A few months ago, for an entry I wrote about Giuseppe Verdi and the unique musical and culinary culture of Parma Italy, I introduced readers to my good friend August Ventura and his intriguing documentary film project on the subject.
I recently saw some footage and the Promotional Reel (see it HERE) he has put together and it promises to be a feast for the eyes, ears and spirit. He is raising money to complete his film in time for next year's Verdi bicentennial, so if any of you opera lovers wish to become "Opera Angels" consider making a fully tax-deductible donation to a great cause at the website HERE.
I recently saw some footage and the Promotional Reel (see it HERE) he has put together and it promises to be a feast for the eyes, ears and spirit. He is raising money to complete his film in time for next year's Verdi bicentennial, so if any of you opera lovers wish to become "Opera Angels" consider making a fully tax-deductible donation to a great cause at the website HERE.
While doing the research I was entranced with Verdi’s
enviable dining adventures in the wonderful book, Dining with Verdi [Mondadori]. The maestro was such a legend that Escoffier
burned through quite a few recipes to honor him with lots of things “a la
Verdi” or dishes named after his operas or characters in his operas. I’ve made a few of these dishes and loved
them, and why not? Most of the “a la Verdi” dishes involved goodly amounts of truffles
and foie gras! Something tells me Verdi lived pretty high on
the "maiale" and when he showed up at Mr. Escoffier’s restaurants, all the stops
were pulled out to impress and delight him.
I am still anticipating my date with the Sole Verdi –– pasta and lobster meat with truffles and a
glazed mornay sauce on the sole.
Wouldn’t that keep the wolf away from the door on a champagne and candlelight
night?
Still, the dish that got the special post-it was Salade Aïda made with chicory, tomatoes,
sliced artichokes, small peppers and slices of egg white with grated egg yolk
and a bit of mostarda, yes, mostarda. I
love bitter greens like radicchio so I’ve always enjoyed its cousin chicory
(they are members of the same endive family) and the sweet and hot mostarda addition was genius (mostarda being a sweet syrupy mustard-infused fruit that
is usually served with cheese or salted meat). The Verdi cookbook is the only
place I’ve seen Salade Aida prepared
this way. Otherwise the salad is lovely
but not inspirational. It’s the mostarda
that hits it out of the ballpark. This
would be a great salad to have with grilled meat or fish –– and it’s
gorgeous to boot with those jewels of translucent mostarda.
The tag, Salade Verdi,
got me to thinking, why is a dish named after an historical figure or an artist or an artistic creation? This has been on my mind since my 5-Star food
group toyed with the idea of writing about dishes named after famous people.
What’s Aida about Salade
Aïda?
Although it was a hit in Egypt, it was enormously successful
when it opened in Europe and still brings raves nearly 150 years later.
Let’s face it, the story of Aïda is epic. The great military
leader Radames falls in love with an
Ethiopean princess named Aïda. She is brought to Egypt as a slave after her father's armies are defeated by Radames. Because
it is opera, things get terribly out of hand thanks to a jealous queen who
wants Radames for herself. After a lot of beautifully scored melodrama, Radames orchestrates Aïda’s escape to safety by sacrificing himself, but she will not go –– she sacrifices her freedom to join her beloved and the lovers get buried alive while
singing a heavenly grand duet or two.
Opera lovers, forgive me my Aïda plot synopsis (go HERE for a more thorough version). As August reminds me the opera is so much more when he says "the over-arching themes of personal liberty and and nations seeking freedom from tyrants and foreign colonizing powers -- so important to Verdi -- rings true today in our age of the Arab Spring. As for Aïda's theme of love transcending all boundaries - social, political, ethnic, you name it - I hope that one never dies."
Production Designed by Chaperon for original production |
The Egyptian set for the original production was by Philippe Marie Chaperon (1823- 1907).
The closest thing I can come to the connection for the
inspiration for the salad is the remarkably researched and detailed set and
costume design for the production. Mr.
Carter was still decades away from his 1920’s discovery of the tomb of
Tutankhamun in 1870, but the designs give the full flavor of what was to come
when those secret doors were opened.
Crown of Egyptian-inspired jewelry for a scene from the
opera Aida,
Music Department of the National Library in Paris.
Egyptomania
exhibition catalog, p. 435
The bejeweled headdress above (thanks to Egiptologia for the scholarship and the photos) would definitely inspire a bejeweled salad
like mine.
The costumes were also rich with gold and deeply encrusted
with rich plates of color. The salad is
like that, isn’t it?
Costumes for Aïda, Original Cairo Production
Costumes for Aïda were by Auguste Mariette-Bey (who did extensive research into the style of the period for the premiere production and was a fascinating figure).
The fashion for naming has faded with time. I can’t conceive of "Pasta Gaga" or "Agneau Lloyd
Webber"(thanks for that pun August), can you? It just doesn’t have
the same evocative power as "Sole Verdi" or "Salade Aïda".
Perhaps that says a lot about our times. We have "Trump Burgers".
Perhaps that says a lot about our times. We have "Trump Burgers".
Salade Aïda for 3-4
1 bunch chicory
1 small green pepper, sliced (a Hungarian banana pepper will work)
a handful of cherry tomatoes, sliced
1 heirloom tomato, sliced
2 large artichoke hearts (raw or cooked - sliced paper-thin if raw)
2 hardboiled eggs.
1 cup of mostarda (you can buy it HERE or there’s a recipe for it HERE that looks good although I have not made it, or do it old school with the recipe at the end of the post)
Dressing
½ c olive oil
¼ c white wine vinegar
1 t Dijon mustard
s &p to taste
Take the dressing ingredients and combine in a jar. Shake to blend and reserve.
Tear up the chicory into serving size pieces. Toss into a bowl with the sliced green
pepper, the tomatoes and artichoke hearts and mostarda.
Toss the salad with the dressing and plate. Lay sliced egg white over the salad and grate
the yolk over the salad and serve.
From Lancelot de Casteau’s 1604 Ouverture de Cuisine:
"To make Cremone mustard.
Take half a pound of orange peels candied in sugar, half a pound of quince preserved in sugar or marmalade, & chop them all well together very small: then take half a pint of mustard well thick, then take melted sugar with rose water, & put therein some turnsole, & let it boil together to give good red color, & let it boil like syrup, & mix therein that which you have chopped, & mix the mustard with, put enough syrup, & serve in little plates three or four spoons for setting at the table with roasts."
Thanks to Gollum for hosting foodie friday!!
Hello Deana:
ReplyDeleteWe fully intend to obtain tickets for Verona for next year's bicentennial celebrations. We are certain that this will be an occasion never to be forgotten. As we have never yet seen Aida, this will be the opera of our choice and we think that we shall try to be there for the 1913 staged production.
Your Salade Aida sounds just the sort of food for the interval. The hot summer night [we hope]will be suited perfectly by this dish and surely the music will make it the most delicious salad ever to pass our lips. As for the 'mostarda', well, we have never heard of it let alone tasted it but we are sure that it will add the necessary dramatic impact. Perfect!
It must be delicious w/ that sweet/spicy ingredient..I never heard of it ..even while in Italy! I'll ask my Italian friends if they have heard of it~
ReplyDeleteWonderful Salad recipe!
ReplyDeleteSweet and spicy or tart at the same time. Very spicy if you follow the French recipe. . .
Did you know that the candied fruit was a substitute for traditional grape must? Apparently this was how the French (or at least de Casteau) produced the wonderful Italian condiment. I don't know why they would do this, as grape must was well known to them.
Fruits cooked in must are ancient and mention of them goes back to Byzantium. Not sure if the Romans also did this (but I'll check). Cool if they used oenogarum, no?
For those that don't love the burn of mustard they can always make a
cogna instead of a mostarda.
Anyway, had some mostarda when we were last in Italy (in Florence) and brought a few jars back - maybe a meat and cheese plate dinner is a good idea soon. . .
Thanks for posting on one of my favorite condiments!
I have never seen a production of Aida but it does sound very dramatic-especially the ending! I love mostarda and mustard fruit and it is such an unusual addition to a salad recipe :)
ReplyDeleteI have never seen a live opera and probably never will now but I did enjoy your post.
ReplyDeleteAs for the salad it sounds delicious with flavours I would never have dreamt of, the mostarda sounds amazing. Have a good Sunday Diane
Another truly unique recipe with a unique (and unknown to me) ingredient. I think I would much prefer this salad over Pasta Gaga :)
ReplyDeleteWell you know I'm a big opera fan, so this post would obviously delight. But Deana, this line from you post surely is the best of the year. "Sole Verdi –– pasta and lobster meat with truffles and a glazed mornay sauce on the sole. Wouldn’t that keep the wolf away from the door on a champagne and candlelight night?" LOVE IT!
ReplyDeleteI don't know, you've never tasted Merman Ribeyes inspired by Annie Get Your Gun, or "I Enjoy Being Chop Suey" named for the Flower Drum Song? Or Moreno Mofongo from West Side Story? VERY spicy!
ReplyDeleteThe depth of your knowledge and the sophistication of your palate always entice me on my visits. Thanks GREG
ReplyDelete1. This salad looks great!
ReplyDelete2. I can totally see the connection to costumes in Aida. :)
You will NOT believe this, but when my eyes opened this morning at 3:30am, it was YOU that came to mind. I thought, "I HAVE NOT VISITED DEANA YET! I WONDER HOW SHE IS?" And then I come to my computer, and THERE YOU ARE!!!!
ReplyDeleteAs always, I have learned something else intriguing and wonderful, chez toi. I think it is genius when a writer connects two ideas together that most of us would not even think about joining. But in your field of expertise, you not only know recipes, but you KNOW the history. The element of surprise that most readers are not aware of but good writers use, is always an ingredient in your posts my dear. And now I am hungry for some LOBSTER!!!
Thank you kindly for always coming to visit me; I love Chopin, the mood that his music sets and just trying to write.
Have a splendid day my beautiful one! Anita
Saw Aïda when I was in school, and yes, the tale is indeed epic. How can you go wrong with love and jealousy? All in song?
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of mostarda...but then I always learn something new when I visit you. It's a beautiful salad, Deana, simple with a kick.
(Trump burgers? Tell me it isn't true!)
Aida is a real visual (as well as audial) treat, it's true! Live elephants on stage!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a lovely salad—I would never have thought of adding mostarda to a salad in a million years, but somehow it sounds right here. Definitely one to try soon.
And, yes, I have to agree, the naming of dishes seems to have gone the way of the dodo. Someone will have to revive it—as soon as we start have celebrities worth naming dishes after again.