dansch wrote:B&L sells high-quality meat, but it's more than just the meat that keeps me coming back. Nowhere else in the area do I feel like I can have a personal relationship with a butcher. I am biased, as I was a regular at Mado, but the first timers next to me got the same personal treatment, cooking advice, etc.
And I know that Rob isn't just part of the community on the customer side, he's a part of the community to his supply chain, as well as restaurants and retail outlets he supplies (GNRs JPGraziano, Great Lake, etc.)
To me, B&L feels like my neighborhood butcher shop.
This pretty much sums up my feelings as well. I'm lucky to live nearby, so I frequent the Butcher and Larder as often as I buy meat. I love discussing recipes with Rob, and know that he will always have a cut of meat in my price range to suit my planned meal. Over the years, I've gotten to know Rob, and he is a principled, intelligent and responsible small businessman, butcher and citizen. I am very grateful that Rob is nearby to source and butcher meat for me according to his exacting standards. I trust what he sells, because I trust him.
Yet, it never ceases to amaze me that every time I'm there, someone walks in, is baffled by the personal service, the dialogue that goes on between butcher and customer, and walks out. The Butcher and Larder is partly redefining and partly reintroducing to customers how to buy meat, interact with their food source, and ask questions if they have them. Rather than defaulting to pre-packaged ground beef because it's easy to prepare in a nonstick skillet, Rob patiently and gently educates his customers about the efficacy and benefit of eating "alternative" but equally delicious cuts of meat, and will take the time to talk to them about preparing these cuts. You could argue that Rob and Chris are Great Neighborhood Resources, but that would shortchange the beautiful product they sell.
A definite yes to GNResource.