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paul o' vendange

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Posts posted by paul o' vendange

  1. Have really missed squab, so straight from TFL, indulged in foie as well, son has had neither squab nor foie gras, opportune time. Seared breast, red chard and dried black mission figs, foie gras, squab sauce.  

     

    Terrible plate wipe was not from TFL.  Just wanted to clear that up. Neither is the sauce soup.  My family likes sauce, esp. my MIL.  Good idea I provide it.

     

     

     

     

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  2. 5 hours ago, AlaMoi said:

    Bock beers have the alcohol to do a rapid wasting . . . (g)

     I am holding off on a long story about an even longer night, brutal WI farm winter overnight low and outdoor brewing a decoction mash intended as a light (« helles ») bock, a failed lauter screen....

     

    -and a beer my wife ultimately named Hellundback Bock.

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    • Haha 6
  3. 39 minutes ago, patti said:

    Ours was too small, as well! Will definitely make it again. 
     

    Tonight’s dinner was a huge clash of cultures! Tea leaf salad and a cheeseburger, anyone? 🤪

     

    I had a tea leaf salad at a Burmese restaurant a few years ago and it was so delicious that I couldn’t forget it. Unfortunately, I’ve never had an opportunity to have one again. I recently discovered that you could buy kits online, and so I did. While it’s not as good as the one in my memory, it’s still very good. I think having had it only once before I wasn’t sure about proportions. 
     

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    We had some ground beef that we needed to use immediately, hence, the odd pairing. 

     

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    Wow, that looks delicious, Patti.

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  4. 2 hours ago, heidih said:

    Beautiful rye loaf. Those were my old flour proportions but the use of pickle liquid! Where did that come? Your innovation or?

     

    Ditto on all counts.  Was just going to ask as well - what a cool technique and the first I’ve come across it, using the pickling liquid to retard amylases. (!)

     

    An Algerian baker friend of mine vastly prefers rye to wheat, whereas I’m the opposite - mostly because I just don’t have a feel for working within the biochemical constraints of the grain.  My wife is Estonian, rye is their flesh, and it would be awesome to learn more of this. 

    • Like 1
  5. Whoops, spaced this one, sorry.  I hear you on him.  I can’t quite pin it but somehow his masterly blending of the rustic and the refined gets me. His atelier and flavors of France especially have been really rewarding for me personally.  I am guessing the Grand Livre will likely never be used, which kills me since I am pathetic in thinking any book, even pretty pictures, sure looks swell in my stacks.  Likely not at that price, and not in this lifetime with Alba truffles, caviar, and endless mounds of foie. (bummed face).

     

    Thanks on the book ideas.  I’ve got Astrance on my cart but can’t seem to find it anywhere but the stratospheric Amazon thing ($609?  Do I hear $3103.69?  $1423? ), but very much hope to get it at some point.

     

    Ironically your post came back to memory as I received Alexandre Gauthier’s book, which I’d had high hopes for.  Pretty disappointed.  Aside from the fact it isn’t a hardcover in any way I’ve ever seen (exposed binding?  Is that a “cover board” or something like that? Really a collection of gorgeous food and idyllic country, very spare on writing. Just not my style.

     

    Saw a reviewer who felt the same, and he or she recommended Astrance very highly, which triggered me in remembering your post.  Thanks again for the rec’s and thoughts.  Eyes opened....!

     

    At the end of the day, I should just admit and accept I’m a terminal classicist, with limited gifts - merely an eternal longing for mastery, not invention. Good god...just got “Les Fastes de la Cuisine Française” today.  In my heart, I’d be no happier than learning at the feet of Carême...

     

    edit:  Thanks on the Alleno, too.  Know almost nothing about him so was grateful for the suggestion.  A bit steep there too for the moment, but eyes peeled.

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  6. On 3/13/2021 at 10:53 AM, blue_dolphin said:

    It does have some tang but just isn't quite as puckery as I'd like.  It uses both lemon juice and orange juice so one could go with all lemon to boost the tang.  On the upside, it's not as tooth-achingly sweet as some lemon desserts can be. 

     

    Also from the Citrus Shrine chapter is this Margarita with Salt Inside p 155:

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    This one simmers preserved lime rind and pulp with sugar and water to make a syrup. It's 1:2, sugar:water, so less sweet than a standard simple syrup and has salt and funky notes from the preserved citrus. 

    The cocktail has either tequila or mezcal, the syrup, plus fresh lime and orange juices.  No triple sec or other orange liqueur.  I am not a fan of salt rims on margarita glasses but I do very much like the savory flavor that the syrup adds. 

    I made this first with kumquats and now with lime.  The kumquat version was stellar.  I might chop up another piece of lime and simmer this syrup a bit more to boost up the flavor. Or maybe add a couple of those limequats I preserved.  

    I've also tried both tequila and mezcal.  Without the competition of an orange liqueur, the mezcal flavor comes through nicely. 

     

    Fun fact:  I learned that Pechuga mezcal supposedly acquires some of its flavors from a piece of raw meat that's set up to hang inside the still, above the liquid.  Fruits, nuts and other ingredients are also added.  This particular brand uses turkey breast.  Note the colorful turkey on the label, surrounded by pictures of fruits and nuts:

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    It tastes spicy and fruity, not smoky at all. I did not taste turkey but honestly, I was trying not to think about it!

     

    Going back to the Little Green Dress chapter, I made another batch of the Cherry Tomato Baked Feta...Surprise! p 25.  This stuff is so good.  I'm happy to just spoon it on to hot, crusty bread and wash it down with some red wine. 

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    I was going to serve it over fish, per the recipe, but I forgot to pull that out to thaw and was getting hungry so figured I could pretend this was like the TikTok baked feta and used it as a pasta sauce:

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    I liked this but the LGD adds quite a bit of acidity so some might prefer to dial back on the amount of LGD used.   That, or add some protein like chicken, shrimp or garbanzo beans, which I think would balance it out. 

     

     

     

     

    Man I wish there were a dozen or so more emoticons....YIKES. YUMMMMM.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  7. 11 minutes ago, heidih said:

    Nice! I've only made them once with the recipe in Julia Child Vol 2. They were much appreciated by all and easier than they look - and that was just regular AP flour and Knudsen butter (been quite a while). As things calm down I may be inspired to bake again. The recovery home down the road has a culinary training program and the guys are always eager to learn and I like to teach. Thanks for the inspiration.

     

    That’s so cool it’s in her book.  Been a long time since I’ve visited Julia, about time I say hello again. (« Julie and Julia » doesn’t count, I know!).

     

    No false modesty here, Heidi, but you and so many here are the inspirations.  I’m really grateful all you all have done to keep this community thriving.

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  8. Same dough day later, some palmiers.  I’m hoping this isn’t just a one off, but even after an additional turn this morning (to coat dough in sugar before final rollout), and using 100% bread flour (11.7% protein), this dough was a real pleasure to work with.

     

    Now, of course, there is that $10K yearly Beurre d’Isigny or Echire budget I have to work out with the family.🥳

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  9. 58 minutes ago, heidih said:

    Like the name and look. What was the lemon filling? I've never had the pleasure of lemon filling in puff pastry.

     

    Thanks Heidi.  The filling is really nothing more than a pastry cream with a microplane zest of a whole lemon.  The starch is 100% cornstarch, which is interesting to me.  Way too rubbery on it’s own, I think it works great as a filling here.

    • Like 2
  10. 12 hours ago, Mutleyracers said:

    Lately I have been using the king arthir no knead bread which is so easy, looks good and tastes awesome.

     

    Was trying the ken forkish white poolish bread but I cannot get the dough to form any shape at all. I use a flor with a protein content of 11% which he uses but mine is nothing like his in his video. It just falls flat as while trying to fold and pincer. 

     

    Anyone had success with this.

     

    I go with Central Milling, usually their organic line, for my white flour and whole wheat in fine and medium.  

     

    I originally tried their « Beehive, » which comes in at 10.7% protein.  Great baguettes and levain, as long as hydration isn’t high on either.  My base from them is their Baker’s choice Plus, clocking in at 11.7%.  Performs beautifully.  

     

    Interesting ng the whole wheat they sell is listed as « Hi-Pro,” in three milling grades.  They tout a gentle milling process that significantly lessens shearing.  I’ve made 100% WW Hi-Pro (fine) with spring and openness approaching straight white flour levains.  My go-to is my best emulation of a traditional French pain au levain, with 63% Baker’s Choice and 27% Hi-Pro fine.  I like it a lot.

    • Like 3
  11. 7 minutes ago, ElsieD said:

    We are fan favourities of the show.  I decided to have a look back at the shows and was saddened to see that three chefs who had appeared on Top Chef have died: Floyd Cardozo, Aaron Grissom and one I liked very much, Fatima Ali.  She was only 29 and had this huge smile.  Very sad.

     

    Oh god, I didn’t about Floyd and Aaron.

     

    Fatima’s passing ripped a hole...like you I was smittened by her a great deal.  Seeing her so ill and reading some of her final words, knowing she and Padma had become good friends through to her death was all so bittersweet, stings every time to see such a beautiful life gone.  

     

    In a different way, a hole opens up every time we see Tony Bourdain.  God we miss him too, and still don’t fully get it that he’s gone.  Such a force of wild nature, who closed the world’s strangeness to itself.

     

    Peace to their memories.  

    • Like 1
  12. Watching season 3 as we write.  Tre, a strong fave of mine, eliminated last night.  

     

    My my wife actually worked with Dale at a Chicago spot.  He was bartending in a sort of breather.  He’d been on the show by then, but couldn’t talk.  Trippy to see him on the show. 

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  13. 27 minutes ago, gfweb said:

    Nick is very successful in Philadelphia. Occasionally has appearances with Perrier. He's doing fine. 

     

    What is this tanking with Ripert? 

     

    That’s good to hear. I didn’t agree with the ultimate call, but he’s clearly a gifted chef.  King Georges is a fantastic look at the two of them, you’ve probably seen it.

     

    Edit:  Ripert, sorry.  I’d read in some sources that they’d had a falling out as a result of her losing it on elimination.  I regret mentioning it as a bit gossipy.  I see they’ve been together in interviews and events since.  

  14. 1 hour ago, Eatmywords said:

    Yea, I used to get bummed when a season ended too.  My favorite show for so many years.  Got as far season 14 but then I can't remember why I didn't continue.  Maybe I'll see if I can stream 15-17.  If you had to pick one?

     

    Oh god, impossible, lol!  A lot of them I’m so fond of some of the chefs and so I get bummed when they get eliminated.  I also get pissed when one of my faves loses to the wrong chef (imo, of course 😁.  Seasons 2 and 11...).  

     

    Season 11, Nick winning didn’t sit at all well.  Soft spot for Stephanie, Nina too.  Sad thing is, Nick was chef de cuisine for Georges Perrier at Le Bec-Fin, before it closed.

     

    Which brings up a point.  I’m so often blown away by the pedigree many of these chefs have, only to cook so poorly on the show.  Or tanks a relationship with mentors, e.g. season 8, J’en and Eric Ripert.  Yikes! )

    • Like 1
  15. Good. Been through each season multiple times and still, on completing, I get deeply bummed.

     

    Oh, and:

     

    1.  Padma called my bread “beautiful” once, in a tweet.

     

    2.  I exchanged with Tom a bit, on the epochal topic of Gilroy garlic.

     

    My life is complete.

    • Haha 2
  16. I have a few by Chef Ducasse - Flavors of France, his first book (Riviera), Atelier, his bistro book, maybe a couple I am forgetting.

     

    Let me say at the outset I prefer books that are written with as little adjustment to home limitations as possible.  I want to learn the chef’s techniques, equipment and materials, but above all else, I want to try and capture the chef’s mind, see the inner life and how it expresses in her or his cuisine, and that things not be “simplified” or “adapted” for the home kitchen.

     

    To that end, on Ducasse, I have long looked at his massive bibles, beginning with his first, the Grande Livre de Cuisine, followed by Desserts and finally on Mediterranean cooking.

     

    On the other hand, as they are bloody expensive, I’m loathe to take the plunge if they are basically reference entries, no real techniques, reasoning and/or genesis behind a given recipe, and/or recipes themselves.  

     

    In a word, ignoring the fact a cuisine stuffed with black and white truffles (especially, as is his wont it seems, the latter), foie, and caviar isn’t something I’ll be working but on rare occasions (like, “My Last Supper” rare, lol), is the book useful as a working and teaching text, from the professional kitchen point of view?

     

     

    • Like 1
  17. Terrible sucker for sensory allurement.  Chocolat?, emergency outing to store for movie fix of crappy chocolate.  Babette’s Feast?  Off  to the races and little sleep.  The Cook, the Thief, his Wife, and her Lover? Don’t ask.

     

    Reading through « My Last Supper » (apologies - iPhone stuck on French, no idea why), pg. 126, Martin Picard in a late fall woods. Before my body went on permanent strike, used to be my favorite place to be alone, or stalking deer in vast wilderness tracts with my son. He references a recipe for snipe from the 1984 edition.  And I am screwed yet again as I must have it.

     

    I prefer to read in French, both to keep alive in the language and because I overwhelmingly prefer to read stuff in its original language (leaving my options to a good French, a middling Spanish and a laughably bad German).

     

    I couldn’t find a purely French 1984 (Edited by Robert Courtine).  I do see a French-English version, but don’t know if it is faithful to the original.

     

    Anyone have it know anything about the bilingual edition?  In their contents, are they identical?

     

    French-English:

     

     

     

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  18. I used to get whole moulard in wholesale from Christian Gasset of Au Bon Canard but that was a long time ago and he is more than busy supplying chefs around the country.

     

    I really like Muscovy but love moulard.  I’m coming up empty on whole moulard.  Anyone have any source?

  19. 4 hours ago, FlashJack said:

    Paul, I too have the 1961 edition I paid reasonable money for and another from the mid 70s I bought very cheaply. The early one is a gem; the latter one a backward step (from memory there is no recipe for swan).

     

    A man of your habits should look to an older, not a newer, edition. They cut down on butter and fat over the years.

    Swan, I’d forgotten!

     

    That should be a helluva bbq.  Hon, can you pass that giant bird with flames shooting out it’s nostrils?  Oh, and the lard pie, with live doves - too much? 😆

     

    You have me thinking (you all do, actually), I should be going backwards in editions, not forwards.  In all seriousness, thank you @FlashJack, it’s a perfect idea.

    • Like 5
  20. 1 hour ago, Margaret Pilgrim said:

    Sounds interesting.    We love condrieu with cheese, and are on the prowl for other viogniers "less cher".    How do you think this would work?    How did you drink it, with food or sipping?

    Very interested as well, sounds delicious.  Viognier can be such an imp, but the right marriage is wonderful.  Funk note is interesting.  Love it in farmhouse ciders (Normandy), saison and touches in certain British ales done traditionally and on cask.  Can’t say I’ve picked it up in a wine, and it’s presence especially in a viognier would be great interesting.  Thanks, @weinoo.

     

    @JoNorvelleWalker, very cool.  Brewer very interested in traditional methods (British ales).  My wife is Estonian and she loves their version of sahtis, runoff in spruce boughs and very open to “good” infections during fermentation.

     

    Before Covid, for an anthropology course my son was taking, I helped him put together a best guess on late kingdom Egyptian beer.  Mash “brick” is fermented on mash in a clay pot, as well.  Would  be interesting to follow the thread on the process you describe.  

     

    So - mad for French (Pinot) burgundies, always on the hunt for the rare price break at better appellations, or solid wines at village or regional cru.  Always up for new or undiscovered Willamette Valley as well.  Back in 2005 my wife won the national fellowship to attend IPNC - nice.  Ample time with Martine Saulnier, Riedel, tons of extraordinary makers, tons of great wine. I ran our restaurant.  I’ve never gotten over the jealousy.😂

     

    So if anyone has ideas....🥳

    • Like 1
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