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Archive for March, 2006


Check, Please! Bay Area: Episode 13

Wednesday, March 29th, 2006

Check, Please! Bay Area is KQED's new local series featuring regular people reviewing Bay Area restaurants.

Visit the Check, Please! Bay Area blog to experience the restaurants from Episode 13:

1) Havana: | restaurant information | reviews

2) El Huarache Azteca: | restaurant information | reviews

3) The House: | restaurant information | reviews

Please feel free to join the discussion by posting comments about the show and your reviews of the featured restaurants!

You can now watch all episodes online! Check out the new photo gallery to view behind-the-scenes shots.

posted by Wendy Goodfriend | posted in food and drink | 1 Comment

Sake to me

Wednesday, March 29th, 2006


Sake is hot! Actually it's also served cold. But never mind, sake is meant to be enjoyed and if that means breaking the rules or with tradition, so be it. That's the fundamental message in Sake A Modern Guide, a new book by Beau Timken, local sake aficionado and owner of the only sake store in America, True Sake, with accompanying recipes by Sara Deseran 7x7 magazine senior editor.

If you've wondered what the difference between Junmai, Ginjo and Junmai dai ginjo is, rest assured Timken demystifies the names and styles of sake. The history of sake is particularly interesting and goes down smooth. Best of all, Timken explains how to taste sake, (something I could have used at the Joy of Sake event a few months back) and provides a selection of fifty sakes to try. The listings are amazing. For each sake, along with a full description is a defining word such as "shimmering" or "silky" a wine and a beer to compare it with and several foods to pair it with.

As you might expect, many of the recipes Deseran provides use sake as one of the ingredients. Suggestions are also made for which sakes pair well with the dishes that run the gamut from appetizers, pasta, salad and even a risotto. It turns out risotto and sake are a very contemporary pairing in Japan these days. Who knew?

As if to demonstrate that sake should not be taken too seriously, there is a section on sake cocktails. If you are setting up a bar and don't want to invest in the typical rum, vodka, whiskey repertoire, you'll be pleasantly surprised at how much you can do with sake. In the section are drinks in the styles of hot toddy, margarita, sangria, cosmopolitan and bloody mary. Finally for those who enjoy infused vodkas, don't miss the section on infused sakes.

posted by Amy Sherman | posted in food and drink | 1 Comment

Dinner with Elizabeth Andoh

Tuesday, March 28th, 2006


Washoku dinner at Medicine: Three Jewels

Without a doubt, Washoku: Recipes from the Japanese Home Kitchen (Ten Speed Press) has been a life-changing cookbook for me. Our adventures with this book, written by Elizabeth Andoh, began on New Year's Eve with a washoku-style dinner at home. Jason and I have always tended toward Japanese food, and to have such a comprehensive guide to Japanese home cooking is a real joy. Since we bought the book, we have tried different recipes on a weekly basis.

Washoku cooking is a focus on the harmony of food. Meals prepared washoku-style focus on five basic principles which culminate in a beautifully presented, delicious plate. Andoh is quick to explain that not all meals need to follow all principles, and that these are merely guides to washoku cooking.


Washoku dinner at Medicine: Yakimono

Harmony in color. Washoku meals include foods that are red, yellow, green, black and white. This is not only visually pleasing, but a great way to be sure you are getting a good nutritional balance with your meal.

Harmony in palate. By having a balance of salty, sour, sweet, bitter, and spicy foods, a washoku-style meal is thoroughly satisfying to the entire palate.

Harmony in cooking method. Washoku-style meals use several different methods of cooking in each meal: simmering, searing, steaming, raw, and sauteeing or frying.

Harmony in the senses. Each meal should please the five senses: taste, sight, sound, smell and touch (texture).

Harmony in the outlook. This is a philisophical idea that when eating we should attempt "first to respect the efforts of all those who contributed their toil to cultivating and preparing our food; second, to do good deeds worthy of receiving such nourishment; third, to come to the table without ire; fourth, to eat for spiritual as well as temporal well-being; and fifth, to be serious in our struggle to attain enlightenment."


Washoku dinner at Medicine: Tsukemono (pickles)

When I heard that The Japan Society and the Mechanics' Institute were joining together to offer a lecture and dinner with Ms. Andoh at Medicine Eat Station, I jumped at the chance to go. We have become big fans of Medicine, and I could see that the Shojin-style offerings of the restaurant would match well with Andoh's book. For this dinner, the chef of Medicine combined some of the recipes from Washoku with classic recipes on the Medicine menu.

1. Amuse: Yasai Chippusu. Renkon and gobo chips with arajio salt
2. Three Jewels. Koriboshi daikon and konbu, hijiki and carrot, kent mango shiraae and mint.
3. Chawan Mushi Ankake. Basic Soy Beanery milk, gingko nuts, lily bult, goji berries, mitsuba.
4. Chikuzen Daki. Seasonal simmered vegetables, konyaku & bamboo shoot in shoyu broth.
5. Yakimono. Grilled asparagus, sweet red pepper and shiitake mushrooms.
6. Enoki No Miso-Jidate. Served with nine-grain rice and fresh pickles.
7. Dessert. Matcha tofu with shiritama.
8. Tea. Soba-cha.

In addition to the five principles outlined above, washoku cooking has a particular eye toward seasonality which you can imagine is very appealing to me. Called shun (rhymes with tune), washoku cooking pays attention to the exact moment in the year when a particular food is at it's peak of flavor. This can be a period of days, weeks, months, or hours. During the dinner, Andoh described that a dish may often play with this seasonality by mixing together an ingredient that has been in season for a while, an ingredient that has just come into season, and an ingredient that has a very long shun. This was demonstrated in the chikuzen daki, which had fresh bamboo shoot, snow peas, konyaku (a tuber in the yam family), and carrot.

I missed taking a picture of the chawan mushi, as Ms. Andoh was walking around the room and I had a chance to talk to her about my new pickle pot, or shokutaku tsukemono ki. She encouraged me to read her essay entitled The Pickle Pot, and to consider a new level of commitment with pickles by making nuka-zuke, or rice bran pickles.

The entire dinner was delicious, and I left Medicine with a greater understanding of washoku cooking and it's focus on harmony. Congratulations to all who made this meal such a wonderful success.


Washoku dinner at Medicine: Chikuzen Daki

For more, please read:

Interview with Will Petty, Medicine Eat Station
A Taste of Culture. Elizabeth Andoh's website.
The Pickle Pot by Elizabeth Andoh.

posted by Jennifer Maiser | posted in food and drink | 3 Comments

The Cheeseboard Collective, My Daily Bread

Monday, March 27th, 2006

When it comes to food and those who seek deliciousness, location is very important. Two of my good friends are buying a house just paces from where they are renting. Their criteria? The house needs to be equidistant to Delfina and Tartine as their apartment had been.

Although I did not pick my new flat in accordance with these stringent laws I was very lucky to have found a home ten minutes walking distance from The Cheeseboard Collective. And I have recently discovered their daily whole grain bread schedule. The Wednesday Sesame Sunflower is my favorite, but I have not been disappointed yet.

If you have ever baked your own bread, spent time in the kitchen where bread was being baked, or were merely the very lucky person to eat the first slice of bread still warm from the oven, you know that what we buy in the supermarket tastes nothing like this. Similarly, if you have ever had the sensuous pleasure of picking an apple on a chilly day or tasted honeycomb thieved from the buzzing creatures themselves, you know there is a specific indescribable flavor inherent in absolute freshness. This je ne sais quois is completely decimated when bread is produced on a large scale.

It is my "Golden Apple of Eternal Desire" this flavor chase. And I'm not talking about the $5-10 dollar loaf of artisinally crafted levain or pugliese, I am speaking here only to the plain wallflower of a girl, the whole wheat loaf for slicing, toasting and hippie sandwich making. Sometimes simple is the most difficult, or in the Bay Area, the hardest to find.

Because The Cheeseboard Collective treats themselves fairly they are closed on Sunday and Monday. On Saturdays the energy is high with people stocking up for the weekend. Although the clientele is predominantly comfortable shoe-wearers who seem to have made the thirty nine year old shop their town square, the atmosphere is welcoming to new people finding their way. Homemade signs list all the ingredients of the various sweet and savory breads, and custom built shelves house bakery tissue and various sizes of brown bags to to grab bread and whisk loaves away in. Some items are sold by the each, others by the pound. At the end of the day if there's anything left you can get a very good deal.

Bread made daily whose ingredient list does not include words we cannot pronounce means that I usually come home and slice and freeze said purchases. It's also because I have the perfect toaster oven. It has a "frozen toast" setting. Currently appearing in my freezer are the Wednesday, Friday and Saturday whole grain breads, a small dense loaf of an interesting spelt bread with farro (makes a very crunchy toast crust if you like this sort of thing), and a shiny-crusted holey sourdough.

Even though I have enough bread to tide me over until May I like walking over for the occasional fresh brioche knot. In the bread and pastry making world, word on the street is that a bread maker makes bready pastries and a pastry maker makes sweeter richer breads. The ingredient list for The Cheeseboard's brioche reads:

organic white flour, water, butter, eggs, buttermilk, cream, sugar, golden raisins, brown sugar, cinnamon, yeast, salt.

Obviously there is no short supply of fat here, but this bread is definately bread: chewy, dense strands wound tight with a shimmery sheen of sugar on the perfectly colored exterior and a whisper-hint of cinnamon hidden in the elbows of the internal twists.

The Cheeseboard Collective's offerings are a quirky ecclectic collection of breads cheesy, sour, sweet and healthful. Having moved "to the other side" as someone recently said, I am compiling my new local sources for daily nibbles. Stay tuned for more delicious findings from the East Bay.

The Cheeseboard Collective
1504 Shattuck Avenue
Berkeley, California
ph# 510. 549.3183

posted by Shuna Fish Lydon | posted in food and drink | 3 Comments

Check, Please! Bay Area: Episode 12

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Check, Please! Bay Area is KQED's new local series featuring regular people reviewing Bay Area restaurants.

Visit the Check, Please! Bay Area blog to experience the restaurants from Episode 11:

1) Old Mandarin Islamic: | restaurant information | reviews

2) Naomi Sushi: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe

3) Woodward's Garden: | restaurant information | reviews | recipe

Please feel free to join the discussion by posting comments about the show and your reviews of the featured restaurants!

You can now watch all episodes online! Check out the new photo gallery to view behind-the-scenes shots.

posted by Wendy Goodfriend | posted in food and drink | 1 Comment

Lipsmacking Links

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Crushpad Winery
I know they've been around for a few years now, but I've only recently investigated just how making wine at Crushpad Winery works. Basically, Crushpad turns you into the winemaker, so whether you're from Scarsdale, San Francisco, or St. Paul, you get to make all the big decisions on your own wine. The grape, the vineyard, the harvest, the crush, the aging, and the packaging -- it's all up to you. If you think about it, it's sort of like SIM Winery or a "Choose Your Own AdVINture" exercise.

Along the way, the Crushpad folks are free with their expert guidance and can even help you promote your vanity vino. Therefore, if you don't want to keep all 25 cases to yourself, they will do things like get your fermented grapes into retail locations or submit your bottles to wine rating organizations.

Here's what I'm thinking: all the Bay Area Biters divide up the cost of a barrel ($3900 to $6900 for 25 cases) and come up with our very own BABernet Sauvignon. What say you?

Hungry Cyclist
I have become fascinated by this Brit on a bike who decided to quit his UK advertising job, fly to America, and pitch his tent along with his appetite. His goal? To cycle and eat his way across America in order to prove that American food isn't as bad as its reputation. After 243 days and 7067 miles, Tom Kevill-Davis has eaten snapping turtle stew in Minnesota and gutted his own wild turkey in Oregon. Last I checked, Tom was tasting tacos in Tijuana and trying to buy back his stolen knife from some Mexican farmers. You gotta admit, one of the best perks about this trip of his is that he can eat absolutely anything and everything.

Not really in search of glory or riches, Tom saved for three years to finance this trip and any money he can raise in donations along the way will go to Macmillan Cancer Relief.

Rent Mother Nature
It may not be nice to fool Mother Nature, but how does she feel about being rented? In my opinion, this is the ultimate foodie gift. Do you have a major food fiend in your life and want to give them the most thoughtfully delicious gift? Look no further than the purple mountains majesty and amber waves of grain we have across our fruited plain. Through Rent Mother Nature, you can lease everything from almond trees to goats to wild rice beds.

According to the site, this is what you get if you decide to rent a bit of Mother Nature:

1 Lease Document: Handsomely personalized with the name of your recipient, the handsome parchment-look certificate is beautifully illustrated and embossed with a gold seal. It is sent to your recipient at the time the lease is ordered along with an illustrated Announcement Folder (including a gift message from you) describing the program you selected. You can also choose to have the Lease sent to you for personal presentation.

2 Progress Reports: As the crop is nurtured informative, entertaining, homespun newsletters build anticipation for the harvest. As a humorous option we'll even go out and take an action photo of your tree, hive, cow, sheep, or field hard at work and mail it with one of the Progress Reports.

3 Harvest: The grand finale, delivered right to the door, of fresh natural products. Yields are guaranteed, along with your complete satisfaction. We do all the work and you get all the raves (while helping America's family farms and craftsmen).

I just love this idea so much I want to give it to everyone I know. More unique than the usual fruit, wine, beer, or cheese-of-the-month club, this gift allows you send carefully raised delicacies that your nearest and dearest might not otherwise be able to get their hands on. Rent an oyster bed and send 4 dozen of the salty Puget Sound suckers to Aunt Eunice in Nebraska; Sister Hortense in Minnesota would love 7 1/2 pounds of Maine lobsters; And how about thanking Professor Keckler in Boston for all his wise counsel with 12-25 Georgian peaches (the number depends on whether you rent a branch or the whole tree).

It's the romantic in me that almost wants the old fashioned, "beautifully illustrated" lease even more than the gift that follows. Now, if you love this idea but don't want to do the food route because your recipient doesn't eat or something, you can rent a fluffy sheep and net them a pure virgin wool blanket.

Fallen Fruit
Capitalizing on a forgotten L.A. law that makes all sidewalk-overhanging fruit fair game for public collection and consumption, three profs at CalArts have embarked on a project to make "fallen fruit" accessible to the general public. By providing online maps that show interested parties where to get their free avocados, loquats, and figs, Austin Young, Matias Viegener, and Dave Burns have turned certain L.A. neighborhoods into veritable supermarkets. Considering they have big plans to infiltrate Brooklyn in order to show those denizens where to get their hungry hands on trashed day-old bread and edible restaurant spoils, could showing wine countrymen how to access undrunk bottles of tasting room wine be far behind?

posted by Stephanie Lucianovic | posted in food and drink | 1 Comment

Cook by the Book: The Healthy Jewish Cookbook

Wednesday, March 22nd, 2006


I confess. When I first came upon this cookbook I barely gave it a look. While the subtitle "100 delicious recipes from around the world" sounded great-- "Healthy Jewish" in The Healthy Jewish Cookbook concerned me. So here's the deal, I'm Jewish but not very fond of what I know of as Jewish cuisine. My general impression is that Jewish food is heavy, bland, often overcooked and fattening. Healthy food on the other hand sounds dull, unsubstantial, undercooked and fat free. To top it all off, the book is written by a British writer. I won't even go near that stereotype. Needless to say I'm glad I gave the book a second look.

Michael van Straten may be unfamiliar to American audiences but he's probably more well-known to the British. A prominent health journalist and practitioner, van Straten has written around 30 books and has run a health radio program for about 30 years. He begins the book with a delightful story of how his parents met and a bit about his upbringing. Though his family is European, he looks far beyond the Eastern European cuisine so many American Jews are familiar with to explore the fusion cuisine that came of the diaspora.

The recipes themselves come from all around the globe--all parts of Europe, the Mediterranean to Persia, the Middle East, North Africa and the Far East. The flavors and colors are vibrant and excite the senses. He reconfigures some less than healthy recipes but mostly the recipes are delicious first, healthy second and just happen to be popular with Jews, somewhere in the world. Most recipes come with a "health note" that points out the health benefits associated with the ingredients. Risotto, couscous and smoked haddock all find there way into recipes. My only complaint is that while there is a section devoted to Jewish holidays, a section of recipes specifically for holidays would have made the book easier to navigate.

This recipe would certainly perk up a Passover seder. Recipe reprinted courtesy of of Frog, Ltd. North Atlantic Books


Olive and Orange Salad
Serves 4

Jews were the earliest cultivators of citrus fruits. Olives have been cultivated for at least 5,000 year, and they're part of Jewish biblical history. Widely used in Sephardic cuisine, this salad is a favorite in Israel, although its origins are probably north African.

4 oranges, peeled and sliced horizontally
About 18 black olives, pitted and cut in half
Juice of 1 lemon
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 garlic clove, very finely chopped
1 teaspoon finely chopped mint
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1/2 teaspoon paprika, plus 2 pinches for serving

Method
Put the oranges into a serving bowl. Scatter the olives over the oranges. Whisk together the lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, mint, cumin, and paprika. Pour the dressing over the salad, adding 2 pinches of paprika for serving.

Health Note
This recipe combines the taste and vitamin C of oranges with the bitter flavors of olives. Because they're such a good source of oil, olive are often thought to be fattening, but this isn't the case: 18 olives contain only 60 calories, but they provide vitamin E and lots of protective antioxidants.

For another recipe from the book, Cinnamon Ball cookies, also a Passover friendly treat, head over to Cooking with Amy.

posted by Amy Sherman | posted in food and drink | 4 Comments

Santa Monica Farmers' Market

Monday, March 20th, 2006

... And this is Laura Avery with the market report.

I listen to those words every week as Laura Avery reports from the Wednesday Santa Monica Farmers' Market. KCRW has a wonderful podcast called Good Food and each week it begins with Market Director Laura Avery talking about what's in season and interviewing farmers. Even though I don't live in the area, it's fun to hear the seasons change and compare their seasonality to our seasonality.

I have been in Southern California a few times recently for work, and when a friend called and invited me to attend the Saturday Santa Monica market, I jumped at the chance. Having heard the market report every week predisposed me to a need to check out this market. The weather had been wild. Rain, hail, and general deluge had taken over the Southland for days and driving to Santa Monica that morning, I was concerned that I didn't have the right clothes to be walking around the farmer's market in a downpour. Arriving at Third and Arizona, however, the skies were clear and Santa Monica was bathed in bright light and blue skies.

Santa Monica has several farmers' markets during the week, with the Wednesday market being their largest. The Saturday Downtown Market is about the same size as our Berkeley Saturday Market.

To me, the main difference between southern California farmers' markets and our Bay Area markets is that they have farmers from the San Diego region and we have farmers from points north of the Bay. We both get farmers from the Central Valley and Central Coast. Due to this difference, the Santa Monica Market featured many different types of avocadoes and lots of citrus.

The market is organized in a way I have never seen before: All organic vendors are grouped together in one portion of the market, marked by signs indicating "You are now entering the certified organic section." An interesting approach, and in some ways I appreciated not having to check with each vendor to see who was organic. Personally, I would love to see markets arranged according to farm distance from the market, with a special place or indicator for farmers who are less than 100 miles away from the market.

Kowalke Family Farms featured sprouts and greens, and we picked up some fresh peanuts to snack on while we walked through the market. Fresh raw peanuts are much more like raw peas in their consistency, and they were delicious to eat out of hand. The stand also had sprouted wheat, raw black beans, and other fun treats to taste. I encouraged Rachel to purchase pea sprouts, as I had recently become enamored of their preparation at Isa restaurant here in San Francisco.

In addition to traditional fruits and vegetables, the market had vendors selling plants, buffalo, and raw milk.

Since I was travelling, I didn't get to do any substantive shopping, but I picked up some wonderful tangerines and some beautiful gerber daisies for my grandmother. I look forward to the next time I can visit this market and Santa Monica's other farmers' markets as well.

Saturday Downtown Farmer's Market
City of Santa Monica
Arizona Ave and Third Street
Year-round, 8:30 am - 1:00 pm

posted by Jennifer Maiser | posted in food and drink | 2 Comments

Destination Dishes

Sunday, March 19th, 2006

I don't usually get cravings for food. (Though this morning, the cornmeal pancakes at Just For You were a necessity.) If we're going out to dinner, being asked what I feel like eating is one of the most irritating questions. I. Don't. Know. How can I be expected to pick just one of the thousands of delicious food items all over the city? It's too overwhelming; there's too much choice.

When faced with such a dreadful freedom, I'm forced to compartmentalize. It's hard to find a perfect restaurant. What's not hard to pinpoint is perfect dishes -- or, let's say, dishes that satisfy a specific need, at a specific time and place (oh, the damage that relativity has done!). While I may lust hungrily after the bread at Blue Plate -- warm from the oven, crisped perfectly on top and flecked with rosemary -- I've become bored with their barely changing menu. The grilled hearts of romaine salad was once a no-fail destination dish for me. When I was there a couple of weeks ago, the winter version -- with blue cheese and Granny Smith apples -- was over-dressed and mediocre. Disappointment burns. Oh, how it burns.

Two dishes at two different restaurants have recently infected my consciousness: the relleno negro de pavo at Mi Lindo Yucatan (401 Valencia, at 15th St.) and the samusa soup at Burma Superstar (309 Clement at 4th Ave.). There are similarities to the dishes, especially in their somewhat overwrought spicing, and I wonder what that indicates about my taste. Come to your own conclusions.

Mi Lindo Yucatan is an extremely friendly place and generally a pleasure to visit. But I'm not reviewing the restaurants, I just want to talk about these two dishes. The mole comes in a big dish, and it's not so pretty to look at -- pale shreds of turkey and a few rounds of turkey sausage swimming in an inky black sauce. The sauce is thin but so very rich, redolent of a warm combination of chiles -- habanero, passila, and jalapeno, I think. I could just drink up the sauce -- the meat, in this case, just serves as a vehicle to convey the sauce to my mouth. Plus tortillas, which I suppose are the real vehicle -- so the turkey is, actually, the axle, or the wheels. The steering wheel? I have no use for metaphors; all I need is the sauce. And a hot car.

I had avoided the crowds outside Burma Superstar for years, even when I lived in that neighborhood -- preferring any of the other wonderful restaurants in the area (hello, Szechuan Trenz Spices II! I love you.). Burma Superstar needs not a shred more publicity. Nor does the samusa soup -- it's long been touted as one of the stars of the Superstar. I second that. The soup consists of vegetarian samusas -- fried pillows of lentils, potatoes, and falafel -- that are broken up and introduced to a vegetarian curry broth that holds deep mysteries. It's thick and has a slight heat, laced with spices and ribbons of cabbage. The samusa wrapping soaks up the broth but remains toothsome while the lentil and falafel filling provides further textural delights.

Both the relleno negro and the samusa soup are winter dishes, perfect comfort for the cold, wet weather. Both are worthy of craving. Freedom is now less dreadful.

posted by bayareabites | posted in food and drink | 3 Comments

Le printemps est arrivé!

Saturday, March 18th, 2006

Spring has arrived! ...and not a moment too soon! After months and months and months of gray skies, rain, hail, snow and below freezing temperatures, I wasn't sure if I was living in Paris or the Artic circle. Last week, the sun generously decided to end its hibernation and let its warming rays begin to thaw this part of the world. The temperatures still hover near freezing, but there is something about a vibrant blue sky that shaves a bit of chill off the cold.

So in honor of the arrival of spring, a quintessential springtime French stew celebrating the beautiful spring vegetables, Navarin Printanier. But first, we must shop for our spring vegetables and what better place than my little farmers market at Place Monge if for no other reason than it is across the street and I am terribly lazy...

The arrival of turnips at the market presage the arrival of spring and bring with it their sweet characteristic flavor. Rumor has it they hail from Ancient Greece and were brought to Europe from Northern Africa where they grow wild. In France, cave drawings depict turnips in clay pots.

They were originally a peasant food, not worthy of noble consumption, however someone in the royal court must have snitched a bite from his servant in a moment of hunger and voila, the lowly turnip became a regal legume and they served them braised, glazed, fried and smothered in honey.

According to Chez Sophie, the name "navarin has nothing to do with sheep. It is widely believed that the name navarin is a reference to the Battle of Navarino on October 20, 1827, in which British, French and Russian ships sank the Turkish and Egyptian fleet during the Greek War of Independence.

There is, however, no detectable connection between that sea battle and French mutton stew, and the dish was invented long before 1827. It's more likely that the name derives from navet -- the French word for turnip, because early recipes prominently featured turnips..."

In French cuisine, turnips (navets) are an key ingredient in certain recipes such as pot-au-feu in the winter and navarin printanier in the spring. Printanier refers to the garniture, in this case the spring vegetables. It is also named Navarin d'Agneau (lamb stew) or Navarin d'Agneau Printanier...all the same.

The traditional French recipe calls for the carrots, turnips and potatoes to be cut and shaped into little footballs. This process is called "tournage" (tour-nazh) or turning the vegetables and the size required is called "cocotte" which is 5 cm long by 1.5 cm thick (1/2" x 2").

I am without question tournage-impaired because no matter how many turnips I practiced on, I could not make a perfect 7-sided football but more of a mutated soccer ball (see pic below) and I'd invariably end up with a cramped hand and shriveled, cut fingers. Chef Pascal so patiently tried to help me get this but finally even he had to give up.

So...unless you are a veritable tournage savant, I would cut them into equal sized sticks of about 1/2" x 2", as you like and whatever is easiest. Unless you are a chef at the George V or Le Crillon, you probably won't have much need for cutting your vegetables into little footballs but give it a try once. You could even take a melon baller to your turnips and potatoes and simply trim baby carrots with your peeler.

Navarin Printanier

For the meat:

1.5 lb lamb -- shoulder or leg cut into 1.5" cubes (approx 1 oz) and seasoned with salt, pepper
vegetable oil (or very light-favored olive oil)
1/2 carrot -- roughly chopped for mirepoix
1/4 onion -- roughly chopped for mirepoix
1/2 celery stalk -- roughly chopped for mirepoix
2 ea garlic cloves -- peels removed
1 tbsp tomato paste
20 g flour (3/4 oz)
1 bouquet garni

For the printanier garniture (spring vegetables):

8 baby carrots (4 large carrots)
4 turnips
12 spring onions -- whites only, root trimmed, peeled (or 1 or those little mesh bags labeled pearl onions)
butter
2 oz haricots verts (string beans) -- cut approx 2 inches long
2 oz green peas
8 sm waxy potatoes
10 parsley springs -- finely chopped for garnish
sea salt, freshly ground pepper

Cook the meat:

1. heat oven to 350F / 175C.

2. using an oven-safe pot, add a swirl of oil and heat over medium flame. brown the cubes of meat, working in batches. don't overcrowd the pan or burn the "sucs" which are those little bits that get stuck to the pan and have *all* the intense flavor. set the browned meat aside in a bowl.

3. pour off the oil from the pan and add the "mirepoix" of carrots, celery and onion. cook for a few minutes, adding the garlic at the end so it doesn't burn.

4. turn the heat to low, add the meat back to the pan and "singer" (sahn-zhay) which is to sprinkle to flour over the pan that has some fat in it in order to make a type of roux or thickener. stir with a flat topped wooden spoon flat topped wooden spoon. cook for approx 5 minutes in order to ensure the raw flour taste is cooked out and the mirepoix are a bit caramelized.

5. add the tomato paste and stir.

6. add water to cover (the real french way is to add veal stock so if you happen to have some sitting in your freezer, good on ya' mate!), add a pinch of salt, a grind of pepper, stir to combine and bring to a boil.

7. skim the fat off and take off the heat. cover with foil and place in the preheated oven. cook for approx 1 hour. stir every 15 minutes and don't let the liquid boil or the meat will toughen and overcook.

while the meet is cooking, prepare the garniture:

8. cook the string beans and peas separately in boiling salted water until just done. remove to bowl and set aside.

9. blanch the potatoes: start the potatoes in cold water then, bring to a boil and cook until just done, then drop in ice water to stop the cooking. remove to bowl and set aside.

10. cook the carrots and turnips separately in a saute pan "glacer a blanc" or glazed white. put one layer of carrots (and turnips) in a pot and cover with water half way up the sides of the vegetables. add a tablespoon of butter and a pinch of salt. you can either cover with a too large lid (to let the steam escape) or cut a circle of parchment paper the diameter of the pot with a small hold in the middle. bring to a boil, reduce the heat to low and cook until the vegetables are tender and lightly glazed (from the butter) but not caramelized. season with salt and pepper.

11. cook the spring onions in a saute pan "glacer a brun". cook as above in step #10 but replace the pinch of salt with a pinch of sugar and when the onions are just turning tender, remove the lid, turn up heat to medium and let the onions caramelize. set aside.

now back to the meat which should be cooked by now:

12. when the meet is tender, strain and separate the meat. keep the meat covered and warm and discard the vegetables. KEEP THE LIQUID!

13. skim the fat from the liquid, as much as you can, and reduce over medium heat to about half. this should concentrate the flavor and make a light sauce. if it is too watery, combine 1 T soft butter and 1 T flour (this is called a beurre manie - a thickener) and stir in. ensure the raw flour taste is cooked out. taste for seasoning and add salt and pepper as needed.

14. add the sauteed lamb and potatoes to the liquid and heat thoroughly. then add the carrots, pearl onions and turnips and heat through.

15. drop the green beans and peas into boiling water for just a moment to heat them through.

16. to serve, plate the meat and vegetable stew, then garnish with the string beans, peas and chopped parsley.

Bon appetit and cheers!

posted by Cucina Testa Rossa | posted in food and drink | 0 Comments

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