Tomato Kumato

August 16, 2009

Tarte à l’oignon

Filed under: Eggs — Tags: , , — emiglia @ 10:35 am

It happens to all of us every once in awhile.

Sometimes you read the recipe wrong.

Other times, the recipe was wrong to begin with.

The oven ran cold, you thought the salt was sugar, you were in a rush, you invented something that didn’t work out. For one reason or another, you make a dish you weren’t proud of, and you have to decide what to do with it.

It honestly doesn’t happen to me too often, but then again, I don’t venture out of my comfort zone terribly often either. The handful of times I’ve truly made a mess in the kitchen over the past few years, I usually dump what I made and go on with life, serving something quick and simple instead or just ordering in sushi or pizza.

Unfortunately, this tactic does not work terribly well when your job is to cook dinner every night for 20 people.

I was lucky enough to be able to rely on things I knew well the majority of the time this summer. The chocolate mousse was a little thicker than I would have liked the second time around, and I over-salted a batch of pasta carbonara, but in general, I was doing fairly well… until a recipe for potato gratin.

I thought I’d learned my lesson when it came to potato gratins: no matter how much I trust the recipe-writer, no matter how much I love the idea of a newfangled version of potatoes and melted cheese, something always goes wrong unless I use my tried and true recipe for gratin dauphinois. Maybe it’s because I learned that recipe, as I feel that the best recipes should be learned, at the elbow of a native who had been making it for forever and a day when I lived in the north of France.

And yet, I tried again, and I failed.

Luckily, we had enough cheese and charcuterie and tomatoes and salad to make a well-rounded meal anyway, and the imperfect gratin lay forgotten in the oven until I worked up the courage to throw out the vast amount of cheese it took to make it. And luckily, I’m still learning.

This recipe isn’t mine: it’s Anne-Marie’s. It’s similar to a quiche, with caramelized onions, cream, eggs and nutmeg. Make your own pie crust if you like, but I love these ready-to-use crusts we get here, and anyway, what you care about are the onions, which I always have lying around, therefore making this the perfect thing to throw together when one of my experiments goes awry.

Onion Tart

1 kilo yellow onions
1 red onion
1/2 stick butter
1 Tbsp. olive oil
1 Tbsp. sugar
1 cup white wine (my addition)
a pinch of fresh ground nutmeg
6 eggs
25 cl. crème fraîche
2 refrigerated pâtes brisées
salt and pepper
1 tsp. thyme
1 tsp. French mustard
freshly grated nutmeg

Thinly slice all of the onions.

Heat the butter and oil over low heat and add the butter, oil, onions, sugar and a pinch of salt. Cook slowly for an hour, stirring occasionally. When the onions start to caramelize, begin adding the wine, a few tablespoons at a time. As the wine evaporates, add more until all of the wine has been added. Add the mustard, thyme and nutmeg as well as salt and pepper to taste.

Combine the eggs, crème fraîche and nutmeg in a bowl.

Roll out the pâtes brisées and place them in two tarte pans. Divide the onions equally between them, and pour the egg and crème fraîche mixture over the top. Bake at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes, until the top of the tarte is set and browned. Serve lukewarm with a green salad.

August 15, 2009

Chocolate Chip Cookies

Filed under: Cookies — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 7:43 pm

America has a smell.

Maybe not America, but definitely New York.

OK… on second thought, scratch that. It’s not New York… it’s JFK. And I’ll go even a bit further to say, it’s not all of JFK, but one specific point, past customs and baggage claim and the desk for lost luggage, where I tend to spend quite a bit of my time. It’s the part right where you exit the automatic doors to where the pickups are. That place right there… it has a smell. Pollution, car exhaust, sweat, steam.

It smells like home.

No matter how far I go, no matter how much I convince myself that I am, once and for all, over New York–a city that truly was a love for me, an unrequited, heart-wrenching, ugly, messy love story over the course of the three years I spent at boarding school and the year and a half I spent in Toronto–I never really am. It was a love affair that had me watching Manhattan over and over and over again on my DVD player in high school and tracking down movie sets meant to be in New York in the biting cold of a Toronto winter. A love affair that made recognizing the buildings that dotted the skyline of my hometown make my heart ache.

I’ve since forgotten about New York: Cannes broke the spell it had on me, quickly replaced with Paris. I’ve become flighty in the true sense of the word, forgetting all the places I was in favor of the place where I am.

But JFK brings it all back.

If you haven’t grasped from the above soliloquy, I am back in America: land of peanut butter sold in vats, 24-hour supermarkets, pharmacies that sell shampoo, and ever-present air conditioning. I’ve stopped thinking of Paziols, the place that had me head-over-heels, except when I’m writing this blog and paging through never-ending photographs that should make it up here, some day.

These cookies should remind me of Paziols: I made them for a neighborhood cookout, where we set up picnic tables along our street–the French equivalent of a block party. I, as the American representative, started cooking at 10 and managed to arrive with a vat of cole slaw, a massive bowl of potato salad, two trays of macaroni and cheese, and these: what we know as chocolate chip cookies and what are translated as simply cookies.


I should remember the endless wine that was poured into Dixie cups and just as quickly knocked over by the Tramontagne wind. I should remember the eggplant appetizer that one of our neighbors is famous for. I should remember the massive platter of grilled meat that was passed up and down the table. I should remember the kids laughing and vying for attention, trying to understand the rapid-fire accented French that was surrounding them. I should remember all of this.

Instead, I think of other things. Of days when I lived back here, days when afternoons were spent at diners splitting plates of fries with ketchup–no mayo to be had. Days when I did my homework at the kitchen table, absently snacking on platters of fruit that were omnipresent in my childhood. Days that were so limited–I only lived at home until I was fourteen–but days that, at the time, seemed to last forever.

I remember–however brief it was–the time when I really, truly was just a regular American kid.

Strange, how much a cookie can make you remember.

Chocolate Chip Cookies (adapted from Alton Brown’s “The Chewy”)

2 sticks unsalted butter
2 1/4 cups bread flour
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 cup sugar
1 1/4 cups brown sugar
1 egg
1 egg yolk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Heat oven to 375 degrees F.

Melt the butter in a heavy-bottom medium saucepan over low heat. Sift together the flour, salt, and baking soda and set aside.

Pour the melted butter in the mixer’s work bowl. Add the sugar and brown sugar. Cream the butter and sugars on medium speed. Add the egg, yolk, and vanilla extract and mix until well combined. Slowly incorporate the flour mixture until thoroughly combined. Stir in the chocolate chips.

Chill the dough, then form with a tablespoon and place onto buttered baking sheets. Bake for 8 minutes or until golden brown, checking the cookies after 5 minutes. Rotate the baking sheet for even browning. Serve with a tall glass of milk, à l’américaine.

August 9, 2009

Quiche

Filed under: Eggs, Pork, Salad, Vegetarian Main Dishes, cheese — Tags: , — emiglia @ 10:22 am


We drive up the path, and even though I’ve been self-consciously wedged between my boyfriend’s mother and one of his best friends for the past several hours as we rode the straight-shot highway from the north–Paris–to the south, I can’t help squirming in my seat, causing the close physical contact I’ve been trying to avoid this whole time as I knock manouche #1’s elbow three or four times, craning my neck to see around him, to drink in everything.

Memories stream back into my consciousness as the reality sets in: grapevines, tiny winding roads. Castles so old I can’t even fathom it. Familiar signposts leading to even more familiar locations–I smile as I remember, not even having realized until this very moment that I had forgotten–the names of winemakers in the region, of nearby cafés, of the champion rugby team.

This feeling used to only come from Long Island–the only true home I had for years: the feeling of something, of some place, that is just so inexplicably right.

When I left Paziols last year, I wasn’t sure I would be coming back–plans were crumbling and rebuilding themselves left and right: a for-sure move to Argentina slowly became a quick jaunt to Spain, and a firm decision to leave Paris at the end of December was fading away as I realized that maybe I would be able to face my 18-month itch–that need I feel to move every year and a half–that maybe someone was more important to me than that feeling, that need, to move on.

But I was back–and, in spite of myself, in spite of the fact that I was dejected about the loss of my almost-job in Africa, despite the fact that I had no real idea what I would be doing at the end of the summer, I was back in Paziols for five weeks, and I allowed myself to be happy about it.

I have turned Paziols into a true home over the past few weeks–a metamorphosis that you, my readers and internet confidantes (no better kind) have witnessed as it unfolded, slowly creeping in around the edges, the way the midday sun here creeps into the cool and breezy mornings so that you don’t even notice until you realize you’re gulping down diabolo menthes by the glassful.

It seems bizarre that I only got here five weeks ago: I feel like I just got here, but at the same time, I feel as though I’ve been here forever. The house feels as though it has my imprint on it–my place at the table, in the chairs by the bookshelf, in my bed by the window in the attic–no place has seemed so right in a long time.

The past few days have been peppered with talk–talk of making programs in Paziols a more permanent thing. My heart skips a beat as I plan–my default setting–plan for adult classes in winemaking and cuisine, coordinating groups with lessons at the boulanger in Cucugnan. I imagine what it would be like to live here all the time–to welcome, not only two groups of children every summer, but other groups, other people, throughout the year. To share Paziols with even more people, and to get to know it better myself. I know it’s just a dream, just a haze in the distant and indefinite future, but for me, it already feels so real I can taste it.

And taste it I will… in time. For now, it’s goodbye again: goodbye to the light pink rosé we’ve been drinking all summer, to the fresh cheeses that sit upon our table every day. Goodbye to fresh baguettes every morning and three or four heads of lettuce consumed every day.

It’s goodbye to the tomatoes we’ve come to love–the ones that I dressed simply with garlic, basil, olive oil, oregano and feta cheese and made into the quintessential summer salad here in Paziols–the one that was missed the day I ran out of tomatoes and didn’t think anyone would notice.

It’s goodbye to perfect summer dishes that I loved to make and typical winter dishes that I sweated over but made anyway because you can’t come to southwestern France without tasting classic cassoulet.

This quiche was a lunchtime standard this summer, one that I could throw together over my shoulder as I spelled out directions slowly and carefully in French to sous-chefs unsure of the meanings of the words dorer, demi and ajouter.

It’s easy enough to throw together quickly for a crowd, but tasty enough to serve with a simple green salad as a classy summer dinner, for quiche, like so many things French has become synonomous with class back in the States, where I’m headed tomorrow. As for me, it’s just a synonym with France, with everything that has been my life for the past two years. And, like everything else, I find it simply delicious.

Quiche Lorraine
5 eggs
25 cl. crème fraîche
1 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. black pepper
1 pinch fresh nutmeg
400 g. lardons
2 onions, diced
1 refrigerated pâte brisée
1/2 cup grated emmental cheese

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

Combine the eggs, crème fraîche, salt, pepper and nutmeg in a bowl until well combined and smooth. Set aside.

Heat the lardons in a skillet over medium heat. When they begin to release some grease, add the onions. Cook until the onions and lardons are golden brown.

Roll the pâte brisée out in a tart pan. Spread the lardons and onions over the bottom, and pour in the egg mixture. Sprinkle the emmental cheese over the top.

Bake for 15-20 minutes, until the top of the quiche is golden. It will puff up slightly, but don’t worry: as soon as you remove it from the oven, it will fall back into place. Serve with green salad simply dressed with homemade vinaigrette.


Vegetarian Quiche
5 eggs
25 cl. crème fraîche
2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. dried basil
1 pinch fresh nutmeg
1 tbsp. butter
1 tsp. olive oil
1 carrot, diced
1 onion, diced
1 stalk celery, diced
1 red pepper, diced
1 orange pepper, diced
1 refrigerated pâte brisée
1/2 cup grated emmental cheese

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

Combine the eggs, crème fraiche, salt, pepper, basil and nutmeg in a bowl until well combined. Set aside.

Meanwhile, heat the butter and olive oil over medium heat in a skillet. Add the vegetables and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened and golden, about 10 minutes.

Roll out the pâte brisée in a tart pan. Spread the vegetables over the bottom, and then pour in the egg mixture. Sprinkle the emmental cheese over the top.

Bake for 15-20 minutes, until the top of the quiche is golden. It will puff up slightly, but don’t worry: as soon as you remove it from the oven, it will fall back into place. Serve with green salad simply dressed with homemade vinaigrette.

Homemade Vinaigrette
1 tsp. French mustard
50 cl. cider vinegar
50 cl. extra virgin olive oil
50 cl. sunflower oil
1 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. black pepper

Place all ingredients in a clean jar with a lid. Shake to combine. Taste for seasoning. Use to dress clean, cool lettuce just before serving.

August 8, 2009

Cucugnan

Filed under: Bread — Tags: , , — emiglia @ 1:18 pm

Yes, the moment you’ve all been waiting for. I am here. I am ready. Today is the day that I finally get off my lazy butt and tell you all about our visit to the local artisan baker, the boulanger de Cucugnan.

But first, a long and winding and somewhat off-topic sidebar (my favorite kind) that comes in the form of a confession: this may come to a shock to the foodie community, but I have yet to see Julie and Julia.

It’s not for lack of wanting to–I have a perfectly valid excuse, what with being in the middle of nowhere for the past five weeks. What I’ve had a hard time admitting is the fact that I may not have seen it anyway. Why?

Well.

Ahem.

I’m jealous.

OK? I said it. Stop hounding me.

Yes, I wish Julie Powell well, and yes, I think it was a great blog, and yes, I’m sure it made a great movie. But nowadays, with food blogs popping up left and right, it’s getting even harder to get noticed and followed, and when I think about the fact that her blog has become so popular they made a movie out of it, well… the little green devil inside of me pops out.

But this blog was not started as a popularity contest, and I don’t intend to make it one. I write because I love to… and I also write because every once in awhile, I get another interesting perk, one of which appeared last year, when the boulanger de Cucugnan (see? Not entirely off-topic) started reading my other blog, Bordeaux and Palmiers.


I outlined our chanced meeting with him on the aforementioned blog last year. What I have yet to outline anywhere is the in-depth day-long lesson he gave to our group, not only about artisanal breadmaking, but about bread as a way of life, something that would never cross the mind of most of the Americans who watched and listened wide-eyed as he spoke.

We started by learning about the grains themselves: there is a sort of tearoom that served quite well as a classroom, and I translated as best I could as he waxed on about the history of specific grains, some dating to Roman times, other to the medieval period, and still others, all the way back to the Egyptians. As he explained the various health benefits of different grains, it was apparent that this, his work, is his love. It’s sometimes disheartening to do translation work: you end up delivering less than stellar words, not of your own will, but because you’re trying to do a sub-par text justice by translating instead of rewriting. With this translation, I felt disheartened, but only because I felt as though I couldn’t do his words, his thoughts, justice.

We moved on up the hill to the mill, where we had met the year before. Luckily, we were blessed with wind on that day, and he let out the sails so that we could crush the grains to flour.

His assistant climbed up onto one of the arms of the mill, and the American girls swooned.

We all crowded into the dark room to watch the antiquated process.

The baker climbed up onto the apparatus and reached for my camera to take this picture for me: the grains in the funnel, right before they would pass through the machinery.

Milling the giant sack of flour took 20 minutes, and we all amused ourselves in different ways, running around outside in the gusts of wind, watching as the flour came pulsing out of the chute, bit by bit, or even asking questions about the mill itself, a medieval mill that the boulanger himself restored from the abandoned pile of stones it had been just a few years before.

I spent my time, as I’ve grown famous for here, dans ma tête–in my head. I looked around and watched and listened, absently translating if need be, but mostly just imagining the history of such a place, the stories it must have witnessed, the hundreds and thousands of people it must have fed. For bread, in France, is more than just an extra complex carbohydrate to snack on before a meal.

Bread is still daily bread here–the main form of sustenance with an importance that surpasses anything similar in the States: there are no adequate comparisons to make. Bread is the one thing that you buy every day. In a country where Sunday closures of all business are taken all too seriously, small towns like Paziols ensure that there is always one place that stays opened on Sundays just so that the villagers can buy their daily bread.

When the grains of wheat had been ground into a mix called mouture in French, it was time to head back to the pseudo-classroom, the sack full of milled grain hoisted over the shoulder of the boulanger.


We took refuge inside the small cabin: Paziols in the summertime is usually unbearably hot, but the wind that day had given us all a chill.

Each of the children had a chance to try sifting the mix with a wooden apparatus, separating fluffy white flour that begged to have fingers raked through it from the rough and tough outer husk of the grain.

As the others waited their turns, they snuck snacks of kernels of wheat that had been set out in bowls as visual aids–grains that were soft enough to chew and lightly sweet.

Luckily for them, the boulanger had something else in mind for lunch.

I admired his old-fashioned stove, allowing me to plunge myself even further into the past as the wind rattled the windows and we allowed the steam from boiling pasta water to warm us. I lent a hand, mixing and seasoning a sauce he had made from tomato confit and zucchini. For the kids, he added shredded cheese, and for us, truffle paste.

The pasta itself was made from the discarded husks of the kernels of wheat that had been milled–a variety of wheat that dated back to the middle ages, just like the mill itself. The pasta was sweet and flavorful–nothing like dried storebought pasta that always seems to be just a vehicle for sauce, although this one would have been worth eating with a spoon… I plan on recreating it myself immediately if not sooner.

He served his creation in biodegradable bowls made from sugarcane pulp–an interesting quirk that I greatly appreciated.

When we had eaten our fill of pasta, he surprised us with another treat: brandade de Nimes, a tartine of salt cod and melted cheese seasoned with cracked black pepper. We were stuffed, but we all dove on the platter he served, and we ate contentedly as we sat, talked and sang together.

I admired the style and rhythm of the day… we could have gotten straight up from lunch and run to the next activity, but instead we were given time to to digest, to discuss with one another and enjoy the company. The boulanger himself is a wealth of information on a myriad of topics, and just sitting around and enjoying a meal with him would have been a pleasant end to what had already been an informative day.

Translation: Know what you know and like what you like.

Translation: Know what you know and like what you like.

But without warning or explanation, he arose, and we were back to work, this time heading down to the bakery, at the bottom of the hill we had spent so much time right in the middle of, between the bakery at the bottom and the mill at the top.

We were each given a homemade chocolate chip cookie, and then we set to work making the flour we had spent the morning grinding into our very own loaf of bread.

Daily bread in France today is most commonly associated with the baguette, but, as we know here (mostly from watching old Marcel Pagnol movies about people living here, in the garrigue), daily bread for a family used to be a gros pain, a huge loaf that is heavy and dense and dark. This is what we made.

We started by combining flour, salt, a starter that had been brought from another bakery and was more than fifty years old, live yeast and the ever-important (at least in this region): water.

The baker kneaded by hand to start, slowly bringing the dough together. He later transferred it to an electric mixer, where it was mixed for two minutes before being turned out on the work table. The anachronism of the machinery frankly startled me, juxtaposed against the baker himself, in his white apron and canvas shoes, and the brick oven with wooden peels.

He worked and shaped the dough easily into the shape of a gros pain, and I admired how easy it was for him to make the finished piece: obviously slightly different from any other bread he had made, but still the standard shape and size. I admired the way that he had brought this craft back to life.

We said goodbye to our bread for the day: it would rest all night before being baked at six o’clock the following morning.

We picked it up the next day, wrapped in paper. Its heft was surprising, its taste even moreso: in the same way that the boulanger’s pasta had been pasta squared–a sort of sharpened and intensified version of what we were used to, this bread was exactly the same as and yet completely different from the baguettes we had gotten used to, slathered with Nutella every morning.

This bread was better with just a bit of butter, so you could appreciate the taste: slightly sour, slightly sweet. Dense and heavy, chewy. Everything that bread should be, everything that bread used to be and isn’t anymore.

Except that now it is.

It all comes full-circle: bringing back an old art that had been taken for granted reminds us of what we give up when we forget, when we allow something as simple as daily bread to be lost. But instead of mourning it, instead of waxing on about what used to be and is no longer, in Cucugnan, we can have it–back the way it once was, the way it now is for the people who know, who are able to come to this old-fashioned mill and eat their daily bread the way it was meant to be eaten.


August 2, 2009

Chocolate Mousse

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — emiglia @ 9:31 am

Tomato Kumato started as a tiny project, a little ray of sunshine in the midst an otherwise monotonous summer spent waiting tables on Long Island (a summer that, I’ve come to realize, I reference quite often on the aforementioned blog). I started on a whim: I called my roommate, he set me up with a Wordpress account, and now, more than three years later, this blog is still going strong, even if I am sometimes the only one reading what I write.

Every rule has an exception–it’s true of French grammar, and it’s true of my “sometimes,” which does not in any way apply to summertime, when this blog, my tiny project, develops a second role: that of chronicling our adventures here in Paziols. The blog becomes intertwined with the program here, and the girls are surprised to learn that the blog existed before Paziols, that I continue to post recipes even after summer is over and I have moved on to somewhere new.

I won’t lie: sometimes it’s a pain. I’ve noticed that many of you have dropped off the radar for the summer, leaving your readers with the blogger equivalent of a “gone fishing” notice on your homepage. Many of my favorite blogs won’t start updating again until it’s time to talk about pie and pumpkin once more, and I myself have been tempted to do the same thing: it’s not as though we haven’t been eating well here in Paziols–quite the contrary, actually, as I have been having the time of my life experimenting with French recipes from all over this diverse country to see what flies with discerning American palates. But summertime, for me, has traditionally been the time of year when I close my laptop to all writing–not just blogging (if you follow my fiction writing, you’ll notice that updates there have been even more scarce). The last thing I want to do at the end of a long day, when I’m sticky with sweat and bug spray and my shoulders ache from one too many jumps off the rope swing at the Pachaire, is to sit down in front of my computer and comb through endless photos and come up with something marginally clever to say.

Blogging becomes, not a fun way to relax, but a chore, and I hate when things I love become a chore. So if you haven’t seen much of me around the blogosphere, it’s because I’ve been waiting: waiting for inspiration to creep up on me instead of sitting in front of photos of cassoulet and gratin and waiting, waiting, waiting for the words to spill out of me, like they were so eager to do when I was wrapped up in a quilt all winter in Paris.

I logged on today with good intentions: I planned, as I have been planning for several days, to chronicle our recent experience at the moulin de Cucugnan, where we learned to make flour, made bread, ate incredible pasta prepared by the miller himself, and were gifted some fairly incredible chocolate chip cookies. It has been a post awaited and expected by the people who read this blog regularly, and I don’t want to let down my readers.

But when I sat down today to write, I realized it wasn’t going to happen. I have yet to organize my thoughts, yet to decide exactly what it is I want to say. And even if this blog is no longer purely mine, even if it has become something different, changed and morphed by the expectations and desires of others, it is still, first and foremost, my canvas, and I refuse to compromise the quality of it by writing something that I have yet to wrap my head around.

Instead, I will offer you something pure and simple today–a way to ease myself back into something I love. Chocolate mousse is a quintessential French dessert, a classic combination of eggs, chocolate and cream. As in much of French cuisine, it is in the preparation, not the ingredients, that this dessert becomes what it is, and as I watched the girls carefully bring the 20 some-odd eggwhites to soft peaks (by hand), I remembered what it was like, for me, when this blog was just a baby, just a little something I did to pass the time.

Chocolate Mousse (serves 20-some-odd people)

1.25 kilos good-quality dark chocolate
50 centiliters crème fraîche
20 eggs

Chop the chocolate into chunks, and melt slowly over a double boiler, stirring constantly. When the chocolate is completely melted, stir in the crème fraîche. Leave the mixture in the double boiler, with the heat turned off, while you prepare the eggs.

Carefully separate the egg whites from the yolks. In a clean metal or glass bowl, beat the egg whites until soft peaks form.

Beat the yolks and combine them with the chocolate. Fold this mixture carefully into the egg whites. Chill several hours before serving with fromage frais or whipped cream.

Powered by WordPress