Friday, March 11, 2011

St Patrick, Gold and the best Medieval Beef Stew you ever tasted!


When I think of St Patrick (387-493), I always think of Irish myth, not Christian martyrs –– lots of green, the little people and their pots of gold –– gorgeous, gorgeous gold.


A few years ago in a farmer’s field in Staffordshire England, a very lucky man with a metal detector came upon what has come to be known as The Staffordshire Hoard –– the largest collection of early Medieval gold ever found in England –– 11 pounds of gold made with a staggering level of craftsmanship and art (as a former jewelry maker, I can’t imagine how they did it with the tools at hand).


Escaping marauders (or rightful owners escaping capture) buried their treasure (mostly implements of war) –– but never came back to claim it.  So it waited for the light for 1400 years.



The Migration Period  (300-900AD) saw the blossoming of remarkable workmanship all over the Island amongst the Anglo-Saxons and the Celts – had they learned the skill at the hands of their Roman lords or Viking conquerers? The Hoard gold is perhaps not quite as intricate as the Hiberno-Saxon Tara brooch from Ireland (oh those crafty leprechauns), but it is vital and complex work and put me in a medieval state of mind.

When I look at these wonders it made me think (no surprise), how could a people that created these miracles of art and craftsmanship not make wonderful food?  I felt I must be remembering my history wrong… too much Monty Python on the brain???


China, Japan, India and the Middle East enjoyed a high level of sophistication during this period (so did the Mayans, for that matter).  Even in the neighboring kingdom of the Ostragoth Theodoric the Great they were living large in Ravenna, with the potent force of Roman science and culture still pulsing through their lives and architecture. But the early Middle Ages in the British Isles were all about rough clothes, rough men, 30-year life expectancy and subsistence eating –– rocks and berries and tree bark, right? Where are their buildings, their palaces?  MFK Fisher said during the Dark Ages, "Food was only a necessity again, like sleep and sweating."

The Romans left England around 410 and soon farmland returned to a nearly feral state.  The vast wheat fields and crop rotation were gone and soon forgotten (the British Isles had been Rome’s breadbasket) when the Roman overlords withdrew –– the skills were slow to return.

Wouldn’t you know it, soon after they’d seen the last of the Romans, the Plague of Justinian devastated Europe and the British Isles in the 6th and 7th centuries and the population of England went from 5 million to 1 million. The forests reclaimed the cultivated land.  With this transformation came increased game and pigs -- in fact, Cambridge historian, Debby Banham said forest size was determined by how many pigs could thrive under its leafy canopy and that oak trees “might be measured according to the number of pigs they would feed” (then as now with the famous Spanish Iberico ham, acorns are great pig food). Barley and oats regained primacy as the principal grains of the land until around the first millennium when wheat bounced back. 

Could it be the real gold in “This other Eden, demi-paradise” was in its verdant, vibrant diversity?  The fields and forests were full of nuts, berries, fruits and herbs as well as grains like oats and barley.  It was a rich place even if the evaporation of the Roman expertise in farming left the populace in dire straights from time to time. Crops failed often.  In a horrible way, the Plague of Justinian made life much better for those who remained –– until the Normans came at least –– there was a lot more to go around.

Although there is precious little remaining to tell us what they ate in the early Middle Ages… there are clues in medical manuscripts of all places.  These precious documents point to a wonderful cuisine (sorry MFK) in emerging cultures but scholars, like Debby Banham, think this forward movement may have been slow in coming to Britain, there is at least no record of it.  I had to cast my net a little further afield to have a taste of the times.  I was determined to eat medievally to honor a medieval saint.

For my St Patrick’s Day meal, I am combining recipes from the continent and Ireland.  It is believed the medieval gold of the hoard covers 600-900 AD.  The suggestion for the beef recipe comes from Anthimus (511-34AD) who wrote of it in his 6th century in De obseruatione ciborum. He was a Byzantine physician who was sent by the emperor in Constantinople to the court of the Ostrogoth king, Theodoric the Great   (454-526AD).  You can see from the Palace picture (and that was only an outbuilding) that it was not an uncivilized backwater.  It was considered the first French cookbook (the Ostragoths cut a wide swath covering Italy and part of France minus Burgundy), well, sort of cookbook. I found out about him reading British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History by Colin Spencer -- the minute I read the description of this beef dish I wanted to make it. If you like sweet and sour (like sauerbraten) you will love this. 

This beef stew is a medieval treat that moves into the modern world with ease and grace.  I tried to honor the ingredients that would have been available at the time as best I could.  I had Italian Forest Honey on hand (you know this kind of splurge purchase we all do from time to time) well you will be amazed at how delicious it is –– dark and rich and full of the flavors of the Forest that the bees called home.  If you can’t get it, any good honey with personality would work. 


Medieval scholar Banham said organized beekeeping wasn’t happening just yet in the early Middle Ages in England (although the Greeks had been doing it since pre-history). Perhaps they got honey the old fashioned way –– like bears –– from hives secreted in trees?? It didn’t make for a huge supply, so as in all special things, most of it went to the lords of the land for their food and their mead (a honey liquor).

Did you know that honey is like wine –– it has terroir  in that it tastes like its environment?  Sadly, Mr. Honeybear is often filled with honey made by bees that have been fed corn syrup instead of drinking nectar as they should.  If you’ve never tried single source honey –– you should just to see the difference, it’s worth the $12 or so bucks. 


Wine would have only been taken by the Lords (the lower classes drank ale) and was probably French since a chilling climate in England made for bad vine growing conditions until a warming at the end of the millennium, even then the English were not big wine makers.

Wine was stored in barrels and jars (amphorae). The Roman bottle had not caught on in the outposts of the Empire as it receded (glass was still rare).  The world’s oldest wine bottle and its contents were discovered in Germany and examination revealed that oil was floated on top of the wine to keep it from spoiling – it turned to vinegar very quickly, which might be why vinegar is ubiquitous in early cuisine (and perhaps salad dressing came from dumping out the winey/vinagery oil at the top?).  As for spices –– the Catholic church and the Romans brought new tastes to England and Ireland –– it’s hard to say what the natives would have had or kept a taste for after the Romans left ––so far they aren't telling.


Some of the ingredients are a wee bit esoteric.  Spikenard or nard (from nardostachys jatamansi- not to be confused with the American Aralia recemosa) is one of the ingredients mentioned in the description of the dish -- you are probably unfamiliar with it (I was until last year).  It’s in the Bible and is a lushly scented spice, famous for being used to anoint Jesus’ feet.  It grows in China, India and Nepal and is in the valerian family but it is easy to get online these days.  If you are in the mood to try it, go for it HERE  The closest I can come to replicating it would be a combination of ginger and mushrooms for a little earthiness with spice


I do wish I could have used costmary.   It is part of the chrysanthemum family but was often called ‘scented salvia’ so I used sage since that would be closest in flavor –– although costmary itself is really a beautiful herb –– more delicate and complex than the strong sage.  Grows beautifully in the garden and you can get it HERE.


I have tasted pennyroyal –– it is a sweet, childlike mint so mint or catnip would be a good substitute.   Should you have it in your garden and want to use it, remember never feed it to a pregnant woman and don’t eat too much of it.

The flavors of the dish reminded me of Hippocras, an ancient spiced wine that I made a while ago.  Although the earliest English recipe for the drink is in the Forme of Cury (1390), written over 800 years after Anthimus wrote about this dish, spiced wines were popular with the Romans and their great epicurean collection Apicius, de re Coquinaria has a recipe for a spiced wine with many of the same spices that you find in hippocras and this dish.  It is not hard to imagine that only a few hundred years after the Romans had left that spiced wines would still be drunk and used for cooking. Would you throw out something delicious just because it was Roman? 

Although this specific dish is European –– it isn’t that far-fetched to think the English were doing something a little like it.  Even with the decline of the Roman Empire, the new Empire of the Catholic church was covering the old world with its influence as surely as the interwoven tendrils of their art covered their gold and vellum illuminations (and preserved English/Irish mythology that would have been lost without monks writing it down).

I’ve also included an Irish recipe with roots in the 6th century, Brochan Fotchep.  It was a favorite of an Irish Saint, St. Columkille   (521-97).  Those of you who are attached to rice and wheat as your starch may change your minds.  Today it is more of a soup –– but it began as a creamy porridge –– start thinking very creamy risotto to get yourself in the right mindset.





Medieval Beef Stew with Fennel, leeks, red wine, Honey and Vinegar, Serves 4


Ingredients

1 ½ pounds lean beef stew meat (mine is from Grazin Angus Acres)
2 T suet or rendered beef fat or oil
2 cups chopped leeks
2 cups chopped fennel
1 stalk celery
1 cup red wine
3 T Italian Forest honey (Rigoni di Asiago  is sold at Gourmet food shops in the US)
¼ c red wine vinegar (1/3 c if not using verjus)
2 T verjus (optional)
salt  to taste
1t ground pepper
¼ t cloves
2 t spikenard root  OR ½ t   dry ginger with 2 t powdered porcini (this is as close as I can get to the taste/smell of it)
1 T fresh sage or 1 t dry (use costmary if you are lucky enough to have some… but it is not in everyone’s cupboard—not mine at least)
1 t pennyroyal if you have it –– a very delicate mint –– used a pinch of dried mint or catnip instead

Directions

Brown the beef in the fat.  Remove and add the fennel, celery and leeks into the fat.  Saute for a few minutes.  Add the wine, vinegar, honey and spices and return the meat to the pot, cover.

Put into a 275º oven for 3 hours.






Brotchan Foltchep (Creamy Oatmeal with butterfried leeks) based on florilegium recipe 


Ingredients

2 cups milk
2 cups chicken or vegetable stock
½ c heavy cream 
¾ c steel cut oats
Parsley, a handful chopped
S & P

3-4 medium leeks, washed and sliced
4 T butter

Directions

Cook the oats in the milk and stock for ½ an hour at low heat till tender.

Saute the leeks until tender in the butter... or go a little farther till they are crisp… I liked them that way.  When finished, add the cream to the oatmeal and then top with the leeks and serve with the beef.




 
Original Recipe for Beef from Anthimus, translated from the Latin by Mark Grant

Beef which has been steamed can be used both roasted in a dish and also braised in a sauce, provided that, as soon as it begins to give off a smell, you put the meat in some water.  Boil it in as much fresh water as suits the size of the portion of meat; you should not have to add any more water during the boiling.  When the meat is cooked, put in a casserole about half a cup of sharp vinegar, some leeks and a little pennyroyal, some celery and fennel, and let these simmer for one hour.  Then add half the quantity of honey to vinegar, or as much honey as you wish for sweetness.  Cook over a low heat, shaking the pot frequently with one's hands so that the sauce coats the meat sufficiently.  Then grind the following:  50 pepper corns, 2 grammes each of costmary and spikenard, and 1.5 grammes of cloves.  Carefully grind all these spices together in an earthenware mortar with the addition of a little wine.  When well ground, add them to the casserole and stir well, so that before they are taken from the heat, they may warm up and release their flavour into the sauce.  Whenever you have a choice of honey or must reduced either by a third or two-thirds, add one of these as detailed above.  Do not use a bronze pan, because the sauce tastes better cooked in an earthenware casserole.


FYI, The bowl and its lid are American woodwork –– about 250 years old.  The statue is a Chinese dragon from about the same vintage.  Best I could do from my prop stock to give a Medieval flavor to the visuals~!



If you want the classic St Patrick's corned/spiced beef,  visit me HERE to get a from scratch recipe!

Friday, March 4, 2011

My Old NYC and Lentil-Chili Soup with Divine Orange Sherry Cream



 Jefferson Market Courthouse – a little before my time!

Very soon after I came to New York City, I moved to the West Village.

                                                        


11th street between 5th and 6th.  It was a great neighborhood with fabulous caring neighbors and a great inclusive spirit. My first cooking experiments started in that 11th Street kitchen (oh yes, Renaissance Veal Pie – ICK, puff paste glue – YUK, coq au vin -- AHHH) that had a giant window overlooking the gardens of 10th and 11th Street. I did my first renovation (very grown up!) on that kitchen and Pierre, the craftsman that did the unorthodox counters with copper and deep-blue-sea tile, became a great friend.

My dining table was in front of another giant window that looked out over what must have been the inspiration for Hitchcock’s Rear Window .  I can’t tell you how much fun we had watching our neighbors… especially one couple that cavorted between the living room and the bedroom, often en déshabillé.  We took to waving but they didn’t seem to care.  It made for very amusing dinner parties and made up for some of the food disasters that came from my reach exceeding my grasp in the kitchen. My friends were very good sports. It also helped that the meals were lubricated by a stock of spectacular wines that the local merchant had discovered in his cellar when he bought the place. He was charmed that I was interested and shared them with me for a song. We often had old Lafite, Latour, Haut Brion, Margaux, Petrus and Yquem from the 1950’s to wash down the food experiments.  What a world.
I shopped at Jefferson Market – on the west side of 6th Avenue, between 10th and 11th Street. The store (with a lovely crew that included owner Angelo and my favorite – very Irish Frank) had a policy that is inconceivable today, they shopped for you (you told them what you wanted and they gathered it for you) when I started going there!  One day before a dinner when I forgot my checkbook, they just said not to worry…I could pay next time… can you imagine??  It was a great store.


When I moved to a loft in the yet-to-be-named NOHO in the 80’s, I was inconsolable.  It was barren and forlorn. Ok, the loft itself was a bohemian dream and 2500 sq feet with the best windows in NYC but there were no people… the neighbors were sequestered, doing their arty things (one made jewelry for Madonna) and I never saw them since we all kept odd hours (only 5 years before there had been an eccentric brothel on the top floor). It was a real artist’s building then.  Leo Castelli and Andy Warhol risked their lives taking our 100-year old elevator (after riding with Warhol I grumbled “there goes the neighborhood”, boy, was I right) on their way to the artist lofts above.  The neighborhood is now crawling with people and all the artists are gone to the outer boroughs.  The lofts now sell for millions and rent for the 10’s of thousands!

Former Hairy Guy Greasy Spoon – now posh shop 

I so missed Jefferson Market.  The only thing around us then was a really pathetic greasy spoon with smelly sandwich meat and an owner with dense black hair exploding exuberantly from every possible place save the top of his shiny bald head… he didn’t look any cleaner than his display cases and leered every time I entered (as well as trying to look down my shirt whenever possible).  His gag-making aftershave couldn’t mask his mighty B.O.  I decided I’d rather starve and at first, went back to my old neighborhood to shop.


 

Then I found Dean & Deluca just a few blocks away.  Back then it was  on Prince Street, (much, much smaller than the giant that’s on Broadway now) and there was a Whole Foods next door (not related to the giant food chain at all –it started as a funky artist/ hippy health-food store).  By the time I got there they were already trendy and not as warm as my beloved Jefferson, but between the 2 --  I could get what I wanted.

I missed the familiar faces and intensely personal service.  At Jefferson people worked there for decades… it felt like family and like the old Cheers TV show, everybody knew your name and what you liked (“Deana, those little artichokes are coming in next week!!”).

I think that’s one of those things I miss with mega stores.  Minimum wage jobs don’t encourage long-term commitments.  Everyone is on their way somewhere else or depressed that they have to be working there.  Once upon a time when someone worked at a place like Jefferson, they could afford houses and cars… they were taken care of and they had enormous pride in their work (like well paid waiters in great restaurants – coincidence??).  Now they are commodities.  It is the cost we pay for saving money, or in D&D’s case, the cost for high quality… lots gets thrown away and high priced employees would make the quality unaffordable (their prices are already extremely high … but when I have to do food for a film, I load up there because everything is PERFECT).  

When they came out with the Dean & Deluca Cookbook in the mid-90s it became a favorite of mine.  David Rosengarten   did a bang up job.  As a self-taught food writer, his voice is unique and nuanced.  You will love the book especially if you entertain frequently. I can’t tell you how many times I used it for parties.

One of my absolute favorite soups comes from this book.  It is a lentil soup that can be totally vegetarian or not… it is crazy good with orange and chili and sherry (that I added to the recipe years ago) giving it richness and warmth -- perfect for these last gasps of winter and that cream will rock your world.  If soup can be sexy… this is one voluptuous bowl of red.


I really recommend getting the petitgrain… it is a very special orange so it takes the cream from good to great… well sublime, actually. I had used orange for years and loved it but the petitgrain blew it out of the water—no contest. Mandy Aftel, the sorceress behind the magic says “Usually petitgrain includes the leaves and the twigs of the bitter orange tree but this is special and included some flowers too so resembles a neroli – floral but restrained – a very sophisticated orange with floral notes.”  Since you only use a drop or 2 it is affordable elegance.  It goes together with the deeply flavored Pedro Ximenez sherry like a perfect love affair. Like the petitgrain above orange juice, Pedro Ximenez stands heads above cream or amontillado sherry. I found it thanks to Manuela's Portuguese blog, Tertúlia de Sabores.   Don't get me wrong... it is delicious with orange and sweet sherry... but best with these additions.

You can only get Aftelier products online!

I like the cream best made the day before.  It allows the 2 elements to refine their duet before the performance at the table.

 


Creamy Lentil & Ancho Chili Soup based on a recipe in the Dean & Deluca Cookbook
Serves 4-6

4 ancho chilies
1 cup hot water
½ t ground allspice
pinch of ground cloves
½ t dry rosemary
 ½ t black pepper
1 T tomato paste
1 large onion, minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 c chopped chorizo (optional for vegetarians)
1 T vegetable oil
½ Lb green lentils
6 c water
grated zest &  juice of 1 orange
1 bay leaf
salt to taste (Chorizo is salty so add salt after everything else)

Sherry Orange Cream

1-3 T Sherry (I like Pedro Jimenez , but a cream sherry will do)
1 cup sour cream
drop of Aftelier Petitgrain  or 1-2 T orange juice
6 T fresh cilantro, minced

Toast chilies in a 200º oven for 5 minutes.  Discard seeds and stems.  Place in a bowl with the hot water for 15 minutes.

Remove the chilies, reserving the water.  Add the chilies to the herbs, spices and salt in a food processor with tomato paste and reserved liquid to blend. 

Cook the onion and garlic in the oil till the onion is soft… 10 minutes.  Add the chili mixture and chorizo and fry for 2 minutes.  Add the lentils, water and orange juice and zest and any remaining reserved chili water.  Cook partially covered for 1 hour.

Remove from heat and cool somewhat… If you wish, puree some of it (or all of it) with a few pulses of the food processor or leave it rough.

Take the sour cream and stir in a little bergamot essence or orange juice and enough sherry to make it spoonable… this will vary with the thickness of the sour cream. Warning, this stuff is really delicious.  Do not eat it all before you finish the soup!

Pour the soup in a bowl and swirl the sour cream on top… sprinkle with cilantro and serve.

                                                ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Since I am on a lentil roll… I thought I’d also share a dish that captured my imagination when I read the description a few weeks ago.  It’s from Guy Savoy in Paris… lentils with sweetbreads and truffles that I read about on a Luxeat,  a blog that takes you to the best restaurants in the world (what does this person do to have such a life, I wonder?). I mixed it up a little with truffle oil (don’t scrimp on this… bad truffle oil has no truffles and is a completely chemical reproduction of the scent without the flavor) since truffles are out of season.  Because I loved that lentil chestnut soup I made a few weeks ago, I wanted to add nuts to the soup somehow.  I was still thinking of Barry Wine’s idea of sweetbreads with a hazelnut crust so I put the 2 together… lentils and hazelnuts are a marriage made in heaven.  If you don’t like sweetbreads, it would be great with salmon too! Sometimes it’s fun to put a recipe together from a description… gives you lots of room to be creative.


Lentils with Hazelnut Crusted Sweetbreads (or Salmon) and Truffle Oil

1 leek, chopped
1 small carrot, chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
3 mushrooms
2 T duck fat
1 cup lentils (either French green or simple brown)
4 cups chicken stock
1 t fresh thyme
1 t fresh marjoram
1-2 T sherry vinegar
2 T Armagnac or cognac
Pinch chipotle powder
2 T hazelnut ‘flour’

1 cup hazelnuts, made into flour*
½ lb sweetbreads, cleaned and prepped* OR  Salmon
1 egg white mixed with equal part water
3 T flour
1 t each thyme and marjoram
¼ c duck fat
Salt and Black Pepper to taste

1 T hazelnut oil
Good quality white truffle oil 

Saute the vegetables in the duck fat until soft.  Add the lentils, herbs and stock and cook for 30 minutes or so until the lentils are soft.  Add the vinegar and armagnac at the end and cool. Season to taste with salt and pepper and chipotle powder

Take the hazelnuts and grind them in a coffee grinder or food processor… a nice mix of powder and small bits is the best and add the s & p, herbs. Dip the sweetbread pieces into flour.  Dunk them in the egg white mixture and then roll the pieces of sweetbreads or salmon  (3-4 pieces per bowl would be good) in the hazelnuts to coat.  The coating will stick better if you refrigerate them for an hour after this. Fry them in the duck fat till golden and crisp.

Place the soup in bowls and lay the sweetbreads (or salmon) on top.  Drizzle with truffle oil and hazelnut oil and serve.

*see HERE  for instructions on how to do the sweetbreads if they are new to you.
** toast the hazelnuts in a 350º oven for 7 minutes.  Allow to cool a little and rub their skins off in a towel.  The skins are slightly bitter so you want to remove as much as possible.

PS If you want to make this vegetarian, just put the ground hazelnuts in the soup as it cooks, it will add a delicious flavor.

Thanks to Gollum for hosting FOODIE FRIDAY


Friday, February 25, 2011

Chocolate Mousse with Szechuan Peppercorn Sabayon





Sometimes when you try to get to the bottom of things, you find you can’t!  Take chocolate mousse (not hard to take by any means), for example.

I decided to do a favorite recipe for chocolate mousse with a Szechwan peppercorn sabayon as part of the Marx Food’s Ridiculously Delicious Challenge (we were given a box of ingredients to use to make a dish with… I chose the peppercorns and coconut sugar…mmm).  Coming up with the recipe was easy… it’s based on my favorite Julia Child mousse recipe from her 1989 The Way to Cook.   Julia’s is a never-fail recipe… but not her first effort at chocolate mousse.  Her original in Mastering the Art of French Cooking was more in the style of a chocolate pot de crème -- without cream -- all rich eggy goodness with butter supplying the necessary oleaginous component for that luxurious mouth-feel we all crave.   As I whipped up my divine chocolate cloud I got to thinking -- who made the first chocolate mousse, where did it come from? 

Chocolate dessert only goes back to the mid 19th century as far as I can see.  Originally, chocolate was a very hot spicy drink from the New World made with water and not milk.  This continued through the 18th century with cream and other additives coming into the mix (like jasmine and ambergris!).



I found this gorgeous innovation for drinking hot chocolate called the mancerina on the blog Potsdecreme.  It was invented in the mid-17th century by the Marques de Mancera,Viceroy of Peru from 1639-48 (said The Oxford Companion to Food).  The stationary cup holder kept the hot beverage from tipping over and scalding the guest. I can see why it was so popular for so long (you can see more chocolate cups and history HERE and HERE ) with such gorgeous vessels to carry your chocolate in... why mess with success? Aren't we glad they did??

The blog Extreme Chocolate  said “The first written record of chocolate mousse in the United States comes from a food Exposition held at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 1892. A "Housekeeper's Column" in the Boston Daily Globe of 1897 published one of the first recipes for chocolate mousse. The recipe yielded a chocolate pudding-type dish, instead of today's stiff, but fluffy, mousse.”


I’d like to believe the legend that the artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1854-1901) invented chocolate mousse.  He was a great cook and gourmet and after his untimely death at only 36, his boyhood friend, art dealer and tireless supporter, Maurice Joyant, collected his recipes in a cookbook in the early 20th century (translated into English in a 1966 edition).  Included was ‘Mayonnaise au chocolat’*… evidently his creative take on the newly popular savory mousses of the day.  Luckily the name didn't stick even though the mousse went on to be nearly as famous as its creator (don’t worry, I will revisit this cookbook again).  It has been said that Lautrec created the chocolate mousse and the cocktail snack (he loved the American cocktail), now that is brilliant!


 Perhaps if he had stayed with food and away from absinthe, he might have stayed around longer.


Like Julia’s original, the first recipes had no cream (although hers is served with a creamy sauce).  I read Robert Carrier had the first cream version in the 1960’s and by the 1980’s chocolate mousse was ubiquitous, although often little more than chocolate flavored whipped cream.  My version is far more than that -- good chocolate is the key and the rum, coffee, star anise and orange add warm, spicy notes (and Aftelier’s Petitgrain or bitter orange essence if you are lucky!). The Szechuan peppercorn sabayon I’ve had for 20 years in my ratty handwritten recipe book so I can’t tell you where it came from.  I do recommend using good eggs... pasture raised are my favs (from my pals at Grazin Angus Acres.  Remember you don't cook them so the fresher the better



Chocolate Mousse with Coconut and Szechuan Peppercorn Sabayon

Chocolate Mousse inspired by Julia Child

8 oz bittersweet chocolate
2 T strong coffee
2 T dark rum
finely grated zest of 1 orange (microplane is best for this)*
1 star anise, crushed into pieces (from Marx Foods)
3 oz softened unsalted butter
3 egg yolks
1 c heavy cream
3 egg whites
¼ cup ground fine coconut sugar from Marx Foods
*for special flavor you could add a drop of Aftelier’s Petitgrain (from the leaves of bitter orange) or bitter orange essence 

Soak the star anise in the rum and coffee for a few hours till it has released its scent in the liquid then strain, reserving the liquid.  Melt the chocolate with the coffee, butter, rum and zest.  When chocolate is melted, add the yolks… whisking constantly (if you add the butter to the chocolate too soon it could separate).  Allow it to cool a little then beat. Whip the egg whites and when stiffened add the sugar slowly.  Fold this into the chocolate.  Whip the cream till stiff and fold into the mousse and add the drop of orange oil now if you wish.  Chill

 
Szechuan Sabayon

3 T water
1 T honey
4 egg yolks
16 toasted Szechuan peppercorns from Marx Foods

Whisk the yolks, water, honey and peppercorns (I used a hand mixer for maximum volume) over a low heat till creamy and foamy.  Add the cream and chill.  Strain the peppercorns after they have perfumed the sabayon if you would like, pressing on the solids.  If you really like the peppercorns, as I do, toast them and grind them in a spice grinder and add to the sauce… it leave a wonderful tingling sensation on your tongue that is delightful and a contrast to the richness.

Plate the mousse and spoon the sabayon around it… add extra orange zest if you would like… I love the bitter orange flavor!


*Toulouse-Lautrec's Mayonnaise au Chocolat

In a saucepan put 4 bars of chocolate with very little water and let them melt on a very gentle fire. 
Add 4 large spoons of granulated sugar, half a pound of good butter, 4 yolks of eggs and mix carefully.

Let cool and you will have a smooth paste.  Beat the whites of eggs to a snow and mix them, while stirring, into the paste

Thanks to Gollum for hosting Foodie Friday.... having an anniversary today!!!





Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Beggar's Purses with Bacon and Cheese



Barry Wine of the Quilted Giraffe, 1990’s (?)

When you are known by friends and acquaintances as a “food person”, there are a few questions that get asked regularly.  One of the most frequent would have to be, “What is the best thing you’ve ever eaten?”

My answer?  There are a few… and that’s not hedging my bets.  Perhaps 5 on my list, but hey, I’ve been around a while now and eaten a lot of great food.  Place, company, event… all contributed to the reason they were best dishes and the top spot changes from time to time even if the list rarely does.


I’ll let you know about one that’s been at the top for 20-odd years that came from Barry Wine’s The Quilted Giraffe in NYC.  The food was all over the place, eccentric and full of hits and misses but creative and fun… this guy was pushing the envelope.  The dish that made me want to genuflect to the diminutive Mr. Wine?  Beggar’s Purses… crepes filled with beluga caviar, crème fraiche tied with a chive.  You popped them in your mouth… I think there were 3 on a plate.  I believe I was such a glutton we had to get another plate and that threw the service off but I didn’t care… I was in love.

New York Magazine, Nov 7, 1983 – that’s Clerc with the moustache!

Mr Wine was inspired to make them after a visit to another great self-taught chef (like himself) in France, François Clerc at La Vielle Fontaine outside of Paris.  Clerc’s Aumônière (that means a little draw-string bag/pouch) became Wine’s beggar’s purses and reading about Clerc I can see why…he and Wine shared the same wild souls when it came to food (although the mad moustache was all Clerc).
Wine was a University of Chicago-schooled lawyer with very little training in the cooking arts (he took a few classes at The Culinary Institute in Hyde Park) but it was probably the fact that he had no preconceived notions that drove him from “chicken cordon bleu and a salad with canned mandarin oranges” to really inventive cuisine.  The NYT wrote “ By the early 80's, Mr. Wine was drizzling red-pepper oil around portions of grilled swordfish, serving sea urchins from Maine and thickening a sauce with mashed potatoes, all strikingly new concepts at the time. David Burke... said Mr. Wine "was the first chef who showed me how creative and whimsical you can be." Don’t forget Wine was the guy who introduced tuna and wasabi pizza and hazelnut-coated sweetbreads! 

The Quilted Giraffe was also a veritable breeding ground for great chefs.   Aside from David Burke, David Kinch of Manresa  spent 4 years there and considered Wine a mentor, Tom Colicchio (Craft and Gramercy Tavern) another self-taught chef, also cooked for Wine – leaving a gig at Alfred Portale’s Gotham  to take the plum opportunity to work with the mercurial Wine.  They (and so many others) remember the experience fondly.  Collicchio remembers making those beggar’s purses all day long!

For years at my New Year's house parties in the country, my great friend Diana would bring a tub of good caviar as her offering.  We all would pig out on caviar and whatever the main course and desserts were that year and drink champagne… normal New Year's behavior.  But New Year’s morning, I would get up late and as the sleepy guests made their way downstairs I would begin making beggar’s purses and a line with plates would form and reform and reform as people returned for 2nds and 3rds and 4ths.  Warm crepe, cool caviar and crème fraiche with a tiny bit of lemon… it was worth not being piggish with the stuff the night before so we could indulge in these beauties for a great beginning to a New Year, with the rest of the champagne of course!



Since then I have done them with salmon caviar, smoked salmon, foie gras even once with whipped cream and raspberries (sans chives!) and they are always wonderful.

The remarkably generous and creative bloggers Natasha and Lazaro (of 5 Star Foodie and Lazaro Cooks) invited me to be part of a great group asked to come up with something fun using bacon and eggs... I was thrilled with the challenge.   I thought I would do something Mr. Wine would appreciate… throw a concept on it’s ear and make something different.

I decided to make the crepes -- but instead of fancy caviar -- fill them with chopped bacon in a creamy cheese sauce.  The idea of popping them in my mouth at brunch appealed to me utterly. I think they would also be fun with a piece of grilled fish, chicken or pork for dinner.  They can be made ahead and warmed gently in the microwave for a few seconds…. They are very rich and 1 or 2 should be plenty (Dr. Lostpast said 3!).  PS, I had chives in a box… bad idea… get full length so they are easy to tie!!!

The recipe for the beggar's purse crepes comes from The New Basics… the classic 80’s Silver Palate cookbook.  They are nearly foolproof.


Bacon and Cheese Beggar’s Purses, makes 10-12

Crepes

¾ c milk
2 eggs
½ c  flour
¼ t salt
butter for pan

Throw the milk eggs flour and salt into the blender and let ‘er rip for a minute or 2.  Strain the mixture through a fine sieve.

Use a stick of butter to coat your pan with butter like a magic marker…be especially generous the first few and use the butter before each pour of batter.  Swirl batter around the pan and flip once set... do not allow to brown too much!

Use 2 T of batter per crepe.


Bacon Cheese Sauce

2 T Butter
1 clove garlic, minced
1 shallot, minced
½ c cream
pinch of nutmeg
1/8 to ¼ t chipotle pepper, ground
1/8 t pepper
3 T grated parmesan
¼ cup finely grated cheddar
1 t cognac or armagnac

4 strips smoky bacon, chopped and cooked till crisp
12 chives, put in salted boiling water for 5 seconds and drained

Sauté the garlic and shallot in the butter till softened…. I like the butter to brown for an added nutty flavor.

Add the cream and warm, reduce a little and add the cheeses and cognac. 

Lay out a crepe, fill with about ½ T bacon cheese sauce (it is rich).  Tie with a chive into a purse… should your chives not be long enough… tie them together and cut off the excess… makes it easier!