David Lebovitz's Blog, page 136

November 22, 2009

How to Make French Vinaigrette



One assumption that I'm going to make about the French is that they're not afraid to make things au pif, or "by the nose".





utensils





I don't know if a precise recipe for sauce vinaigrette actually exists. But if there is, I bet few people follow it very closely. And Romain is no different from his compatriots when it comes to recipes, and rules.



They are both for other people—and don't apply to him.





adding salt salad basket





Vinaigrette is just one of those things. It's a few simple ingredients which come...

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Published on November 22, 2009 21:16

November 21, 2009

French Sugars

sugars



Many people who tackle French recipes get stumped by the sugars, which don't necessarily correspond to the sugars available elsewhere. All supermarkets in France carry white granulated sugar and there's often unrefined sugars, such as cassonade, which grocers stock and are widely-available. In America and elsewhere, bakers often have to do a bit of hunting around to find the corresponding sugar.



French brown sugars are quite varied and don't always neatly fit into substitutions. In...

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Published on November 21, 2009 09:03

November 18, 2009

Community Supported Agriculture, in Paris



About a year ago, I was having supper in a friend's apartment and everything we ate was simple, and tasted really good. He'd lived on a farm near Toulouse for many years, where he worked for one of France's agricultural organizations. Now he lives in Paris and I was surprised when he told me that the onions we were eating on the tart he'd made were from a panier, or a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) box.





pannier





He gets a weekly panier from Les Paniers du Val de Loire. I kept hemming a...

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Published on November 18, 2009 22:10

November 15, 2009

Israeli Couscous with Butternut Squash & Preserved Lemons



Israeli Couscous





When I started this site, I had forums, where people could chat and post messages. Before we took it down (because my brain was about to implode), one of the burning questions on there was this: Is couscous pasta?



My contention was that it wasn't, since it wasn't a 'paste' (or as the French would say, un pâte), which is what I believe—in my limited intelligence—that pasta is.



On the other hand, perhaps it is pasta, because couscous is flour mixed with water, then rolled until...

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Published on November 15, 2009 20:42

November 14, 2009

Saint Marcellin

stmarcellin1



If you go to Lyon, you'll find Saint Marcellin pretty much everywhere. It's the best-known cheese from that region, and the user friendly-sized disks are inevitably piled high at each and every cheese shop you step in to. Locals bake them at home and slide the warm disks onto salads, and I've not been to a restaurant in that city that didn't have Saint Marcellin on the menu doing double-duty as the cheese or the dessert course. Or both. At the outdoor market stands, you can see how...

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Published on November 14, 2009 12:13

November 11, 2009

Pumpkin Ice Cream Recipe



Every year I get a slew of requests from people looking for a recipe for Pumpkin Ice Cream. While in The Perfect Scoop I have a recipe for Sweet Potato Ice Cream studded with maple-glazed pecans, there's something about the fall that makes people think of all-things pumpkin. I'm a big fan of sweet potatoes, personally, but old traditions die hard I suppose. And Pumpkin Ice Cream got put on my to-churn list.





pumpkinicecreamblog scooppumpkinicecream





As luck would have it, I was leafing through a copy of The Craft of Baking

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Published on November 11, 2009 14:19

November 7, 2009

French Pear & Almond Tart Recipe



french pear tart with cherries



I've been living in France for almost eight years and in all that time, I've yet to make even one of these classic French pear tarts. I don't think I've ever been in a bakery that didn't have wedges of this tart in little paper footings, ready to take out and be consumed right away. So I guess because I could always buy one, why make it? But since I had a kilo of almond paste that I bought for another project, a batch of poached pears on hand, and an unbaked tart shell waiting it's turn ...

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Published on November 07, 2009 18:28

November 6, 2009

Sidecars



sidecar sidecar





For someone who doesn't drink that much, I sure have a lot of liquor on my liquor shelf. I guess I should rephrase that. For someone who drinks an a lot of wine, but not a lot of liquor, I sure have a lot of liquor on my liquor shelf.





liquors





The French don't have anything on us Americans when it comes to drinking cocktails, although that seems to be changing a bit. Fruity, sweet drinks won't likely catch on around here, which I'm happy about, but minty Mojitos are popular, fueled on...

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Published on November 06, 2009 16:44

November 4, 2009

How to Poach Pears



poached pears





Every year I spend an inordinate amount of my time poaching fruit. It's usually because I'm powerless to resist all the pears in baskets at my market, and buy far more than I need. Yes, much of my sweet bounty find its way into sorbets, cakes, ice creams, and jams. But one of my favorite ways to keep those pears around a little longer is to poach them.





poaching pears





Poaching is gentle, stove-top cooking, and winter pears are ideal candidates since they keep their shape. Poaching also improves t...

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Published on November 04, 2009 16:49

November 2, 2009

A Great Kouign Amann, in Paris



frenchpastries





I'm not going to say a thing, because I'm certain I did the same thing back in the day. But a lot of people who are en route to Paris are always asking me where they can find things like bouillabaisse, a true salade Niçoise, or Kig ha farz, and when I answer, "You can't", they either don't believe me, or get irked because they think I'm being elusive and keeping those addresses a secret and probably say mean things about me behind my back.



To get those things, you need to go where...

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Published on November 02, 2009 13:06