Showing posts with label galette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label galette. Show all posts

The Last Days of Summer



    I have always said that September is my spring.

    As summer comes to an end, I feel a tremendous sense of beginning. Excited for new things to happen and the year to unfold.



    We spent our last days in the Basque Country exploring. Little corners of the world that only my dad knows well. Remote villages, a river stream lined with fig trees, or a field filled with wildflowers where we spotted a few leftover poppies from spring. These are the places where my dad feels at ease and loves to share with us.



    In the nature preserve of Pagoeta, we saw the first signs of autumn as maple trees were beginning to turn colors. The skies were bright blue and leaves burnt orange. Jon followed my dad's footsteps with a wooden stick in hand looking for mushrooms and picking wild strawberries. "Aitite, can you tell me the tales of fairies and mountain giants?" Jon asked. Stories that my dad tells to him at night, before bedtime. He listened in awe as we walked the forest.

    We picked wild blackberries in Urkiola and ate them with yogurt panna cotta that I made for dessert.



    During our visits, my parents' home becomes a gathering place. We sit tightly around their kitchen table, elbow to elbow, eating course after course. For one of our last meals, I cooked a risotto with russulas my dad had found and red kuri squash I brought back from our trip to Iparralde. "This is so good!" my brother shouted -- nothing makes me feel better.

    For dessert, a simple galette with mirabelle plums, white nectarines, and red currants. It was gone in minutes.



    We also picked apples, figs, and peaches from my uncle Javi's garden. We took a walk around the property with him as he talked about his passion for gardening and pastry, his day job. "This has been a strange growing season" he said "Tomatoes have not done well, yet chestnuts are already opening up". Indeed. All the chestnut trees were full of bright green, prickly cocoons. Some even open -- a sign of things to come.

    Back at home I made a apple, prune, and yogurt cake, similar to this one. The last days of summer would not be the same without an apple cake.

    No, they would not.



    Red Kuri Squash and Wild Mushroom Risotto

    Serves 4 to 6

    4 to 5 cups chicken stock
    2 Tbs olive oil
    1 large shallot, minced
    1 clove garlic, minced
    1/2 leek, washed and sliced
    1/2 medium red kuri squash, peeled and diced into 1/2-inch pieces
    1 cup thinly sliced wild mushrooms (we used the russulas we picked)
    1/2 tsp salt
    1 1/2 cups arborio rice
    1/4 cup txakoli or any dry white wine you like
    1/2 cup finely grated Idiazabal or Parmesan cheese
    2 Tbs finely chopped parsley


    Begin by heating the chicken stock over medium heat. Keep it warm until ready to use.

    In a stock pot, heat the olive oil over medium high heat. Add the shallots, garlic, and leek. Cook until soft but not browned, about 3 minutes.

    Add the diced red kuri squash. Stir and cook for 5 to 7 minutes. Add the mushrooms and cook for another 3 minutes. Season with salt.

    Add the rice and stir it well so all the oil and flavors coat the rice. Add the txakoli or dry white wine and cook for 30 seconds until alcohol evaporates. Add 1 cup of chicken stock and cook stirring constantly until liquid is absorbed. Then proceed by adding another 1/2 cup of stock. Continue to cook the risotto storring constantly and adding more stock as needed until rice is cooked al dente, about 18 minutes.

    Off the heat, add the grated Idiazabal and parsley. Stir to combine and serve immediately.

Post Title

The Last Days of Summer


Post URL

https://mercymadame.blogspot.com/2011/09/last-days-of-summer.html


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There Is Always Chocolate In The Summer





    Summer is usually all about fruit for me. Peaches, apricots, cherries, melon, and a array of sweet and tart berries. I turn them into tarts, muffins, sorbets and ice cream... Sometimes even into savory dishes. But one can only stay away from chocolate for so long. I try, believe me -- with no result.







    I spent a lot of time at home last week working on the finishing touches of the manuscript. "What is new?" you might be wondering. So does everyone else in my life.



    "Maybe you should get some fresh air?" my mom tells me everyday over the phone. "Go for a walk and get some fresh air" I'm counting down the days when I get to do that with her.



    One more week and I will be back home.







    I have been revisiting some of the recipes in the book. Baking them over and over again and seeing that they work every time gives me a sense of peace. I can get very obsessive about details and when I think of a recipe that was tested a while ago, I tend to think "What if it doesn't work!". I panic. Then I jump into the kitchen.



    Last week there were many chocolate recipes. I craved them. The intensity and richness.







    I made my favorite dark chocolate and hazelnut cake. Very moist... almost the texture of a brownie. It works every time.



    I also made chocolate pots de creme with raspberries and currants. You can find a similar recipe here. And with leftover chocolate tart dough, I made a chocolate, black and red raspberry, and currant galette.



    I certainly got my fix.







    In a few more days, I will be done. My manuscript will be in the hands of my editor and there will be a big sigh of relief (mine, of course). Then we will be off to the Basque Country for some quiet family time, food, and another Robin Food show.



    But for now. I must return to my book.... with a slice of chocolate cake right next to me.

Post Title

There Is Always Chocolate In The Summer


Post URL

https://mercymadame.blogspot.com/2011/08/there-is-always-chocolate-in-summer.html


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How To Stay Cool



    Summer approaches and the heat is already getting to me.

    This is the time when all I can think about is fresh fruit, chilled soups, salads, and lots and lots of sorbet pops.



    I bought the first saturn peaches of the season a few days ago. They are nature's candy, if you ask me. (I seem to say that about all fruit, don't I?). Soft, full of water, and sweet. We have been enjoying them sliced for breakfast every morning.

    "Let's make an orange and peach smoothie" Jon asked. It hit the spot after we came back from a swim.




    It has been so hot that I barely turn on the oven at home. We grilled outside and I made a few salads with ingredients from the farm.

    The kids and I went to pick tomatoes at the farm early in the morning. I guided them on which ones to pick and they quickly got the hang of it. Even as early as nine in the morning, it was unbearable to stand out in the sun, and we left quickly, just after saying hello to the baby goats and chickens.



    Back at home, we turned the tomatoes into a mid morning snack. Drizzle of olive oil, squeeze of lemon juice, and a touch of pink salt.

    For lunch, a refreshing red lentil, salmon, radish, and fennel salad inspired by a recipe I had seen at Elle à Table.

    "No dessert?" C. asked. "It's too hot to bake" I replied.

    All I got was a look.



    So I pulled out some mulberries from the freezer and made a quick batch of mulberry, millet and poppy seed cakes. And to take advantage that the oven was on, I ended up baking a galette with leftover tart dough from a recipe for the book, saturn peaches,and raspberries.



    And summer is almost here.

    Mulberry, Millet and Poppy Seed Cakes

    Makes 18 cakes

    1/2 cup superfine brown rice flour
    1/2 cup millet flour
    1/3 cup almond flour
    1/4 cup potato starch
    2 Tbs tapioca starch
    1 Tbs poppy seeds
    1 tsp baking powder
    1 tsp baking soda
    1/4 tsp salt
    2 eggs, room temperature
    1/2 cup natural cane sugar
    1/3 cup applesauce
    1/3 cup coconut milk
    1 Tbs lemon juice
    1/3 cup melted ghee
    1/2 cup mulberries (mine were frozen)


    Pre-heat oven to 350F.

    In a large bowl, whisk together the first nine ingredients. In a separate bowl, whisk together the rest of wet ingredients. Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix until incorporated. Fold in the mulberries.

    Pour the batter into muffin molds lined with baking papers. bake for 18 to 20 minutes until a skewer inserted in the center comes out dry.

    Cool in the pan for 5 minutes and then transfer to a cooling rack. Store them in an airtight container for up to 2 days.

    Red Lentil, Salmon and Fennel Salad

    Serves 4

    1 cup red lentils, rinsed several times
    8 ounces sockeye salmon
    5 Tbs olive oil
    1 medium fennel bulb, thinly sliced
    6 radishes, thinly sliced
    Arugula
    Watercress
    1 Tbs lemon juice
    1 tsp dijon mustard
    Salt and pepper


    Place the lentils in a medium saucepan and cover them with cold water plus 1 inch. Bring the liquid to a boil, reduce heat to medium low, cover the pot, and cook the lentils for 8 minutes until they are al dente. Drain them and rinse them in cold water. Reserve.

    In a medium saute pan, heat 1 Tbs of live oil over medium heat. Season the salmon with salt and pepper. Place the salmon skin side down. Cook for 3 minutes. Turn it over and cook it for 1 to 2 minutes longer depending on the thickness. Turn onto a clean plate and let it cool. When cool enough to handle, flake it with a fork and reserve.

    In a large bowl, toss together the red lentils, salmon, fennel, radishes and greens. Make a quick vinaigrette with the dijon, lemon juice and 1/4 cup olive oil. Drizzle the vinaigrette over the salad. Season with salt and pepper. Toss well and serve in glass jars.

Post Title

How To Stay Cool


Post URL

https://mercymadame.blogspot.com/2011/06/how-to-stay-cool.html


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What Basque Cooking Is About



    It has been hot in South Florida this past few days, reminding us that the cool weather that I love so much is leaving us soon. Mornings are still cool, but temperatures soared into mid to high 80s during the day.

    This is the peak of growing season. It was really noticeable when I visited Robert and Paula at their farm Sunday afternoon. I had to get my weekly eggs and say hello to the baby goats and chickens.

    Their tomatoes were ripening, the squash were also ready to be harvested and all the herbs were flowering. All this warmth and abundance of produce put us in the summer spirit.



    "What do you want to have for lunch?" mom asked after breakfast. You see, this is how it goes in our family. We finish one meal, clean up, and start thinking about the next one. Is this normal?

    "Let's stop at Whole Foods after the farmers' market and see what kind of fish they have today" I told her.

    When we arrived, we picked up a whole yellow-eyed snapper. Fresh as can be. "Why don't we make your fish soup? I would love that". We smiled and proceeded with local clams, mussels, and Key West pink shrimp. I was anxious to get home and start cooking.




    While my mom was busy in the kitchen making the fish stock, prepping all the vegetables, and also cooking a batch of arroz con leche, Miren and I ate a bowl of heirloom cherry tomatoes with olive oil and sea salt.

    We went outside to look at the flowering herbs and our wild strawberry plant. There is one ripe strawberry at the moment. I think I will wait one more day to pick it. There are some more ripening and there is such anticipation in the family. They are nature's candy for sure.




    When we came back inside, dad took over baby watching duties. By the time I walked into the kitchen, mom had the arroz con leche cooling and the fish soup ready. "I'm waiting for you to take photos so I can add the fish into it!". She's amazing. So efficient. And well, me?... procrastinating.



    But I did manage to make a quick galette with leftover dough from the book shoot. Tossed together strawberries, rhubarb, apple, sugar, and chamomile leaves to make a super simple filling. By the time I photographed the soup, the galette was ready.

    "Mahaire!" I shouted to get my dad's attention who was still bird watching with Miren. Lunch was served.

    And so when people ask me what Basque cooking is all about I say, "taking what is available and fresh, and preparing it as simply as possible". No big fuss. Knowing how to pick the best ingredients, how to smell the fish and look into their eyes to see how old it is... That is what Basque cooking is about.



    All the credit for these dishes goes out to my mom who keeps us nourished and well fed during this crazy time for me. I'm not sure what I would do without her.

    Eskerrik asko amatxu.

Post Title

What Basque Cooking Is About


Post URL

https://mercymadame.blogspot.com/2011/03/what-basque-cooking-is-about.html


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