• A Sweet Idea

    January 27, 2009

    Posted in: The Recipes

    Last night, as I contemplated vegetable options for my dinner party, I was overwhelmed by the unmistakable craving for sweet potatoes. It had been a chilly day, overcast and predictive of rain, and by the time evening rolled around my hankering (yes, I use this word. And almost in earnest, too) had built to such a mighty intensity that I spared myself any futile efforts towards other vegetables. I find the almost shocking sweetness of these tubers, as a palatable indication of the complex carbohydrates and dense nutrient profile they offer, to chase away the cold with singular efficiency. Bored with the terribly overdone idea of sweet potatoes roasted with brown sugar or male syrup (of which I am admittedly a fan,) I desired a more savory rendering to accompany my rosemary- marinated pork loin. Sweet potatoes are one of the very few exceptions I make in my culinary life, preferring them cooked in butter than in olive oil. The damages created by holiday feasting in full evidence, however (bursting buttons and split seams, anyone?) I wanted them to be less… excessive. No butter, no sugar. Not wanting to compromise their lushness either, I realized the following: though they aren’t related to potatoes, we treat sweet potatoes in exactly the same way as les pommes de terres. The French are very much in the habit of cooking potatoes in duck or goose fat, and I find this to be the only potato preparation that actually tempts me. So why not? Sweet potatoes tossed in a smidge of duck fat, with salt and pepper. A bit of animal fat, yes, but of the healthful kind (ducks and geese contain an amino acid that we lack, and which therefore makes their fat extremely beneficial to us.) I roasted them as plain medallions, but they’d carry the flavors of either rosemary, thyme, or sage delightfully. If my pork hadn’t been so thoroughly perfumed with rosemary, this is the one I would have chosen.

    If you have any leftovers, cube them and toss them into warm quinoa! Add pecans and you have a lovely lunch, add chickpeas and you have a one-pot veggy dinner.

    Ingredients, for 2:

    • 2 sweet potatoes, of the garnet or jewel yam varieties
    • 2 small t duck or goose fat
    • salt and pepper
    • herb of choice, if desired

    Procedure:

    1. Preheat your oven to 400 degrees.
    2. Wash and dry the sweet potatoes, but don’ t peel them.
    3. Cut into 1/4 inch medallions.
    4. Place the duck or goose fat on a baking tray and put in the oven, as it heats, for about 45 seconds, or until the fat has liquefied.
    5. Toss the sweet potatoes in the fat. Season liberally with salt and pepper, and whichever herb you’re using. Toss again (I find that hands are the best tool for this.)
    6. Arrange the medallions in one layer on the baking sheet, and place on the lowest possible rack in your oven. Bake for about 25 minutes, until the face resting on the baking sheet is golden and caramelized, and the medallions are tender throughout but not mushy. Flip them, and then turn the oven off, so that the residual heat will color their other side, about ten minutes. Serve them warm, no hot, so that the flavors mellow.

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