bacon, eggs, tomato, wild garlic, herbs, spices, toast

bacon_eggs_tomato_etc

Since we would be heading out to the Jewish Museum afterward, I suppose this hearty Sunday breakfast could be called ‘unorthodox’, in light of the title of the museum’s current show of that title.  That same afternoon we were also able to visit some of the rooms of the permanent exhibition, which I can heartily recommend to anyone.

  • the thick bacon from the Amish farmers in Pennsylvania, Millport Dairy was fried very slowly over a very low flame
  • the eggs were also from Millport Dairy, fried in the bit of fat rendered earlier by the bacon, but only after a little butter had been added to the pan, then enriched with condiments which included, Maldon salt, some ground highly-pungent ‘India Special Extra Bold’ Tellicherry peppercorns, wild garlic from Lani’s Farm, a bit of dried Itria-Sirissi chili (peperoncino di Sardegna intero) from Buon Italia, and, after the photo above was taken, a very wonderful aromatic seasoning blend called L’eKama
  • the tomatoes were halved Backyard Farms Maine ‘cocktail tomatoes’ from Whole Foods, briefly sautéed in the pan in which the bacon and eggs had cooked, then sprinkled with Maldon salt, with fresh oregano from Stokes Farm which I had been keeping alive since last fall [yup.]
  • the bread for the toast was ‘rustic classic’ from Eataly

John Dory, lemon, wild garlic, lovage; mustard greens mix

John_Dory_mustards2

looking a bit like emeralds mounted on silver, but much more rewarding

 

I’ve prepared John Dory, which I’ve described as “aka le Poisson de St.Pierre, Pesce San Pietro, Petersfisch, Heringskőnig, Zeus Faber, or ‘the-funny-shiny-one with-the-sourpuss-face'”, at least 3 times since initiating this blog. Each time I assembled it a little differently, but the fish itself has always retained its distinctive flavor and texture, a flavor and texture quite unlike other white fish.

And it’s delicious.

This time, as always, the formula was adjusted for the season, and for what I had on hand.

  • John Dory fillets from Pura Vida Fisheries, arranged in a lightly-buttered copper au gratin pan, sprinkled with a few (3?) tablespoons of lemon juice, seasoned with salt, and pepper, the skin side spread with half of a mixture of 1-2 tablespoons of softened ‘Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter‘, chopped lovage from Two Guys from Woodbridge and finely-chopped wild garlic from Lani’s Farm, baked in a 350º oven, skin-side down for 5 minutes, turned over, the other side spread with the remaining mixture and the pan returned to the oven for another 10 minutes, served with both chopped lovage and parsley sprigs from Eataly (this is the recipe, except for my substitution of the herbs it suggests) [the smooth silver skin can be eaten or easily removed, and I’ve done both]
  • a mix of greens, mostly mustard, from Norwich Meadows Farm, wilted in a little oil which had already warmed one halved clove of bruised garlic from John D. Madura Farm, seasoned with salt and pepper, finished with a drizzle of oil
  • the wine was an Austrian (Kemptal) white, Schlosskellerei Gobelsburg Kamptal Grüner Veltliner 2014
  • the music was Peter Maxwell Davies, Symphony No. 2, the BBC Philharmonic conducted by Maxwell Davies

cavatelli with spring garlic, tomatoes, anchovies, parsley

Cavatelli_spring_garlic_tomato_anchovy

The pasta itself was the star here. It was fresh cavatelli, from Eataly, where its making was overseen by Luca Donofrio, Eataly’s pastaio.

The recipe for the sauce, in this combination a rich and complex complement to a surprisingly earthy plain pasta, was a slight re-imagining of Mark Bittman’s ‘Pasta With Garlic, Tomatoes and Anchovies‘.

  • two roughly-chopped spring garlic from Norwich Meadows Farm placed in a copper skillet over medium heat along with some dried Itria-Sirissi chili (peperoncino di Sardegna intero) from Buon Italia, cooked until the garlic was somewhat tender, 2 small serrano peppers from Forager’s and 7 salted anchovies from Buon Italia, filleted, added and heated until the anchovies had fallen apart, followed by over a cup of halved Backyard Farms Maine ‘cocktail tomatoes’ from Whole Foods, and then the chopped green sections of the fresh garlic, everything cooked until the mix had become ‘saucy’ (about 5 minutes), salt and pepper added, tossed with 12 ounces of just-boiled hand-made fresh cavatelli from Eataly, and served with grated ‘Organic Parmigiana Reggiani Hombre’, from Whole Foods, and chopped parsley, also from Whole Foods
  • the wine was an Italian (Sardinia) white, La Cala Vermentino di Sardegna 2013
  • the music was Peter Maxwell Davies’ “..sprawling, elemental work, ..wind-swept and rain-lashed..” Symphony No. 3, the composer conducting the BBC Philharmonic

pollock, wild garlic, capers, beet greens; mustard greens

beet_greens_micro2

I could say the meal was all about micro ‘Bull’s Blood’ beet greens, but that wouldn’t be quite accurate.

 

pollock_frisee_mustard

In fact I had decided on the two pollock fillets first, and then I spotted the purple ‘greens’ across the way.

 

Whatever. But the plate sure was pretty.

  • two 8-ounce pollock fillets from from American Seafood, seasoned on both sides with salt and pepper, placed in a buttered copper au gratin pan, spread with a mixture of soft butter, zest from a local Lemon grown by Fantastic Gardens of Long Island, and some finely-scissored tiny wild garlic bulbs and stems from Lani’s Farm, baked 12 to 15 minutes at 350º, removed to 2 plates, drizzled with the cooking juices, sprinkled with a small number of salted capers which had been rinsed, drained, dried, and briefly heated in a little hot olive oil (the oil in that pan also drizzled over the fish), finished with micro ‘Bull’s Blood’ beet greens from Windfall Farms
  • frisée-like mustard greens from Lani’s Farm, wilted in a little oil which had already warmed a halved clove of bruised garlic from John D. Madura Farm, seasoned with salt and pepper, finished with a drizzle of oil
  • the wine was an Oregon (Willamette) white, Kings Ridge Oregon Pinot Gris 2014
  • the music was early Peter Maxwell-Davies chamber works, from this album

Mrs. Nic’s sauce again, and the San Marzano tomato story

San_Marzano

pedigree: San Marzano, Italian San Marzano, Italian San Marzano D.O.C.

 

Gorgeous.

I love tomatoes, in any form, and I think I know what to do with them, in any form, but what do I know about the competing claims of the many serious (read, ‘high-end’) producers of tomatoes canned for cooking? I’m beginning to think that I may really only be able to say what tastes good.

I used to think I knew what was the very best canned tomato, based on my discussions with Nic Soccodato long ago, and my experience with the cans he sold out of the back of his barber shop. It was the San Marzano, and only the San Marzano which originated in and grew in his own paese, the Valle del Sarno.  After he retired however I may have inadvertently strayed from what he would have considered the genuine San Marzano, and recently I became aware that one of the brands I had been using for some time, and had always found very good, while described as San Marzano tomatoes, did not actually include fruit from Italy. Apostasy, or victory for locavores?

The problem has been further complicated by the fact that products of the same producers are not found in all markets, and the name, ‘San Marzano’, might not be found on any label in a given market, on a given day.

The can of peeled tomatoes shown in the image above, produced by Agrigenus, is what I used last Wednesday, in my last tomato sauce outing; it had all of the credentials. On Friday however, when I was at Eataly for another reason, and remembered I should replace it, the one brand I found was Mutti.  The label asserted, ‘Only Italian tomatoes. GMO Free’, but, while I looked everywhere, the words ‘San Marzano’ were nowhere to be found. I’ve really liked this brand in the past, often picking it up when my first choice was not available. Its exclusive presence in the store seemed to carry the recommendation of Batali and the Bastianich family, so I bought one.

I now don’t know what my experience means to the claims for San Marzano tomatoes from the Agro Nocerino, but I’ll probably continue to seek out the original.

scallops with herb butter; tomatoes, cress; mustard greens

scallops_tomato_mustard_greens

almost over the top, at least by my measure

 

I rarely include a cream sauce in any of my cooking, and in fact the finishing touch on these scallops was not actually a cream sauce, but a ‘composed butter’ which included fish juices, herbs and wild garlic, a small remainder from this earlier meal, kept frozen in a ramekin until now.

The picture above is very unlike the usual images of pan-grilled scallops found on this blog (this one is my favorite), which are frankly more to my taste, but I couldn’t resist pursuing the experiment this time.

I’ve had the small ramekin on my mind for two weeks, hoping to arrange a perfect [second] marriage for it.  I’m more familiar with composed butters as a final touch for grilled steaks, a device I’ve only encountered in Julia Childs books; I was afraid that matching this one up with shellfish might be too much of a stretch, but the result was delicious.

The plans for virtually every element of this meal came together only at the last moment – in fact only while I was actually already cooking – and that included the treatment of the scallops.

Mildly-aromatic ‘wild garlic’ came into play twice during the preparation of this dinner, as a finish for the tomatoes, and as an important element in the herb butter spread on top of the scallops. I’ll think of this tiny (actually, at least partially domesticated) plant as my first 2016 ‘find’ in the Greenmarket.  It’s tasty, attractive, pretty versatile, and keeps pretty well. It’s also the harbinger of a growing season which is actually heralded by the first appearance of ramps, which, while definitely wild, have become a fixture, a tradition, for both the farmers and their happy city customers.

wild_garlic

  • ten sea scallops from P.E. & D. D. Seafood, washed, rinsed and dried very thoroughly, generously seasoned with salt and pepper, pan grilled a minute or so on each side, finished on the plates with a squeeze of juice from a local lemon grown by Fantastic Gardens of Long Island, drizzled with a little olive oil, and spread with a preserved butter which included tilefish juices combined wild garlic from Lani’s Farm, fresh parsley (Eataly), thyme (Forager’s), lovage (Two Guys from Woodbridge), sage (Eataly), and oregano (Stoke’s Farm)
  • eight Backyard Farms Maine ‘cocktail tomatoes’ from Whole Foods, halved, sautéed in a little olive oil until beginning to soften, seasoned with salt and pepper, removed and placed on a bed of tiny, only slightly-peppery cress, “a basal rosette of baby-arugula-like winter cress”, according to the grower/seller, Lani’s Farm (and in fact also basically ‘wild’?), then 8 or 10 finely-chopped wild garlic plants, also from Lani’s Farm (including bulbs, white and green stems) immediately tossed into the still-warm pan in which the tomatoes had cooked, stirred a few seconds, the garlic and tomato juices poured on top of the tomatoes themselves
  • red mustard greens from Norwich Meadows Farm, wilted in a little oil which had already warmed 1 halved clove of bruised garlic from John D. Madura Farm, seasoned with salt and pepper, finished with a drizzle of oil
  • the wine was a California (Clarksburg) white, Akiyoshi Reserve Chardonnay Clarksburg 2014
  • the music was a number of works by Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, beginning with his ‘Mavis in Las Vegas‘, and the other entertaining pieces on this recording, and ending with his very serious last symphony, Symphony No. 10 (“Alla ricerca di Borromini”), which includes a sonnet to and text of by Francesco Borromini, and poetry by Giacomo Leopardi

salame, arugula; fiore di zucca ravioli with sage butter

salume_arugula_bread

Sweet.

 

There were two courses, first, a salumi with greens…

  • Two ounces of La Quercia Salame Americano, from Eataly, arranged on plates, drizzled with with a little Casa Gola olive oil, accompanied by small leaves of arugula from Norwich Meadows Farm, which had been dressed with the same oil, juice from a local hot house Lisbon lemon (Fantastic Gardens of Long Island), salt, and pepper
  • slices of a Bien Cuit ‘campagna’ from Forager’s

…followed by a fresh pasta.

fiore_di_zucca_sage

  • twelve ounces of Fiore di Zucca crescent ravioli from Eataly (a filling of butternut squash, ricotta, grana padano, and breadcrumbs), with a sauce of  6  or 8 fresh sage leaves from Eataly warmed in several tablespoons of ‘Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter‘, with some grated ‘Organic Parmigiana Reggiani Hombre’ from Whole Foods sprinkled on the top of the pasta once it had been placed in bowls

 

chorizo-onion-serrano-kale-pimentón-lovage frittata

frittata_chorizo_onion_etc_2

I was a very simple thing, and it welcomed a certain number of ingredients I already had sitting around in the kitchen, but it tasted delicious.  Surprisingly, it also boasted the texture of a soufflé, and who does soufflés any more?

The basic recipe comes from Joyce Goldstein, and is described in detail here, but, just as when I had prepared the dish before, I took some liberties, including changing the half pound of kale she prescribes to the mere handful I had on hand (scattering it all on the top near the end, for visibility). I also added one green serrano pepper to the sausage and onion mix near the end of their cooking, and, after the frittata had come out of the oven, while it was still hot, I sprinkled it with my current favorite herb.

roasted herb-marinated white sea perch; wilted cavalo nero

white_sea_perch

before (Paul displaying his own purchase)..

 

white_sea_perch_cavalo_nero

..and after (my display of our dinner)

 

I was introduced to this terrific fish today on one of my regular visits to one of the fish stalls in the Union Square Greenmarket, Pura Vida Seafood.  I’ve learned to pay attention to what Paul tells me, and this is another of the proofs.  I had never cooked white sea perch before, but the taste is superb, and the texture is more firm than that of other perch or similar fish.  The price is modest by today’s standards, and, for those who dwell on such things, the fillets have very few bones.

The recipe I used had the advantage of simplicity and it could be divided into two periods of a cook’s attention, both virtues especially appreciated on a night when I would not be returning to the apartment from a concert until almost 10 o’clock.

I was able to prepare a marinade and arrange six small fillets in it before I left for Avery Fisher Hall and Esa_Pekka Salonen’s performance of Messiaen’s ‘Turangalîla Symphony’.  Soon after arriving home at 10 o’clock I lit the oven and, once it had heated to 500º, place the fish in it, still in the pan with the marinade.  Less than 10 minutes later I was arranging it on the plates.

The recipe is found in Mark Bittman’s “Fish: The Complete Guide to Buying and Cooking“.

  • six white perch fillets from Pura Vida Seafood (about 15 ounces total) arranged in an oven pan with a marinade consisting of 2 tablespoons of chopped herbs (in this case, parsley from Eataly, rosemary from Phillips Farm, thyme from Forager’s, and lovage from Two Guys from Woodbridge), salt and pepper, left covered in the refrigerator for 3 hours (although the recipe suggests, alternatively, periods as brief as 15 minutes), then roasted with the marinade in a pre-heated 500º oven for about 8 minutes, and served
  • small, young Cavolo Nero (Black, or Tuscan kale) from Bodhitree Farm, briefly wilted with olive oil and two cloves of garlic from John D. Madura Farm which had first been heated in the oil
  • slices from a loaf of ‘El Bario Sourdough’ from Hot Bread Kitchen in the Greenmarket
  • the wine was a French (Savoie) white, Domaine Demeure-Pinet Jacquère Savoie 2013, from Chelsea Wine Vault
  • the music was first that of works by Esa Pekka-Salonen, from the album, ‘Meet the Composer-Conductor‘, and later, the really terrific piece, ‘So it feels… Trumpet Concerto No. 2’, by Leif Segerstam, from the same album

crab cake, salsa, orpine; potato, wild garlic, lovage, cress

crab_cake_salsa_potato

looks like a flattened bouquet

 

Yes, it definitely looks like I had a lot of greenery on hand, but I think I managed to disguise some of its volumes with a little judicious mixing with other elements of the meal.

And this wasn’t just ordinary greenery, as it included upland cress, wild garlic (bulb and green), stone crop, lovage, fresh oregano (ordinary, except that it’s a survivor from last fall), and borage flowers!

  • two crab cakes from PE & DD Seafood (ingredients: crab, egg, flour, red & green peppers, garlic, salt, pepper, breadcrumbs, mayonnaise, milk, celery, parsley), heated in a small heavy cast iron pan, 3 to 4 minutes on each side, and served on a salsa composed of 6 Backyard Farms Maine ‘cocktail tomatoes’ from Whole Foods, which had been chopped and combined with salt, freshly-ground black pepper, a bit of homemade French Basque piment d’Espellate purchased in a small town north of Baie-Comeau, Quebec last year from the producer’s daughter, some crushed dried pepperoncini, and some chopped fresh oregano leaves from Stoke’s Farm (which I have been husbanding for months in the refrigerator!), the salsa covering much of a bed of undressed stone crop (a succulent, aka orpine, aka sedum) from Lani’s Farm, the dish finished with a few drops of olive oil, some of the liquid remaining from the salsa, and some gorgeous blue borage flowers from Two Guys from Woodbridge
  • five red Norland potatoes from John D. Madura Farm (these potatoes have grown especially sweet over the winter), scrubbed, boiled in salted water unpeeled, halved, tossed with olive oil and chopped tiny wild garlic bulbs and stems from Lani’s Farm, sprinkled with chopped lovage from Two Guys from Woodbridge, and mixed, still in the pan in which they were boiled, with cultivated upland cress from Alewife Farm

There was a cheese course included 3 cheeses and thin toasts of potato bread.

  • the cheeses were Consider Bardwell’s ‘Experience’, a pasteurized cow cheese still in the developing stage; their ‘Manchester’ goat cheese; and an adaged goat cheese from Vermont Creamery, ‘Coupole
  • with the cheese there were very thin slices of potato bread (Balthazar’s ‘Potato Fendu’) from Whole Foods, toasted