Diary: October 16, 2002
#1
Posted 16 October 2002 - 05:05 PM
I still have not nailed down my externship. I have taken this week off from the hunt because our next tests are on Friday, and I need the time to study and prepare.
We made our first venison today. I have never eaten venison before, not even before I became a vegetarian. I am glad we waited so long to prepare it, because I am now somewhat acclimated to eating red meat and was not as sensitive to the gamier flavors in the venison as I would have been a few months ago. As it was, the venison we got at school was farm-raised and not particularly gamy. As Chef Peter said, it tasted like very red meat. I found it fairly easy to trim, and had no trouble tying it up. We dusted it with porcini dust, seared it, and finished it in the oven. We served it with a traditional sauce poivrade. I was a little sorry we didn’t make the grand veneur sauce we talked about, because I think red currant jelly would taste nice with the venison.
Since we went down to two-person teams, we have had shorter menus. A week and a half into the small teams, I have started to enjoy the extra work. I like that I feel in charge of lots of things and have no trouble getting it all done. Today I trimmed and cleaned the venison, cut all the mirepoix for the sauce (we made one big pot of sauce for everybody to share), made a spinach-ricotta ravioli filling, made alfredo sauce for the ravioli, and put together the parsnips we served with the venison.
The last twenty minutes before service are the best. Everybody crowds along the line to get everything cooked, and if you don’t have a rhythm then your plates won’t be ready at the time you need them. Today’s sequence: finish alfredo, strain alfredo, color blanched parsnips, season parsnips, roast parsnips in oven, season and dust venison, sear venison, finish venison in oven, reduce sauce, mount sauce with butter, remove parsnips and finish with butter and honey, rest venison, and plate everything up. My teammate Chris helped my out by finishing the parsnips, and he made the raviolis and the roulade we had for dessert. He brought out currant-rye bread he’d baked for eating with the meal.
I have noticed that my approach to preparing food is spilling over into my approach to other tasks. On laundry night, I automatically start my laundry right when I get home so it will be dry and folded before bedtime. When I shop for food, I attack the store in the most efficient way possible, and I load items onto the conveyor belt at the cashier stand in a specific order: cold items together, heavy items interspersed with lighter ones, fragile things like eggs and greens last. (The place where I shop, a natural foods co-op, is a bag-your-own type of place, and I bring my own bags.) I even take medications in the most efficient way possible, finishing up with an inhaled medication right before brushing my teeth. Days when I do these things out of order or offhandedly are almost always bad days; I don’t know if it’s because I’m out of sorts to begin with or if it’s because I approached the tasks unthinkingly (thereby putting myself in a bad mood).
Saddle of Venison with Sauce Poivrade
Venison bones
Peanut oil
Mirepoix
Parsley
Thyme
Bay leaf
Red wine
Black pepper
Demi-glace or game stock
Venison
Sea salt and white pepper
Porcini dust
Butter
Color bones in peanut oil. Color mirepoix in peanut oil in separate pan. Add mirepoix to bones. Add parsley, thyme, bay leaf, and red wine. Cook down. Add seasoning, demi-glace. Boil, skim, simmer, and strain. Season venison. Dredge in porcini dust and sear in peanut oil. Finish in oven. Mount sauce with butter and serve over venison.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#2
Posted 16 October 2002 - 08:45 PM
I was amazed. It was tender, thick and incredibly meaty without being gamey. The sauce was Grand Veneur and you are right. The curranty thing was wonderful.
The section about how you have become more organized in your personal life was inspiring. Think I'll go fold some laundry!
Margaret McArthur
"Take it easy, but take it."
Studs Terkel
1912-2008
A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites
margaretmcarthur.com
#3
Posted 17 October 2002 - 05:30 AM
VarmintBites
#4
Posted 17 October 2002 - 06:52 AM
Yes!I have a knife callous.
You go girl!
"Behold, I teach you the ubermunch. The ubermunch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the ubermunch shall be the meaning of the earth!" -Fritzy N.
"It's okay to like celery more than yogurt, but it's not okay to think that batter is yogurt."
Serving fine and fresh gratuitous comments since Oct 5 2001, 09:53 PM
#5
Posted 17 October 2002 - 10:47 AM
#6
Posted 17 October 2002 - 02:32 PM
#7
Posted 17 October 2002 - 05:55 PM
Varmint, I didn't get red currant jelly from your grandma...I think I got raspberry-blackberry jelly. Still haven't cracked it. Was there red currant jelly among the many jars?
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#8
Posted 19 October 2002 - 05:54 AM
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#9
Posted 19 October 2002 - 08:30 PM
#10
Posted 22 October 2002 - 02:23 PM









