Saturday, July 30, 2011

One year ago

One year ago today, I arrived in Amsterdam for the start of a month and a half traveling across Europe, mostly all over France, to taste as many regional cuisines as I could.  It was an amazing trip, and it has been on my mind a lot lately.  It's not that I exactly wish I were headed off for another six-plus weeks of living out of a suitcase and moving to a new city every two or three days, but I can't shake the feeling that this summer is so mundane in comparison, especially when I consider all I packed into those weeks.

I boated under low, canal-spanning bridges.


 I dipped my toes in the Mediterranean.


I compared tomatoes at open-air markets.


I visited cathedrals and soaked in a gargoyle's-eye view.


I hiked Alpine peaks while cowbells jingled in the distance.


I rode téléphériques through the clouds.


I trod over cobbled streets through half-timbered neighborhoods.


I considered breaking US customs laws.


I watched naked children play in the world's largest puddle.


I explored old fortifications while the sun set over the Atlantic.


I nibbled pastries by riversides.


I sipped espressos in shady plazas.


I got caught in the middle of front-page news.


I danced the YMCA with a thousand Parisians on the Champ du Mars.


And I ate.  Oh, did I eat.  There were so many good things to eat in France, but four of them really stand out in my memory: pig's feet in Lyon; cod omelet in Bayonne; blood sausage in Bordeaux; and brioche perdu - that's French toast for y'all non-French speakers - in Tours.  My mouth starts watering when I just think of any of those dishes.  Sadly, even if I could get the ingredients I needed to make those dishes for myself, I know I couldn't prepare them as masterfully as those chefs did.

I'm glad to have the opportunity to see so many friends this summer, and to visit my own farmer's market every week and cook with the produce I buy there, and to read, rest, and relax.  But oh, do I miss France.  So here's a toast - a kir, of course - to my next trip.  I hope it will be soon.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Clafoutis aux cérises

I received some terrible news this weekend.  Local sweet cherries are done for the season.

After all of my harping on cherries for the last few weeks, it's probably just as well they're almost done.  We'll still be able to get them for a few more weeks from the orchards up North, around Traverse City, but after that it will really be time to start focusing on peaches and plums and apricots, which have arrived just in time to distract me.



But for now, though, I'll take advantage of the few cherries I can still get a hold of and make a clafoutis.

I can't very well talk about clafoutis without talking about Catherine, my host mother during my time in Paris in 2008. It was Catherine, after all, who served me my first clafoutis.  Like so many of the dishes Catherine prepared, I had no idea what to expect from a clafoutis, but I was pleased to discover it's kind of like a super custardy cake, loaded with tons of fresh fruit.  My first clafoutis was light and eggy and studded with chunks of rhubarb from Catherine's garden. During dessert, Catherine explained that clafoutis was traditionally made cherries, but could be made with just about any fruit.  In this case, the rhubarb was chosen just for me, since I had mentioned a few weeks earlier how much I loved rhubarb, and Catherine had promised to bring some back from her garden after her next visit to her country home.  Traditional fruit or no, the clafoutis was delicious, and I was smitten.

After dinner, I asked Catherine for her recipe, and she did me one better: she handed over her self-assembled cookbook, an alphabetized journal in which Catherine, her children, and even occasionally her husband Jacques had jotted down their favorite recipes – my favorite kind of family heirloom. I held onto the book for a few days, during which time I copied down dozens of recipes.  After work one day, I remember meandering down to the park between la Bourse and the Forum des Halles, stopping on the way to pick up a couple of rose and passion fruit flavored guimauves, or fresh marshmallows, for snacking.  In the shady summer evening, I set myself up on one of the long curving stone benches, with Carla Bruni playing on my iPod and Catherine's cookbook and my own journal propped carefully in my lap.  If my back hadn't been sore from a couple of hours spent hunched over, slowly copying in an unpracticed Paris-style cursive hand (you never see Parisians write in anything but cursive, and I was determined to embrace all aspects of Parisian life that I could), it would have been a perfect evening.

I came back to the states a few weeks later with big plans to keep up my French cooking.  And I do, sometimes, but to be honest, I probably haven't made even a tenth of the recipes I jotted down.  Quel dommage !  It must be time to start reviewing those recipes in earnest.  And for starters, I can't think of a better place to begin than with a cherry clafoutis.  Light and refreshing, dotted with pockets of sweet, juicy cherries, there's no better way to finish a summer meal.  So if you've still got any cherries available at your local market, snatch them up and make yourself a clafoutis before they're all gone til next summer.



Clafoutis aux cérises de Catherine

Clafoutis is traditionally made with sweet cherries, but it could be made with any fruit - I've had it with plums, rhubarb, apricots, strawberries... the possibilities are endless.  Just be sure all fruit is in bite-size bits. 

Intriguingly, the cherries in a traditional clafoutis are never pitted.  I can understand the desire to avoid spending lots of time pitting cherries, but I can also appreciate not wanting to deal with the pits while you're eating the dessert.  I pitted my cherries for my clafoutis today, but if you don't want to expend the extra labor, just explain to your guests that you're following tradition.

1 pound cherries or other fruit, washed, and pitted (or not - see note above)
1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup sugar
pinch salt
4 eggs
1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 cups whole milk

Garnish
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.  Butter a deep baking dish.

Mix together the flour, sugar, and salt.  Mix in the eggs one at a time, then stir in the oil and milk carefully to avoid lumps, mixing until just combined.  Pour the batter into the baking dish, then carefully drop in the fruit.

Bake the clafoutis for 35 minutes.  Meanwhile, prepare the garnish by mixing together the butter, sugar, and egg.  Pour the garnish over the clafoutis, then continue to bake for another 10 minutes, or until puffed, golden brown, and set - it should jiggle only slightly in the middle when shaken.  Serve warm or cold, sprinkled with powdered sugar, if you desire.

Serves six to eight

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Continuing the cherry saga

Right from the very beginning, I said we'd be talking about cherries this summer.  This is Michigan, after all, and we are nothing if not proud of our cherries.  So I'm afraid you'll have to bear with my hyper-focus on another fruit for another post or two, or at least until peaches come into season and distract me.  But really, the cherry season is so short, we must seize the day and use cherries in everything while we still can!

Unfortunately, it's too hot just now to really be doing much cooking with cherries this week.  This morning, I made some sour cherry jam, and all that boiling turned my kitchen into a sauna.  Thankfully, though, last week I took advantage of the cooler temperatures and baked myself a batch of cherry almond scones.  Today, I have the leftovers sitting in my freezer, just waiting for snack time to help cool me down.


I started making scones back in the Wanda days of college, when I noticed that I could eat a dozen muffins in a couple of hours.  That was fine when I was swimming four hours each day, but during the off-season, it could get me into trouble.  Since my muffin recipes generally only called for one egg, I couldn't very well scale down the recipe.  So instead, I started looking for baked goods that did not require eggs, and scones fit the bill.  Once I started making them, I was hooked.

There are so many reasons to love scones, but for me I think it begins with the texture.  I love them for their crisp, buttery exteriors encasing a soft, flaky crumb, and for the pockets of moist sweetness provided by any fruit tossed into the batter.  I love that they're sweet but not too sweet, and that you can adapt them to fit whatever's at the market or in the pantry that day.  I love that they freeze well and reheat in the toaster oven beautifully for a quick snack.  I love that they give me another chance to use my surprisingly fantastic free plastic pizza cutter (which looks something like this).  But mostly, I love that they're just so darn delicious.

Today's scones included a healthy helping of cherries and almond flour, which are a pair only slightly less exalted than, say, peanut butter and jelly, or bacon and chocolate.  (Seriously.)  I'm not sure I'd made that pairing in scones before, but it was my loss because these were particularly tasty, if I may say so.  If you don't want to take my word for it, then maybe you'll believe my mom, who declared these the best scones she'd ever eaten.  I guess that means it's time to brave the heat and bake another batch - here's to hoping for cooler temperatures soon so that I can start running my oven again without dying of heat stroke.


Cherry almond scones

I used sweet cherries to make these scones, but sour cherries would be pretty delicious, too.  In that case, it would probably be best to add in an extra tablespoon or two of sugar.

1 1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 cup almond flour
3 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons unsalted butter, cold, cut into small cubes
1/2 cup fresh cherries, washed, pitted, and cut in half
1 cup heavy cream
Raw sugar for sprinkling on top (or regular sugar, if you don't have raw)

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit.

In a large bowl, sift together flour, almond flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.  Using a pastry cutter or two knives, cut in the butter, mixing until well combined: the butter should be well-coated with flour, with no lumps larger than a pea.  Stir in the cherries, then fold in the cream using a wooden spoon.  Mix just until the dough comes together into one mass, then knead in the bowl about ten times.

On a lightly floured counter, flatten the dough with your palms into a large circle about 3/4" thick, then sprinkle with the raw sugar.  Using a pizza cutter or sharp knife, cut the dough into eight wedges that are approximately equal in size.  Set the wedges onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, leaving about an inch between wedges.

Bake for about 15 minutes, until the edges are golden brown.  Let cool for five minutes, then serve hot with butter or honey.

Makes eight scones

Friday, July 15, 2011

Cherry crumble baby

I've only just realized it's been quite a while since I posted a recipe here.  In fact, it's been over a month if you count strawberry shortcake, and I'm not sure I do – it's just too easy! – which means it's actually been over two months, dating back to when I talked about rhubarb crumble.  After all the rhubarb crumbles I'm sure you've been preparing as you've been anxiously awaiting my next recipe, I'm sure you're ready for something totally different.  Something like, say, a cherry crumble.


Cherries started showing up at the market at the beginning of the month, and like a good Michigander, I've been stuffing my face with them ever since.  We take our cherries seriously here in Michigan. When you go to a local wine shop, you'll often find a Michigan shelf that includes a cherry wine or two. (By the way, if you ever find cherry wine for sale, pick up a bottle or two – it's delicious stuff!)  The first weekend of each July, Traverse City hosts the national cherry festival.  But I think my favorite Michigan cherry tradition is one of the simplest: driving through the northwestern lower peninsula this time of year, the ubiquitous roadside cherry stands beckon with a bounty of sweet red fruit.  If you're lucky, the stands won't just have fresh cherries, but also cherry pies.  If this is the case, drop everything and buy one right away, then rush to the grocery for some vanilla ice cream and have yourself a feast: this is sure to be a cherry pie par excellence.

After all of my gushing about cherries, I'm a little embarrassed to say that as a kid, I wouldn't eat cherries.  I think it was about the pits: I didn't like the idea of having to spit something out with every cherry you ate.  Eventually though, in New Jersey of all places, I did learn to love fresh cherries, and I'm sure I've been making up for lost time ever since.  Luckily, I never confused fresh cherries for cherry pie, which I would happily scarf down any time I had the chance.

I'm not sure when I made my first cherry pie – maybe in high school.  I'm sure I've made my fair share of them since then.  But pies, with their fussy crusts that need to be kept cool and then double baked in a hot oven to stay crisp, seem so counterintuitive in summer, when the house is too hot to keep a crust cool and will get hotter with the extra oven time.  Much better, I think, to toss together a quick crumble topping and make the process much quicker – this way, it only takes an hour and a half for pitting cherries, instead of an hour and a half for cherries and another hour for dealing with crust.  Much better, indeed.

Finally, before we move onto the recipe (and I promise, after all these months, we really are getting there!), a word about the title of this post, which does not arise solely from my childhood love of cherry pie.  When I was growing up, I had a book called Cherry Pie Baby.  It's a picture book about a girl and a boy who strike a bargain: the girl, who has always wanted a sibling and whose father is a baker, trades a cherry pie for the baby brother of a boy from a huge family.  It's cute and clever and a fun read.  I hated that book.  I think it's because it was read to me for the first time when I was in first grade and quarantined at home with chicken pox during the week of Halloween.  At the time, I was quite certain it was the most miserable week of my life.  I think that misery tainted my experience of the book, which I refused to read again for probably more than a decade.  Thankfully, though, the association did not carry so far as to taint my experience of cherry pie itself!


Cherry Crumble

Cherry pies (or crumbles) are fantastic because they are so tart-sweet.  To achieve this, you'll need to use sour cherries.  Unfortunately, they don't grow in that many places in the US outside of the Pacific Northwest and Michigan, so I guess that means you'll just need to come for a visit.  For a few brief weeks in July, you may be able to find fresh sour cherries at a market or supermarket.  If you do, snatch them up immediately and bake yourself a pie (or crumble) while you can - there's nothing quite like fresh cherry pie (or crumble.)  I say pie or crumble interchangeably because this recipe would work very well with a pie crust, too: use your favorite double crust in place of the crumble topping and you'll have a decadent dessert indeed.  But if you're like me and pie crust in the summer seems like entirely too much trouble, a crumble is far quicker and easier, and quite delicious.

Be sure to taste your cherries while they're raw to get a sense of how tart they are.  If they are particularly tart, you may wish to add a little additional sugar; if they're milder, a little less sugar suffice.  There's no clear-cut rule, here, but use your judgment and it will turn out beautifully.

Finally, a word about pitting cherries: there's no quick and easy way to do this.  Pull up a chair, invite a friend or two, turn on the TV or radio, and be ready to spend a fair amount of time at it.  If you've got a cherry pitter, here's your opportunity to dig it out from the bottom of the drawer and use it!  If not, you can use what I use: a wooden skewer, like for making satay or kebabs.  Using the pointy end of the skewer, poke a hole in the bottom end of the cherry (opposite where the stem was) until you reach the pit.  Then flip the skewer around and poke the flat end through the hold you just created to push the pit out through the stem end.  I find it's best to do this over a large bowl with a strainer set in it to catch the pits and the juice, which will inevitably spurt out in all directions when you're poking the cherries.

1 quart fresh tart cherries, washed and pitted
3/4 cup sugar
3 tablespoons corn starch
1/8 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

Stir together cherries, sugar, corn starch, and salt.  Let sit for 20 minutes to meld and get deliciously juicy, then pour into a 9" pie plate.  Sprinkle with crumble topping.

Bake for 40 minutes, or until crumble topping is golden brown and cherry filling is bubbling.  Serve immediately with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Serves four to eight, depending on your willingness to share.  Leftovers should be covered with plastic wrap and refrigerated.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Flavors of Tunisia

On Friday night, I went to a Tunisian dinner. A couple of Zingerman's employees are aspiring to open a Tunisian restaurant in Ann Arbor in the next year or two, and the dinner was something of a kick-off in celebration of meals to (hopefully!) come soon. There were six courses, and I'm excited to tell you all about them. But first, I hope you'll indulge me as I say a little about Tunisian cuisine.

Though we're quite familiar with Italian and other northern Mediterranean cuisines in the US, Tunisian food remains more of a mystery. (Perhaps this is partly due to the fact that, as I learned on Friday, there is currently only one Tunisian restaurant in the US – it's in New Orleans, if you were wondering.) Tunisian is a southern Mediterranean cuisine, and it uses many of the same ingredients as its northern cousins, like garlic, tomatoes, peppers, and olives and olive oil. Unlike other Mediterranean cuisines, though, Tunisian food is often quite spicy: the ubiquitous condiment harissa, a spread made of sun-dried chili peppers, olive oil, and other spices, is found throughout the country in many traditional dishes. Another important facet of Tunisian cuisine is the use of preserved foods: fruit, tomatoes, garlic, peppers, and, most importantly, couscous, are all carefully prepared to be kept for years of drought or raids from neighboring tribes.

Friday night's dinner was a special occasion not only for the food, but also because of a couple of VIP attendees: Majid and Onsa Mahjoub. The Mahjoubs own les Moulins Mahjoubs, a company based in the Merjada valley of Tunisia that produces some outstanding traditionally-made Tunisian foods. Many of their products were featured throughout the meal, and they contributed in other ways, too: Majid, a charming and charismatic man, has a contagious enthusiasm for his country's history and food, and he educated and entertained us all with his stories of Berber traditions and his explanations of why couscous was first created. Onsa's English is limited, but she is an incredible and generous cook with a sweet, ready smile, and sometimes I think that communicates more than spoken language ever can. At the end of the meal, what a joy it was to be able to thank not only the chefs who cooked the meal, but also the couple who prepared so many of the ingredients!

Speaking of the meal, enough of my blabber; let's get down to business.  We started with a trio of spreads: houria, harissa, and mechouia.


The bright orange glob in front is the houria, a mild spread with a slightly grainy texture made of carrots, olive oil, and spices.  The red sauce in the back is the Mahjoub's harissa.  It's incredibly flavorful stuff, and packs a serious punch of heat in the finish.  The dark green sauce at the upper right is the mechouia, made of grilled green peppers, grilled onions, tomatoes, eggplant, olive oil, caraway, salt, pepper, and lemon juice.  It had a pronounced smokiness from the grilled vegetables.  The three spreads combined on a hunk of baguette created a fantastic bite.

The second course was a fava bean and green pea mdammis.


This bright green soup was made with favas and peas, garnished with pea sprouts and a spicy tomato spread, and finished with a radish torchi, or quick radish pickle made with ground toasted caraway.  The soup tasted as green as it looks, but the real star of the show were the radish pickles, which added a lovely tartness and crunch to the bite.

Next came a grilled sardine with olives and preserved lemon, served alongside a brik au thon.


The sardine had been grilled to crispy perfection.  It was a challenge separating the fillet from the bones, but when the flesh was finally liberated from its bony confines it was perfectly cooked, smoky and fishy and intensely flavorful.  The sardine was served with the Mahjoubs' Meski and Sahli olives, for which I heard many compliments bandied about the table.  Unfortunately, try as I may, I just can't seem to become an olive-ophile.

The sardine was served alongside the brik au thon.  A brik is a savory Tunisian pastry made with a semolina-based pastry (called "malsouqa") that is wrapped around a filling.  Thon means tuna in French, and this brik was filled with tuna, onion, parsley, sun-dried garlic spread, ricotta, and egg.  The brik was pan fried until golden and crisp, and served with a lemon wedge.  It was crisp on the outside, soft and creamy on the inside, mild and delicious.

And finally, the pièce de résistance: Couscous Royale with Quadid and summer vegetables.  A dinner like this would hardly be complete without a couscous, which is the national dish of Tunisia.  This version was made with the exquisite Mahjoub M'hamsa couscous, which is the best I have ever tasted.  It's still hand-rolled, the way the Berbers have been making their couscous for centuries.  Topping the couscous was Quadid, a luscious lamb confit: the lamb, which came from a local farm whose name escapes me, was cooked in an olive oil bath with mint, rose petal, harissa, and garlic at a low heat for about eight hours, infusing it with an incredible richness - just outstanding.  The couscous was also served with roasted wedges of zucchini and summer squash, and a few roasted parsnips.  Summer squash isn't always one of my favorites, but this was soft and sweet and just lovely with the beautiful, flavorful couscous.  The whole dish was superb.

Unfortunately, my photos of the still-steaming, nearly overflowing mound of couscous, meat, and vegetables on its enormous platter for family-style service all turned out dark and blurry, so you'll have to take my word that it was a beautiful presentation.  You won't have to take my word, though, that it was finger-lickin' good:


Finally, we were on to dessert: maquroudh, pistachio creme, and Mahjoub mulberry jam.


Though the Mahjoubs had arrived in the US at about two a.m. on Friday morning, Onsa helped the chefs make the maquroudh, a semolina cookie stuffed with date, orange zest, and orange flower water, which is fried and then simmered in honey syrup.  It was sweet but not too sweet, and paired very well with the flavorful mulberry jam and delicate, delicious pistachio cream.

And then, in case we hadn't eaten enough yet, there were dates and mint tea.


The dates had been sprinkled with orange flower water and orange zest for a little kick of citrus sweetness.  The expertly steeped mint tea was dotted with toasted pine nuts, added to the drink traditionally for their toasty flavor and to add a little crunch to the drink.

The only thing sweeter than finishing with a lovely dessert was being able to thank the Mahjoubs for their beautiful food, especially the exquisite couscous.  I thanked Majid in French, and he was so gracious and so enthusiastic about being able to share his knowledge and his food.  As I ambled away into the warm summer evening, I could only hope the evening's pleasure was one I'll experience again soon.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

That's how you know

The last 24 hours have been pretty fantastic.  I'd love to tell you about them.

We'll start with yesterday morning, at a meeting for work.  I know, I know, it doesn't sound like a very promising place to begin, but hear me out.  So remember how a few weeks ago I mentioned that I had started at a new job?  What I didn't mention then is that I'm working for Zingerman's Mail Order.  ZMO is one of the Zingerman's Community of Businesses here in Ann Arbor, an organization that makes and sells some superb, full-flavored, traditionally made foods.*  Being knowledgeable about the products we carry is an important part of my job, and consequently there are frequent tastings both at ZMO and at other Zingerman's businesses.

After nearly thirty years in business, Zingerman's is something of an institution here in Ann Arbor.  On a national level, Zingerman's also has a reputation in the food industry as a well-respected purveyor of excellent-quality goods.  As you might imagine, we're contacted fairly frequently by folks who are interested in having us sell their foods.  But how do we decide what products we'll carry?  We taste them, of course.  Once a month, an informal group called the tasting team gets together to taste through all of the sample products that have been sent to us.  It's an hour-long gustatory marathon.  And that, my friends, is the meeting I attended yesterday morning.

I didn't take any pictures of the event, but I'll try to paint the scene for you.  Imagine a small room, maybe twelve feet by eighteen feet, the north and west walls lined with windows providing good natural light. The center of the room is filled with six IKEA tables, all pushed together one after the other to form a large conference table.  Scattered around the tables are twelve or fifteen black rolling chairs, in which sit ten or twelve employees of different Zingerman's businesses.  The tables have all but disappeared beneath piles foodstuffs (and associated informative literature) to be tasted: two dozen olive oils, tinned fish, cured meats and salamis, fruit preserves, honeys, crackers, olives, chocolates, peppermint bark, fruit syrups, cookies... the selection is daunting.

Armed with a cup of ice water and a loaf of good - but thankfully relatively neutral-tasting - bread, at ten a.m. we began.  While our palates were fresh, we launched right into the twenty or so olive oils vying for our attention.  For half an hour, the routine was the same: tiny tasting cups of an oil were poured and passed around the table, we briefly warmed the cups between our hands, stuck our noses in for a deep inhalation or two, and then took a noisy sip, slurping through pursed lips to mix the oil with air in our mouths and maximize the flavors, like you would when tasting wine.  After a thorough and thoughtful tasting, we'd start discussing what we smelled and tasted.  Most of the oils were fine, running the standard gamut of grassy or citrusy or peppery, while a few boasted more unusual flavors, like mango.  A few oils were, unfortunately, rather unpalatable.  But a few others were fantastic, set aside to be remembered later. 

Once the oils were finally done, the table dotted with tall, tilting stacks of tiny tasting cups as a testament to our dedication and iron stomachs, we devolved into semi-organized chaos.  Jars and bottles were uncapped and passed around the table all at once, while we tried to taste everything conscientiously, and then tried to remember the tastes and opinions we had noted for that bottle or jar when it finally made its way down to the notetaker.  A nibble of cranberry ketchup might be followed by a taste of tikka masala sauce, which in turn was followed by a tiny spoonful of acacia honey.  Cornichons, olive tapenades and jams, marmalades, and a pistachio pesto were all passed, one after another, to be tasted and considered.  Eventually we moved on to tinned anchovies and tuna and fish pates, and then finally to dry-cured salami, prosciutto, and bacon.  By eleven o'clock, tasters started to leave, but not before sliding a favorite jar or two into their pockets to take home with them.  By eleven-thirty, essentially everything had been tasted, most of the remaining foods had been packed up and the room cleared.  As I waddled home, my mind swimming with flavors and aromas, I felt only mildly sick to my stomach.  It was a great success.

And what was the best thing we tasted?  In my opinion, it was a pistachio cream.  Pale green, sweet and nutty and utterly delicious, I wanted to dip my tiny tasting spoon back in the jar and savor another bite or five before passing it along.  That's how you know when something is great, I think: when, even amid this outrageous gluttony, you want to just keep eating more and more, straight from the jar.

~*~

As you might imagine, I didn't eat much that afternoon.  Instead, I spent my afternoon picking up photos I'd had printed, mailing a few of them off to a friend, and then taking down old pictures and putting up the new ones in their places all over my room.  It was a perfect afternoon, filled with beautiful memories and, thankfully, very little motion.

When it came time for dinner, I wanted something simple and comforting.  One of my standards lately is a dish I adapted from my host-mother when I lived in Paris in 2008, Catherine.  I'm not quite sure what I expected in a host family when I first arrived in Paris, but I don't think it was Catherine and Jacques.  Jacques, a soon-to-be-retired biology professor, was quiet and unassuming with a wry wit and a fondness for exchange students with hearty appetites.  (In this department, I was happy to oblige.)  Catherine was the more talkative of the pair, a friendly, welcoming sort.  I'm not sure what I expected of a host-mother when I arrived in Paris, but I don't think it was Catherine: slight of frame, with small glasses, a mop of short, curly grey hair, and a multitude of colorful Converses, she reminded me more of my own mother than of the chic, stilettoed Parisienne of my imagination.  Catherine and Jacques had four grown children, but there were always toddlers about since Catherine ran a day-care out of her apartment.  Every Tuesday and Friday, she'd take her three-year-old wards down to the local market and pick out fresh produce: baskets of fresh tomatoes or apricots were a constant adornment to the white kitchen counters, tempting me every time I walked through the apartment.

Every Tuesday, I had dinner with my host family.  It was always at least a three-course affair, starting at eight p.m. and almost always lasting at least ninety minutes.  I had been a picky eater before college, and though I had begun to eat a little more adventurously by the end of my junior year, I arrived in Paris still restricting myself to a fairly limited palate.  I told myself, however, that I would eat whatever Catherine served me at dinner; I would not offend her by refusing anything she cooked.  My first test came my very first night in Paris, when Catherine served a quiche lorraine - a dish I could not remember ever having tasted before (though my mom informs me that she made quiches when I was little, and that I loved them until the day I decided I didn't; who knew!).  I'm sure I'm the only one who was surprised to find that the quiche was delicious - because really, with eggs, cream, bacon, and pie crust, how could you go wrong?

Over the course of the next several weeks, Catherine opened up my eyes - and mouth - to many new tastes and dishes.  With her, I ate my salads with dressing (before, I'd always taken them dry); I ate fresh white asparagus from the market ("c'est le saison," she explained, "alors il faut le manger!"  It's the season, so we must eat it!); I ate my first ratatouille and clafoutis  and flan aux champignons and all sorts of dishes with names infinitely more fun to say in French than in English.  The dish that I make the most often now, though, was one of the simplest.

One Tuesday evening, Catherine announced she had gotten fresh peas at the market that morning.  She had shelled them while the toddlers napped in the afternoon, and in the evening she'd fried up some lardons (tiny bits of bacon), carmelized some onions, tossed in her fresh peas, and finally served up this mixture alongside rice.  Peas weren't on my list of Foods I Ate, but I ate them anyway and discovered that I liked them - especially with caramelized onions and bacon.  In fact, when made with good bacon and served over a fragrant rice, there's very little that I like better.


Last night, I used Nueske's applewood smoked bacon and Camargue red rice.  Unfortunately, my peas were frozen, not fresh, but that made little difference to the final product (and saved me considerable time, since there was no shelling!).  Even with a still slightly uncomfortable stomach, I was struck with each bite just how much I love this meal.  That's how you know your host-mother was a good cook, I think: when you're still following her recipes years after you've eaten her cooking.

~*~

This morning, I went to the farmer's market.  Hello, July - for the first time this year, there are blueberries and cherries for sale!  I quickly snatched up a quart of each, and I've been plowing through them ever since.  The cherries are so good, I'll be surprised if there are any left by the end of the day tomorrow.  That's how you know it's really summer, I think: not the solstice, not the heat, but the arrival of fruits that, every time you open the fridge door, you just have to grab a handful and pop them in your mouth.

A bowl of fresh blueberries and cherries were the ideal start to my day and the ideal end of an incredible 24 hours of eating.  Here's to hoping they've shown up at your market, too, perhaps alongside some pistachio cream and fresh peas.  Happy eating!


*For the sake of full disclosure, I'd like to note that though my day job is with Zingerman's, this blog is in no way affiliated with the company, and that all comments made here are my own.  I'm not being compensated in any way for anything I write here, so if I make a recommendation for a product that Zingerman's produces or sells, it's because I love it, not because I'm going to get a commission if it sells.