The story is killer – and it’s bound fairly decently to British history, in all its ormolu bedizened glory.
Queen Elizabeth II Claire Foy Prince Phillip Matt Smith
The Crown I-II begins with Elizabeth II at the end of WWII -- her courtship, marriage and early life with her blond Prince Phillip, ending in the 60’s. The cast of characters and historical events flash around the Elizabeth like Roman candles flashing through the firmament.
Statesmen Churchill, Mountbatten, McMillan and Eden – and the Royal family and their friends and associates keep the story sparkling along with great costumes and sets to frame the drama magnificently at superb stately-home locations.
Sir Anthony Eden
Harold MacMillan
Lord Mountbatten
Winston Churchill
The palace’s private quarters were mostly built-sets (yet not copies of the real private quarters), done with exquisite detail and then edited seamlessly into the real grand houses where most of the shooting was done – no wonder Netflix spent $100 million on the program.
The Set for The Crown’s private royal apartments by designer Martin Childs
Connecting passage built between Philip and Elizabeth's bedrooms
Queen’s bedroom with the catchy ciel de lit / baldaquin bed crown and ‘curtainage’
This was a location: High Canons, Buckettsland Lane, Well End, Hertfordshire
Royals – English and American. President Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy
One of my favorite episodes of The Crown II is #8. It dramatizes the dinner between the Queen and American royalty – the President and Mrs. Kennedy (it’s about food, what a surprise - I've written about the Kennedys and food Here and HERE).
Eltham Palace, London as Hartnell showroom
Eltham Palace
Fresh from her triumph in France, Jacqueline Kennedy arrives at Buckingham Palace radiant in her Chez Ninon Paris knock-off and for all Elizabeth’s shy attempts to up her fashion game for Jackie at her favorite designer, Norman Hartnell’s showroom (staged in a spectacularly re-purposed Eltham Palace entryway), Elizabeth looks rather like a dowdy bedspread in her tulle compared to the sleek, ice-blue column of satin on the first lady.
What Liz had thought was sincere shared feelings of friendship was betrayed by snarky comments by a loose-lipped Jackie at a party a few nights later, It was genuinely hurtful to Liz. In the end apologies soothed the royal breast and Liz is magnanimous -- she treats Jackie with enormous
kindness.
What about the food? Liz's chef from 1953 to 1964 was Charles Mellis. He divulged the queens tastes to Chatelaine and I'll share them with you. Liz is not a fancy eater.
Mellis revealed Elizabeth liked the American custom of having salad with lunch. She had a great affection for our Chicken Maryland (fried chicken with cream gravy), served with fried banana and bacon, sweet corn pancake with horseradish sauce. Dinners always started with small hors d'oeuvres like tomato canapés topped with peanut butter (???) or peppers stuffed with shrimp. Some of her other favorite dishes were sole with asparagus and cheddar and Tournedos continental (a steak with tomato, mushroom and maître d'hôtel butter). Mellis observed that the Queen was not fond of dessert and often had Scotch woodcock ( scrambled eggs on toast with anchovies, capers and parsley - I just made it for breakfast and it is really good!) after dinner - she liked oven baked fries.
Given the Queen's simple tastes, Chef Mellis didn’t push the envelope for this dinner even though Jackie wasn’t an unsophisticated American rube that had to be cooked-down to. He made a simple meat and potatoes dinner for the Kennedys, or, as a spokesman reported with just a hint of irony, “a good old English dinner” – read boiled and bland.
When deciding what to cook from the menu, I decided to try the sole.
Jack Kennedy and Elizabeth watching Jackie and Philip warily
Since I was stuck inside with the cold snap in the East, I decided to make some puff pastry for a case to hold the asparagus (you can use regular pastry or buy pre-made frozen vol au vent cases or cut a piece of purchased puff pastry). I was pleased that mine puffed up successfully (because with puff pastry you never know). I also figured I’d try the old fashioned velouté since it’s about the same amount of work as a hollandaise and a bit more unusual.
I make my fish stock by saving and freezing shrimp and lobster shells and any bits of fish and cooking it up when I have enough – giving me about 1-2 c of reduced stock and freezing it. The result is that my shellfish-based velouté tastes like a lobster bisque – delicious. If you can’t spring for truffles – use truffle butter to get the truffle flavor. You will be very pleased with the result. The madeira sauce is just the dark knight the dish needs – it works superbly with that lobster-y velouté and the asparagus – a delicious stuffing for the puff pastry basket. Pretty much everything can be put together in advance and warmed up and quickly cooked at your dinner (just warm the sauces gently or they will separate).
4 small fillets of sole
1 cup fish stock
2 T white wine
herbs like chervil, parsley
s&p to taste
1 recipe Normande Sauce (which used a fish velouté as its base)
2 baked pastry cases for asparagus
6-8 asparagus spears, cooked and sliced in half and cut to fit case
1 recipe for madeira sauce
truffles or 2-3 T black truffle butter (I use D'Artagnan's version) optional
Salt and pepper the sole and fold them. Warm the stock and wine and herbs. Lay the fish in the liquid and gently poach for a few minutes – it cooks quickly.
Toss the truffles and the asparagus in the madeira sauce to coat and warm through.
Melt the truffle butter if you are using it.
Put the pastry cases on the plate and put the asparagus and truffles in the cases – spoon some of the truffle butter over the asparagus if you are using it and then a little more of the madeira sauce.
Place the fish next to the pastry case, put some of the truffle on the fish if you have them or the rest of the truffle butter over the fish. Then spoon the Normande sauce and a drizzle of the madeira sauce over the fish and serve.
Normande Sauce
½ c fish fumet/stock
1 T dried mushrooms or fresh mushroom trimmings
½ c velouté sauce (*see recipe below)
¼ c cream
2T butter
2 T cream
Cook the stock with the mushrooms until reduced by half. Strain out the mushrooms and combine with the veloute and cream. Reduce by half. Add the cream and butter gently to keep the velvety texture. Strain and keep warm.
*Velouté
1 T butter
1 T flour
1 c fish fumet
s&p
pinch of nutmeg
pinch of cayenne
Cook the flour and butter for a few minutes to get rid of the flour taste. Add the fish fumet slowly and cook very slowly for 20 minutes (to 45 if you have time and patience), stirring frequently. Strain.
Madeira Sauce
¾ c demiglace
1-2 T madeira
2 T butter
salt and pepper to taste
Cook the stock till thickened a little more. Add the madeira, then add the butter in a few pieces stirring all the while over a very low heat to have a thick, glossy sauce
Puff Pastry
Butter layer
1/2 lb cold unsalted butter (I love Irish butter for this)
1 t Lemon juice
1/2 c (65g) bread flour *
pinch of salt
Dough
1 1/2 c (200 g) bread flour (freeze it)*
1 3/4 T (28g) duck fat or butter
1 t Salt
1/2 c cold water (start with 1/3 and add as needed, you may not need a whole cup)
* with pastry -- it's a good idea to weigh if you can.
Mix the butter and the flour and lemon and salt into a paste, make a 5” square and chill on wax paper till firm
Make the dough, knead lightly and refrigerate.
Make the dough into a rectangle around 7 x 10"-- or just big enough that it will fold in and meet in the center when you put the butter in the center in a diamond with points facing the sides and not the corners - you may have to make it a bit larger but it doesn't have to be exact -- as long as the butter is completely enclosed. Fold the dough around it like an envelope, bringing the 4 outer points to the center of the butter and seal. If it’s hot, chill. Otherwise roll it to a rectangle and fold it like a brochure and chill ½ an hour. Roll it out to a rectangle again and fold again like a brochure - do this again 5 times, resting for 30 minutes to an hour in the fridge each time (weather changes this - in winter, 30 minutes is fine in summer you may need 1 hour -- keeping it cold is vital to keep the layers).
I left mine overnight in the fridge after the last turn. Take it out and roll it to about 1/8- 1/4" thick (the pastry will be very high at 1/4") the next day. After cutting your shapes, cut a little into the pastry leaving a frame (taking care not to cut all the way through) so you can pull the center out when it bakes making a well (you can see a technique HERE), I put it back in the fridge for 15-30 minutes when the weather is warm -- if the dough still feels cold after rolling it out, you can just bake it. Remember to cut with a sharp knife if you can or a sharp-edged cutter -- the more you use a sawing action, the more likely your pastry edges will catch and the loft will be uneven (I had one that plopped over to the side like a slinky). It's best to make a few extra if for safety. You will have a nice amount to freeze for later and it freezes very well (I found some 1 year old in the back of the freezer and it still worked!).
Heat oven to 425º. Place your pastries on parchment and lay another sheet of parchment over them.
Bake for 10 minutes. Lower the heat to 375º, remove the parchment and turn the sheet. Cook for another 7-12 minutes until nicely browned and cooked through, open the oven door and keep them in the warm oven for 10 minutes or so with the door open. Remove and then pull out the center section -- the top will be cooked but the center will be a touch sticky - just pull it out -- a large tweezers is good for this. You can pop them back in the over a few moments before you serve them to warm them through if you do these in advance -- they keep well for a few days.
So good to see a post from you, they are so rare these days, and as always a fascinating one. I've always been served saddle of lamb as a roasted dish and it is served that way in most English carveries to the best of my knowledge. I have a feeling that may have prepared it for the dinner in question.
ReplyDeleteI would normally agree with you, but when you look up the dish",a l'Anglaise" -- it talks about covering it in cloth and boiling it. I will make a note because the idea is rather nasty -- big chunk of boiled meat!
ReplyDeleteI hope all is well with you..
ReplyDeleteI have not gotten into The Crown yet..my son-in-law..one of them..loved it! I'll try..I am into Mozart in The Jungle and the Marvelous Mrs Maisel right now;)
Frankly I'd murder anyone who boiled a saddle of lamb particularly if it was Southdown lamb from one of the Royal Properties. A French cookbook suggests that the sauce may have been "à la anglaise". A rather interesting sauce along the lines of mint sauce but in that recipe using sage which I just might try the next time we have lamb chops.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Willym. Sometimes food names can be hard to decipher -- one of the reasons I didn't go for anglaise being a sauce was because they were specific about sauces in the NYT description and not for the lamb so I imagined that it was referring to the method of preparation. Boiling large pieces of meat is not unheard of and one wonders why they wouldn't have said roast saddle of lamb... I will continue investigating!
ReplyDeleteGood to hear from you. I would love to see this series but the chances of it appearing in France I would say is nil! The sole dish sounds delicious and yes I make my fish stock the same way as you do. I hope that you are well. Not sure if you have noticed that I have moved my blog as the first one was sooooooooo slow. It has a link on it to the second one though. Take care Diane
ReplyDeletewell when you make it, it looks delicious! I've been addicted to the crown as well although some of the small petty 'wrong' things distract me. Plus it slightly suffers from the Downton effect....the oddly busy running around of people in the foreground. Very distracting and are people really that ADD that they need to see rushing movement at all times?
ReplyDeleteWe've been rationing it out though, one episode per week so we're up to episode 7 at the moment.
As one of your readers has pointed out, saddle of lamb was never boiled---and in the television series Upstairs Downstairs we see the Bellamy's cook basting this magnificent cut for a dinner in honour of King Edward 7th. The actress who played the cook Mrs Bridges, was Angela Baddely who knew a thing or two about cookery in private life.
ReplyDelete