Archive for November, 2008
November 26, 2008 // No Comments »
These cornbread muffins are in the Southern tradition, incorporating buttermilk (I do live in Texas after all), but pay tribute to Native American traditions as well, using blue cornmeal. I initially tried the muffins with both blue and yellow varieties, but found the blue specimens to be far superior: tender and tasty. These are significantly more impressive when they’re fresh out of the oven. If you must hold them for a while, I’d recommend using yellow cornmeal instead; for reasons I don’t fully comprehend the sunny variety keep better. The muffins are extremely fluffy, so please be careful no to confuse this as an indication that they are undercooked.
Ingredients, for 12 small muffins:
- 1 1/2 cups blue cornmeal
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 cups buttermilk
- 1/4 cup melted butter
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 2 large egg
Procedure:
- Heat oven to 450°F.
- Brush muffin pan with a bit of melted or room temperature butter.
- Combine all ingredients into one large bowl, stir until well mixed.Beat vigorously for 30 seconds.
- Divide entire contents of bowl among 12 muffin cups.
- Bake for 10 minutes on one side, then flip tray and bake for another ten on the other.
- The muffins should be toasted on top, and if pricked the probe will come out clean.
- Remove from muffin tin and serve immediately.
Variations:
I tried them with a few leaves of sage torn in, a few grinds of pepper, and with maple syrup compound butter. Personally, I preferred the muffins plain, but they were rather spectacular with the compound butter, achieved simply by mixing room temp butter with maple syrup. Lather on and enjoy!
Posted in The Recipes
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Mes Petits Choux, Punkin’s, and Dears,
I decided to take advantage of New York’s abundant bounty, and cheffed a Faux Thanksgiving meal just prior to my departure from the lovely city. Though intermittently sedated and totally high on codeine, I managed to remain dictatorial in the food department: Daddy-o and I went shopping for ingredients, and he actually cringed at my fascist fervor and veritable verve! The trouble is, I’m always right. Toujours, really I swear it. But he is my mentor, so it’s odd. The moment has been coming on for a while, and the definitive dawning of the age when I’ve surpassed my teacher in culinary knowledge is here. But I am most fortunate that he is as excited to be outdone as I am to be outdoing. It’s rather grand, actually!
I adore Thanksgiving. It is, après tout, a nationally sanctioned feast! But my history with the holiday is a bit peculiar. My derivation, culturally and genetically speaking, is totally un-American. I’d attended a few Turkey- and- Gravy affairs in my youth, but the first real Thanksgiving I had was the one I orchestrated and cooked last year at the ripe old age of 18. As such, I get to approach the holiday with sufficient cultural detachment that I’m able to use seasonal and historical ingredients in a way that is traditional, but that doesn’t suffer at the expense of adherence to childhood memories of Aunt Gretchen’s parchment-dry turkey. As a culinary celebration that is unabashedly cherished more as an excuse to cook and gorge than to uphold any moralistic ideals, Thanksgiving holds unique appeal to me, and I attack it with particular zeal and respect.
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Posted in Marfa, TX
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I recently cooked up a Faux Thanksgiving Feast, and though only intended to be a peripheral attraction, this dish stole the show. I love sweet potatoes. Love, love them. Earthy and sweet, evocative of the holidays and provocative of the sort of deep-down comfort that settles low in your belly and warms your mind and body from the inside out. Thanksgiving was never celebrated in my un-American home, and as sweet potatoes are not part of French or Brazilian culinary traditions, my infatuation with these rosy tubers is sparkling and new, unmarred by horrific failures. The bacon, sweet potato, and sage trifecta is inspired by Suzanne Goin’s Sunday Suppers at Luques, the freshest addition to my cookbook collection, and a superbly beautiful masterpiece I highly recommend. I would never have thought of it without her, as I’m absolutely not a bacon person, finding it to be the greasiest and most aberrant component of the All American Breakfast (scorned by my famille.) Youthful traumas involving this pork product have made me very wary (approximate rhyme!!!) but when I saw bacon listed on the “Lucques” page, it resonated in that soulful way that lets me know I have thought up or read about a golden combination. It was sensational. I’ve long lusted to cook sweet potatoes with maple syrup, and I found this to be a ripe opportunity; my guests and I were well rewarded.
Ingredients, for 4:
- 5 small sweet potatoes, of the Garnet or Jewel yam varieties (they aren’t actually yams, but distant relatives of the potato. The term yam is applied to sweet potatoes grown in the South, namely Louisiana, to distinguish them. True yams are enormous and are found only in Africa and Asia.)
- 3 T good butter, preferably French butter from Normandy.
- 8 sage leaves.
- 4 T maple syrup. The real stuff, not pancake syrup. This is not IHOP!!!
- 10 slices Applewood smoked bacon. I used Niman Ranch bacon, which is all natural and not preserved with bizarre, unpronounceable chemicals.
- Finely milled sel gris, and freshly ground black pepper.
Procedure:
* The sweet potatoes are intended to be cooked ahead of time. The action of letting them cool to room temperature allows their flavor to mellow, and reheating and caramelizing them with the bacon and sage imparts them with added depth of flavor. Even the bacon can be cooked earlier on, making this a fantastically easy dish to prepare when entertaining large crowds.
For the Sweet Potatoes:
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
- Peel and cube the sweet potatoes. I did this by halving them vertically; incising them twice, still vertically; and then about three times horizontally, to produce medium large, approximately even cubes. This is not a dish, however, in which it is necessary to ensure that the pieces are of exactly the same size. I actually like the textural contrast when the smaller ones melt in your mouth and the larger ones offer pleasing resistance.
- Place these in an oven-proof dish, either Pyrex or, if you should have the good fortune, a Le Creuset ceramic sauté pan.
- Heat a small pan over medium high heat. Add the butter and cook until it is nutty, fragrant, and hazelnut brown.
- Swirl the maple syrup immediately into the butter.
- Pour over the sweet potatoes. Salt and pepper generously.
- Toss gently (it should seem that there is more buttery liquid than necessary. If you start fearing for the safety of your waistline at the mere sight of it, you’ve done it right!) and pop into the oven for about 40 minutes, or until the sweet potatoes are fully cooked and soft, but still a bit firm.
For the Bacon:
- If there are expansive stretches of ivory, opalescent fat, remove about 3/4 of it.
- Heat a nonstick pan over high heat.
- Stack half the bacon slices and slice horizontally, producing thin lardons (bacon rectangles that are part meat, part fat). Repeat with the other half. I actually cooked mine in two batches, crisping the first more, and leaving the second meatier and softer.
- Render the lardons until nicely crisped, but keep in mind that they will continue to cook breifly after you remove them from the heat.
- Strain the contents of the pan, reserving the rendered fat and placing the lardons on a paper towel to drain.
Before Serving:
- If cooked in a Pyrex dish, transfer the sweet potatoes and all the succulent maple butter to a pan. If prepared in a ceramic dish, keep them in there. Heat over high heat.
- Tear the sage into small bits and scatter the herb and the bacon over the sweet potatoes.
- Push around gently every so often to maximize caramelization (making use of the increased surface to mass ratio produced by cubing!)
- When heated through and golden brown, taste. Add more salt and pepper as needed, and a fresh drizzle of maple syrup if you find the sweetness of the dish needs to be pepped up. If you aren’t already calling up Jenny Craig and feel that the dish you’ve creates can support an additional drop of fat, a minimal amount of the bacon drippings will lend fabulous smokiness to the final product. But do be careful and discerning! If the maple butter wasn’t adequately absorbed into the sweet potatoes, the addition of more fat will render the dish a greasy mess. It’s a fine line.
Posted in Portland, The Recipes
November 25, 2008 // No Comments »
Oh, little ones!
It has been so long! And after I swore to post about all my gustatory adventures! I am Jewish-guilting myself, don’t you worry. But you must understand, there is a perfectly legitimate explanation: I had both wisdom teeth on the left side of my mouth removed. Ca douille!!! Yes, yes. Right after it was pronounced that my refusal to floss has indeed had negative ramifications on my pearly whites (a raging case of gingivitis), it was also discovered that I needed two impacted wisdom teeth removed, and pronto! You see, El Paso dental work is notoriously bad, so I needed to get the extraction taken care of before leaving New York, New York. And I did. And I was stoned. So, so stoned. So I didn’t write. Mais je suis là de nouveau, so don’t you fret your pretty little heads!
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Posted in Marfa, TX
November 20, 2008 // No Comments »
This is one of my earlier creations. It is lush. Utterly lush. There is no other word that does it justice. Warm, soft, and heady: the sort of food you want to pet. Permeated on every level by truffle-infused delicacies, it is a remarkably thrifty way to luxuriate in gastronomic heaven. And it takes all of one minute to make, from start to finish.
Truffled pecorino is more readily available than you might expect, as long as you’re living in a cosmopolitan area, so don’t despair before you search at least tentatively. Believe me, it is well worth the effort. Find an artisanal cheese shop! And actually, I’ll let you in on a little secret: Whole Foods carries the younger version of the Boschetto. My preference is to use half aged and half fresh, and if I had to choose one variety, I’d select the older for it’s more pronounced flavor and firmer textuer, but if the best you can find is the juvenile stuff at Whole Foods, by all means! This dish is about truffles and cheese. There’s not really any way to go wrong!
Ingredients, for 1:
- 2 organic eggs. Preferably Chino Valley Ranchers (the non Omega sort) or The Country Hen, or farm-fresh eggs if you have that special opportunity. Organic Valley eggs are also good, and are more widely available. But do seek these brands out, and be discerning: the flavor of the eggs and richness of the yolks is paramount to this dish! Since there isn’t much cooking involved at all, the quality of the dish you turn out is entirely dependent on the quality of the products.
- 1/3-1/2 oz aged Boschetto Truffled Pecorino.
- 1/3 -1/2 oz fresh Boschetto Truffled Pecorino.
- Tiny drizzle truffle oil. If you don’t have this on hand, go ahead and make the dish without it, but it will indeed lose a certain sultriness.
- Salt, Pepper
Procedure:
- Heat a cast iron pan over high heat. If it doesn’t yet have a patina, brush with a dot of olive oil.
- Slice the cheese into thin slivers with a paring knife, most paper thin, some thicker to provide texture (the thinner slices will melt into the eggs, while the thicker ones will maintain their shape and provide textural contrast and identifiably truffle-y, cheese-y bite).
- Break the eggs into a bowl, sprinkle with two generous pinches of salt (one per egg is the rule, as per Alice Waters, who’s opinion is certainly to be trusted) and a few abundant grinds of freshly ground pepper.
- Using a fork, break the yolks and barely swirl the contents of the bowl. Do not under any circumstances mix the yolks and whites homogeneously. When unmixed, the whites coagulate and firm up during cooking to create texture and body, and the yolks remain runny and bathe the dish in deliciousness.
- Pour the eggs into the hot pan, and lower the heat to medium instantaneously. Once the first layer of “skin” has formed on the bottom of the pan, break it up with a spatula.
- Add the cheese, and again break up the eggs to incorporate the cheese.
- When the eggs are still runny, remove to a plate.
- Drizzle with truffle oil and serve immediately.
- Experience “an edible orgasm,” as a friend one described it to me!
Posted in The Recipes
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