Friday, November 09, 2007

Our Last Dinner Party

|

We hosted our last dinner party one week ago.

No, not really. But it was the last dinner party we’re likely to have in our apartment. Sniff. It’s held a fair number of parties, and it’s a nice space — the dining room is gigantic for an apartment — but I’m looking forward to smoking cuts of meat on the back steps, plucking preserves from the basement, and serving food fresh from my garden.

You might imagine that we would do a blow-out farewell in honor of our current space, but I decided to keep it simple.

Appetizers and Amuse
Just before our guests arrived, I put out an appetizer platter: olives; salumi; homemade pickled red onions; and layered strips of zucchini, carrot, and bell pepper that I marinated overnight in oil and herbs. I poured a nice Prosecco — I always like to greet people with sparkling wine — and we dug in.

After I read Harold McGee’s article about gelatin filtration, I decided to try a butternut squash consomme as an amuse-bouche for this party. I steamed the quartered squash until fork-tender — about 20 minutes — over a simple stock of squash pulp, butter, and seeds, and then I used that liquid to purée the soft, orange flesh. I added water until the soup had a thin consistency and then one package of gelatin for the six cups of soup. I froze it overnight and thawed it for a week in the refrigerator in a sieve. The liquid in the soup seeped through the molecular net and dripped into the bowl below. The result was decidedly strange: An almost clear, light yellow liquid that tasted like pure butternut squash. I made a sage gelée with the intent of plopping tiny balls of it into the consomme, which I served in a small glass, but the jelly was too sticky. Melissa came up with the brilliant idea of “salting” the glasses with the sage jelly by dipping the rim into a bowl of jelly. This sticky rim added just a hint of sage to each sip of squash essence.

As an aside, I tried making fruit leather from the quivering squash mass that remained after the filtration, but I didn’t spread it thinly enough in the dehyrdator. Fruit leather remains an ongoing experiment.

Opener: Fall Salad With Marrow Dumpling
I had a hard time deciding on an opener. I auditioned a tongue and tail terrine from The River Cottage Meat Book, but I decided against it. It was good, but it didn’t seem like a natural step in the dinner. Then I saw a dish in Art Culinaire that featured fried marrow dumplings, quail eggs, caviar, and lobster glaze. I played around with that concept, but I couldn’t find an adaptation that worked for me. The morning of the party, I finally concocted a simple salad: Three leaves of Belgian endive arranged in a Mercedes-Benz symbol and filled with roasted grapes. In one corner, I piled sautéed fennel and bacon; in the other two I drizzled balsamic vinegar. I placed a fried marrow dumpling (scoop marrow, season, refrigerate, cover with egg and bread crumbs, and deep fry) at the center of the plate. I poured a François Pinon Vouvray to accompany the salad, trusting in its acidity to counteract the rich marrow.

Main: Slow-roasted Pork Shoulder With Brussels Sprouts
This wasn’t the prettiest dish I’ve ever plated, but even my talkative internal critic agreed that these slabs of pork, which I rubbed with salt and oregano and slow-roasted at 250° for two hours, were juicy and flavorful. I de-leafed Brussels sprouts and sautéed the greens in duck fat before braising them, and I dressed the meat with a brown butter sauce (which caused a stir in the dining room when it foamed violently after I added vinegar to the hot fat). I served Cantillon’s Rosé de Gambrinus, a raspberry-infused lambic beer, which I joked was a regional pairing: Cantillon is based in Brussels.

Cheese: Montgomery Cheddar
Given that Eat Local queen Jen Maiser was one of our guests, I joked that I tried to source ingredients from as far away as possible, but I only picked up the Montgomery Cheddar, a true English farmhouse cheese, because my cheese shop was out of the much more local Fiscalini bandage-wrapped cheddar. I served a dry Lustau oloroso sherry to complement the rich cheese.

Dessert: Pomegranate Sorbet With Pistachio Tuiles
Since I like to make frozen desserts early in the morning of a dinner party, you can imagine my frustration when I realized the night before that I hadn’t bought enough pomegranates. I had enough time to assemble the sorbet, but the delay stressed me out.

For once, I had success using the whack-with-a-wooden-spoon technique for extracting the blood-red seeds from the halved fruit, and I used a food mill to extract the juice from the ruby drops. I combined the tart liquid with sugar, strained fig jam, vodka, and a bit of red wine vinegar to get the taste right. But even a deep red sorbet isn’t very eye-catching when served naked, so I made lacy pistachio tuiles that I could pose like a sail in the sorbet. A number of my recent dishes have combined red and green in unexpected ways: Maybe all the Christmas decorations in stores have influenced me.

Mignardise: Candied Buddha’s Hand And Pine Nut Brittle
I’ve already written about the pine nut brittle, a simple candy that I’ll make again and again. The candied Buddha’s hand, however, was a morning-of addition. I spotted a Cthulhu-esque Buddha’s hand at Market Hall, and I decided to try candying it. Of course, you have to chop all the pretty yellow tentacles into bite-size strips, but I hoped the unusual flavor would come through in the final product. It did, but I think next time I’ll only blanch it twice instead of the three times I do for normal candied citrus peel. There wasn’t enough bitterness to stand up against the sugary syrup and coating.

Labels: ,

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Dinner With Clotilde

|

Photos by Clotilde Dusoulier
Long-time readers may have noticed that we fell off the entertaining wagon for a time, but we couldn't resist having Clotilde over for dinner when she arrived in the area on her book tour. Even in our first letters to each other, Clotilde commented on how much she enjoyed reading about our dinner parties. We've since become friends, in the real world as well as in the blogosphere, and Melissa and I were thrilled that she'd have time for a quick bite during her Bay Area stay.

She encouraged us to invite whomever we'd like, and we settled on a gaggle of friends we thought would mesh, bloggers and non-bloggers alike. We must have chosen well: At one point, Melissa and I stood in the kitchen listening to the raucous conversation and said, "I think we could leave and they wouldn't notice." Few sounds are more satisfying than a group of friends having a lively conversation over a leisurely meal. We decided not to abandon them, lest they starve or die of thirst.

1999 J. Schram, Schramsberg, California Sparkling Wine
Appetizer
Platter of house-cured duck ham, homemade olives, homemade pickled sour cherries, snap peas steamed and tossed with butter and salt.

The snap pea idea came from Farm, the new restaurant at the Carneros Inn, where instead of olives they bring you a bowl of blanched, lightly dressed, vegetables.

Amuse 1
Hog Island Sweetwater oyster poached in white wine with crème fraîche and Tsar Nicoulai wasabi caviar
Inspired by The Hog Island Oyster Lover's Cookbook, which I intend to review soon.

2003 Norheimer Kirschheck, Dönnhoff, Riesling Spätlese, Nahe, Germany

Amuse 2
Basil-infused custard with orange blossom jelly
Served in a decapitated eggshell.
Entrée
Terrine of foie gras with rhubarb-fennel-watercress salad
Served on toasted slices of homemade pain de mie.


2001 Pickberry Vineyards, Ravenswood, Bordeaux blend, Sonoma Mountain, California
2001 Rancho Salina Vineyards, Ravenswood, Bordeaux blend, Sonoma Valley, California
Main
Duck confit with fava beans, asparagus, morels, and a red wine reduction.



Amontillado Sherry, Lustau
Cheese
Silver Mountain Cheddar (cow's milk, Bravo Farms, Visalia, California) and San Andreas (sheep's milk, Bellwether Farms, Sonoma, California) with salt-roasted almonds, strawberries macerated in extra vecchio traditional balsamic vinegar, and Acme walnut levain.
Dessert
Strawberry-white chocolate ice cream with a vanilla tuile

Liqueur de Poete, Caddell & Williams Germain Robin (thanks meriko)
Mignardise
Chocolate truffles enrobed with cacao nibs
Peanut brittle

Labels: ,

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Vs.! Pollan and Mackey

|

"Pollan-Mackey Smackdown" was the entry on my calendar. Michael Pollan, the tall, thin journalism professor whose The Omnivore's Dilemma described Big Organic and the "supermarket pastorale" of stores such as Whole Foods, and John Mackey, the sandy-haired Average Joe CEO of Whole Foods, had engaged in an open, Internet-wide debate for months, and the two were going to continue it in public. The food blogs buzzed for days when the announcement came.

Mackey knows how to work a crowd. In front of a 2000-person audience where half or more of the members were critics, he tossed gold bits into his 45-minute preamble to tip the balance to his side. He outlined the gray areas around every food issue. He described, in a humble way, how The Omnivore's Dilemma caused him to rethink Whole Foods' business. He mentioned the company's investments, plucking the crowd's heartstrings with feel-good slides that showed farms and the equipment they had bought with loans from the chain. He peppered his talk with first-time announcements of new initiatives, from a "Whole Trade" label for ethically traded foods to a rating system for organic farms. He closed his talk with a question aimed to put his critics off-balance, "I've told you what Whole Foods has been doing about this for the last 27 years. What are you going to do to make these changes happen?"

It's easy to be cynical when the CEO of a major corporation speaks: For instance, a suspiciously similar amount of clapping greeted each announcement of Whole Foods' accomplishments. But Pollan underlined the point that few men in Mackey's position would engage in such an open debate with their critics. Mackey seems sincere enough about his ideals—he sacrificed three or four minutes of his talk to show a video detailing the horror of factory farms, prompting Pollan's comment, "you can tell a P.R. firm didn't make that for you." He has made real changes in response to critics. He has a passion for animal welfare (he's a vegan and good friends with Lauren Ornelas, the head of Viva! USA). He blamed Pollan for exaggerating the industrialization of organic food. "It doesn't seem to have hurt sales too much," said Pollan, alluding to the booming-business numbers for organic food in Mackey's talk.

Few of the men's questions, or the handful they took from the audience, shed new light on the debate the two have had since the middle of last year. Mackey noted that after The Omnivore's Dilemma came out, it became open season on the company. "Trader Joe's is our biggest competition," he said, "but the press hasn't touched them." Mackey asked Pollan what his vision would be, echoing the challenge at the end of the 45-minute talk. Pollan hemmed and hawed but then presented an answer: less corn and more grass, more thinking about food, and transparency throughout the food chain.

There's no doubt the two men disagree about a number of issues, but this debate, close to a year in duration, has created notable changes in the Whole Foods chain and has given the public much to think about. Even I have softened my view of the company; although their anti-union stance and the obliteration of small, established organic grocers remain sticking points that keep them off my normal shopping beat.

I distrust Mackey as I distrust any Fortune 500 CEO, but my hats off to him for setting an example that few other CEOs have the courage to follow.

Labels: