Showing posts with label frisée. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frisée. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Micro-greens from the garden.


Today, I picked our first homegrown salad. A small one, admittedly, bulked out with some arugula I bought yesterday at the market in Lavelanet. The frilly leaves are frisée, the last-but-one head that resulted from some seedlings I planted back in November. The other leaves are bitter cress which I found growing under the rosemary bush. A small, tufted plant, its leaves have a mustard-y taste. Like many of the other wild things around here, I identified it from the invaluable Eyewitness Handbook to Herbs. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Another Use for Duck Fat


Everywhere is swimming in duck at the moment. This is the big foie gras season. Fat livers make fat ducks which means lots of duck fat. This is one of my favourite ways to get my daily allowance. You find these confited chicken livers in the cooler at the supermarket. Usually, I make a big salad of frisée and chopped onion with a fairly acerbic dressing, then crisp and warm the chicken livers in the fry pan to put on top of the salad at the last moment. Nice with fried potatoes too and I'm playing around with the idea of cooking them with chopped onion, garlic and herbs and whizzing them into a paté

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Lardons and Croutons

    








When the temperature is in the high 20s and low 30s (Celsius), I try to do any cooking in the early morning with the shutters closed and Radio Montaillou playing its engaging mix of vintage North American songs, French hits and--read very slowly--the weather in English. 

     A couple of days ago, I started by making croutons to use up the tag ends of baguette. A smidge of olive oil in the big non-stick pan, then the bread cubes tossed in, crumbs and all. I had vague plans for the toasted breadcrumbs. Maybe an ingredient in the stuffed round courgettes I plan to make later this week? But absent-mindedly (while singing along with Charles Aznavour) threw them out. 

    Croutons done, it was a short mental leap to dealing with the package of lardons that has been sitting in the fridge for the past week (or two) and is fast approaching its "best before" date. 

     Even though they are really only little strips of bacon, there's something about the geometric precision of lardons that elevates them to a higher culinary sphere. Once they were crisped, I drained them on paper towel, and poured the melted bacon fat into a little jar. Maybe I'll make a British variation on croutons by cooking the next batch of stale baguette cubes in it.
 
     Monday, at Mirepoix market, we bought a huge, frizzly-leaved frisée. These lettuces, unlike all the others, the sucrines, the feuille de chène, and others are sold by weight. On this already simmering day, I didn't think we'd want anything heavy for supper so the classic French bistro salad seemed the perfect idea. 

     Traditional recipes call for lardons to be cooked à la minute and the still-warm fat to be poured over the greens. Too heavy for me. I also deviated from the classic recipe by adding thin rounds of green onion to the torn frisée. All I had to do at the last minute was poach a couple of eggs, also bought at yesterday's market from the elderly lady who sits near the wine truck selling them out of a basket. Fresh? Unlike the city eggs I'm used to, these didn't fall apart into vaporous swirls of white, but stayed round, plump and all in one piece. 

     The salad tossed, the croutons and lardons sprinkled on, the egg on top...à table. As we broke into the soft eggs, the yolk combined with the dressing, a glorious mouth-mix of oil, sharpness, and bitter green leaves. There are good reasons it's a classic.