The Journal

Heirloom at Comstock Ferre

Heirloom at Comstock Ferre

Old Wethersfield, Connecticut

There are places that feel designed for lingering.

Not rushed through. Not optimized. Just quietly built to hold people for a while.

Last night, my brother Nikko and I slipped into Heirloom at Comstock Ferre just as the evening settled in — around six, that soft hour when daylight is thinning but the room hasn’t fully turned to night.

We were greeted first by the pastry counter, still generously full in a way that immediately signals care. Cookies lined in rows. Cakes cut into clean slices. And, most importantly, the sourdough — weekend-only loaves that you learn quickly not to take for granted. When they’re gone, they’re gone.

We ordered instinctively.

A slice of cake that read like a cousin to tiramisu, but brighter — layered with lemon curd running through the center. Light but grounded. Alongside it, a maple pecan cookie, which Nikko already knew to love.

Pastries in hand, we asked to sit at the bar.

At the Far End of the Bar

The bar was softly active — exactly the right temperature of energy.

Two women sat nearby, settled into their cocktails. Two men worked quietly on laptops. One had ordered a slice of pizza that looked convincing enough to note mentally for next time.

The music was low but rhythmic, just enough to hold the room together without asking for attention. It created that rare condition where conversation can unfold without strain — no raised voices, no leaning in too close just to be heard.

A place to talk.
A place to think.

The Drinks

Nikko ordered the Honey Hole — Tomcat gin, lemon, ginger, honey lavender, finished with a scotch float.

When it arrived, the color was the first thing — a kind of liquid sunlight. He lifted the glass and immediately caught the scotch on the nose before even tasting.

The first sip led with the smoke of the float, quickly rounded by honey and the gentle heat of ginger. Warm but bright. Structured but easy.

His immediate read was simple:

perfect for any season.

Something that could warm you in winter but still feel refreshing in summer — a careful juxtaposition that kept revealing itself with each sip.

I ordered the Spicy Berry and Hibiscus — reposado, lime, blueberry, raspberry, hibiscus jam, finished with Scrappy’s bitters.

Where Nikko’s leaned golden, mine sat deeper in tone. Dark, warm, slightly spiced. The kind of drink that feels most at home beside a fireplace in the colder months. Soft fruit, gentle heat, and enough body to make you slow down while drinking it.

Both cocktails carried intention without heaviness.

Small Moments That Make a Room

At one point, a family with young children came in and took seats nearby.

Behind the bar, the bartender began torching large marshmallows — slow, deliberate passes of the flame — before placing them on top of the children’s hot chocolates. The room shifted almost instantly.

You could hear it happen.

Small oohs and ahhs from nearby tables. Curious glances. That quiet, shared delight that moves through a space when something simple is done well.

Later, the woman next to me ordered a cocktail garnished with a sprig of rosemary. The bartender passed the torch over it briefly, releasing that sharp, green aroma into the air.

For a few minutes, the room carried layers of scent:

Pastry sugar.
Toasted marshmallow.
Warm rosemary.
Fragrant citrus and spirits.

It punctuated the evening in the best way — subtle but immersive.

Conversations at the Bar

The bartender was warm and easy to talk with — the kind of presence that makes asking questions feel natural.

I had to ask about the bacon, egg, and cheese.

I’ve had it there before, and it lingers in memory the way truly good simple food does. Unfortunately, they were sold out for the evening — a disappointment, but an understandable one.

What softened the blow was learning what they offer to take home.

Par-baked biscuits.
House-made cinnamon buns ready for the oven.
Even sourdough dough available to bring back to your own kitchen.

This detail matters.

It extends the experience beyond the room itself — letting the ritual continue at home.

And then: the small victory.

Back at the pastry counter, two sourdough loaves remained. We managed to claim one of the last of the day — the kind of small win that quietly makes an evening feel complete.

Why Places Like This Matter

As we sat there — pastries half-finished, cocktails slowly disappearing — the conversation inevitably turned toward amadeo amadeo and the kind of world I’m building.

What struck me most is how aligned the atmosphere at Heirloom feels with a slower, more intentional way of living.

Nothing about the space pushes you out the door.
Nothing feels overworked.
There is craftsmanship here, but it isn’t performative.

In a town like Old Wethersfield, places like Heirloom matter because they create more than just a stop for coffee or a drink. They build a pocket of community. A place where you can sit, talk, work quietly, bring your family, or simply pause for a moment.

More personally, it offers something even harder to manufacture:

The feeling of being taken care of.

Of being able to settle in.

Of being allowed — even encouraged — to slow down in the middle of everything else moving quickly.

And in this moment, that kind of space feels less like a luxury and more like a necessity.


Winter Citrus & Fennel Ritual Plate

After time spent at Comstock Ferre — moving slowly between the produce, the seeds, the bread counter — it felt right to assemble something simple. Something seasonal. Something meant to be placed in the center of the table and passed between hands.

This plate began with sourdough from Heirloom at Comstock Ferre. Warm, structured, meant to be torn rather than carefully sliced. The kind of bread that immediately shifts a table into something more communal.

Everything else gathered around it.

Blood oranges for brightness in the depth of February.
Fennel for clean, cool lift.
Endive for bitterness.
Mint and parsley for green sharpness.
Olive oil, salt, pepper — enough, but not too much.
Toasted pistachios for texture.

Nothing here is rigid. Everything is adjustable.
This is less a fixed recipe and more a way of sharing time.

Winter Citrus & Fennel Ritual Plate

You’ll need (loosely):

  • Blood oranges (or any winter citrus you find)

  • 1 fennel bulb, shaved thin

  • A few endives, leaves separated or sliced

  • Fresh mint

  • Fresh parsley

  • Extra virgin olive oil

  • Flaky sea salt

  • Fresh cracked black pepper

  • Toasted pistachios, lightly crushed

  • Sourdough from Heirloom at Comstock Ferre

  • Optional: a soft cheese such as ricotta or burrata

To assemble

Slice the citrus into thin rounds or soft half-moons, removing any seeds. Let the juice fall naturally onto the plate — it becomes part of the dressing.

Arrange the citrus across a large shallow platter. Scatter the shaved fennel over and between the slices so the textures begin to intermingle.

Tuck in the endive leaves, allowing some height and structure to form naturally. Tear the mint and parsley gently with your hands and let them fall where they may.

Drizzle generously with good olive oil. Finish with flaky sea salt, several turns of black pepper, and a loose scattering of toasted pistachios.

If using cheese, add soft spoonfuls or torn pieces across the plate — not too neat.

To serve

Grill or warm the sourdough until the edges are crisp and the interior stays tender.

Place the bread alongside the platter and serve immediately, encouraging everyone at the table to tear, scoop, and build their own bites.

This dish is meant to be moved through slowly — passed, adjusted, shared.

Swap the citrus.
Change the herbs.
Use what looks best that day.

The ritual matters more than the precision.

Break the bread.
Pour the oil.
Stay at the table a little longer than planned.