Month: May 2016

sautéed ramps, fried eggs, tomatoes, other things, toast

breakfast_with_ramps_tomatoes

Looks a little disorganized in this picture, but, hey, it was early morning (at least for me).

To maintain some self esteem, I’ll call it ‘rustic’.

  • the fat used to sautée the ramps and fry the eggs was a combination of rendered duck, butter, and olive oil; the eggs were from Millport Dairy; the ramps from Berried Treasures; the tomatoes were Backyard Farms Maine ‘cocktail tomatoes’ from Whole Foods; the sliced spring garlic sautéed with the tomatoes was from Bodhitree Farm; the oregano with both of those was from Eataly; the lovage on the eggs was from Windfall Farms; the micro beets, also on the eggs, from Two Guys from Woodbridge; and there were dashes of a superb aromatic seasoning blend called L’eKama;  there were two different breads slipped into the vintage toaster, Eric Kayser’s demi-Vendôme (de farine de froment, de levain, de germe de blé) and a 7-grain loaf from Eataly
  • our traditional Sunday liturgical first listen this time was the another mass from the album Les messes à teneur‘ [the tenor masses] of Guillaume Du Fay, performed by the ensemble, The Cut Circle

fluke, spring garlic, herbs; potato, micro beet; fiddleheads

fluke_fiddleheads_potato2

Each of these 3 elements needed attention in the moments before being served, and they each turned out very well, plus their tastes really complimented each other, and then finally there was that great color thing going on all over the plate.

Feeling good about this meal.

  • two filets (together just under a pound) of that excellent local fish, oddly called ‘fluke’, or sometimes ‘Summer Flounder’, from Seatuck Fish Company in the Union Square Greenmarket, seasoned on both sides, coated with coarse stone-ground flour, then totally submerged in a mixture of one large egg beaten with a third of a cup of whole milk and a pinch of salt until it was time to cook the fish, when it was lifted from the egg mixture, drained, carefully laid in olive oil which had been warmed up over medium-high heat inside a tin-lined copper au gratin pan, let fry gently until golden, about 2 minutes each side, removed and transferred to 2 plates while 3 tablespoons of butter and thinly-sliced green garlic from Bodhitree Farm were added to the pan, along with a little salt and freshly-ground pepper, cooked for about a minute, stirring, the juice of nearly half of an organic lemon added to the pan and stirred, the garlic butter sauce spooned over the fish, which was then sprinkled with chopped lovage from Windfall Farms and chopped parsley from Eataly
  • fiddlehead ferns (the first of a very short season) from what is essentially a 2-week pop-up stand in the Union Square Greenmarket belonging to Ben and Jeannette Shaw’s Garden of Spices, washed, cleaned, sautéed in olive oil, seasoned with salt and pepper, finished with a dollop of ‘Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter‘ (I learned to love them in New England decades ago, and these were the best fiddleheads I’ve ever had)
  • six sweet Norland red potatoes from Lucky Dog Organic Farm, scrubbed, boiled unpeeled, then halved, tossed with sweet butter, salt, freshly-ground pepper, and beet micro greens from Two Guys from Woodbridge
  • the wine was a French (Burgundy) white, Domaine Leroy Aligote Bourgogne 2011
  • the music was Aulis Sallinen’s Symphony No. 6 and his cello concerto