

Like everything else, the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade has fallen on some hard times, largely because of the city’s huge budget deficit.

This year, says parade director Michael Bradley, city officials said they couldn’t pick up the expense for police and post-parade cleanup, which leaves the parade committee about $40,000 short. “We’ll do it, that’s all, I’m pretty much an optimist,” says Bradley. “But it will be difficult to come up with that money in a short period of time.”

The parade is scheduled for Sunday, March 15.

In past years, the parade association has paid for things like bleachers, stands, and portable toilets “that other parades don’t pay for,” says Bradley. That makes these additional costs (which include police over-time) more onerous.

“We’ve had the suggestion that we charge participants more money, but the city really didn’t give us a lot of turnaround time so I don’t think I want to do that to the groups,” says Bradley. Instead, he and committee members want to do some old-fashioned fundraising, hitting up the high rollers and the low.

“I was honored a couple of years ago by the March of Dimes and I hadn’t really thought about their name and how they raised money by collecting dimes,” he says. “Nickels and dimes count too.”

So, check around the house. Donate the jar of change on the dresser, the coins you can find by fishing around underneath the cushions of your chairs and couch, the ones that jingle at the bottom of your purse and pocket. If you have some spare change to donate, contact Bradley at info@philadelphiastpatsparade.com.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

It’s almost too quiet out there. Oh, if you don’t count the sessions that run every night of the week in the Philadelphia region. We’re lucky. A reader recently asked us about sessions in Atlanta where he was heading on a trip. We did a little search and didn’t turn up much. Oh, they have their Irish pubs, but most of the music is either provided by DJs or patrons using the karaoke machine. Now, there’s a little bit of hell for you.

There is one great event this weekend you won’t want to miss. The Next Generation, a group of local youngsters who are following in the footsteps of some of the great session musicians we have here, will be performing at the Garden State Discovery Museum in Cherry Hill on Saturday.

And we have one correction. The Ambassador’s and Taoiseach Awards luncheon of the Irish American Chamber and Business Network that has appeared on our calendar for this Sunday is actually scheduled for February 27. We apologize for the error. So don’t be showing up at the Ritz Carlton this weekend.

Since there’s a light schedule now, we want you to rest up, because the events are starting to build up in February and March, when you won’t have a moment to even think. But if you have some time, get out for a pint and some craic at your local Irish pub. They need the business, and we need them.

On the horizon: The World Irish Dance Championships are coming to Philadelphia in early April (thousands and thousands of curly wigs—imagine it!). To get yourself ready, there’s a regional dance competition next Saturday at the Irish Center you an attend. Trust us, it will put a smile on your face. And we need that too.

Check out our calendar for all the details. Most of them correct, we hope.

People

Meet the 2009 St. Patrick’s Day Parade Grand Marshal

Never make the mistake of calling Philadelphia’s Irish Memorial at Penn’s Landing the “famine memorial” in front of Jim Coyne. To Coyne, those dark years in Irish history when millions died and a millions emigrated to America, had nothing to do with famine. It was “starvation,” he says. What the Irish call “an gorta mor,” the great hunger. His great grandfather was one of those immigrants, a farmer who left his home in Connemara, County Galway “because the choices were clearcut—either you left or you starved to death.”

The truth, as Coyne points out, is that “only one crop failed”—the potato, on which the Irish were entirely dependent for food. “There were other crops that were exported to other countries while the Irish starved,” he says. “When you call it a famine, it’s as if you were blaming God for it. It wasn’t God. It was the English.”

When Jim Coyne looks at the sculpture by artist Glenna Goodacre, he sees in the 35 bronze figures—men, women, and children—ordinary people forced by prejudice and politics to become adventurers, people who climbed onto what were known as “coffin ships” to leave horror behind and sailed, some bravely, most terrified, into the unknown. Like his great-grandfather, who wound up in the coal mines of Pittston, PA, where Coyne grew up.

When others look at the memorial, they see Jim Coyne, president emeritus of the Irish Memorial Inc., who spent 13 years of his life working to see it built. “He’s an unsung hero,” says Michael Bradley, former president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Parade Observance Committee, which chose Coyne as Grand Marshall of the 2009 parade. “Not only did he come up with the vision, he put together the team to raise the money—more than $3 million. I know how hard it is for me to raise the money for the parade, which is a fraction of that. I admire that he never gave up. Whenever I hear his name, I think ‘Gentleman Jim.’ He’s the perfect gentleman, and he’s a great human being.”

Coyne was at the meeting of the board of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick in the late 1980s when historian Dennis Clark, PhD, author of “The Irish In Philadelphia,” proposed that a memorial be built in the city. “At the time, the only memorial to the starvation was in Quebec,” says Coyne. If anyone had had any doubts that one was needed, Coyne erased them when he asked the men in the room what they knew about the events that led to the Irish diaspora. “Only one person had a grasp of what happened. The rest said, ‘There was a famine and the Irish starved.’ So we knew there was room for education.”

Coyne, who heads his own company (Coyne First Aid, which teaches basic life support to diverse groups across the country), suddenly had a new job that would take more than a decade to complete. Originally, the Friendly Sons and the Memorial group that grew out of it wanted the memorial in place for the Sesquicentennial of the An gorta mort, 1995-2000, but the amount of money that needed to be raised pushed the unveiling to 2003.

He remains in awe of many of the organizations that supported the memorial from the beginning—so in awe, that he joined them. For example, he’s a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Sean McBride Division 2 in Glenside although he and his family (with wife, Ginny, he has 5 children, 18 grandchildren and 5 great grandchildren) have lived in Hilltown, Bucks County, for 30 years. “They passed out pamphlets during the St.. Patrick’s Day parade, collected money, held fund-raisers—I thought, I’d like to be involved with an outfit like that.”

Over the years, he’s also been president of the Galway Association, a member of the Irish Society, and is director emeritus of the Friendly Sons, which was founded in Philadelphia in 1771 and counted among its early members Commodore John Barry and at least nine other military men who distinguished themselves in the War of Independence.

But it may be the memorial of which he’s most proud. “When I look at it, I feel great personal pride,” he admits. “In the beginning, every time I would walk away from it I felt like I was leaving a child.”

“It’s a lasting contribution to the city of Philadelphia that will be there forever,” says Michael Bradley. “Jim has left his mark and a legacy to Philadelphia that will endure.”

And while his family is proud of Coyne’s work in the Irish community, his selection this year as parade grand marshal has created even more enthusiasm.

Last year, four generations of his family marched in the parade. This year, they may do some riding.

“When John Cardinal O’Connor of New York was grand marshal of the New York parade, he said, ‘My family is more excited and enthused about me being grand marshal of the parade than when I was made a cardinal.’ That’s true for me too,” he laughs.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

The Irish are Celtic. TheScots are Celtic. So it’s not a far stretch for an Irishman or woman to celebrate the 250th birthday of Scotland’s beloved poet, Robbie (or Rabbie) Burns.

This is a man (a very handsome man, if his portraits are any indication) who once wrote a poem to a haggis which, in case you didn’t know, is a Scottish dish made from sheep intestines stuffed with sheep’s heart, lung,and liver with spices and oatmeal. (Now, now, the Scots might experience a little bile in the craw if you told them about scrapple.)

Here’s how Rabbie felt about stuffed sheep’s intestine:

“Fair fa’ your honest, sonsie face,

Great chieftain o the puddin’-race!

Aboon them a’ ye tak your place,

Painch, tripe, or thairm:

Weel are ye wordy of a grace

As lang’s my arm.”

We wouldn’t be surprised if there’s haggis on the menu somewhere in Bethlehem this weekend as the city celebrates Burns’ big one. They’re kicking it off Friday night, January 23, with an art show, poetry reading, and other events at the Hotel Bethlehem. On Saturday, there will be a lecture and supper (look for the haggis there) at the Hotel on Bethlehem’s Main Street, and a whiskey tasting cross the street at Donegal Square/McCarthy’s Tea Room. On Sunday, at the Braveheart Highland Pub in nearby Hellertown, there will also be a Burns supper featuring kilts and music.

Sligo Pub in Media is still offering free Gaelic lessons on Monday nights. And on Friday, popular local duo Gerry Timlin and Tom Kane (we love them!) will be appearing at The Shanachie Pub in Ambler, where Timlin is part-owner and genial host.

Just a peek at the following week: Those wonderful pint-sized musicians called The Next Generation will be performing at the Garden State Discovery Museum in Cherry Hill next Saturday, January 31 for the museum’s Irish American Children’s Festival.

On Sunday, February 1, the Irish American Chamber and Business Network will be giving out its 2009 Ambassador’s and Taoiseach’s Awards to ICON PLC and ICON Clinical Research, headquartered in North Wales and Warrington, and John and Joan Mullen of Apple Leisure Group and AppleVacations respectively.

Speaking of business, we’re going to take this opportunity to again urge you to eat, drink, and buy Irish. If you’re a local business owner, let us know what you’re doing to bring in the crowds and separating them from their money and we’ll mention it here.

For example, we think Kildare’s idea of offering a bottomless bowl of stew for only $10.99 is great and we told you about it here last week. Brittingham’s Irish Pub in Lafayette Hill is offering “recession proof prices” for food and drink specials during the week: On Tuesdays, enjoy burgers and fries for less than $5 from 4 to 10 PM, and prime rib for under $20 on Thursdays, when appetizers are half price and beers are $3.

Can you say “free advertising,” boys and girls? Email us!

Music

They Do Make Beautiful Music Together

Mary McPartlan gives Aidan Brennan a hug.

Mary McPartlan gives Aidan Brennan a hug.

When they met last year during the Willie Clancy Summer School in Miltown Malbay, County Clare, singers Susan McKeown and Mary McPartlan vowed they would one day perform together. Lucky for us, they kept their promise.

The two, accompanied by remarkable Irish guitarist Aidan Brennan, sang separately and together on the stage at the Irish Center in Philadelphia on January 10. McKeown, who won a Grammy for her work with the New York-based klezmer group, The Klezmatics, performed an eclectic mix of Yiddish and Irish tunes along with her own inspired songs. McPartlan, whose voice has been compared to that of Dolores Keane, did several sean nos or unaccompanied traditional tunes, and even did a little rocking out. The two women and Brennan sang one song together in tight, gorgeous harmony.

But don’t take my word for it. Watch and listen.

Check out our videos.

View our photos too:

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Eileen Ivers

Eileen Ivers

There’s an embarrassment of riches this weekend in the Philly region. Three great Irish women performers will be in town at the same time Saturday night: Eileen Ivers, fiddler extraordinaire, in Media, and singers Susan McKeown and Mary McPartlan, together for the first time, on stage at the Irish Center. And if you’re in Delaware, the Scottish group Malinky will be performing at the Blue Ball Barn in Wilmington.

I hate when that happens.

But things could be worse. It could be quiet here, and we don’t like that.

There’s also a remarkable Irish play debuting at the Adrienne Theater on Sansom Street with a performance that same night, but Paul Meade’s “Skin Deep,” a production of the Inis Nua Theatre Company (they brought us the darkly funny “Trad”) will be here till January 18 so you have more than one chance to see it. Knowing Inis Nua’s Director Tom Reing’s record for finding the best in Celtic theater, you may actually want to see it more than once.

For those of you worried about cost, some reassurance: It’s the rare Irish event that will put you out more than $50. Most musical and theatrical events cost somewhere in the $20-$25 range, by any standards a bargain (and possibly why so many Irish musicians can’t quit their day jobs).

On Monday, head over to the Sligo Pub in Media for another free Gaelic lesson. Or, if you’re in Bethlehem, hear the Celtic group BUA at the Bethlehem BrewWorks. Are you from Derry? The Sons and Daughters of Derry, one of the oldest county associations in Philadelphia, is making a comeback and is holding a meeting Monday night at the Irish Center.

There’s more coming up this month. In fact, it’s the rare day in January that there isn’t something Celtic going on that will remind you of where you came from. Pick something and go. Pubs, restaurants, gift shops, musicians and actors are all hard-hit in economic downturns. Let’s support them. Eat, drink, and buy Irish! Check out our calendar for all the details.