Archive for December, 2014

Saucier – Beginning at the Beginning

Posted in Books, Food with tags , , , , , , , on December 27, 2014 by David McInerny

IMG_2603I think I can trace back my desire to get serious about cooking to a single evening. My mom was visiting us in Chicago with her best friend. Her friend was a refined Londoner I had known my whole life, and whose Italian home I had visited any number of times in Perugia, so it was a pleasure to have them stay while they explored the city for a few days. They arrived too exhausted to endure a restaurant, but my mom asked if there was anything easy for them to snack on. Thinking of all the meals these two women had made for me over the years, I felt it was imperative that I whip up something nice for them. My wife wasn’t home yet, so being on my own, I pulled out a paperback copy of the Fanny Farmer Cookbook I used when I occasionally took over the responsibility for making dinner.

I wanted something quick to make, so I chose a simple recipe that has now long been my “go-to” meal-in-ten-minutes specialty: scrambled eggs topped with asparagus tips sautéed in Parmesan butter. They loved it, and Sally, the English expatriate, looked at me and asked me how I had learned to cook like that. That galvanized my desire to learn more about cooking and, admittedly, maybe garner more fabulous praise like Sally’s.

Soon after I arranged a week off from work to take cooking classes from a school in the western Chicago suburbs run by two retired one-star Michelin French chefs. At their recommendation I took the course on making classic French sauces. In retrospect, I should have been paid by these talented but cunning cretins to take these classes. What they didn’t say was they ran a small, eight table bistro in the front of the kitchen, and my other classmate and I were responsible for all the prep to serve dinner for the single seating at 6pm each evening. We arrived a 7am each morning, and before there was any mention of possibly making, let’s say, some French sauces, we sharpened knives, cleaned chickens and rabbits, and chopped mirepoix until our hands shook. Around noon we lunched on remainders of the previous day’s meal, and finally started roasting veal neck bones for stock.

We made oceans of stock, boatloads of demi-glace, and mounds of glace. From there the sauces finally flowed, and each evening around dark, I’d arrive home exhausted but equipped with a quart of the sauce I’d spent the day making over and over until the chefs declared it just right. The neighbors would be waiting in the cul de sac with bread in hand, waiting to dip right in before I barely got out of the car. The desire to please people with food has never left me.

I still use that old copy of Fanny Farmer because it remains the vital guide to overall American cuisine, but I’ve kept my saucier skills sharp with a copy of the Cordon Bleu Cookbook given to me for my birthday that year from one of those grateful neighbors. This year though, I’ve fallen in love with a new sauce book by Holly Herrick. Her Sauces cookbook in The French Cook series (Gibbs Smith Publishing, 2013), is a tidy yet complete volume of all the essentials. Cordon Bleu trained, she presents recipes and techniques that are classic, and the photos (and what good is a cookbook without photos?) are plentiful, large and in full color. I strongly recommend Sauces  for anyone looking to cook well from the start, or to raise their skills a classic notch. As I often tell people who don’t even like to spend time in the kitchen, if you can make a quick and simple Béchamel, you’ve just turned a boiled box of pasta into a French culinary delight. Bon appetit!

 

Sabatini in Rome

Posted in Family, Food, Travel with tags , , on December 22, 2014 by David McInerny

736041-1I usually wouldn’t find myself wandering an antique mall of my own volition, but I will confess that I don’t fight the opportunity when asked. I especially like the ones where there are booths with absentee owners, where you take your purchase up to a central cashier. The pressure to browse is nonexistent, and I get to imagine what kind of person would spend time and money collecting late Victorian piss pots and then decide other people would want to buy them. (If I’ve just described you, well, I’m sure it’s a fulfilling hobby.) Anyway, I tend to look at the old books on sale, hoping for some pristine gem, but people tend to take better care of old Brady Bunch lunch boxes than first edition Steinbeck’s twice that age.

This is not to say I haven’t made purchases. One of my favorites is a pretty black and white 19th century etching reproduction of the Duomo in Florence, Italy. I had been wondering if I wanted it when I saw the owner had labeled it “A Scene in Paris.” That clinched the deal, and it currently hangs in my office at work.

My last find was a wonderfully sentimental one. I spent a few years in Rome growing up, and my parent’s favorite restaurant was Sabatini in the Trastevere section which hugs the Tiber river on the southwestern side of the Eternal City. It’s a cozy refuge from the noise of Rome, filled with family-owned pizzerias and art shops, and with streets too narrow for cars, making it a pedestrian’s dream. There is only space for one small piazza, and on one end of this cobbled idyll resides Sabatini. Whenever we had visitor’s from the States, we always took them there for dinner. On my last visit to Rome, I strolled through Trastevere and Sabatini is still there, vibrant as ever.

In those days, dining and smoking went hand in hand, and many European restaurants placed colorful ceramic glazed ashtrays on the tables with the establishment’s name and address on it. Patrons were welcome to take them home, much in the way we swipe pens from hotels today and unwittingly advertise for them. Sabatini also had elegant terra cotta water pitchers on each table emblazoned with the restaurant’s vital statistics. My mom always loved them, but they must have been for sale, because I don’t remember one ever displayed at home. Or maybe they were too big for her to stuff into her purse when the waiter wasn’t looking.

Regardless, in Prairie Village, KS recently I was walking through an antique mall and looked into a booth with a fair amount of dusty old books. I stepped in and noticed that, being used as a bookend, was a Sabatini water pitcher. I don’t remember what is cost, but it wasn’t much. I would have paid anything within a country mile of reasonable for it. I keep it in my own bookcase now. It’s just a simple, mass produced hunk of ceramic, but I can’t look at it without remembering how much my mom looked forward to an evening at Sabatini. I guess that’s the whole allure of rummaging through an antique mall. You just never know…

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Robert Plant – “lullaby and…The Ceaseless Roar”

Posted in Music with tags , , on December 18, 2014 by David McInerny

Robert_Plant_Lullaby_and_the_Ceaseless_Roar_coverRobert Plant’s 2014 effort is arguably both subtly complex and quite listenable. His successful evolution from Zeppelin frontman to creative rock solo artist to now, within the course of his last three albums, creator of a new genre (Country & Welshtern?) is nothing short of astounding. Throughout all of his diversity, however, runs the common theme of roots music, whether it’s the Delta blues of Willie Dixon or the rural folk themes of his native England.

“Little Maggie,” a tradition tune, opens the disc and thematically sets the tone of a beautifully played, written and produced work. Each song pulses lightly and evenly from the last, making the album eminently enjoyed as a single work. The rhythms are set back in the mix but still drive each track soulfully. English pipes and fiddles are used sparingly and with intelligent effect. Guitar work is integrated into the melodies with passion but without bombast. But it’s Plant’s voice that is on display, and it’s an excellent voice this man has retained and developed over four decades and more.

At first listening, there are early moments when one feels a song or two might slide into something closer to Enya or even Gerry & the Pacemakers, but the fear is unwarranted. This is very good work, and my personal standouts are “Embrace Another Fall” and “Up on the Hollow Hill (understanding Arthur).” Images of fog clinging to castle ruins, ghosts of forlorn lovers, medieval milk maids at dawn and all sorts of cool English images flow through the songs and out of Robert’s mouth. In fact, the music is unquestionably folk, but there are deceptive and delicious layers to it that make me believe that “lullaby” has music awards coming in its very near future.

Richard III – DNA Match

Posted in Books, Travel with tags , , , , , , on December 3, 2014 by David McInerny

_79448768_79429127You can’t make this stuff up. Two years ago a skeleton was discovered under a parking lot in Leicester, England. Historians had posited that King Richard III had been buried there in what was Greyfriars Abbey. They dug, and they found remains. Today the BBC reports that test results of DNA from the skeleton matches DNA from known descendants of Richard with 99.99% accuracy.

Briefly, Richard III was the last English king to die in battle, in this case the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, slain by the army of who would become king Henry VII. This marked the end of the Plantagenet royal line and the beginning of the Tudors. (See my December 17, 2012 blog for a review of Shakespeare’s Richard III.)

Remarkably, the DNA evidence also reveals something else. It appears that somewhere along the line the female chromosomes picked up an anomaly that can only be explained by … infidelity. Unfortunately, it can’t be determined whether the infidelity occurred before or after Richard or, even stranger, whether the indiscretion is to be found on the Plantagenet or Tudor side, since both families sprung from the same ancestor, Edward III.

Was either royal line legitimate? Should the current royal family be under scrutiny? Who knows, but look for juicy, “based on a true story” historical dramas springing from British PBS over the next few years. Downton Abbey, move over, historical reality TV is on the way!

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