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Old Is New: Table on Ten in Upstate New York

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Bloomville, a tiny crossroads town in Upstate New York, has a new community hub built from the humblest ingredients. We discovered it last week when we were in farm country photographing a Scandinavian-style barn for Remodelista's first book (out a year from this fall; stay tuned).

Table on Ten is a refreshingly ragtag café that the owners built and run themselves with a lot of encouragement—the mismatched tables and chairs were donated one by one by locals just before the July 1 opening. It's located in a refurbished 1860's house on Route 10 and is dedicated to using ingredients sourced within 10 miles. On the calendar for fall: a new pizza oven, movie nights, pop-up dinners with guest chefs, and classes in foraging for wild edibles. Milkweed frittata, anyone?

Photographs by Matthew Williams

Above: Table on Ten is the creation of Justus Kempthorne and Inez Valk-Kempthorne, escapees from Manhattan. He's a carpenter and cabinetmaker, and she's a chef/caterer (and former model who grew up in Holland). Having recently collaborated on their own post-and-beam cabin nearby, they renovated Table on Ten's nearly derelict building themselves, renting out the upstairs rooms as offices. The café makes use of salvaged oak from the house's old floor boards and was designed in collaboration with their friend Erjan Borren, an Amsterdam interior designer.

Above: The small dining room has mismatched furniture, antique mirrors, and an evolving display of art.

Above: Old carpet was stripped away and the bare stairs painted white with a runner-like band of charcoal gray. The gray was matched from an original paint color and is also used in the café and dining room.

Above: The restaurant serves breakfast (housemade granola and eggs with local pancetta and herbs baked in a ramekin), lunch (baguette sandwiches and salads), baked goods (lemon and lavender cookies, Dutch speculaas), and a lot of coffee and herbal iced tea. On Saturdays, it hosts a farmers' market.

Above: The counters and shelves are made of seasoned hemlock from a local mill. Justus used a combination of vinegar and steel wool to create the grayed finish. The shelves serve as a microshop stocked with Irving Farm Coffee roasted nearby, as well as a few delicacies that the couple missed from the city, such as Maldon sea salt and Frankie's 457 olive oil.

Above: Table on Ten's signature sandwich: Harvest Field Tilsit cheese with pickled red onions, arugula, and safflower mayonnaise. The crunchy, tart onions are the key condiment. They're surprisingly easy to make. Here's Table On Ten's recipe:

In a liquid measuring cup mix together 1 cup apple cider vinegar, 1 cup water, 3 tablespoons brown sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, and 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns. Make sure sugar and salt are completely dissolved.

Slice 1 red onion into thin, half-moon rings. Spread out in a colander and pour boiling water over the slices so they look wilted.

Place onions in a quart container and pour brine over them. Let cool before putting in the refrigerator. The quick pickled onions will be a gorgeous pale pink and ready the next day.

Above: In the course of the renovation, ceilings were raised, new drywall and plaster added, and the original service cabinets opened up, as they originally did, to pass through from kitchen to café.

Above: Ball jars from the local hardware store serve as cold drinks glasses.

Above: The three-part stainless sink and hanging shelves and dish drying racks are from Ikea. The café's white dishes and mugs came from the defunct diner down the road.

Above: Justus inverted traditional picnic table proportions when he built the narrow, long perch out back. It's constructed from a single slab of hemlock. He's now working on the wood-fired brick pizza oven.

Above: Word has gotten out–even the local hens regularly stop by.


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